Meines Sohns Name ist doch wahr and O wehe bring mir ein nackends Weib
From Theatrum Paracelsicum
Revision as of 12:05, 7 July 2022 by JP (talk | contribs) (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...")
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.