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The Secret Book Artephius
(1) Antimony is a mineral participating of saturnine parts, and has in
all respects the nature thereof. This saturnine antimony agrees with sol,
and contains in itself argent vive, in which no metal is swallowed up,
except gold, and gold is truly swallowed up by this antimonial argent
vive. Without this argent vive no metal whatsoever can be whitened; it
whitens laton, i.e. gold; reduceth a perfect body into its prima materia,
or first matter, viz. into sulphur and argent vive, of a white color, and
outshining a looking glass. It dissolves, I say the perfect body, which is
so in its own nature; for this water is friendly and agreeable with the
metals, whitening sol, because it contains in itself white or pure argent
vive.
(2) And from both these you may draw a great arcanum, viz. a water of
saturnine antimony, mercurial and white; to the end that it may whiten
sol, not burning, but dissolving, and afterwards congealing to the
consistence or likeness of white cream. Therefore, saith the philosopher,
this water makes the body to be volatile; because after it has dissolved
in it, and infrigidated, it ascends above and swims upon the surface of
the water. Take, saith he, crude leaf gold, or calcined with mercury, and
put it into our vinegre, made of saturnine antimony, mercurial, and sal
ammoniac, in a broad glass vessel, and four inches high or more; put it
into a gentle heat, and in a short time you will see elevated a liquor, as
it were oil swimming atop, much like a scum. Gather this with a spoon or
feather dipping it in; and in doing so often times a day until nothing
more arises; evaporate the water with a gentle heat, i.e., the superfluous
humidity of the vinegre, and there will remain the quintessence,
potestates or powers of gold in the form of a white oil incombustible. In
this oil the philosophers have placed their greatest secrets; it is
exceeding sweet, and of great virtue for easing the pains of wounds.
(3) The whole, then, of this antimonial secret is, that we know how by
it to extract or draw forth argent vive, out of the body of Magnesia, not
burning, and this is antimony, and a mercurial sublimate. That is, you
must extract a living and incombustible water, and then congeal, or
coagulate it with the perfect body of sol, i.e. fine gold, without alloy;
which is done by dissolving it into a nature [sic? mature?] white
substance of the consistency of cream, and made thoroughly white. But
first this sol by putrefaction and resolution in this water, loseth all
its light and brightness, and will grow dark and black; afterwards it will
ascend above the water, and by little and little will swim upon it, in a
substance of a white color. And this is the whitening of red laton to
sublimate it philosophically, and to reduce it into its first matter; viz.
into a white incombustible sulphur, and into a fixed argent vive. Thus the
perfect body of sol, resumeth life in this water; it is revived, inspired,
grows, and is multiplied in its kind, as all other things are. For in this
water, it so happens, that the body compounded of two bodies, viz. sol and
luna, is puffed up, swells, putrefies, is raised up, and does increase by
the receiving from the vegetable and animated nature and substance.
(4) Our water also, or vinegar aforesaid, is the vinegar of the
mountains, i.e. of sol and luna; and therefore it is mixed with gold and
silver, and sticks close to them perpetually; and the body receiveth from
this water a white tincture, and shines with inestimable brightness. Who
so knows how to convert, or change the body into a medicinal white gold,
may easily by the same white gold change all imperfect metals into the
best or finest silver. And this white gold is called by the philosophers "luna
alba philosophorum, argentum vivum album fixum, aurum alchymiae, and fumus
albus" [white philosophical silver, white fixed mercury, alchemical gold
and white (something)]: and therefore without this our antimonial vinegar,
the aurum album of the philosophers cannot be made. And because in our
vinegar there is a double substance of argentum vivum, the one from
antimony, and the other from mercury sublimated, it does give a double
weight and substance of fixed argent vive, and also augments therein the
native color, weight, substance and tincture thereof.
(5) Our dissolving water therefore carries with it a great tincture,
and a great melting or dissolving; because that when it feels the vulgar
fire, if there be in it the pure and fine bodies of sol or luna, it
immediately melts them, and converts them into its white substance such as
itself is, and gives to the body color, weight, and tincture. In it also
is a power of liquefying or melting all things that can be melted or
dissolved; it is a water ponderous, viscous, precious, and worthy to be
esteemed, resolving all crude bodies into their prima materia, or first
matter, viz. earth and a viscous powder; that is into sulphur, and
argentum vivum. If therefore you put into this water, leaves, filings, or
calx of any metal, and set it in a gentle heat for a time, the whole will
be dissolved, and converted into a viscous water, or white oil as
aforesaid. Thus it mollifies the body, and prepares for liquefaction; yea,
it makes all things fusible, viz. stones and metals, and after gives them
spirit and life. And it dissolves all things with an admirable solution,
transmuting the perfect body into a fusible medicine, melting, or
liquefying, moreover fixing, and augmenting the weight and color.
(6) Work therefore with it, and you shall obtain from it what you
desire, for it is the spirit and soul of sol and luna; it is the oil, the
dissolving water, the fountain, the Balneum Mariae, the praeternatural
fire, the moist fire, the secret, hidden and invisible fire. It is also
the most acrid vinegar, concerning which an ancient philosopher saith, I
besought the Lord, and he showed me a pure clear water, which I knew to be
the pure vinegar, altering, penetrating, and digesting. I say a
penetrating vinegar, and the moving instrument for putrefying, resolving
and reducing gold or silver into their prima materia or first matter. And
it is the only agent in the universe, which in this art is able to
reincrudate metallic bodies with the conservation of their species. It is
therefore the only apt and natural medium, by which we ought to resolve
the perfect bodies of sol and luna, by a wonderful and solemn dissolution,
with the conservation of the species, and without any destruction, unless
it be to a new, more noble, and better form or generation, viz. into the
perfect philosopher's stone, which is their wonderful secret or arcanum.
