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CHAPTER VII. ALCHEMY—PART I
What a weird yet strangely pleasing name the term Alchemy is. It is
simple, yet so infilled and intermixed with the possible verities of exact
science and the philosophical speculations on the infinite and the
unknown, as to elude our mental grasp, as it were, by its own subtle
essence, and defy the keenest analysis of our profoundest generalizers in
science. And yet, in spite of this self-evident truth, how fascinating the
sound of the word becomes to the mystic student's ear, and bow pregnant
with awful and mysterious possibilities it becomes, to the immortal powers
embodied within the complex human organism termed man.
Words, if we but knew it, have the same innate, magnetic influence, and
possess the same power of affinity and antipathy, that the human family
possesses; as well as all organic and inorganic forms and substances; and
how sad, to a developed soul, to witness the inharmony existing in our
midst, caused by the misapplication of names.
Most human beings are very conscious of personal, or human magnetism,
and its effects. But they stop right there, and do not dream of the
subtle, silent influences emanating from a name, a word, and the power
existing in words, when properly used. The human mind is so absorbed in
Nature's manifestations, which are only the husks, that they fail to see
the true, hidden meaning and realities, concealed beneath the material
shell.
We will first notice the meaning of the words which constitute our
subject, viz., Alchemy, then give a brief review of its physical
correspondence, chemistry, and its true relation to its spiritual
counterpart, Alchemy.
"Al" and "Chemy" are Arabic-Egyptian words which have much more in them
than appears upon the surface, and possess a far different meaning from
the one which the terms usually convey to the average mind. Terms, and the
ideas we associate with them, vary according to the age in which we live.
So with those, from which the word Alchemy is derived.
Let us penetrate beneath the mere verbal husk with which linguistic
usage and convenience have clothed them, and which, in the course of ages,
has become nothing but the dross of decomposed verbiage, and see if we can
excavate the living germ, that has become buried within. If we can do so,
we shall, at the commencement of our study, have attained unto a
realization of the ancient meaning and real significance of the terms
employed. And this will be no small gain, and will form no unimportant
part of the equipment in our present research.
The Arabians, who derived the whole of their Occult arcana from the
Egyptians, are the most likely to render us the most truthful and direct
significance of the word, and so we find them. Thus, "Al," meaning "the,"
and Kimia," which means the hidden, or secret, ergo THE OCCULT, from which
are derived our modern term Alchemy, more properly Al Kimia. This is very
different from the popular conception to-day, which supposes that the word
relates to the art of artificially making gold by some chemical process,
and viewing it only as some sort of magical chemistry, forgetting that,
the science of chemistry itself is also derived from the Kimia of Arabian
mystics, and was considered as one and the same thing by every writer of
the Middle Ages.
At this time, the physical man was not so dense and grasping for husks;
hence the soul and spiritual part had greater control, and could impart
the real, the alchemical side, of Nature to him; hence the Law of
Correspondences was understood, and guided the educated in their
considerations, researches, and conclusions.
Do you ask why, if they were so enlightened, they have veiled their
knowledge from the world at large?
The power of mind over matter was as potent in those days as now, and
the masses were as correspondingly corrupt as they are today. Therefore,
to put this knowledge into the hands of the multitude would have been
generally disastrous. So they wrote it in mystical language, knowing that
all educated students in Nature's laws, at that time, would understand;
yet they little dreamed how much their language would be misunderstood in
the centuries to follow, by those who look to their ancient ancestry for
aid on subjects that have become at the present day so lost in mystery.
Having ascertained, beyond question, that Alchemy was, and consequently
is, the secret science of Occultism—not the philosophy, mind you, but the
science; let us proceed, for, we shall find that these two aspects may
often differ, or appear to differ, widely from each other, though they can
never do so in reality, for the latter produces and establishes the facts,
while the former occupies itself in their tabulation and deductions. The
science constitutes the foundation, and the philosophy, the metaphysical
speculations, which rest thereon. If these important distinctions are
borne in mind, all the apparent confusion, contradiction, and other
intellectual debris, will either disappear or resolve themselves into
their own proper groups, so that we may easily classify them.
It is at this very point, that, so many students go astray amid the
labyrinths of science and philosophy. They, unconsciously, so mix and
intermingle the two terms, that nine-tenths of the students present only
one side of the question—philosophy, which soon runs into theory, if not
supported by the science, which they have lost in their volumes of
philosophy.
You may say, one subject at a time. Yes, this may be true, if its twin
brother is not absorbed and forgotten.
In this chapter, we shall deal especially with organic Alchemy.
Organic Alchemy deals exclusively with living, organic things, and in
this connection differs from the Alchemy of inorganic matter. These two
aspects may, in this one respect, be compared to organic and inorganic
chemistry, to which originally they belonged; as astrology did to
astronomy. Alchemy and astrology—twin sisters—were the parents of the
modern offspring, known in chemistry and astronomy as exact science. These
latter, however, deal with shadows and phenomenal illusions, while the
former concern the living realities, which produce them. Therefore, there
can be "no new thing under the sun," saith Solomon.
