"Rosarium Philosophorum" czyli "Różaniec Filozofów". Część II
Make a round glass vessel and let the
bottom
be of a small quantity in the manner of a little dish, and in the
middle
thereof, let there be a brim with an earthen girdle or ring
encompassing
it about, and let a round wall be built upon that girdle equally
distant
from the wall of the shell, of the thickness of the cover of that
shell,
so that in this distance the wall of the cover may fall largely without
any thrusting down, but let the height of this wall be according to the
height of the wall of the shell, or somewhat more or less. Let there be
two covers made according to the measure of this hollowness and let the
length be equal and the breadth of two great hands, and the shape of
one
of them like a pyramid. And in the heads of them let there be two equal
holes, that the one may be in the one and the other in the other into
both
which a hen's feather may fall, but the whole intention of the vessel
is
that the cover thereof may be removed according to the will of the
workman.
The special intention concerning this is that the lower hollow place
with
its brims, enter into its cover even to the middle.
Hermes: The Dragon dieth not unless he be killed with his
Brother
and Sister, not by one only, but by both together, that is by Sol and
Luna.
The Philosopher: Mercury never dieth unless he be killed by
his
Brother and Sister, that is, we must congeal it with Sol and Luna.
Note that, the Dragon is Argent vive, extracted out of bodies,
having
a body in himself, a soul and a spirit. Whereupon he saith, "The Dragon
dieth not but with his Brother and Sister", that is with Sol and Luna,
which is extracted Sulphur, having in itself the nature of moisture and
coldness by reason of Luna. The Dragon dies with them - that is, Argent
vive extracted from those bodies in the beginning, which is the
Permanent
Water of the Philosophers, which is made after the putrefaction and
separation
of the elements, and the water otherwise is called Stinking Water.
Bonellus: The Copper which before I spoke of is neither
copper
nor common tin, but it is our true work, because it must be mingled
with
the body of Magnesia that it may be decocted and grinded with aqua
vitae,
until it be destroyed. But you Sons of Learning, you must have much
water,
and that continually, until you have put it by parts and that the
greatest
part of the earth be dissolved.
Avicenna: That which is spiritual, ascendeth upwards in the
vessel,
but that which is thick and gross, remaineth downwards in the vessel,
and
unless you deal with the body in this sort, until the water will not be
mingled with it, or be received of the earth, you shall but lose your
labour.
Therefore, unless you turn all into spiritual powder, you have not yet
contrived it, i.e. grinded it, and that which you do in the white body
do likewise in the red, because this medicine is.
Of the Salt of the Philosophers: There are three Stones
and three
Salts, of which the whole magistery consists, that is to say Mineral,
Plant
and Animal, and there are three waters, that is of Sol, of Luna, and of
Mercury. Mercury is an Mineral, Luna a plant, because it receiveth in
itself
two Colours, Whiteness and Redness, and Sol is an Animal because it
receiveth
three things, that is, Constriction, Whiteness, and Redness. And Sol is
called the Great Animal, and Salt Armoniac is made of it; and Luna is
called
a Plant and Salt Alkali is made of it, but Mercury is called the
mineral
Stone and common Salt is made of it. Likewise when the Philosophers saw
the substance of this Art dissolved, they called it Salt Armoniac, and
when it was putrefied they said our Stone was base, and is found on a
dunghill,
and many have dug and laboured in the dunghill and have found nothing.
And when it is converted into water, then both poor and rich have it,
and
it is found in every place, at any time, and in every thing, although
the
searching aggravates the searcher. And when it was white, they called
it
Arsenic, and by the name of every white thing, and also Virgin's MiIk,
and when it was red they called it Sulphur, Jacinth and Blood, and by
the
name of every red thing.
Gratianus: Ashes may be made of every thing, and of those
Ashes,
Salt may be made, and of that Salt may water be made, and of that water
is Mercury made, and of that Mercury by divers operations is Sol made.
Arnoldus: Truly this ash wants to melt, which moreover it
enters
favourably in order that it may tinct, melting or liquefaction is added
to it, or else sweat by some means is delivered of the Philosophers.
Therefore,
what means is that? Is it in dissolving the waters? Surely not, because
the Philosophers respect not the waters and other moistures sticking to
that which is touched.
The Philosopher: Whosoever will alter and change bodies and
spirits
from their nature, must first reduce them to the natures of Salts and
Alums,
otherwise it will not be done and then it dissolveth them.
The Philosopher: Salts and Alums are those which are made
in
our work.
Arnold: He that hath fusible salt and incombustible oil,
let
him praise God.
