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The Pictorial Symbols Of Alchemy
by
Arthur Edward Waite
THE
Hermetic Mystery- upon the higher interpretation of which I have spoken
at considerable length in the previous paper and have created an analogy
between its hidden meaning and that which I should term the centre of
the Religions Mystery in Christendom- is the only branch of mystic and
occult literature which lent itself to the decorative sense. I suppose
that there are few people comparatively who at this day have any notion
of the extent to which that sense was developed in the books of the
adepts. It will be understood that in speaking now upon this subject I
am leaving my proper path, but though the fact does not seem to have
been registered, it is so utterly curious to note how a literature which
is most dark and inscrutable of all has at the same time its lighter
side- a side, indeed, of pleasant inventions, of apologue, of parable,
of explicit enigma, above all of poetry. The fact is that alchemy
presented itself as an art, its books were the work of artists; and for
the sym-pathetic reader, even when he may understand them least, they
will read sometimes like enchanting fables or legends. When in this
manner some of the writers had exhausted their resources in language,
they had recourse to illustrations, and I wonder almost that no one has
thought to collect the amazing copper-plates which literally did adorn
the Latin and other tracts of the seventeenth century.
As I propose to print some selected
specimens of the pictorial art in alchemy because they are exceedingly
curious, and not for a deeper reason, the reader will not expect, and
for once in a way will perhaps be rather relieved, that I am not going
in quest especially of their inner meanings. So far as may be possible,
the pictures shall speak for themselves, seeing that I write for the
moment rather as a lover of books- a bibliophile- than a lover of
learning. I will begin, however, with a definition. The alchemists whom
I have in my mind may be classified as artists on the decorative side
and in their illustrations- but I know not whether they were their own
draughtsmen- they approached the Rabelaisian method. The school on both
sides is rather of Germanic origin; and it is such entirely, so far as
the pictures are concerned. The French alchemists had recourse
occasionally to designs, but they are negligible for the present
purpose. This is a clearance of the ground, but it must be added that
the great and authoritative text-books have not been illustrated- as,
for example, The Open Entrance to the Closed Palace o/ the King,
which is the work of Eirenaeus Philalethes, and the New Light 0/
Alchemy, which is. believed to be that of. Alexander Seton. If I may
attempt such a comparison, Philalethes- in the work mentioned- reads
rather like a Pauline epistle and Seton like an Epistle to the
Hebrews but the. analogy in both cases is intended to be allusive
only, and strict in no sense. So also they read here and there as if
they were almost inspired; but they could not be termed decorative. The
really practical works- as, for example, the Latin treatises ascribed to
Geber- are never illustrated, except by crude sketches of material
vessels used in the material art for the aid of the neophyte on his way
to the transmutation of metals. I do not think that they really helped
him, and they are of no account for our purpose. The pictures of the
adepts were the allegorical properties of the adepts, and though the
criticism has a side of harshness they were almost obviously provided
for the further confusion of the inquirer, under the pretence of his
enlightenment. At the same time, authors or artists were sages after
their own manner, their allegories had a set purpose and represent
throughout a prevailing school of symbolism. It is quite easy to work
out the elementary part of the symbolism; it is not difficult to
speculate reasonably about some of the more obscure materials. But the
true canons of alchemical criticism yet remain to be expounded; and I
believe that I have intimated otherwise the difficulty and urgency
attaching to this work, so that there may be one unerring criterion to
distinguish between the texts representing the spiritual and those of
the physical work. On the latter phase of the subject it would be
useless- and more than useless- to discourse in any periodical, even if
I. could claim to care anything and to know sufficiently thereof. I know
neither enough to hold my tongue nor enough to speak, so that I differ
in this respect- but for once only- from my . excellent precursor Elias
Ashmole. Like him and like Thomas Vaughan, I do know the narrowness of
the name Chemia, with the antiquity and infinity of the proper
object of research; thereon we have all borne true witness in our
several days and generations.
It is a matter of common report that the
old Hermetic adepts were the chemists of their time and that, as such,
they made numerous and valuable discoveries. This is true in a general
sense, but under what is also a general and an exceedingly grave
reserve. There is little need to say in the first place, that the
spiritual alchemists made no researches and could have had no findings
in the world of metals and minerals. Secondly, there was a great
concourse of witnesses in secret literature, who were adepts of neither
branch; but they expressed their dreams and speculations in terms of
spurious certitude, and were often sincere in the sense that they
deceived themselves. They produced sophistications in the physical work
and believed that their tinctures and colorations were the work of
philosophy; these discovered nothing, and misled nearly every one. They
also- in the alternative school- pursued erroneous ways or translated
their aspirations at a distance into root-matter of spiritual Hermetic
tradition; they reached the term of their folly and drew others who were
foolish after them, who had also no law of differentiation between
things of Caesar and God. Finally- but of these I say nothing- there
were arrant impostors, representing the colportage of their time, who
trafficked in the interest of the curious, assuming alchemy for their
province, as others of the secret sciences were exploited by others of
their kindred. Now, between all these the official historians of
chemistry in the near past had no ground of distinction, and there is
little certainty that they were right over many or most of their
judgments. Once more, the canon was wanting; as I have shown that in
another region it is either wanting for ourselves, or- to be correct- is
in course only of development. This work, therefore, was largely one of
divination, with a peculiar uncertainty in the results.
I have now finished with this introductory
part, and I offer in the first place a simple illustration of the
alchemist's laboratory, as it was conceived by Michael Maier at the
beginning of the seventeenth century. He had a hand in the
Rosicrucianism of his period and published some laws of the brotherhood,
or alternatively those of an incorporated sodality based on similar
lines. He was a man of great and exceptional learning, but withal of a
fantastic spirit; he is proportionately difficult to judge, but his
palmary concern was the material side of the magnum opus. He may
have veered, and did probably, into other directions. The illustration
is chosen from The Golden Tripod, being three ancient tracts
attributed respectively to Basil Valentine, Thomas Norton, and John
Cremer- a socalled abbot of Westminster. It is these personages who are
apparently represented in the picture, together with the zelator,
servant or pupil, attached to the master of the place, whose traditional
duty was the maintenance with untiring zeal of the graduated fire of the
art. Basil Valentine, in the course of his tract, makes it clear that he
is concerned therein only with the physical work, and in the decorative
manner which I have mentioned he affirms that if the three alchemical
principles- namely, philosophical Mercury, Sulphur and Salt- can be
rectified