(7) Now this water is a certain middle substance, clear as fine silver,
which ought to receive the tinctures of sol and luna, so as they may be
congealed, and changed into a white and living earth. For this water needs
the perfect bodies, that with them after the dissolution, it may be
congealed, fixed, and coagulated into a white earth. But if this solution
is also their coagulation, for they have one and the same operation,
because one is not dissolved, but the other is congealed, nor is there any
other water which can dissolve the bodies, but that which abideth with
them in the matter and the form. It cannot be permanent unless it be of
the nature of other bodies, that they may be made one. When therefore you
see the water coagulate itself with the bodies that be dissolved therein;
be assured that thy knowledge, way of working, and the work itself are
true and philosophic, and that you have done rightly according to art.
(8) Thus you see that nature has to be amended by its own like nature;
that is, gold and silver are to be exalted in our water, as our water also
with these bodies; which water is called the medium of the soul, without
which nothing has to be done in this art. It is a vegetable, mineral and
animal fire, which conserves the fixed spirits of sol and luna, but
destroys and conquers their bodies; for it destroys, overturns, and
changes bodies and metallic forms, making them to be no bodies but a fixed
spirit. And it turns them into a humid substance, soft and fluid, which
hath ingression and power to enter into other imperfect bodies, and to mix
with them in their smallest parts, and to tinge and make them perfect. But
this they could not do while they remained in their metallic forms or
bodies, which were dry and hard, whereby they could have no entrance into
other things, so to tinge and make perfect, what was before imperfect.
(9) It is necessary therefore to convert the bodies of metals into a
fluid substance; for that every tincture will tinge a thousand times more
in a soft and liquid substance, than when it is in a dry one, as is
plainly apparent in saffron. Therefore the transmutation of imperfect
metals is impossible to be done by perfect bodies, while they are dry and
hard; for which cause sake they must be brought back into their first
matter, which is soft and fluid. It appears therefore that the moisture
must be reverted that the hidden treasure may be revealed. And this is
called the reincrudation of bodies, which is the decocting and softening
them, till they lose their hard and dry substance or form; because that
which is dry doth not enter into, nor tinge anything except its own body,
nor can it be tinged except it be tinged; because, as I said before, a
thick dry earthy matter does not penetrate nor tinge, and therefore,
because it cannot enter or penetrate, it can make no alteration in the
matter to be altered. For this reason it is, that gold coloreth not, until
its internal or hidden spirit is drawn forth out of its bowels by this,
our white water, and that it may be made altogether a spiritual substance,
a white vapor, a white spirit, and a wonderful soul.
(10) It behoves us therefore by this our water to attenuate, alter and
soften the perfect bodies, to wit sol and luna, that so they may be mixed
other perfect bodies. From whence, if we had no other benefit by this our
antimonial water, than that it rendered bodies soft, more subtile, and
fluid, according to its own nature, it would be sufficient. But more than
that, it brings back bodies to their original of sulphur and mercury, that
of them we may afterwards in a little time, in less than an hour's time do
that above ground which nature was a thousand years doing underground, in
the mines of the earth, which is a work almost miraculous.
(11) And therefore our ultimate, or highest secret is, by this our
water, to make bodies volatile, spiritual, and a tincture, or tinging
water, which may have ingress or entrance into bodies; for it makes bodies
to be merely spirit, because it reduces hard and dry bodies, and prepares
them for fusion, melting and dissolving; that is, it converts them into a
permanent or fixed water. And so it makes of bodies a most precious and
desirable oil, which is the true tincture, and the permanent fixed white
water, by nature hot and moist, or rather temperate, subtile, fusible as
wax, which does penetrate, sink, tinge, and make perfect the work. And
this our water immediately dissolves bodies (as sol and luna) and makes
them into an incombustible oil, which then may be mixed with other
imperfect bodies. It also converts other bodies into the nature of a
fusible salt which the philosophers call "sal alebrot philosophorum",
better and more noble than any other salt, being in its own nature fixed
and not subject to vanish in fire. It is an oil indeed by nature hot,
subtile, penetrating, sinking through and entering into other bodies; it
is called the perfect or great elixir, and the hidden secret of the wise
searchers of nature. He therefore that knows this salt of sol and luna,
and its generation and perfection, and afterwards how go commix it, and
make it homogene with other perfect bodies, he in truth knows one of the
greatest secrets of nature, and the only way that leads to perfection.
(12) These bodies thus dissolved by our water are called argent vive,
which is not without its sulphur, nor sulphur without the fixedness of sol
and luna; because sol and luna are the particular means, or medium in the
form through which nature passes in the perfecting or completing thereof.
And this argent vive is called our esteemed and valuable salt, being
animated and pregnant, and our fire, for that is nothing but fire; yet not
fire, but sulphur; and not sulphur only, but also quicksilver drawn from
sol and luna by our water, and reduced to a stone of great price. That is
to say it is a matter or substance of sol and luna, or silver and gold,
altered from vileness to nobility. Now you must note that this white
sulphur is the father and mother of the metals; it is our mercury, and the
mineral of gold; also the soul, and the ferment; yea, the mineral virtue,
and the living body; our sulphur, and our quicksilver; that is, sulphur of
sulphur, quicksilver of quicksilver, and mercury of mercury.
(13) The property therefore of our water is, that it melts or dissolves
gold and silver, and increases their native tincture or color. For it
changes their bodies from being corporeal, into a spirituality; and it is
in this water which turns the bodies, or corporeal substance into a white
vapor, which is a soul which is whiteness itself, subtile, hot and full of
fire. This water also called the tinging or blood-color-making stone,
being the virtue of the spiritual tincture, without which nothing can be
done; and is the subject of all things that can be melted, and of
liquefaction itself, which agrees perfectly and unites closely with sol
and luna from which it can never be separated. For it joined [joins?] in
affinity to the gold and silver, but more immediately to the gold than to
the silver; which you are to take special notice of. It is also called the
medium of conjoining the tinctures of sol and luna with the inferior or
imperfect metals; for it turns the bodies into the true tincture, to tinge
the said imperfect metals, also it is the water that whiteneth, as it is
whiteness itself, which quickeneth, as it is a soul; and therefore as the
philosopher saith, quickly entereth into its body.