Avicenna: If thou wilt be rich, prepare Salts until they be
pure
water, because Salts are converted into Spirit by fire. Salts are the
root
of our work.
Hermes: All Salts of what kind so ever, are contrary to our
Art,
except the Salt of our Lunaria.
The Philosopher: The Salt of metal dissolves Mercury in
pure
water, under dung and that mixture being coagulated will be a perfect
medicine.
Note that, all Salts well prepared return to the nature of Salt
Armoniac,
and the whole secret is in common salt well prepared. Note that the
Roman
Vitriol hath the nature of the Stone of Metals, and it is hot and dry.
Likewise, Alum seems to be coagulated Mercury, but it goeth from his
accomplishment,
hot and moist and it is called the like of one that is Mercury.
Therefore,
he that knoweth Salt and the Solution thereof, knoweth likewise the
hidden
secret of the Ancient wise men. Therefore, set thy mind on Salt and
cogitate
on nothing else, for in that only the science and greatest secret of
all
the Ancient Philosophers is hidden.
Conjunction or Coupling
"O Luna, by means of my embracing and sweet kisses,
Thou art made beautiful, strong and mighty like as I am.
O Sol, thou art to be preferred before all light, But yet thou needest me, as the cock does the hen".
Arisleus in a Vision: Join therefore thy son Gabrick, best
beloved
of thee among all thy sons, with his sister Beya, who is a fair, sweet
and tender damsel. Gabrick is the man and Beya the woman, who gives him
all that is hers.
0 blessed Nature, and blessed is thy operation, because out of an imperfect thing thou makest a perfect thing. Therefore, thou must not take that nature unless pure, clean, raw, pleasant, earthy and right and if thou do otherwise it will not bring forth anything, so that no contrary thing enter in with our Stone and put nothing but that only. Join therefore our ferment with his sweet sister and they will beget a son between them, who shall not be like his parents. And although Gabrick is made more dear to Beya, yet there is no generation made without Gabrick, for the coupling of Gabrick with Beya is presently dead. For Beya ascendeth above Gabrick and includes him in her womb because nothing at all can be seen of him. And she embraceth Gabrick with so great a love that she hath conceived him wholly in his nature and divided him into inseperable parts.
Masculinus:
Conception changeth the blood, which before was as it were milk. The pale things wax black, the red diffused things shine. The white woman, if she be married to the red man, presently they embrace, and embracing are coupled. By themselves they are dissolved and by themselves they are brought
together, that they which were two, may be made as it were one body.
Mary the sister of Moses: Join Gum with Gum in true
matrimony
and make them like running water.
Astanus: Spirits are not joined unto bodies until they be
perfectly
purified, and great miracles appear in the hour of conjunction, for
then
the imperfect body is coloured with a firm colour with the help of the
ferment. This ferment is the soul of the imperfect body, and the spirit
by the help of the soul, is conjoined and knit to the body and is
turned
together with it into the colour of ferment, and is made one with them.
Basius: In a perfect magistery, stones do not receive
themselves
by course, unless either of them be first purified. For the body does
not
receive the spirit, nor the spirit the body, so that spiritual may be
made
corporeal, or corporeal spiritual, unless they be first perfectly
purged
from all filthiness.
0 Sol, thou hast need of me, as the hen hath need of the cock, and I have need of thy work.
Alexander in the Secrets of Nature: Know that no son is
born
but of man and woman.
Hermes in his Second Treatise: Know this, my Son, that
unless
a man know how to marry and to make pregnant and to engender forms,
there
can be nothing done. But if he shall do this, he shall be of great
dignity.
Rosinus: The secret of the art of gold consists of the man
and
woman, because the woman receiving the strength of the man rejoiceth
because
the woman is strengthened by the man.
Alphidius: Son, by the faith of the glorious God,
complexion
is of Complexion, between two lights, male and female, and then they
embrace
themselves and couple together, and a perfect light is begotten between
them, which there is no light like through the whole world.
Senior: Of two waters make one water, if you understand
these
two words, all the Regimen will be under your feet.
Rosarius: It behoveth thee to have two waters, the one is
white
but the other is red. This is that water in which the powers of the
whiteness
and redness are gathered together.
Hali: Take a whelp dog, and a whelp bitch of Armenia, join
them
both together, and both these will bring forth to thee a dog whelp of
an
heavenly colour, and that son will preserve thee in thy house from the
beginning in this world, and in another world.
Senior: The red ferment hath married a white wife, and in
their
conjunction the wife being great with child, hath brought forth a son
which
in all things hath preserved his Parents, and is more bright and
glorious.
Rosinus: This Stone is a Key, for without it nothing is
done.