till "the metallic
spirit and body are joined together inseparably by means of the metallic
soul," the chain of love will he riveted firmly thereby and the palace
prepared for the coronation. But the substances in question are not
those which are known under these names, and it is for this reason, or
for reasons similar thereto, that no process of metallic alchemy can he
followed practically by the isolated student, because everything
essential is left out. The tradition is that the true key was imparted
only from the adept to his son in the art. This notwithstanding, Basil
Valentine calls the particular work to which I am here referring, The
Twelve Keys, and it is said that they open the twelve doors leading
to the Stone of the Philosophers and to the true Medicine. The same
terminology would be used by the spiritual alchemists in another and
higher sense; but this school possesses a master-key which opens all the
doors. Basil Valentine's second key is that of Mercury, as it is
pictured here below.

This, it
will be seen, is the crowned or philosophical Mercury, bearing in either
hand the caduceus, which is his characteristic emblem, and having wings
upon his shoulders, signifying the volatilized state. But there are also
wings beneath his feet, meaning that he has overcome this state, and has
been fixed by the art of the sages, which is part of the Great Work,
requiring the concurrence of the Sun and Moon, whose symbols appear
behind him. The figures at either side carry on their wands or swords
respectively the Bird of Hermes and a crowned serpent. The latter
corresponds to that serpent which, by the command of Moses, was uplifted
in the wilderness for the healing of the children of Israel. As in this
figure Mercury has become a constant fire, one of the figures is
shielding his face from the brilliance. He is on the side of the
increasing moon, but on the side of the sun is he who has attained the
Medicine, and he looks therefore with a steadfast face upon the unveiled
countenance of the vision. According to Basil Valentine, Mercury is the
principle of life. He says also that Saturn is the chief key of the art,
though it is least useful in the mastery. The reference is to
philosophical lead, and he gives a very curious picture representing
this key, as it is shown on the next page [here below. Ed.].

