Des Vermis Mysteriis [patched] Access

The text is pseudepigraphically attributed to , a 16th-century Belgian sorcerer, alchemist, and alleged diabolist. According to tradition, Prinn traveled extensively in the Middle East, Egypt, and the ruins of Babylon, where he claimed to have decoded pre-diluvian tablets written in a cuneiform-like script.

: Prinn allegedly wrote the manuscript while imprisoned for witchcraft in Brussels; it was published in Cologne in 1542, shortly after he was burned at the stake. Thematic Content des vermis mysteriis

Yellow (Low but persistent). Prolonged study may lead to nihilistic obsession with decay and the perception of all living tissue as “temporary housing for larval consciousness.” The text is pseudepigraphically attributed to , a

Des Vermis Mysteriis has appeared in various forms of media outside of the original pulp magazines: The text is pseudepigraphically attributed to