Table Of Paradise; A True Account Of The Ancient Science Which
Adam Learned From God Himself; Which Noah, Abraham, And Solomon Held
As One Of The Greatest Gifts Of God; Which Also All Sages, At All
Times, Preferred To The Wealth Of The Whole World, Regarded As The
Chief Treasure Of The Whole World, And Bequeathed Only To Good Men;
Namely,
The Science Of The Philosopher's Stone
Included in the Musaeum Hermeticum of 1625, though it was
first published in German as Gloria Mundi sonsten Paradeiss
Taffel, Frankfurt, 1620.
The Glory Of The World,
or,
Table Of Paradise:
A most precious book, containing art, the like of which is not
to be found upon earth; shewing the truth concerning the true
Philosophy, and the most noble medicine, and priceless Tincture,
together with divers other valuable Arts, and the instruments
required for them.
Now, in the name of God, the Almighty Creator and Preserver of
this World, I venture to shew forth the hidden mysteries of Nature,
which God has planted there, and deigns to reveal to men, that they
may see how marvellously things are created, and how wonderfully all
classes of natural objects are brought forth: for a testimony to all
believing Christian men, and for a comfort to all afflicted and
troubled hearts --- seeing that all things created perish and are
decomposed only to be renewed again, to be multiplied, animated, and
perfected after their kind. For nothing that is created, or born, is
at rests but daily undergoes increase or multiplication on the part
of Nature, until it becomes that which is created and ordained to be
the treasure of all mankind.
Therefore, beseech God to give you such wisdom and understanding
as will enable you to understand this Art, and to bring it, by His
blessing, to a good issue for His own glory, and the good of your
neighbour.
If then you would obtain this knowledge at the hand of God, you
must confess yourself a miserable sinner, and implore His blessing,
which alone can enable you to receive His Gift worthily, and to bear
in mind that He has bestowed it upon you out of pure mercy, and that
any pride or presumptuous insolence on your part will most certainly
entail its loss, in addition to His wrath, and eternal condemnation.
You must resolve to begin this blessed and divine work in the name
of God, for the service of all good Christians, and the building up
of our faith; to be a good athlete in the war against unbelievers;
to shun the company of wicked men; never to open your mouth against
the righteous; but to bestow your bounty upon the needy in order
that after this life you may receive the crown of eternal joy and
beatitude. For this treasure, which is above all other earthly
treasures, is granted to him alone who approves himself humble,
honest, gentle, and faithful, as far as the weakness of human nature
allows, and keeps the laws of God through God's bounty and blessing,
and who is not likely to mistake the true nature of the gift, or to
abuse it against his own eternal welfare. It is the gift of the Holy
Spirit, the loving bounty of the great God, which comes down from
the Father of light. He who masters this Art, must have asked and
obtained wisdom of God, since he has not only gold, silver, and all
the riches of this world, but also perfect health, length of days,
and, what is better still, the comfort toe be derived from a
reassuring type of the bitter passion and death of our Lord and
Saviour Jesus Christ, His descent into hell, His glorious and most
holy Resurrection on the third day, and His victory and triumph over
sin, death, Devil, and hell --- a victory that must carry joy and
comfort to all that have the breath of life.
Let me now shew you how wonderfully the human and divine natures
of Jesus Christ were united and joined together in one Person. The
soul and body of Christ and His divine nature were so inseparably
joined together that they cannot be severed throughout all eternity.
Nevertheless Christ had to die, and His soul had to be separated
from His body, and once more joined to it on the third day, that His
body might be glorified, and rendered as subtle as His soul and
spirit. For He had received His body of the substance of the most
Blessed Virgin Mary, and therefore it had to be perfected by
temporary separation from His soul and Spirit. Nevertheless, His
divinity remained united in one essence with the body and soul of
Christ --- it was with the body in the tomb, and with His soul in
Paradise.
The body of Christ had to be separated from its soul in order
that it might receive the same power and glory. But now, Christ
having been dead, and His soul having afterwards been reunited to
His body, they are henceforth inseparably conjoined into one subtle
essence. His divine omnipotence which He received from His Father,
which governs all things in heaven and earth, and is equally perfect
from all eternity, is now one Person with the Christ Jesus, who
suffered, died, rose again, and ascended into heaven, in endless
power, glory, majesty, might, and honour.
Therefore, O sinful man, render thanks to Almighty God for the
grace and fatherly loving kindness shewn to you; and rest assured
that you may obtain the glorification which was given to Christ. For
Christ rose first that he might open up for you a way unto His
heavenly Father. Like Him, you too must be crucified to this world
by many hardships, tribulations, and anxieties. But that you may
understand the glorification of the body, and its renewal to eternal
life, you should dilligently consider God's fatherly love and mercy
towards fallen man. Bear in mind that all things that come down from
Him are good and perfect gifts. Take care, therefore, lest you
foully abuse the gifts bestowed upon you freely, without any merit
of your own, to the destruction of your soul; rather let all your
actions shew that you love and fear God, and then every labour to
which you set your hand will prosper, and from beginning to end you
will pursue the work successfully and joyously. Commit your care to
God, trust His word, and keep His holy commandments: then God will
be with you in all things, will bless your toil, and in His fatherly
love forefend all loss and harm. Your art will then afford you true
comfort, yield you al] you need, refresh you amid all your
hardships, supply you with the means of relieving the necessities of
others, and constantly keep before your eyes a living type of your
own glorious resurrection, and of that of all Christian believers --
whereby we must exchange this earthly and mortal life for endless
joy and the glory of eternal and incorruptible beatitude.
Let me then tell you, who would be a true lover of this Art, that
it was first delivered by God to Adam in Paradise. For it is a true
revelation of many secrets and mysteries. It shews you the vanity of
your body and of your life in this world; but it also solaces you
with the hope of eternal salvation. It suggests to you the
reflection that if God has infused such wonderful virtues into mere
inanimate natural objects, surely we, who are so much better than
they, must be reserved for some high and glorious destiny. I beseech
you, therefore, to acquit yourself wisely in all that you do --- not
to be in haste, --- but to reveal this mystery to no mortal man,
unless he be a lover of this Art and of a godly, sincere, and
merciful temper. Such was the practice of the ancient Sages to whom
this wisdom was revealed by the inspiration of the Holy Spirit. You
must also confess that this Art is real, for the sake of those who
will not believe that Jesus Christ proceeded from His Almighty
Heavenly Father, and was also born of a pure virgin. Moreover, you
must ask God to enlighten you by the gift of His Holy Spirit, to
sharpen your understanding, to open your eyes, and to grant you a
profound insight into that unfathomable wisdom which lies hid in our
Art, and which no Sage has ever been able to express in his
writings. For there are many secrets in Nature which it is
impossible for our unaided human reason to apprehend. If you follow
my directions and suffer yourself to be guided by the grace of God,
then the work which you undertake for the glory of God, and for the
good of your neighbour, will have a joyful issue. Feed the hungry;
give drink to the thirsty; clothe the naked; comfort the afflicted;
visit the sick and the prisoners: and you shall have what you
desire.
Robert Valens Rugl.
A spirit is within, which by deliberate skill
you must separate from the body. Simply
disjoin the material part from the vapour. You
should then add the cold water of the spring.
With this you should unweariedly sprinkle both.
You will then have the true Elixir of all this Art.
Exhortation and Information
To all the lovers of this Art, in which they can see, as in a
mirror, all the fundamental and essential requirements thereof;
whether it is possible or not to arrive at the true Art, and
concerning the same.
I would warn all and sundry, but especially you, my beloved
disciples, in clear and impressive language, to be on your guard
against all fantastical teaching, and to listen to the truthful
information which I shall now proceed to give you.
In the first place, you must give a wide berth to the false
Alchemy of the vulgar herd. I have experienced this so much that I
am loath to recommend any to undertake the work, since this Art is
so well hidden that no mortal on earth can discover it unless Sol
and Luna meet. If you give diligent heed to my warning you may
attain to a knowledge thereof, but if you do not, you will never
approach any nearer to it. Know also that there is only one thing in
the whole world that enters into the composition of the Stone, and
that, therefore, all coagulation, and admixture, of different
ingredients, would shew you to be on a wrong scent altogether. If
you could perform all the different operations of our art, yet all
your dissolving, coagulating, decomposing, distilling, augmenting,
albefying, &c., would be useless, without a true knowledge of our
Matter. For our Art is good and precious, nor can any one become a
partaker of it, unless it be revealed to him by God, or unless he be
taught by a skilled Master. It is a treasure such as the whole world
cannot buy. Do not, therefore, my sons, spend your toil until you
know what that is on which you are to operate. For even if you knew
the right Matter, your information would be useless to you without a
knowledge of the method of preparing it. The Stone in its final and
effective form is not to be found anywhere in the whole world,
either in the heavens above, or in the earth beneath; nor in any
metal, nor in anything that grows, nor yet even in gold or silver.
It must be prepared, i.e., developed, into its final form;
yet for all that, it cannot, strictly speaking, be made better than
God created it, nor can the Tincture be prepared out of it: the '
Tincture ' must be added to it, and therefore has nothing to do with
our main object, since it is a different thing altogether. If it
were in any metal, we should surely have to look for it in the Sun
or Moon; yet the Moon cannot contain it, or it would long since have
become the Sun. Neither is it in mercury, or in any sulphur, or
salt, or in herbs, or anything of that nature, as you shall see
hereafter. Now we will conclude our exhortation, and proceed to
describe the Art itself.
There follow some Methods of Recognising our Stone.
I.
Know that our Stone is one, and that it is justly called a Stone.
For it is a Stone, and could bear no name so characteristic, as that
of the Stone of the Sages. Yet it is not any one of our existing
stones, but only derives its appellation from its similarity to
them. For our Stone is so prepared as to be composed of the four
elements. On this account it has been called by different names, and
assumes different forms, although it is one thing, and its like is
not found upon earth. It is a Stony, and not a stone in the sense of
having the nature of any one stone; it is fire, yet it has not the
appearance, or properties, of fire; it is air, yet neither has it
the appearance, or properties, of air; it is water, but has no
resemblance, or affinity, to the nature of water. It is earth,
though it has not the nature, or appearance, of earth, seeing that
it is a thing by itself.
Another way of Knowing our Precious Stone.
II.
An ancient philosopher says: Our Stone is called the sacred rock,
and is divided, or signified, in four ways. Firstly, into earth;
secondly, into its accretion; thirdly, into fire; and fourthly, into
the flame of fire. If any one knows the method of dissolving it, of
extracting its salt, and of perfectly coagulating it, he is
initiated in the mysteries of the Sages. Therefore if the salt turn
white, and assume an oily appearance, then it tinges. There are
three stages in our Art. Firstly, the transmutation of the whole
thing into one salt; secondly, the rendering of three subtle bodies
intangible; thirdly, the repetition of the whole solution of the
whole thing. If you understand this, set your hand to the work. For
the Matter is only one thing, and would remain one thing, though a
hundred thousand books had been written about it, because this Art
is so great a treasure that the whole world would not be a
sufficient compensation for it. It is described in obscure terms,
yet openly named by all, and known to all. But if all knew its
secret, no one would work, and it would lose its value. On this
account it would be impious to describe it in universally
intelligible language. He to whom God will reveal it, may understand
these dark expressions. But because most men do not understand them,
they are inclined to regard our Art as impossible, and the Sages are
branded as wicked men and swindlers. Learned doctors, who thus speak
of us, have it before their eyes every day, but they do not
understand it, because they never attend to it And then, forsooth,
they deny the possibility of finding the Stone; nor will any one
ever be able to convince them of the reality of our Art, so long as
they blindly follow their own bent and inclination. In short, they
are too wise to discern it, since it transcends the range of the
human intellect, and must be humbly received at the hand of God.
Yet another Way of Knowing our Blessed Stone.
The philosopher, Morienus, calls our Stone, water: and he had
good reasons for the name. O water of bitter taste, that preservest
the elements! O glorious nature, that overcomest Nature herself! O
thou that resemblest Nature, which dissolvest her tractable nature,
that exaltest Nature -- that art crowned with light, and preservest
in thyself the four elements, out of which the quintessence is made!
Thou art for the simple, seeing that thou art most simple in thy
operation. Having conceived by a natural process, thou bringest
forth vapour, and art a good mother. Thou needest no outward help;
nature preserves nature, and is not separated from nature by the
operation of nature. The thing is easy to find, the knowledge is
easy, altogether familiar, yet it is as a miracle to many. Thy
solution is great glory, and all thy lovers are named above. Thou
art a great arcanum and to the many thou appearest impossible!
Explanation.
Know, my son, that our Stone is such that it cannot adequately be
described in writing. For it is a stone, and becomes water through
evaporation; yet it is no stone, and it by a chemical process it
receives. a watery form it is at first like any other liquid water,
being a thin fluid; yet its nature is not like that of any other
water upon earth. There is only one spring in all the world from
which this water may be obtained. That spring is in Judaea, and is
called, the Spring of the Saviour, or of beatitude. By the grace of
God its situation was revealed to the Sages. It issues in a secret
place, and its waters flow over all the world. It is familiar to
all, yet none knows the principle, reason, or way to find the
spring, or discover the way to Judaea. But whoever does not know the
right spring will never attain to a knowledge of our Art. For this
reason, that Sage might well exclaim, "O water of a harsh and bitter
taste!". For, in truth, the spring is difficult to find; but he who
knows it may reach it easily, without any expense, labour, or
trouble. The water is, of its own nature, harsh and bitter, so that
no one can partake of it; and, because it is of little use to the
majority of markind the Sage doth also exclaim, "O water, that art
lightly esteemed by the vulgar, who do not perceive thy great
virtues, in thee lie, as it were, hid the four elements. Thou hast
power to dissolve, and conserve, and join nature, such as is
possessed by no other thing upon earth". If you would know the
properties and appearance of this Stone, know that its appearance is
aqueous, and that the water is first changed into a stone, then the
stone into water, and the water at length into the Medicine. If you
know the Stone without the method of its preparation, your knowledge
can be of no more use to you than if you knew the right method
without being acquainted with the true Matter. Therefore our hearts
are filled with gratitude to God for both kinds of knowledge.
Concerning the Treasure in the Tincture.
For let me tell you that when you have the red [tincture] you
have something that all the treasures of the world will not buy. For
it transmutes all metals into true gold, and is therefore much
better than the preparation of the Sun. As a medicine it excels all
other gold; all diseases may be cured by drinking one drop of the
tincture in a glass of wine; and it has power to work many other
marvels which we cannot here mention at length. If you wish to
prepare the tincture for the Moon, take five half-ounces of the red
tincture, and mix it well with five hundred half-ounces of the Moon,
which have been subjected to the action of fire, then melt it, and
the whole will be changed into the Tincture and the Medicine. Of
this take half an ounce, and inject it into five hundred half-ounces
of Venus or any other metal, and it will be transmuted into pure
silver. Of the red tincture, which you have diligently prepared,
take one part to a thousand parts of gold, and the whole will be
changed into the red tincture. Of this, again, you may take one part
to a thousand parts of Venus, or any other metal, and it will be
changed into pure gold. For this purpose you need not buy any gold
or silver. The first injection you can make with about a drachm of
both; and then you can transmute with the tincture more and, more.
You should also know that in our Art we distinguish two things
--- the body and the spirit: the former being constant, or fixed,
while the other is volatile. These two must be changed, the one into
the other: the body must become water, and the water body. Then
again the body becomes water by its own internal operation, and the
two, i.e., the dry and the liquid, must once more be joined
together in an inseparable union. This conjunction could not take
place if the two had not been obtained from one thing; for an
abiding union is possible only between things of the same nature. Of
this kind is the union which takes place in our Art; for the
constituent parts of the Matter are joined together by the operation
of nature, and not by any human hand. The substance is divided into
two parts, as we shall explain further on. For instance, the Eagle
is a "water," which being extracted is then a body dead and
lifeless: if it is to be restored to life, the spirit must once more
be joined to it, and that in a unique fashion, as we see that it
devours gradually again the one eagle after the other. Then the body
loses all its grossness, and becomes new and pure; nor can this body
and soul ever die, seeing that they have entered into an eternal
union, such as the union of our bodies and souls shall be at the
last day.
Another Description of our Stone.
The Enigma of the wise (the Stone) is the Salt and Root of the
whole Art, and, as it were, its Key, without which no one is able
either to lock or unlock its secret entrance. No man can understand
this Art who does not know the Salt and its preparation, which takes
place in a convenient spot that is both moist and warm; there the
dissolution of its liquid must be accomplished, while its substance
remains unimpaired. These are the words of Geber.
Explanation.
Know that the Salt of which Geber speaks has none of the specific
properties of salt, and yet is called a Salt, and is a Salt.
It is black and fetid, and when chemically prepared, assumes the
appearance of blood, and is at length rendered white, pure, and
clear. It is a good and precious Salt which, by its own operation,
is first impure and then pure. It dissolves and coagulates itself,
or, as the Sage says, it locks and unlocks itself. No Salt has this
property but the Salt of the Sages. Its chemical development it may
undergo in a moist and convenient place, where its moisture (as the
Sage says) may be dissolved in the Bath of Mary. He means that it
must be warm enough for its water to be distilled, yet not warmer
than the excrement of horses, which is not fresh.
Another Description of our Stone.
Alexander the Great, King of Macedonia, in his "Philosophy"
has the following words: Know that the Salt is fire and dryness.