First, let us deal with the most lovely form of our art, that which
pertains to the floral and vegetable kingdoms. Every flower or blade of
grass, every tree of the forest and stagnant weed of the swamp, is the
outcome of, and ever surrounded by, its corresponding degree of spiritual
life. There is not a single atom but what is the external expression of
some separate, living force, within the spaces of Aeth, acting in unison
with the dominant power corresponding with the type of life.
If science could only behold this wonderful laboratory within the vital
storehouse of Nature, she would no longer vainly seek for THE ORIGIN OF
LIFE, nor wonder, what may have become of the missing link in scientific
evolution, because, she would quickly realize that, biogenesis is the one
grand truth of both animate and inanimate Nature, the central, living
source of which is God. Science would also, further realize that, this
biune life is ever in motion throughout the manifested universe;
circulating around the focii of creative activities, which we term suns,
stars, and planets, awaiting the conditions which are ever present for
material incarnation; and under all possible combinations of circumstances
and conditions, conceivable and inconceivable, adapting itself to
continuous phenomenal expression. Links, so called, in this mighty chain
of evolution, may appear to be missing here and there, and, for that
matter, whole types may seem to be wanting, but, this is only because of
our imperfect perception, and, in any case, can make no real difference
with the facts, because, if such be a reality, if there be what we may
term MISSING LINKS in the scheme of evolution, it only shows that spirit,
although associated with, is ever independent of matter.
But matter—what is to become of it? Is it independent of spirit? The
kindness of the Divine spirit heeds not the unconscious mind of matter and
its boasted independence, and works silently on, and at last, accomplishes
its mission—the evolution of matter, the uplifting of the soul of man, as
well as the universe. The blindness of man is dense, and the saddest part
to admit is that, they will so stubbornly remain so.
If, for one instant, the penetrating eye of the soul could shine forth
through the physical orbs of vision, and imprint the scenes, beheld behind
the veil, upon the tablets of the brain of the physical organism, a fire
would be kindled that, could never be quenched by the fascinating
allurements of the material, perishable things, of matter.
That development of the real atom of biune life can, and does, go
forward, irrespective of the gradation of physical types, needs no
convincing proof, other than visible Nature.
MAN IS NOT THE OUTCOME OF PHYSICAL EVOLUTION, and produced by a series
of blind laws, that lead him upward from protozoa to man, as a child
climbs up stairs, advancing regularly, ONE STEP AS A TIME. This latter
conception, we know, is the theory of exact science, but not of Alchemy,
not of the science of Occultism. Man, according to Wallace, Darwin,
Huxley, and Tyndall, is what progressive stages of physical evolution have
made him. But the very reverse is true. The fauna and flora of past
geological periods are what the human soul has produced, by virtue of its
gradual advancement to higher states and conditions of life, so that, so
far from man being the outcome of the planet's development, such material
progress is the outgrowth of man's advancement, proving again that, matter
is not independent of spirit, neither can spirit be independent of matter
for its expressions. They so interblend that, the dividing line cannot be
detected by the untrained eye of the exact scientist. But, that time is
not far distant, when the scientists will prepare and evolve their
interior being to take up the spiritual thread, exactly where the visible
thread ends, and carry forth the work, as far as the mortal mind of man
can penetrate, while embodied in the physical form.
God hasten this day is my prayer, for then man will become more
spiritual and aspiring for advancement and knowledge, thus, setting up
vibrations that will create higher and loftier conditions for the physical
man. Aye! then they will know that, even the birth of the world itself,
owes its primal genesis to the desire of the human atom for earthly
embodiment.
Here is where exact science, or the counterpart of Alchemy, becomes
both profitable and helpful. Says Paracelsus: "The true use of chemistry
is not to make gold, but to prepare medicines." He admits four
elements—the STAR, the ROOT, the ELEMENT and the SPERM. These elements
were composed of the three principles, SIDERIC SALT, SULPHUR, and MERCURY.
Mercury, or spirit, sulphur, or oil, and salt, and the passive principles,
water and earth. Herein we see the harmony of the two words, Alchemy and
Chemistry. One is but the continuation of the other, and they blend so
into each other that, they are not complete, apart.
The chemist, in his analysis of the various component parts of any form
of matter, knows also the proportional combinations; and thus, by the Law
of Correspondence, could, by the same use of the spiritual laws of
Alchemy, analyze and combine the same elements from the atmosphere, to
produce the corresponding expression of crystallized form. By the same
laws, are affinities and antipathies discovered and applied, in every
department of Nature's wonderful laboratory.
Chemistry is the physical expression of Alchemy, and any true knowledge
of chemistry is:—not the knowing of the names of the extracts and
essences, and the plants themselves, and that certain combinations produce
certain results, obtained from blind experiments, yet, prompted by the
Divine spirit within; but, knowledge born from knowing the why and
wherefore of such effects. What is called the oil of olives is not a
single, simple substance, but it is more or less combined with other
essential elements, and will fuse and coalesce with other oils and
essences of similar nature. The true chemist will not confine his
researches for knowledge to the mere examination, analysis, and
experiments, in organic life; but will inform himself equally, in physical
astrology; and learn the nature, attributes, and manifested influences of
the planets, that constitute our universe; and, under which, every form of
organic matter is subject, and especially, controlled by. Then, by
learning the influence of the planets upon the human family; and that
special planetary vibration that influences the individual; he can
intelligently and unerringly administer medicines to remove disease in
man.
