Aurora, that is, the day-spring, or dawning of the day in the Orient, or morning-rednesse in the rising of the sun, that is, the root or mother of philosophie, astrologie, & theologie from the true ground, or a description of nature ... all this set down diligently from a true ground in the knowledge of the spirit, and in the impulse of God / by Jacob Behme, Teutonick philosopher ...
About this Item
Title
Aurora, that is, the day-spring, or dawning of the day in the Orient, or morning-rednesse in the rising of the sun, that is, the root or mother of philosophie, astrologie, & theologie from the true ground, or a description of nature ... all this set down diligently from a true ground in the knowledge of the spirit, and in the impulse of God / by Jacob Behme, Teutonick philosopher ...
Author
Böhme, Jakob, 1575-1624.
Publication
London :: Printed by John Streater for Giles Calvert ...,
1656.
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Subject terms
Mysticism -- History.
Link to this Item
http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A28515.0001.001
Cite this Item
"Aurora, that is, the day-spring, or dawning of the day in the Orient, or morning-rednesse in the rising of the sun, that is, the root or mother of philosophie, astrologie, & theologie from the true ground, or a description of nature ... all this set down diligently from a true ground in the knowledge of the spirit, and in the impulse of God / by Jacob Behme, Teutonick philosopher ..." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A28515.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed April 26, 2025.
Pages
descriptionPage [unnumbered]
Note
* 1.1 I advertise the Reader who loveth God; that this
booke the Aurora or Morn∣ing
Rednesse, was not finish∣ed:
for the Devil intended to put a stop to it
and suppresse it, when he preceived that the
Day would break forth therein. And
the Day hath cleerly made haste after the
Morning Rednesse, so that it is become ve∣ry
Light. There want yet about Thirtie
sheets to the end of it. But being the storm hath
broken them off, therefore it was not finished;
and in ••heme 〈◊〉〈◊〉 while it is c••me to be Day,
so that the Morning Rednesse is passed a∣way,
and since that time, the worke hath
gone on by Day. And it shall so stand, for
an eternal Remembrance,
being the defect herein, is supplyed in the
* 1.2other Books.
Jacob Behme
1620.
Notes
* 1.1
See Behmes third Epistle▪ to Abraham von Somer∣feld, vers. 30. anno 1620.