Fire coagulates, and its nature is hot, dry, and penetrating, even
unto the inmost part. Its property is to become white even as the
Sun and the Moon with the variations in the extremes of fire, to
wit, of the natural fire, while the Sun restores redness and the
Moon whiteness, and brings bodies to their spiritual condition at
the same time that it removes their blackness and bad sulphur. With
it bodies are calcined: it is the secret of the red and white
tincture, the foundation and root of all things, and the best of all
created things after the rational soul of man. For no Stone in the
whole world has a greater efficacy, nor can any child of this earth
find the Art without this Stone. Blessed be God in heaven, who hath
created this Art in Salt for the transmutation of all things, seeing
that it is the quintessence which is above all things, and in all
things. God Most High has not only from Heaven blessed creatures in
this fashion, but praise, excellence, power, and wisdom are to be
recognised as existing in this Salt. He who can dissolve and
coagulate it, is well acquainted with the arcana of this Art. Our
Salt is found in a certain precious Salt, and in all things. On this
account the ancient Sages called it the "common moon," because all
men need it. If you would become rich, prepare this Salt till it is
rendered sweet No other salt is so permanent, or has such power to
fix the "soul," and to resist fire. The Salt of the earth is the
soul; it coagulates all things, is in the midst of the earth when
the earth is destroyed; nor is there anything on the earth like its
tincture. It is called Rebis (Two-thing), is a Stone, Salt, one
body, and, to the majority of mankind, a vile and a despised thing.
Yet it purifies and restores bodies, represents the Key of our whole
Art, and all things are summed up in it. Only its entering in is so
subtle that few perceive it: yet if it enter a body, it tinges it
and brings it to perfection. What then should you desire of God but
this Salt and the ingression thereof?
If a man lived a hundred thousand years, he could never
sufficiently marvel at the wonderful manner in which this noble
treasure is obtained from ashes, and again reduced to ashes. In the
ashes is Salt, and the more the ashes are burnt, the more ashes it
affords; notice also, that that proceeds from fire, and returns to
fire, which proceeds from earth. All must confess that in the Salt
there are two salts that kill mercury. This is a most profound
saying. For sulphur, and the radical liquid, are generated in earth
of a most subtle nature, and thus is prepared the Philosopher's
Stone, which causes all things, even as the philosophers set forth,
to arise out of one thing, and one nature, without the addition of
any foreign substance. Our Matter is one of the commonest things
upon earth, and contains within itself the four elements. It is,
indeed, nothing short of marvellous that so many seek so ordinary a
thing, and yet are unable to find it. We might put down many other
characteristics of this Salt, but I prefer to leave the further
elaboration of this subject to the reader, and to confine myself to
a more detailed account of its fruits, entrance, and life, of the
mode of opening the garden, and catching a glimpse of the glorious
roses, of the way in which they multiply, and bear fruit a
thousand-fold; also how you may cause the dead body to reappear, and
to be raised again to immortal life, by the power of which it may be
able to enter imperfect bodies, purify them, and bring them to
perfection, and to a state of immutable permanence.
I now propose to speak of the Stone under three aspects, viz.,
as the vegetable, the animal, and the mineral Stone; and among these
again, of the one which contains those four elements that impart
life to all. Place this one substance in an airtight alembic, and
treat it according to the precepts of our Art, which we shall set
forth further on. Then the sowing in the field can take place, and
you obtain the Mineral Stone, and the Green Lion that imbibes so
much of its own spirit. Then life returns to its spirit through the
alembic, and the dead body lies at the bottom of the vessel. In the
latter there are still two elements which the fire cannot sever ---
for sooner the ashes are burned in the fire itself, and the Salt
thereby becomes stronger. The earth must be calcined until it turns
white; then the earth is severed of its own accord, and is united to
its own earth. For every thing strives to be joined to its like.
Give it the cold and humid element to drink, and leave it standing
eight days, that the two may be well mixed. You must see yourself
what is best to be done after this: for I cannot give you any
further information at present. Sun and Moon must have intercourse,
like that of a man and woman: otherwise the object of our Art cannot
be attained. All other teaching is false and erroneous. Think upon
this Salt as the true foundation of our Art; for its worth outweighs
all the treasures of this world. Itself is not developed into the
tincture, but the tincture must be added to it. Nor is the substance
of our Art found in any metal.
Another Description of the Matter and the Method
By Senior.
Natural things, according to this Sage, are those which have been
generated and produced out of a natural substance by a natural
method. Now in its first, or lunar, stage, our Stone is produced
from a coagulated white earth, as the Sage says: Behold our Sun in
our white earth, and that by which the union in our Art is effected;
which is twice transmuted into water, and whose volatile exhalation,
representing that which is most precious in our Substance, is the
highest consolation of the human body. With this water the inward
mercury of the metals must be extracted. Hence it follows that our
Stone is obtained from the elements of two luminaries (gold and
silver), being called our quicksilver and incombustible oil, the
soul and light of bodies --- which alone can afford to dead and
imperfect bodies eternal light and life. Therefore I pray and
beseech you, my son, to crush quicksilver from our Substance with
intelligence and great activity.
The Purging the "Earth" of Its Superfluous Earth.
The aforesaid earth, or Matter, you must purify, or calcine, so
as to extract its water and spirit. The latter you must enclose in a
phial, and pour common aqua vita upon it till the substance is
covered to the height of three or four fingers; then subject it to
the action of fire for an hour, and diligently distil it by the
bath. What remains you must again calcine, and extract with its
water till you find nothing more in the "earth". The earth keep for
the second stage of the process. The water you have extracted distil
over a gentle fire. Then you will find at the bottom of the
distilling vessel a certain beautiful substance resembling a crystal
stone, which is purged of all earthly grossness, and is called "our
earth." This substance you must place in a glass (pumpkin-shaped)
distilling vessel, and calcine until it becomes dry and white, and
yet liquid withal. Then you have obtained the treasure of this
world, which has virtue to purify and perfect all earthly things: it
enters into all, it nourishes the fixed salt in all things by means
of Mercury or the body.
Another Description of our Stone.
Know, my sons, that the Stone out of which our Art is elaborated,
never touches the earth after its generation. If it touch the earth,
it is of no use for our purpose, although at its first birth it is
generated by the Sun and Moon, and embodies certain earthy elements.
It is generated in the earth, then broken, destroyed, and mortified.
Out of it arises a vapour which is carried with the wind into the
sea, and thence brought back again to the land, where it almost
immediately disappears. It must be caught in the air, before it
touches the ground; otherwise it evaporates. As soon as it is borne
from the sea to the land, you must promptly seize it, and enclose it
in your phial, then manipulate it in the manner described. You may
know its coming by the wind, rain, and thunder, which accompany it;
therefore it should not escape you. Though it is born anew every
day, yet it existed from the beginning of the world. But as soon as
it falls to the ground, it becomes useless for the purposes of our
Art.
From our earth wells forth a fertilizing fountain,
whence flow two precious stones. The first
straightway hastens to the rising of the Sun;
the other makes its way to the setting thereof.
From them fly forth two Eagles, plunge into the
flames, and fall once more to the earth. Both
are furnished with feathers, and Sun and Moon,
being placed under their wings, are perfected.
Know also that two waters flow forth from this fountain; the one
(which is the spirit) towards the rising Sun, and the other,
the body, towards the setting Sun. The two are really only
one very limpid water, which is so bitter as to be quite
undrinkable. The quantity of this water is so great that it flows
over the whole earth, yet leads to nothing but the knowledge of this
Art. The same also is misused too often by those who desire it. Take
also the "fire", and in it you will find the Stone, and nowhere else
in the whole world. It is familiar to all men, both young and old,
is found in the country, in the village, in the town, in all things
created by God; yet it is despised by all. Rich and poor handle it
every day. It is cast into the street by servant maids. Children
play with it. Yet no one prizes it, though, next to the human soul,
it is the most beautiful and the most precious thing upon earth, and
has power to pull down kings and princes. Nevertheless, it is
esteemed the vilest and meanest of earthly things. It is cast away
and rejected by all. Indeed it is the Stone which the builders of
Solomon disallowed. but if it be prepared in the right way, it is a
pearl without price, and, indeed, the earthly antitype of Christ,
the heavenly Corner Stone. As Christ was despised and rejected in
this world by the people of the Jews, and nevertheless was more
precious than. heaven and earth; so it is with our Stone among
earthly things: for the spring where it is found is called the fount
of nature. For even as through Nature all growing things are
generated by the heat of the Sun, so also through Nature is our
Stone born after that it has been generated.
When you have found the water which contains our Stone, you must
take nothing away from it, nor add anything to it: for it must be
entirely prepared by means of that which it contains within itself.
Then extract the water in an alembic, and separate the liquid from
the dry. The body will then remain alone on the glass, while the
water runs down into the lower part. Thereupon unite the water once
more to the body in the manner described above, and your task will
be accomplished. Know also that the water in which is our Stone, is
composed in well balanced proportions of the four elements. In the
chemical process you will learn to distinguish earth, oil, and
water, or body, spirit, and soul: the earth is at the bottom of the
glass vessel, the oil, or soul, is with the earth, and the water is
the spirit which is distilled from it. In the same way you will come
upon two colours, namely, white and red, representing the Moon and
the Sun. The oil is the fire, or the Sun, the water is air, or the
Moon; and Sun and Moon are silver and gold which must enter into
union. But enough, what I have said in this Epistle ought to enable
you to find the Stone, and if herein you fail to discover it, rest
assured that it will never become known to you. Be thou, therefore,
a lover of the Art, and commended unto God the Almighty even unto
all eternity. Written in the year 1526 after the birth of our Lord.
Thus do the Sages write concerning the two waters which yet are
only one water --- and in this alone the Stone is to be found. Know
also that by so much as the earthly part is wanting, by also so much
does the heavenly part abound more fully. Now this Stone renders all
dry and arid bodies humid, all cold bodies warm, all impure bodies
clear and pure. It contains within itself all healing and
transmuting virtue, breathed into it by the art of the Master and
the quickening spirit of fire. Thanks be unto God therefore in all
time.
The Sun is its Father, the Moon its Mother.
If you have those two spirits, they bring forth the Stone, which
is prepared out of one part of Sulphur, or Sun, and four parts of
Mercury, or Moon. The Sulphur is warm and dry, the Mercury cold and
moist. That must again be dissolved into water, which before was
water, and the body, which before was mercury, must again become
mercury.
Concerning the First Matter, or Seed of the Metals,
including that of the Husband, and that of the Spouse.
Metals have their own seed, like all other created things.
Generation and parturition take place in them as in everything else
that grows. If this were not the case, we should never have had any
metals. Now, the seed is a metallic Matter which is liquefied from
earth. The seed must be cast into its earth, and there grow, like
that of every other created thing. Therefore, we must prepare the
earth, or our first Matter, and cast into it the seed, whereupon it
will bring forth fruit after its kind. This motion is required for
the generation out of one thing, viz., that first Matter; the body
must become spirit, and the spirit body: thence arises the medicine
which is transmuted from one colour to another. Now, that which is
sought in the white produces white, and the red, in like manner,
gives red. The first Matter is one thing, and fashioned into its
present shape by the hand of God, and not of man --- joined
together, and transmuted into its essence by Nature alone. This we
take, dissolve, and again conjoin, and wash with its own water,
until it becomes white, and then again red. Thus our earth, in which
we now may easily see our Sun and Moon, is purified. For the Sun is
the Father of metals, and the Moon is their Mother: and if
generation is to take place, they must be brought together as
husband and wife. By itself neither can produce anything, and
therefore the red and the white must be brought together. And though
a thousand books have been written about it, yet for all that, the
first substance is not more than one. It is the earth into which we
cast our grain, that is to say, our Sun and Moon, which then bear
fruit after their kind. If itself be cast into metals, it is changed
into that which is best, viz., Sun and Moon. This is most
true. Thanks be unto God.
A Simple Account of the True Art
According to the Sages, no body is dissolved without the
coagulation of the spirit. For as soon as the spirit is transmuted
into the body, [the Stone] receives its power. So long as the spirit
is volatile, and liable to evaporate, it cannot produce any effect:
when it is fixed, it immediately begins to operate. You must
therefore prepare it as the baker prepares the bread. Take a little
of the spirit, and add it to the body, as the baker adds leaven to
the meal, till the whole substance is leavened. It is the same with
our spirit, or leaven. The Substance must be continuously penetrated
with the leaven, until it is wholly leavened. Thus the spirit purges
and spiritualizes the body, till they are both transmuted into one.
Then they transmute all things, into which they are injected, into
their own nature. The two must be united by a gentle and continuous
fire, affording the same degree of warmth as that with which a hen
hatches her eggs. It must then be placed in a St. Mary's Bath, which
is neither too warm nor too cold. The humid must be separated from
the dry, and again joined to it. When united, they change mercury
into pure gold and silver Thenceforward you will be safe from the
pangs of poverty. But take heed that you render thanks unto God for
His gracious gift which is hidden from many. He has revealed the
secret to you that you may praise His holy name, and succour your
needy neighbour. Therefore, take diligent heed, lest you hide the
talent committed to your care. Rather put it out at interest for the
glory of God, and the good of your neighbour. For every man is bound
to help his fellowman, and to be an instrument in the hand of God
for relieving his necessities. Of this rule Holy Scripture affords
an illustration in the example of Joseph, Habakkuk, Susanna, and
others.
Here follows my Testament which I have drawn up in your
favour, my beloved Sons, with all my Heart
For your sakes, beloved students of this Art, and dear Sons, I
have committed to writing this my testament, for the purpose of
instructing, admonishing, warning, and informing you as to the
substance, the method, the pitfalls to be avoided, and the only way
of understanding the writings of the Sages. For as Almighty God has
created all things out of the dry and the humid elements, our Art,
by divine grace, may be said to pursue a precisely similar course.
If therefore any man know the principle and method of creative
nature, he should have a good understanding of our Art. If anyone be
unacquainted with Nature's methods, he will find our Art difficult,
although in reality it is as easy as to crush malt, and brew beer.
In the beginning when, according to the testimony of Scripture, God
made heaven and earth, there was only one Matter, neither wet nor
dry, neither earth, nor air, nor fire, nor light, nor darkness, but
one single substance, resembling vapour or mist, invisible and
impalpable. It was called Hyle, or the first Matter. If a thing is
once more to be made out of nothing, that "nothing" must be united,
and become one thing; out of this one thing must arise a
palpable substance, out of the palpable substance one body, to which
a living soul must be given --- whence through the grace of God, it
obtains its specific form. When God made the substance, it was dry,
but held together by moisture. If anything was to grow from that
moisture, it had to be separated from that which was dry, so as to
get the fire by itself, and the earth by itself. Then the earth had
to be sprinkled with water, if anything moist was to grow out of it,
for without moisture nothing can grow. In the same way, nothing
grows in water, except it have earth wherein to strike root. It then
the water is to bedew the earth, there must be something to bring
the water into contact with the earth; for example, the wind
prevents all ordinary water from flowing to the sea, and remaining
there. Thus one element without the aid of another can bear no
fruit; if there was nothing to set the wind in motion it would never
blow --- therefore the fire has received the office of impelling and
obliging it to do its work. This you may see when you boil water
over the fire; for then there arises a steam which is really air,
water being nothing but coagulated air, and air being generated
from water by the heat of the Sun. For the Sun shines upon the
water, and heats it until steam is seen to issue forth. This vapour
becomes wind, and, on account of the large quantity of they air, we
get moisture and rain: so air is once more changed or coagulated
into water, or rain, and causes all things upon earth to grow, and
fills the rivers and the seas.
It is the same with our Stone, which is daily generated from air
by the Sun and Moon, in the form of a certain vapour, yea, even
through the Red Sea; it flows in Judea in the channel of Nature
whither it behoves us to bring it. If we catch it, we lop off its
hands and feet, tear off its head, and try to bring it to the red.
If we find anything black in it, we throw it away with the entrails
and the filth. When it has been purified, we take its limbs, join
them together again, whereupon our King revives, never to die again,
and Is so pure and subtle as to pervade all hard bodies, and render
them even more subtle than itself. Know also that when God, the
Almighty, had set Adam in Paradise, He shewed him these two things
in the following words: "Behold, Adam, here are two things, one
fixed and permanent, the other volatile: their secret virtue thou
must not make known to all thy sons".
Earth, my brother, is constant, and water volatile, as you may
see when anything is burnt. For then that which is constant remains,
while that which is volatile evaporates. That which remains
resembles ashes, and if you pour water on it, it becomes an alkali,
the efficacy of the ashes passing into the water. If you clarify the
lye, put it into an iron vessel, and let the moisture evaporate over
a fire, you will find at the bottom the substance which before was
in the lye, that is to say, the salt of the matter from which the
ashes were obtained. This salt might very well be called the
Philosopher's Stone, from being obtained by a process exactly
similar to that which is employed in preparing the reel Stone,
though at the same time it profits nothing in our work. For the
substance which contains our Stone is a lye, not indeed prepared by
the hand of man from ashes and water, but joined together by Nature,
according to the creation and ordination of God, commingled of the
four elements, possessed of all that is required for its perfect
chemical development. If you take the substance, which contains our
Stone, subject it to a St. Mary's Bath in an alembic, and distil it,
the water will run down into the antisternium, and the salt, or
earth, remain at the bottom, and is so dry as to be without any
water, seeing that you have separated the moist from the dry. Pound
the body small, put it into the S. Mary's Bath, and expose it to
heat till it is quite decomposed. Then give it its water to drink,
slowly, and at long intervals, till it is clarified. For it
coagulates, dissolves, and purifies itself. The distilled water is
the spirit which imparts life to its body, and is the alone soul
thereof. Water is wind (air), and wind is life, and the life is
soul. In the chemical process, you find water and oil --- but the
oil always remains with the body, and is, as it were, burnt blood.
