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ALCHEMY: a bibliography of English-language writings. 2nd (Internet) edition 1 Mar 2006 1A(000) 1. The Alchemist spoke (from an old record). Alchem Lab Bulls, no. 15 (Q2 1963). [http://www.spagyria.com/alb.zip]. "The following has been re-recorded from an old worn phonograph record of which only two were ever made. The master and one copy. Both are old and worn and could only be made audible again on a modern powerful machine. Audibly enough to be transcribed on a soundtrack and herewith partly made public for the first time. Perhaps two or three more playings would erase the last traces of sound. It will give you an inside of the life, thinking and habitation of an alchemist, not of the Middle Ages but of our own present century" 2. The Alchemists prayer. [ http://www.alchemylab.com/alchemists_prayer.htm]. In Spiritual Alchemy section 3. Aphorismi et Notio. [http://homepages.ihug.com.au/~panopus/aphorisms.htm]. 4. The Book on antimony. Salt Lake City (UT): Paracelsus Research Society. 5. Davis, Tenney L. Pulvis Fulminans. Chymia 2 (1949). 6. Elliot. Compendium of alchemical experiments. Restorers of Alchemical Manuscripts Society. 70p. 7. From one to ten. Salt Lake City (UT): Paracelsus Research Society. A treatise on the origin and extension of the prime manifestation on the physical plane 8. Gardening. Berkeley (CA): Shambhala, 1972. 104 p. Includes: Ponce, C. The alchemical death.--Maier, M. Atalanta fugiens 9. Grossinger, Richard, ed.Alchemy: pre-Egyptian legacy, millennial promise. Richmond (CA): North Atlantic Books, 1979. 253p. Contains English Translations of Works by Zosimos, Paracelsus, Basilius Valentinus, Thomas Vaughan, Edward Kelly, Janus Lacinius, Rudolf Hauschka 10. Inner alchemy. Parabola 3, no. 3 (1978). 11. Mappae Clavicula (trans. C.S. Smith, J.G. Hawthorne). Transactions of the American Philosophical Society, New Series 64 (1974): 3-128. Translated by C.S. Smith and J.G. Hawthorne. 12. The Method and materials... comprising the Sophick Mercury; edited by Leszek Kobiernicki. Cauda Pavonis 2, no. 2 (Fall 1984): 1-2. 13. The Occult, black magic mysticism. Winnipeg: XMLWorld Publishing, 2004. 35 ebooks, including The Golden Tractate of Hermes Trismegistus; The Treasure of Treasures for Alchemists; Theophrastus Paracelsus; The Tincture Of The Philosophers Theophrastus Paracelsus Coelum Philosophorum Theophrastus Paracelsus The Aurora of the Philosophers Theophrastus Paracelsus; Alchemical Catechism. Bit difficult to sort out exactly what is on this CD 14. The Old alchemical manuscript. Salt Lake City (UT): Paracelsus Research Society. 15. Review of Les textes alchimiques, by Robert Halleux. In Ambix 28, no. 1 (Mar 1981): 55. . 1A(000)-3FQ 16. Godwin, Joscelyn. Magnum Opus Hermetic sourceworks (review article). Cauda Pavonis 2, no. 2 (Fall 1983): 6-7. 17. Godwin, Joscelyn. Magnum Opus Hermetic sourceworks Part Two (review article). Cauda Pavonis 3, no. 1 (Spring 1984): 6-7. 1A(000)-3FR 18. [Albertus, Frater]. Questions and answers. Alchem Lab Bulls, no. 30 (Q1 1967). [http://www.spagyria.com/alb.zip]. Lengthy explanation of Qabalistic diagrams in the book "From One to Ten" 19. Schuler, Robert M. "Six anonymous verse translations, ca. 1700." In Alchemical poetry 1575-1700, ed. Robert M. Schuler, 415-419. , 1995. 1A(000)-3LV 20. Bacstrom, Sigismund. Bacstrom's alchemical anthology / a bookplate, used by Dr. Bacstrom, adapted from an alchemical figure in a fifteenth century manuscript ; edited by J. W. Hamilton-Jones. [http://www.ebrary.com]. 1992. 21. Ingalese, Richard.Golden Manuscripts, They made the philosophers stone by Richard Ingalese; The Hermetic Art teaching concerning atomic transmutation by Volpierre (1892- 1952); The true book of the learned Synesius a Greek Abbot taken out of the Emperors library concerning the philosophers stone; Circulatum Minus Urbigeranum, or the philosophical elixir of vegetables with the three certain ways of preparing it fully and clearly set forth in one and thirty aphorisms by Baru Urbigerus / with an introduction by Frater Albertus. Kessinger, 1992. 