1887, and from Light, and printed
privately
by Grace Shaw
Duff.
Duff.
Cambridge History of English Literature - 1908 - v09
(Preface by Sparrow.
] (17).
Aurora. That is, the Day-Spring. . . . By Jacob Behme. . . . 1656. [Preface
by Sparrow. ] (1).
The Fifth Book of the Authour. . . . 1659. [Preface by Sparrow. ] (5).
Several Treatises of Jacob Bebme. . . . Englished by John Sparrow. . . . 1661.
(6), (26), (7), (28), (22), (29), letter 6 of (32) i, re-translated.
The Remainder of Books written By Jacob Behme. Englished by John
Sparrow. . . . 1662. (32) iii and (11), (10), (12), (16), (25), (32) ii.
## p. 518 (#542) ############################################
518
Bibliography
•
The Way to Christ Discovered. . . . Manchester. . . . 1752. [A reprint b
Byrom of Blunden's edn, 1648. ]
The Way to Christ . . . also . . . the Four Complexions. Bath, 1775. [With
preface; a different translation from H. Blunden's, 1648 and 1654. )
(4) Biographical and Critical
[The earliest (and best) life of Boehme is that written by his friend Abraham
von Franckenberg, in the printed editions always dated 1651, but written by
Franckenberg (in Latin) in 1637. It reached Amsterdam, and was translated
into German as early as 1638-and probably was circulated in MS (see a letter
from 'E. H. ' from Görlitz, 21 Feb. 1669, printed by Francis Okely, in his
Memoirs of J. B. , 1780, p. 122). It is printed in many editions of Boehmet
works, as, for instance, in the Forty Questions, pub. 1665 in London, or in
German, in the 1682 edition, Amsterdam, and it forms the basis of all the
other lives, such as the earliest English one below, or that prefixed to ‘Law
edition. For a collection (translated into English) of all documents giving
firsthand information as to Boehme's life and work, see Francis Okely's
Memoirs, 1780, below. ]
Anderdon, J. One Blow at Babel in those of the People called Behmenites
.
Whose Foundation is . . . upon their own Carnal Conceptions, begotten in
their Imaginations upon Jacob Behmen's Writings. . . . 1662.
Boutroux, E. Le Philosophe allemand Jacob Boehme. Paris, Alcan, 1888
Brockhaus' Konversations-Lexikon. Leipzig, 1892. New edn 1901. Artick,
Böhme.
Deussen, Paul. Jakob Böhme. Über sein Leben und seine Philosophie.
Kiel, 1897.
Ederheimer, E. Jakob Böhme und die Romantiker.
Heidelberg, 1904
[J. B. 's influence on Tieck and Novalis. ]
Fechner, H. A. Jakob Böhme, sein Leben und seine Schriften, in Nenes
Lausitzches Magazin, vol. XXXIII, PP. 313-446. Görlitz, 1857. (Reviewed
in Saturday Review, 12 July 1873. ]
Hamberger, Julins. Die Lehre des deutschen Philosophen Jakob Böhme. . . .
Munich, 1844.
Harless, G. C. A. von. Jakob Böhme und die Alchymisten. . . . Berlin, 1870.
Hartmann, F. The Life and Doctrines of . . . Jacob Boehme, 1891.
Hotham, Charles. Ad Philosophiam Teutonicam Manuductio. . . . 1648.
Translated under title: Introduction to the Teutonick Philosophie.
Being a Determination concerning the Original of the Soul. . . . By
C. Hotham, one of the Fellows of Peter-House. . . . 1650. [Botham later
(1654) translated the Four Complexions. ]
Hotham, Durand. The Life of Jacob Behmen, written by Durand Hotham,
Esquire, Novemb. 1653. . . . 1654.
As to Charles Hotham and his brother, see Mullinger, J. Bass, The
University of Cambridge, vol. 111, p. 418.