Our Stone is a most strong spirit to which bodies are not mingled,
until
it be dissolved, and if I should call it by its true name, the ignorant
would not believe it were so.
Arnoldus: Thou that desireth to search out the secret of
this
Art, must of necessity know the first matter of metals, for otherwise
thou
shalt but spend thy labour in vain.
Rosinus: We use true nature because nature does not amend
nature,
unless it be into his own nature. There are three principal Stones of
Philosophers.
That is mineral, animal, and vegetable. A mineral Stone, a vegetable
Stone,
and an animal Stone, three in name but one in essence.
The Spirit is double, that is tincturing and preparing.
Albertus: The spirit preparing, dissolveth copper and
extracteth
it out of the body of Magnesia, and reduceth it again to its body.
Senior: It is the preparer and extractor of the Soul from
its
body, and bringeth it again to its body. The tincting spirit is called
the Fifth Essence, which is strength and a soul standing and
penetrating.
Liber Trium Verborum: It behoveth thee to extract the fifth
essence,
otherwise thou labourest in vain, and this without doubt cannot be done
without water.
But the second Spirit is without the body and it is of a watery
nature
and it is a tincturing body in Elixir.
Turba: But this man is the body and this woman is the
spirit.
Arnoldus: The spirit is not altered of the body so that it
may
lose its spiritual virtue, but every body is altered and tinctured of
the
spirits.
Aristotle: Note therefore the words and mark the mysteries,
because
the spirit which dissolves the white foliated earth, doth not hold any
of them fixed, unless you possess it with that body of which it was
prepared
in the beginning. Permanent or Perpetual Water, or the spirit of Wine,
is called the water of the body, that is when the body is reduced into
Mercury. Likewise without permanent water nothing is done. It is also
called
Water of Life.
The Philosopher: I protest by the God of Heaven, that the
Art
is nothing else than to dissolve a Stone, and always to coagulate it,
and
again with the spirit of wine only, you may make perfect Elixir.
~ Sol and Luna ~ |
The Water of the Philosophers is called the Vessel of Hermes of
which
the Philosophers have written, "All means are made in our water - that
is; Sublimation, Distillation, Solution, Calcination, Fixation, are
done
in this foresaid water, as it were in an artificial vessel, which is
the
greatest Secret". And water is the weight of wisemen, therefore, water
and fire suffice thee for the whole work. Our water is stronger than
fire
because it makes a mere spirit of a body of gold, which fire cannot do,
and fire is in respect to it as it were water in respect to our common
fire. Therefore, the Philosopher says, ' Burn our copper in a most
strong
fire.'
Aristotle in the Regimen of Princes says unto Alexander concerning
the
four elements: When you have water, that is Mercury of the Air, that is
of the Stone and Air of Fire, that is Spirit of Mercury and fire that
is
Mercury of the Earth, that is of Luna, then you shall have the Art
fully.
The Philosopher: Our Stone passeth into the earth, the
earth
into the water, the water into the air, the air into the fire, and
there
is its standing. The white work is compiled of three elements, in which
fire is not, that is three weights of earth, two of water and one of
air.
But for Elixir of Sol - put two parts of earth, three of water, and one
and a half of air and of fire, and that is red ferment.
Rasis in his Great Book of Precepts: Whosoever is ignorant
in
the weight let him not labour in our books, because the Philosophers
have
concealed nothing but these things.
The Turba: Our contrition or grinding is not done with the
hands,
but with most strong decoction.
Calidus: A lesser fire grindeth all things.
Note, there is a difference between the element and that which is
Elementated,
and the Fifth Essence. The Element is the first thing of compoundable
matters,
from whence neither earth, nor water, nor air, nor fire is a pure
element
and simple with us, because they are mingled between themselves by
course
and especially - in that part where they conjoin. But the Fifth Essence
is a body standing by itself and differing from all Elements and from
things
Elementated, as well in matter as in form, and as well in nature as in
virtue, not having the cause of corruption in itself. And it is called
the Fifth Essence, therefore, because it is extracted out of all
Elementated
things, wherefore there is no elemental motion in it as in other
Elemental
Bodies. The Stone therefore is called everything because it hath in
itself
and of itself every necessary thing of its own perfection. It is found
in every place by reason of the participation of the Elements. It is
called
by all names because of the worthy and miraculous variety of colours of
its nature. Most base and cheap by putrefaction, and most dear by
virtue.
This is the hidden and Secret Magistery of the Philosophers. Our Stone
is called one thing when the substances of the body and water are
prepared
inseparably, so that one of them cannot be separated from another. Our
Stone is said to be of a combustible matter and Mercury is only a
Spirit
incombustible and coppery, and therefore it is meet that it be in the
magistery.