166p. 22. Ingalese, Richard. Golden Manuscripts, They made the philosophers stone by Richard Ingalese; The Hermetic Art teaching concerning atomic transmutation by Volpierre (1892- 1952); The true book of the learned Synesius a Greek Abbot taken out of the Emperors library concerning the philosophers stone; Circulatum Minus Urbigeranum, or the philosophical elixir of vegetables with the three certain ways of preparing it fully and clearly set forth in one and thirty aphorisms by Baru Urbigerus / with an introduction by Frater Albertus. [http://www.ebrary.com]. 1992. 23. Kunc, Karen, ed.Lore of gold. Lincoln (NE): Blue Heron P., 1987. [12] leaves "The Stone of the Philosophers, an Undated Work by George Starkey, From the Seventeenth Century, Is the Source for the First, Second, Fourth, and Fifth Excerpts. The Third Selection Is From the Golden Tractate of Hermes Trismegistus, From the Fourth or Fifth Century. The Final Quote Is From Of the Nature of Things by Paracelsus (Theophrastus Von Hehenheim) From 1650"--Colophon. "Karen Kunc Has Brought Together This Book ... At the University of Nebraska-Lincoln in the Fall and Winter of 1986-1987 ... This Work Is in an Edition of Twenty Copies"--Colophon. 24. Linden, Stanton J., ed.The alchemy reader : from Hermes Trismegistus to Isaac Newton; edited by Stanton J. Linden. Cambridge: Cambridge Univ P, 2003. [xxvi], 260p. The Introduction Is an Especially Useful Modern Survey of Alchemy. Each Extract Is Prefaced by an Interpretive Introduction and Suggestions for Further Readings. "The Alchemy Reader Is a Collection of Primary Source Readings on Alchemy and Hermeticism, Which Offers Readers an Informed Introduction and Background to a Complex Field Through the Works of Important Ancient, Medieval and Early Modern Alchemical Authors. Including Selections From the Legendary Hermes Trimegistus to Robert Boyle and Isaac Newton, the Book Illustrates Basic Definitions, Conceptions, and Varied Interests and Emphases; And It Also Illustrates the Highly Interdisciplinary Character of Alchemical Thought and Its Links with Science and Medicine, Philosophical and Religious Currents, the Visual Arts and Iconography and, Especially, Literary Discourse. Like the Notable Anthologies of Alchemical Writings Published in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries, It Seeks to Counter the Problem of an Acute Lack of Reliable Primary Texts and to Provide a Convenient and Accessible Point of Entry to the Field. Contents: 1. Hermes Trismegistus: The Emerald Table (Tabula Smaragdina); 2. Plato: From the Timaeus; 3. Aristotle: From the Meteorology; 4. Pseudo-Democritus: From the Treatise of Democritus on Things Natural and Mystical; 5. Anonymous: Dialogue of Cleopatra and the Philosophers; 6. Anonymous: From Leiden Papyrus X and the Stockholm Papyrus; 7. Zosimos of Panopolis: From The Great and Sacred Art of the Making of Gold; 8. Zosimos of Panopolis: Of Virtue, Lesson 1-3; 9. Anonymous: The Poem of the Philosopher Theophrastos Upon the Sacred Art; 10. Khalid Ibn Yazid: From Secreta Alchymiae; 11. Pseudo-Geber: From Of the Investigation or Search of Perfection Of the Sum of Perfection; And His Book of Furnaces; 12. Avicenna: De Congelatione Et Conglutinatione Lapidum; 13. Albertus Magnus: From the Libellus De Alchimia; 14. Roger Bacon: From the Radix Mundi; 15. Nicolas Flamel: From His Exposition of the Hieroglyphical Figures; 16. Bernard, Earl of Trevisan: A Treatise of the Philosophers Stone; 17. George Ripley: The Epistle of George Ripley Written to King Edward the 4; 18. Paracelsus: From Of the Nature of Things Paracelsus His Aurora; 19. Francis Anthony: Aurum-Potabile: Or the Receit of Dr. Fr. Antonie; 20. Michael Sendivogius: From A New Light of Alchymie; A Dialogue Between Mercury, the Alchymist and Nature; 21. Robert Fludd: From Mosaicall