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THE AUTHOR'S PREFACE
I, being an anonymous adept, a lover of learning, and a philosopher,
have decreed 'to write this little treatise of medicinal, chemical, and
physical arcana, in the year 1645, after the Birth of Christ, and in the
23rd year of my age, to assist in conducting my straying brethren out of
the labyrinth of error, and with the further object of making myself known
to other Sages, holding aloft a torch which may be visible far and wide to
those who are groping in the darkness of ignorance. The contents of this
Book are not fables, but real experiments which I have seen, touched, and
handled, as an adept will easily conclude from these lines. I have written
more plainly about this Art than any of my predecessors; sometimes I have
found myself on the very verge of breaking my vow, and once or twice had
to lay down my pen for a season; but I could not resist the inward
prompting of God, which impelled me to persevere in the most loving
course, who alone knows the heart, and to whom only be glory for ever.
Hence, I undoubtedly gather that in this last age of the world, many will
become blessed by this arcanum, through what I have thus faithfully
written, for I have not willingly left any-thing doubtful to the young
beginner. I know many who with me do enjoy this secret, and am persuaded
that many more will also rejoice in its possession. Let the holy Will of
God perform what it pleases, though I confess myself an unworthy
instrument through whom such great things should be effected.
Of the need of
Sulphur for producing the Elixir
Whoever wishes to possess this secret Golden Fleece, which has virtue
to transmute metals into gold, should know that our Stone is nothing but
gold digested to the highest degree of purity and subtle fixation to which
it can be brought by Nature and the highest effort of Art; and this gold
thus perfected is called "our gold," no longer vulgar, and is the ultimate
goal of Nature. These words, though they may be surprising to some of my
readers, are true, as I, an adept, bear witness; and though overwise
persons entertain chimerical dreams, Nature herself is most wonderfully
simple. Gold, then, is the one true principle of purification. But our
gold is twofold; one kind is mature and fixed, the yellow Latten, and its
heart or centre is pure fire, whereby it is kept from destruction, and
only purged in the fire. This gold is our male, and it is sexually joined
to a more crude white gold -- the female seed: the two together being
indissolubly united, constitute our fruitful Hermaphrodite. We are told by
the Sages that corporal gold is dead, until it be conjoined with its
bride, with whom the coagulating sulphur, which in gold is outwards, must
be turned inwards. Hence it follows that the substance which we require is
Mercury. Concerning this substance, Geber uses the following words:
"Blessed be the Most High God who created Mercury, and made it an
all-prevailing substance." And it is true that unless we had Mercury,
Alchemists might still boast themselves, but all their boasting would be
vain. Hence it is clear that our Mercury is not common mercury; for all
common mercury is a male that is corporal, specific, and dead, while our
Mercury is spiritual, female, living, and life-giving. Attend closely to
what I say about our Mercury, which is the salt of the wise men. The
Alchemist who works without it is like a man who draws a bow without a
string. Yet it is found nowhere in a pure state above ground, but has to
be extracted by a cunning process out of the substance in which it exists.
Of the
Component Principles of the Mercury of the Sages
Let those who aim to purify Mercury by means of salts, faeces and other
foreign bodies, and by strange chemical processes, understand that though
our water is variousy composed, it is yet only one thing, formed by the
concretion of divers substances of the same essence. The components of our
water are fire, the vegetable "Saturnian liquid," and the bond of Mercury.
The fire is that of mineral Sulphur, which yet can be called neither
mineral nor metallic, but partakes of both characters: it is a chaos or
spirit, because our fiery Dragon, that overcomes all things, is yet
penetrated by the odour of the Saturnian liquid, its blood growing
together with the Saturnian sap into one body which is yet neither a body
(since it is all volatile) nor a spirit (since in fire it resembles melted
metal). It may thus be very properly described as chaos, or the mother of
all metals. From this chaos I can extract everything -- even the Sun and
Moon -- without the transmutatory Elixir. It is called our Arsenic, our
Air, our Moon, our Magnet, and our Chalybs: these names representing the
different stages of its development, even unto the manifestation of the
kingly diadem, which is cast out of the menstruum of our harlot. Learn
then, who are the friends of Cadmus; who is the serpent that devoured
them; what the hollow oak to which Cadmus spitted the serpent. Learn who
are the doves of Diana, that overcome the green lion by gentleness: even
the Babylonian dragon, which kills everything with its venom. Learn, also,
what are the winged shoes of Mercury, and who are those nymphs whom he
charms by means of his incantations.
Concerning the Chalybs of the Sages
Our Chalybs is the true key of our Art, without which the Torch could
in no wise be kindled, and as the true magi have delivered many things
concerning it, so among vulgar alchemists there is great contention as to
its nature. It is the ore of gold, the purest of all spirits; a secret,
infernal, and yet most volatile fire, the wonder of the world, the result
of heavenly virtues in the lower world -- for which reason the Almighty
has assigned to it a most glorious and rare heavenly conjunction, even
that notable sign whose nativity is declared in the East. This star was
seen by the wise men of old, and straightway they knew that a Great King
was born in the world. When you see its constellation, follow it to the
cradle, and there you will behold a beautiful Infant. Remove the
impurities, look upon the face of the King's Son; open your treasury, give
to him gold, and after his death he will bestow on you his flesh and
blood, the highest Medicine in the three monarchies of the earth.
Of the Magnet of
the Sages
As steel is attracted towards the magnet, and the magnet turns towards
the steel, so also our Magnet attracts our Chalybs. Thus, as Chalybs is
the ore of gold, so our Magnet is the true ore of our Chalybs. The hidden
centre of our Magnet abounds in Salt, which Salt is the menstruum in the
Sphere of the Moon, and can calcine gold. This centre turns towards the
Pole with an archetic appetite, in which the virtue of the Chalybs is
exalted into degrees. In the Pole is the heart of Mercury, the true fire
(in which is the rest of its Master), sailing through this great sea that
it may arrive at both the Indies, and direct its course by the aspect of
the North Star, which our Magnet will manifest.
Of the Chaos of
the Sages
Let the student incline his ear to the united verdict of the Sages, who
describe this work as analogous to the Creation of the World. In the
Beginning God created Heaven and Earth; and the Earth was without form and
void, and the Spirit of God moved upon the face of the waters. And God
said, "Let there be light," and there was light. These words are
sufficient for the student of our Art. The Heaven must be united to the
Earth on the couch of friendship, so shall he reign in glory for ever. The
Earth is the heavy body, the womb of the minerals, which it cherishes in
itself, although it brings to light trees and animals. The Heaven is the
place where the great Lights revolve, and through the air transmit their
influences to the lower world. But in the beginning all was one confused
chaos. Our Chaos is, as it were, a mineral earth (by virtue of its
coagulation), and yet also volatile air -- in the centre of which is the
Heaven of the Sages, the Astral Centre. which with its light irradiates
the earth to its surface. What man is wise enough to evolve out of this
world a new King, who shall redeem his brothers from their natural
weaknesses, by dying, being lifted on high, and giving his flesh and blood
for the life of the world ? I thank Thee, O God, that Thou hast concealed
these things from the wise and prudent, and hast revealed them unto babes!