The King in Basil Valentine's terminology
is the stone in its glorious rubefaction, or state of redness, when it
is surrounded by the whole court of the metals. The Spouse of the King
is Venus; Saturn is the Prefect of the royal household; Jupiter is the
Grand Marshal; Mars is at the head of military affairs; Mercury has the
office of Chancellor; the Sun is Vice-Regent; the office of the Moon is
not named, but she seems to be a Queen in widowhood. Before them there
is borne the banner attributed to each: that of the King is crimson,
emblazoned with the figure of Charity in green garments; that of Saturn-
which is carried by Astronomy- is black, emblazoned with the figure of
Faith in garments of yellow and red; that of Jupiter- which is carried
by Rhetoric- is grey, emblazoned with Hope in party-coloured garments;
that of Mars is crimson, with Courage in a crimson cloak, and it is
borne by Geometry; that of Mercury is carried by Arithmetic, and is a
rainbow standard with the figure of Temperance, also in a many-coloured
vestment; that of the Sun is a yellow banner, held by Grammar and
exhibiting the figure of Justice in a golden robe; that of the Moon is
resplendent silver, with the figure of Prudence, clothed in sky-blue,
and it is borne by. Dialectic. Venus has no banner apart from that of
the King, but her apparel is of gorgeous magnificence.
I pass now to another order of symbolism
which delineates the spiritual work by means of very curious pictures,
accompanied by evasive letterpress. These are also from a Germanic
source, and the writer-if not the designer-was Nicholas Barnaud, who
went among many others in quest of Rosicrucians, but it does not appear
what he found. I will give in the first place a Symbol which represents
Putrefaction, being the disintegration of the rough matter in physical
alchemy and on the spiritual side the mystery of mystical death.
According to The Book of Lambspring,
which is the name of the little treatise, the sages keep close guard
over the secret of this operation, because the world is unworthy; and
the children of philosophy, who receive its communication in part and
carry it to the proper term by their personal efforts, enjoy it also in
silence, since God wills that it should be hidden. This is the conquest
of the dragon of material and manifest life; but it is like the old
folklore fables, in which an act of violence is necessary to determine
an enchantment for the redemption of those who are enchanted. The work
is to destroy the body, that the body may not only be revived, but may
live henceforth in a more perfect and as if incorruptible form. The
thesis is that Nature is returned unto herself with a higher gift and
more sacred warrant and the analogy among things familiar is the
sanctification of intercourse by the sacrament of marriage. The dragon
in this picture is destroyed by a knight, but we shall understand that
he is clothed in the armour of God, and that St. Paul has described the
harness.

The next illustration concerns the natural
union between body soul and spirit; it is represented pictorially in the
tract after more than one manner, as when two fishes are shown swimming
in the sea, and it is said that the sea is the body. Here it is a stag
and an unicorn, while the body is that forest which they range. The
unicorn represents the spirit, and he who can couple them together and
lead them out of the forest deserves to be called a Master, as the
letterpress

testifies. The reason is that on their
return to the body the flesh itself will he changed and will have been
rendered golden. In respect of the alternative illustration, the mystery
of this reunion is likened to a work of coaction, by which the three are
so joined together that they are not afterwards sundered; and this
signifies the Medicine. In yet another picture the spirit and soul are
represented by a lion and lioness, between which an union must

must be
effected before the work upon the body can be accomplished. It is an
operation of great wisdom and even cunning, and he who performs it has
merited the meed of praise before all others. I suppose that rough
allegory could hardly express more plainly the marriage in the
sanctified life between the human soul and the Divine Part. Neither text
nor illustration continue so clear in the sequel, more especially as
different symbols are used to represent the same things. In the next
picture the war between the soul and the spirit is shown by that waged
between a wolf and a dog, till one of them kills the other, and a poison
is thus generated which restores them in some obscure manner, and they
become the great and precious Medicine which in its turn restores the
sages.

