![]() ![]() With Smith's death in 1832, the copy was passed on to Frederick Hockley. Graham on behalf of a Magical organization known as "the Society of the Mercurii." In the hands of the Mercurii, it came into the possession of Robert Cross Smith in 1822, who had John Palmer copy it. Upon his death in the 1820s, it passed hands to a bookshop owned by John Denley, bought by an occultist named George W. This version was owned by artist Richard Cosway. This version was either copied or translated by Englishman John Porter in 1583. The most detailed version is a direct but poor translation from English to Latin. Thomas Rudd titles his copy of the Ars Goetia as Liber Malorum Spirituum. Weyer, in his Pseudomonarchia Daemonum, lists his source as Liber officiorum spirituum. Johannes Trithemius mentions two separate works ( Liber quoque Officiorum, and De Officiis Spirituum), indicating that the text may have branched off by his time. 2.1 Demons shared by this and other grimoires. ![]()
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