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PART III
CHAPTER I - THE MEDICINE
FROM METALS
In our
treatment of the human body we have to remember that in composition it is
not an inanimate object capable of sustaining the kind of treatment
accorded to a sack of sand, but a delicate organism possessed of the
capacity of feeling, consciously and unconsciously, and must be handled
accordingly. The cell life of the body is selective in the finest sense,
the cells rejecting any substance unfit for their use, and consequently it
is as reasonable to expect to run a modern aeroplane engine on inferior
fuel as to ingest into the human body for its maintenance a drug of a
gross nature, or a food devoid of its natural vital principle.
We all have
constant proof of the fact that at a certain stage in his life man's body
apparently begins to deteriorate, the reason given for this deterioration
being the slowing down of the cell activity with the result that the
body's wasting process proceeds more rapidly than does the repairing
process. This explanation is correct, for as man gets older, the vital
energy does not flow through to the cells of his body so efficiently as in
his youth, and the cells of the body, when unable to obtain their
requisite elements, become sluggish in their action and ultimately
diseased.
In this
connection our ideas on so-called diseased bacteria have to be very much
revised; the so-called bacteria is the medium through which the vital
energy is transferred to the cell life. This is its work, the purpose for
which it was created, and if for some reason the flow of that energy is
impeded in its passage, then the bacteria takes its energy from the cell,
and at once becomes pathological. For this reason it has been regarded by
the medical faculty as the cause of the disease; but any
bacteriologist will realize how nearly he has approached to the truth of
this statement when he in his turn states, for example, that certain types
of bacteria are oxygen-eating, that is, in the event of their being unable
to obtain their oxygen from such a substance as sugar, they take it from
the human body and so debilitate and disease that body. For this reason,
if we really desire to become an A 1 race, we must find and understand the
preparation of those elements which the human body's cell-life requires to
assist its correct functioning, for when the cell-life of the body fails,
then the body itself fails also.
Alchemy, as
demonstrated by two of its most prominent exponents, Basil Valentine and
Paracelsus, is concerned not only with the attainment of the Philosopher's
Stone, but with the preparation of medicines, by which is meant the
separation of the ethereal from the gross, the true secret of the Spagyric
Art.
At the present
day we have two definite systems of medicine, the one termed allopathy,
the other homeopathy. Both these systems have countless remedies, but
neither is by any means perfect, for where the allopath gains his cures,
the homeopathist has to admit defeat, and where the homeopathist succeeds,
the allopath may fail. The allopath, whose methods are the more widely
practised at the moment, maintains that the homeopathist gains his
successes through the imagination of his patients, but the homeopathist
believes his methods to be the more scientific, since he deals with a more
finely divided and spiritualized medium; for while the allopath uses his
drugs without trituration, the homeopathist triturates his drugs from the
first decimal to the higher potencies even up to the two-hundredth
decimal. Even so, although his method is the more perfect of the two, it
is still far from the ideal
The
homeopathists, of course, teach that the founder of their system was
Hahneman, but in actual fact this is inaccurate. Hahneman merely
rediscovered in part a system which had been taught in alchemy for
hundreds of years. I say in part because the alchemist's interpretation of
the system was very much more perfect than is the modern homeopathist's.
In regard to
the question of potencies, I will repeat once again the definition of the
Quintessence: 'Nothing of true value is located in the body of a substance
but in the virtue thereof. And this is the principle of the quintessence,
which reduces, say, twenty pounds to a single ounce, but that ounce far
exceeds in potency the entire twenty pounds.' Thus to find the
Quintessence of Iron, for example, the metal is changed into its vitriol
or salts, which in turn are purified by several washings in distilled
water, and after each washing re-crystallised. The salt is then calcined
to redness and its spirit drawn off in a special manner and also in its
turn carefully distilled several times, the result being a red oil of iron
which is its true essence, a few drops constituting a dose.
The first
essential of a really effective healing agent is that it should contain
the Quintessence or vital principle of the herb or metal used, and it is
the homeopathist's failure to provide this element in his preparations
which entails the loss of the real value of his medicaments.
The allopath's
failures lie in the fact that his remedies are always administered in too
crude a form. In the administration of a metal, for instance, it must be
understood that the body of a metal is worthless, as a medicine, it cannot
heal: it is the essence alone that is curative. Only too often the
body is poisonous, and until that gross part of the metal be broken up,
its administration is definitely harmful. Probably one of the most
common forms of metallic poisoning is that of mercury, but remove the
harmful parts of the metal and the healing essence is free to do its work
thoroughly. Nitrate of silver is a caustic poison, but remove the gross
part of the metal and the essence of the silver is a cure for diseases of
the brain. Lead salts are poisonous, it is true, and in many cases their
administration has resulted in death from lead poisoning, but remove that
poisonous matter and the remaining essence, which is clear,
sweet-smelling, and aromatic in taste, forms a cure for all diseases of
the spleen. Copper, when the gross body of the metal is removed and the
essence unlocked, is invaluable for the nervous system and the kidneys;
likewise, tin for the liver, iron for all inflammatory diseases, and
the bile, and gold for the heart and general circulation. But gold, too,
is only suitable for a medicine when the salts of gold are reduced into
the oil of gold and distilled into a golden liquid; then and only then is
gold tolerated and utilized by the human body. The salts of gold used at
the present day can never be assimilated, for by their present method of
preparation they can never be properly distilled and purified.
From the
foregoing paragraphs it will be seen that the whole principle of cure
rests on the proper separation of this Quintessence to which alchemy, and
alchemy alone, provides the key. The whole principle of the system is that
the body of the metal impedes the action of the essence, and those metals
which have hitherto been regarded as poisonous (mercury, antimony, lead,
arsenic) are all non-poisonous and capable of greater curative potency
when this process has been faithfully carried out.
A third system
of medicine which I have not mentioned, and which is not much practised in
this country, has recently come into being. I refer to the colloidal
system. Although even here the methods of preparation have not been pushed
quite far enough, the results of some of its experiments would seem to
indicate that this particular branch of research work is being conducted
on the right lines, and is paving the way to a more efficient system of
medicine.
The Rockefeller
Institute, in the course of its research work, has demonstrated that iron
taken in this form is much more easily absorbed by the body than in its
cruder state, whilst copper administered as a colloidal preparation is a
powerful agent in the reduction of neuralgic and nervous conditions. In
their laboratory experiments too, it has been found that flowers rescued
from the rubbish heap and placed in a bowl of colloidal copper regain
their freshness.
A further proof
of the efficacy of the system was provided during a bad outbreak of goitre
in one of the American states. The epidemic was almost entirely eliminated
by the addition of a colloidal preparation of iodine to the supply of
drinking-water in those districts where the goitre was most prevalent.