A familiarity with the mere chemical relations of the planet to man,
makes still more apparent, the mutual affinity of both to the soil, from
which they appear to spring, and to which, they ultimately return; so much
so that, we have become conscious, that, the food we eat is valuable or
otherwise as a life sustainer, in proportion to the amount of life it
contains. We are so complex in our organization that, we require a great
variety of the different elements to sustain all the active functions and
powers within us. Man, being a microcosm, or a miniature universe, must
sustain that universe, by taking into the system the various elements,
which combine to make up the Infinite Universe of God. Animal flesh is
necessary to certain organized forms, both animal and man. When I say
necessary, I do not mean an acquired taste and habit of consuming just so
much flesh a day; but a constitution, which would not be complete in its
requirements, without animal flesh. I am thankful such do not constitute
the masses.
Science would say, you only require certain combinations of oxygen,
hydrogen, nitrogen, and carbon, to sustain all the activities of the
physical body. Apparently, this is true. Upon the surface it is, but in
reality it is not; because if it were really true there could be no
famines. Science could make bread out of stones, as was suggested at the
temptation of Christ in the wilderness. And yet, no one knows better than
the academies of Science, themselves, that their learned professors would
quickly starve to death, if they were compelled to produce their food from
the chemical properties of the rocks. They can make a grain of wheat
chemically perfect, but they cannot make the invisible germ by which it
will grow, become fruitful, and reproduce itself. They can reproduce from
the stones in the street the same chemical equivalents that go to compose
gluten, albumen, and starch—the trinity which must always be present to
sustain life; but they cannot, by any known process, make such chemical
equivalents of these substances, do the same thing. Now, if not, why not?
Science cannot answer this. A very mysterious shake of the head and
profound silence is the only answer. Ask Science HOW THE PLANT GROWS, what
causes the atoms of matter to build up root, stem, leaf, bud and flower,
true to the parent species from which the germinal atom came. What is
there behind the plant that stamps it with such striking individuality?
And why, from the same soil, the deadly aconite and nutritious vegetable
can grow, each producing qualities in harmony with its own nature, so
widely different in their effects upon the human organism, YET, SO
COMPLETELY IDENTICAL AS REGARDS THE SOURCE FROM WHICH THEY APPEAR TO
SPRING. There must be a something to account for this, and this something,
ancient Alchemy alone can scientifically reveal and expound; and, this
knowledge lies just beyond that line which calls a halt to material
scientists, and says: "You can go no farther; this is beyond your purview.
The end of the material thread has been reached, and unless you can
connect it with the thread of the next plane, your researches must stop."
Before entering upon and answering these vital questions, we must
digress a little, and make ourselves perfectly familiar with the ideas and
revelations of advanced physical science upon the subject, and for this
purpose no more trustworthy guide can be consulted than the new edition of
"The Chemistry of Common Life," by the late James F. W. Johnson, M. A.,
England, and revised by Arthur Herbert Church, M. A. In chapter IV on page
56 of this work, upon the anatomy of plant life, we read:
"How interesting it is to reflect on the minuteness of the organs by
which the largest plants are fed and sustained. Microscopic apertures in
the leaf suck in gaseous food from the air; the surfaces of microscopic
hairs suck a liquid food from the soil. We are accustomed to admire, with
natural and just astonishment, how huge, rocky reefs, hundreds of miles in
length, can be built up by the conjoined labors of myriads of minute
zoophytes, laboring together on the surface of a coral rock; but it is not
less wonderful that, by the ceaseless working of similar microscopic
agencies in leaf and root, the substance of vast forests should be built
up and made to grow before our eyes. It is more wonderful, in fact; for
whereas, in the one case, the chief result is that, dead matter extracted
from the sea is transformed into a dead rock; in the other, the lifeless
matter of the earth and air are converted by these minute plant-builders
into living forms, lifting their heads aloft to the sky, waving with every
wind that blows, and beautifying whole continents with the varying verdure
of their ever-changing leaves."
Further on in the same chapter, on pages 62-3, the same eloquent writer
continues:
"But the special chemical changes that go on within the plant, could we
follow them, would appear not less wonderful than the rapid production of
entire microscopic vegetables from the raw food contained in the juice of
the grape. It is as yet altogether incomprehensible, even to the most
refined physiological chemistry, how, from the same food taken in from the
air, and from generally similar food drawn up from the soil, different
plants, and different parts of plants, should be able to extract or
produce substances so very different from each other in composition and in
all of their properties. From the seed-vessels of one (the poppy) we
collect a juice which dries up into our commercial opium; from the bark of
another (cinchona) we extract the quinine with which we assuage the raging
fever; from the leaves of others, like those of hemlock and tobacco, we
distil deadly poisons, often of rare value for their medicinal uses. The
flowers and leaves of some yield volatile oils, which we delight in for
their odors and their aromatic qualities; the seeds of others give fixed
oils, which are prized for the table or use in the arts * * * These, and a
thousand other similar facts, tell us how wonderfully varied are the
changes which the same original forms of matter undergo in the interior of
living plants. Indeed, whether we regard the vegetable as a whole, or
examine its minutest part, we find equal evidence of the same diversity of
changes and of the same production, in comparatively minute quantities, of
very different, yet often characteristic forms of matter."