(14) For it is a living water which comes to moisten the earth, that it
may spring out, and in its due season bring forth much fruit; for all
things springing from the earth, are endued through dew and moisture. The
earth therefore springeth not forth without watering and moisture; it is
the water proceeding from May dew that cleanseth the body; and like rain
it penetrates them, and makes one body of two bodies. This aqua vite or
water of life, being rightly ordered and disposed with the body, it
whitens it, and converts or changes it into its white color, for this
water is a white vapor, and there- fore the body is whitened with it. It
behoves you therefore to whiten the body, and open its unfoldings, for
between these two, that is between the body and the water, there is desire
and friendship, like as between male and female, because of the
propinquity and likeness of their natures.
(15) Now this our second and living water is called "Azoth", the water
washing the laton viz. the body compounded of sol and luna by our first
water; it is also called the soul of the dissolved bodies, which souls we
have even now tied together, for the use of the wise philosopher. How
precious then, and how great a thing is this water; for without it, the
work could never be done or perfected; it is also called the "vase naturae",
the belly, the womb, the receptacle of the tincture, the earth, the nurse.
It is the royal fountain in which the king and queen bathe themselves; and
the mother must be put into and sealed up within the belly of her infant;
and that is sol himself, who proceeded from her, and whom she brought
forth; and therefore they have loved one another as mother and son, and
are conjoined together, because they come from one and the same root, and
are of the same substance and nature. And because this water is the water
of the vegetable life, it causes the dead body to vegetate, increase and
spring forth, and to rise from death to life, by being dissolved first and
then sublimed. And in doing this the body is converted into a spirit, and
the spirit afterwards into a body; and then is made the amity, the peace,
the concord, and the union of contraries, to wit, between the body and the
spirit, which reciprocally, or mutually change their natures which they
receive, and communicate one to another through their most minute parts,
so that that which is hot is mixed with that which is cold, the dry with
the moist, and the hard with the soft; by which means, there is a mixture
made of contrary natures, viz. of cold and hot, and moist with dry, even
most admirable unity between enemies.
(16) Our dissolution then of bodies, which is made such in this first
water, is nothing else, but a destroying or overcoming of the moist with
the dry, for the moist is coagulated with the dry. For the moisture is
contained under, terminated with, and coagulated in the dry body, to wit,
in that which is earthy. Let therefore the hard and the dry bodies be put
into our first water in a vessel, which close well, and let them there
abide till they be dissolved, and ascend to the top; then may they be
called a new body, the white gold made by art, the white stone, the white
sulphur, not inflammable, the paradisical stone, viz. the stone
transmuting imperfect metals into white silver. Then we have also the
body, soul and spirit altogether; of which spirit and soul it is said,
that they cannot be extracted from the perfect bodies, but by the help or
conjunction of our dissolving water. Because it is certain, that the
things fixed cannot be lifted up, or made to ascend, but by the
conjunction or help of that which is volatile.
(17) The spirit, therefore, by help of the water and the soul, is drawn
forth from the bodies themselves, and the body is thereby made spiritual;
for that at the same instant of time, the spirit, with the soul of the
bodies, ascends on high to the superior part, which is the perfection of
the stone and is called sublimation. This sublimation, is made by things
acid, spiritual, volatile, and which are in their own nature sulphureous
and viscous, which dissolves bodies and makes them to ascend, and be
changed into air and spirit. And in this sublimation, a certain part of
our said first water ascends with the bodies, joining itself with them,
ascending and subliming into one neutral and complex substance, which
contains the nature of the two, viz. the nature of the two bodies and the
water. and therefore it is called the corporeal and spiritual compositum,
corjufle, cambar, ethelia, zandarith, duenech, the good; but properly it
is called the permanent or fixed water only, because it flies not in the
fire. But it perpetually adheres to the commixed or compound bodies, that
is, the sol and luna, and communicates to them the living tincture,
incombustible and most fixed, much more noble and precious than the former
which these bodies had. Because from henceforth this tincture runs like
oil, running through and penetrating bodies, and giving to them its
wonderful fixity; and this tincture is the spirit, and the spirit is the
soul, and the soul is the body. For in this operation, the body is made a
spirit of a most subtile nature; and again, the spirit is corporified and
changed into the nature of the body, with the bodies, whereby our stone
consists of a body, a soul, and a spirit.
(18) O God, how through nature, doth thou change a body into a spirit:
which could not be done, if the spirit were not incorporated with the
bodies, and the bodies made volatile with the spirit, and afterwards
permanent and fixed. For this cause sake, they have passed over into one
another, and by the influence of wisdom, are converted into one another. O
Wisdom: how thou makest the most fixed gold to be volatile and fugitive,
yeah, though by nature it is the most fixed of all things in the world. It
is necessary therefore, to dissolve and liquefy these bodies by our water,
and to make them a permanent or fixed water, a pure, golden water leaving
in the bottom the gross, earthy, superfluous and dry matter. And in this
subliming, making thin and pure, the fire ought to be gentle; but if in
this subliming with soft fire, the bodies be not purified, and the gross
and earthy parts thereof (note this well) be not separated from the
impurities of the dead, you shall not be able to perfect the work. For
thou needest nothing but the thin and subtile part of the dissolved
bodies, which our water will give thee, if thou proceedest with a slow or
gentle fire, by separating the things heterogene from the things homogene.
