[665] Reprinted London, 1866; revised, 1889. Treatises of alchemy are also ascribed to Hermes in Sloane 2135, 15th century, and 2327, 14th century.
[666] Arezzo 232, 15th century, fols. 1-14, “Liber transmissus ab Alexandro rege ex libra Hermogenis”; Bodleian 67, fol. 33v (Secret of Secrets of the pseudo-Aristotle), “Et pater noster Hermogenes qui triplex est in philosophia optime philosophando dixit.”
[667] Opus minus, ed. Brewer (1859), in RS XV, 313.
[668] Arundel 377, 13th century, Philosophia magistri danielis de merlai, fols. 89r, 92v; these citations, like many others, are not included in V. Rose’s faulty list of Daniel’s authorities in his article, “Ptolemaeus und die Schule von Toledo,” Hermes, VIII (1874), 327-49.
[669] De animalibus, XX, i, 5, “dicit Hermes ad Esclepium.”
[670] The passages are mentioned in the chapter on William of Auvergne; see below, p. 350.
[671] Spec. astron., cap. 11 (Opera, ed. Borgnet, X, 641).
[672] A book on necromantic images by Hermes is listed in the 1412 A. D. catalogue of MSS of Amplonius: Math. 54.
[673] See in the same catalogue, Math. 9, Mercurii Colotidis liber prestigiorum.
[674] Opera, Venetiis, 1591, pp. 831, 898.