From the whole of the foregoing, we observe the exact position to be
the one we have previously stated. If such wondrous things can be revealed
to us through the physical science of chemistry, what think you must be
hidden from our physical sight and knowledge by the veil which hangs
between matter and spirit? Think you not, it is worth the effort to
penetrate beyond that point where the atom disappears from the view of the
scientist?
If plants produce such wonderful phenomena in their life and influence,
what must the Divine organism of man have concealed within his microscopic
universe, to study and comprehend? Plant life is merely the alphabet of
the complex, intricate, and multitudinous processes, going on in the human
body.
And, as the mechanical microscope of physical science cannot reveal the
why and the wherefore, let us, for a brief moment, disclose some of the
wonders that declare their existence, when subjected to the penetrating
alchemical lens, of the inward spirit. The first thing that intrudes
itself upon our notice, by virtue of its primary importance, is the grand
fact of biogenesis—life emanating from life. We perceive every external
form to be the physical symbol of a corresponding degree of spiritual
life; that each complete plant represents a complete cycle, state, or
degree of interior existence; that it is made up and consists of countless
millions of separate atoms of life; that these atoms of spiritual activity
are the real instigators of the life and motion of corresponding material
atoms; that they ever obey the Divine impulse of co-operative unity, in
their chemical, as well as their spiritual affinity. Consequently,
everything in the form of material substance must be, and is, but the
means for the phenomenal expression of incarnating spirit; the organism of
man, a tree, a plant, or an animal, being no exception to this Divine,
omnipresent law of creative life.
To the true Alchemist there can be no mystery surrounding the wonderful
phenomena mentioned in the work we have quoted, in plants extracting from
the same rocks, soil, and air, qualities so manifestly different—deadly
poisons, healing balsams, and pleasant aromas, or the reverse, from the
same identical plant foods. Nothing is more wonderful or mysterious, than,
the same alchemical processes, which, are hourly being enacted within our
own bodies. From the same breath of air and the same crust of bread do we
concoct the blood, the bile, the gastric juice, and various other
secretions; and distil the finer nervous fluids, that go to build up and
sustain the whole of our mental and dynamic machinery. It is the same
ancient story of the atoms; each part and each function endowing the same
inorganic chemicals with their own spiritual, magnetic, and physical
life-qualities, by what appears, to the uninitiated observer, a miraculous
transmutation of matter, but which is, in reality, the evolution of
organic form from inorganic materials, in obedience to the Divine law of
spiritual progression. Who could stop with exact science? For, when we
come to consider the apparent mysteries of life and growth by the aid of
this alchemical light, the shadows flee, and all the illusions of Nature's
phenomenal kaleidoscope vanish before the revelation of the underlying
spiritual realities. We know that the plant, being the physical expression
upon the material plane of a more interior life, endows its outward atoms
with their peculiar qualities. THESE QUALITIES ARE NOT DRAWN DIRECTLY FROM
THE SOIL; the soil only becoming the medium for their complete or
incomplete expression, as the case may be; i.e., supplying the necessary
inorganic atoms. Hence, the deadly qualities of aconite, and the generous
life-sustaining qualities of the nutritious vegetable, BEING SPIRITUAL
LIFE ENDOWMENTS, conveyed to the material substance, abstracted from the
soil and withdrawn from the atmosphere, are no mystery; their effect upon
the human organism being exactly that, which is produced by their
spiritual affinity or antipathy, as the case may be. And this also shows
and explains, why purely inorganic chemical atoms, though they be exactly
the same as the organic substances, from a strictly scientific standpoint,
YET FAIL TO SUPPORT LIFE, because such chemical equivalents lack the
organic spirituality of the interior life, which alone, gives them the
power and function to support the same. They fail to fulfill the
requirements of the alchemical law of life for the support of life—in
other words, biogenesis.
And, too, this inorganic life may be parted from the plant or
vegetable, if it be too long severed from the medium which transmits the
spiritual life, from the inorganic world to that of organic matter.
Vegetables, fresh from the ground, or parent stem, retain this life if at
once prepared for food, if not overcooked, which is so often ignorantly
done. This is the secret of sustenance from foods. Nature's perfected
fruits and vegetables are overflowing with the life-giving essences, and,
if eaten direct from the tree or parent stem, that life is not lost, but
transmitted to our organisms, and replenishes the wasting system with a
living life. Much less of such food is required to completely satisfy and
nourish the body than if the life had partly departed or been destroyed.
Briefly stated, then, everything within organic Nature is the
expressional symbolic manifestation of spirit; every form being a
congregation of innumerable atoms of life, revealing their presence in
material states; each organic form, or, rather, organism, evolving under
the central control of some dominating Deific atom or soul, which, by
virtue of past incarnations and labors in its cycle of evolution, from the
mineral up to man, has achieved the royal prerogative to rule within its
own state. Man being the highest representative form—the grand finale in
the earthly drama—sums up and contains within himself everything below,
and THE GERMS OF EVERYTHING BEYOND, THIS STATE. He is truly a microcosm,
and represents in miniature the grand Cosmic Man of the Heavens. Every
living force beneath him corresponds to some state, part, or function,
which he has graduated through and conquered, and which, in him, has now
become embodied, as a part of his universal kingdom. Consequently, all
things are directly related to him, in the grand universal unity of
spiritual life.