(19) This compositum then has its mundification or cleaning, by our moist
fire, which by dissolving and subliming that which is pure and white, it
cast forth its feces or filth like a voluntary vomit, for in such a
dissolution and natural sublimation or lifting up, there is a loosening or
untying of the elements, and a cleansing and separating of the pure from
the impure. So that the pure and white substance ascends upwards and the
impure and earthy remains fixed in the bottom of the water and the vessel.
This must be taken away and removed, because it is of no value, taking
only the middle white substance, flowing and melted or dissolved,
rejecting the feculent earth, which remains below in the bottom. These
feces were separated partly by the water, and are the dross and terra
damnata, which is of no value, nor can do any such service as the clear,
white, pure and clear matter, which is wholly and only to be taken and
made use of.
(20) And against this capharean rock, the ship of knowledge, or art of
the young philosopher is often, as it happened also to me sometimes,
dashed together in pieces, or destroyed, because the philosophers for the
most part speak by the contraries. That is to say that nothing must be
removed or taken away, except the moisture, which is the blackness; which
notwithstanding they speak and write only to the unwary, who, without a
master, indefatigable reading, or humble supplications to God Almighty,
would ravish away the golden fleece. It is therefore to be observed, that
this separation, division, and sublimation, is without a doubt the key to
the whole work.
[the first 20 chapters of this treatise were presented under the
heading 'the secret book' (chapter 3 of 'in pursuit of gold'). at this
point is begun chapter 4, 'the wisdom of artephius', which contains the
balance of the treatise. I feel the division is significant, though I
couldn't quite say why]
(21) After the putrefaction, then, and dissolution of these bodies, our
bodies also ascend to the top, even to the surface of the dissolving
water, in a whiteness of color, which whiteness is life. And in this
whiteness, the antimonial and mercurial soul, is by natural compact
infused into, and joined with the spirits of sol and luna, which separate
the thin from the thick, and the pure from the impure. That is, by lifting
up, by little and little, the thin and the pure part of the body, from the
feces and impurity, until all the pure parts are separated and ascended.
And in this work is out natural and philosophical sublimation work
completed. Now in this whiteness is the soul infused into the body, to
wit, the mineral virtue, which is more subtile than fire, being indeed the
true quintessence and life, which desires or hungers to be born again, and
to put off the defilements and be spoiled of its gross and earthy feces,
which it has taken from its monstrous womb, and corrupt place of its
original. And in this our philosophical sublimation, not in the impure,
corrupt, vulgar mercury, which has no qualities or properties like to
those, with which our mercury, drawn from its vitriolic caverns is
adorned. But let us return to our sublimation.
(22) It is most certain therefore in this art, that this soul extracted
from the bodies, cannot be made to ascend, but by adding to it a volatile
matter, which is of its own kind. By which the bodies will be made
volatile and spiritual, lifting themselves up, subtilizing and subliming
themselves, contrary to their own proper nature, which is corporeal, heavy
and ponderous. And by this means they are unbodied, or made no bodies, to
wit, incorporeal, and a quintessence of the nature of a spirit, which is
called, "avis hermetis", and "mercurius extractus", drawn from a red
subject or matter. And so the terrene or earthy parts remain below, or
rather the grosser parts of the bodies, which can by no industry or
ingenuity of man be brought to a perfect dissolution. (23) And this white
vapor, this white gold, to wit, this quintessence, is called also the
compound magnesia, which like a man does contain, or like a man is
composed of a body, soul and spirit. Now the body is the fixed solar
earth, exceeding the most subtile matter, which by the help of our divine
water is with difficulty lifted up or separated. The soul is the tincture
of sol and luna, proceeding from the conjunction, or communication of
these two, to wit, the bodies of sol and luna, and our water, and the
spirit is the mineral power, or virtue of the bodies, and also out of the
bodies like as the tinctures or colors in dying cloth are by the water put
upon, and diffused in and through the cloth. And this mercurial spirit is
the chain or band of the solar soul; and the solar body is that body which
contains the spirit and soul, having the power of fixing in itself, being
joined with luna. The spirit therefore penetrates, the body fixes, and the
soul joins together, tinges and whitens. From these three bodies united
together is our stone made: to wit, sol, luna and mercury.
(24) Therefore with this our golden water, a natural substance is
extracted, exceeding all natural substances; and so, except the bodies be
broken and destroyed, imbibed, made subtile and fine, thriftily, and
diligently managed, till they are abstracted from, or lose their grossness
or solid substance, and be changed into a subtile spirit, all our labor
will be in vain. And unless the bodies be made no bodies or incorporeal,
that is converted into the philosophers mercury, there is no rule of art
yet found out to work by. The reason is, because it is impossible to draw
out of the bodies all that most thin and subtile spirit, which has in
itself the tincture, except it first be resolved in our water. Dissolve
then the bodies in this our golden water, and boil them until all the
tincture is brought forth by the water, in a white color and a white oil;
and when you see this whiteness upon the water, then know that the bodies
are melted, liquified or dissolved. Continue then this boiling, till the
dark, black, and white cloud is brought forth, which they have conceived.
(25) Put therefore the perfect bodies of metals, to wit, sol and luna,
into our water in a vessel, hermetically sealed, upon a gentle fire, and
digest continually, till they are perfectly resolved into a most precious
oil. Saith Adfar, digest with a gentle fire, as it were for the hatching
of chickens, so long till the bodies are dissolved, and their perfectly
conjoined tincture is extracted, mark this well. But it is not extracted
all at once, but it is drawn out by little and little, day by day, and
hour by hour, till after a long time, the solution thereof is completed,
and that which is dissolved always swims atop. And while this dissolution
is in hand, let the fire be gentle and continual, till the bodies are
dissolved into a viscous and most subtile water, and the whole tincture be
educed, in color first black, which is the sign of a true dissolution.
