
Thrice-Greatest Hermes, Vol. 3, by G.R.S. Mead, [1906], at sacred-texts.com
| Ex. I. Of Piety and True Philosophy | |
| Commentary | |
| Ex. II. Of the Ineffability of God | |
| Commentary | |
| Ex. III. Of Truth | |
| Commentary | |
| Ex. IV. God, Nature and the Gods | |
| Commentary | |
| Ex. V. Of Matter | |
| Ex. VI. Of Time | |
| Ex. VII. Of Bodies Everlasting and Bodies Perishable | |
| Commentary | |
| Ex. VIII. Of Energy and Feeling | |
| Commentary | |
| Ex. IX. Of the Decans and the Stars | |
| Commentary | |
| Ex. X. Concerning the Rule of Providence, Necessity and Fate | |
| Commentary | |
| Ex. XI. Of Justice | |
| Commentary | |
| Ex. XII. Of Providence and Fate | |
| Ex. XIII. Of the Whole Economy | |
| Ex. XIV. Of Soul, I. | |
| Ex. XV. Of Soul, II. | |
| The Embryonic Stages of Incarnation | |
| Ex. XVI. Of Soul, III. | |
| Ex. XVII. Of Soul, IV. | |
| Ex. XVIII. Of Soul, V. | |
| Commentary | |
| Ex. XIX. Of Soul, VI. | |
| Commentary | |
| Ex. XX. The Power of Choice | |
| Commentary | |
| Ex. XXI. Of Isis to Horus | |
| Commentary | |
| Ex. XXII. An Apophthegm | |
| Ex. XXIII. From “Aphrodite” | |
| Commentary | |
| Ex. XXIV. A Hymn of the Gods | |
| Commentary | |
| Ex. XXV. The Virgin of the World, I. | |
| Ex. XXVI. The Virgin of the World, II. | |
| Commentary | |
| Argument | |
| Sources? | |
| The Direct Voice and the Books of Hermes | |
| Kamephis and the Dark Mystery | |
| Kneph-Kamephis | |
| Hermes I. and Hermes II. | |
| The Black Rite | |
| Black Land | |
| The Pupil of the Worlds Eye | |
| The Son of the Virgin | |
| The Mystery of the Birth of Horus | |
| “Ishon” | |
| The Sixty Soul-Regions | |
| Plutarchs Yogin | |
| The Plain of Truth | |
| The Boundaries of the Numbers which Pre-exist in the Soul | |
| The Mysterious “Cylinder” | |
| The Eagle, Lion, Dragon and Dolphin | |
| Momus | |
| The Mystic Geography of Sacred Lands | |
| Ex. XXVII. From the Sermon of Isis to Horus | |
| Commentary | |
| Argument | |
| Title and Ordering | |
| The Books of Isis and Horus | |
| The Watery Sphere and Subtle Body | |
| The Habitat of Encarnate Souls | 
| 
 | I. JUSTIN MARTYR | |
| i. | The Most Ancient of Philosophers | |
| 
 | The “Words of Ammon” | |
| 
 | The Ineffability of God | |
| ii. | Hermes and Asclepius Sons of God | |
| iii. | Hermes the Word who brings Tidings from God | |
| 
 | The Sons of God in Hellenistic Theology | |
| 
 | An Unverifiable Quotation | |
| 
 | ||
| 
 | II. ATHENAGORAS | |
| 
 | III. CLEMENT OF ALEXANDRIA | |
| i. | Many Hermeses and Asclepiuses | |
| ii. | The Apotheosis of Hermes and Asclepius | |
| iii. | The Books of Hermes | |
| 
 | The General Catalogue of the Egyptian Priestly Library | |
| 
 | ||
| 
 | IV. TERTULLIAN | |
| i. | Hermes the Master of all Physics | |
| ii. | Hermes the Writer of Scripture | |
| iii. | Hermes the First Preacher of Reincarnation | |
| iv. | Hermes on Metempsychosis | |
| 
 | Frag. I. | |
| 
 | ||
| 
 | V. CYPRIAN | |
| 
 | God is beyond all Understanding | |
| 
 | ||
| 
 | VI. ARNOBIUS | |
| 
 | The School of Hermes | |
| 
 | ||
| 
 | VII. LACTANTIUS | |
| i. | Thoyth-Hermes and his Books of the Gnosis | |
| 
 | Frag. II. | |
| 
 | The Historical Origin of the Hermetic Tradition | |
| ii. | Uranus, Cronus and Hermes, Adepts of the Perfect Science | |
| iii. | Divine Providence | |