Of the Air of the
Sages
Our air, like the air of the firmament, divides the waters; and as the
waters under the firmament are visible to us mortals, while we are unable
to see the waters above the firmament, so in "our work" we see the
extracentral mineral waters, but are unable to see those which, though
hidden within, nevertheless have a real existence. They exist but do not
appear until it please the Artist, as the author of the New Light has
testified. Our air keeps the extracentral waters from mingling with those
at the centre. If through the removal of this impediment, they were
enabled to mingle, their union would be indissoluble. Therefore the
external vapours and burning sulphur do stiffy adhere to our chaos, and
unable to resist its tyranny, the pure flies away from the fire in the
form of a dry powder. This then should be your great object. The arid
earth must be irrigated, and its pores softened with water of its own
kind, then this thief with all the workers of iniquity will be cast out,
the water will be purged of its leprous stain by the addition of true
Sulphur, and you will have the Spring whose waters are sacred to the
maiden Queen Diana. This thief is armed with all the malignity of arsenic,
and is feared and eschewed by the winged youth. Though the Central Water
be his Spouse, yet the youth cannot come to her, until Diana with the
wings of her doves purges the poisonous air, and opens a passage to the
bridal chamber. Then the youth enters easily through the pores, presently
shaking the waters above, and stirring up a rude and ruddy cloud. Do thou,
O Diana, bring in the water over him, even unto the brightness of the Moon
! So the darkness on the face of the abyss will be dispersed by the spirit
moving in the waters. Thus, at the bidding of God, light will appear on
the Seventh Day, and then this sophic creating of Mercury shall be
completed, from which time, until the revolution of the year, you may wait
for the birth of the marvellous Child of the Sun, who will come to deliver
his brethren from every stain.
Of the First Operation -- Preparation of Mercury by means of the Flying
Eagles
Know, my brother, that the exact preparation of the Eagles of the
Sages, is the highest effort of our Art. In this first section of our
work, nothing is to be done without hard and persevering toil; though it
is quite true that afterwards the substance develops under the influence
of gentle heat without any imposition of hands. The Sages tell us that
their Eagles must be taken to devour the Lion, and that they gain the
victory all the sooner if they are very numerous; also that the number of
the work varies between 7 and 9. The Mercury of the Sages is the Bird of
Hermes (now called a goose, now a pheasant). But the Eagles are always
mentioned in the plural, and number from 3 to lo. Yet this is not to be
understood as if there should be so many weights or parts of the water to
one of the earth, but the water must be taken so oftentimes acuated or
sharpened as there are Eagles numbered. This acuation is made by
sublimation. There is, then, one sublimation of the Mercury of the Sages,
when one Eagle is mentioned, and the seventh sublimation will so
strengthen your Mercury, that the Bath of your King will be ready... Let
me tell you now how this part of the work is performed. Take 4 parts of
our fiery Dragon, in whose belly is hidden the magic Chalybs, and 9 parts
of our Magnet; mingle them by means of a fierce fire, in the form of a
mineral water, the foam of which must be taken away. Remove the shell, and
take the kernel. Purge what remains once more by means of fire and the
Sun, which may be done easily if Saturn shall have seen himself in the
mirror of Mars. Then you will obtain our Chameleon, or Chaos, in which all
the virtues of our Art are potentially present. This is the infant
Hermaphrodite, who, through the bite of a mad dog, has been rendered so
fearful of water, that though of a kindred nature, it always eschews and
avoids it. But in the grove of Diana are two doves that soothe its rabid
madness if applied by the art of the nymph Mercury. Take it and plunge it
under water till it perish therein; then the rabid and black dog will
appear panting and half suffocated -- drive him down with vigorous blows,
and the darkness will be dispelled. Give it wings when the Moon is full,
and it will fly away as an Eagle, leaving the doves of Diana dead (though,
when first taken they should be living). Repeat this seven times, and your
work is done, the gentle coction which follows is child's play and a
woman's work.
Of the
Difficulty and Length of the First Operation
Some Alchemists fancy that the work from beginning to end is a mere
idle entertainment; but those who make it so will reap what they have sown
-- viz., nothing. We know that next to the Divine Blessing, and the
discovery of the proper foundation, nothing is so important as unwearied
industry and perseverance in this First Operation. It is no wonder, then,
that so many students of this Art are reduced to beggary; they are afraid
of work, and look upon our Art as mere sport for their leisure moments.
For no labour is more tedious than that which the preparatory part of our
enterprise demands. Morienus earnestly entreats the King to consider this
fact, and says that many Sages have complained of the tedium of our work.
"To render a chaotic mass orderly"' says the Poet, "is matter of much time
and labour" -- and the noble author of the Hermetical Arcanum describes it
as an Herculean task. There are so many impurities clinging to our first
substance, and a most powerful intermediate agent is required for the
purpose of eliciting from our polluted menstruum the Royal Diadem. But
when you have once prepared your Mercury, the most formidable part of your
task is accomplished, and you may indulge in that rest which is sweeter
than any work, as the Sage says.
On the
Superiority of our Mercury over All Metals
Our Mercury is that Serpent which devoured the companions of Cadmus,
after having first swallowed Cadmus himself, though he was far stronger
than they. Yet Cadmus will one day transfix this Serpent, when he has
coagulated it with his Sulphur. Know that this, our Mercury, is a King
among metals, and dissolves them by changing their Sulphur into a kindred
mercurial substance. The Mercury of one, two, or three eagles bears rule
over Saturn, Jupiter, and Venus. The Mercury of from three to seven eagles
sways the Moon; that of ten eagles has power over the Sun; our Mercury is
nearer than any other unto the first ens of metals; it has power to enter
metallic bodies, and to manifest their hidden depths.
On the
sulphur which is in the Mercury of the Sages
It is a marvellous fact that our Mercury contains active sulphur and
yet preserves the form and all the properties of Mercury. Hence it is
necessary that a form be introduced therein by our preparation, which form
is a metallic sulphur. This Sulphur is the inward fire which causes the
putrefaction of the composite Sun. This sulphureous fire is the spiritual
seed which our Virgin (still remaining immaculate) has conceived. For an
uncorrupted virginity admits of a spiritual love, as experience and
authority affirm. The two (the passive and the active principle) combined
we call our Hermaphrodite. When joined to the Sun, it softens, liquefies,
and dissolves it with gentle heat. By means of the same fire it coagulates
itself; and by its coagulation produces the Sun. Our pure and homogeneous
Mercury, having conceived inward Sulphur (through our Art), coagulates
itself under the influence of gentle outward heat, like the cream of milk
-- a subtle earth floating on the water. When it is united to the Sun, it
is not only not coagulated, but the composite substance becomes softer day
by day; the bodies are almost dissolved; and the spirits begin to be
coagulated, with a black colour and a most fetid smell. Hence it appears
that this spiritual metallic Sulphur is in truth the moving principle in
our Art; it is really volatile or unmatured gold, and by proper digestion
is changed into that metal. If joined to perfect gold, it is not
coagulated, but dissolves the corporal gold, and remains with it, being
dissolved, under one form, although before the perfect union death must
precede, that so they may he united after death, not simply in a perfect
unity, but in a thousand times more than perfect perfection.