Philosophy; 22. Gabriel Plattes: A Caveat for Alchymists; 23. John French: Preface to The Divine Pymander of Hermes Mercurius Trimegistus in XVII Books; 24. George Starkey/Eirenaeus Philalethes: The Admirable Efficacy, and Almost Incredible Virtue of True Oyl From An Exposition Upon Sir George Ripley's Epistle to King Edward IV; 25. Elias Ashmole: Prolegomena to the Theatrum Chemicum Britannicum; 26. Robert Boyle: From An Historical Account of a Degradation of Gold Made by an Anti-Elixir: A Strange Chymical Narrative; 27. Isaac Newton: The Key (Keynes MS 18) The Commentary on the Emerald Tablet (Keynes MS 28), King's College, Cambridge." 1A(000) [ADI] 25. Adiramled. The art of alchemy or the generation of gold: a course of practical lessons in metallic transmutation for the use of occult students being a new illumination regarding the secret science of the sages. Lightning Source. ISBN: 0766175774 1A(000) [AND] 26. Anderton, William. Inner alchemy. London: Soluna, 1981. 1A(000) [AZI] 27. Aziz, A.A. Alchemical solution. Isle of Arran: Banton Press, 1995. 66p. ISBN: 1- 85652- 153-2 1A(2) [HER] 28. Hauck, Dennis William. A hyper-history of the Emerald Tablet. [http://www.alchemylab.com/hyper_history.htm]. Contents: The Emerald Tablet; Timeless myths and church politics; Thrice Greatest Hermes; Thoth: the first Hermes; Akhenaten: the second Hermes; Apollonius: the third Hermes 1A(32) 29. Westcott, William Wynn. The Isiac tablet : or, The Bembine table of Isis / by W. Wynn Westcott ; introductory pref. by Manly P. Hall. Bath: Fryar, 1887; reprint, Los Angeles (CA): Philosophical Research Soc, 1976. 19p. ISBN: 089314410X Facsimile reprint 30. Westcott, William Wynn. Tabula Bembina sive Mansa Isiacus. The Isiac Tablet of Cardinal Bembo. Its history and occult significance. Bath: Fryar, 1887. 20pp. 1A(32) [ELE] 31. Nicolas Flamel - The Figures of Abraham the Jew. [http://www.levity.com/alchemy/flamimag.html]. Coloured illustrations. "This series of seven figures, purports to be a copy of an original 'Book of Abraham the Jew' which Nicolas Flamel is supposed to have found in the 14th Century, and which inspired him to undertake his quest for the secrets of alchemy. There are no early manuscripts of these figures, but there are many beautifully coloured manuscripts dating from the late 17th and the 18th century. The figures often appear in different orders from the one given below: Mercurius meets with Saturn; Planetary dragons on a hill; The workers in the garden; The massacre of the innocents; The winged caduceus of Mercurius; The crucified snake; Snakes among the hills" 1A(32) [HER] 32. [Divine Pymander] Corpus Hermeticum - John Everard. The Divine Pymander in XVII books.. London 1650. This was translated by John Everard from the Ficino Latin translation. [http://www.levity.com/alchemy/ corpherm.html]. Introductory page to the 17 books. The First Book; The Second Book - Poemander; The Third Book - The Holy Sermon; The Fourth Book - The Key; The Fifth Book - That God is not Manifest and yet most Manifest; The Sixth Book - That in God alone is Good; The Seventh Book - His Secret Sermon in the Mount or Regeneration, and the Profession of Silence; The Eighth Book - That the greatest Evil in Man, is the not knowing God; The Ninth Book - A Universal Sermon to Asclepius; The Tenth Book - The Mind to Hermes; The Eleventh Book - Of the Common Mind to Tat; The Twelfth Book - His Crater or Monas; The Thirteenth Book - Of Sense and Understanding; Te Fourteenth Book - Of Operation and Sense; The Fifteenth Book - Of Truth to His Son Tat; Te Sixteenth Book - That None of the Things that are, can Perish; The Seventeenth Book - To Asclepius, to be Truly Wise 33. The Emerald Table of Hermes. [http://www.hermetic.com/texts/emerald.html]. 