| iv. | On Mortal and Immortal Sight | |
| 
 | Frag. III. | |
| v. | Man made after the Image of God | |
| vi. | Hermes the First Natural Philosopher | |
| vii. | The Daimon-Chief | |
| viii. | Devotion in God-Gnosis | |
| 
 | Frag. IV. | |
| ix. | The Cosmic Son of God | |
| 
 | Frag. V. | |
| x. | The Demiurge of God | |
| xi. | The Name of God | |
| 
 | Frag. VI. | |
| xii. | The Holy Word about the Lord of All | |
| 
 | Frag. VII. | |
| xiii. | His Own Father and Own Mother | |
| xiv. | The Power and Greatness of the Word | |
| xv. | The Fatherless and Motherless | |
| xvi. | Piety the Gnosis of God | |
| xvii. | The Only Way to Worship God | |
| xviii. | The Worthiest Sacrifice to God | |
| 
 | Frag. VIII. | |
| xix. | Man made in the Image of God | |
| xx. | Contemplation | |
| xxi. | The Dual Nature of Man | |
| 
 | Frag. IX. | |
| 
 | Wonder the Beginning of Philosophy | |
| xxii. | The Cosmic Restoration | |
| 
 | Frag. X. | |
| xxii. | Of Hermes and his Doctrine Concerning God | |
| xxiv. | A Repetition | |
| xxv. | Plato as Prophet follows Trismegistus | |
| 
 | ||
| 
 | VIII. AUGUSTINE | |
| i.-iii. | Three Quotations from the Old Latin Version of the “Perfect Sermon” | |
| 
 | ||
| 
 | IX. CYRIL OF ALEXANDRIA | |
| i. | Cyrils Corpus of XV. Books | |
| ii. | The Incorporeal Eye | |
| 
 | Frag. XI. | |
| iii. | The Heavenly Word Proceeding Forth | |
| 
 | Frag. XII. | |
| 
 | The Pyramid | |
| 
 | Frag. XIII. | |
| 
 | The Nature of Gods Intellectual World | |
| 
 | Frag. XIV. | |
| 
 | The Word of the Creator | |
| 
 | Frag. XV. | |
| iv. | Mind of Mind | |
| 
 | Frag. XVI. | |
| 
 | He is All | |
| 
 | Frag. XVII. | |
| 
 | Concerning Spirit | |
| 
 | Frag. XVIII. | |
| 
 | The “To Asclepius” of Cyrils Corpus | |
| v. | From “The Mind” | |
| vi. | Osiris and Thrice-greatest Agathodaimon | |
| 
 | Frag. XIX. | |
| 
 | “Let there be Earth!” | |
| 
 | Frag. XX. | |
| 
 | The Generation of the Sun | |
| 
 | Frag. XXI. | |
| 
 | “Let the Sun be!” | |
| 
 | Frag. XXII. | |
| vii. | The Firmament | |
| 
 | Frag. XXIII. | |
| viii. | From the “To Asclepius” | |
| ix. | The Sole Protection | |
| x. | The Supreme Artist | |
| 
 | Frag. XXIV. | |
| xi. | An Unreferenced Quotation | |
| 
 | Frag. XXV. | |
| 
 | ||
| 
 | X. SUIDAS | |
| 
 | Hermes speaks of the Trinity | |
| 
 | An Orphic Hymn | |
| 
 | ||
| 
 | XI. ANONYMOUS | 
| I. ZOSIMUS | |
| On the Anthrōpos-Doctrine | |
| The Processions of Fate | |
| “The Inner Door” | Against Magic | 
| Frag. XXVI. | |
| Thoth the First Man | |
| The Libraries of the Ptolemies | |
| Nikotheos | |
| From the Books of the Chaldæans | Man the Mind | 
| Frag. XXVII. | The Counterfeit Daimon | His Advice to Theosebeia | 
| 
 | II. JAMBLICHUS | Abammon the Teacher | Hermes the Inspirer | Those of the Hermaïc Nature | The Books of Hermes | The Monad from the One | The Tradition of the Trismegistic Literature | Bitys | Ostanes-Asclepius | From the Hermaïc Workings | The Cosmic Spheres | 
| 
 | III. JULIAN THE EMPEROR | The Disciples of Wisdom | 
| 
 | IV. FULGENTIUS THE MYTHOGRAPHER | 
| Frag. XXVIII. | 
| An Attempt at Classifying the Extant Literature | Of Hermes | To Tat | To Asclepius | To Ammon | Of Asclepius | Of Isis | From the Agathodaimon Literature | Of Judgments of Value | The Sons of God | Concerning Dates | The Blend of Traditions | Of Initiation | A Last Word |