Concerning the
Discovery of the Perfect Magistery
There are those who think that this Art was first discovered by
Solomon, or rather imparted to him by Divine Revelation. But though there
is no reason for doubting that so wise and profoundly learned a sovereign
was acquainted with our Art, yet we happen to know that he was not the
first to acquire the knowledge. It was possessed by Hermes, the Egyptian,
and some other Sages before him; and we may suppose that they first sought
a simple exaltation of imperfect metals into regal perfection, and that it
was at first their endeavour to develop Mercury, which is most like to
gold in its weight and properties, into perfect gold. This, however, no
degree of ingenuity could effect by any fire, and the truth gradually
broke on their minds that an internal heat was required as well as an
external one. So they rejected aqua fortis and all corrosive solvents,
after long experiments with the same -- also all salts, except that kind
which is the first substance of all salts, which dissolves all metals and
coagulates Mercury, but not without violence, whence that kind of agent is
again separated entire, both in weight and virtue, from the things it is
applied to. They saw that the digestion of Mercury was prevented by
certain aqueous crudities and earthy dross; and that the radical nature of
these impurities rendered their elimination impossible, except by the
complete inversion of the whole compound. They knew that Mercury would
become fixed if it could be freed from their defiling presence -- as it
contains fermenting sulphur, which is only hindered by these impurities
from coagulating the whole mercurial body. At length they discovered that
Mercury, in the bowels of the earth, was intended to become a metal, and
that the process of development was only stopped by the impurities with
which it had become tainted. They found that that which should be active
in the Mercury was passive; and that its infirmity could not be remedied
by any means, except the introduction of some kindred principle from
without. Such a principle they discovered in metallic sulphur, which
stirred up the passive sulphur in the Mercury, and by allying itself with
it, expelled the aforesaid impurities. But in seeking to accomplish this
practically, they were met by another great difficulty. In order that this
sulphur might be effectual in purifying the Mercury, it was indispensable
that it should itself be pure. All their efforts to purify it, however,
were doomed to failure. At length they bethought them that it might
possibly be found somewhere in Nature in a purified condition -- and their
search was crowned with success. They sought active sulphur in a pure
state, and found it cunningly concealed in the House of the Ram. This
sulphur mingled most eagerly with the offspring of Saturn, and the desired
effect was speedily produced -- after the malignant venom of the " air" of
Mercury had been tempered (as already set forth at some length) by the
Doves of Venus. Then life was joined to life by means of the liquid; the
dry was moistened; the passive was stirred into action by the active; the
dead was revived by the living. The heavens were indeed temporarily
clouded over, but after a copious downpour of rain, serenity was restored.
Mercury emerged in a hermaphroditic state. Then they placed it in the
fire; in no long time they succeeded in coagulating it, and in its
coagulation they found the Sun and the Moon in a most pure state. Then
they considered that, before its coagulation, this Mercury was not a
metal, since, on being volatilised, it left no residue at the bottom of
the distilling vessel; hence they called it unmatured gold and their
living (or quick) silver It also occurred to them that if gold were sown,
as it were, in the soil of its own first substance, its excellence would
probably be enhanced; and when they placed gold therein, the fixed was
volatilised, the hard softened, the coagulated dissolved, to the amazement
of Nature herself. For this reason they wedded these two to each other,
put them in a still over the fire, and for many days regulated the heat in
accordance with the requirements of Nature. Thus the dead was revived, the
body decayed, and a glorified spirit rose from the grave; the soul was
exalted into the Quintessence -- the Universal Medicine for animals,
vegetables, and minerals.
The Generic
Method of Making the Perfect Magistery
The greatest secret of our operation is no other than a cohobation of
the nature of one thing above the other, until the most digested virtue be
extracted out of the digested body of the crude one. But there are hereto
requisite: Firstly, an exact measurement and preparation of the
ingredients required; secondly, an exact fulfilment of all external
conditions; thirdly a proper regulation of the fire; fourthly, a good
knowledge of the natural properties of the substances; and fifthly,
patience, in order that the work may not be marred by overgreat haste. Of
all these points we will now speak in their proper order.
Of the
Use of Mature Sulphur in the Work of the Elixir
We have spoken of the need of Mercury, and have described its
properties more plainly and straightforwardly than has ever been done
before. God knows that we do not grudge the knowledge of this Art to our
brother men; and we are not afraid that it can ever become the property of
any unworthy person. So long as the secret is possessed by a comparatively
small number of philosophers, their lot is anything but a bright and happy
one; surrounded as we are on every side by the cruel greed and -- the
prying suspicion of the multitude, we are doomed, like Cain, to wander
over the earth homeless and friendless. Not for us are X the soothing
influences of domestic happiness; not for us the delightful confidences of
friendship. Men who covet our golden secret pursue us from place to place,
and fear closes our lips, when love tempts us to open ourselves freely to
a brother. Thus we feel prompted at times to burst forth into the desolate
exclamation of Cain: "Whoever finds me will slay me." Yet we are not the
murderers of our brethren; we are anxious only to do good to our
fellow-men. But even our kindness and charitable compassion are rewarded
with black ingratitude- ingratitude that cries to heaven for vengeance. It
was only a short time ago that, after visiting the plague-stricken haunts
of a certain city, and restoring the sick to perfect health by means of my
miraculous medicine, I found myself surrounded by a yelling mob, who
demanded that I should give to them my Elixir of the Sages; and it was
only by changing my dress and my name, by shaving off my beard and putting
on a wig, that I was enabled to save my life, and escape from the hands of
those wicked men. And even when our lives are not threatened, it is not
pleasant to find-ourselves, wherever we go, the central objects of human
greed... I know of several persons who were found strangled in their beds,
simply because they were suspected of possessing this secret, though, in
reality, they knew no more about it than their murderers; it was enough
for some desperate ruffians, that a mere whisper of suspicion had been
breathed against their victims. Men are so eager to have this Medicine
that your very caution will arouse their suspicions, and endanger your
safety. Again, if you desire to sell any large quantity of your gold and
silver, you will be unable to do so without imminent risk of discovery.
The very fact that anyone has a great mass of bullion for sale would in
most places excite suspicion. This feeling will be strengthened when
people test the quality of our gold; for it is much finer and purer than
any of the gold which is brought from Barbary, or from the Guinea Coast;
and our silver is better even than that which is conveyed home by the
Spanish silver fleet. If, in order to baffle discovery, you mix these
precious metals with alloy, you render yourself liable, in England and-
Holland at least, to capital punishment; for in those countries no one is
permitted to tamper with the precious metals except the officers of the
mint, and the licensed goldsmiths. I remember once going, in the disguise
of a foreign merchant to a goldsmith's shop, and offering him 600 pounds
worth of our pure silver for sale. He subjected it to the usual tests, and
then said: "This silver is artificially prepared." When I asked him why he
thought so, his answer was: "I am not a novice in my profession, and know
very well the exact quality of the silver which is brought from the
different mines." When I heard these words I took myself away with great
secrecy and dispatch, leaving the silver in the hands of the goldsmith. On
this account, and by reason of the many and great difficulties which beset
us, the possessors of this Stone, on every side, we do elect to remain
hidden, and will communicate the Art to those who are worthily covetous of
our secrets, and then mark what public good will befall. Without Sulphur,
our Mercury would never be properly coagulated for our supernatural work;
it is the male substance, while Mercury may be called the female; and all
Sages say that no tincture can be made without its latten, which latten is
gold, without any double speaking. Wise men, notwithstanding, can find
this substance even on the dunghill; but the ignorant are unable to
discern it even in gold. The tincture of gold is concealed in the gold of
the Sages, which is the most highly matured of bodies; but as a raw
material it exists only in our Mercury; and it (gold) receives from
Mercury the multiplication of its seed, but in virtue rather than in
weight. The Sages say that common gold is dead, while their's is living;
and common gold is dead in the same sense in which a grain of wheat is
dead, while it is surrounded by dry air; and comes to life, swells,
softens, and germinates only when it is put into moist earth. In this
sense gold, too, is dead, so long as it is surrounded by the corporeal
husk, always allowing, of course, for the great difference between a
vegetable grain and metallic gold. Our grain is quickened in water only;
and as wheat, while it remains in the barn is called grain, and is not
destined to be quickened, because it is to be used for bread making -- but
changes its name, when it is sown in the field, and is then called
seedcorn; so our gold, while it is in the form of rings, plate, and coins,
is called common gold, because in that state it is likely to remain
unchanged to the end of the world; but potentially it is even then the
gold of the Sages, because if sown in its own proper element, it would in
a few days become the Chaos of the Sages. Hence the Sages bid you revive
the dead (i.e., the gold which already appeared doomed to a living death)
and mortify the living, i.e., the Mercury which, imparting life to the
gold, is itself deprived of the vital principle. Their gold is taken in a
dead, their water in a living, state, and by their composition and brief
coction, the dead gold revives and the living Mercury dies, i.e., the
spirit is coagulated, the body is dissolved, and thus both putrefy
together, until all the members of the compound are torn into atoms. The
mystery of our Art, which we conceal with so great care, is the
preparation of the Mercury, which above ground is not to be found made
ready to our hand. But when it is prepared, it is "our water" in which
gold is dissolved, whereby the latent life of the gold is set free, and
receives the life of the dissolving Mercury, which is to gold what good
earth is to the grain of wheat. When the gold has putrefied in the
Mercury, there arises out of the decomposition of death a new body, of the
same essence, but of a glorified substance. Here you have the whole of our
Philosophy in a nutshell. There is no secret about it, except the
preparation of Mercury, its mingling with the gold in the right
proportions, and the regulation of the fire in accordance with its
requirements. Gold by itself does not fear the fire; hence the great point
is, to temper the heat to the capacity of the Mercury. If the Mercury is
not properly prepared, the gold remains common gold, being joined with an
improper agent; it continues unchanged, and no degree of heat will help it
to put off its corporeal nature. Without our Mercury the seed (i.e., gold)
cannot be sown; and if gold is not sown in its proper element, it cannot
be quickened any more than the corn which the West Indians keep
underground, in air-tight stone jars, can germinate. I know that some
self-constituted "Sages" will take exception to this teaching, and say
that common gold and running Mercury are not the substance of our Stone.
