The Signature of All Things (1621) presents B0h0me0s theosophy: every being bears a 'signature' that reveals its origin in the divine ground. From the Ungrund to nature0s birth, he maps how wrath and love, bitter and sweet, sulfur, mercury, and salt articulate the One into the manifold. Mixing Scripture with Paracelsian natural philosophy, he reads plants, stones, and stars as hieroglyphs; the style is visionary, metaphor-rich, diagrammatic, and unscholastic. A shoemaker of G0rlitz, B0h0me underwent a decisive illumination around 1600 when reflected light on a pewter dish disclosed the inner signature of things. Censured after Aurora by Lutheran authorities, he wrote this treatise to vindicate a devout reading of nature beside Scripture. He draws on Tauler and the Theologia Germanica, on Paracelsus, and on artisanal knowledge of fire and matter amid the unsettled onset of the Thirty Years0 War. Scholars and seekers alike will find here a rigorous, poetic grammar for reading creation. Admirers of Blake, Novalis, Schelling, or Hegel will recognize a crucial ancestor; historians of science and religion will meet a seminal interpreter of Paracelsian nature. Read slowly, attending to symbols and contraries, and let B0h0me teach you to discern the world0s signatures with humility and intellectual audacity.
Quickie Classics summarizes timeless works with precision, preserving the author's voice and keeping the prose clear, fast, and readable-distilled, never diluted. Enriched Edition extras: Introduction · Synopsis · Historical Context · Author Biography · Brief Analysis · 4 Reflection Q&As · Editorial Footnotes.