34. The Emerald Tablet. [ http://www.alchemylab.com/what_is_the_tablet.htm]. Contents: What is the Emerald Tablet?; A new English translation; Emerald Tablet slide show; Hyper-history of the Tablet; Grail version of the Tablet; A Tablet for the 21st century; Symbol of the Ouroboros; The Emerald Formula; Emerald insights to live by; Recommended books 35. An Emerald Tablet for the 21st century. [http://www.alchemylab.com/modern_emerald_tablet.htm]. How would the Emerald Tablet read if it were written today? First of all, we would have to gear it toward an audience without much time for any background philosophizing, and of course, we would be competing with television for their attention. Then, we would have to at least acknowledge the "advances" made in scientific knowledge. Contemporary science tells us that the universe is made up of energy, matter, and light. Those would be what the alchemists called Sulfur, Salt, and Mercury, respectively. According to Einsteins equation (E=mc2), energy and matter can be transformed into one another through the constant of light. In alchemy, Sulfur and Salt are transformed into one another through the intermediary of Mercury. It looks like, if that little "c" in Einsteins equation really stood for "consciousness" instead of "light," there would be no difference at all between physics and alchemy. Let us assume that consciousness is light, after all. In that case, an Emerald Tablet for the 21st Century would look something like this: 36. Emerald Tablet workbook. Athanor Books, 1999. ISBN: 0-9637914-4-3 This workbook is a guided tour through the steps of the Emerald Formula. There are alchemical mandalas and symbolic drawings actually used by the alchemists to illustrate the principles of the Emerald Tablet, as well as interpretations and guided meditations to accompany them. Most engravings have never before been published to a wide audience and date back over five hundred years; others have been restored with symbolic colors to convey their archetypal content. [By D.W. Hauck?] 37. Grail version of the Tablet. [http://www.alchemylab.com/ grail_version_of_emerald_tablet.htm]. The ET in the shape of a Grail 38. Hermes Trismegistus. [Aureus]. Rosicrucian Brotherhood, c. 1907-1908. Book or magazine article(s)? 39. Hermes Trismegistus. [Aureus] 'Aureus': the golden tractate of ..., concerning the physical secret of the Philosopher's Stone. In seven sections. Bath Occult Reprints. Bath: R. H. Fryar, 1886. 40. Hermes Trismegistus. "[Aureus] 'Aureus': the golden tractate of ..., concerning the physical secret of the Philosopher's Stone. In seven sections." In Alchemy rediscovered and restored, ed. A. Cockren, 131-148. , 1940. 41. Hermes Trismegistus. [Aureus] Hermetis Trismegisti Tractatus Aureus. [Design]. The tree of alchimi; redrawn from an original manuscript 1577. The leaves of Hermes' sacred tree. In his Key to Alchemy, Samuel Norton divides into fourteen parts the processes or states though which the alchemical substances pass from the time they are first placed in the test tube untill ready as medicines for plants, minerals or men: Printed fro J. Harris and T. Hawkins 1692. The Golden Work of of Hermes Trismegistus, Translated out of Hebrew into Arabick, then into Greek, afterwards into Latin; and now done out of Latin into English; claused and largely commented upon by William Salmon Professor of Physick. [Richardson (TX)]: [R.A.M.S.], n.d. [1], 150p. 42. Hermes Trismegistus. "[Aureus] Hermetis Trismegisti Tractatus Aureus. The gold work of ... translated out of Hebrew into Arabick, then into Greek, and afterwards into Latin; and now done out of Latin into English, claused and largely commented upon, by William Salmon." In Medicina practica, ed. William Salmon, 177-283. , 1707. 43. Hermes Trismegistus. [Aureus] The Golden Tractate of Hermes Trismegistus: Aureus or the Golden Tractate of Hermes. [http://www.hermetics.org/pdf/ goldentractateofhermestrismegistus.pdf]. 8p. 44. Hermes Trismegistus. [Aureus] The Golden Tractate of Hermes Trismegistus: Aureus or the Golden Tractate of Hermes. [ http://www.sacred- texts.com/alc/goldtrac.htm]. The Translation here used and followed is from that notable work, "A Suggestive Inquiry into the Hermetic Mystery," (London, 1850.) 