For a
medicament to be brought to its highest grade of action, the preparation
is of inestimable importance, but so long as the physician is content with
the preparation of the chemist, I fail to see how any vital improvement in
the quality and efficacy of our healing mediums can be expected. The
physician is no chemist, the chemist has no clinical experience, and so
the medicinal art must fail repeatedly not because its students themselves
are incompetent, but because the system under which they work is so
inadequate. We contribute enormous sums of money to the maintenance of our
hospitals and at the same time drive into them the victims of our foolish
system of drugging and feeding. I repeat, it is not the body of men that I
condemn, but merely our absurd system of contradictions. Paracelsus has
said:
'If, then, it
be of such vast importance that Alchemy shall be thoroughly understood in
Medicine, the reason of this importance arises from the great latent
virtue which resides in natural things, which also can lie open to none,
save insofar as they are revealed by Alchemy. Otherwise it is just as if
one should see a tree in winter and not recognize it, or be ignorant what
was in it until summer puts forth, one after another, now branches, now
flowers, now fruits, and whatever appertains to it. So in these matters
there is a latent virtue which is occult to men in general. And unless a
man learns and makes proof of these things, which can only be done by an
alchemist, just as by the summer, it is not possible that he can
investigate the subject in any other way.'
Again he says:
'Who will deny
that even in the very best things a poison may be hid? All must
acknowledge this. And if this be true, I would now ask you whether it is
not right that the poison should be separated from what is good and
useful, that the good should be taken and the evil left. Such should
certainly be the case. If so, tell me how it is separated in your
surgeries. With you all these elements remain mixed. See your own
simplicity, then, if you are forced to confess that a poison lies hid, and
are asked how it is to be got rid of. Then you bring forth I know not how
many correctives, which shall drive out and take away the poison. Does not
the poison remain afterwards as before? And yet you boast that you have so
corrected it that the poison no longer harms. Whither has it gone? Exceed
the proper dose, and you will soon see where the poison is.
'The
elimination of a poison can only be done by separation; if this is not
brought about you cannot be sure of your work. If a sure foundation be
necessary for the extraction of the poison, this is afforded by alchemy.
But when the bodies are contrary, it is absolutely necessary that one of
them should be taken away and removed, so that in this way all contrariety
should be separated from the good. It is necessary that everything which
is to benefit man shall have passed by fire to a second birth. Should not
this then be deemed the right fundamental principle by every physician?'
I put forward
these ideas because I believe that in the medicine of metals there is a
perfect curative system; that in the seven metals, gold, silver, iron,
copper, tin, mercury, and lead can be found elements to cure all discords
in the human body, and that when this system is properly understood and
practised, the multitude of remedies may be discarded. Be it understood
that this is not my system, but one which is as old as man himself. Truly
it has been said that there is nothing new under the sun, for knowledge is
revealed and is submerged again, even as a nation rises and falls. Here is
a system, tested throughout the ages, but lost again and again by
ignorance or prejudice, in the same way that great nations have risen and
fallen and been lost to history beneath the desert sands and in the ocean
depths.
To what end do
we study history if not to learn from it? To profit by the example of
those who have gone before, to learn from their mistakes, if needs be? Our
civilization of today might be a far greater civilization if it would but
borrow from the past, for knowledge there has always been, and wise men
there have always been, who despite the persecution and opposition of
their fellow men, have yet laboured to preserve these secrets for
posterity.
CHAPTER II - PRACTICAL
In writing this
section on the practical work I wish my readers to realize that I am
writing purely from the alchemist's, not the chemist's viewpoint. I fully
realized when commencing this work that my only hope of success was to put
on one side for the time being any knowledge of chemistry that I might
possess and to study alchemystical writings in a sincere attempt to
understand the alchemist's language and reasoning, and then, by following
out his instructions faithfully step by step, to prove the practicability
of this science.
The chemist who
may read this book must therefore appreciate this point, and understand
that at the moment I am not trying to reconcile my findings with the
precepts of orthodox chemistry, but merely placing on record my work as an
alchemist.
. . . . . .
The practice of
alchemy in the laboratory has been a far from easy task, as those who have
at any time studied literature on the subject will fully appreciate. It is
only by continuous experiment and constant comparison with alchemystic
writings that the present results have eventually been attained, and
looking back on the years of persistence in the face of the countless
difficulties and failures which ever confront the would-be alchemist, one
can well question the wisdom of pursuing such a course. At last, however,
it does seem that these labours may not have been entirely in vain, for
from these experiments has gradually emerged the vision of the benefit
this art could be to man who, in his present state of imperfection, with
its accompanying suffering of mind and body, would seem to require some
assistance on his way through life.
As I have said,
I believe that in this art lies man's salvation from sickness and disease,
and the secret of his ultimate perfection, but needless to say in order to
utilize to the full the physical benefits of alchemistic research, man
must undertake the transmutation of certain baser elements in his
emotional and mental make-up. With this process of psychological
transmutation I do not propose to deal for the moment, but I am convinced
that in this present age of chaos, when new ideas, new values, and, as I
believe, new understanding are coming into being, it may be possible that
some of these more unorthodox conceptions will meet with less opposition
and more sympathy than previously. Since the complete destruction of all
those conditions which in the nineteenth century seemed so permanent and
immovable, man has been far less inclined to reject out of hand any new
idea which may be put before him. For this reason I write down my findings
of an age-old truth in the belief that it is a task destiny has set me,
and whether my words be accepted or no lies not with me but with those to
whom they are addressed.
. . . . . .
Come with me,
therefore, to my little laboratory with its array of alembics, crucibles,
and sandbaths, and hear something of the struggles of the would-be
alchemist and of the mysteries he seeks to unravel.
After a careful
study of Basil Valentine's 'Triumphal Chariot of Antimony,' I decided to
make my first experiments with antimony. I soon found, however, that on
arriving at a crucial point, the key had almost invariably been
deliberately withheld, and a dissertation on theology inserted in its
place. Gradually, however, I came to realize that the theological
discourse was not without object, but actually the means of veiling a
valuable clue of some kind. After much labour, a fragrant golden liquid
was finally obtained from the antimony, although this was merely a
beginning. The alkahest of the alchemist, the First Matter, still remained
a mystery.
Then followed
processes with iron and copper. After purification of the salts or vitriol
of these metals, of calcination, and the obtaining of a salt from the
calcined metal by a special process, followed by careful distillation and
re-distillation in rectified spirits of wine, the oil of these metals was
obtained, a few drops of which used singly, or in conjunction, proved very
efficacious in eases of anemia and debility which the ordinary iron
medicine failed to touch.
The conjunction
of iron and copper proved to be an elixir of a very stimulating and
regenerating character, the action being such as to clear the body from
toxins, and I well remember on taking a few drops one evening that the
prospect of a spell of fairly strenuous mental work, even after a really
laborious day, seemed to hold no terrors for me!
But still the
alkahest remained an enigma, and so further experiments were made with
silver and mercury. For those with silver, fine silver was reduced with
nitric acid to the salts of the metal, carefully washed in distilled
water, sublimated by special process, finally yielding up a white oil
which had a very soothing effect on highly nervous cases.
In the case of
mercury, the metal on being reduced to its oil, produced a clear
crystalline liquid with great curative properties, but unlike common
mercury, no poisonous qualities.
After this I
decided to work upon fine gold--gold, that is, without any alloy. This was
dissolved in Aqua Regia and reduced to the salts of gold; these were
washed in distilled water, which in its turn was evaporated in order to
remove its very caustic properties. It was at this point that a very real
difficulty arose, for when these salts of gold lose their acidity, they
slowly but surely tend to return to their metallic form again.
Nevertheless, an elixir was finally produced from them by distillation,
although even then a residue of fine metallic gold remained behind in the
retort.