But one question will suffice to silence their objections: Have they ever
actually prepared our Tincture? I have prepared it more than once, and
daily have it in my power; hence I may perhaps be permitted to speak as
one having authority. Go on babbling about your rain water collected in
May, your Salts, your sperm which is more potent than the foul fiend
himself, ye self-styled philosophers; rail at me, if you like; all you say
is conclusively refuted by this one fact -- you cannot make the Stone.
When I say that gold and Mercury are the only substances of our Stone I
know what I am writing about; and the Searcher of all hearts knows also
that I say true. The time has arrived when we may speak more freely about
this Art. For Elias the artist is at hand, and glorious things are already
spoken of the City of God. I possess wealth sufficient to buy the whole
world -- but as yet I may not use it on account of the craft and cruelty
of wicked men. It is not from jealousy that I conceal as much as I do: God
knows that I am weary of this lonely, wandering life, shut out from the
bonds of friendship, and almost from the face of God. I do not worship the
golden calf, before which our Israelites bow low to the ground; let it be
ground to powder like the brazen serpent. I hope that in a few years gold
(not as given by God, but as abused by man) will be so common that those
who are now so mad after it, shall contemotuously spurn aside this bulwark
of Antichrist. Then will tie day of our deliverance be at hand when the
streets of the new Jerusalem are paved with gold, and its gates are made
of great diamonds. The day is at hand when, by means of this my Book, gold
will have become as common as dirt; when we Sages shall find rest for the
soles of our feet, and render fervent thanks to God. My heart conceives
unspeakable things, and is enlarged for the good of the Israel of God.
These words I utter forth with a herald's clarion tones. My Book is the
precursor of Elias, designed to prepare the Royal way of the Master; and
would to God that by its means all men might become adepts in our Art --
for then gold, the great idol of mankind, would lose its value, and we
should prize it only for its scientific teaching. Virtue would be loved
for its own sake. I am familiar with many possessors of this Art who
regard silence as the great point of honour. But I have been enabled by
God to take a different view of the matter; and I firmly believe that I
can best serve the Israel of God, and put my talent out at usury, by
making this secret knowledge the common property of the whole world. Hence
I have not conferred with flesh and blood, nor attempted to obtain the
consent of my Brother Sages. If the matter succeeds according to my desire
and prayer, they will all rejoice that I have published this Book.
Of
the Circumstantial and Accidental Requisites of our Art
We have weeded out all vulgar errors concerning our Art, and have shewn
that gold and Mercury are the only substances required. We have shewn that
this gold is to be understood, not metaphorically, but in a truly
philosophical sense. We have also declared our Mercury to be true
quicksilver, without any ambiguity of acceptation. The latter, we have
told you, must be made by art, and be a key to the former. We have made
everything as clear as noonday; and our teaching is based, not on hearsay,
or on the writings of others, but on our own personal and oft repeated
experience. The things we faithfully declare are what we have both seen
and known. We have made and do possess the Stone -- the great Elixir.
Moreover, we do not grudge you this knowledge, but wish you to attain it
out of this Book. We have spoken out more plainly than any of our
predecessors; and our Receipt, apart from the fact that we have not called
things by their proper names, is perfectly trustworthy. It remains for us
to give you some practical tests by which the goodness or unsuitableness
of your Mercury may be known. and some directions for amending its
defects. When you have living Mercury and gold, there remains to be
accomplished, first, the purging of the Mercury and the gold, then their
espousal, and finally the regulation of the fire.
Of the Incidental
Purging of Mercury and Gold
Perfect gold is found in the bowels of the earth in little pieces, or
in sand. If you can meet with this unmixed gold, it is pure enough; if
not, purge it with antimony or royal cement, or boil it with aqua fortis,
the gold being first granulated. Then smelt it, remove the impure
sediment, and it is ready. But Mercury needs inward and essential purging.
which radical cleansing is brought about by the addition of true Sulphur,
little by little, according to the number of the Eagles. Then it also
needs an incidental purgation for the purpose of removing from its surface
the impurities which have, by the essential purgation, been ejected from
the centre. This process is not absolutely necessary, but it is useful, as
it accelerates the work. Therefore, take your Mercury, which you have
purified with a suitable number of Eagles, sublime it three times with
common salt and iron filings, and wash it with vinegar and a moderate
quantity of salts of ammonia, then dry and distil in a glass retort, over
a gradually increasing fire, until the whole of the Mercury has ascended.
Repeat this four times, then boil the Mercury in spirits of vinegar for an
hour, stirring it constantly. Then pour off the vinegar, and wash off its
acidity by a plentiful effusion of spring water. Dry the Mercury, and its
splendour will be wonderful. You may wash it with wine, or vinegar and
salt, and so spare the sublimation; but then distil it at least four times
without addition, after you have perfected all the eagles, or washings,
washing the chalybeat retort every time with ashes and water; then boil it
in distilled vinegar for half a day, stirring it strongly at times. Pour
off the blackish vinegar, add new, then wash with warm water. This process
is designed to purge away the internal impurities from the surface. These
impurities you may perceive if, on mixing Mercury with purest gold, you
place the amalgam on a white sheet of paper. The sooty blackness which is
then seen on the paper is purged away by this process.
Of the Amalgam of Mercury and Gold, and of their respective Proportions
When you have done all this, take one part of pure and laminated gold,
or fine gold filings, and two parts of Mercury; put them in a heated
(marble) jar, i.e., heaved with boiling water, being taken out of which it
dries quickly, and holds the heat a long time. Grind with an ivory, or
glass, or stone, or iron, or boxwood pestle (the iron pestle is not so
good; I use a pestle of crystal): pound them, I say, as small as the
painters grind their colours; then add water so as to make the mass as
consistent as half melted butter. The mixture should be fixable and soft,
and permit itself to be moulded into little globules -- like moderately
soft butter; it should be of such a consistency as to yield to the
gentlest touch. Moreover, it should be of the same temperature throughout,
and one part should not be more liquid than another. The mixture will be
more or less soft, according to the proportion of Mercury which it
contains; but it must be capable of forming into those little globules,
and the Mercury should not be more lively at the bottom than at the top.