Then it is purified with the body by long, continued gentle heat.
But you should be careful not to set about this Art before you
understand my instructions, which at the end of this first part are
bequeathed to you in the form of a Testament. For the Stone is
prepared out of nothing in the whole world, except this substance,
which is essentially one. He who is unacquainted therewith can never
attain the Art. It is that one thing which is not dug up from mines
or from the caverns of the earth, like gold, silver, sulphur, salt,
&c., but is found in the form which God originally imparted to it.
It is formed and manifested by an excessive thickening of air; as
soon as it leaves its body, it is clearly seen, but it vanishes
without a trace as soon as it touches the earth, and, as ii is never
seen again, it must therefore be caught while it is still in the air
--- as I told you once before. I have called it by various names,
but the simplest is perhaps that of "Hyle", or first principle of
all things. It is also denominated the One Stone of the
Philosophers, composed of hostile elements, the Stone of the Sun.
the Stone of the Metals, the runaway slave, the aeriform Stone, the
Thirnian Stone, Magnesia, the corporeal Stone, the Stone of the
jewel, the Stone of the free, the golden Stone, the fountain of
earthly things, Xelis, or Silex (flint), Xidar, or Radix (root),
Atrop, or Porta (gate). By these and many other names it is called,
yet it is only one. If you would be a true Alchemist, give a
wide berth to all other substances, turn a deaf ear to all other
advisers, and strive to obtain a good knowledge of our Stone, its
preparation, and its virtue.
My Son, esteem this my Testament very highly: for in it I have,
out of love and compassion towards you, given the reins to the
warm-hearted impulse which constrains me to reveal more than I ought
to reveal. But I beseech you, by the Passion of our Lord and Saviour
Jesus Christ, not to communicate my Testament to ignorant, unworthy,
or wicked men, lest God's righteous vengeance light upon you, and
hurl you into the yawning gulf of everlasting punishment, from which
also may the same merciful God most mercifully preserve us.
It is by no means a light thing to shew the nature of the
aforesaid Hyle. Hyle is the first Matter, the Salt of the Sages,
Azoth, the seed of all metals, which is extracted from the body of
"Magnesia" and the Moon.
Hyle is the first principle of all things --- the Matter that was
from the beginning. It was neither moist, nor dry, nor earth, nor
water, nor light, nor darkness, but a mixture of all these things,
and this mixture is HYLE.
Here Follows The Second Part Of This Book
In the beginning, when God Almighty had created our first parent
Adam, together with all other earthly and heavenly bodies, He set
him in Paradise, and forbade him, under penalty of eternal death, to
eat of the fruit of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil So
long as Adam obeyed the Divine precept he had immortality, and
possessed all that he needed for perfect happiness. But when he had
partaken of the forbidden fruit, he was, by the command of God,
driven forth into this world, where he and his descendants have
since that time suffered nothing but poverty, disease, anxiety,
bitter sorrow, and death. If he had been obedient to the Divine
injunction, he would have lived a thousand years in Paradise in
perfect happiness, and would then have been translated to heaven;
and a like happy destiny would have awaited all his descendants. For
his disobedience God visited him with all manner of sufferings and
diseases; but in His mercy also shewed him a medicine whereby the
different defects brought in by sin might be remedied, and the pangs
of hunger and disease resisted, as we are, for instance, preserved
and strengthened by bodily meat and drink.
It was on account of this original sin that Adam, in spite of his
great wisdom and the many arts that God had taught him, could not
accomplish his full thousand years. But if he had not known the
virtues of herbs, and the Medicine, he would certainly not have
lived as long as he did. When, however, at length his Medicine would
no longer avail to sustain life, he sent his son Seth to Paradise to
fetch the tree of life. This he obtained after a spiritual manner.
But Seth did seek also and was given some olives of the Tree of the
Oil of Mercy, which he planted on the grave of his father. From them
sprang up the blessed Tree of the Holy Cross, which through the
atoning death of our Redeemer became to us wretched, sinful men, a
most potent tree of life, in gracious fulfilment of the request of
our first parent Adam. On the other hand, the suffering, disease,
and imperfection brought not only upon men, but also upon plants and
animals, by the fall of Adam, found a remedy in that precious gift
of Almighty God, which is called the Elixir, and Tincture, and has
power to purge away the imperfections not only of human, but even of
metallic bodies; which excels all other medicines, as the brightness
of the sun shames the moon and the stars. By means of this most
noble Medicine many men, from the death of Adam to the fourth
monarchy, procured for themselves perfect health and great length of
days. Hence those who had a good knowledge of the Medicine, attained
to three hundred years, others to four hundred, some to five
hundred, like Adam; others again to nine hundred, like Methusalem
and Noah; and some of their children to a longer period still, like
Bacham, Ilrehur, Kalix, Hermes, Geber, Albanus, Ortulanus, Morienus,
Alexander of Macedonia, Anaxagoras, Pythagoras, and many others who
possessed the Medicine of the Blessed Stone in silence, and neither
used it for evil purposes, nor made it known to the wicked; just as
God Himself has in all times hidden this knowledge from the proud,
the impure, and the froward. But cease to wonder that God has put
such excellent virtue into the Stone, and has imparted to it the
power of restoring animal bodies, and of perfecting metals: for I
hope to explain to you the whole matter in the three parts of my
Book, which I have entitled GLORY of the WORLD. If you will accept
my teaching, and follow my directions, you will be able to prove the
truth of my assertions by your own happy experience. Now when you
have attained this great result, take care that you do not hide your
talent. Use it for the solace of the suffering, the building of
Christian schools and churches, and the glory of the Holy Trinity.
Otherwise God will call you to an eternal account for your criminal
neglect of His gift May God deign to keep us from such a sin, and to
establish us in His Holy Word!
To the Reader
If it should seem unto you a tedious matter, my friendly reader,
to read through and digest my book, I advise you to cheer yourself
on by bearing in mind the great object you have in view. If you do
so you will find the book very pleasant reading, and a joy indeed.
Since God --- praised in all times be his Holy and Venerable Name!
--- in His unspeakable mercy has made known to me the magistery of
this most true and noble Art, I am moved and constrained by
brotherly love to shew you the manner of producing this treasure, in
order that you may be able to avoid the ruinous trouble and expense
to which I was put in the course of a long and fruitless search. I
will endeavour to be as clear and outspoken as possible, in order to
vindicate myself from the possible charge of imposture, malice, and
avarice. I am most anxious that the gift which God has committed to
my trust shall not rust, or rot, or be useless in my hands. For this
most precious Medicine is so full of glorious potency as to be most
justly styled the Oil of Mercy, for reasons which your own
understanding will suggest to you. It is therefore unnecessary for
me to go into this preliminary question at any great length. I may
at once proceed to give you an account of the Art itself, and to put
you on your guard against all seducing deceivers, --- in short, to
open up to you a true, unerring, and joyful road to the knowledge
and possession of the Stone, and to the operations of this Art.
Therefore, I --- who possess the Stone, and communicate to you
this Book --- would faithfully admonish and beseech you to keep this
my TABLE of PARADISE and GLORY of the WORLD, from all proud and
unjust oppressors of the poor; from all presumptuous, shallow,
scornful, calumnious, and wicked persons, so as not to put it into
their hands, on pain of God's everlasting punishment. I beseech you
to take this warning to heart; but, on the other hand, to
communicate and impart this my Table to all true, poor, pious,
honest, and benevolent persons, who will gratefully reverence and
rightly use the merciful gift of God, and conceal it from the
unworthy. Nevertheless, even if my book should find its way into the
hands of wicked men, God will so smite them with blindness as to
prevent them from apprehending too much of my meaning, and frustrate
all their attempts to carry out my directions. For God knows how to
confound the wicked, and bring their presumption to nought; as we
are also told by David in his psalms: "Thine enemies shalt thou hold
in thine hand, and shalt restrain them in the snares of their mind."
I beseech you, therefore, my sons, to give diligent heed to my
teaching; then you will spend this life in health and happiness, and
at length inherit everlasting joy. I pray that God the Father, the
Son, and the Holy Ghost, may grant this my petition.
An Account of the True Art
I make known to all ingenuous students of this Art that the Sages
are in the habit of using words which may convey either a true or a
false impression; the former to their own disciples and children,
the latter to the ignorant, the foolish, and the unworthy. Bear in
mind that the philosophers themselves never make a false assertion.
The mistake (if any) lies not with them, but with those whose
dulness makes them slow to apprehend the meaning. Hence it comes
that, instead of the waters of the Sages, these inexperienced
persons take pyrites salts, metals, and divers other substances
which, though very expensive, are of no use whatever for our
purpose. For no one would dream of buying the true Matter at the
apothecary's; nay, that tradesman daily casts it into the street as
worthless refutes. Yet the matter of our Stone is found in all those
things which are used by ignorant charlatans: for it is our Stone,
our Salt, our Mercury, our verdigris, halonitre, salmiac, Mars,
sulphur, &c. It is not dug out with pick-axes from ordinary
mountains, seeing that our Stone is found in our mountains and
springs; our Salt is found in our salt-spring, our metal in our
earth, and from the same place we dig up our mercury and sulphur.
But what we mean by our mines and springs these charlatans cannot
understand. For God has blinded their minds and made gross their
senses, and left them to carry on their experiments with all manner
of false substances. Nor do they seem able to perceive their error,
or to be roused from their idle imaginations by persistent failure.
Where they should have distilled with gentle heat they sublime over
a fierce fire, and reduce their substance to ashes, instead of
developing its inherent principles by vitalizing warmth. Again, when
they should have dissolved, they coagulated instead, and so on. By
these false methods they could, of course, obtain no good result;
but instead of blaming their own ignorance they lay the fault on
their teacher, and even deny the genuineness of our Art. As a matter
of fact, all their mistakes arise from their misinterpreting the
meaning of words which should have put them on the right scent. For
instance, when the Sages speak of calcining, these persons
understand that word to mean "burning," and consequently render
their substance useless by burning it to ashes. When the Sages
"dissolve", or transmute into "water", these shallow persons corrode
with aqua fortis. They do not understand that the dissolution must
be effected with something that is contained within our substance,
and not by means of any foreign appliance. These foolish devices
bear the same relation to our Art that a dark hole bears to a
transparent crystal. Et is their own ignorance that prevents them
from attaining to a true knowledge; but they put the blame on
our writings, and call us charlatans and impostors. They argue that
if the Stone could be found at all, they must have discovered it
long ago, their eyes being as keen and their minds as acute as they
are. "Behold", say they, "how we have toiled day and night, how many
books we have read, how many years we have spent in our
laboratories: surely if there were anything in this Art, it could
not have escaped us". By speaking thus, they only exhibit their own
presumption and folly. They themselves have no eyes, and they make
that an argument for blaspheming our high and holy Art. Therefore,
you should first strive to make yourself acquainted with the secrets
of Nature's working, and with the elementary principles of the
world, before you set your hand to this task. After acquiring this
knowledge, carefully peruse this book from beginning to end; you
will then be in a position to judge whether our Art is tree or
false. You will also know what substance you must take, how you must
prepare it, and how your eager search may be brought to a successful
issue. Let me enjoin you, therefore, to preserve strict silence, to
let nobody know what you are doing, and to keep a good heart: then
God will grant you the fulfilment of all your wishes.
Here follows my own Opinion and Philosophical Dictum
I now propose to put down a brief statement of the view which I
take of this matter. He who understands my meaning may at once pass
on to the opinions of the various Sages, which I have placed at the
end of my book. He who does not apprehend my meaning, will find it
explained in the following treatise.
Since I know the blessed and true Art, with the nature and the
matter of the Stone, I have thought it my duty freely to communicate
it to you -- Not in a lawyer's style, nor in pompous language, but
in few and sample words. Whoever peruses this book carefully, and
with an elementary knowledge of natural relations, cannot miss the
secret which I intend to convey. I am afraid that I shall be
overwhelmed with reproaches for speaking out with so much plainness,
seeing that this Art has never, from the beginning of the world,
been so clearly explained as I mean to explain it in this Book.
Nevertheless, I am well aware that I am now declaring a secret which
must for ever remain hidden from the wise of this world, and from
those who are established in their own conceits. But I must now
proceed to give you the result of my experience
My beloved sons and disciples, and all ye that are students of
this Art; I herewith, in the fulness of Christian faith and charity.
do make known to you that the Philosopher's Stone grows not only on
"our" tree, but is found, as far as its effect and operation are
concerned, in the fruit of all other trees, in all created things,
in animals, and vegetables, in things that grow, and in things that
do not grow. For when it rises, being stirred and distilled by the
Sun and the Moon, it imparts their own peculiar form and properties
to all living creatures by a divine grace; it gives to flowers their
special form and colour, whether it be black, red, yellow, green, or
white; in the same way all metals and minerals derive their peculiar
qualities from the operation of this Stone. All things, I say, are
endowed with their characteristic qualities by the operation of this
Stone, i.e., the conjunction of the Sun and Moon. For the Sun is the
Father, and the Moon the Mother of this Stone, and the Stone unites
in itself the virtues of both its parents. Such are the peculiar
properties of our Stone, by which it may be known. If you understand
the operation, the form, and the qualities, of this Stone, you will
be able to prepare it; but if you do not, I faithfully counsel you
to give up all thought of ever accomplishing this task.
Observe, furthermore, how the seeds of all things that grow, as,
for instance, grains of wheat or barley, spring forth from the
ground, by the operation of the Stone, and the developing influences
of Sun and Moon; how they grow up into the air, are gradually
matured, and bring forth fruit, which again must be sown in its own
proper soil. The field is prepared for the grain, being well
ploughed up, and manured with well rotted dung; for the earth
consumes and assimilates the manure, as the body assimilates its
food, and separates the subtle from the gross Therewith it calls
forth the life of the seed, and nourishes it with its own proper
milk, as a mother nourishes her infant, and causes it to increase in
size, and to grow upward. The earth separates, I say, the good from
the bad, and imparts it as nutriment to all growing things; for the
destruction of one thing is the generation of another. It is the
same in our Art, where the liquid receives its proper nutriment from
the earth. Hence the earth is the Mother of all things that grow;
and it must be manured, ploughed, harrowed, and well prepared, in
order that the corn may grow, and triumph over the tares, and not be
choked by them. A grain of wheat is raised from the ground through
the distillation of the moisture of the Sun and Moon, if it has been
sown in its own proper earth. The Sun and Moon must also impel it to
bring forth fruit, if it is to bring forth fruit at all. For the Sun
is the Father, and the Moon the Mother, of all things that grow.
In the same way, in our soil, and out of our seed,
our Stone grows through the distilling of the Sun and Moon; and as
it grows it rises upwards, as it were, into the air, while its root
remains in the ground. That which is above is even as that which is
below; the same law prevails; there is no error or mistake. Again,
as herbs grow upward, put forth glorious flowers and blossoms, and
bear fruit, so oar grain blossoms, matures its fruit, is threshed,
sifted, purged of its chaff, and again put in the earth, which,
however, must previously have been well manured, harrowed, and
otherwise prepared. When it has been placed in its natural soil, and
watered with rain and dew, the moisture of heaven, and roused into
life by the warmth of the Sun and Moon, it produces fruit after its
own kind. These two sowings are peculiar characteristics of our Art.
For the Sun and Moon are our grain, which we put into our soil, as
soul and spirit --- and such as are the father and the mother will
be the children that they generate. Thus, my sons, you know our
Stone, our earth, our grain, our meal, our ferment, our manure, our
verdigris, our Sun and Moon. You understand our whole magistery, and
may joyfully congratulate yourselves that you have at length risen
above the level of those blind charlatans of whom I spoke. For this,
His unspeakable mercy, let us render thanks and praise to the
Creator of all things, through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.
Concerning the Origin of Metals
My son, I will now proceed to explain to you more in detail the
generation of the metals, and the way in which they receive their
growth and development, with their special form and quality. You
will thereby be enabled to understand, even from the very
foundation, with marvellous accuracy and clearness, the principle
that underlies our whole Art. Permit me, therefore, to inform you
that all animals, trees, herbs, stones, metals, and minerals, grow
and attain to perfection, without being necessarily touched by any
human hand: for the seed is raised up from the ground, puts forth
flowers, and bears fruit, simply through the agency of natural
influences. As it is with plants, so it is with metals. While they
lie in the heart of the earth, in their natural ore, they grow, and
are developed, day by day, through the influence of the four
elements: their fire is the splendour of the Sun and Moon; the earth
conceives in her womb the splendour of the Sun, and by it the seeds
of the metals are well and equally warmed, just like the grain in
the fields. Through this warmth there is produced in the earth a
vapour or spirit, which rises upward and carries with it the most
subtle elements. It might well be called a fifth element: for it is
a quintessence, and contains the most volatile parts of all the
elements. This vapour strives to float upward through the summit of
the mountains, but, being covered with great rocks, they prevent it
from doing so: for when it strikes against them, it is compelled to
descend again. It is drawn up by the Sun, it is forced down again by
the rocks, and as it falls the vapour is transmuted into a liquid,
i.e., sulphur and mercury. Of each of these a part is left
behind --- but that which is volatile rises and descends again, more
and more of it remaining behind, and becoming fixed after each
descent. This "fixed" substance is the metals, which cleave so
firmly to the earth and the stones that they must be smelted out in
a red-hot furnace. The grosser the stones and the earth of the
mountains are, the less pure will the metal be; the more subtle the
soil and the stones are, the more subtle will be the vapour, and the
sulphur and mercury formed by its condensation -- and the purer
these latter are, the purer, of course, will the metals themselves
be. When the earth and the stones of the mountain are gross, the
sulphur and mercury must partake of this grossness, and cannot
attain to their proper development. Hence arise the different
metals, each after its own kind. For as each tree of the field has
its own peculiar shape, appearance, and fruit, so each mountain
bears its own particular ore, those stones and that earth being the
soil in which the metals grow. The quality of this soil is to a
great extent dependent upon planetary influences. The nearer the
mountains lie to the planets, the more do metals grow in them; for
the qualities of metals are determined by planetary influences.