45. Hermes Trismegistus. "[Aureus] The golden treatise of ..., concerning the physical secret of the Philosopher's Stone. In seven sections." In Philosophers Stone, ed. Israel Regardie, 30-41. . 46. Hermes Trismegistus. [Divine pymander] Corpus Hermeticum - John Everard. [http://www.levity.com/alchemy/ corpherm.html]. A portal page to the 17 books. "The Divine Pymander in XVII books.. London 1650. This was translated by John Everard from the Ficino Latin translation" 47. Hermes Trismegistus.[Divine pymander] Hermes Mercurius Trismegistus : his Divine Pymander. Also, the Asistic mystery, the Smaragdine table and the Song of Brahm / Ed. by Paschal Beverly Randolph. Edited by Paschal Beverley Randolph. Boston (MA): Rosicrucian Publ. Co., 1871. 148p. 48. Hermes Trismegistus.[Divine pymander] Hermes Mercurius Trismegistus : his Divine Pymander. Also, the Asistic mystery, the Smaragdine table and the Song of Brahm / Ed. by Paschal Beverly Randolph. Edited by Paschal Beverley Randolph. Toledo (OH): P.B. Randolph, 1889. 144, xvii p. 49. Hermes Trismegistus. [Divine pymander] Hermes Mercurius Trismegistus, his Divine Pymander, in seventeen books. Together with his second book called Asclepius; containing fifteen chapters, with a commentary. Translated formerly out of the Arabick into Greek, and thence into Latine, and Dutch, and now out of the original into English; by that learned divine Dr. Everard. London: Printed by J.S. for Tho. Brewster in Pauls Church-yard near the West-end, 1657. [14], 246 p.; [2], 127, [3] p. Available through Early English Books Online. "Hermes Trismegistus his second book called Asclepius" has special t.p. and pagination 50. Hermes Trismegistus. [Divine pymander] Hermes Mercurius Trismegistus, his Divine Pymander, in seventeen books. Together with his second book called Asclepius; containing fifteen chapters, with a commentary. Translated formerly out of the Arabick into Greek, and thence into Latine, and Dutch, and now out of the original into English; by that learned divine Dr. Everard. London: 1657; reprint, Ann Arbor (MI): University Microfilms, 1966. 1 reel Alos UMI, 1982 51. Hermes Trismegistus. [Divine pymander] Hermes Mercurius Trismegistus, his Divine Pymander, in seventeen books. Together with his second book called Asclepius; containing fifteen chapters, with a commentary. Translated formerly out of the Arabick into Greek, and thence into Latine, and Dutch, and now out of the original into English; by that learned divine Dr. Everard. London: J.S. for Tho. Brewster, 1657; reprint, Whittlesey: J. Green, [1805?]. 105p. 52. Hermes Trismegistus. [Divine pymander] The divine pymander. [http://www.alchemylab.com/pymander.htm]. From Pymander: Divine Mind of the Sovereignity, the Shepherd of Men. Attributed to Hermes Trismegistus in the Corpus Hermeticum 53. Hermes Trismegistus.[Divine pymander] The Divine Pymander of Hermes Mecurius Trismegistus; by John Everard Translator. Wizards Bookshelf, 2000. 140p. 54. Hermes Trismegistus. [Divine pymander] The divine pymander of Hermes Mercurius Trismegistus, in XVII. books. Translated formerly out of the Arabick into Greek, and thence into Latine, and Dutch, and now out of the original into English; by that learned divine Dr. Everard. London: printed by Robert White, for Tho. Brewster, and Greg. Moule, at the Three Bibles in the Poultrey, under Mildreds Church, 1650. [16], 215, [1] p. "To the reader" signed: J.F. 55. Hermes Trismegistus. [Divine pymander] The divine pymander of Hermes Mercurius Trismegistus, in XVII. books. Translated formerly out of the Arabick into Greek, and thence into Latine, and Dutch, and now out of the original into English; by that learned divine Dr. Everard. London: 1650; reprint, Ann Arbor (MI): University Microfilms International, 1996. 1 reel "To the reader" signed: J.F. 56. Hermes Trismegistus.