[805.] Michael Rodkinson (i.e. Rodkinssohn), in Preface to translation of the Talmud, Vol. I. p. x.
[806.] Drach, De l'Harmomie entre l'Église[C] et la Synagogue, I. 167, quoting the treatise Aboda-Zara, folio 13 verso, and folio 20 recto; also treatise Baba Kamma, folio 29 verso. Drach adds: "We could multiply these quotations almost to infinity."
[807.] Zohar, section Toldoth Noah, folio 63b (de Pauly's trans., I 373).
[808.] Zohar, section Toldoth Noah, folio 646 (de Pauly's trans., I. 376).
[809.] J.P. Stehelin, The Traditions of the Jews, II. 215-20, quoting Talmud treatises Baba Bathra folio 74b, Pesachim folio 32, Bekhoroth folio 57, Massektoth Ta'anith folio 31. The Zohar also refers to the female Leviathan (section Bô, de Pauly's trans., III. 167). Drach shows that amongst the delights promised by the Talmud after the return to Palestine will be the permission to eat pork and bacon.--De l'Harmonie entre l'Église et la Synagogue, I. 265, 276, quoting treatise Hullin, folio 17, 82.
[810.] Stehelin, op. cit., II. 221-4.
[811.] The Very Rev. Sir George Adam Smith, Syria and the Holy Land, p. 49 (1918).
[812.] Zohar, section Schemoth, folio 7 and 9b; section Beschalah, folio 58b (de Pauly's trans., III. 32, 36, 41, 260).
[813.] Ibid., section Vayschlah, folio 177b (de Pauly's trans., II. p. 298).
[814.] Hastings' Encyclopædia of Religion and Ethics, article on the Kabbala by H. Loewe.