(26) Then continue the digestion, till it become a white fixed water,
for being digested in balneo, it will afterwards become clear, and in the
end become like common argent vive, ascending by the spirit above the
first water. When there you see bodies dissolved in the first viscous
water, then know, that they are turned into a vapor, and the soul is
separated from the dead body, and by sublimation, turned into the order of
spirits. Whence both of them, with a part of our water, are made spirits
flying up in the air; and there the compounded body, made of the male and
female, viz. of sol and luna, and of that most subtile nature, cleansed by
sublimation, taketh life, and is made spiritual by its own humidity. That
is by its own water; like as a man is sustained by the air, whereby from
thenceforth it is multiplied, and increases in its own kind, as do all
other things. In such an ascention therefore, and philosophical
sublimation, all are joined one with another, and the new body subtilized,
or made living by the spirit, miraculously liveth or springs like a
vegetable.
(27) Wherefore, unless the bodies be attenuated, or made thin, by the
fire and water, till they ascend in a spirit, and are made or do become
like water and vapor or mercury, you labor wholly in vain. But when they
arise or ascend, they are born or brought forth in the air or spirit, and
in the same they are changed, and made life with life, so as they can
never be separated, but are as water mixed with water. And therefore, it
is wisely said, that the stone is born of the spirit, because it is
altogether spiritual. For the vulture himself flying without wings cries
upon the top of the mountain, saying, I am the white brought forth from
the black, and the red brought forth from the white, the citrine son of
the red; I speak the truth and lie not.
(28) It sufficeth thee then to put the bodies in the vessel, and into
the water once and for all, and to close the vessel well, until a true
separation is made. This the obscure artist calls conjunction,
sublimation, assation, extraction, putrefaction, ligation, desponsation,
subtilization, generation, etc.
(29) Now the whole magistery may be perfected, work, as in the
generation of man, and of every vegetable; put the seed once into the
womb, and shut it up well. Thus you may see that you need not many things,
and that this our work requires no great charges, for that there is but
one stone, there is but one medicine, one vessel, one order of working,
and one successive disposition to the white and to the red. And although
we say in many places, take this, and take that, yet we understand, that
it behoves us to take but one thing, and put it once into the vessel,
until the work be perfected. But these things are so set down by obscure
philosophers to deceive the unwary, as we have before spoken; for is not
this "ars cabalistica" or a secret and a hidden art? Is it not an art full
of secrets? And believest thou O fool that we plainly teach this secret of
secrets, taking our words according to their literal signification? Truly,
I tell thee, that as for myself, I am no ways self seeking, or envious as
others are; but he that takes the words of the other philosophers
according to their common signification, he even already, having lost
Ariadne's clue of thread, wanders in the midst of the labyrinth,
multiplies errors, and casts away his money for naught.
(30) And I, Artephius, after I became an adept, and had attained to the
true and complete wisdom, by studying the books of the most faithful
Hermes, the speaker of truth, was sometimes obscure also as others were.
But when I had for the space of a thousand years, or thereabouts, which
has now passed over my head, since the time I was born to this day,
through the alone goodness of God Almighty, by the use of this wonderful
quintessence. When I say for so very long a time, I found no man had found
out or obtained this hermetic secret, because of the obscurity of the
philosophers words. Being moved with a generous mind, and the integrity of
a good man, I have determined in these latter days of my life, to declare
all things truly and sincerely, that you may not want anything for the
perfecting of this stone of the philosophers. Excepting one certain thing,
which is not lawful for me to discover to any, because it is either
revealed or made known by God himself, or taught by some master, which
notwithstanding he that can bend himself to the search thereof, by the
help of a little experience, may easily learn in this book.
(31) In this book I have therefore written the naked truth, though
clothed or disguised with few colors; yet so that every good and wise man
may happily have those desirable apples of the Hesperides from this our
philosophers tree. Wherefore praises be given to the most high God, who
has poured into our soul of his goodness; and through a good old age, even
an almost infinite number of years, has truly filled our hearts with his
love, in which, methinks, I embrace, cherish, and truly love all mankind
together. But to return to out business. Truly our work is perfectly
performed; for that which the heat of sun is a hundred years in doing, for
the generation of one metal in the bowels of the earth; our secret fire,
that is, our fiery and sulphureous water, which is called Balneum Mariae,
doth as I have often seen in a very short time.
(32) Now this operation or work is a thing of no great labor to him who
knows and understands it; nor is the matter so dear, consideration [sic,
considering?] how small a quantity does suffice, that it may cause any man
to withdraw his hand from it. It is indeed, a work so short and easy, that
it may well be called woman's work, and the play of children. Go to it
then,, my son, put up thy supplications to God almighty; be diligent in
searching the books of the learned in this science; for one book openeth
another; think and meditate of these things profoundly; and avoid all
things which vanish in or will not endure the fire, because from these
adjustible, perishing or consuming things, you can never attain to the
perfect matter, which is only found in the digesting of your water,
extracted from sol and luna. For by this water, color, and ponderosity or
weight, are infinitely given to the matter; and this water is a white
vapor, which like a soul flows through the perfect bodies, taking wholly
from them their blackness, and impurities, uniting the two bodies in one,
and increasing their water. Nor is there any other thing than Azoth, to
wit, this our water, which can take from the perfect bodies of sol and
luna, their natural color, making the red body white, according to the
disposition thereof.
(33) Now let us speak of the fire. Our fire is mineral, equal,
continuous; it fumes not, unless it be too much stirred up, participates
of sulphur, and is taken from other things than from the matter; it
overturns all things, dissolves, congeals, and calcines, and is to be
found out by art, or after an artificial manner. It is a compendious
thing, got without cost or charge, or at least without any great purchase;
it is humid, vaporous, digestive, altering, penetrating, subtile,
spiritous, not violent, incombustible, circumspective, continent, and one
only thing. It is also a fountain of living water, which circumvolveth and
contains the place, in which the king and queen bathe themselves; through
the whole work this moist fire is sufficient; in the beginning, middle and
end, because in it, the whole of the art does consist. This is the natural
fire, which is yet against nature, not natural and which burns not;
lastly, this fire is hot, cold, dry, moist; meditate on these things and
proceed directly without anything of a foreign nature. If you understand
not these fires, give ear to what I have yet to say, never as yet written
in any book, but drawn from the more abstruse and occult riddles of the
ancients.
