Hebraic Literature; Translations from the Talmud, Midrashim and eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 528 pages of information about Hebraic Literature; Translations from the Talmud, Midrashim and.

Hebraic Literature; Translations from the Talmud, Midrashim and eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 528 pages of information about Hebraic Literature; Translations from the Talmud, Midrashim and.

Avodah Zarah, fol. 12, col. 2.

A python is a familiar spirit who speaks from his armpits; a wizard is one who speaks with the mouth.  As the Rabbis have taught, a familiar spirit is one who speaks from his joints and his wrists; a wizard is one who, putting a certain bone into his mouth, causes it to speak.

Sanhedrin, fol. 65, cols, 1, 2.

He who says to a raven “Croak,” and to a hen raven, “Droop thy tail and turn it this way as a lucky sign,” is an imitator of the ways of the Amorites (Lev. xviii. 3).

Shabbath, fol. 67, col. 2.

Women going out on the Sabbath-day are allowed, as the Rabbis teach, to carry with them a certain stone believed to counteract abortion.

Abaii interrupts his exposition of this Halachah in order to enumerate certain antidotes to chronic fever which, he says, he had learned from his mother.  Take a new zouz and then procure its weight in sea-salt; hang this round the neck, suspended by a papyrus fibre, so that it may rest just in the hollow in front.  If this does not answer, go where two or more roads meet and watch for the first big ant that is going home loaded; lay hold of it and place it in a brass tube; stop up the end of the tube with lead, putting as many seals upon it as possible; then shake it, saying the while, “My load be upon thee, and thine upon me.”  To this Rav Acha, the son of Rav Hunna, objected to Rav Ashi, and asked, “Might not the ant have been already laden with another man’s fever?” “True,” observed the other; “nevertheless let him say, ’My load be upon thee as well as thine own.’” If this be not effective, then take a new earthenware pot, and going to the nearest stream, say, “Stream, stream, lend me a pot full of water for one who is on a visit to me.”  Wave it seven times round thy head and then throw the water back again, saying, “Stream, stream, take back thy borrowed water for my guest came and went the same day.”

Rav Hunna then adds a prescription for a tertian fever, and Rabbi Yochanan gives the following as effective against a burning fever:—­Take an iron knife, and having fastened a papyrus fibre to the nearest bramble, cut off a piece and say, “And the Angel of the Lord appeared to him in a flame of fire,” etc., as in Exod. iii. 2.  On the morrow cut off another piece and say, “The Lord saw that he (the fever) turned aside;” then upon the third day say, “Draw not hither,” and stooping down, pray, “Bush, bush! the Holy One—­blessed be He!—­caused His Shechinah to lodge upon thee, not because thou art the loftiest, for thou art the lowest of all trees; and as when thou didst see the fire of Hananiah, Mishael, and Azariah, thou didst flee therefrom, so see the fire (fever) of this sufferer and flee from it.”

Shabbath, fol. 66, col. 2, etc.

Rabba once created a man (out of dust) and sent him to Rabbi Zira, who having addressed the figure and received no answer, said, “Thou art (made) by witchcraft; return to thy native dust.”  Rav Chaneanah and Rav Oshayah sat together every Sabbath-eve studying the book Yetzirah (i.e., the book of Creation), until they were able to create for themselves a calf (as large as a) three-year old, and they did eat thereof.

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Hebraic Literature; Translations from the Talmud, Midrashim and from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.