Life, The, of one Jacob Boehmen: Who although he were a Very Meane man,
yet wrote the most Wonderfull deepe Knowledge in Naturall and Divine
Things That any hath been knowne to doe since the Apostles Times. . .
1644.
Martensen, H. L. Jacob Boehme: his life and teaching . . . translated from
the Danish by T. Rhys Evans. 1885. [Reviewed in Saturday Review,
26 June 1886, pp. 895-6. ]
Mercurius Teutonicns. . . . Being Divers Prophetical Passages . . . Gathered
out of the mysticall Writings of . . . Behmen. . . . 1649 and 1656.
[More, Henry. ] Philosophiæ Teutonicæ Censura. 1670.
## p. 519 (#543) ############################################
Chapter XII
519
. .
.
Okely, Francis. Memoirs of the Life, Death, Burial and Wonderful Writings
of Jacob Behmen. . . . Northampton, 1780.
Penny, Mrs A. J. An Introduction to the Study of Jacob Boehme’s writings.
New York, 1901. [Essays collected from Light and Life, Nov. , Dec.
1885 and Feb.
1887, and from Light, and printed privately by Grace Shaw
Duff. Most valuable for serious study, but unfortunately not in the
B. M. )
Poiret, Pierre. Petri Poiret Bibliotheca Mysticorum selecta. . . . Amsterdam,
1708. (Jacob Boehme, pp. 162-76, 186. ]
1. P[ordage), J. A Treatise of Eternal Nature with Her seven Essential
Forms, J. P. M. D. . . . 1681. [An account of Boehme's philosophy
by Dr Pordage, bound up with Theologia Mystica. . . . By J. P. M. D. . . .
1683,' and not separately catalogued in B. M. ]
Taylor, E. J. Behmen's Theosophick philosophy unfolded. 1691.
Theological and Practical Divinity: with Extracts of several Treatises written
by Jacob Behmen. . . . Published By a Gentleman retired from Business.
. . . 1769.
A Compendious View of the Grounds of the Teutonick Philosophy.
With considerations by way of Enquiry into the . . . writings of Jacob
Behmen. . . . Published by a Gentleman retired from Business. . . . 1770.
Walton, C. Notes and Materials. . . . 1854. [See under Law. ]
Whyte, A. Jacob Behmen: An Appreciation. Edinburgh, 1894.
[Articles on Boehme, of great value, are]
Allen, G. W. A Master Mystic. An Introduction to the teaching of Jacob
Boehme, in the Theosophical Review, 1904-5, vol. xxxv, pp. 202, 321, 420,
and vol. xxxvi, p. 160.
A Series of 'Excerpts from Boehme' with comments, in The Seeker,
ed. Allen, G. W. , Nov. 1906, Aug. , Nov. 1907, May, Aug. , Nov. 1908, Feb. ,
May, Aug. , Nov. 1909 in progress).
[The influence of Boehme on Sir Isaac Newton is an interesting point
which cannot be developed here. Law definitely asserts that Newton owed
a debt to Boehme. See Some Animadversions upon Dr Trapp's Reply,
Works, vol. vi, pp. 314-15, The Spirit of Love, Works, vol. viii, p. 38, and
letter to Dr Cheyne, printed in Walton's Notes, p. 46, note. See, also,
Walton's Notes, p. 408, note, and 416, note; the Athenæum, 26 Jan. 1867,
p. 127, and Overton's William Law, p. 189. ]
•
B. Other Writers
Antoinette Bourignon (1616-1680)
(1) Works
Toutes les œuvres de Mlle Anthoinette Bourignon. 19 vols. Amsterdam,
1679–84 and 1686. [Ed. by Poiret, Pierre. ]
[Mademoiselle Bourignon knew Boehme's works, and had met admirers
of him in Amsterdam; she enumerates him with Tauler, à Kempis and
Engelbrecht in her list of inspired and illuminated men. Her works were
translated into English (in 1699, 1703, 1707, 1708, etc. ) and much read, more
especially in Scotland. )
(2) Biographical and Critical
Gordon, Alex. The Fortunes of a Flemish Mystic. A paper read before the
Liverpool Literary and Philosophical Society, 4 March 1872.