[Divine pymander] The divine pymander of Hermes Mercurius Trismegistus. Translated from the Arabic by Dr. Everard. (1650) With introduction & preliminary essay, by Hargrave Jennings. Edited by Hargrave Jennings. Translated by John Everard. London: Redway for R.H. Fryar, 1884. xiv, 112 p. Bath Occult Reprints 1. Includes Also Fragments and Asclepius on Initiation 57. Hermes Trismegistus.[Divine pymander] The divine Pymander of Hermes Mercurius Trismegistus. Translated from the Arabic by Dr. Everard. With introd. & preliminary essay by Hargrave Jennings. Edited by Hargrave Jennings. Translated by John Everard. Madras: P. Kailasam Bros, 1884. xiv, 112 p. 58. Hermes Trismegistus.[Divine pymander] The divine Pymander of Hermes Mercurius Trismegistus. Translated from the Arabic by Dr. Everard. With introd. & preliminary essay by Hargrave Jennings. Madras, India, P. Kailasam Bros., 1884. Edited by Hargrave Jennings. Translated by John Everard. Madras: 1884; reprint, Minneapolis (MN): Wizards Bookshelf, 1973. xiv, 112 p. 59. Hermes Trismegistus.[Divine pymander] The divine Pymander of Hermes Mercurius Trismegistus. Translated from the Arabic by Dr. Everard. With introd. & preliminary essay by Hargrave Jennings. Madras, India, P. Kailasam Bros., 1884. Edited by Hargrave Jennings. Translated by John Everard. Madras: 1884; reprint, Minneapolis (MN): Wizards Bookshelf, 1973. xiv, 112 p. 60. Hermes Trismegistus. [Divine pymander] The divine pymander of Hermes Trismegistus. Shrine of Wisdom 4, no. 13 (Autumn 1922): 1-9. ibid (14) Winter 1922, 33-41; ibid (15) Spring 1923, 73-82; ibid (16) Summer 1923, 105- 113; ibid 5(17) Autumn 1923, 1-10 61. Hermes Trismegistus. [Divine pymander] The divine pymander of Hermes Trismegistus; an endeavour to systematise and elucidate the Corpus Hermeticum. By the editors of Shrine of Wisdom. London: Shrine of Wisdom, 1923. 54p. Shrine of Wisdom, manual no 7 62. Hermes Trismegistus. [Divine pymander] The divine pymander of Hermes Trismegistus; an endeavour to systematise and elucidate the Corpus Hermeticum. By the editors of Shrine of Wisdom. 2nd ed ed. Shrine of Wisdom, 1935. Shrine of Wisdom, manual no 7 63. Hermes Trismegistus. [Divine pymander] The divine pymander of Hermes Trismegistus; an endeavour to systematise and elucidate the Corpus Hermeticum. By the editors of Shrine of Wisdom. 3rd ed ed. Shrine of Wisdom, 1948. Shrine of Wisdom, manual no 7 64. Hermes Trismegistus. [Divine pymander] The divine pymander of Hermes Trismegistus; an endeavour to systematise and elucidate the Corpus Hermeticum. By the editors of Shrine of Wisdom. 4th ed ed. Fintry: Shrine of Wisdom, 1955. 53p. Shrine of Wisdom manual no 7 65. Hermes Trismegistus.[Divine pymander] The Divine Pymander of Hermes Trismegistus; by George Robert Stowe Mead Translator. Translated by George Robert Stow Mead. Holmes Publishing Group, 1990. 66. Hermes Trismegistus. [Divine pymander] The divine pymander of Hermes Trismegistus; reprinted from the Old English translation [by J. Everard]. J Specul Philos 20 (1886): 225-269. ibid 337-374 67. Hermes Trismegistus.[Divine pymander] The Divine Pymander. Translated by Everard. Intro by Hargrave Jennings. Wizards Bookshelf, 1978. 68. Hermes Trismegistus.[Divine pymander] The pymander of Hermes with a preface by the ditor. Edited by William Wynn Westcott. London: Theosophical Publ. Soc., 1894. 117p. Collectanea Hermetica, Vol. 2 69. Hermes Trismegistus. "[Emerald table] Emerald table." In The lives of the alchemystical philosophers, ed. Francis Barrett, 383-384. London: , 1814. 