Mountains that are turned towards the sun have subtle stones and
earth, and produce nothing but gold. If they are more conveniently
situated for being influenced by the moon, their metallic substance
is turned into silver. For all metals, when perfectly developed,
must ultimately become Moon and Sun, though some need to be operated
on by the Sun and Moon longer than others: for the Sun is the
Father, and the Moon the Mother, of all things that grow. Thus you
see that gold glitters like the Sun, and silver like the Moon. Now,
children always resemble their parents; and all metallic bodies
contain within themselves the properties of the Sun: to change the
baser metals into gold and silver, there is positively nothing
wanting but gentle solar warmth. In this respect there exists a
close analogy between animal and vegetable growth. When the Sun
retires in the winter, the flowers droop and die, the trees shed
their leaves, and all vegetable development is temporarily
suspended. In the summer again, when the heat of the Sun is too
great, not being sufficiently tempered by the cooling influences of
the Moon, all vegetation is withered and burnt up If there is to be
perfect growth, the Sun and Moon must work together, the one heating
and the other cooling. If the influence of the Moon prevails unduly,
it must be corrected by the warmth of the Sun, the excessive heat of
the Sun must be tempered by the coldness of the Moon. All
development is sustained by solar fire. Imperfect metals are what
they are, simply because they have not yet been duly developed by
solar influences.
Now, by the special grace of God, it is possible to bring this
natural fire to bear on imperfect metals by means of our Art, and to
supply the conditions of metallic growth without any of the
hindrances which in a natural state prevent perfection. Thus by
applying our natural fire, we can do more towards "fixing" imperfect
bodies and metals in a moment, than the Sun in a thousand years. For
this reason our Stone has also power to cure all things that grow,
acting on each one according to its kind. For our Matter represents
a perfect and inseparable union of the four elements, which indeed
is the sum of our Art, and is consequently able to reconcile and
heal all discord in all manner of metals and in all things that
grow, and to put to flight all diseases. For disease is discord of
the elements, (one unduly lording it over the rest) in animal as
well as in metallic bodies. Now as soon as our blessed Medicine is
applied, the elements are straightway purified, and joined together
in amity; thus metallic bodies are fixed, animal bodies are made
whole of all their diseases, gems and precious stones attain to
their own proper perfection.
You should also know that all stones are generated by the Sun and
Moon out of the sulphur and volatile mercury; if they do not become
metals, that is entirely due to their own grossness. In the same
way, all plants are generated from sulphur and mercury, and that by
the heat of the Sun and Moon. For the Sun and Moon are the mercury
in our Matter. The Sun is warm and dry, the Moon warm and moist; for
in [the] earth is hid a warm and dry fire, and in that fire dwells
warm and moist air --- and from these is generated mercury which is
both warm and moist. Hence there may be distinguished two chief
constituent principles, to wit, moist and dry, that is, earth, wind,
and water, unto which mercury is conjoined, and the same is warm and
moist. Mercury and sulphur, in our substance, and in all things,
spring from the moist and dry, the moist and dry being stirred by
the warmth of the Sun, and distilled and sublimed, --- in each thing
according to its specific nature. Thus our Stone is that mercury
which is mixed of the dry and the moist. But the common mercury is
useless for our purpose --- for it is volatile, while our mercury is
fixed and constant. Therefore have nothing to do with the common
mercury, but take our mercury which is the principle of growth in
all bodies, whether human, vegetable, or metallic; which imparts to
all flowers their fragrance and colour. This mercury represents an
harmonious mixture of the four elements, hot and dry, Sun and Moon.
Ii is generated in the form of a vapour in the fields and on the
mountains, by the warmth of the Sun: that vapour is condensed into a
moisture, from which arise sulphur and mercury, and from them again
metals The same process takes place in our Art, which represents the
union of the warm and moist, by means of warmth. For our substance
is generated in the form of a vapour out of warmth and moisture, and
changed into sulphur. In this fire and water, and nowhere else, is
our Stone to be found. For the vapour carries upward with it most
subtle earth, most subtle fire, most subtle water, and most subtle
air, and thus presents a close union of the most subtle elements.
This is the first Matter, and may be divided into water and earth,
which two are again joined together by gentle heat, even as in the
woods and mountains mercury is joined with a quick earth and rare
water by means of a temperate warmth, and in the long process of
time is converted into metal. So is it ordained in our Art, and not
otherwise does the process take place. When you, therefore, see that
our substance, having been first generated in the form of a vapour,
permits itself to be separated into water and earth, you may know
that the Stone is composed of the four elements. Know also that the
vapour in the mountains is true mercury (which cannot be said of the
ordinary mercury); for wherever there is vapour in the mountains,
there is true mercury, which by ascending and descending, in the
manner described above, becomes fixed, and inseparable from its
earth, so that where the one is, there the other must abide.
Thus I have told you plainly enough how the metals are generated,
what mercury is, and how it is transmuted into metals. I will
therefore conclude this part of my treatise, and tell you in the
following section how you may actually perform the chemical process.
You see that it is not so incredible, after all, that all metals
should be transmuted into gold and silver, and all animal bodies
delivered from every kind of disease; and I hope and trust that God
will permit you practically to experience the truth of this
assertion.
Now I will tell you how you must produce the Fire and
Water, in which is prepared the Mercury required for thee red and
white Tincture
Take fire, or the quicklime of the Sages, which is the vital fire
of all trees, and therein doth God Himself burn by divine love. In
it purify Mercury, and mortify it for the purposes of our Art;
understand, with vulgar Mercury, which you wish to fix in water or
fire. But the Mercury which lies hidden in this water, or fire, is
therein fixed of itself. The Mercury which is in the fire must be
decomposed, clarified, coagulated, and fixed with indelible, living,
or Divine fire, of that kind which God has placed in the Sun; and
wherein God Himself burns as with Divine love for the consolation of
all mankind. Without this fire our Art can not be brought to a
successful issue. This is the fire of the Sages which they describe
in such obscure terms, as to have been the indirect cause of
beguiling many innocent persons to their ruin; so even that they
have perished in poverty because they knew hot this fire of the
Philosophers. It is the most precious fire that God has created in
the earth, and has a thousand virtues --- nay, it is so precious
that men have averred that the Divine Power itself works effectually
in it. It has the purifying virtue of Purgatory, and everything is
rendered better by it. It is not wonderful, therefore, that a fire
should be able to fix and clarify Mercury, and to cleanse it from
all grossness and impurity. The Sages call it the living fire,
because God has endowed it with His own Divine, and vitalising
power.
In the writings of the Sages, this fire goes by different names.
Some call it "burnt" wine, others assign to it three names from the
analogy of the Three Persons of the Holy Trinity, God the Father,
God the Son, and God the Holy Ghost; Body, Soul, and Fire, or
Spirit.
The Sages further say: The fire is fire, and also water,
containing within itself both cold and heat, moisture, and dryness,
nor can anything extinguish it but itself. Hence others say that it
is an inextinguishable fire, which is continually burning,
purifying, and tinging all metals, consuming all their impurities,
and combining Mercury with the Sun in so close an union that they
become one and inseparable.
Therefore our great Teachers say that as God the Father, the Son,
and the Holy Ghost, are three Persons, and yet but one God; so this
fire unites these three things, namely, the Body, Spirit, and Soul,
or Sun, Mercury, and Soul. The fire nourishes the Soul which binds
together the Body and the Spirit, and thus all three become one, and
remain united for ever. Again, as an ordinary fire, on being
supplied with fuel, may spread and fill the whole world, so this
Tincture may be multiplied, and so this fire may enter into all
metals; and one part of it has power to change two, three, or five
hundred parts of other metals into gold.
Again, the Sages call this fire the fire of the Holy Spirit,
because as the Divinity of Christ took upon itself true flesh and
blood without forfeiting anything of its Divine Nature, so the Sun,
the Moon, and Mercury, are transmuted into the true Tincture, which
remains unaffected by all outward influences, and endures, and will
endure, for ever. Once more, as God feeds many wicked sinners with
his blood, so this Tincture tinges all gross and impure metals,
without being injured by contact with them. So also, therefore, may
it be compared with the sacro-saintly Sacrament of the Most Holy
Eucharist, from which no sinner is excluded, how impure soever he
may have been. You have thus been made acquainted with the all but
miraculous virtue of this fire: remember that no student of this Art
can possibly do without it. For another Sage says: "In this
invisible fire you have the whole mystery of this Art, as the three
Persons of the Holy Trinity are truly concluded in one substance".
In this fire the true Art is summed up in three palpable things,
which yet are invisible and incomprehensible, like the Holy Spirit.
Without those three things our Art can never be brought to
perfection. One of them is fire; the second, water; the third,
earth; and all those three are invisibly present in one
essence, and are the instrumental cause of all perfection in Nature.
Now will I also describe the operation of those Three
Things in our art, and will at once begin with all Three.
Our wise Teacher Plato says: "Every husbandman who sows good
seed, first chooses a fertile field, ploughs and manures it well,
and weeds it of all tares; he also takes care that his own grain is
free from every foreign admixture. When he has committed the seed to
the ground, he needs moisture, or rain, to decompose the grain, and
to raise it to new life. He also requires fire, that is, the warmth
of the Sun, to bring it to maturity". The needs of our Art are of an
analogous nature. First, you must prepare your seed, i.e.,
cleanse your Matter from all impurity, by a method which you will
find set forth at length in the Dicta of the Sages which I subjoin
to this Treatise. Then you must have good soil in which to sow your
Mercury and Sun; this earth must first be weeded of all foreign
elements if it is to yield a good crop. Hence the Sage enjoins us to
"sow the seed in a fruitful field, which has been prepared with
living fire, and it will produce much fruit". What is the Urine of
Children?
I will now truly inform you concerning the Urine of Children, and
of the Sages. The spirit which is extracted from the metals is the
urine of children: for it is the seed and the first principle of
metals. Without this seed there is no consummation of our Art, and
no Tincture, either red or white. For the sulphur and mercury of
gold are the red, the sulphur and mercury of silver are the white
Tincture: the Mercury of the Sun and Moon fixes all Mercury in
imperfect metals, and imparts excellence and durability even to
common Mercury. Dioscorides has written an elegant treatise
concerning this Urine of Children, which he calls the first Matter
of metals.
What is the Mercury of the Sages?
Mercury is nothing but water and salt, which have been subjected
for a long space of time to natural heat so as to be united into
one. This is Mercury, or dry water, which is not moist, and does not
moisten anything; of course, I do not speak of crude common mercury,
but of the Mercury of the Sages. The Sages call it the fifth
element. It is the vital principle which brings all plants to
maturity and perfection. The other quintessence, which is in the
earth, and partly material, contains within itself its own seed
which grows out of its soil. The heavenly quintessence comes to the
aid of the earthly, removes the grossness of its earth, and brings
the aforesaid seed to maturity. For Mercury, and the Celestial
Quintessence, drain off all harmful moisture from the quintessence
of the earth. This Mercury is also called sulphur of the air,
sulphur being a hardening of mercury; or we may describe them as
husband and wife, from whom issue many children in the earth. You
must not think that I desire to hide from you my true meaning: nay,
I will further endeavour to illustrate it in the following way.
Common sulphur, as you know, coagulates common mercury; for sulphur
is poisonous, and mercury deadly. How then can you obtain from
either of them anything suitable for perfecting the other, seeing
that both require to be assisted by some external agent? On the
other hand, I tell you that if, after the conjunction of our fixed
sulphur with our sublimed mercury, you sprinkle a mere particle of
it upon crude mercury, the latter is at once brought to perfection.
Again, you may clearly perceive that the quintessence of the earth
has its operation in the winter when the earth is closed up with
frost; while the Quintessence of the Stars operates in the summer
times when it removes all that is injurious in the inferior
quintessence, and thus quickens everything into vigorous growth. The
two quintessences' may also be driven off into water, and there
conserved. An earthly manifestation you may behold in the colours of
the rainbow, when the rays of the Sun shine through the rain. But,
indeed, there is not a stone, an animal, or a plant, that does not
contain both quintessences. In short, they embody the secret of our
whole Magistery, and out of them our Stone is prepared. Hermes, in
his Emerald Table, expresses himself as follows: "Our Blessed Stone,
which is of good substance, and has a soul, ascends from earth to
heaven, and again descends from heaven to earth. Its effectual
working is in the air; it is joined to Mercury; hence the Sun is its
Father, the Moon its Mother; the wind has borne it in her womb, the
earth is its nursing mother, and at length that which is above is
also that which is below. The whole represents a natural mixture:
for it is a Stone and not a Stone, fixed and volatile, body and
soul, husband and wife, King and Queen." Let what I have said
suffice, instead of many other words and parables.
Composition
Albertus expresses himself thus concerning the conjunction of the
Stone: "The elements are so subtle that no ordinary method of
mingling will avail. They must first be dissolved into water, then
mixed, and placed in a warm spot, where they are united after a time
by natural warmth. For the Elixir and the two solutions must be
conjoined in the proportion of three parts of the Elixir and one
part of the crushed body. This must again be coagulated and
dissolved, and so also again until the whole has become one, without
any transmutation. All this is accomplished by the virtue of our
mercurial water; for with it the body is dissolved. It is that which
purifies, conjoins, dissolves, and makes red and white." Aristotle
says of it as follows: This water is the earth in which Hermes bids
us sow the seed; the Sun or Moon, as Senior hath it, for extraction
of the Divine water of sulphur and mercury, which is fire, warming
and fructifying by the igneous virtue thereof. This is the Mercury
and that is the water which wets not the hand. It is the Mercury
which all Sages have loved and used, and of which they have
acknowledged the virtue so long as they lived.
The Third Part Of This Treatise,
Containing The Dicta Of The Sages.i. I will now
proceed to quote the very words of the various Sages in regard to
this point, in order that you may the more easily understand our
meaning. Know then that Almighty God first delivered this Art to our
Father, Adam, in Paradise. For as soon as He had created him, and
set him in the Garden of Eden, He imparted it to him in the
following words: "Adam, here are two things: that which is above is
volatile, that which is below is fixed. These two things contain the
whole mystery. Observe it well, and make not the virtue that
slumbers therein known to thy children; for these two things shall
serve thee, together with all other created things under heaven, and
I will lay at thy feet all the excellence and power of this world,
seeing that thou thyself art a small world."
ii. ABEL, the son of Adam, wrote thus in his Principles:
After God had created our Father, Adam, and set him in Paradise, He
subjected to his rule all animals, plants, minerals, and metals. For
man is the mountain of mountains, the Stone of all stones, the tree
of trees, the root of roots, the earth of earths. All these things
he includes within himself, and God has given to him to be the
preserver of all things.
iii. SETH, the son of Adam, describes it thus: Know, my
children, that in proportion as the acid is subjected to coction, by
means of our Art, and is reduced into ashes, the more of the
substance is extracted, and becomes a white body. If you cook this
well, and free it from all blackness, it is changed into a stone,
which is called a white stone until it is crushed. Dissolve it in
water of the mouth, which has been well tempered, and its whiteness
will soon change to redness. The whole process is performed by means
of this sharp acid and the power of God.
iv. ISINDRUS: Our great and precious Matter is air, for
air ameliorates the Matter, whether the air be gross or tenuous,
warm or moist. For the grossness of the air arises from the setting,
the approach, and the rising of the Sun. Thus the air may be hot or
cold, or dry and rarefied, and the degrees of this distinguish
summer and winter.
v. ANAXAGORAS says: God and His goodness are the first
principle of all things. Therefore, the mildness of God reigns even
beneath the earth, being the substance of all things, and thus also
the substance beneath the earth. For the mildness of God mirrors
itself in creating, and His integrity in the solidity that is
beneath the earth. Now we cannot see His goodness, except in bodily
form.
vi. SENIOR, or PANDOLPHUS, says: I make known to posterity
that the thinness, or softness, of air is in water, and is not
severed from the other elements. If the earth had not its vital
juice, no moisture would remain in it.
vii. ARISTEUS delivers himself thus briefly: Know that the
earth is round, and not flat. For if it were perfectly flat, the Sun
would shine everywhere at the same moment
viii. PYTHAGORAS: That which is touched and not seen, also
that which is known but not looked upon, these are only heaven and
earth; again, that which is not known is in the world and is
perceived by sight, hearing, smell, taste, or touch. Sight shews the
difference between black and white; hearing, between good and evil;
taste, between sweet and bitter; touch, between subtle and gross;
smell, between fragrant and fetid.
ix. ARISTEUS, in his Second Table, says: Beat the body
which I have made known to you into thin plates; pour thereon our
salt water, i.e., water of life, and heat it with a gentle fire
until its blackness disappears, and it becomes first white, and then
red.
x. PARMENIDES: The Sages have written about many waters,
stones, and metals, for the purpose of deceiving you. You that
desire a knowledge of our Art, relinquish Sun, Moon, Saturn, and
Venus, for our ore, and our earth, and why so? Every thing is of the
nature of no thing.
xi. LUCAS: Take the living water of the Moon, and
coagulate it, according to our custom. By those last words I mean
that it is already coagulated. Take the living water of the Moon,
and put it on our earth, till it becomes white: here, then, is our
magnesia, and the natures of natures rejoice.
xii. ETHEL: Subject our Stone to coction till it becomes
as bright as white marble. Then it is made a great and effectual
Stone, sulphur having been added to sulphur, and preserving its
property.
xiii. PYTHAGORAS: We exhibit unto you the regimen
concerning these things. The substance must drink its water, like
the fire of the Moon, which you have prepared. It must continue
drinking its own water and moisture till it turns white. .
xiv. PHILETUS Know, ye sons of philosophy, that the
substance, the search after which reduces so many to beggary, is not
more than one thing of most effectual properties. It is looked down
upon by the ignorant, but held in great esteem by the Sages. Oh, how
great is the folly, and how great also is the presumptuous ignorance
of the vulgar herd! If you knew the virtue of this substance, kings,
princes, and nobles would envy you. We Sages call it the most sharp
acid, and without this acid nothing can be obtained, neither
blackness, whiteness, nor the Tincture.
xv. METHUSALEM: With air, vapour, and spirit we shall have
vulgar mercury changed into as good a silver as the nature of
minerals will allow in the absence of heat.
xvi. SIXION: Ye sons of philosophy, if you would make our
substance red, you must first make it white. Its three natures are
summed up in whiteness and redness. Take e, therefore, our Saturn,
subject it to coction in aqua vita --- until it turns white, becomes
thick, and is coagulated, and then again till it becomes red. Then
it is red lead, and without this lead of the Sages nothing can be
effected.
xvii. MUNDINUS: Learn, O imitators of this Art, that the
philosophers have written variously of many gums in their books, but
the substance they refer to is nothing but fixed and living water,
out of which alone our noble Stone can be prepared. Many seek what
they call the essential " gum." and cannot find it. I reveal unto
you the knowledge of this gum and the mystery which abides therein.