(34) We have properly three fires, without which our art cannot be
perfected; and whosoever works without them takes a great deal of labor in
vain. The first fire is that of the lamp, which is continuous, humid,
vaporous, spiritous, and found out by art. This lamp ought to be
proportioned to the enclosure; wherein you must use great judgement, which
none can attain to, but he that can bend to the search thereof. For if
this fire of the lamp be not measured, or duly proportioned or fitted to
the furnace, it will be, that either for the want of heat you will not see
the expected signs, in their limited times, whereby you will lose your
hopes and expectation by a too long delay; or else, by reason of too much
heat, you will burn the "flores auri", the golden flowers, and so
foolishly bewail your lost expense.
(35) The second fire is ignis cinerum, an ash heat, in which the vessel
hermetically sealed is recluded, or buried; or rather it is that most
sweet and gentle heat, which proceeding from the temperate vapors of the
lamp, does equally surround your vessel. This fire is not violent or
forcing, except it be too much excited or stirred up; it is a fire
digestive; alterative, and taken from another body than the matter; being
but one only, moist also, and not natural. (36) The third fire, is the
natural fire of water, which is also called the fire against nature,
because it is water; and yet nevertheless, it makes a mere spirit of gold,
which common fire is not able to do. This fire is mineral, equal, and
participates of sulphur; it overturns or destroys, congeals, dissolves,
and calcines; it is penetrating, subtile, incombustible and not burning,
and is the fountain of living water, wherein the king and queen bathe
themselves, whose help we stand in need of through the whole work, through
the beginning, middle, and end. But the other two above mentioned, we have
not always occasion for, but only at sometimes. In reading therefore the
books of the philosophers, conjoin these three fires in your judgement,
and without doubt, you will understand whatever they have written of them.
(37) Now as to the colors, that which does not make black cannot make
white, because blackness is the beginning of whiteness, and a sign of
putrefaction and alteration, and that the body is now penetrated and
mortified. From the putrefaction therefore in this water, there first
appears blackness, like unto broth wherein some bloody thing is boiled.
Secondly, the black earth by continual digestion is whitened, because the
soul of the two bodies swims above upon the water, like white cream; and
in this only whiteness, all the spirits are so united, that they can never
fly one from another. And therefore the laton must be whitened, and its
leaves unfolded, i.e., its body broken or opened, lest we labor in vain;
for this whiteness is the perfect stone for the white work, and a body
ennobled to that end; even a tincture of a most exuberant glory, and
shining brightness, which never departs from the body it is once joined
with. Therefore you must note here, that the spirits are not fixed but in
the white color, which is more noble than the other colors, and is more
vehemently to be desired, for that as it were the complement or perfection
of the whole work.
(38) For our earth putrefies and becomes black, then it is putrefied in
lifting up or separation; afterwards being dried, its blackness goes away
from it, and then it is whitened, and the feminine dominion of the
darkness and humidity perisheth; then also the white vapor penetrates
through the new body, and the spirits are bound up or fixed in the
dryness. And that which is corrupting, deformed and black through the
moisture, vanishes away; so the new body rises again clear, pure, white
and immortal, obtaining the victory over all its enemies. And as heat
working upon that which is moist, causeth or generates blackness, which is
the prime or first color, so always by decoction more and more heat
working upon that which is dry begets whiteness, which is the second
color; and then working upon that which is purely and perfectly dry, it
produces citrinity and redness, thus much for colors. WE must know
therefore, that thing which has its head red and white, but its feet white
and afterwards red; and its eyes beforehand black, that this thing, I say,
is the only matter of our magistery.
(39) Dissolve then sol and luna in our dissolving water, which is
familiar and friendly, and next in nature to them; and is also sweet and
pleasant to them, and as it were a womb, a mother, an original, the
beginning and the end of their life. That is the reason why they are
meliorated or amended in this water, because like nature, rejoices in like
nature, and like nature retains like nature, being joined the one to the
other, in a true marriage, by which they are made one nature, one new
body, raised again from the dead, and immortal. Thus it behoves you to
join consanguinity, or sameness of kind, by which these natures, will meet
and follow one another, purify themselves and generate, and make one
another rejoice; for that like nature now is disposed by like nature, even
that which is nearest, and most friendly to it.
(40) Our water then is the most beautiful, lovely, and clear fountain,
prepared only for the king, and queen whom it knows very well, and they
it. For it attracts them to itself, and they abide therein for two or
three days, to wit, two or three months, to wash themselves therewith,
whereby they are made young again and beautiful. And because sol and luna
have their original from this water their mother; it is necessary
therefore that they enter into it again, to wit, into their mothers womb,
that they may be regenerated and born again, and made more healthy, more
noble and more strong. If therefore these do not die and be converted to
water, they remain alone or as they were and without fruit; but if they
die, and are resolved in our water, they bring forth fruit of a hundred
fold; and from that very place in which they seem to perish, from thence
shall they appear to be that which they were not before.
(41) Let therefore the spirit of our living water be, with all care and
industry, fixed with sol and luna; for they being converted into the
nature of water become dead, and appear like to the dead; from thence
afterwards being revived, they increase and multiply, even as do all sorts
of vegetable substances; it suffices then to dispose the matter
sufficiently without, because that within, it sufficiently disposes itself
for the perfection of its work. For it has in itself a certain and
inherent motion, according to the true way and method, and a much better
order than it is possible for any man to invent or think of. For this
cause it is that you need only prepare the matter, nature herself will
perfect it; and if she be not hindered by some contrary thing, she will
not overpass her own certain motion, neither in conceiving or generating,
nor in bringing forth.