70. Hermes Trismegistus. [Emerald table] Emerald Tablet of Hermes; translated by Patrick Smith. Holmes Pub Group, 1997. ISBN: 1-558-18360-4 "This edition of the Emerald Tablet which in which Hortulanus gives commentary of the thirteen "stanzas" of the Hermes most famous work. The translation by Patrick J. Smith is readable with explanatory notes. There is a short introduction which attempts to give a concise history of the Emerald Tablet, then proceeds from there to read the Tablet in full, while thereafter is the commentary then notes. Not a long book, however the dialect of the times is enough to slow the reader down a bit, not to mention the dense subject matter. Its not an entirely entertaining book, but fascinating in itself is the Emerald Tablet. The notes are without references, however well written in a dry, scholarly form" 71. Hermes Trismegistus. [Emerald table] The Emerald Table by R. Steele and D.W. Singer. Proc Roy Soc Med Sect Hist Med 21 (1928): 41-57. 72. Hermes Trismegistus. [Emerald table] The Emerald Table of Hermes Trismegistus; three Latin versions which were current among later alchemists by T.L. Davis. J Chem Educ 3, no. 8 (Aug 1926): 863-875. Includes also the commentary of Hortolanus 73. Hermes Trismegistus. [Emerald table] The Emerald Tablet of Hermes: multiple translations. [http://www.hermetics. org/pdf/ontablet.pdf]. 2002. (c) Blackmask Online. 22p. Contents: · History of the Tablet; Translations From Jabir ibn Hayyan; Another Arabic Version (from the German of Ruska, translated by 'Anonymous'); Twelfth Century Latin; Translation from Aurelium Occultae Philosophorum..Georgio Beato; Translation of Issac Newton c. 1680; Translation from Kriegsmann (?) alledgedly from the Phoenician; From Sigismund Bacstrom (allegedly translated from Chaldean); From Madame Blavatsky; From Fulcanelli (translated from the French by Sieveking); From Fulcanelli, new translation; From Idres Shah; Hypothetical Chinese Original; Textual remarks; Ccommentaries; General; A commentary of Ibn Umail; Appendix; Translation of same source, made c. 1485; Bibliography 74. Hermes Trismegistus. "[Emerald table] The Smaragdine table." In Five treatises of the Philosophers' Stone, 1p.]. London: , 1652. 75. Hermes Trismegistus. [Emerald table] The Smaragdine table; annotated by "Styx". Occult Mag 2, no. 21-23 (Oct-Dec 1886): 71-72. 76. Hermes Trismegistus. "[Seven chapters] Seven golden chapters." In Lives of the alchemystical philosophers, ed. Francis Barrett, 366-383. , 1814. 77. Hermes Trismegistus. [Seven chapters] The Seven Chapters, with explanatory notes by M. S. Churchill. Chymia 12 (1967): 25-57. Translated by M.S. Churchill. 78. Hermes Trismegistus. "The Emerald table (Tabula Smaragdina)." In The alchemy reader, ed. Stanton J. Linden, 27-28. , 2003. 79. Hermes Trismegistus. The Golden Tractate of Hermes Trismegistus. [http://www.levity.com/alchemy/goldtrac.html]. This is taken from "Aureus:" The Golden Tractate of Hermes Trismegistus. Concerning the Physical Secret of the Philosopher's Stone. In Seven Sections. With an Introductory Essay by John Yarker, Esq. Edited and Published for Friends (200 copies only): Robt. H. Fryar,Bath. 1886. Transcribed by Frank Modica. From the original "[ The Translation here used and followed is from that notable work, "A Suggestive Inquiry into the Hermetic Mystery," (London, 1850.) ] " 80. Hermes Trismegistus. The Golden Treatise of Hermes Trismegistus : concerning the physical secret of the philosopher's stone / the translation and commentary of Mary Anne Atwood & the text of Barrett's version with additional notes by Patrick J. Smith. Edmonds (WA): Holmes Publishing Group, 1998. 49p. ISBN: 1558183582 81. Hermes Trismegistus.Hymns of Hermes; translated by George Robert Stowe Mead. Translated by George Robert Stowe Mead. Holmes Publishing Group, 1991. 32p. "These Writings Are Attributed to Hermes Trismegistus an Ancient Egyptian the Founder of All Arts and Sciences Both Mundane and Spiritual. Rather Than Being an Actual Person Hermes Is, in Reality, the Egyptian Personification of the Gnostic Revealer. In Addition to Providing Translations of the Beautiful Greek Hymns From the Ancient Hermetic Writing, Mead Offers an Interpretation Which Is Sympathetic Personal and Full of Insight. This Little Volume Which Might Well Be Called Initiatory Is an Excellent Introduction to the Hermetic Gnosis" 82. Hermes Trismegistus. The secrets of Hermes by L. Thorndike. Isis 27, no. 1 (May 1937): 53-62. Translated by Lynn Thorndike. 