Likewise, the Stone which the Philosophers seek, in which the first
elements
of minerals are, tincture and calx, soul and spirit with the body fixed
and volatile. And it is not every Mercury, but it is that above which
nature
hath determined her first operations into a metallic nature, and hath
left
it imperfect. But if you extract this Stone from that thing in which it
is found, and shall begin to work about it to perfection, by beginning
in that place where nature hath left it imperfect, you shall find
perfection
in it and shall rejoice.
Argent vive of itself is of no force, but when it is mortified
with
its hidden body, then it is of force and liveth with an incorruptible
life.
This body is of the nature of Sol, therefore of necessity it must
convert
all Argent vive into the nature of Sol, as leaven converts the whole
lump
of dough into the nature of leaven, but not on the contrary, because
always
that which is ruled is transported to that which is ruling.
Our Stone is named of all the Philosophers --- Mercury, which is
not
born as many think but extracted out of a body. The Stone of
Philosophers
is of three things, that is of Sol, Luna and Mercury, that is make
Mercury
of Sol and Luna in his essence without common Mercury, but by the
philosophical
way.
This Stone is but one stone in the whole world, and he that in the
beginning
of his work shall err from this one, doth altogether lose his labour.
In
the whole world there is not any other thing necessary in our work but
only this Stone.
Arnoldus says Sol and Luna are in our Stone in virtue and power
and
in all nature, if this were not so neither Sol nor Luna would be made
thereof,
because the Sol and Luna in our Stone are better than the common in the
nature of them, and because Sol and Luna are alone in Our Stone, and
the
vulgar are dead in respect of Sol and Luna. Therefore the Philosophers
have named that Stone, Sol and Luna by course, because they are in it
potentially
and not visibly, but in virtue and essence. Wherefore Hermes says, "Our
Stone crieth saying, 'Son, help me and I will help thee.'"
Conception or Putrefaction
Aristotle the King and Philosopher: I never saw any thing
that
had life to grow and increase without putrefaction, and vain would be
the
work of Alchemy be, unless it were putrefied.
Morienus: This earth is purified and cleansed with his
water,
which when it shall be cleansed, by the help of God the whole work
shall
be effected.
Parmenides the Philosopher: Unless the body be spoiled and
putrefied
and be converted into a substantial substance, then cannot that hidden
virtue be extracted nor mingled with the body.
Bacchus the Philosopher: When natures are corrupted and
putrefied
then they engender.
Plato the Philosopher: We have an example in an egg, which
first
putrefies and then a chicken is engendered, which after it is wholly
corrupted,
it becomes a living creature.
Note, that without corruption there can no generation be made.
Study
therefore in putrefaction, for the corruption of the one is the
generation
of the other.
Hermes: The second degree is to putrefy and grind,
therefore
the disposition thereof is first to make it black and to putrefy it.
Plato: The first regimen of Saturn is to putrefy and to put
it
to Sol, but the composition is of four nights.
Democritus: Be neither too quick or too slow in putrefying
the
gravel and the bodies plated and joined together, attend in your work
and
you shall profit in it.
Rosinus to Euthiaca: Take a living creature of the Sea, dry
it
and putrefy it.
Morienus: No enervating nor engendering is done but after
putrefaction,
but if putrefaction be not, it cannot be dissolved, and if it be not
dissolved
it will be brought to nothing.
Morienus: Our Stone is a confection of the magistery itself
and
is likened in order to the creation of man, for the first thing is
Coupling,
the second Conception, the third Pregnation, the fourth Rising, and the
fifth Nourishment.
Dear brother, understand these words of Morienus and thou shalt
not
err in the truth. Therefore open thy eyes and behold the sperm of the
Philosophers
is quick water, but the earth is the imperfect body. This earth is
worthily
called mother because it is the mother of all the elements, therefore
when
the sperm is conjoined with the earth of the imperfect body, then it is
called Coupling. For then the earth of the body is dissolved into the
water
of sperm, and it is made one water without division.