Know that our gum is better than Sun and Moon. Therefore it is
highly esteemed by the Sages, though it is very cheap; and they say:
Take care that you do not waste any of our "gum". But in their books
they do not call it by its common name, and that is the reason why
it is hidden from the many, according to the command which God gave
to Adam.
xviii. DARDANIUS: Know, my sons, that the Sages take a
living and indestructible water. Do not, then, set your hands to
this task until you know the power and efficacy of this water. For
nothing can be done in our Art without this indestructible water.
For the Sages have described its power and efficacy as being that of
spiritual blood. Transmute this water into body and spirit, and
then, by the grace of God, you will have the spirit firmly fixed in
the body.
xix. PYTHAGORAS, in his Second Book, delivers himself as
follows: The Sages have used different names for the substance, and
have told us to make the indestructible water white and red. They
have also apparently indicated various methods, but they really
agree with each other in regard to all essentials, and it is only
their mystic language that causes a semblance of disagreement. Our
Stone is a stone, and not a stone. It has neither the appearance nor
the properties of stone, and yet it is a stone. Many have called it
after the place where it is found; others after its colour.
xx. NEOPHIDES: I bid you take that mystic substance, white
magnesia And have a care that the Stone be pure and bright. Then
place it in its aqueous vessel, and subject it to gentle heat, until
it first becomes black, then again white, and then red. The whole
process should be accomplished in forty days. When you have done
this, God shows you the first substance of the Stone, which is an
eagle -- stone, and known to all men.
xxi. THEOPHILUS: Take white Magnesia, i.e.,
quicksilver, mingled with the Moon. Pound it till it becomes thin
water; subject it to coction for forty days; then the flower of the
Sun will open with great splendour. Close well the mouth of the
phial, and subject it to coction during forty days, when you will
obtain a beautiful water, which you must treat in the same way for
another forty days, until it is thoroughly purged of its blackness,
and becomes white and fragrant.
xxii. BAELUS says: I bid you take Mercury, which is the
Magnesia of the Moon, and subject it and its body to coction till it
becomes soft, thin, and like flowing water. Heat it again till all
its moisture is coagulated, and it becomes a Stone.
xxiii. BASAN says: Put the yellow Matter into the bath,
together with its spouse, and let not the bath be too hot, lest both
be deprived of consciousness. Let a gentle temperature be kept up
till the husband and the wife become one; sprinkle it with its
sweat, and set it in a quiet place. Take care you do not drive off
its virtue by too great heat. Honour then the King and his Queen,
and do not burn them. If you subject them to gentle heat, they will
become, first black, then white, and then red. If you understand
this, blessed are ye. But if you do not, blame not Philosophy, but
your own gross ignorance.
xxiv. ARISTOTLE: Know, my disciples, the Sages call our
Stone sometimes earth, and sometimes water. Be directed in the
regulation of your fire by the guidance of Nature. In the liquid
there is first water, then a stone, then the earth of philosophers
in which they sow their grain, which springs up, and bears fruit
after its kind.
xxv. AGODIAS: Subject our earth to coction, till it
becomes the first substance. Pound it to an impalpable dust, and
again enclose it in its vessel. Sprinkle it with its own moisture
till an union is effected. Then look at it carefully, and if the
water presents the appearance of ) (, continue to pound and heat
For, if you cannot reduce it to water, the water cannot be found. In
order to reduce it to water, you must stir up the body with fire.
The water I speak of is not rain water, but indestructible water
which cannot exist without its body, which, in its turn, cannot
exist, or operate, without its own indestructible water.
xxvi. SIRETUS: What is required in our Art is our water
and our earth, which must become black, white, and red, with many
intermediate colours which shew themselves successively. Everything
is generated through our living and indestructible water. True Sages
use nothing but this living water which supersedes all other
substances and processes. Coction, calcination, distillation,
sublimation, desiccation, humectation, albefaction, and
rubrefaction, are all included in the natural development of this
one substance.
xxvii. MOSINUS: The Sages have described our substance,
and the method of its preparation, under many names, and thus have
led many astray who did not understand our writing. It is
composed of red and white sulphur, and of fixed or indestructible
water, called permanent water.
xxviii. PLATO: Let it suffice you to dissolve bodies with
this water, lest they be burned. Let the substance be washed with
living water till all its blackness disappears, and it becomes a
white Tincture.
xxix. ORFULUS: First, subject the Matter to gentle
coction, of a temperature such as that with which a hen hatches her
eggs, lest the moisture be burnt up, and the spirit of our earth
destroyed. Let the phial be tightly closed that the earth may crush
our substance, and enable its spirit to be extracted. The Sages say
that quicksilver is extracted from the flower of our earth, and the
water of our fire extracted from two things, and transmuted into our
acid. But though they speak of many things, they mean only one
thing, namely, that indestructible water which is our substance, and
our acid.
xxx. BATHON: If you know the Matter of our Stone, and the
mode of regulating its coction, and the chromatic changes which it
undergoes -- as though it wished to warn you that its names are as
numerous as the colours which it displays -- then you may perform
the putrefaction, or first coction, which turns our Stone quite
black. BY this sign you may know that you have the key to our Art,
and you will be able to transmute it into the mystic white and red.
The Sages say that the Stone dissolves itself, coagulates itself,
mortifies itself, and is quickened by its own inherent power, and
that it changes itself to black, white, and red, in Christian
charity and fundamental truth.
xxxi. BLODIUS. Take the Stone which is found everywhere,
and is called Rebis (Two-thing), and grows in two mountains Take it
while it is still fresh, with its own proper blood. Its growth is in
its skin, also in its flesh, and its food is in its blood, its
habitation in the air. Take of it as much as you like, and plunge it
into the Bath.
xxxii. LEAH, the prophetess, writes briefly thus: Know,
Nathan, that the flower of gold is the Stone; therefore subject it
to heat during a certain number of days, till it assumes the
dazzling appearance of white marble.
xxxiii. ALKIUS: You daily behold the mountains which
contain the husband and wife. Hie you therefore to their caves, and
dig up their earth, before it perishes.
xxxiv. BONELLUS: All ye lovers of this Art, I say unto
you, in faith and love: Relinquish the multiplicity of your methods
and substances, for our substance is one thing, and is called living
and indestructible water. He that is led astray by many words, will
know the persons against whom he should be on his guard.
xxxv. HIERONYMUS: Malignant men have darkened our Art,
perverting it with many words; they have called our earth, and our
Sun, or gold, by many misleading names. Their salting, dissolving,
subliming, growing, pounding, reducing to an acid, and white
sulphur, their coction of the fiery vapour, its coagulation, and
transmutation into red sulphur, are nothing but different aspects of
one and the same thing, which, in its first stage, we may describe
as incombustible and indestructible sulphur.
xxxvi. HERMES: Except ye convert the earth of our Matter
into fire, our acid will not ascend.
xxxvii. PYTHAGORAS, in his Fourth Table, says: How
wonderful is the agreement of Sages in the midst of difference! They
all say that they have prepared the Stone out of a substance which
by the vulgar is looked upon as the vilest thing on earth. Indeed,
if we were to tell the vulgar herd the ordinary name of our
substance, they would look upon our assertion as a daring falsehood.
But if they were acquainted with its virtue and efficacy, they would
not despise that which is, in reality, the most precious thing in
the world. God has concealed this mystery from the foolish, the
ignorant, the wicked, and the scornful, in order that they may not
use it for evil purposes.
xxxviii. HAGIENUS: Our Stone is found in all mountains,
all trees, all herbs, and animals, and with all men. It wears many
different colours, contains the four elements, and has been
designated a microcosm. Can you not see, you ignorant seekers after
the Stone, who try, and vainly try, such a multiplicity of
substances and methods, that our Stone is one earth, and one
sulphur, and that it grows in abundance before your very eyes 7 I
will tell you where you may find it. The first spot is on the summit
of two mountains; the second, in all mountains; the third, among the
refuse in the street; the fourth, in the trees and metals, the
liquid of which is the Sun and Moon, Mercury, Saturn, and Jupiter.
There is but one vessel, one method, and one consummation.
xxxix. MORIENUS: Know that our Matter is not in greater
agreement with human nature than with anything else, for it is
developed by putrefaction and transmutation. If it were not
decomposed, nothing could be generated out of it. The goal of our
Art is not reached until Sun and Moon are conjoined, and become, as
it were, one body.
xl. THE EMERALD TABLE: It is true, without any error, and
it is the sum of truth; that which is above is also that which is
below, for the performance of the wonders of a certain one thing,
and as all things arise from one Stone, so also they were generated
from one common Substance, which includes the four elements created
by God. And among other miracles the said Stone is born of the First
Matter. The Sun is its Father, the Moon its Mother, the wind bears
it in its womb, and it is nursed by the earth. Itself is the Father
of the whole earth, and the whole potency thereof. If it be
transmuted into earth, then the earth separates from the fire that
which is most subtle from that which is hard, operating gently and
with great artifice. Then the Stone ascends from earth to heaven,
and again descends from heaven to earth, and receives the choicest
influences of both heaven and earth. If you can perform this you
have the glory of the world, and are able to put to flight all
diseases, and to transmute all metals. It overcomes Mercury, which
is subtle, and penetrates all hard and solid bodies. Hence it is
compared with the world. Hence I am called Hermes, having the three
parts of the whole world of philosophy.
xli. LEPRINUS says: The Stone must be extracted from a
two-fold substance, before you can obtain the Elixir which is fixed
in one essence, and derived from the one indispensable Matter, which
God has created, and without which no one can attain the Art. Both
these parts must be purified before they are joined together afresh.
The body must become different, and so must the volatile spirit.
Then you have the Medicine, which restores health, and imparts
perfection to all things. The fixed and the volatile principle must
be joined in an inseparable union, which defies even the destructive
force of fire
xlii. LAMECH: In the Stone of the Philosophers are the
first elements, and the final colours of minerals, or Soul, Spirit,
and Body, joined unto one. The Stone which contains all these things
is called Zibeth, and the working of Nature has left it imperfect
xliii. SOCRATES: Our Mystery is the life of all things, or
the water. For water dissolves the body into spirit, and summons the
living spirit from among the dead. My son, despise not my Practical
Injunction. For it gives you, in a brief form, everything that you
really need.
xliv. ALEXANDER: The good need not remain concealed on
account of the bad men that might abuse it. For God rules over all,
according to His Divine Will. Observe, therefore, that the salt of
the Stone is derived from mercury, and is that Matter, most
excellent of all things, of which we are in search. The same also
contains in itself all secrets. Mercury is our Stone, which is
composed of the dry and the moist elements, which have been joined
together by gentle heat in an inseparable union.
xlv. SENIOR teaches us to make the Salt out of ashes, and
then, by various processes, to change it into the Mercury of the
Sages, because our Magistery is dependent on our water alone, and
needs nothing else.
xlvi. ROSARIUS: It is a stone, and not a stone, viz.,
the eagle --- stone. The substance has in its womb a stone, and when
it is dissolved, the water that was coagulated in it bursts forth.
Thus the Stone is the extracted spirit of our indestructible body.
It contains mercury, or liquid water, in its body, or fixed earth,
which retains its nature. This explanation is sufficiently plain.
xlvii. PAMPHILUS: The Salt of the Gem is that which is in
its own bowels; it ascends with the water to the top of the alembic,
and, after separation, is once more united and made one body with it
by means of natural warmth. Or we may, with King Alexander, liken
the union to that of a soul with its body.
xlviii. DEMOCRITUS: Our Substance is the conjunction of
the dry and the moist elements, which are separated by a vapour or
heat, and then transmuted into a liquid like water, in which our
Stone is found. For the vapour unites to the most subtle earth the
most subtle air, and contains all the most subtle elements. This
first substance may be separated into water and earth, the latter
being perceptible to the eye. The earth of the vapour is volatile
when it ascends, but it is found fixed when the separation takes
place, and when the elements are joined together again it becomes
fixed mercury. For the enjoyment of this, His precious gift, we
Sages ceaselessly praise and bless God's Holy Name.
xlix. SIROS: The body of the Sages, being calcined, is
called everlasting water, which permanently coagulates our Mercury.
And if the Body has been purified and dissolved, the union is so
close as to resist all efforts at separation.
l. NOAH, the man of God, writes thus in his Table: My
children and brethren, know that no other stone is found in the
world that has more virtue than this Stone. No mortal man can find
the true Art without this Stone. Blessed be the God of Heaven who
has created this property in the Salt, even in the Salt of the Gem!
li. MENALDES: The fire of the Sages may be extracted from
all natural things, and is called the quintessence. It is of earth,
water, air, and fire. It has no cause of corruption or other
contrary quality.
lii. HERMES, in his second Table, writes thus: Dissolve
the ashes in the second element, and coagulate this substance into a
Stone. Let this be done seven times. For as Naaman the Syrian was
purged of his leprosy by washing himself seven times in Jordan, so
our substance must undergo a seven-fold cleansing, by calcining and
dissolving, and exhibiting a variety of ever deepening colours. In
our water are hidden the four elements, and this earth, which
swallows its water, is the dragon that swallows its tail, i.e.,
its strength.
liii. NUNDINUS: The fire which includes all our chemical
processes, is three-fold: the fiery element of the air, of water and
of the earth. This is all that our Magistery requires.
liv. ANANIAS: Know, ye Scrutators of Nature, that fire is
the soul of everything, and that God Himself is fire and soul. And
the body cannot live without fire. For without fire the other
elements have no efficacy. It is, therefore, a most holy, awful, and
divine fire which abides with God Himself in the Most Holy Trinity,
for which also we give eternal thanks to God.
iv. BONIDUS: In the fountain of Nature our Substance is
found, and nowhere else upon earth; and our Stone is fire, and has
been generated in fire, without, however, being consumed by fire.
lvi. ROSINUS: TWO things are hidden in two things, and
indicate our Stone: in earth is fire, and air in water, yet there
are only two outward things, viz., earth and water. For
Mercury is our Stone, consisting as it does both of moist and dry
elements. Mercury is dry and moist in its very nature, and all
things have their growth from the dry and moist elements.
lvii. GEBER: We cannot find anything permanent, or fixed,
in fire, but only a viscous natural moisture which is the root of
all metals. For our venerable Stone nothing is required but
mercurial substances, if they have been well purified by our Art,
and are able to resist the fierce heat of fire. This Substance
penetrates to the very roots of metals, overcomes their imperfect
nature, and transmutes them, according to the virtue of the Elixir,
or Medicine.
lviii. AROS: Our Medicine consists of two things, and one
essence. There is one Mercury, of a fixed and a volatile substance,
composed of body and spirit, cold and moist, warm and dry.
lix. ARNOLDUS: Let your only care be to regulate the
coction of the Mercurial substance. In proportion as it is itself
dignified shall it dignify bodies.
lx. ALPHIDIUS: Transmute the nature, and you will find
what you want. For in our Magistery we obtain first from the gross
the subtle, or the spirit; then from the moist the dry, i.e.,
earth from water. Thus we transmute the corporeal into the
spiritual, and the spiritual into the corporeal, the lowest into the
highest, and the highest into the lowest
lxi. BERNARDUS: The middle substance is nothing but
coagulated mercury; and the first Matter is nothing but twofold
mercury. For our Medicine is composed of two things, the fixed and
the volatile, the corporeal and the spiritual, the cold and the
warm, the moist and the dry. Mercury must be subjected to coction in
a vessel with three divisions, that the dryness of the active fire
may be changed into vaporous moisture of the oil that surrounds the
substance. Ordinary fire does not digest our substance, but its heat
converted into dryness is the true fire.
lxii. STEPHANUS: Metals are earthly bodies, and are
generated in water. The water extracts a vapour from the Stone, and
out of the moisture of [the] earth, by the operation of the Sun, God
lets gold grow and accumulate. Thus earth and water are united into
a metallic body.
lxiii. GUIDO BONATUS writes briefly concerning the
quintessence, as being purer than all elements. The quintessence
contains the four elements, that is, the first Matter, out of which
God has created, and still creates, all things. It is Hyle,
containing in a confused mixture the properties of every creature.
lxiv. ALRIDOS: The virtue and efficacy of everything is to
be found in its quintessence, whether its nature be warm, cold,
moist, or dry. This quintessence gives out the sweetest fragrance
that can be imagined. Therefore the highest perfection is needed.
lxv. LONGINUS I describes the process in the following
terms: Let your vessel be tightly closed and exposed to an even
warmth. This water is prepared in dry ashes, and is subjected to
coction till the two become one. When one is joined to the other,
the body is brought back to its spirit. Then the fire must be
strengthened till the fixed body retains that which is not fixed by
its own heat. With this you can tinge ten thousand times ten
thousand of other substances.
lxvi. HERMES, in his Mysteries, says: Know that our Stone
is lightly esteemed by the thankless multitude; but it is very
precious to the Sages. If princes knew how much gold can be made out
of a particle of Sun, and of our Stone, they would never suffer it
to be taken out of their dominions.