Having got so
far I realized that without the alkahest of the philosophers the real oil
of gold could not be obtained, and so again I went back and forth in the
alchemists' writings to obtain the clue. The experiments which I had
already made considerably lightened my task, and one day while sitting
quietly in deep concentration the solution to the problem was revealed to
me in a flash, and at the same time many of the enigmatical utterances of
the alchemists were made clear.
. . . . . .
Here, then, I
entered upon a new course of experiment, with a metal for experimental
purposes with which I had had no previous experience. This metal, after
being reduced to its salts and undergoing special preparation and
distillation, delivered up the Mercury of the Philosophers, the Aqua
Benedicta, the Aqua Celestis, the Water of Paradise. The first intimation
I had of this triumph was a violent hissing, jets of vapour pouring from
the retort and into the receiver like sharp bursts from a machine-gun, and
then a violent explosion, whilst a very potent and subtle odour filled the
laboratory and its surroundings. A friend has described this odour as
resembling the dewy earth on a June morning, with the hint of growing
flowers in the air, the breath of the wind over heather and hill, and the
sweet smell of the rain on the parched earth.
Nicholas Flamel,
after searching and experimenting from the age of twenty, wrote when he
was eighty years old:
'Finally I
found that which I desired, which I also soon knew by the strong scent and
odour thereof.'
Does this not
coincide, this voice from the fourteenth century, with my own description
of the peculiar subtle odour? Cremer, also writing in the early fourteenth
century, says
'When this
happy event takes place, the whole house will be filled with a most
wonderful sweet fragrance, and then will be the day of the nativity of
this most blessed preparation.'
Having arrived
at this point my next difficulty was to find a way of storing this subtle
gas without danger to property. This I accomplished by coils of glass
piping in water joined up with my receiver, together with a perfect
government of heat, the result being that the gas gradually condensed into
a clear golden-coloured water, very inflammable and very volatile. This
water had then to be separated by distillation, the outcome being the
white mercurial water described by the Comte St. Germain as his athoeter
or primary water of all the metals. I will again quote from Manly Hall's
introduction to 'The Most Holy Trinosophia,' the passage in which Casanova
describes the athoeter:
'Then he showed
me his rnagistrum which he called Athoeter. lit was a white liquid
contained in a well stopped phial. He told me that this liquid was the
universal spirit of Nature and that if the wax of the stopper was pricked
ever so slightly, the whole of the contents would disappear. I begged him
to make the experiment. He thereupon gave me the phial and the pin and I
myself pricked the wax, when, lo, the phial was empty.'
This passage
aptly describes this water which is so volatile that it rapidly evaporates
if left unstoppered, boils at a very low temperature, and does not so much
as wet the fingers. This mercurial water, this athoeter of St. Germain, is
absolutely necessary to obtain the oil of gold, which is obtained by its
addition to the salts of gold after those salts have been washed with
distilled water several times to remove the strong acidity of the Aqua
Regia used to reduce the metal to that state. When the Mercurial Water is
added to these salts of gold, there is a slight hissing, an increase in
heat, and the gold becomes a deep red liquid, from which is obtained, by
means of distillation, the oil of gold, a deep amber liquid of an oily
consistency. This oil, which is the potable gold of the alchemist, never
returns to the metallic form of gold. I can understand now, I think, how
it is that some of the patients to whom Salts of Gold injections have been
administered have succumbed to gold poisoning. So long as the salts are in
an acid solution, they remain soluble, but directly the dissolving medium
loses its acidity and becomes neutral or alkaline, the salts tend to form
again into metallic gold. This is probably what happens in the case of the
injection of gold salts into the alkaline intercellular fluids, which in
some cases leads to fatal results.
Do not imagine
that chemists know all about metals! They do not, as the following
quotation from the report of Professor Charles Gibson's presidential
address on 'Recent Investigations in the Chemistry of Gold' would seem to
show:
'The address
was of a highly technical nature. One of the chief points brought forward
was that current text-book views of the constitution of salts of gold are
incorrect. These are never of the same nature as normal metallic salts
with simple formulae such as AuCl or AuBr3, but always of a
complex constitution. . ."
From the golden
water I have described can be obtained this white water, and a deep red
tincture which deepens in colour the longer it is kept; these two are the
mercury and the sulphur described by the alchemists, Sol the Father and
Lune the Mother, the Male and the Female Principles, the White and Red
Mercuries, which two conjoined again form a deep amber liquid. This is the
Philosophic Gold, which is not made from metallic gold, but
from another metal, and is a far more Potent Elixir than the oil of
gold. This deep amber liquid literally shines and reflects and intensifies
rays of light to an extraordinary degree. It has been described by many
alchemists, which fact again corroborates my work in the laboratory.
Indeed, every step which I have taken in the laboratory I have found in
the work of the various followers of the Spagyric Art.
. . . . . .
And now to the
final goal, the Philosophers' Stone. Having found my two principles, the
Mercury and the Sulphur, my next step was to purify the dead body of the
metal, that is, the black dregs of the metal left after the extraction of
the golden water. This was calcined to a redness and carefully separated
and treated until it became a white salt. The three principles were then
conjoined in certain exact quantities in a hermetically sealed flask in a
fixed heat neither too hot nor too cold, care as to the exact degree of
heat being essential, as any carelessness in its regulation would
completely spoil the mixture.
On conjunction
the mixture takes on the appearance of a leaden mud, which rises slowly
like dough until it throws up a crystalline formation rather like a coral
plant in growth. The 'flowers' of this plant are composed of petals of
crystal which are continually changing in colour. As the heat is raised,
this formation melts into an amber-coloured liquid which gradually becomes
thicker and thicker until it sinks into a black earth on the bottom of the
glass. At this point (the Sign of the Crow in alchemical literature) more
of the ferment or mercury is added. In this process, which is one of
continual sublimation, a long-necked, hermetically sealed flask is used,
and one can watch the vapour rising up the neck of the flask and
condensing down the sides. This process continues until the state of 'dry
blackness' is attained. When more of the mercury is added, the black
powder is dissolved, and from this conjunction it seems that a new
substance is born, or, as the early alchemists would have expressed it, a
Son is born. As the black colour abates, colour after colour comes and
goes until the mixture becomes white and shining; the White Elixir. The
heat is gradually raised yet more, and from white the colour changes to
citrine and finally to red--the Elixir Vitae, the Philosophers' Stone, the
medicine of men and metals. From their writings, it appears that many
alchemists found it unnecessary to take the Elixir to this very last
stage, the citrine coloured solution being adequate for their purpose.
It is of
interest to note that an entirely different manifestation comes into being
after the separation of the three elements and their re-conjunction under
the sealed vase of Hermes. By the deliberate separation and unification of
the Mercury, Sulphur, and Salt, the three elements appear as a more
perfect manifestation than in the first place.
CONCLUSION
Man's work is
not merely to exist on this earth, to scratch ignorantly at its surface,
to mutilate Nature in every possible way, to fight and rob his neighbour,
but to develop the powers surrounding him, to manipulate those forces that
he may truly and deservedly claim his right to inherit the earth. A garden
which has been neglected for years and is overgrown with weeds, when taken
over by an intelligent human being who will work hand in hand with nature,
may once again become a thing of beauty and joy. Thus the earth, which is
man's garden, must be sown and cultivated by him, perfected by his art.