If the amalgam be left undisturbed, it will at once harden; you must
therefore judge of the merits of the mixture, while you are stirring it;
if it fulfils the above conditions, it is good Then take spirit of
vinegar, and dissolve in it a third part of salt of ammonia, put the
amalgam into this liquid, let the whole boil for a quarter-of-an-hour in a
long necked glass vessel; then take the mixture out of the glass vessel,
pour off the liquid, heat the mortar, and pound the amalgam (as above)
vigorously, and wash away all blackness with hot water. Put it again into
the liquid, let it boil up once more in the glass vessel, pound it as
before, and wash it. Repeat this process until the blackness is entirely
purged out. The amalgam will then be as brilliant and white as the purest
silver. Once more regulate the temperature of the amalgam according to the
rules given above; your labour will be richly rewarded. If the amalgam be
not quite soft enough, add a little Mercury. Then boil it in pure water,
and free it from all saltness and acidity. Pour off the water, and dry the
amalgam. Make quite sure that it is thoroughly dried, by waving it to and
fro on the point of a knife over a sheet of white paper.
Concerning the Size, Form, Material, and Mode of Securing the Vessel
Let your glass distilling vessel be round or oval; large enough to hold
neither more nor much less than an ounce of distilled water in the body
thereof. Let the height of the vessel's neck be about one palm,
hand-breath, or span, and let the glass be clear and thick (the thicker
the better, so long as it is clear and clean, and permits you to
distinguish what is going on within) -- but the thickness should be
uniform. The substance which will go into this vessel consists of 1/2 oz.
of gold, and one oz. of mercury; and if you have to add 1/3 oz. of
mercury, the whole compound will still be less than 2 oz. The glass should
be strong in order to prevent the vapours which arise from our embryo
bursting the vessel. Let the mouth of the vessel be very carefully and
effectually secured by means of a thick layer of sealing-wax. The utensils
and the materials required are not then very expensive -- and if you use
my thick distilling-vessel you will avoid loss by breakage. The other
instruments that are requisite are not dear. I know that many will take
exception to this statement; they will say that the pursuit of our Art is
a matter of all but ruinous expense. But my answer consists in a simple
question: What is the object of our Art? Is it not to make the
Philosopher's Stone -- to find the liquid in which gold melts like ice in
tepid water? And do those good people who are so eager in their search
after "Mercury of the Sun," and "Mercury of the Moon," and who pay so high
a price for their materials, ever succeed in this object? They cannot
answer this question in the affirmative. One florin will buy enough of the
substance of our water to quicken two pounds of mercury, and make it the
true Mercury of the Sages. But, of course, glass vessels, coals, earthen
vessels, a furnace, iron vessels, and other instruments, cannot be bought
for nothing. Without a perfect body, our ore, viz., gold, there can be no
Tincture, and our Stone is at first vile, immature, and volatile, but when
complete it is perfect, precious, and fixed. These two aspects of our
Stone are the body, gold, and the spirit, or quicksilver.
Of
the Furnace or Athanor of the Sages
I have spoken about Mercury, Sulphur, the vessel, their treatment, etc.
etc.; and, of course, all these things are to be understood with a grain
of salt. You must understand that in the preceding chapters I have spoken
metaphorically; if you take my words in a literal sense, you will reap no
harvest except your outlay. For instance, when I name the principal
substances Mercury and gold -- I do not mean common gold in the state in
which it is sold at the goldsmiths -- but it must be prepared by means of
our Art You may find our gold in common gold and silver, but it is easier
to make the Stone than to get its first substance out of common gold. "Our
gold" is the Chaos whose soul has not been taken away by fire. The soul of
common gold has retired before the fiery tyranny of Vulcan into the inmost
citadel. If you seek our gold in a substance intermediate between
perfection and imperfection, you will find it: but otherwise, you must
unbar the gates of common gold by the first preparatory process (ch. xv.),
by which the charm of its body is broken, and the husband enabled to do
his work. If you choose the former course, you shall use only gentle heat;
in the latter case, you will require a fierce fire. But here you will be
hopelessly lost in a labyrinth, if you do not know your way out of it. But
whether you choose our gold, or common gold, you will in either case need
an even and continual fire. If you take our gold, you will finish the work
a few months sooner, and the Elixir will be ten times more precious than
that prepared from common gold. If you work with "our gold," you will be
assisted in its calcination, putrefaction, and dealbation by its gentle
inward (natural) heat. But in the case of common gold, this heat has to be
applied externally by foreign substances, so as to render it fit for union
with the Virgin's Milk. In neither case, however, can anything be effected
without the aid of fire. It was not, then, in vain that Hermes counts fire
next to the Sun and Moon as the governor of the work. But this is to be
under stood of the truly secret furnace, which a vulgar eye never saw.
There is also another furnace, which is called our common furnace, made of
potter's earth, or of iron and brass plates, well compacted with clay.
This furnace we call Athanor, and the shape which I like best is that of a
tower with a "nest" at the top. The "tower" should be about three feet
high, and nine fingers wide within the plates. A little above the ground,
let there be a little opening of about three or four fingers wide, for
removing the cinders; over that, there should be a fire-place built with
stones. Above this, we place the furnace itself, which should be such as
to exclude all draughts and currents of air. The coals are put in from
above, and the aperture should then be carefully closed. But it is not
necessary that your furnace should exactly correspond to the description
which I have given so long as it fulfils the following conditions:
firstly, it must be free from draughts; secondly, it must enable you to
vary the temperature, without removing your vessel; thirdly, you must be
able to keep up in it a fire for ten or twelve hours, without looking to
it. Then the door of our Art will be opened to you; and when you have
prepared the Stone, you may procure a small portable stove, for the
purpose of multiplying it.
Of the
Progress of the Work during the First Forty Days
When you have prepared our gold and Mercury in the manner described,
put it into our vessel, and subject it to the action of our fire; within
40 days you will see the whole substance converted into atoms, without any
visible motion, or perceptible heat (except that it is just warm). If you
do not yet rightly know the meaning of "our gold," take one part of common
gold (well purified), and three parts of our Mercury (thoroughly purged),
put them together as directed (cap. xvi), place them over the fire, and
there keep them at the boiling point, till they sweat, and their sweat
circulates. At the end of 90 days you will find that the Mercury has
separated and reunited all the elements of the common gold. Boil the
mixture 50 days longer, and you will discover that our Mercury has changed
the common gold into "our gold," which is the Medicine of the first order.