La vie de Damlle Antoinette Bourignon. Amsterdam, 1683. [By Poiret,
Pierre, translated by Dr Garden into English, in 1696. See below.
## p. 520 (#544) ############################################
520
Bibliography
Poiret also wrote an apologetic Mémoire of her in the Nouvelles de la rép.
des lettres, 1685, and defended her against V. L. von Seckendorf, 1686. )
Linde, Antonius von der. Antoinette Bourignon, das Licht der Welt.
Leiden, 1895. (This gives a very full account of her life and work, and of
the people closely connected with her, also a full list of her writings on
pp. 261-4, and of early lives and later accounts of her. ],
Macewen, Alex. R. Antoinette Bourignon, Quietist. 1910.
Select Lives of Foreigners, eminent in piety. 2nd edn. Bristol, 1796.
The Light of the World: A most True Relation of a Pilgrimess, M. Antonis
Bourignon, Travelling towards Eternity, To which is added A Preface to
the English Reader. 1696. (Preface by George Garden, an Aberdeen
minister (1650–78) who warmly esponsed Mlle Bourignon's views, and was
in consequence, in 1701, deposed by the General Assembly for teaching her
damnable errors. ' His chief opponent was Dr Cockburn, Episcopalian
minister of Aberdeen, who wrote Bourignianism Detected. Garden replied
to this as well as to Leslie's Preface to The Snake in the Grass, in his
Apology for M. Bourignon, 1699. His nephew, Garden, J. , also a mystic
,
was later a friend of Byrom; see Journal, vol. I, pt. 2, pp. 519-20 and
vol. 11, pt. 1, pp. 128-30. ]
(3) The Bourignon Controversy
Cockburn, John. Bourignianism Detected: or the Delusions and Errors of
Antonia Bourignon, and her Growing Sect. 1698.
A Letter from John Cockburn, D. D. To his Friend in London. 1698.
(Leslie, Charles. ] The Snake in the Grass. Third Edition. . . . 1698.
(Garden, Dr George. ) An Apology for M. Antonia Bourignon, in Four
Parts. 1699.
White, George. Advertisement anent the reading of the books of Antonia
Bourignon. Aberdeen, 1700.
[Barclay, Robert. ] A Modest and Serious Address to the well meaning
Followers of Ant. Bourignon. 1708.
Hog, James. Notes about the Spirit's Operations. . . . Edinburgh, 1709.
[In 1771 the ordination formula was drawn up by General Assembly
of the Free Kirk of Scotland, embracing a renunciation of Bourignian
errors, which remained until in 1844 ' Erastian’ was substituted. ]
Dionysius Andreas Freher (1649-1728)
A large quantity of MS writings (duplicates in B. M. and Dr Williams's
library), some few in Freher's hand, but mostly copied by his friend Leuchter,
They are commentaries on and expositions of Boehme, and were much prized
by Law, who himself copied out a number of them. Freher also left many
symbolical drawings, illustrating Boehme, which are very interesting. Some
of these were specially chosen out by Law,and
were reproduced in the edition
of Boehme's works (1764-81) which appeared after Law's death.
For some account of Freher by himself, see Walton's Notes and Materials,
p. 141, note; and, of his writings, with copious extracts from them, ibid.
Pp. 258-491, and for a list of the MSS, see Walton, pp. 679-84, or Appendir
B. to Barker's reprint of Boehme's Threefold Life of Man, 1909. There
are 27 vols. of Freher's MSS in the B. M. [Add. MSS 5767-5794).
Madame Guyon (1648-1717)
(1) Works
Lettres Chrétiennes et Spirituelles (Madame Guyon et Fénelon), à Londres
(Lyons), 1767-8. 5 vols.