Life is not a
haphazard game of chance, but an unfoldment and development of its own
powers manifesting in perfect Law. Let us, then, try to understand this
Life which is Eternal Law, pervaded by an Intelligence with Order and
Wisdom, and having understood, let us work for the more perfect unfoldment
of our earth and the forces which lie beneath its surface; for this Law
applies to agriculture, to science, to the production of food, to the use
of minerals and metals, to the building of cities, to the use of
electricity and all natural forces. When man finally learns to use these
forces, he will be able to press forward and onward to the final goal,
which is the perfection of the earth and of his own species.
Alchemy brings
us the vision of the heights to which man may attain; it teaches us that
he is Triune, that is, Spiritual, Mental, and Physical; that his future is
far greater than at present can be envisaged; that, Life is Law and
Wisdom.
. . . . . .
Those of you
who have followed me thus far may be interested in the following extracts
of Hermetic literature, both of which, apart from their intrinsic beauty,
provide perfect examples of the highly mystical and intentionally
enigmatic phraseology of alchemical writing.
The authorship
of the first, the Tractatus Aureusi or Golden Treatise of Hermes, is
unknown, despite the name it bears. It is, however, thought to be one of
the most ancient and complete pieces of alchemical writing left to us, and
has been held in high esteem by alchemists of all ages as a complete
exposition of their art.
The second, the
Book of the Revelation of Hermes, interpreted by Theophrastus Paracelsus,
concerning the Supreme Secret of the World, was first published under the
auspices of Benedictus Figulus in his 'Golden and Blessed Casket of
Nature's Marvels,' in 1608 (a translation of which work was edited and
introduced by Mr. Arthur Edward Waite in the latter part of the last
century). Many of the truths enunciated therein are to be found in other
works by writers of earlier and later times, but much of the phraseology
is unique to Paracelsus himself.
'AUREUS,'
OR THE GOLDEN TRACTATE - SECTION I
EVEN thus saith Hermes:
"Through long
years I have not ceased to experiment, neither have I spared any labour of
mind, and this science and art I have obtained by the sole inspiration of
the Living God, who judged fit to open them to me His servant, who has
given to rational creatures the power of thinking and judging aright,
forsaking none or giving to any occasion to despair. For myself, I had
never discovered this matter to anyone had it not been from fear of the
judgment and the perdition of my soul, if I concealed it. It is a debt
which I am desirous to discharge to the faithful as the Father of the
faithful did liberally bestow it upon me.
"Understand ye
then, O Sons of Wisdom, that the knowledge of the four elements of the
ancient philosophers was not corporally or imprudently sought after, which
are through patience to be discovered according to their causes and their
occult operation. But, their operation is occult, since nothing is done
except the matter be decompounded and because it is not perfected unless
the colours be thoroughly passed and accomplished. Know then, that the
division that was made upon the water, by the ancient philosophers,
separates it into four substances, one into two, and three into one, the
third part of which is colour, as it were--a coagulated moisture; but the
second and third waters are the Weights of the Wise.
"Take of the
humidity, or moisture, an ounce and a half, and of the Southern Redness,
which is the soul of gold, a fourth part, that is to say, half an ounce;
of the citrine Seyre, in like manner, half an ounce; of the Auripigment,
half an ounce, which are eight; that is three ounces. And know ye that the
vine of the wise is drawn forth in three, but the wine thereof is not
perfected, until at length thirty be accomplished.
"Understand the
operation, therefore. Decoction lessens the matter, but the tincture
augments it, because Luna in fifteen days is diminished, and in the third
she is augmented. This is the beginning and the end. Behold, I have
declared that which was hidden, since the work is both with thee and about
thee; that which was within is taken out and fixed, and thou canst have it
either in earth or sea.
"Keep,
therefore, the Argent vive, which is prepared in the innermost chamber in
which it is coagulated; for that is the Mercury which is celebrated from
the residual earth.
"He, therefore,
who now hears my words, let him search into them, which are to justify no
evil-doer, but to benefit the good; therefore I have discovered all things
that were before hidden concerning this knowledge, and disclosed the
greatest of all secrets, even the Intellectual Science.
"Know ye,
therefore, Children of Wisdom, who inquire concerning the report thereof,
that the vulture standing upon the mountain crieth out with a loud voice:
'I am the White of the Black, and the Red of the White, and the Citrine of
the Red, and behold I speak the very Truth.'
"And know that
the chief principle of the art is the Crow, which is the blackness of the
night and the clearness of the day, and flies without wings. From the
bitterness existing in the throat the tincture is taken, the red goes
forth from his body, and from his back is taken a thin water.
"Understand,
therefore, and accept this gift of God which is hidden from the
thoughtless world. In the caverns of the metals there is hidden the stone
that is venerable, splendid in colour, a mind sublime and an open sea.
Behold, I have declared it unto thee; give thanks to God who teacheth thee
this knowledge, for He in return recompenses the grateful.
"Put the matter
into a moist fire, therefore, and cause it to boil, in order that its heat
may be augmented, which destroys the siccity of the incombustible nature,
until the radix shall appear; then extract the redness and the light
parts, till only about a third remains.
"Sons of
Science! For this reason are philosophers said to be envious, not that
they grudged truth to religious or just men, or to the wise, but to fools,
ignorant and vicious, who are without Self-Control and benevolence, lest
they should be made powerful, and able to perpetrate sinful things. For of
such the philosophers are made accountable to God, and evil men are not
admitted worthy of this wisdom.
"Know that this
matter I call the stone, but it is also named the feminine of magnesia, or
the hen, or the white spittle, or the volatile milk, the incombustible
oil, in order that it may be hidden from the inept and ignorant, who are
deficient in goodness and self-control; which I have nevertheless
signified to the wise by one only epithet, viz., the Philosophers' Stone.
"Include,
therefore, and conserve in this sea, the fire, and the heavenly bird, to
the latest moment of his exit. But I deprecate ye all, Sons of Philosophy,
on whom the great gift of this knowledge being bestowed, if any should
undervalue or divulge the power thereof to the ignorant, or such as are
unfit for the knowledge of this secret. Behold, I have received nothing
from any to whom I have not returned that which had been given me, nor
have I failed to honour him; even in this I have reposed the highest
confidence.
"This, O Son,
is the concealed Stone of many colours, which is born and brought forth in
one colour; I know this and conceal it. By this, the Almighty favouring,
the greatest diseases are escaped, and every sorrow, distress and evil and
hurtful thing is made to depart; for it leads from darkness into light,
from this desert wilderness to a secure habitation, and from poverty and
straits to a free and ample fortune."
SECTION II
"My son, before
all things I admonish thee to fear God, in whom is the strength of thy
undertaking, and the bond of whatsoever thou meditatest to unloose;
whatsoever thou hearest, consider it rationally. For I hold thee not to be
a fool. Lay hold, therefore, of my instructions and meditate upon them,
and so let thy heart be fitted also to conceive, as if thou was thyself
the author of that which I now teach. If thou appliest cold to any nature
that is hot, it will not hurt it; in like manner, he who is rational shuts
himself within from the threshold of ignorance, lest supinely he should be
deceived.
