Difference between revisions of "Meines Sohns Name ist doch wahr and O wehe bring mir ein nackends Weib"
From Theatrum Paracelsicum
(Created page with "<i>Von Bereitung des gebenedeiten philosophischen Steins</i> (§ 4.53), also attributed to Caspar Hartung vom Hoff and first printed in 1603 in Paracelsus’s <i>Opera</i> edited by Ps.-Huser, contains two poems that are therefore indirectly attributed to Paracelsus. {{Heading|level=3|align=left|before=1|family=serif|bold=0|text=I. Basic information}} (1) 8 verses, ca. 50 words (2) 5 verses, ca. 40 words The second one is a fragment of a longer and well known alch...") |
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Latest revision as of 12:05, 7 July 2022
Von Bereitung des gebenedeiten philosophischen Steins (§ 4.53), also attributed to Caspar Hartung vom Hoff and first printed in 1603 in Paracelsus’s Opera edited by Ps.-Huser, contains two poems that are therefore indirectly attributed to Paracelsus.
I. Basic information
(1) 8 verses, ca. 50 words
(2) 5 verses, ca. 40 words
The second one is a fragment of a longer and well known alchemical poem edited by Joachim Telle in 1980.
Further bibliographical references:
Joachim Telle, Sol und Luna. Literar- und alchemiegeschichtliche Studien zu einem altdeutschen Bildgedicht (Hürtgenwald, 1980), 126–127.
Telle, “‘Wo sind meine Vers’?’” (2008), 335.