The tract then proceeds to the
consideration of Mercury, and to all appearance has changed its subject,
though this is not really the case, as might be demonstrated by an
elaborate interpretation; but I omit this and the pictures thereto
belonging, not only from considerations of space but because the task
would be difficult, since it is not possible to say what the spiritual
alchemists intended by Mercury, this being the secret of a particular
school. When the sequence is again taken up the human trinity is
presented under another veil, being that of the Father, the Son and the
Guide. The symbolism is strangely confused, but some apologists would
affirm that this was for a special purpose. In any case, the soul now
appears as a boy; the Guide is the Spirit, and the illustration shows
them at the moment of parting, when the soul is called to ascend, so
that it may understand all wisdom and go even to the gate of Heaven.
Their hands are interlinked, and it will he seen that the highest of all
is distinguished- except for his wings- by an utter simplicity,
characterized by his plain vestments. He, on the other hand, who
represents

the body has the symbols of earthly royalty.
The story concerning them tells how the Soul ascended till it beheld the
throne of Heaven. The next picture is intended to set forth this vision,
when the soul and spirit are seen on the high

mountain of initiation, with all the
splendours of the celestial canopy exhibited above them. It is said to
be a mountain in India, which in books of the Western adepts seems
always to have been regarded as the symbolical soul's home and
the land of epopts. The text states, notwithstanding, that the mountain
lies in the vessel, and those who remember what was set forth in my
previous paper will know exactly what this means- an intimation on the
part of the alchemist that lie is dealing only with events of experience
belonging to the world within. That which is expressed, however, as a
result of the vision is that the soul remembers the body-spoken of here
as the father- and longs to return thereto, to which the Spirit Guide
consents, and they descend from that high eminence. Two things are
illustrated hereby- (1) that the soul in its progress during incarnate
life has the body to save and to change, so that all things may be holy;
but (2) that it is possible- as is nearly always the case in parables of
this kind- to offer a dual interpretation, and the alternative to that
which I have given would be an allegory of return to the House of the
Father in an entirely different sense. But it is obvious that I cannot
speak of it- at least, in the present place. The next picture- and
assuredly the most grotesque of all- represents the reunion of body and
soul by the extraordinary

process of the one devouring the other,
during which operation it should he noted that the spirit stands far
apart. The text now approaches its close and delineates the construction
of a reborn and glorified body, as the result of which it is said "The
son ever remains in the father, and the father in the son… By the grace
of God they abide for ever, the father and the son triumphing gloriously
in the splendour of their new Kingdom." They sit upon one throne and
between them is the spirit, the Ancient Master, who is arrayed in a
crimson robe. So is the triadic union

accomplished, and herein is the spiritual understanding of that mystery
which is called the Medicine in terms of alchemical philosophy.
The finality of the whole subject can be
expressed in a few words, and although it may be a dark saying for some of
my readers it may prove a light to others, and for this reason I give it
as follows: The experiment of spiritual alchemy was the Yoga process of
the West. The root-reason of the statement must be already, as I think,
obviousprobably from the present paper and assuredly from that which
preceded it. The physical experiment of the magnum opus may have
been carried in the past to a successful issue. I do not know, and of my
concern it is no part; but those who took over the terminology of the
transmutation of metals and carried it to another degree had opened gates
within them which lead into the attainment of all desire in the order
which is called absolute, because after its attainment all that we
understand by the soul's dream has passed into the soul's reality. It is
the dream of Divine Union, and eternity cannot exhaust the stages of its
fulfillment. |