Aurora. That is, the Day-Spring. . . . By Jacob Behme. . . . 1656. [Preface
by Sparrow. ] (1).
The Fifth Book of the Authour. . . . 1659. [Preface by Sparrow. ] (5).
Several Treatises of Jacob Bebme. . . . Englished by John Sparrow. . . . 1661.
(6), (26), (7), (28), (22), (29), letter 6 of (32) i, re-translated.
The Remainder of Books written By Jacob Behme. Englished by John
Sparrow. . . . 1662. (32) iii and (11), (10), (12), (16), (25), (32) ii.
## p. 518 (#542) ############################################
518
Bibliography
•
The Way to Christ Discovered. . . . Manchester. . . . 1752. [A reprint b
Byrom of Blunden's edn, 1648. ]
The Way to Christ . . . also . . . the Four Complexions. Bath, 1775. [With
preface; a different translation from H. Blunden's, 1648 and 1654. )
(4) Biographical and Critical
[The earliest (and best) life of Boehme is that written by his friend Abraham
von Franckenberg, in the printed editions always dated 1651, but written by
Franckenberg (in Latin) in 1637. It reached Amsterdam, and was translated
into German as early as 1638-and probably was circulated in MS (see a letter
from 'E. H. ' from Görlitz, 21 Feb. 1669, printed by Francis Okely, in his
Memoirs of J. B. , 1780, p. 122). It is printed in many editions of Boehmet
works, as, for instance, in the Forty Questions, pub. 1665 in London, or in
German, in the 1682 edition, Amsterdam, and it forms the basis of all the
other lives, such as the earliest English one below, or that prefixed to ‘Law
edition. For a collection (translated into English) of all documents giving
firsthand information as to Boehme's life and work, see Francis Okely's
Memoirs, 1780, below. ]
Anderdon, J. One Blow at Babel in those of the People called Behmenites
.
Whose Foundation is . . . upon their own Carnal Conceptions, begotten in
their Imaginations upon Jacob Behmen's Writings. . . . 1662.
Boutroux, E. Le Philosophe allemand Jacob Boehme. Paris, Alcan, 1888
Brockhaus' Konversations-Lexikon. Leipzig, 1892. New edn 1901. Artick,
Böhme.
Deussen, Paul. Jakob Böhme. Über sein Leben und seine Philosophie.
Kiel, 1897.
Ederheimer, E. Jakob Böhme und die Romantiker.
Heidelberg, 1904
[J. B. 's influence on Tieck and Novalis. ]
Fechner, H. A. Jakob Böhme, sein Leben und seine Schriften, in Nenes
Lausitzches Magazin, vol. XXXIII, PP. 313-446. Görlitz, 1857. (Reviewed
in Saturday Review, 12 July 1873. ]
Hamberger, Julins. Die Lehre des deutschen Philosophen Jakob Böhme. . . .
Munich, 1844.
Harless, G. C. A. von. Jakob Böhme und die Alchymisten. . . . Berlin, 1870.
Hartmann, F. The Life and Doctrines of . . . Jacob Boehme, 1891.
Hotham, Charles. Ad Philosophiam Teutonicam Manuductio. . . . 1648.
Translated under title: Introduction to the Teutonick Philosophie.
Being a Determination concerning the Original of the Soul. . . . By
C. Hotham, one of the Fellows of Peter-House. . . . 1650. [Botham later
(1654) translated the Four Complexions. ]
Hotham, Durand. The Life of Jacob Behmen, written by Durand Hotham,
Esquire, Novemb. 1653. . . . 1654.
As to Charles Hotham and his brother, see Mullinger, J. Bass, The
University of Cambridge, vol. 111, p. 418.
Life, The, of one Jacob Boehmen: Who although he were a Very Meane man,
yet wrote the most Wonderfull deepe Knowledge in Naturall and Divine
Things That any hath been knowne to doe since the Apostles Times. . .