"Take the
flying bird and drown it flying, and divide and separate it from its
pollutions, which yet hold it in death; draw it forth and repel it from
itself, that it may live and answer thee, not by flying away into the
regions above but by truly forbearing to fly. For if thou shalt deliver it
out of its prison, after this thou shalt govern it according to Reason,
and according to the days that I shall teach thee: then will it become a
companion unto thee, and by it thou wilt become to be an honoured lord.
"Extract from
the ray its shadow, and from the light its obscurity, by which the clouds
hang over it and keep away the light: by means of its construction, also,
and fiery redness, it is burned.
"Take, my Son,
this redness, corrupted with water, which is as a live coal holding fire,
which if thou shalt withdraw so often until the redness is made pure, then
it will associate with thee, by whom it was cherished, and in whom it
rests.
"Return, then,
O my Son, the coal being extinct in life, upon the water for thirty days,
as I shall note to thee, and henceforth thou art a crowned king, resting
over the fountain, and drawing from thence Auripigment dry without
moisture. And now I have made the heart of the hearers, hoping in thee, to
rejoice, even in their eyes, beholding thee in anticipation of that which
thou possessest.
"Observe, then,
that the water was first in the air, then in the earth; restore thou it
also to the superiors by its proper windings and not foolishly altering
it; then to the former spirit, gathered in its redness, let it be
carefully conjoined.
"Know, my Son,
that the fatness of our earth is sulphur, the auripigment sirety, and
colcothar which are also sulphur, of which auripigments sulphur, and such
like, some are more vile than others, in which there is a diversity, of
which kind also is the fat of gluey matters, such as are hair, nails,
hoofs, and sulphur itself, and of the brain, which too is auripigment, of
the like kind also are the lions' and cats' claws, which is sirety the fat
of white bodies, and the fat of the two oriental quicksilvers, which
sulphurs are hunted and retained by the bodies.
"I say,
moreover, that this sulphur doth tinge and fix, and is held by the
conjunction of the tinctures; oils also tinge, but fly away, which in the
body are contained, which is a conjunction of fugitives only with sulphurs
and albuminous bodies, which hold also and detain the fugitive ens.
"The
disposition sought after by the philosophers, O Son, is but one in our
egg, but this in the hen's egg is much less to be found. But lest so much
of the Divine Wisdom as is a hen's egg should not be distinguished, our
composition is, as that is, from the four elements adapted and composed.
Know, therefore, that in the hen's egg is the greatest help with respect
to the proximity and relationship of the matter in nature for in it there
is a spirituality and conjunction of elements, and an earth which is
golden in its tincture."
But the Son, inquiring of Hermes, saith:
"The sulphurs which are fit for our work, whether they are celestial or
terrestrial?"
To whom the Father replies:
"Certain of them are heavenly and some are of the earth."
Then the Son saith:
"Father, I imagine the heart in the superiors to be heaven, and in the
inferiors, earth."
But saith Hermes:
"It is not so; the masculine is truly the heaven of the feminine, and
the feminine is the earth of the masculine."
The Son then asks:
"Father, which of these is more worthy than the other, whether is it
the heaven or the earth?"
Hermes replies:
"Both need the help one of the other, for the precepts demand a
medium."
But saith the Son:
"If thou shalt say that a wise man governs all mankind?"
"But ordinary men," replies Hermes, "are better for them, because every
nature delights in society of its own kind, and so we find it to be in the
life of Wisdom where equals are conjoined."
"But what," rejoins the Son, "is the mean betwixt them?"
To whom Hermes replies:
"In everything
in nature there are three from two; the beginning, the middle, and the
end. First the needful water, then the oily tincture, and lastly, the
faeces, or earth, which remains below.
"But the Dragon
inhabits in all these, and his houses are the darkness and blackness that
is in them, and by them he ascends into the air, from his rising, which is
their heaven. But whilst the fume remains in them, they are not immortal.
Take away, therefore, the vapour from the water, and the blackness from
the oily tincture, and death from the faeces, and by dissolution thou
shalt possess a triumphant reward, even that in and by which the
possessors live.
"Know then, my
Son, that the temperate unguent, which is fire, is the medium between the
faeces and the water, and is the Perscrutinator of the water. For the
unguents are called sulphurs, because between fire and oil and this
sulphur there is such a close proximity, that even as fire burns so does
the sulphur also.
"All the
sciences of the world, O Son, are comprehended in this my hidden Wisdom,
and this, and the learning of the Art, consists in these wonderful hidden
elements which it doth discover and complete. It behoves him, therefore,
who would be introduced to this hidden Wisdom, to free himself from the
hidden usurpations of vice, and to be just and good and of a sound reason,
ready at hand to help mankind, of a serene countenance, diligent to save,
and be himself a patient guardian of the arcane secrets of philosophy.
"And this know,
that except thou understandest how to mortify and induce generation, to
vivify the Spirit and introduce Light, until they fight each other and
grow white and freed from their defilements, rising as it were from
blackness and darkness, thou knowest nothing nor canst perform anything.
But if thou knowest this, thou wilt be of a great dignity so that even
kings themselves shall reverence thee. These secrets, Son, it behoves thee
to conceal from the vulgar and profane world.
"Understand,
also, that our Stone is from many things and of various colours, and
composed from four elements which we ought to divide and dissever in
pieces, and segregate, in the veins, and partly mortifying the same by its
proper nature, which is also in it, to preserve the water and fire
dwelling therein, which is from the four elements and their waters, which
contain its water; this, however, is not water in its true form, but fire,
containing in a pure vessel the ascending waters, lest the spirits should
fly away from the bodies; for by this means they are made tingeing and
fixed.
"O, blessed
watery form, that dissolvest the elements! Now it behoves us, with this
watery soul, to possess ourselves of a sulphurous form, and to mingle the
same with our Acetum. For when, by the power of water, the composition is
dissolved, it is the key of the restoration; then darkness and death will
fly away from them and Wisdom proceeds onwards to the fulfilment of her
Law."
SECTION III
"Know, my Son,
that the philosophers bind up their matter with a strong chain that it may
contend with the Fire; because the spirits in the washed bodies desire to
dwell therein and to rejoice. In these habitations they vivify themselves
and inhabit there, and the bodies hold them, nor can they be hereafter
separated any more.
"The dead
elements are revived, the composed bodies tinge and are altered, and by a
wonderful process they are made permanent, as saith the philosopher.
"O, permanent
watery Form, creatrix of the royal elements! who, having with thy brethren
and a just government obtained the tincture, findest rest. Our precious
stone is cast forth upon the dung-hill, and that which is most worthy is
made vilest of the vile. Therefore, it behoves us to mortify two Argent
vives together, both to venerate and be venerated, viz., the Argent vive
of Auripigment, and the oriental Argent vive of Magnesia.
"O, Nature, the
most potent creatrix of Nature, which containest and separatist natures in
a middle principle. The Stone comes with light, and with light it is
generated, and then it generates and brings forth the black clouds of
darkness, which is the mother of all things.
"But when we
marry the crowned King to our red daughter, and in a gentle fire, not
hurtful she doth Conceive an excellent and supernatural son, which
permanent life she doth also feed with a subtle heat, so that he lives at
length in our fire.
"But when thou
shalt send forth thy fire upon the foliated sulphur, the boundary of
hearts doth enter in above, it is washed in the same, and the purified
matter thereof is extracted.