This cannot be realized and comprehended by the physical man, nor
conveyed to his outer senses by the physical sciences. He must bring into
active use the inner man, the real being, which inhabits and controls the
outer organism, and through its instrumentality, understand the interior
source and workings behind the phenomena of manifested being. So we see
that, exact science cannot take us far, yet, it is a mighty factor, in the
evolution of the microcosm Man, and in consciously relating him to the
Infinite Macrocosm—God, Spirit, All.
CHAPTER VIII.
ALCHEMY-PART II
Paracelsus, the most celebrated of the alchemists of the Middle Ages,
thus mystically speaks of his art:
"If I have manna in my constitution, I can attract manna from heaven.
Melissa is not only in the garden, but also in the air and in heaven.
Saturn is not only in the sky, but also deep in the ocean and Earth. What
is Venus but the artemisia that grows in your garden, and what is iron but
the planet Mars? That is to say, Venus and Artemisia are both products of
the same essence, while Mars and iron are manifestations of the same
cause. What is the human body but a constellation of the same powers that
formed the stars in the sky? He who knows Mars knows the qualities of
iron, and he who knows what iron is knows the attributes of Mars. What
would become of your heart if there were no Sun in the Universe? What
would be the use of your 'Vasa Spermatica'[*] if there were no Venus? To
grasp the invisible elements, to attract them by their material
correspondences, to control, purify, and transmute, them by the
ever-moving powers of the living spirit—this is true Alchemy."
[*] Astral germs of subjective life forms:—it is the latent, "to be".
Thus, in a very few simple words, we find this master of the art
revealing the whole arcana of that mysterious science, which has for its
chief object and goal, the discovery of the "philosopher's stone," which
confers upon its fortunate possessor the blessings of immortal youth.
Therefore, we cannot possibly do better in the commencement of our present
study than, to minutely examine each particular sentence and endeavor to
discover his true meaning, which, like all mystical writing, is so
apparent, yet cunningly concealed, as to excite the student's admiration.
"If I have manna in my constitution, I can attract manna from Heaven."
The manna here spoken of does not specify any particular thing, but is of
universal application, and is simply used as an unknown quantity, like x,
y, z in mathematics. But, ever since the days of Paracelsus,
half-initiated mystics and bookworm occultists, have endeavored to
discover what this manna really was. Some, the more spiritual, were of the
opinion that, it was spiritual power, or purity of spirit; others imagined
it to mean special magnetic qualifications, similar in nature to the
so-called gifts of modern spiritualistic media. The concealment of the
truth is unique, and consists in its very simplicity; and, when correctly
expounded, should read: "I am the microcosm, and all the visible and
invisible universe dwells within me, so that whatsoever power I have in my
constitution, I can attract its correspondence from Heaven." Paracelsus
must have smiled to himself when he wrote "If I have manna," etc., because
his whole writings strive to prove man the miniature of Deity. Further
along, he explains himself by pointing out the real Law of Correspondence,
thus: "Melissa is not only in the garden, but also in the air, and in
Heaven. Saturn is not only in the sky, but also deep in the ocean, and
Earth." The illustrations are beautiful, The life of the plant, the "anima
floralis," pervades the atmosphere and the interior states of spiritual
life, where it becomes in the highest degree beautiful, and beneficial to
the soul. A reference upon this point to "The Light of Egypt" Vol., I, may
not be considered out of place. Upon page 74 it is written: "The flower
that blooms in beauty, breathing forth to the air its fragrance, which is
at once grateful to the senses and stimulating to the nerves, is a perfect
specimen of Nature's faultless mediumship. The flower is a medium for the
transmission to the human body of those finer essences, and of THEIR
SPIRITUAL PORTION TO THE SOUL; for the aroma of the flower is
spiritualized to such a degree as to act upon the life currents of the
system, imparting to the spiritual body a nutriment of the finest
quality."
Thus, here is where the knowledge of the alchemical attributes of
plants, as applicable to man, can be most beneficially utilized. Plants
and flowers, whose attributes and aromas harmonize with the complex
organism of man, should be selected for the house and garden, for, they
are mediums to transmit the finer essences and aromas to the spiritual
constitution of man; the plant to the physical, and the aromas and
essences of the flowers to the soul.
Antipathies in plants and flowers would bring a similar evil influence,
as the discords of the antagonistic human magnetism. It would not be so
apparent, but more subtle, yet nevertheless effective in result.
Our attention is next drawn to the planet Saturn, which, we are
informed, is not only shining in his starry sphere of the heavens, but is
also buried in the ocean depths and embodied in the stratas of the earth.
