Sanctus Spiritus, The Long Hidden Friend John George Hohman Edited, illustrated & introuduced by Gemma Gary
Alongside our standard edition within our ‘Classic Grimoire Series’, we are now pleased to offer The Long Hidden Friend in a handy ‘pocket edition’. This is due to popular demand arising from the fact that the books itself was originally intended to be kept and carried as a personal charm of protection; as revealed by the book’s closing words:
Whosoever carries this book with him, is safe from all his enemies, visible or invisible; and whoever has this book with him cannot die without the holy corpse of Jesus Christ, nor drowned in any water, nor burn up in any fire, nor can any unjust sentence be passed upon him. So help me.
Written by John George Hohman, The Long Hidden Friend first appeared in 1820 in German as Der Lange Verborgene Freund, appearing later in English as Pow-Wows; or, Long Lost Friend. It is as a result of this book that the Dutch Pennsylvania tradition of folk-magic known as “Pow-Wow” became so named.
It is a fascinating collection of traditional European folk-magical formulas for a wide range of spells, simple rituals, charms, talismans, bindings, prayers, benedictions, magical folk-healing, recipes and remedies for humans and animals as well as various non-magical ‘tips’ for matters or rural and domestic life.
In editing this edition for Troy Books, Gemma Gary has arranged the formerly scattered and unstructured content into some order, organising the practices into the categories of Curative Arts, Animal Arts, Arts against Evildoers, Protective Arts and Propitious Arts; this final chapter detailing a diverse collection of magical and non magical practices for general success, good fortune, safety and wellbeing in a number of areas including divination, games and gambling, hunting and legal matters.
This edition is illustrated by Gemma’s line drawings, inspired by Dutch Pennsylvanian folk art, charms and traditional hex signs.
Contents: |
Pagination: 176 pages, line drawings and figures by Gemma Gary |
Introduction by Gemma Gary Preface Testimonials Curative Arts Animal Arts Arts against Evildoers Protective Arts Propitious Arts |