(42) Wherefore, after the preparation of the matter, beware only lest
by too much heat or fire, you inflame the bath, or make it too hot;
secondly, take heed lest the spirit should exhale, lest it hurt the
operator, to wit, lest it destroy the work, and induce many informities,
as trouble, sadness, vexation, and discontent. From these things which
have been spoken, this axiom is manifest, to wit, that he can never know
the necessary course of nature, in the making or generating of metals, who
is ignorant of the way of destroying them. You must therefore join them
together that are of one consanguinity or kindred; for like natures do
find out and join with their like natures, and by putrifying themselves,
and mix together and mortify themselves. It is needful therefore to know
this corruption and generation, and the natures themselves do embrace one
another, and are brought to a fixity in a slow and gentle fire; how like
natures rejoiceth with like natures; and how they retain one another and
are converted into a white consistency.
(43) This white substance, if you will make it red, you must
continually decoct it in a dry fire till it be rubified, or become red as
blood, which is nothing but water, fire, and true tincture. And so by a
continual dry fire, the whiteness is changed, removed, perfected, made
citrine, and still digested till it become to a true red and fixed color.
And consequently by how much more it is heightened in color, and made a
true tincture of perfect redness. Wherefore with a dry fire, and a dry
calcination, without any moisture, you must decoct this compositum, till
it be invested with a most perfect red color, and then it will be the true
and perfect elixir.
(44) Now if afterwards you would multiply your tincture, you must again
resolve that red, in new and fresh dissolving water, and then by
decoctions first whiten, and then rubify it again, by the degrees of fire,
reiterating the first method of operating in this work. Dissolve,
coagulate, and reiterate the closing up, the opening and multiplying in
quantity and quality at your own pleasure. For by a new corruption and
generation, there is introduced a new motion. Thus we can never find an
end if we do always work by reiterating the same thing over and over
again, viz. by solution and coagulation, by the help of our dissolving
water, by which we dissolve and congeal, as we have formerly said, in the
beginning of the work. Thus also is the virtue thereof increased, and
multiplied both in quantity and quality; so that if after the first course
of the operation you obtain a hundred fold; by the second fold you will
have a thousand fold; and by the third; ten thousand fold increase. And by
pursuing your work, your projection will come to infinity, tinging truly
and perfectly, and fixing the greatest quantity how much soever. Thus by a
thing of small and easy price, you have both color, goodness, and weight.
(45) Our fire then and azoth are sufficient for you: decoct, reiterate,
dissolve, congeal, and continue this course, according as you please,
multiplying it as you think good, until your medicine is made fusible as
wax, and has attained the quantity and goodness or fixity and color you
desire. This then is the compleating of the whole work of our second stone
(observe it well) that you take the perfect body, and put it into our
water in a glass vesica or body well closed, lest the air get in or the
enclosed humidity get out. Keep it in digestion in a gentle heat, as it
were of a balneum, and assiduously continue the operation or work upon the
fire, till the decoction and digestion is perfect. And keep it in this
digestion of a gentle heat, until it be purified and re-solved into
blackness, and be drawn up and sublimed by the water, and is thereby
cleaned from all blackness and impurity, that it may be white and subtile.
Until it comes to the ultimate or highest purity of sublimation, and
utmost volatility, and be made white both within and without: for the
vulture flying in the air without wings, cries out that it might get up
upon the mountain, that is upon the waters, upon which the "spiritus albus"
or spirit of whiteness is born. Continue still a fitting fire, and that
spirit, which is the subtile being of the body, and of the mercury will
ascend upon the top of the water, which quintessence is more white than
the driven snow. Continue yet still, and towards the end, increase the
fire, till the whole spiritual substance ascend to the top. And know well,
that whatsoever is clear, white-pure and spiritual, ascends in the air to
the top of the water in the substance of a white vapor, which the
philosophers call their virgin milk.
(46) It ought to be, therefore, as one of the Sybills said, that the
son of the virgin be exalted from the earth, and that the white
quintessence after its rising out of the dead earth, be raised up towards
heaven; the gross and thick remaining in the bottom, of the vessel and the
water. Afterwards, the vessel being cooled, you will find in the bottom
the black feces, scorched and burnt, which separate from the spirit and
quintessence of whiteness, and cast them away. Then will the argent vive
fall down from our air and spirit, upon the new earth, which is called
argent vive sublimed by the air or spirit, whereof is made a viscous
water, pure and white. This water is the true tincture separated from all
its black feces, and our brass or latten is prepared with our water,
purified and brought to a white color. Which white color is not obtained
but by decoction and coagulation of the water; decoct, therefore,
continually, wash away the blackness from the latten, not with your hands,
but with the stone, or the fire, or our second mercurial water which is
the true tincture. This separation of the pure from the impure is not done
with hands, but nature herself does it, and brings it to perfection by a
circular operation.
(47) It appears then, that this composition is not a work of hands, but
a change of the natures; because nature dissolves and joins itself,
sublimes and lifts itself up, and grows white, being separated from the
feces. And in such a sublimation the more subtile, pure, and essential
parts are conjoined; for that with the fiery nature or property lifts up
the subtile parts, it separates always the more pure, leaving the grosser
at the bottom. Wherefore your fire ought to be gentle and a continual
vapor, with which you sublime, that the matter may be filled with spirit
from the air, and live. For naturally all things take life from the
inbreathing of the air; and so also our magistery receives in the vapor or
spirit, by the sublimation of the water. (48) Our brass or latten then, is
to be made to ascend by the degrees of fire, but of its own accord,
freely, and without violence; except the body therefore be by the fire and
water broken, or dissolved, and attenuated, until it ascends as a spirit,
or climbs like argent vive, or rather as the white soul, separated from
the body, and by sublimation diluted or brought into a spirit, nothing is
or can be done. But when it ascends on high, it is born in the air or
spirit, and is changed into spirit; and becomes life with life, being only
spiritual and incorruptible. And by such an operation it is that the body
is made spirit, of a subtile nature, and the spirit is incorporated with
the body, and made one with it; and by such a sublimation, conjunction,
and raising up, the whole, both body and spirit are made white.