"The Sages rejoice when the bodies are dissolved; for our stone
is prepared with two waters. It drives away all sickness from the
diseased body, whether it be human or metallic."
By means of our Art, we do in one month what Nature cannot
accomplish in a thousand years: for ore purify the parts, and then
join them together in an inseparable and indissoluble union .
lxvii. NERO: Know that our Mercury is dry and moist, and
conjoined with the Sun and Moon. Sun and Moon in nature are cold and
moist mercury and hot and dry sulphur, and both have their natural
propagation by being joined in one thing.
Here follows a True Explanation of some of the Foregoing
Philosophical Dicta
the Meaning, word for word and point for point, being clearly set
forth.
I now propose to say something about the meaning of the obscure
and allegorical expressions used by some of the Sages whom I have
quoted. Be sure that they all were true Sages, and really possessed
our Stone. It may have been possessed by more persons since the time
of Adam, but the above list includes all of whom I have heard. I
need not here review all their sayings; for the words of the least
of them are sufficient for imparting to you a knowledge of this Art;
and my ambition goes no higher than that. If I have enumerated so
large a number of authorities, I have only done so in order that you
might the better understand both the theory and practice of this
Art, and that you might be saved all unnecessary expense. For this
reason I have declared this true philosophy with all the skill that
God has given me. I hope the initiated will overlook any verbal
inaccuracy into which I have fallen, and that they will be induced
by my example to abstain from wilfully misleading anxious enquirers.
I may have fallen into some errors of detail, but as to the gist of
my work, I know what I have written, And that it is God's own truth.
Explanation of the Saying of Adam
When God had created our first parent Adam, and set him in
Paradise, He shewed him two things, namely, earth and water. Earth
is fixed and indestructible, water is volatile and vaporous. These
two contain the elements of all created things: water contains air,
and earth fire --- and of these four things the whole of creation is
composed. In earth are enclosed fire, stones, minerals, salt,
mercury, and all manner of metals; in water, and in air, all manner
of living and organic substances, such as beasts, birds, fishes,
flesh, blood, bones, wood, trees, flowers, and leaves. To all these
things God imparted their efficacy and virtue, and subjected them to
the mastery and use of Adam. Hence you may see how all these things
are adapted to the human body, and are such as to meet the
requirements of his nature. He may incorporate the virtue of outward
substances by assimilating them in the form of food. In the same
way, his mind is suitably constructed for the purpose of gaining a
rational knowledge of the physical world. That this is the case, you
may see from the first chapter of Genesis.
On the sixth day of the first year of the world, that is to say,
on the 15th day of March, God created the first man, Adam, of red
earth, in a field near Damascus, with a beautiful body, and after
His own image. When Adam was created, he stood naked before the
Lord, and with outstretched hands rendered thanks to Him, saying: O
Lord, Thy hands have shaped me: now remember, I pray Thee, the work
of Thy hands, which Thou hast clothed with flesh, and strengthened
with bones, and grant me life and loving kindness.
So the Lord endowed Adam with great wisdom, and such marvellous
insight that he immediately, without the help of any teacher ---
simply by virtue of his original righteousness --- had a perfect
knowledge of the seven liberal arts, and of all animals, plants,
stones, metals and minerals. Nay, what is more, he had perfect
understanding of the Holy Trinity, and of the coming of Christ in
the flesh. Moreover, Adam was the Lord, King, and Ruler of all other
creatures which, at the Divine bidding, were brought to him by the
angel to receive their names. Thus all creatures acknowledged Adam
as their Lord, seeing that it was he to whom the properties and
virtues of all things were to be made known. Now the wisdom, and
knowledge of all things, which Adam had received, enabled him to
observe the properties, the origin, and the end of all things. He
noted the division and destruction, the birth and decay of physical
substances. He saw that they derive their origin from the dry and
the moist elements, and that they are again transmuted into the dry
and the moist. Of all these things Adam took notice, and especially
of that which is called the first Matter. For he who knows how all
things are transmuted into their first Matter, has no need to ask
any questions. It was that which existed in the beginning before God
created heaven and earth; and out of it may be made one new thing
which did not exist before, a new earth, fire, water, air, Sun,
Moon, Stars, in short, a new world.
As in the beginning all things were created new, so there is a
kind of new creation out of the first substance in our Art. Now
although God warned Adam generally not to reveal this first
substance --- viz., the moist and the dry elements --- yet He
permitted him to impart the knowledge to his son Seth. Abel
discovered the Art for himself, by the wisdom which God had given
him, and inscribed an account of it on beechen tablets. He was also
the first to discover the art of writing; further, he foretold the
destruction of the world by the Flood, and wrote all these things on
wooden tablets, and hid them in a pillar of stone, which was found,
long afterwards, by the children of Israel Thus you see that our Art
was a secret from the beginning, and a secret it will remain to the
end of the world. For this reason it is necessary carefully to
consider all that is said about it, and especially the words of the
Lord to Adam: for they exhibit in a succinct form the secret of the
whole Art.
Explanation of the Saying of Abel
This saying partly explains itself, and is partly explained by
what we said about God's words to Adam. Yet I will add a few remarks
concerning it. Man hath within him the virtue and efficiency of all
things, whence he is called a small world, and is compared to the
large world, because the bones which are beneath his skin, and
support his body, may be likened to the mountains and stones, his
flesh to the earth, his veins to the rivers, and his small veins to
the brooks which are discharged into them. The heart is the sea into
which the great and small rivers flow, his hair resembles the
growing herbs -- and so with all other parts of his body. Again, his
inward parts, such as the heart, lungs, and liver, are comparable to
the metals. The hairs have their head in the earth (i.e., the flesh)
and their roots in the air, as the Sages say, that the root of their
minerals is in the air, and their head in the earth. That which
ascends by distillation is volatile, and is in the air; that which
remains at the bottom, and is fixed, is the head, which is in the
earth. Therefore, the one must always exist in conjunction with the
other if it is to be effectual. Hence man may be compared to an
inverted tree: for he has his roots, or his hair, in the air, while
other trees have their hairs. or their roots, in the earth.
And of our Stone, too, the Sages have justly said that it has its
head in the earth, and its root in the air. This similitude has a
two-fold interpretation. First, with regard to the place in which
our Matter is found; secondly, with regard to the dissolution and
second conjunction of the Stone. For when our Stone rises upward in
the alembic, it has its root in the air; but if it would regain its
virtue and strength, it must once more return to its earth, and then
it has its head and perfect potency in the earth. Hence our Stone,
too, is not inaptly denominated a small world; it is called the
mountain of mountains, from which our ore is derived, since it is
evolved from the first substance in a way analogous to that in which
the great world was created. Know that if you bury anything in [the]
earth, and it rots, as food is digested in the human body, and the
gross is separated from the subtle, and that which is fetid from
that which is pure, then that which is pure is the first Matter
which has been set free by decay. If you understand this, you know
the true Art. But keep it to yourself, and cast not pearls before
swine; for the vulgar regard our Art with ignorant contempt.
Explanation of the Saying of Seth, Son of Adam
By "acid which is to be subjected to coction, and transmuted into
ashes", the Sage Seth means distilled water, which we call seed. If
this, by diligent coction, is condensed into a body --- which he
calls ashes --- the body loses its blackness by being washed till it
becomes white; for, by constant coction, all blackness and gross
impurity are removed. If it were not for this earth, the spirit
would never be coagulated; for it would have no body into which it
could enter --- seeing that it cannot be coagulated and fixed
anywhere but in its own body. On the other hand, the spirit purifies
its body, as Seth says, and makes it white. He says further: "If you
diligently heat it, and free it from its blackness, it is changed
into a Stone, which is called the white coin of the Stone". That is
to say, if it is slowly heated with a gentle fire, it is by degrees
changed into a body which resists fire, and is named a Stone. It is
fixed, and it has a brilliantly white appearance. A coin it is
called, because, as he who has a coin may purchase with it bread or
whatever else he needs, so he who has this Stone may purchase for
himself health, wisdom, longevity, gold, silver, gems, etc. Hence it
is justly called the Coin, since it can buy what all the riches in
the world cannot procure. It is struck By the Sages, who, instead of
the image of a prince, impress upon it their own image. Therefore it
is denominated the COIN of the SAGES, because it is their own money,
struck in their own mint
Again, when the Sage says, "Heat the Stone till it breaks, and
dissolve it in the well-tempered water of the Moon", he means that
the Stone must be heated by that which is in itself, until it is
changed into water, or dissolved. All this is done by its own
agency; for the body is called Moon, when it has been changed into
water; and the extracted spirit, or distilled water, is called Sun.
For the element of air is concealed in it; but the body must be
broken in its own water, or dissolved by itself. The "well-tempered
water of the Moon" is the gentle inward heat which changes it into
water, and yields two waters, viz., the distilled spirit, and the
dissolved body. These two waters are again united by slow and gentle
coction, the distilled spirit becoming coagulated into a body, the
dissolved body becoming a spirit The fixed becomes volatile, and the
volatile fixed, by dissolution and coagulation, and both assume,
first a white, and then a red colour. The change to white and red is
produced by the same water, and the white is always followed by the
red, just as the black is followed by the white. When the Sage says,
in conclusion, "that the whole can be accomplished only with the
best acid, through the power of God alone," he means that the one
thing from which alone our Stone can be procured may be compared to
the sharpest acid and that, by means of our Art, this acid is
changed into the best of earthly things, which all the treasures of
all kings and princes are not sufficient to buy.
Explanation of the Saying of Isindrus
Good Heavens! How skilfully the Sages have contrived to conceal
this matter. It would surely have been far better if they had
abstained from writing altogether. For the extreme obscurity of
their style has overwhelmed thousands in ruin, and plunged them into
the deepest poverty, especially those who set about this task
without even the slightest knowledge of Nature, or of the
requirements of our Art. What the Sages write is strictly true; but
you cannot understand it unless you are already initiated in the
secrets of this Art. Yea, even if you were a Doctor of the Doctors,
and a Light of the World, you would be able to see no meaning in
their words without this knowledge. They have written, but you are
none the wiser. They half wished to communicate the secret to their
posterity; but a jealous feeling prevented them from doing so in
plain language. To the uninitiated reader these words of Isindrus
must appear nothing short of nonsense: "Great is the air, because
the air corrects the thing, if it is thin or thick, hot or cold."
But the Sage means that when it ascends with the water, it is hot
air, for fire and air bear our Stone like secret fire concealed
therein, and the water which ascends from the earth, by that
ascension becomes air, and thin; and when it descends, it descends
into water which contains fire; thus the earth is purified, seeing
that the water takes [the] fire with it into the earth. For the fire
is the Soul, and the Moon the Spirit. Therefore, the air is great,
because it bears with it water and fire, and imparts them to all
things, though thereby (by this loss of water) itself becomes cold.
Then the air becomes thick, when with its fire it is transmuted into
the body, and thus the air corrects the thing by its thickness. For
it bears out our Stone as it carries it in, and purifies it both in
its ascent and in its descent. In the same way air purifies all
things that grow (i.e., plants), gives them their food (i.e.,
water), and imparts to them its fire, by which they are sustained.
Of this you may convince yourself by ocular demonstration. For the
air bears the clouds, and sheds them upon earth in the form of rain;
which rain contains secret fire derived from the earth, and the rays
of the Sun by which it was drawn upward --- and this fire it gives
to all things as food. And although the rays of the Sun and Moon are
immeasurably subtle, swift, and intangible; yet the rays of our Sun
and Moon are much swifter and more subtle than those which are
received by the plants in their growth. For the earth digests the
rays of the Sun and Moon, and they sustain in the most wonderful
manner things of vegetable growth; and all the living rays of the
Sun and Moon nourish all created things. For by this digestion they
obtain their life. For this reason the air may be called great,
because through the grace of God it accomplishes great things.
Again, when the Sage says, "If the air becomes thick", i.e.,
when the Sun turns aside, or is changed, "there is a thickness, till
it rises," he means that if the distilled water which is taken for
the Sun, or fire, approaches its body, and is changed into it, then
the Sun stoops down to the earth. Thereby the air becomes thick,
being joined to the earth, and if the Sun is once more elevated the
air becomes thin; that is to say, when the water is extracted from
the earth by means of the alembic, the fire rises upward, i.e., the
Sun is exalted, and the air becomes thin. Again, when he says, "This
also is hot and cold, and thickness, and thinness, or softness", the
Sage means that the Sun is hot, and the Moon cold; for the earth,
when dissolved, is the Moon, and water, in which is fire, is the
Sun: these two must be conjoined in an inseparable union. This union
enables them to reduce the elements of all metallic and animal
bodies, into which they are injected, to perfect purity and health.
When the Sage adds that thickness and thinness denote summer and
winter, he means that our Art is mingled of thickness and thinness,
or two elements which must be united by gentle warmth, like that of
winter and summer combined. This temperate warmth, which resembles
that of a bath, brings the Sun and Moon together. Thus I have, by
the grace of God, interpreted to you the parabolic saying of
Isindrus.
Explanation of the Saying of Anaxagoras
From the beginning of all things God is. He is likened to light
and fire, and He may be likened to the latter in His essence,
because fire is the first principle of all things that are seen and
grow. In the same way, the first principle of our Art is fire. Heat
impels Nature to work, and in its working are manifested Body,
Spirit, and Soul; that is, earth and water. Earth is the Body, oil
the Soul, and water the Spirit; and all this is accomplished through
the Divine goodness and lenity, without which Nature can do nothing;
or, as the Sage says: "God's lenity rules all things; and beneath
the thickness of the earth, after creation, are revealed lenity and
integrity". That is to say: If the earth is separated from the
water, and itself dissolved into oil and water, the oil is
integrity, and the water lenity; for the water imparts the soul to
the oil and to the body, and [the body] receives nothing but what is
imparted to it by heaven, that is, by the water --- and the water is
revealed under the oil, the oil under the earth. For the fire is
subtle, and floats upward from the earth with subtle waters, and is
concealed in the earth. Now oil and air and earth are purified by
their own spirit Therefore the oil is integrity in the body, and the
spirit lenity. And the spirit in the first operation descends to the
body and restores life to the body; although the oil is pure and
remains with the body, yet it cannot succour the body without the
help of the spirit; for the body suffers violence and anguish while
it is dissolved and purified. Then, again, the "thickness of the
earth" is transmuted into a thin substance such as water or oil, and
thus the "lenity" is seen in the body. For the body is so mild or
soft as to be changed into water, or oil, although before it was
quite dry. Therefore oil is seen in the earth, which is the fatness
or life of the water, i.e., an union of fire, air, and water.
Now give the water to the body to drink, and it will be restored to
life. And though those three elements have ascended from the earth,
yet the virtue remains with the body, as you may see by dissolving
it into oil and water. But the oil cannot operate without the
spirit, nor can the spirit bear fruit without the oil and the body.
Therefore they must be united; and all "lenity" and "integrity" are
seen in the body when it is transmuted to white and red.
Explication of the Opinion of Pythagoras
This Sage asks what that is which is touched, and yet not seen.
He means that the substance which is prepared by our Art is one
thing, which is tangible and invisible. That is to say, it is felt,
but not seen, nor is the mode of its operation known. He who knows
it, but knows not its operation, as yet knows nothing as he ought.
This one thing, which alone is profitable for the purposes of our
Art, proceeds from a certain dark place, where it is not seen, nor
are its operation or its virtue known to any but the initiated. A
great mystery is also concealed in the Matter itself, namely, air
and fire, or the Sun, the Moon, and the Stars. This is concealed in
it, and yet is invisible, as the Sage says: What is not seen, or
known, is only heaven. That which is felt, and not seen, is earth.
Earth, says the Sage, is thickness, or body, which is found at the
bottom of the Matter, has accumulated in the Matter, and can be felt
and known. By the words, "that is between heaven and earth, which is
not known", (i.e., in the world), the Sage means that the
Matter of our Stone is found in the small world; not in rocks and
mountains, or in the earth, but between heaven and earth, i.e.,
in the air. Again, when he says that "in it are senses, and
entirety, as smell, taste, hearing, touch," he would teach us that
in human nature there is entirety of mind and perception; for man
can know, feel, and understand. He would also teach us how our Stone
is to be found, namely, by sight, hearing, smell, taste, and touch.