It is already our Sulphur, but it has not yet the power of tinging. This
method has been followed by many Sages, but it is exceedingly slow and
tedious, and is only for the rich of the earth. Moreover, when you have
got this Sulphur do not think that you possess the Stone, but only its
true Matter, which you may seek in an imperfect thing, and find it within
a week, by our easy yet rare way, reserved of God for His poor, contemned,
and abject saints. Hereof I have now determined to write much, although in
the beginning of this Book I decreed to bury it in silence. This is the
one great sophism of all adepts; some speak of this common gold and
silver, and say the truth, and others say that we cannot use it, and they
too, say the truth. But in the presence of God I will call all our adepts
to account, and charge them with jealous surliness. I, too, had determined
to tread the same path, but God's hand confounded my scheme. I say then,
that both ways are true, and come to the same thing in the end -- but
there is a vast difference at the beginning. Our whole Art consists in the
right preparation of our Mercury and our gold. Our Mercury is our way, and
without it nothing is effected. Our gold is not common gold, but it may be
found in it; and if you operate on our Mercury with common gold
(regulating the fire in the right way), you will after 150 days have our
gold, since our gold is obtained from our Mercury. Hence if common gold
have all its atoms thoroughly severed by means of our Mercury, and then
reunited by the same agency, the whole mixture will, under the influence
of fire, become our gold. But, if, without this preparatory purging, you
were to use common gold with our Mercury for the purpose of preparing the
Stone, you would be sadly mistaken; and this is the great Labyrinth in
which most beginners go astray, because the Sages in writing of these ways
as two ways, purposely obscure the fact that they are only one way (though
of course the one is more direct than the other). The gold of the Sages
may then be prepared out of our common gold and our Mercury, from which
there may afterwards be obtained by repeated liquefactions, Sulphur and
Quicksilver which is incombustible, and tinges all things else. In this
sense, our Stone is to be found in all metals and minerals, since our gold
may be got from them all -- but most easily, of course, from gold and
silver. Some have found it in tin, some in lead, but most of those who
have pursued the more tedious method, have found it in gold. Of course, if
our gold be prepared in the way I have described, out of common gold (in
the course of 150 days), instead of being found ready made, it will not be
so effectual, and the preparation of the Stone will take 1 1/2 years
instead of 7 months. I know both ways, and prefer the shorter one; but I
have described the longer one as well in order that I may not draw down
upon myself the scathing wrath of the "Sages." The great difficulty which
discourages all beginners is not of Nature's making: the Sages have
created it by speaking of the longer operation when they mean the shorter
one, and vice versa. If you choose common gold, you should espouse it to
Venus (copper), lay them together on the bridal bed, and, on bringing a
fierce fire to bear on them, you will see an emblem of the Great Work in
the following succession of colours: black, the peacock's tail, white,
orange, and red. Then repeat the same operation with Mercury (called
Virgin's Milk), using the "fire of the Bath of Dew," and (towards the end)
sand mixed with ashes. The substance will first turn a much deeper black,
and then a completer white and red. Hence if you know our Art, extract our
gold from our Mercury (this is the shorter way), and thus perform the
whole operation with one substance (viz., Mercury); if you can do this,
you will have attained to the perfection of philosophy. In this method,
there is no superfluous trouble: the whole work, from beginning to end, is
based upon one broad foundation -- whereas if you take common gold, you
must operate on two substances, and both will have to be purified by an
elaborate process. If you diligently consider what I have said, you have
in your hand a means of unravelling all the apparent contradictions of the
Sages. They speak of three operations: the first, by which the inward
natural heat expels all cold through the aid of external fire, the second,
wherein gold is purged with our Mercury, through the mediation of Venus,
and under the influence of a fierce fire; the third, in which common gold
is mixed with our Mercury, and the ferment of Sulphur added. But if you
will receive my advice, you will not be put out by any wilful obscurity on
the part of the Sages. Our sulphur you should indeed strive to discover;
and if God enlightens you, you will find it in our Mercury. Before the
living God I swear that my teaching is true. If you operate on Mercury and
pure common gold, you may find "our gold" in 7 to 9 months, and "our
silver" in 5 months. But when you have these, you have not yet prepared
our Stone: that glorious sight will not gladden your eyes until you have
been at work for a year-and-a-half. By that time you may obtain the elixir
by subjecting the substance to very gentle continuous heat.
Of the Appearance of Blackness in the Work of the Sun and Moon
If you operate on gold and silver, for the purpose of finding our
Sulphur, let your substance first become like a thin paste, or boiling
water, or liquid pitch; for the operation of our gold and Mercury is
prefigured by that which happens in the preparation of common gold with
our Mercury. Take your substance and place it in the furnace, regulate the
fire properly for the space of twenty days, in which time you will observe
various colours, and about the end of the fourth week, if the fire be
continuous, you will see a most amiable greenness, which will last for
about ten days. Then rejoice, for in a short time it will be as a black
coal, and your whole compound shall be reduced to atoms. The operation is
a resolution of the fixed into the not fixed that both afterwards, being
conjoined, may make one matter, partly spiritual and partly corporal. Once
more, I assure you, the regulation of the fire is the only thing that I
have hidden from you. Given the proper-regimen, take the Stone, govern it
as you know how, and then these wonderful phenomena will follow: The fire
will at once dissolve the Mercury and the Sulphur like wax; the Sulphur
will be burnt, and change its colours from day to day; the Mercury will
prove incombustible, and only be gradually tinged (and purified, without
being infected) with the colours of the Sulphur. Let the heaven stoop to
the earth, till the latter has conceived heavenly seed. When you see the
substances mingle in your distilling vessel, and assume the appearance of
clotted and burnt blood, be sure that the female has received the seed of
the male. About seventeen days afterwards your substance will begin to
wear a yellow, thick, misty, or foamy appearance. At this time, you must
take care not to let the embryo escape from your vessel; for it will give
out a greenish, yellow, black, and bluish vapour and strive to burst the
vessel. If you allow these vapours (which are continuous when the Embryo
is formed) to escape, your work will be hopelessly marred. Nor should you
allow any of the odour to make its way through any little hole or outlet;
for the evaporation would considerably weaken the strength of the Stone.
Hence the true Sage seals up the mouth of his vessel most carefully. Let
me advise you, moreover, not to neglect your fire, or move or open the
vessel, or slacken the process of decoction, until you find that the
quantity of the liquid begins to diminish; if this happens after thirty
days, rejoice, and know that you are on the right road. Then be doubly
careful, and you will, at the end of another fortnight, find that the
earth has become quite dry and of a deep black. This is the death of the
compound; the winds have ceased, and there is a great calm. This is that
great simultaneous eclipse of the Sun and Moon, when the Sea also has
disappeared. Our Chaos is then ready, from which, at the bidding of God,
all the wonders of the world may successively emerge.
Of the
Caution required to avoid Burning the Flowers
The burning of the flowers is fatal, yet soon committed: it is chiefly
to be guarded against after the lapse of the third week. In the beginning
there is so much moisture that if the fire be too fierce it will dry up
the liquid too quickly, and you will prematurely obtain a dry red powder,
from which the principle of life has flown; if the fire be not strong
enough the substance will not be properly matured. Too powerful a fire
prevents the true union of the substances. True union only takes place in
water. Bodies collide, but do not unite; only liquids (and spirits) can
truly mingle their substance. Hence our homogeneous metallic water must be
allowed to do its work properly, and should not be dried up, until this
perfect mutual absorption has taken place in a natural manner. Premature
drying only destroys the germ of life, strikes the active principle on the
head as with a hammer, and renders it passive. A red powder is indeed
produced, but long before the time: for redness should be preceded by
blackness. It is true that, in the beginning of our work, when heaven is
wedded to earth, and earth conceives the fire of nature, a red colour does
appear. But the substance is then sufficiently moist; and the redness soon
gives way to a green colour, which in its turn gradually yields to
blackness. Do not be in a hurry; let your fire be just powerful enough,
but not too powerful; steer a straight course between Scylla and Charybdis:
you will behold in your vessel a variety of colours and grotesque
transformations -- until the substance settles down into a powder of
intense blackness. This should happen within the first fifty days. If it
does not, either your Mercury, or the regulation of your fire, or the
composition of your substance is at fault -- if, indeed, you have not
moved or shaken your glass vessel.