1644.
Martensen, H. L. Jacob Boehme: his life and teaching . . . translated from
the Danish by T. Rhys Evans. 1885. [Reviewed in Saturday Review,
26 June 1886, pp. 895-6. ]
Mercurius Teutonicns. . . . Being Divers Prophetical Passages . . . Gathered
out of the mysticall Writings of . . . Behmen. . . . 1649 and 1656.
[More, Henry. ] Philosophiæ Teutonicæ Censura. 1670.
## p. 519 (#543) ############################################
Chapter XII
519
. .
.
Okely, Francis. Memoirs of the Life, Death, Burial and Wonderful Writings
of Jacob Behmen. . . . Northampton, 1780.
Penny, Mrs A. J. An Introduction to the Study of Jacob Boehme’s writings.
New York, 1901. [Essays collected from Light and Life, Nov. , Dec.
1885 and Feb.
1887, and from Light, and printed privately by Grace Shaw
Duff. Most valuable for serious study, but unfortunately not in the
B. M. )
Poiret, Pierre. Petri Poiret Bibliotheca Mysticorum selecta. . . . Amsterdam,
1708. (Jacob Boehme, pp. 162-76, 186. ]
1. P[ordage), J. A Treatise of Eternal Nature with Her seven Essential
Forms, J. P. M. D. . . . 1681. [An account of Boehme's philosophy
by Dr Pordage, bound up with Theologia Mystica. . . . By J. P. M. D. . . .
1683,' and not separately catalogued in B. M. ]
Taylor, E. J. Behmen's Theosophick philosophy unfolded. 1691.
Theological and Practical Divinity: with Extracts of several Treatises written
by Jacob Behmen. . . . Published By a Gentleman retired from Business.
. . . 1769.
A Compendious View of the Grounds of the Teutonick Philosophy.
With considerations by way of Enquiry into the . . . writings of Jacob
Behmen. . . . Published by a Gentleman retired from Business. . . . 1770.
Walton, C. Notes and Materials. . . . 1854. [See under Law. ]
Whyte, A. Jacob Behmen: An Appreciation. Edinburgh, 1894.
[Articles on Boehme, of great value, are]
Allen, G. W. A Master Mystic. An Introduction to the teaching of Jacob
Boehme, in the Theosophical Review, 1904-5, vol. xxxv, pp. 202, 321, 420,
and vol. xxxvi, p. 160.
A Series of 'Excerpts from Boehme' with comments, in The Seeker,
ed. Allen, G. W. , Nov. 1906, Aug. , Nov. 1907, May, Aug. , Nov. 1908, Feb. ,
May, Aug. , Nov. 1909 in progress).
[The influence of Boehme on Sir Isaac Newton is an interesting point
which cannot be developed here. Law definitely asserts that Newton owed
a debt to Boehme. See Some Animadversions upon Dr Trapp's Reply,
Works, vol. vi, pp. 314-15, The Spirit of Love, Works, vol. viii, p. 38, and
letter to Dr Cheyne, printed in Walton's Notes, p. 46, note. See, also,
Walton's Notes, p. 408, note, and 416, note; the Athenæum, 26 Jan. 1867,
p. 127, and Overton's William Law, p. 189. ]
•
B. Other Writers
Antoinette Bourignon (1616-1680)
(1) Works
Toutes les œuvres de Mlle Anthoinette Bourignon. 19 vols. Amsterdam,
1679–84 and 1686. [Ed. by Poiret, Pierre. ]
[Mademoiselle Bourignon knew Boehme's works, and had met admirers
of him in Amsterdam; she enumerates him with Tauler, à Kempis and
Engelbrecht in her list of inspired and illuminated men. Her works were
translated into English (in 1699, 1703, 1707, 1708, etc. ) and much read, more
especially in Scotland. )
(2) Biographical and Critical
Gordon, Alex. The Fortunes of a Flemish Mystic. A paper read before the
Liverpool Literary and Philosophical Society, 4 March 1872.