By sight, because the Matter of the Stone is thick, or thin and
clear, and turns black, white, and red. By smell, because, when its
impurity is purged away, it emits a most sweet fragrance. By taste,
because it is first bitter and disagreeable, but afterwards becomes
most pleasant By touch, because that sense enables us to distinguish
between the hard and the soft, the gross and the subtle, between
water and earth, and between the different stages of distillation,
putrefaction, dissolution, coagulation, fermentation, and injection,
which the substance goes through. The different processes of the
task are perceived with the senses, and it should be accomplished
within forty-six days.
Loosening of the Knot of Aristeus
"Take the body which I have shewn you, and beat it into thin
leaves", i.e., take the earth which cleaves to our substance,
and, by having become dry, becomes visible and knowable; for now it
is water and earth. The earth is thus shewn and divided into
two parts, earth and water. Let that earth be taken, placed in a
phial, and put in a warm bath, by the warmth of which it is
dissolved, through its own internal coction, into water; this the
Sage calls beating into thin leaves. The body which is thus obtained
is variously described as the Philosopher's Stone, or the Stone of
leaves. "Add some of our salt water, and this is the water of life".
That means: After its dissolution into water, it must receive our
salt water to drink, for this water has been previously distilled
from it, and is the water of life; for the soul and spirit of the
body are hidden in it, and it is called our sea water; the same also
is its natural name, because it is obtained from the invisible
hidden sea of the Sages, the sea of the smaller world. For our Art
is called the smaller world, and thus it is the water of our sea. If
this water is added to the body, and heated and purified with it,
the body is purged by long coction, and its colour changes from
black to a brilliant white, while the water is coagulated, and
forms, by indissoluble union with the body, the imperishable
Philosopher's Stone, which you must use to the glory of God, and the
good of your neighbour.
Exposition of the Sayings of Parmenides
Jealous Sages have named many waters and metals and stones,
simply for the purpose of deceiving you; herein the philosophers
would warn us that they have used secrecy, lest the whole mystery
should be manifested before all the world. Those who follow the
letter of their directions are sure to be led astray, and to miss
entirely the true foundation of our Art. The fault, however, lies
not with the Sages so much as with the ignorance of their readers.
The Sages name it a stone; and so it is a stone, which is dug up
from our mine. They speak of metals, and there are such things as
metals liquefied from our ore. They speak of water; but our water we
obtain from our own spring. The red and white sulphur they refer to
are obtained from our air. Their salt is obtained from our salt
mines. It is our Sun, our verdigris, halonitre, alkali, orpiment,
arsenic, our poison, our medicine, etc. By whatever name they call
it they cannot make it more than one thing. It is rightly described
by all the Sages, but not plainly enough for the uninitiated
enquirer. For such an one knows neither the substance nor its
operation. The Sage says: "Relinquish Sun, Moon, and Venus for our
ore," i.e., it is not to be found in any earthly metals, but only in
our ore. Whoever rightly understands the concluding words of the
Sage has received a great blessing at the hand of God.
Explanation of the Saying of Lucas
By the living water of the Moon this Sage means our water, which
is twofold. The distilled water is the Moon; the Sun, or fire, is
hidden in it, and is the Father of all things. Hence it is compared
to a man, because the Sun is in the water. It is also called living
water; for the life of the dead body is hidden in the water. It is
the water of the Moon, because the Sun is the Father and the Moon
the Mother. Hence, also, they are regarded as husband and wife. The
Body is the Moon, or Mother, and the distilled water, or male
principle, rises upward from the earth; and for that reason is
sometimes called Moon. For it is the water of the Moon, or Body. It
has left the Body, and must enter it again before our Art can be
perfected. Hence the Body, or Moon, has well been designated the
female principle, and the water, or Sun, the male principle, for
reasons which have been set forth at length in this book.
Again, when the Sage says, "Coagulate it after our fashion,"
those last three words mean that the body must receive its spirit to
drink gradually, and little by little, until it recovers its life,
and health, and strength, which takes place by means of the same
gentle heat which digests food in the stomach, and matures fruit in
its place. For it is our custom to eat, drink, and live in gentle
warmth. By this regimen our body is preserved, and all that is foul
and unprofitable is driven out from our body. According to the same
fashion of gentle coction, all that is fetid and black is gradually
purged out of our Stone. For when the Sage says "after our fashion",
he wishes to teach you that the preparation of the Stone bears a
strict analogy to the processes of the human body. That the chemical
development of our substance is internal, and caused by the
operation of Nature and of its four elements, the Sage indicates by
the words, "Everything is already coagulated." The substance
contains all that is needed; there is nothing to be added or taken
away, seeing that it is dissolved and again conjoined by its own
inherent properties. When the Sage continues, "I bid you take water
of life, which descends from the Moon, and pour it upon our earth
till it turns white", he means that if water and earth are separated
from each other, then the dry body is our earth, and the extracted
water is the water of the Moon, or water of life. This process of
adfusion, desiccation, attrition, coagulation, etc., is repeated
till the body turns white; and then takes place on conglutination,
which is indissoluble. "Then," as the Sage says, "we have our
Magnesia, and the Nature of natures rejoices." Its spirit and body
become one thing: they were one thing, and after separation have
once more become one thing; therefore, one nature rejoices in the
restoration of the other.
Exposition of the Saying of Ethelius
He says: "Heat our Stone until it shines like dazzling marble;
then it becomes great, and a mystic Stone; for sulphur added to
sulphur preserves it on account of its fitness". That is to say:
When the moist and the dry have been separated, the dry which lies
at the bottom, and is called our Stone, is as black as a raven. It
must be subjected to the coction of our water (separated from it),
until it loses its blackness, and becomes as white as dazzling
marble. Then it is the mystic Stone which by coction has been
transmuted into fixed mercury with the blessing of God. The Stone is
mystic, or secret, because it is found in a secret place, in an
universally despised substance where no one looks for the greatest
treasure of the world. Hence it may well be called The HIDDEN STONE.
By the joining of two sulphurs and their mutual preservation, he
means that though, after the separation of spirit and body, there
seem to be two substances, yet, in reality, there is only one
substance; so the body which is below is "sulphur," and the spirit
which is above is also "sulphur." Now, when the spirit returns to
the body, one sulphur is added to another; and they are bound
together by a mutual fitness, since the body cannot be without the
spirit, nor the spirit without the body. Hence there are these two
sulphurs in the body, the red and the white, and the white sulphur
is in the black body, while the red is hid beneath it. If the spirit
is gradually added to the body, it is entirely coagulated into the
body, sulphur is added to sulphur, and perfection is attained
through the fitness which exists between them. The body receives
nothing but its own spirit; for it has retained its soul, and what
has been extracted from a body can be joined to nothing but that
same body. The spirit delights in nothing so much as in its own
soul, and its own body. Hence the Sage says: "When the spirit has
been restored to the body, the sulphur to the sulphur, and the water
to the earth, and all has become white, then the body retains the
spirit, and there can be no further separation". Thus you have the
well purged earth of the Sages, in which we sow our grain, unto
infinity, that it may bring forth much fruit.
Explanation of the Saying of Pythagoras
You have good cause to wonder at the great variety of ways in
which the Sages have expressed the same thing. Nevertheless, their
descriptions apply only to one Matter, and their sayings refer only
to a single substance. For when our Sage says, "We give you
directions concerning these things: We tell you that it is dry
water, like the water of the Moon, which you have prepared", he
means that we Sages must give directions, according to the best of
our ability. If those directions, rightly understood, do not answer
the purpose, you may justly charge us with fraud and imposture. But
if you fail through not taking our meaning, you must blame your own
unspeakable stupidity, which follows the letter, but not the spirit
of our directions. When the Sage further says that it must drink its
own water, he would teach you that after the separation of the dry
from the moist, the water extracted from the body is the right
water, and the water of the Moon, prepared by putrefaction and
distillation. This extracted water is regarded as the male
principle, and the earth, or body, as the female principle. The
water of the husband must now be joined in conjugal union to that of
the wife; the body must, at intervals, drink of its own prepared
water, and become ever purer, the more it drinks, till it turns most
wonderfully white. Then it is called "our calx," and you must pour
the water of our calx upon the body, until it is coagulated,
becoming tinged, and a most bright quality returns to it, and the
body itself is saturated with its own moisture. If you wish to
obtain the red tincture, you should dissolve and coagulate, and go
through the whole process over again. Verily, this is God's own
truth, an accurate, simple, and plain statement of the requirements
of our Art.
Explanation of the Emerald Table of Hermes
Hermes is right in saying that our Art is true, and has been
rightly handed down by the Sages; all doubts concerning it have
arisen through false interpretation of the mystic language of the
philosophers. But, since they are loth to confess their own
ignorance, their readers prefer to say that the words of the Sages
are imposture and falsehood. The fault really lies with the ignorant
reader, who does not understand the style of the Philosophers. If,
in the interpretation of our books, they would suffer themselves to
be guided by the teaching of Nature, rather than by their own
foolish notions, they would not miss the mark so hopelessly. By the
words which follow: "That which is above is also that which is
below," he describes the Matter of our Art, which, though one,
is divided into two things, the volatile water which rises upward,
and the earth which lies at the bottom, and becomes fixed. But when
the reunion takes place, the body becomes spirit, and the spirit
becomes body, the earth is changed into water and becomes volatile,
the water is transmuted into body, and becomes fixed. When bodies
become spirits, and spirits bodies, your work is finished, for then
that which rises upward and that which descends downward become one
body. Therefore the Sage says that that which is above is that which
is below, meaning that, after having been separated into two
substances (from being one substance), they are again joined
together into one substance, i.e., an union which can never
be dissolved, and possesses such virtue and efficacy that it can do
in one moment what the Sun cannot accomplish in a thousand years.
And this miracle is wrought by a thing which is despised and
rejected by the multitude. Again, the Sage tells us that all things
were created, and are still generated, from one first substance and
consist of the same elementary material; and in this first substance
God has appointed the four elements, which represent a common
material into which it might perhaps be possible to resolve all
things. Its development is brought about by the distillation of the
Sun and Moon. For it is operated upon by the natural heat of the Sun
Moon, which stirs up its internal action, and multiplies each thing
after its kind, imparting to the substance a specific form. The
soul, or nutritive principle, is the earth which receives the rays
of the Sun and Moon, and therewith feeds her children as with
mother's milk. Thus the Sun is the father, the Moon is the mother,
the earth the nurse --- and in this substance is that which we
require. He who can take it and prepare it is truly to be envied. It
is separated by the Sun and Moon in the form of a vapour, and
collected in the place where it is found. When Hermes adds that "the
air bears it in its womb, the earth is its nurse, the whole world
its Father," he means that when the substance of our Stone is
dissolved, then the wind bears it in its womb, i.e., the air
bears up the substance in the form of water, in which is hid fire,
the soul of the Stone, and fire is the Father of the whole world.
Thus, the volatile substance rises upward, while that which remains
at the bottom, is the "whole world" (seeing that our Art is compared
to a "small world "). Hence Hermes calls fire the father of the
whole world, because it is the Sun of our Art, and air, Moon, and
water ascend from it; the earth is the nurse of the Stone, i.e.,
when the earth receives the rays of the Sun and Moon, a new body is
born, like a new foetus in the mother's womb. The earth receives and
digests the light of Sun and Moon, and imparts food to its foetus
day by day, till it becomes great and strong, and puts off its
blackness and defilement, and is changed to a different colour.
This, "child,"which is called "our daughter," represents our Stone,
which is born anew of the Sun and Moon, as you may easily see, when
the spirit, or the water that ascended, is gradually transmuted into
the body, and the body is born anew, and grows and increases in size
like the foetus in the mother's womb. Thus the Stone is generated
from the first substance, which contains the four elements; it is
brought forth by two things, the body and the spirit; the wind bears
it in its womb, for it carries the Stone upward from earth to
heaven, and down again from heaven to earth. Thus the Stone receives
increase from above and from below, and is born a second time, just
as every other foetus is generated in the maternal womb; as all
created things bring forth their young, even so does the air, or
wind, bring forth our Stone. When Hermes adds, "Its power, or
virtue, is entire, when it is transmuted into earth," he means that
when the spirit is transmuted into the body, it receives its full
strength and virtue. For as yet the spirit is volatile, and not
fixed, or permanent. If it is to be fixed, we must proceed as the
baker does in baking bread. We must impart only a little of the
spirit to the body at a time, just as the baker only puts a little
leaven to his meal, and with it leavens the whole lump. The spirit,
which is our leaven, in like fashion transmutes the whole body into
its own substance. Therefore the body must be leavened again and
again, until the whole lump is thoroughly pervaded with the power of
the leaven. In our Art the body leavens the spirit, and transmutes
it into one body, and the spirit leavens the body, and transmutes it
into one spirit And the two, when they have become one, receive
power to leaven all things, into which they are injected, with their
own virtue.
The Sage continues: "If you gently separate the earth from the
water, the subtle from the hard, the Stone ascends from earth to
heaven, and again descends from heaven to earth, and receives its
virtue from above and from below. By this process you obtain the
glory and brightness of the whole world. With it you can put to
flight poverty, disease, and weariness; for it overcomes the subtle
mercury, and penetrates all hard and firm bodies". He means that all
who would accomplish this task must separate the moist from the dry,
the water from the earth. The water, or fire, being subtle, ascends,
while the body is hard, and remains where it is. The separation must
be accomplished by gentle heat, i.e., in the temperate bath
of the Sages, which acts slowly, and is neither too hot nor too
cold. Then the Stone ascends to heaven, and again descends from
heaven to earth. The spirit and body are first separated, then again
joined together by gentle coction, of a temperature resembling that
with which a hen hatches her eggs. Such is the preparation of the
substance, which is worth the whole world, whence it is also called
a "little world". The possession of the Stone will yield you the
greatest delight, and unspeakably precious comfort. It will also set
forth to you in a typical form the creation of the world. It will
enable you to cast out all disease from the human body, to drive
away poverty, and to have a good understanding of the secrets of
Nature. The Stone has virtue to transmute mercury into gold and
silver, and to penetrate all hard and firm bodies, such as precious
stones and metals. You cannot ask a better gift of God than this
gift, which is greater than all other gifts. Hence Hermes may justly
call himself by the proud title of "Hermes Trismegistus, who holds
the three parts of the whole world of wisdom".
Another Tract,
Corresponding To The First, Which May Be Read
With Great Profit
Preface
We may justly wonder that the Sages who have written about this
most precious and secret Art, have thought it necessary to invent so
many occult and allegorical expressions, by means of which our Art
is concealed not only from the unworthy but from earnest and
diligent students of the truth. Foolish persons, indeed, who read
their books, and hear of the riches and all the other good things
which this Art affords, experience a pleasant tickling sensation in
their ears, and straightway behold visions of themselves sitting on
golden thrones, and commanding all the treasures of the universe,
they fancy that the Art can be learned in the twinkling of an eye,
soon come to regard themselves as great Doctors, and are unable to
conceive the possibility of their making a mistake, or being led
astray by the Sages, much less are they aware that it has always
been the custom of the philosophers to conceal the fundamental facts
of this Art and to reveal them to their own sons and disciples only
in sententious allegorical sayings. It is impossible to read through
all that the Sages have ever written on this subject; but it is a
still more hopeless undertaking to gather from their books a full
and sufficient knowledge of our Art, unless, indeed, God opens your
understanding, and gives you a real insight into the natural
properties of things, and thereby into the sayings of those who
speak of them. For it is Nature alone that accomplishes the various
processes of our Art, and a right understanding of Nature will
furnish you with eyes wherewith to perceive the secrets thereof.
Thus Bason says: "Take care not to add anything else; for it is the
property of our substance to overcome all other things". And
Bondinus tells us that the whole process is accomplished by means of
the water which issues from the Stone. Alphidius declares that the
Philosopher's Stone contains four different natures, and thereby
possesses a virtue and efficacy such as are found in no other stone.
Therefore, the question of the Royal Sage Haly, whether there is
another stone upon earth which may be compared with our Stone, and
possesses the same wonderful properties, is answered by Morienus in
the following words: "I am aware of no other stone of equal
excellence, potency, and virtue, for it contains the four elements
in a visible form, and is singular of its kind among all the created
things of the world. If, therefore, any person should take any
[other] Stone but the one demanded by this Magistery, his labours
must result in failure." Moreover, the ancient Sage Arros says: "Our
Stone is useless for our purpose, until it be purged of its gross
earth." In like manner we are informed by Morienus that unless the
body be purged of its grossness, it cannot be united to its spirit;
but when it has put off its gross nature, the spirit joins itself to
it, and delights in it, because both have been freed from all
impurity". The truth of his words is attested by Ascanius in "The
Crowd", who says: "Spirits cannot join themselves to impure
bodies; but when the body has been well purged, and digested by
coction, the spirit becomes united to it, amidst a phenomenal
exhibition of all the colours in the world, and the imperfect body
is tinged with the indestructible colour of the ferment; this
ferment is the soul, in and through which the spirit is joined to
the body, and transmuted with the body into the colour of the
ferment, whereupon all three become one thing". Hence it is well,
though somewhat enigmatically said by the Sages, that there takes
place a conjugal union of husband and wife, and that of the two a
child is born after their likeness, just as men generate men, metals
metals, and all other things that which is like them.