"Then he is
transformed, and his tincture by help of the fire remains red, as it were
flesh. But our Son, the king begotten, takes his tincture from the fire,
and death even, and darkness, and the waters flee away.
"The Dragon
shuns the sunbeams which dart through the crevices and our dead son lives;
the king comes forth from the fire and rejoins with his spouse, the occult
treasures are laid open, and the virgin's milk is whitened. The Son,
already vivified, is become a warrior in the fire, and of tincture
super-excellent. For this Son is himself the treasury, even himself
bearing the Philosophic Matter.
"Approach, ye
Sons of wisdom, and rejoice; let us now rejoice together, for the reign of
death is finished, and the Son doth rule. And he is invested with the red
garment, and the scarlet colour is put on."
SECTION IV
"Understand,
then, O Son of Wisdom, what the Stone declares: 'Protect me and I will
protect Thee; increase my strength that I may help thee! My Sol and my
beams are most inward and secretly in me, my own Luna, also, is my light,
exceeding every other light, and my good things are better than all other
good things, I give freely, and reward the intelligent with joy and
gladness, glory, riches, and delights, and them that seek after me I make
to know and understand, and to possess divine things.'
"Behold, that
which the philosophers have concealed is written with seven letters; for
Alpha and Yda follow two, and Sol in like manner follows the book.
Nevertheless, if thou art willing that he should have Dominion, observe
the Art, and join the son to the daughter of the water, which is Jupiter
and a hidden secret.
"Auditor,
understand. Let us use our Reason. Consider all with the most accurate
investigation, which in the contemplative part I have demonstrated to
thee, the whole matter I know to be the one only thing. But who is he that
understands the true investigation and inquires rationally into this
matter? It is not from man, nor from anything like him or akin to him; nor
from the ox or bullock, and if any creature conjoins with one of another
species, that which is brought forth is neutral from either."
"Thus saith
Venus: 'I beget light, nor is the darkness of my nature, and if my metal
be not dried all bodies desire me, for I liquefy them and wipe away their
rust, even I extract their substance. Nothing, therefore is better or more
venerable than I, my brother also being conjoined.'
"But the King,
the Ruler, to his brethren, testifying of him, saith: 'I am crowned, and I
am adorned with a royal diadem. I am clothed with the royal garment, and I
bring joy and gladness of heart, for being chained, I caused my substance
to lay hold of, and to rest within the arms and breast of my mother, and
to fasten upon her substance, making that which was invisible to become
visible, and the occult matter to appear. And everything which the
philosophers have hidden is generated by us. Hear, then, these words, and
understand them. Keep them, and meditate thereon, and seek for nothing
more. Man in the beginning is generated of nature, whose inward substance
is fleshy, and not from anything else. Meditate on these plain things, and
reject what is superfluous.'
"Thus saith the
philosopher: 'Botri is made from the citrine, which is extracted out of
the Red Root, and from nothing else; and if it be citrine and nothing else
Wisdom was with thee. It was not gotten by thy care, nor if it be freed
from redness, by thy study. Behold, I have circumscribed nothing. If thou
hast understanding, there be but few things unopened.
"Ye Sons of
Wisdom! Turn then the Breym Body with an exceeding great fire, and it will
yield gratefully what you desire. And see that you make that which is
volatile, so that it cannot fly, and by means of that which flies not. And
that which yet rests upon the fire, as it were itself a fiery flame, and
that which in the heat of a boiling fire is corrupted, is cambar.
"And know ye
that the Art of this permanent water is our brass and the colouring of its
tincture and blackness is then changed into the true red.
"I declare
that, by the help of God, I have spoken nothing but the truth. That which
is destroyed is renovated, and hence the corruption is made manifest in
the matter to be renewed, and hence the melioration will appear, and on
either side it is a signal of Art."
SECTION
V
"My Son, that
which is born of the Crow is the beginning of this Art. Behold, now I have
obscured the matter treated of, by circumlocution, depriving thee of the
light. Yet this dissolved, this joined, this nearest and farthest off, I
have named to thee. Roast those things, therefore, and boil them in that
which comes from the horse's belly for seven, fourteen or twenty-one days.
Then will the Dragon eat his own wings and destroy himself. This being
done, let it be put into a fiery furnace, which lute diligently, and
observe that none of the spirit may escape.
"And know that
the periods of the earth are in the water, which let it be as long as
until thou puttest the same upon it. This matter being thus melted and
burned, take the brain thereof and triturate it in most sharp vinegar,
till it becomes obscured. This done, it lives in the putrefaction, let the
dark clouds which were in it before it was killed be converted into its
own body. Let this process be repeated, as I have described, let it again
die, as I before said, and then it lives.
"In the life
and death thereof we work with the spirits, for as it dies by the taking
away of the spirit, so it lives in the return and is revived and rejoices
therein. Being arrived then at this knowledge, that which thou hast been
searching for is made apparent in the Affirmation. I have even related to
thee the joyful signs, even that which doth fix the body. But these
things, and how they attained to the knowledge of this secret, are given
by our ancestors in figures and types. Behold, they are dead. I have
opened the riddle, and the book of knowledge is revealed. The hidden
things I have uncovered, and have brought together the scattered truths
within their boundary, and have conjoined many various forms; even I have
associated the spirit. Take it as the gift of God."
SECTION VI
"It behoves
thee to give thanks to God, Who has bestowed liberally of his bounty to
the Wise, Who delivers us from misery and poverty. I am tempted and proven
with the fulness of His substance and His probable wonders, and humbly
pray God that whilst we live we may come to Him.
"Remove thence,
O Sons of Science, the unguents which we extract from fats, hair,
verdigrease, tragacanth and bones, which are written in the books of our
fathers. But concerning the ointments which contain the tincture,
coagulate the fugitive, and adorn the sulphurs, it behoves us to explain
their disposition more at large, and to unveil the Form, which is buried
and hidden from other unguents, which is seen in disposition, but dwells
in his own body, as fire in trees and stones, which by the most subtle art
and ingenuity it behoves to extract without burning.
"And know that
the heaven is to be joined mediately with the earth, but the Form is in a
middle nature between the heaven and the earth, which is our water. But
the water holds of all the first place which goes forth from this stone.
But the second is gold, and the third is gold, only in a mean which is
more noble than the water and the faeces.
"But in these
are the smoke, the blackness and the death. It behoves us, therefore, to
dry away the vapour from the water, to expel the blackness from the
unguent, and death from the faeces and this by dissolution. By which means
we attain to the highest philosophy and secret of all hidden things."
SECTION VII
"Know ye then,
O Sons of Science, there are seven bodies, of which gold is the first, the
most perfect, the king of them, and their head, which neither the earth
can corrupt nor fire devastate, nor the water change for its complexion is
equalized, and its nature regulated with respect to heat, cold and
moisture; nor is there anything in it which is superfluous, therefore the
philosophers do buoy up and magnify themselves in it, saying that this
gold, in relation to other bodies is, as the sun amongst the stars, more
splendid in Light; and as, by the power of God, every vegetable and all
the fruits of the earth are perfected, so gold by the same power
sustaineth all.
"For as dough
without a ferment cannot be fermented so when thou sublimest the body and
purifiest it, separating the uncleanness from it, thou wilt then conjoin
and mix them together, and put in the ferment confecting the earth and
water. Then will the Ixir ferment even as dough doth ferment. Think of
this, and see how the ferment in this case doth change the former natures
to another thing. Observe also, that there is no ferment otherwise than
from the dough itself.