It is almost needless to add that, our author refers to those substances
naturally Saturnine in their quality of life and expression, such as lead,
clay, and coal, among the minerals, and various deadly plants among the
flora, the chief of which is the aconite or monkshood, so significant of
Saturn and the isolated, monkish hermit. After some repetition, in order
to impress the truth of correspondences, our author exclaims: "What is the
human body but a constellation of the same powers that formed the stars in
the sky?" Truly, what else? for, "he who knows Mars knows the qualities of
iron, and he who knows what iron is knows the attributes of Mars." Could
anything be plainer? We think not.
From the foregoing, which a long experience and much critical
investigation and research have demonstrated as true, we cannot avoid the
conclusion that Alchemy, equally as well as every other science, religion,
or system of philosophy formulated by man, resolves itself, ultimately, in
all its final conclusions, into the one universal parent of all wisdom.
ASTROLOGY, the Science of the Stars, in unison with the Science of the
Soul, was, and still is, the one sublime center of real learning. It
constituted the sacred fountain of living waters, from whose placid depths
there rayed forth the Divine revelations of man, his whence, where, and
whither; and under the careful conservation of a long line of gifted
seers, it shone forth to the sons of men, as the sacred Hermetic light in
the Astro-Masonic wisdom of Egypt's ancient priesthood.
It is not lost to us to-day. The same book lies open before us that
faced our ancient forefathers. It is standing out clear and distinct,
waiting to be read by the sons of men. We can learn its language, and from
its pages, we ourselves can read our relation to God and our fellowman.
Shall we not heed the whispering intuitions of the soul and place
ourselves in conscious rapport with the whole?
This sublime Book of Wisdom was written by God Himself, to convey to
His children the knowledge of His powers, attributes, and relation to all
creative life. We cannot see that Divine Spirit which we call God. No; but
as long as the finite form exists as such, we will have the spirit's
manifestations to learn from. Never will the Book of God be closed to the
searching eye of the soul. There will always be presented to his vision
lessons to study, and practical experiments to perform, to lead the soul
into deeper mysteries. Until man fathoms his own universe, he cannot
understand God. "Know thyself" is as applicable to-day as when the famous,
immortal and mystic utterance was inscribed on the porch of the temple at
Delphi.
Before this wonderful, divinely elaborated, but complex system can be
fully realized, it is necessary that the student should comprehend, very
distinctly, the two states of existence, the internal and the external,
and become familiar with the laws of correspondences. And it seems strange
that of all Sciences, that of medicine should have so completely failed to
grasp this living truth, since every atom of medicine administered,
invariably acts upon this alchemical principle. When the human organism
has become discordant in some of its parts, it is because the interstellar
vibrations have aroused various states within the human kingdom into a
condition of rebellion against the supreme will. Man's ignorance favors
such seditious movements, and his general habits and code of morals
stimulate them to undue activity. The final result is
disease—disorganization of the parts and functions, and those medicines
corresponding TO THE SAME FUNCTIONAL DEGREE OF LIFE WITHIN THE GRAND MAN,
cure the disorder, when administered properly and IN TIME, whereas, if
given to the perfectly healthy organism, THE ATOMS PRODUCE SIMILAR
SYMPTOMS TO THE DISEASES THEY ALLEVIATE, because it is their mission to
either subdue or be subdued, and when disease prevails the medicinal
atoms, acting in unison with the natural parts and functions they affect,
conquer or subdue the inharmony, and vice versa, as before stated. In all
cases of disease and medicine, it is a simple question of A WAR BETWEEN
THE ATOMS, and, therefore, the most potential forces within Nature are
always at the command of the true Alchemist, because he knows bow and when
to select his fighting forces, and when to set them in motion, for the
best results.
Hahnemann, the founder of the Homeopathic system, has approached THE
NEAREST to this alchemical truth, and as a consequence, we find it is in
actual practice, the most natural, scientific, and successful system of
medicine, yet given to the world; based, as it is, upon the well-known law
of affinites, "Similia similibus curantur," "like cures like," being a
very ancient axiom in the astrological practice of physic.
Bulwer Lytton, who had become thoroughly convinced of the great value
and importance of uniting ancient Alchemy with modern medicine, makes the
hero of his immortal story declare: "All that we propose to do is this: To
find out the secrets of the human frame, to know why the parts ossify and
the blood stagnates, and to apply continual preventives to the effects of
time. THIS IS NOT MAGIC; IT IS THE ART OF MEDICINE, RIGHTLY UNDERSTOOD."
It is a fact that, the molecules of the body are all changed within
twelve months; that every cell in the human organism is born and grows to
maturity within that space of time. Nature is absolutely impartial. She
draws from the atmosphere that she may reproduce a fac-simile of
everything she finds upon the surface of the body. So, if there be a sore,
or festering ulcer, the atoms which are thrown off attract similar atoms,
so as to reproduce the ulcer or sore, and thus prevent the disease from
getting well of itself until it has worn itself out.
Further, every vein and canal throughout the entire body, from youth to
maturity, is being coated with carbonate of lime, or lime in some form.
The coating of the walls of the veins in such a manner, prevents the free
circulation of the living matter; then, the real vitality of the food
which we eat, is simply passed off through the pores, or through the
bowels, or through the system, because it is unable to penetrate through
the lime.
If that prevention which produces old age can be attained, then
physical youth will continue.
