[38.] Eliphas Lévi, Histoire de la Magie, pp. 46, 105. (Eliphas Lévi was the pseudonym of the celebrated nineteenth-century occultist the Abbé Constant.)
[39.] Lexicon of Freemasonry, p. 323.
[40.] Ginsburg op. cit. p. 105; Jewish Encyclopædia, article on Cabala.
[41.] Gougenot des Mousseaux, Le Juif, le Judaïsms el la Judaïsation des Peuples Chrétiens, p. 503 (1886).
[42.] P. L. B. Drach De l'Harmonie entre l'Église et la Synagogue, Vol. I. p. xiii (1844). M. Vulliaud (op. cit., II. 245) points out that, as far as he can discover Drach's work has never met with any refutation from the Jews, by whom it was received in complete silence. The Jewish Encyclopædia has an article on Drach in which it says he was brought up in a Talmudic school and afterwards became converted to Christianity, but makes no attempt to challenge his statements.
[43.] Drach, op. cit., Vol. II. p. xix
[44.] Franck, op. cit., p. 127.
[45.] De Pauly's translation. Vol. V. pp. 336-8, 343-6.
[46.] Zohar, treatise Beschalah, folio 59b (De Pauly, III. 265).
[47.] Zohar, Toldoth Noah, folio 69a (De Pauly, I. 408).