"Observe,
moreover, that the ferment whitens the confection and hinders it from
turning, and holds the tincture lest it should fly, and rejoice the
bodies, and makes them intimately to join and to enter one into another,
and this is the key of the philosophers and the end of their work, and by
this science, bodies are meliorated, and the operation of them, God
assisting, is consummate.
"But, through
negligence and a false opinion of the matter, the operation may be
perverted, as a mass of leaven growing corrupt, or milk turned with rennet
for cheese, and musk among aromatics.
"The sure
colour of the golden matter for the red, and the nature thereof, is not
sweetness; therefore we make of them sericum--i.e., Ixir; and of them we
make the enamel of which we have already written, and with the king's seal
we have tinged the clay, and in that have set the colour of heaven, which
augments the sight of them that see.
"The Stone,
therefore, is the most precious gold without spots, evenly tempered, which
neither fire, nor air, nor water, nor earth is able to corrupt; for it is
the Universal Ferment rectifying all things in a medium composition, whose
complexion is yellow and a true citrine colour.
"The gold of
the wise, boiled and well digested, with a fiery water, makes Ixir, for
the gold of the wise is more heavy than lead, which in a temperate
composition is a ferment Ixir, and contrariwise, in our intemperate
composition, is the confusion of the whole.
"For the work
begins from the vegetable, next from the animal, as in a hen's egg, in
which is the greatest help, and our earth is gold, all of which we make
sericum, which is the ferment Ixir."
THE REVELATION OF HERMES
INTERPRETED BY THEOPHRASTUS
PARACELSUS
CONCERNING THE SUPREME SECRET
OF THE WORLD
Hermes, Plato,
Aristotle, and the other philosophers, flourishing at different times, who
have introduced the Arts, and more especially have explored the secrets of
inferior creation, all these have eagerly sought a means whereby man's
body might be preserved from decay and become endued with immortality. To
them it was answered that there is nothing which might deliver the mortal
body from death; but that there is One Thing which may postpone decay,
renew youth, and prolong short human life (as with the Patriarchs). For
death was laid as a punishment upon our first parents, Adam and Eve, and
will never depart from all their descendants. Therefore, the above
philosophers, and many others, have sought this One Thing with great
labour, and have found that which preserves the human body from
corruption, and prolongs life, conducts itself, with respect to other
elements, as it were like the Heavens from which they understood that the
Heavens are a substance above the Four Elements. And just as the Heavens,
with respect to the other elements are held to be the fifth substance (for
they are indestructible, stable, and suffer no foreign admixture), so also
this One Thing (compared to the forces of our body) is an indestructible
essence, drying up all the superfluities of our bodies, and has been
philosophically called by the above-mentioned name. It is neither hot and
dry like fire, nor cold and moist like water, nor warm and moist like air,
nor dry and cold like earth. But it is a skilful, perfect equation of all
the Elements, a right commingling of natural forces, a most particular
union of spiritual virtues, an indissoluble uniting of body and soul. It
is the purest and noblest substance of an indestructible body, which
cannot be destroyed nor harmed by the Elements, and is produced by Art.
With this Aristotle prepared an apple prolonging life by its scent, when
he, fifteen days before his death, could neither eat nor drink on account
of old age. This spiritual Essence, or One Thing, was revealed from above
to Adam, and was greatly desired by the Holy Fathers, this also Hermes and
Aristotle call the Truth without Lies, the most sure of all things
certain, the Secret of all Secrets. It is the Last and the Highest Thing
to be sought under the Heavens, a wondrous closing and finish of
philosophical work, by which are discovered the dews of Heaven and the
fastnesses of Earth. What the mouth of man cannot utter is all found in
this Spirit. As Morienus says: 'He who has this has all things, and wants
no other aid. For in it are all temporal happiness, bodily health, and
earthly fortune. It is the spirit of the fifth substance, a Fount of all
Joys (beneath the rays of the moon), the Supporter of Heaven and Earth,
the Mover of Sea and Wind, the Outpourer of Rain, upholding the strength
of all things, an excellent spirit above Heavenly and other spirits,
giving Health, Joy, Peace, Love: driving away Hatred and Sorrow, bringing
in Joy, expelling all Evil, quickly healing all Diseases, destroying
Poverty and Misery, leading to all good things, preventing all evil words
and thoughts, giving man his heart's desire, bringing to the pious earthly
honour and long life, but to the wicked who misuse it, Eternal
Punishment.'
This is the
Spirit of Truth, which the world cannot comprehend without the
interposition of the Holy Ghost, or without the instruction of those who
know it. The same is of a mysterious nature, wondrous strength, boundless
power. The Saints, from the beginning of the world, have desired to behold
its face. By Avicenna this Spirit is named the Soul of the World. For as
the Soul moves all the limbs of the Body, so also does this Spirit move
all bodies. And as the Soul is in all the limbs of the Body, so also is
this Spirit in all elementary created things. It is sought by many and
found by few. It is beheld from afar and found near; for it exists in
every thing, in every place, and at all times. It has the powers of all
creatures; its action is found in all elements, and the qualities of all
things are therein, even in the highest perfection. By virtue of this
essence did Adam and the Patriarchs preserve their health and live to an
extreme age, some of them also flourishing in great riches.
When the
philosophers had discovered it, with great diligence and labour, they
straightway concealed it under a strange tongue, and in parables, lest the
same should become known to the unworthy, and the pearls be cast before
swine. For if everyone knew it, all work and industry would cease; man
would desire nothing but this one thing, people would live wickedly, and
the world be ruined, seeing that they would provoke God by reason of their
avarice and superfluity. For eye hath not seen, nor ear heard, nor hath
the heart of man understood what Heaven hath naturally incorporated with
this Spirit. Therefore have I briefly enumerated some of the qualities of
this Spirit, to the Honour of God, that the pious may reverently praise
Him in His gifts (which gift of God shall afterwards come to them), and I
will herewith shew what powers and virtues it possesses in each thing,
also its outward appearance, that it may be more readily recognized.
In its first
state, it appears as an impure earthly body, full of imperfections. It
then has an earthly nature, healing all sickness and wounds in the bowels
of man, producing good and consuming proud flesh, expelling all stench,
and healing generally, inwardly and outwardly.
In its second
nature, it appears as a watery body, somewhat more beautiful than before,
because (although still having its corruptions) its Virtue is greater. It
is much nearer the Truth, and more effective in works. In this form it
cures cold and hot fevers, and is a specific against poisons, which it
drives from heart and lungs, healing the same when injured or wounded,
purifying the blood, and, taken three times a day, is of great comfort in
all diseases.
But in its
third nature it appears as an aerial body of an oily nature, almost freed
from all imperfections, in which form it does many wondrous works,
producing beauty and strength of body, and (a small quantity being taken
in the food) preventing melancholy and heating of the gall, increasing the
quantity of blood and seed. It expands the blood vessels, cures withered
limbs, restores strength to the sight, in growing persons removes what is
superfluous and makes good defects in the limbs.