The first step to take is to dissolve the lime in the body. Drink
nothing but distilled water, in either tea, coffee, or any other form, and
drink freely of the sweet juices of the grape and apple.
The food that we eat contains lime in a living form, and it is the
living lime we need to build up the living bones, for the lime and the
magnesia that we take in the water is crystallized dead mineral,
possessing no responsibility of life, and the lime in our food is quite
sufficient for all purposes. For everything we take in excess, Nature
makes us pay the penalty.
The first principle of long living is to keep all channels of the body
perfect and free from coatings of lime.
The second is that of youthful ideals of the mind. The soul never grows
old.
The third principle is dynamic breathing, which is storing up the
oxygen in sufficient quantities, to supply the tissues with sufficient
fuel, for combustion.
These three principles, acting in unison, contain the true basis of
physical life and a means of long living. Old age is simply the
petrifaction of the body through lime, and the incorporating of erroneous
thoughts into the organism.
It is the true Alchemy of human existence, and the preventives, in each
and every case must contain the spiritual correspondence to the cause they
seek to remedy; and, though the followers of Hahnemann base the whole of
their procedure of treatment upon their master's fundamental law of "Similia
similibus curantur," yet, there may be a few rare cases wherein, this
undeviating method would not apply with the required effect. In such a
case, the Alchemist would resort to the well-known law of opposites, and
base his treatment upon the dogma of "Contraria contrariis curantur," so
long the pet theory of the Allopathic school. They work upon the
hypothesis that, like attracts like, and, if disease exist, those elements
must be administered to set up the vibrations that will produce the polar
opposite. If the body was racked with pain, those medicines would not be
given that would create or increase similar conditions, but, their
antipathy would be introduced into the system or applied locally to
extinguish the foe.
So long as mankind remain within the semicrystallized state of soul
development, so as to require the aid of external forces to support the
human throne within its earthly temple, mercenary troops will exist to
supply these supposed supports.
Unquestionably, the astrological law is the true system of medicine,
which treats disease by sympathy or by antipathy, according to the nature
of the case, and the efficacy of the remedies at hand. This method is the
only natural one, and has been thoroughly demonstrated by the numerous "provings
of drugs" under Hahnemann's law.
Happily, the time is not far distant when, the incarnated spirit will
be able to use its own slumbering forces, and subdue all suffering and
symptoms of disease in their very first inception, by virtue of its purer
life and the dynamic potencies of its own interior, spiritual thought.
Already, mental therapeutics is taking an advanced position among liberal,
progressive minds, and nothing demonstrates so clearly and forcibly the
grand, alchemical law of life-growth and decay, as the imponderable,
invisible forces, which, constitute the materia medica, or remedial
agents, of mental, magnetic, and spiritual healing.
Perhaps the most recondite subject connected with the healing art
divine is, the modus operandi of medicinal action, upon the human body. A
subject so simple and self-evident to the Alchemist, remains a profound
mystery to the educated physician of the medical college; so much so that,
we are tempted to ask of them: "Can you explain the modus operandi of
drugs?" Dr. William Sharp, one of the most advanced physicians of the
Homeopathic school, in one of his well- known "Essays on Medicine," says:
"In respect to the manner of action of drugs we are in total darkness, and
we are so blind that the darkness is not felt. KNOWLEDGE OF THIS KIND
CANNOT BE ATTAINED; it is labor lost and TIME wasted to go in search of
it. True, hypotheses may be easily conceived; so may straws be gathered
from the surface of the stream. But what are either of them worth? There
is this difference between them—straws may amuse children, and hypotheses
are sure to mislead physicians."
It is when the Occult Initiate observes to what helpless conditions the
practice of medicine has fallen, that, he would, if be could with any
possibility of success, implore the angelic guardian of the human race to
open the spiritual sight of men, that they might see, as he sees, the
Divine relationship, and spiritual correspondence, of everything in the
wide universe to man.
Nature's laws move slowly and imperceptibly, yet surely and exact, and
the time will certainly come when man will be forced into consciousness of
these laws, whether he will or no. Nature is no respecter of persons, and
those who will not move and progress, in harmony with her laws of
advancement, must, of necessity, pass out with the old.
Alchemy, as it relates to the healing art, is the most noble in its
object and beneficial in its effects, of all the many subdivisions of the
sciences, because, it alleviates the pains and morbid afflictions of
suffering humanity. We have given quite sufficient of its astrological
aspect in the second part of "The Light of Egypt," Vol. I, wherein the
four ancient elements are translated into their chemical correspondences
of oxygen, hydrogen, nitrogen and carbon, which still constitute the four
primary elements of the most advanced chemistry to-day. They enter more or
less into every organic form and substance, which is known, in various
combinations and proportions. The human organism is principally composed
of them; so, likewise, is the food that supports physical life, and the
air we breathe is but modifications of the same atoms.
As man's constitution embraces a microscopic atom of all the essences
and elements, corresponding to the whole; so does the air; and much, that
we depend upon our food to supply, can be extracted from the atmosphere by
breathing. Every breath we breathe is new life, or death.
Herein is the secret of success or failure, in certain localities, and
under certain conditions. If we have iron within us, could we extract or
attract iron from Saturn's district? Or, if the element within us could
attract gold, could we obtain it from the coal fields?