(49) This philosophical and natural sublimation therefore is necessary
which makes peace between, or fixes the body and spirit, which is
impossible to be done otherwise, than in the separation of these parts.
Therefore it behoves you to sublime both, that the pure may ascend, and
the impure may descend, or be left at the bottom, in the perplexity of a
troubled sea. And for this reason it must be continually decocted, that it
may be brought to a subtile property, and the body may assume, and draw to
itself the white mercurial soul, which it naturally holds, and suffers not
to be separated from it, because it is like to it in the nearness of the
first pure and simple nature. From these things it is necessary, to make a
separation by decoction, till no more remains of the purity of the soul,
which is not ascended and exalted to the higher part, whereby they will
both be reduced to an equality of properties, and a simple pure whiteness.
(50) The vulture flying through the air, and the toad creeping upon the
ground, are the emblems of our magistery. When therefore gently and with
much care, you separate the earth from the water, that is from the fire,
and the thin from the thick, then that which is pure will separate itself
from the earth, and ascend to the upper part, as it were into heaven, and
the impure will descend beneath, as to the earth. And the more subtile
part in the superior place will take upon it the nature of a spirit, and
that in the lower place, the nature of an earthy body. Wherefore, let the
white property with the more subtile part of the body, be by this
operation, made to ascend leaving the feces behind, which is done in a
short time. For the soul is aided by her associate and fellow, and
perfected by it. My mother, saith the body, has begotten me, and by me she
herself is begotten; now after I have taken from her, her flying she after
an admirable manner becomes kind and nourishing, and cherishing the son
whom she has begotten till he come to a ripe or perfect age.
(51) Hear now this secret: keep the body in our mercurial water, till
it ascends with the white soul, and the earthy part descends to the
bottom, which is called the residing earth. Then you shall see the water
coagulate itself with the body, and be assured the art is true; because
the body coagulates the moisture into dryness, like as the rennet of a
lamb or calf turns milk into cheese. In the same manner the spirit
penetrates the body, and is perfectly comixed with it in its smallest
atoms, and the body draws to itself his moisture, to wit, its white soul,
like as the loadstone draws iron, because of the nearness and likeness of
its nature; and then one contains the other. And this is the sublimation
and coagulation, which retaineth every volatile thing, making it fixed for
ever.
(52) This compositum then is not a mechanical thing, or a work of the
hands, but as I said, a changing of natures; and a wonderful connection of
their cold with hot, and the moist with the dry; the hot is mixed with the
cold, and the dry with the moist: By this means is made the mixture and
conjunction of body and spirit, which is called a conversion of contrary
spirits and natures, because by such a dissolution and sublimation, the
spirit is converted into a body and body in a spirit. So that the natures
being mixed together, and reduced into one, do change one another: and as
the body corporifies the spirit, or changes it into a body, so also does
the spirit convert the body into a tinging and white spirit.
(53) Wherefore as the last time I say, decoct the body in our white
water, viz. mercury, till it is dissolved into blackness, and then by
continual decoction, let it be deprived of the same blackness, and the
body so dissolved, will at length ascend or rise with a white soul. And
then the one will be mixed with the other, and so embrace one another that
it shall not be possible any more to separate them, but the spirit, with a
real agreement, will be unified with the body, and make one permanent or
fixed substance. And this is the solution of the body, and coagulation of
the spirit which have one and the same operation. Who therefore knows how
to conjoin the principles, or direct the work, to impregnate, to mortify,
to putrefy, to generate, to quicken the species, to make white, to cleanse
the culture from its blackness and darkness, till he is purged by the fire
and tinged, and purified from all his spots, shall be the possessor of a
treasure so great that even kings themselves shall venerate him.
(54) Wherefore, let our body remain in the water till it is dissolved
into a subtile powder in the bottom of the vessel and the water, which is
called the black ashes; this is the corruption of the body which is called
by the philosophers or wise men, "Saturnus plumbum philosophorum", and
pulvis discontinuatus, viz. saturn, latten or brass, the lead of the
philosophers the disguised powder. And in this putrefaction and resolution
of the body, three signs appear, viz., a black color, a discontinuity of
parts, and a stinking smell, not much unlike to the smell of a vault where
dead bodies are buried. These ashes then are those of which the
philosophers have spoken so much which remained in the lower part of the
vessel, which we ought not to undervalue or despise; in them is the royal
diadem, and the black and unclean argent vive, which ought to be cleansed
from its blackness, by a continual digestion in our water, till it be
elevated above in a white color, which is called the gander, and the bird
of Hermes. He therefore that maketh the red earth black, and then renders
it white, has obtained the magistery. So also he who kills the living, and
revives the dead. Therefore make the black white, and the white black, and
you perfect the work.
(55) And when you see the true whiteness appear, which shineth like a
bright sword, or polished silver, know that in that whiteness there is
redness hidden. But then beware that you take not that whiteness out of
the vessel, but only digest it to the end, that with heat and dryness, it
may assume a citron color, and a most beautiful redness. Which when you
see, render praises and thanksgiving to the most great and good God, who
gives wisdom and riches to whomsoever He pleases, and takes them away
according to the wickedness of a person. To Him, I say, the most wise and
almighty God, be glory for ages and ages. AMEN.
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