83. Hermes Trismegistus. Seven salts of Hermes by L. Thorndike. Isis 14, no. 1 (May 1930): 187-188. Translated by Lynn Thorndike. 84. Hermes Trismegistus. "The Smaragdine Table of Hermes Trismegistus of alchemy." In The mirror of alchemy composed by the thrice-famous and learned Fryer, Roger Bachon, ed. Roger Bacon. London: , 1597. 85. Latz, Gottlieb. Secret of the Emerald Tablet. Chapter 1: The origin of the Emerald Tablet. Translated by Dennis W. Hauck. [ http://www.alchemylab.com/latz.htm]. An extract from The secret of the Emerald Tablet (which is an extract from Latz's Die Alchemie) 86. Mead, George Robert Stow. Virgin of the world, or apple of the eye of the world. Holmes Publishing Group, 1990. 32p. 87. A New English translation of the Emerald Tablet. [http://www.alchemylab.com/emerald_tablet.htm]. 88. Shroeder, John. Dr Bacstrom and the Tabula Smaragdina. Cauda Pavonis 3, no. 1 (Spring 1984): 1-2. 89. A Sketch of what the Phoenician Emerald Tablet might have looked like. [http://www.alchemylab.com/ phoenician_tablet.htm]. 90. Tabula Smaragdina from the Geheime figuren. [http://www.levity.com/alchemy/emer_gf.html]. 91. Turner, Janet K. On the Emerald Tablet of Hermes. Alchemy J 3, no. 4 (Autumn 2002). [http://www.alchemylab.com/AJ3-4.htm]. 1A(32) [HER]-3FR 92. Clark, Rawn. [Emerald table] Commentary on the Emerald Tablet Of Hermes. [http://www.levity.com/alchemy/ rawn_cla.html]. 8 Feb 1996. 93. Duquette, L.M. "The Emerald Tablet of Hermes." In The Golden Dawn Journal, Book III: The Art of Hermes, eds. C. Cicero and S.T. Cicero. St Paul (MN): Llewellyn, 1998. 94. Everard, John. [Emerald table] Everard's commentary on Emerald Tablet. Tabula Smaragdina or The Table of Emerald said to be found in the Sepulchre of Hermes with glosses (in italic) by John Everard, Doctor of Divinity. [http://www.levity.com/alchemy/everard.html]. Transcribed from Ms. Ashmole 1440 95. Fisher, Bruce S. The Emerald Tablet - an interpretation. . 72p. A detailed interpretation of and commentary on the ancient and fundamental alchemical formula contained in this great Hermetic statement 96. Gaster, M. The Tabula Smaragdina. The Quest 21, no. 2 (Jan 1930): 165-169. 97. Glory of the World. [http:// www.levity.com/alchemy/emerglor.html]. "This text is included in the Musaeum Hermeticum of 1625, though it was first published in German as Gloria Mundi sonsten Paradeiss Taffel, Frankfurt, 1620. Contained in the third part is an explanation of the Emerald Tablet" 98. Hermes Trismegistus. [Emerald table] Glory of the world. [http://www.sacred- texts.com/alc/emerglor.htm]. [20031206]. Emerald Table and Explanation 99. Hermes Trismegistus. [Emerald table] The Emerald Table of Hermes Trismegistus; translated by Dr. Juliet Ashley, commentary by Dr. John Gilbert. [http://www.alchemicalorder.com/articles/ emerald.htm]. 100. Hermes Trismegistus. [Emerald table] The Emerald Tablet. [http://universalgnostic.com/ reading/mystic/Emerald_Tablet.htm]. "The text given here was translated by Drs. Rhodonn Starrus and Betty Jean McCloud Reeves in about 1954. The commentary was done by two of their students, Bishops John Gilbert, Ph.D., D.D. and Rita Baker, D.D. at Universal Seminary during 1962 - 1963" 101. Historical note concerning the Emerald Tablet. Hermetic J, no. 15 (Spring 1982): 35-39. Included as an Appendix to the anonymous Les meditations sur les Arcanes Majeurs du Tarot. Translated by Robert Powell 102. Holmyard, Eric John. The Emerald table. Nature 112, no. 2814 (6 Oct 1923): 525- 526.

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Theophrastus Paracelsus Coelum Philosophorum Theophrastus Paracelsus The Aurora of the Philosophers Theophrastus [http://www.hermetics.org/pdf/sixkeysofeudoxos.pdf]. 9p. 145. Eudoxus. Six keys of Aureolus Theophrastus Bombastus Von Hohenheim, Called Paracelsus, Is Known for the.
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