Therefore, it is only natural that the medical remedies we employ to
restore the organism, when afflicted with disease, should group themselves
into similar correspondences, and so, in a general sense, we find them;
for we note that the brain, the circulation, the lungs, and the stomach,
are the four chief citadels of the body; the heart, of course,
representing the center of circulation. And this also explains, further,
if that were necessary, why the principal remedies of the homeopathic
system are so speedy and direct in their action. The four principal drugs,
which stand as representatives of their class, are aconite, belladonna,
phosphorus, and pulsatilla. These represent the quadrant, for light is not
more nicely adjusted to the eye, nor sound to the ear, than aconite to the
circulation, belladonna to the brain, phosphorus to the lungs, and
pulsatilla to the stomach; while ramifying in the seven directions
indicated by the seven primary planets, we find stimulants, tonics,
narcotics, nervines, alteratives, cathartics and diuretics, as the natural
material correspondences thereof.
That we assign phosphorus to the lungs may appear startling to the
orthodox student, especially when, he calls to mind the fact that
phosphorus has long been recognized in medical science as a brain food and
medicine. Anticipating such mental questions, we reply that in medicine,
from the alchemical view, we are occupying a wholly different standpoint;
i.e., the power of controlling the functional action of the body, in this
view of the case, and the fact that, the lungs and the brain are in the
most perfect affinity, there will remain no mystery upon the subject.
The Alchemy of stones and gems attracts our next attention. Affinites
and antipathies to the human constitution, are to be found in these
crystallized representatives of the subtle, invisible influences emanating
from our planetary system. They are the mediums for the transmission of
corresponding attributes and influences of existing powers and potencies,
and if carried or worn upon the person, they will bring the person in
direct rapport with the invisible forces within the universal system.
Here again Hahnemann's scientific philosophy would prove effectual,
that "Similia similibus curantur." Would the fiery influence of a topaz
attract much from the realms of a chrysolite? Or, the crystallized, airy
forces of a sapphire be a suitable medium for the earthly forces of a
jasper?
Gems and stones are dead or living realities. They live, slumber and
die, and have their potent existence as do the organic forms of matter.
They are, usually, imbued with the vivifying spark of Divinity, and shine
forth and exert their influence through the magical powers attracted to
them from the forces of Nature. A real, living entity abides within them
that can be seen by the clairvoyant vision, and to the trained student in
Occult lore, this entity can be made to become an obedient servant, giving
warning of the approach of danger, impressions of men and things, and
warding off discordant influences surrounding us; or that, which we may
contact from the magnetic and personal environments in our relations in
the social world; or that which may be projected to us from the invisible
realms of life.
Think you the pryamids would be intact to-day, if the stones from which
they were built had been promiscuously selected? They were chosen by
Adepts in the knowledge of the Laws of Correspondence and antipathy and
affinity. The sphinx also stand as monuments to the heights of wisdom that
man can attain.
Metals also can be followed out on the same lines as the gems and
stones.
Much as we would like to continue, we are compelled to bring this
discourse to a close, even though in doing so we must of necessity omit
much of vital interest to the student. We will, therefore, only add that
the seven basic metals stand as the crystallized representatives of their
respective groups: Gold for the Sun, Silver for the Moon, Tin for Jupiter,
Copper for Venus, Quicksilver for Mercury and Lead for Saturn. Each finds
it own sphere of action within the temporary abiding place of the human
soul on earth—the physical body. So, likewise, the twelve constellations
and their corresponding talismanic gems, representing in their glittering
array the anatomical Zodiac of the human frame, and typifying the
spiritual quality of the atoms, there congregated, in every degree of
life. These, and a thousand other mysteries, had we the time, might be
unfolded to the student's view with considerable advantage, but we are
compelled to refrain. The philosopher's stone is near at hand. Seek it not
in remote spheres or distant parts of the earth, for it is ever around you
and within, and becomes the golden key of true wisdom, which prepares the
soul for its higher life and brighter destiny. It is the still, small
voice of the awakened soul, that purges the conscience from suffering, and
the spiritual body from earthy dross. It is that, which treasures not the
corrupting, delusive wealth of Earth, nor the transient powers of mammon,
but garners the fruits which spring from the pure life, and treasures the
jewels of heaven. Vainly will you seek for this stone of the wise
philosopher amid the turmoils, sufferings, and selfishness of life, unless
you accept your mission upon earth as a duty, delegated to the soul, from
Heaven. Eschew the evil thereof, and hold fast that which is good. To do
this, means to expand with the inward truth and become one of the "pure in
heart," in which blessed state, the magical white stone, conveying A NEW
NAME, reveals the living angel within, to the outward man. Then, and then
alone, doth he know the Adonai.
Such are the Divine, spiritual principles upon which the higher Alchemy
of life is based. They seek only to establish a Divine, conscious at-one-ment
between the angel, the man, and the universe, and to this end, we conclude
with the words of the immortal Paracelsus:
"To grasp these invisible elements, to attract them by their material
correspondences, to control, purify, and transmute them by the ever-moving
powers of the living spirit, THIS IS TRUE ALCHEMY." |