Hence all that would exercise this Art must know the properties
of the most noble substance thereof, and follow the guidance of
Nature. But many enquirers conduct their operations at haphazard,
they grope in the dark, and do not know whether their art be an
imitation of Nature, or not. Yet they undertake to correct, and
intensify, the operation of Nature. Of such persons Arnold says that
they approach our Art as the ass goes up to the crib, not knowing
for what it opens its mouth. For they do not know what they would
do, nor are they aware that they must listen to the teaching of
Nature. They seek to do the works of Nature, but they will not watch
the hand of her whom they pretend to imitate. Yet our Art has a true
foundation in natural fact. For Nature prepares the metals in the
earth, some perfect, like gold and silver; others imperfect, like
Venus, Mars, Saturn, and Jupiter, according to the labour and
influence of the planets. He, then, who would accomplish our
Magistery, and desires to participate in this most noble Art, must
know the seed from which the metals are naturally generated in the
earth, which seed we remove by Nature, and purify and prepare it by
Art, making it so glorious, and full of wonderful potency, that with
it we can impart instant purity and perfection to the imperfect
bodies of men and metals. This seed we must extract from perfect,
pure, and mature bodies, if we would attain the desired end. Now, in
order that you may the more readily attain this knowledge, I have
composed the following Tract concerning the first principle of
Nature, and the creation and generation of man --- which the student
of our Magistery should diligently peruse, consider, and digest.
Then he will not so easily miss the right path.
The Fear of the Lord is the Beginning of Wisdom
All true Sages and philosophers have earnestly sought to obtain a
knowledge of Almighty God as He is revealed in His marvellous works;
this knowledge they attained, in so far as it can be attained by the
human mind, by diligently considering the origin and first
principles of all things. For they were enabled to realize the
omnipotence of the Creator by the contemplation of the secret
powers, and miraculous virtues, which He has infused into natural
things. They were led to consider how they might employ their
knowledge for the good of the human race, and how they might reveal
it to others, and they received wisdom to expound the first
principles of natural things, but more especially the birth and
death of man, in something like the following way: In the beginning
God created all things out of a subtle liquid, or impalpable vapour
which was neither moist, nor dry, nor cold, nor hot, nor light, nor
dark, but a confused chaos. This subtle vapour God first changed
into water, which He then separated into a hard and a liquid part,
or into earth and water. Out of elementary water He further evolved
air, and out of elementary earth He brought forth fire, that is,
elementary fire. And it may still be seen that the two first
elements contain the two last; for daily experience teaches us that
in water there is air, and that in earth there is fire. Out of these
God created the firmament, the Sun, the Moon, and the Stars, and all
other natural objects. At last He created a being in His own image,
which He formed out of moist earth --- i.e., for the most
part out of earth (which encloses fire) moistened with water
(containing air). Hence it is said that man was created out of the
four elements, and he is called a "small world." But man lay like
one dead upon the ground, until God breathed into his nostrils the
spirit of life, and Adam became a living soul. In like manner God
created all other animals, and all plants and minerals, out of the
four elements. Then God set Adam in the Garden of Eden, in Paradise,
which He had planted with His own hands, and in which flourished all
manner of flowers, fruit, roots, herbs, leaves, and grass. Then
Adam's heart was filled with joy, and he understood the great power
of his Creator, and praised and magnified Him with his lips; at that
time he suffered no lack of any thing, having all that his heart
desired, and he was appointed lord of all other creatures.
Therefore, the eternal Creator bade the holy angels bring every
other living being to Adam, that all might acknowledge him as their
lord, and that Adam might give to each one its own name, and
distinguish one from the other.
Now when God beheld the animals walking about in Paradise, each
with its own mate (except Adam, for whom no mate was found); when
God saw them approaching him, and yet eager to flee from him,
because of the reverence and awe with which he inspired them --- God
said: "It is not good for man to be alone"; therefore He caused a
deep sleep to fall upon Adam, and taking one of his ribs, not far
from his heart, He formed it into a beautiful woman. This woman God
brought unto the man, calling her Eve, and gave her to him for a
wife, that he might protect her, that she might obey him, and that
they might be fruitful and multiply.
The Glory and Excellence of Adam.
God had appointed that Adam and Eve should spend a thousand years
in Paradise, and then be translated, body and soul, to the Eternal
Life of Heaven; the same glorious destiny was in reserve for their
posterity. For as yet man was pure, good, and sinless, and not
subject or liable to any kind of distemper or sickness. He was
acceptable and perfect in the sight of His Creator, who had made him
in His own image, and given him all the produce of Paradise to eat,
except the fruit of the Tree of Knowledge, from which he was to
abstain on pain of eternal punishment, both bodily and spiritual.
But when he gave ear to the seducing words of the Evil One, and ate
the forbidden fruit, he straightway became poor and wretched,
perceived his own nakedness, and concealed himself amongst the trees
of the garden. He had deserved eternal death, and it would have
fallen upon him, if the Son of God, our Lord and Saviour Jesus
Christ, had not promised to give satisfaction for him. Yet in this
world God punished Adam with a heavy yoke of wretchedness,
tribulation, poverty, and disease, followed by the bitter agony of
death. He also drove him forth from Paradise, and laid a heavy curse
upon the ground, that thenceforward it should not bring forth fruit
of its own accord, but that it should bear thorns and thistles. Now,
when Adam found himself in the midst of a wild and uncultivated
earth, compelled to gain his bread by tilling the field in the sweat
of his brow, and to endure much suffering, care, and anxiety, he
began to think seriously of what he had done to provoke the wrath of
God, to experience deep sorrow for his grievous sin, and to implore
God's gracious mercy and forgiveness. His prayers appeased the
paternal heart of God, and induced Him to ease the grievous yoke
laid upon Adam. The central fact of his punishment, however,
remained, and death, though deferred, at length overtook him. But,
as I say, God mitigated the punishment of Adam, and took away from
his neck the grievous yoke of suffering, by shewing him the means of
warding off the strokes of impending calamity. For this purpose the
natural properties of things were revealed to Adam by the
inspiration of the Holy Spirit; and he was taught to prepare
medicines out of herbs, stones, and metals, wherewith he might
alleviate his hard lot, ward off disease, and keep his body in good
health until the end of his days, which, however, was known to God
alone. For, although from the very beginning Adam had a clear
insight into the working of the natural world, the greatest of all
secrets was still hidden from him, till God one day called him into
Paradise, and set forth to him this marvellous mystery --- the
mystery of our Stone --- in the following words:
"Behold, Adam, here are two things, the one fixed and immutable,
the other volatile and inconstant. The great virtue and potency that
slumber in them you must not reveal to all your sons. For I created
them for a special purpose, which I will now no longer conceal from
you". Now, when Adam had learned the mystery out of God's own mouth,
he kept it a strict secret from all his sons, until at length,
towards the close of his life, he obtained leave from God to make
the preparation of the Stone known to his son Seth. Unless Adam had
possessed the knowledge of this great mystery he would not have been
able to prolong his life to the age of 300 (let alone 900) years.
For he was never for a moment free from an agonizing sense of his
guilt, and of the terrible evils which he had, by his disobedience,
brought upon himself and his posterity, who, through his fault, were
one and all involved in the condemnation of eternal death. If we
consider this, it must appear amazing that Adam could keep alive
even so long as a single year after his fall; and we thereby clearly
perceive (from the fact that he attained to so great a length of
days) that the goodness of God must have furnished him with some
life-preserving remedy. If Adam had not possessed our Medicine, or
Tincture, he could not have borne up under so much tribulation,
anxiety, wretched ness, grief, sorrow, and disease. But against all
these ills he used our Medicine, which preserved his limbs and his
strength from decay, braced his faculties, comforted his heart,
refreshed his spirit, relieved his anxiety, fortified his mortal
body against all manner of disease, and, in short, guarded him from
all evil until the last hour of his life.
At length, however, Adam found that the Remedy had no longer any
power to strengthen him, or to prolong his life. So he began to
consider his end, refrained from applying the Medicine any more,
threw himself upon the mercy of God, and sent his son Seth (to whom
he had confided the secret), to she gate of Paradise, to demand some
of the fruit of the Tree of Life. His request was denied him,
whereupon he returned, and carried back to his father the answer of
the Angel. It was heavy news for Adam, who now felt that his end was
approaching, and therefore sent Seth a second time to fetch the oil
of mercy. Before he could return, Adam died; but, at the bidding of
God, Seth obtained from the Angel some olive stones from the Tree of
the Oil of Mercy, and planted them on his father's grave, where they
grew into the tree from which the Cross of our Blessed Redeemer was
made. Thus, though in a carnal sense the Oil was denied to Adam, and
brought him no surcease from temporal death; yet, in a spiritual
sense, it was freely given to him and obtained for him and all his
offspring eternal life, and free, gracious, and merciful forgiveness
of all their sins, concerning which God promised that He would
remember them no more.
Thus, through the Heavenly Tree of Life, God fulfilled the prayer
of our first parent Adam, and granted his request in a way which he
had not looked for; and he now tastes the joy which is at the right
hand of God, and is for ever removed from the hostile power of
hunger, thirst, heat, cold, death, and all the other evils which
flesh is heir to. Let us then diligently strive to realize that the
Mystery of the Redemption is the most precious, the most excellent,
and the most awful of the mysteries revealed by God to man, a
mystery which no human thought can sound, and which no human lips
can ever fully utter. But of this Awful Mystery, or Medicine of the
Soul, God has also bestowed upon us an earthly antitype, or Medicine
of the Body, by means of which wretched man may, even in this world,
secure himself against all bodily distempers, put to flight anxiety
and care, and refresh and comfort his heart in the hour of trouble
--- namely, the Mystery of the Sages, or the Medicine of the
Philosophers. If, therefore, a man would be perfectly happy in this
world, and in the world to come, he should earnestly and devoutly
strive to become possessed of these two Remedies; and for this
purpose, he should turn to God with his whole heart, and ask for His
gracious help, without which neither can be obtained; and, above
all, he should be most eager to receive that Remedy by which the
soul is healed of the mortal disease of sin.
This is the true fountain of the Sages; and there is nothing like
it upon earth, but one eternal thing, by which the mortal body may,
in this vale of tears, be fortified against all accidental disease,
shielded from the pangs of poverty, and rendered sound, healthy, and
strong, being protected against all mischances to the very end; and
by which also metallic bodies may. be changed into gold through a
quickening of the process which Nature uses in the heart of the
earth. The preparation and effects of this Stone are not unjustly
considered to bear a close analogy to the creation of the world;
therefore, I thought well to give an account of it from the very
beginning.
I will now proceed briefly to expound my view of this Art, which,
as all Sages testify, corresponds most closely to the creation and
generation of man. I will attempt to make my meaning as plain as I
dare, for the glory of the Holy Trinity, and the good of all
Christian believers. When God had created the world, and adorned it
with all manner of green things, herbs, roots, leaves, flowers,
grass, and also with animals and minerals, he blessed them, and
appointed that everything should bring forth fruit and seed after
its kind. Only Adam (who is our Matter) was not yet in a position to
produce any fruit out of himself. Before he could propagate his
species, it was necessary that a part of him should be taken away,
and again joined to him, i.e., his wife Eve. Hereunto we must
understand that so long as our substance is still gross and
undivided, it can produce no fruit It must first be divided, the
subtle from the gross, or the water from the earth. The water is
Eve, or the spirit; the earth Adam, or the body. And as the male is
useless for purposes of generation until it be united to the female,
so our earth is dead till it is quickened by the union with water.
This is what that ancient Sage, Hermes, means when he says that the
dead must be raised to life, and the feeble made strong.
It is necessary, then, to unite body and soul, and to change that
which is below into that which is above, i.e., body into spirit, and
spirit into body. By this expression you are to understand not that
the spirit by itself is changed into a body, or that the body by
itself is changed into a spirit, but that both are united, and that
the spirit, or water, dissolves, or resuscitates the body, or earth,
while the body attracts the spirit, or water; and that they are thus
joined into one substance, the earth being softened by the water,
and the water hardened by the earth --- as the boys in the street
pour water on dry dust, and knead the whole into one mass. For this
reason the Sages call our process child's play, in which the death
of one is the life of the other, i.e., in which the hardness of the
one is softened by the other, and vice versa, seeing that the two
are nothing but body and spirit originally belonging together. When
contemplating this union, the Sage, Hermes, bursts forth into the
following exclamation: "Oh, how strong, victorious, and precious is
this nature that so unspeakably comforts its supplementary nature!".
This nature is water, which stirs up and quickens the nature of the
body. Hence it is said that Adam, or the body, would be dead without
Eve, the spirit; for when the water has been distilled from our
substance. the body lies dead and barren at the bottom of the
alembic, and is described by the Sages as being, after the loss of
its spirit, black, poisonous, and deadly. If the body is to be
resuscitated, it must be rendered fit for generation by being purged
of its blackness and fetid smell, and then its sweat or spirit must
be restored to it; the spirit cannot conceive unless the body be
allowed to embrace its Eve, or spirit. Senior says that the higher
vapour must be brought back to the lower vapour; the Divine water is
the King that descends from heaven, and leads the soul back to its
body which is thereby quickened from the dead. Observe that in the
body there is hidden fixed salt, which slumbers there just as the
male seed slumbered in Adam. This the spirit, or Eve, attracts, and
thus becomes pregnant; that is to say: The seed of the body, which
we call fixed salt, is extracted from the body by its own water
(which has before been separated from it), and is rendered so subtle
and volatile that it ascends with the spirit to heaven. Then we say
that the fixed has become volatile, that the dead has been revived,
and that the body has received life from its spirit. On this account
the water is called by some Sages the living water of the man, since
it is extracted from the body, or man; and Lucas enjoins us to take
it, and heat it after the fashion of Nature. Other Sages call the
body the "black soil," because in it the fixed salt is concealed
from view, like the seed in the ground. Others, again, call it the
"black raven," which has in its maw the "white dove"; and the water
which is distilled from the body they call the "virgin's milk," ---
by which the white dove must be brought forth from the black raven.
In short, these things are described by the Sages under a great
variety of names; but the meaning of those names is the same. In
this fashion the water is embraced by the body and the seed of the
body, or the fixed salt, makes the water pregnant. For the water
dissolves the body, and bears upward with it some particles of the
fixed salt; and the oftener this process is repeated, the thicker
does the water become. Hence the repetition of the process is a most
important point Hermes says that when he saw the water gradually
grow thicker and harder, he rejoiced, for thereby he knew that he
should find what he sought. The water, then, must be poured upon the
body, and heated with it, till the body is dissolved, and then again
extracted till the body is coagulated. Thus the body must be well
broken up, and purified by washing. This process of affusion and
extraction must be repeated until all the salt, or potency and
efficacy, has been extracted from the body. This is the case when
the water becomes white and thick, and, in the cold, hard and solid
like ice, while in the heat it melts like butter. Now, when nothing
more can be extracted from the body, the residuum must be removed;
for it is the superfluous part of the substance. This is what the
Sages mean when they say: In the preparation we remove that which is
superfluous; but otherwise our whole Magistery is accomplished with
one single substance, nothing being added, and nothing taken away,
except that which is really superfluous; for it possesses in
abundance all that is needed, namely, the water, or "white, flaky
earth," which must be injected into "living mercury;" that so the
transmutation into good and fixed silver may take place. But
something much more noble and precious is concealed in this water
(fixed salt), which grows and grows like the infant in the mother's
womb. For as the embryo in the matrix, which is first a mere seed,
grows, and is gradually transmuted into flesh and blood, ie., into a
thicker substance, till at length the limbs are formed; so this
water grows from the white colour which distinguishes it at first,
till it is changed to another colour. (For the embryo, too, is
transmuted from the natural colour of the embryo into flesh and
blood.) The substance at length assuming a red colour, may be
compared to the forming of the infant's limbs; it is then that we
first see what is to become of it. When you perceive this final
transmutation --- the germ of which lay in the substance all along
-- you may well rejoice; for you have attained the object of your
desire.
Thus I have described the union of the man and woman, that is to
say, of the body and spirit, by means of which the child is
conceived in the water, and the whiteness extracted from the black
body. Nor do we need anything else, except, as Morienus says, time
and patience. This coagulated water is the "white, flaky earth," in
which the Sage bids us sow our gold and silver that they may bear
fruit a hundred-thousand-fold. This is the "clear spring" of the
Count of Trevisa, in which the King bathes, though not assisted by
any of his ministers, who only watch his clothes until he has dried
up the whole spring, when he makes all his ministers lords and kings
such as he was at the time of his entering the bath. But now the
King's dignity is three times as great as it was before; he wears a
three-fold diadem on his head, and is arrayed in garments that shine
like carbuncles and amethysts, and beneath them he wears the tunic
of purity, and is bound with the girdle of righteousness. He is the
most glorious King of life, whose power transcends all human thought
At his side is seated his pure and chaste queen, sprung of his own
seed; and of these two are born many royal children. The redness is
concealed and preserved in the whiteness, which must not be
extracted, but subjected to gentle coction until its full crimson
glory flames forth This whiteness is thus referred to in "The
Crowd": "If you see that after the blackness there follows a
whiteness, be sure that after the whiteness will come a redness: for
the redness slumbers in the whiteness, and should not be extracted,
but gently heated, until the whole turns red." Let what I have now
said suffice you.
Hermes:
You must have a good knowledge of the True Principle of both
Natural and Artificial Substances. For he who knows not the true
First Principle will never attain to the end.
The Love Of God And
Of Your Neighbour
Is The Perfection Of All Wisdom.
To Love God Is The Highest Wisdom,
And
Time Is Our Possession.
Unto Him Be All Honour, Praise, And Glory