In its fourth
nature it appears in a fiery form (not quite freed from all imperfections,
still somewhat watery and not dried enough), wherein it has many virtues
making the old young and reviving those at the point of death. For if to
such an one there be given, in wine, a barleycorn's weight of this fire,
so that it reach the stomach, it goes to his heart, renewing him at once,
driving away all previous moisture and poison, and restoring the natural
heat of the liver. Given in small doses to old people, it removes the
diseases of age, giving the old young hearts and bodies. Hence it is
called the Elixir of Life.
In its fifth
and last nature, it appears in a glorified and illuminated form, without
defects, shining like gold and silver, wherein it possesses all previous
powers and virtues in a higher and more wondrous degree. Here its natural
works are taken for miracles. When applied to the roots of dead trees they
revive, bringing forth leaves and fruit. A lamp, the oil of which is
mingled with this spirit, continues to burn for ever without diminution.
It converts crystals into the most precious stones of all colours, equal
to those from the mines, and does many other incredible wonders which may
not be revealed to the unworthy.
For it heals
all dead and living bodies without other medicine. Here Christ is my
witness that I lie not, for all heavenly influences are united and
combined therein.
This essence
also reveals all treasures in earth and sea, converts all metallic bodies
into gold, and there is nothing like unto it under Heaven.
This spirit is
the secret, hidden from the beginning yet granted by God to a few holy men
for the revealing of these riches to His Glory--dwelling in fiery form in
the air, and leading earth with itself to Heaven, while from its body
there flow whole rivers of living water. This spirit flies through the
midst of the Heavens like a morning mist, leads its burning fire into the
water, and has its shining realm in the Heavens.
And although
these writings may be regarded as false by the reader, yet to the
initiated they are true and possible, when the hidden sense is properly
understood. For God is wonderful in His works, and His wisdom is without
end.
This spirit in
its fiery form is called a Sandaraca, in the aerial a Kybrick, in the
watery an Azoth, in the earthly Alcohoph and Aliocosoph. Hence they are
deceived by these names, who, seeking without instruction, think to find
this Spirit of Life in things foreign to our Art. For although this Spirit
which we seek, on account of its qualities, is called by these names, yet
the same is not in these bodies and cannot be in them. For a refined
spirit cannot appear except in a body suitable to its nature. And, by
however many names it be called, let no one imagine there be different
spirits, for, say what one will, there is but one spirit working
everywhere and in all things.
That is the
spirit which, when rising, illumines the Heavens, when setting
incorporates the purity of Earth, and when brooding has embraced the
Waters. This spirit is named Raphael, the Angel of God, the subtlest. and
purest, whom the others all obey as their King.
This spiritual
substance is neither heavenly nor hellish, but an airy, pure, and hearty
body, midway between the highest and the lowest, without reason, but
fruitful in works, and the most select and beautiful of all other heavenly
things.
This work of
God is far too deep for understanding for it is the last, greatest, and
highest secret of Nature. It is the Spirit of God, which in the Beginning
filled the Earth and brooded over the waters, which the world cannot grasp
without the gracious interposition of the Holy Spirit and instruction from
those who know it, which also the whole world desires for its virtue, and
which cannot be prized enough. For it reaches to the planets, raises the
clouds, drives away mists, gives its light to all things, turns everything
into Sun and Moon, bestows all health and abundance of treasure, cleanses
the leper, brightens the eyes, banishes sorrow, heals the sick, reveals
all hidden treasures, and, generally, cures all diseases.
Through this
spirit have the philosophers invented the Seven Liberal Arts, and thereby
gained their riches. Through the same Moses made the golden vessels in the
Ark, and King Solomon did many beautiful works to the honour of God.
Therewith Moses built the Tabernacle, Noah the Ark, Solomon the Temple.
By this Ezra restored the Law, and Miriam, Moses' sister, was hospitable;
Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, and other righteous men, have had life-long
abundance and riches; and all the saints possessing it have therewith
praised God. Therefore is its acquisition very hard, more than that of
gold and silver. For it is the best of all things, because, of all things
mortal that man can desire in this world, nothing can compare with it, and
in it alone is truth. Hence it is called the Stone and Spirit of Truth; in
its works is no vanity, its praise cannot be sufficiently expressed. I am
unable to speak enough of its virtues, because its good qualities and
powers are beyond human thoughts, unutterable by the tongue of man, and in
it are found the properties of all things. Yea, there is nothing deeper in
Nature.
O unfathomable
abyss of God's Wisdom, which thus hath united and comprised in the virtue
and power of this one Spirit the qualities of all existing bodies!
O unspeakable
honour and boundless joy granted to mortal man! For the destructible
things of Nature are restored by virtue of the said Spirit.
O mystery of
mysteries, most secret of all secret things, and healing and medicine of
all things! Thou last discovery in earthly natures, last best gift to
Patriarchs and Sages, greatly desired by the Whole world! Oh, what a
wondrous and laudable spirit is purity, in which stand all joy, riches,
fruitfulness of life, and art of all arts, a power which to its initiates
grants all material joys! O desirable knowledge, lovely above all things
beneath the circle of the Moon, by which Nature is strengthened, and heart
and limbs are renewed, blooming youth is preserved, old age driven away,
weakness destroyed, beauty in its perfection preserved, and abundance
ensured in all things pleasing to men! O thou spiritual substance, lovely
above all things! O thou wondrous power, strengthening all the world! O
thou invincible virtue, highest of all that is, although despised by the
ignorant, yet held by the wise in great praise, honour, and glory,
that--proceeding from humours--wakest the dead, expellest diseases,
restorest the voice of the dying!
0 thou treasure
of treasures, mystery of mysteries, called by Avicenna 'an unspeakable
substance,' the purest and most perfect soul of the world, than which
there is nothing more costly under Heaven, unfathomable in nature and
power, wonderful in virtue and works, having no equal among creatures,
possessing the virtues of all bodies under Heaven! For from it flow the
water of life, the oil and honey of eternal healing, and thus hath it
nourished them with honey and water from the rock. Therefore, saith
Morienus: 'He who hath it, the same also hath all things.' Blessed art
Thou, Lord God of our Fathers, in that Thou has given the prophets this
knowledge and understanding, that they have hidden these things (lest they
should be discovered by the blind, and those drowned in worldly
godlessness) by which the wise and pious have praised Thee! For the
discoverers of the mystery of this Thing to the unworthy are breakers of
the seal of Heavenly Revelation, thereby offending God's Majesty, and
bringing upon themselves many misfortunes and the punishments of God.
Therefore, I
beg all Christians, possessing this knowledge, to communicate the same to
nobody, except it be to one living in Godliness, of well-proved virtue,
and praising God, Who has given such a treasure to man. For many seek, but
few find it. Hence the impure and those living in vice are unworthy of it.
Therefore is this Art to be shown to all God-fearing persons, because it
cannot be bought with a price. I testify before God that I lie not,
although it appear impossible to fools, that no one has hitherto explored
Nature so deeply.
The Almighty be praised for having created this Art and for revealing
it to God-fearing men. Amen.
And thus is
fulfilled this precious and excellent work, called the revealing of the
occult spirit, in which lie hidden the secrets and mysteries of the world.
But this spirit
is one genius, and Divine, wonderful and lordly power. For it embraces the
whole world, and overcomes the Elements and the fifth Substance.
To our
Trismegistus Spagyrus,
Jesus Christ,
Be praise and glory immortal.
Amen. |