La vie de Damlle Antoinette Bourignon. Amsterdam, 1683. [By Poiret,
Pierre, translated by Dr Garden into English, in 1696. See below.
## p. 520 (#544) ############################################
520
Bibliography
Poiret also wrote an apologetic Mémoire of her in the Nouvelles de la rép.
des lettres, 1685, and defended her against V. L. von Seckendorf, 1686. )
Linde, Antonius von der. Antoinette Bourignon, das Licht der Welt.
Leiden, 1895. (This gives a very full account of her life and work, and of
the people closely connected with her, also a full list of her writings on
pp. 261-4, and of early lives and later accounts of her. ],
Macewen, Alex. R. Antoinette Bourignon, Quietist. 1910.
Select Lives of Foreigners, eminent in piety. 2nd edn. Bristol, 1796.
The Light of the World: A most True Relation of a Pilgrimess, M. Antonis
Bourignon, Travelling towards Eternity, To which is added A Preface to
the English Reader. 1696. (Preface by George Garden, an Aberdeen
minister (1650–78) who warmly esponsed Mlle Bourignon's views, and was
in consequence, in 1701, deposed by the General Assembly for teaching her
damnable errors. ' His chief opponent was Dr Cockburn, Episcopalian
minister of Aberdeen, who wrote Bourignianism Detected. Garden replied
to this as well as to Leslie's Preface to The Snake in the Grass, in his
Apology for M. Bourignon, 1699. His nephew, Garden, J. , also a mystic
,
was later a friend of Byrom; see Journal, vol. I, pt. 2, pp. 519-20 and
vol. 11, pt. 1, pp. 128-30. ]
(3) The Bourignon Controversy
Cockburn, John. Bourignianism Detected: or the Delusions and Errors of
Antonia Bourignon, and her Growing Sect. 1698.
A Letter from John Cockburn, D. D. To his Friend in London. 1698.
(Leslie, Charles. ] The Snake in the Grass. Third Edition. . . . 1698.
(Garden, Dr George. ) An Apology for M. Antonia Bourignon, in Four
Parts. 1699.
White, George. Advertisement anent the reading of the books of Antonia
Bourignon. Aberdeen, 1700.
[Barclay, Robert. ] A Modest and Serious Address to the well meaning
Followers of Ant. Bourignon. 1708.
Hog, James. Notes about the Spirit's Operations. . . . Edinburgh, 1709.
[In 1771 the ordination formula was drawn up by General Assembly
of the Free Kirk of Scotland, embracing a renunciation of Bourignian
errors, which remained until in 1844 ' Erastian’ was substituted. ]
Dionysius Andreas Freher (1649-1728)
A large quantity of MS writings (duplicates in B. M. and Dr Williams's
library), some few in Freher's hand, but mostly copied by his friend Leuchter,
They are commentaries on and expositions of Boehme, and were much prized
by Law, who himself copied out a number of them. Freher also left many
symbolical drawings, illustrating Boehme, which are very interesting. Some
of these were specially chosen out by Law,and
were reproduced in the edition
of Boehme's works (1764-81) which appeared after Law's death.
For some account of Freher by himself, see Walton's Notes and Materials,
p. 141, note; and, of his writings, with copious extracts from them, ibid.
Pp. 258-491, and for a list of the MSS, see Walton, pp. 679-84, or Appendir
B. to Barker's reprint of Boehme's Threefold Life of Man, 1909. There
are 27 vols. of Freher's MSS in the B. M. [Add. MSS 5767-5794).
Madame Guyon (1648-1717)
(1) Works
Lettres Chrétiennes et Spirituelles (Madame Guyon et Fénelon), à Londres
(Lyons), 1767-8. 5 vols.