Of the Regimen of
Saturn
All the Sages who have written on our Art, have spoken of the work and
regimen of Saturn; and their remarks have led many to choose common lead
as the substance of the Stone. But you should know that our Saturn, or
lead, is a much nobler substance than gold. It is the living earth in
which the soul of gold is joined to Mercury, that they may bring forth
Adam and his wife Eve. Wherefore, since the highest has so lowered itself
as to become the lowest, we may expect that its blood may be the means of
redeeming all its brethren. The Tomb in which our King is buried, is that
which we call Saturn, and it is the key of the work of transmutation;
happy is he who can salute this planet, and call it by its right name. It
is a boon which is obtained by the blessing of God alone; it is not of him
that willeth, or of him that runneth; but God bestoweth it on whom He
will.
Of
the different Regimens of this Work
Let me assure you that in our whole work there is nothing hidden but
the regimen, of which it was truly said by the Sage that whoever knows it
perfectly will be honoured by princes and potentates. I tell you plainly
that if this one point were clearly set forth, our Art would become mere
women's work and child's play: there would be nothing in it but a simple
process of "cooking." Hence it has always been most carefully concealed by
the Sages. But I have determined to write in a more sympathetic and kindly
spirit: know then that our regimen throughout consists in coction and
digestion, but that it implies a good many other processes, which those
jealous Sages have made to appear different by describing them under
different names. But we intend to speak more openly in regard to this
subject.
Of the First
Regimen, which is that of Mercury
This first regimen has been studiously kept secret by all the Sages.
They have spoken of the second regimen, or that of Saturn, as if it were
the first, and have thus left the student without guidance in those
operations which precede the appearance of that intense blackness. Count
Bernard, of Trevisa, says, in his Parable, that When the King has come to
the Fountain, he takes off the golden garment, gives it to Saturn, and
enters the bath alone, afterwards receiving from Saturn a robe of black
silk. But he does not tell us how long it takes to put off that golden
robe; and thus, like all his brethren, leaves the poor beginner to grope
in the dark during 40 or 50 days. From the point where the stage of
blackness is reached to the end of the work their directions are more full
and intelligible. It is in regard to these first 40 days that the student
requires additional light. This period represents the regimen of Mercury
(of the Sages), which is alone active during the whole time, the other
substance being temporarily dead. You should not suffer yourself to be
deluded into the belief that when your matters are joined, namely, our Sun
and Mercury, the "setting of the Sun" can be brought about in a few days.
We ourselves waited a tedious time before a reconciliation was made
between the fire and the water. As a matter of fact, the Sages have called
the substance, throughout this first period, Rebis, or Two-thing: to shew
that the union is not effected till the operation is complete. You should
know, then, that though our Mercury consumes the Sun, yet a year after you
shall separate them, unless they are connected together by a suitable
degree of fire. It is not able to do anything at all without fire. We must
not suppose that when our gold is placed in our Mercury it is swallowed up
by it in the twinkling of an eye. This conception rests on a
misunderstanding of Count Bernard's teaching about the King's plunge in
the fountain. But the solution of gold is a more difficult matter than
these gentry appear to have any idea of. It requires the highest skill so
to regulate the fire in the first stage of the work as to solve the bodies
without injuring the tincture. Attend to my teaching therefore. Take the
body which I have shewed you, put it into the water of our sea, and bring
to bear on the compound the proper degree of heat, till dews and mists
begin to ascend, and the moisture is diminished night and day without
intermission. Know that at first the two do not affect each other at all,
and that only in course of time the body absorbs some of the water, and
thus causes each to partake of the other's nature. Only part of the water
is sublimed; the rest gradually penetrates the pores of the body, which
are thereby more and more softened, till the soul of the gold is enabled
gently to pass out. Through the mediation of the soul the body is
reconciled and united to the spirit, and their union is signalized by the
appearance of the black colour. The whole operation lasts about 40-50
days, and is called the Regimen of Mercury, because the body is passive
throughout, and the spirit, or Mercury, brings about all the changes of
colour, which begin to appear about the 20th day, and gradually intensify
till all be at last completed in black of the deepest dye, which the both
day will manifest.
The
Regimen of the Second Part, which is that of Saturn
The Regimen of Mercury, the operation whereof despoils the King of his
golden garments, is followed by the Regimen of Saturn. When the Lion dies
the Crow is born. The substance has now become of a uniform colour,
namely, as black as pitch, and neither vapours, or winds, or any other
signs of life are seen; the whole is dry as dust, with the exception of
some pitch-like substance, which now and then bubbles up; all presents an
image of eternal death. Nevertheless, it is a sight which gladdens the
heart of the Sage. For the black colour which is seen is bright and
brilliant; and if you behold something like a thin paste bubbling up here
and there, you may rejoice. For it is the work of the quickening spirit,
which will soon restore the dead bodies to life. The regulation of the
fire is a matter of great importance at this juncture; if you make it too
fierce, and thus cause sublimation at this stage, everything will be
irrecoverably spoilt. Be content, therefore, to remain, as it were, in
prison for forty days and nights, even as was the good Trevisan, and
employ only gentle heat. Let your delicate substance remain at the bottom,
which is the womb of conception, in the sure hope that after the time
appointed by the Creator for this Operation, the spirit will arise in a
glorified state, and glorify its body -- that it will ascend and be gently
circulated from the centre to the heavens, then descend to the centre from
the heavens, and take to itself the power of things above and things
below.
Of the Regimen of
Jupiter
Black Saturn is succeeded by Jupiter, who exhibits divers colours. For
after the putrefaction and conception, which has taken place at the bottom
of the vessel, there is once more a change of colours and a circulating
sublimation. This Reign or Regimen, lasts only three weeks. During this
period you see all conceivable colours concerning which no definite
account can be given. The "showers" that fall will become more numerous as
the close of this reign approaches, and its termination is signalized by
the appearance of a snowy white streaky deposit on the sides of the
vessel. Rejoice, then, for you have successfully accomplished the regimen
of Jupiter. What you must be particularly careful about in this operation,
is to prevent the young ones of the Crow from going back to the nest when
they have once left it; secondly, to let your earth get neither too dry by
an immoderate sublimation of the moisture, nor yet to swamp and smother it
with the moisture. These ends will be attained by the proper regulation of
the outward heat.
Of the Regimen
of the Moon
When the Reign of Jupiter comes to an end (towards the close of the
fourth month) you will see the sign of the waxing moon (Crescent), and
know that the whole Reign of Jupiter was devoted to the purification of
the Laton. The mundifying spirit is very pure and brilliant, but the body
that has to be cleansed is intensely black. While it passes from blackness
to whiteness, a great variety of colours are observed; nor is it at once
perfectly white; at first it is simply white -- afterwards it is of a
dazzling, snowy splendour. Under this Reign the whole mass presents the
appearance of liquid quicksilver. This is called the sealing of the mother
in the belly of the infant whom she bears; and its intermediate colours
are more white than black, just as in the Reign of Jupiter they were more
black than white. The Reign of the Moon lasts just three weeks; but before
its close, the substance exhibits a great variety of forms; it will become
liquid, and again coagulate a hundred times a day; sometimes it will
present the appearance of fishes' eyes, and then again of tiny silver
trees, with twigs and leaves. Whenever you look at it you will have cause
for astonishment, particularly when you see it all divided into beautiful
but very minute grains of silver, like the rays of the Sun. This is the
White Tincture, glorious to behold, but nothing in respect of what it may
become.
