*注1:Azrael (Azrail, Ashriel, Azriel, Azaril, Gabriel,etc·-"whom God helpsT')-in Hebrew and Islamic lore, the angel of death, stationed in the 3rd Heaven· To the Moslems, Azrael is another form of Raphael· In their tradition, he has "70,000 feet and 4,000 wings, while his body is provided with as many eyes and tongues as there are men in the world·" [Rf: Hastings, Encyclopaedia of Religion and Ethics IV, 617·1 In Arabic tradition, Azrael is "forever writing in a large book and forever erasing what he writes; what he writes is the birth of a man, what he erases is the name of the man at death·" When Michael, Gabriel, and Israfel failed to provide 7 handfuls of earth for the creation of Adam, the 4th angel on this mission, Azrael, succeeded; and because of this feat he was appointed to separate body fiom soul· [Cf: Murdad, the angelus morris in ancient Persian lore·] Oriental legend has it that Azrael accomplishes his mission (i·e·, bringing death first and separation afterward) by holding an apple from the Tree of Life to the nostril of the dying person· In Jewish mysticism, Azrael is the embodiment of evil· In The Book of Protection he is one of 3 holy angels (the other 2 being Gabriel and Michael) invoked in Syriac charms· He is the angel of death in Longfellow's poem "The Spanish Jew's Tale" and, in the popular edition of The Complete Poetical Works of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, he is pictorially represented with King Solomon entertaining a "rajah of Hindostan·"