Of the Regimen of
Venus
The substance, if left in the same vessel, will once more become
volatile and (though already perfect in its way) will undergo another
change. But if you take it out of the vessel, and after allowing it to
cool, put it into another, you will not be able to make anything of it. In
this Reign you should also give careful attention to your fire. For the
perfect Stone is fusible and if the fire be too powerful the substance
will become glazed, and unsusceptible of any further change. This "vitrification"
of the substance may happen at any time from the middle of the Reign of
the Moon to the tenth day of the Reign of Venus, and should be carefully
guarded against. The heat should be gentle so as to melt the compound very
slowly and gradually; it will then raise bubbles, and receive a spirit
that will rise upward, carrying the Stone with it, and imparting to it new
colours, especially a copper-green colour, which endures for some time,
and does not quite disappear till the twentieth day; the next change is to
blue and livid, and at the close of this Reign the colour is a pale
purple. DO not irritate the spirit too much -- it is more corporeal than
before, and if you sublime it to the top of the vessel, it will hardly
return. The same caution should be observed in the Reign of the Moon, when
the substance begins to thicken. The law is one of mildness, and not of
violence, lest everything should rise to the top of the vessel, and be
consumed or vitrified to the ruin of the whole work. When you see the
green colour, know that the substance now contains the germ of its highest
life. DO not turn the greenness into blackness by immoderate heat. This
Reign is maintained for forty days.
Of the Regimen of
Mars
When the Regimen of Venus is over, and therein has appeared the
philosophical tree, with all its branches and leaves, the Reign of Mars
begins with a light yellow, or dirty brown colour, but at last exhibits
the transitory hues of the Rainbow, and the Peacock's Tail. At this stage
the compound is drier, and often shews like a hyacinth with a tinge of
gold. The mother being now sealed in her infant's belly, swells and is
purified, but because of the present great purity of the compound, no
putridness can have place in this regimen, but Some obscure colours are
chief actors, while some middle colours come and go, and they are pleasant
to look on. Our Virgin Earth is now undergoing the last degree of its
cultivation, and is getting ready to receive and mature the fruit of the
Sun. Hence you should Weep up a moderate temperature; then there will be
seen, about the thirtieth day of this Reign, an orange colour, which,
within two weeks from its first appearance, will tinge the whole substance
with its own hue.
Of the Regimen of
the Sun
As you are now approaching the end of the work, the substance receives
a golden tinge, and the Virgin's Milk which you give your substance to
drink has assumed a deep orange colour. Pray to God to keep you from haste
and impatience at this stage of the work; consider that you have now
waited for seven months, and that it would be foolish to let one hour rob
you of the fruits of all your labour. Therefore be more and more careful
the nearer you approach perfection. Then you will first observe an
orange-coloured sweat breaking out on the body; next there will be vapour
of an orange hue. Soon the body below becomes tinged with violet and a
darkish purple. At the end of fourteen or fifteen days, the substance will
be, for the most part, humid and ponderous, and yet the wind still bears
it in its womb. Towards the 26th day of the Reign it will begin to get
dry, and to become liquid and solid in turn (about a hundred times a day);
then it becomes granulated; then again it is welded together into one
mass, and so it goes on changing for about a fortnight At length, however,
an unexpectedly glorious light will burst from your substance, and the end
will arrive three days afterwards. The substance will be granulated, like
atoms of gold (or motes in the Sun), and turn a deep red -a red the
intensity of which makes it seem black like very pure blood in a clotted
state. This is the Great Wonder of Wonders, which has not its like on
earth.
Of the
Fermentation of the Stone
I forgot to warn you in the last chapter to be on your guard against
the danger of vitrification; too fierce a fire would render your substance
insoluble and prevent its granulation. You now possess the incombustible
red Sulphur which can no longer be affected in any way by fire. In order
to obtain the Elixir from this Sulphur by reiterate solution and
coagulation, take three parts of purest gold, and one part of this fiery
Sulphur. Melt the gold in a clean crucible, and then cast your Sulphur
into it (protecting it well from the smoke of the coals) Make them liquid
together, when you will obtain a beautiful mass of a deep red, though
hardly transparent. This you should permit to cool, and pound into a small
powder. Of this powder take one part, and two parts of our Mercury; mix
them well, and put them in a glass vessel, well sealed. They should be
exposed to gentle heat for two months. This is the true fermentation,
which may be repeated if needful.
The Imbibition
of the Stone
Many authors take fermentation in this work for the invisible external
agent, which they call ferment; by its virtue the fugitive and subtle
spirits, without laying on of hands, are of their own accord thickened,
and our before-mentioned fermentation they call cibation with bread and
milk. But I follow my own judgment There is another operation, called
Imbibition of the Stone, by which its quantity rather than its quality is
increased. It is this: Add to three parts of your perfect Sulphur (either
white or red) one part of water, and after six or seven days' coction the
water will become thick like the Sulphur Add again as much water as you
did before; and when this is dried up, with a convenient fire, add three
distinct times so much water as shall be equal to one-third of the
original quantity of Sulphur. Then add (for the 7th imbibition) five parts
of water (the parts being equal to the original parts of the Sulphur).
Seal up the vessel; subject it to gentle coction, and let the compound
pass through all the different Reigns of the original Substance, which
will be accomplished in a month. Then you have the true Stone of the third
order, one part of which will perfectly tinge 1,000 parts of any other
metal.
The
Multiplication of the Stone
Take the perfect Stone; add one part of it to three or four parts of
purified Mercury of our first work, subject it to gentle coction for seven
days (the vessel being carefully sealed up), and let it pass through all
the Reigns, which it will do very quickly and smoothly. The tinging power
of the substance will thus be exalted a thousandfold; and if you go
through the whole process a second time (which you can do with ease in
three days) the Medicine will be much more precious still. This you may
repeat as often as you like; the third time the substance will run through
all the Reigns in a day, the fourth time in a single hour, and so on --
and the improvement in its quality will be most marvellous. Then kneel
down and render thanks to God for this precious treasure.
Of Projection
Take four parts of your perfect Stone, either red or white (of both for
the Medicine): melt them in a clean crucible. Take one part of this
pulverisable mixture to ten parts of purified Mercury; heat the Mercury
till it begins to crackle, then throw in your mixture, which will pierce
it in the twinkling of an eye; increase your fire till it be melted, and
you will have a Medicine of an inferior order. Take one part of this, and
add it to a large quantity of well purged and melted metal, which will
thereby be transmuted into the purest silver or gold (according as you
have taken white or red Sulphur). Note that it is better to use a gradual
projection, for otherwise there may be a notable loss of the Medicine. The
better the metals are purged and refined, the quicker and more complete
will the transmutation be.
Of the
Manifold uses of this Art
He that has once found this Art, can have nothing else in all the world
to wish for, than that he may be allowed to serve his God in peace and
safety. He will not care for pomp or dazzling outward show. But if he
lived a thousand years, and daily entertained a million people, he could
never come to want, since he has at hand the means of indefinitely
multiplying the Stone both in weight and virtue, and thus of changing all
imperfect metals in the world into gold. In the second place, he has it in
his power to make stones and diamonds far more precious than any that are
naturally procured. In the third place, he has an Universal Medicine, with
which he can cure every conceivable disease, and, indeed, as to the
quantity of his Medicine, he might heal all sick people in the world. Now
to the King Eternal, Immortal, and sole Almighty, be everlasting praise
for these His unspeakable gifts and invaluable treasures. I exhort all
that possess this Treasure, to use it to the praise of God, and the good
of their neighbours, in order that they may not at the last day be
eternally doomed for their ingratitude to their Creator.
To God Alone be the Glory
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