Hali: Solution and Coagulation of the body are two things
but
they have one operation, because the spirit is not coagulated, but with
the solution of the body; neither is the body dissolved, but with the
coagulation
of the spirit; and the body and soul, when they are conjoined, each of
them goes unto his like. An example - when water is joined to earth,
the
water with his moisture and virtue endeavoureth to dissolve the earth,
for it makes it more subtle than it was before, and likewise makes it
like
unto itself, because water is more subtle than earth. So the soul doeth
the like in the body, and in the same way the water is thickened with
the
earth, and becometh like thickened earth, because the earth is thicker
than the water, therefore there is no difference between the solution
of
the body and the coagulation of the spirit nor any contrary work in
either
if them; so that the one may be done without the other, as there is no
contrary part of time between the water and the earth in their
conjunction,
that the one may be known or separated from the other in their
conjunctions
and operations. As the sperm of the man is not separated from the sperm
of the woman in the hour of their coupling, and so there is one form of
them, one deed, one and the self same operation at once of them both.
Merculinus:
He calleth the mixture of things
Coupling and engendering.
The seeds are mingled
As it were milk which seems to be mixed.
The seeds are mingled
As it were milk which seems to be mixed.
The second is Conception, when the earth is dissolved into black
powder
and begins a little to retain Mercury with him, for there the male
works
in the female, that is Azoth in Earth.
Aristeus: Males engender not by course, neither do females
conceive,
for the generation is of males and females and especially of the
compound.
For nature rejoices and true generation is made by the males
marrying
the females, but nature being joined to a foreign foolish nature, does
engender no truth of sperm.
Merculinus:
Conception, changes the blood
Which was as it were milk
The pale things wax black
And the red diffuse things shine.
Which was as it were milk
The pale things wax black
And the red diffuse things shine.
Arnoldus: Every colour will appear after blackness, and
where
thou see thy matter to wax black, then rejoice because it is the
beginning
of the work.
Arnoldus: Burn our Copper in a soft fire like the hatching
of
eggs, until the body be made and the tincture extracted, but you must
not
extract it out altogether, but let it come forth all the day by little
and little, until in a long time it be filled.
I am black of white, and red of white, and yellow of red, and
certainly
I speak the truth, and lie not. And know this, that a Crow is head of
this
Art, which in the darkness of the night, and in the brightness of the
day
flies without wings. For the colouration is taken of a bitterness which
is in her throat, and redness is taken of her body, and pure water is
taken
of her back. Understand therefore, the gift of God and receive it and
conceal
it from the simple and ignorant, for it hath been concealed.
Concerning the dens and caverns of the metals, the Stone whereof
is
miraculous and animal, a bright colour on high mountain and and open
sea.
And we must confess that in the philosophical Stone after true
mundification
the greatest part is Argent vive and for this cause it is not burnt but
by accident. But all this is done by nature, and it is not to be
believed
that this is possible to be done by workmanship, as diverse ignorant
persons
have taught. And do think for the philosophical stone is found created
by Nature, and through the highest God it wants nothing more, than that
may be removed which is superfluous in it. Therefore let that matter be
prepared and let that which is pure be chosen out of it, and let that
which
is earthly be removed from it.
Tudianus: Know that our coppery and volatile stone is in
his
manifest cold and moist, and in his secret warm and dry. And that
coldness
and moistness which is in manifest, is a watery fume corrupting and
making
black, destroying itself and all things, and flying from the fire. And
the heat and dryness, which is in secret, is warm and dry gold, and it
is a most pure oil penetrative in bodies and not fugitive, because the
heat and dryness of Alchemy tingeth and nothing else. Cause therefore
the
coldness and watery moisture, which is in manifest, to be like unto the
heat and dryness, which is in secret, that they may agree together and
be conjoined, and be made all in one penetrating and tincting, but it
is
meet those moistures be destroyed by the fire, and by the degrees of
the
fire, with gentle temperament and moderate digestion.
The philosophical putrefaction is nothing else but a corruption
and
destruction of bodies. For one form being destroyed, nature presently
brings
into it another form, more better and subtle. Putrefaction is the same
thing that fraction of filthiness is. For by putrefaction every thing
is
digested, and fraction is made between that which is filthy, that which
stinks, and that which is pure and clean. For a pure and clean body
being
putrefied doth immediately grow and increase, as is manifest in a grain
of corn, which after it has stood many days under the heat of the
earth,
then it beginneth to swell, and that which is pure grows out of it and
multiplies, but that which is filthy and naught, vanishes away.
Therefore
putrefaction is also necessary in our work, by reason of the aforesaid
causes.
Conception and desponsation are done in rottenness in the bottom
of
the vessel, and the generation of things begotten shall be done in the
air, that is in the head of the vessel, that is of an alembic. The body
does nothing but putrefy, and cannot be putrefied but by Mercury.
Putrefaction
may be made with a most soft fire of dung, warm and moist, and with no
other, so that nothing may ascend. Because if anything should ascend, a
separation of parts would be made, which should not be done until the
man
and woman be perfectly joined, and one receives another. The sign is in
the sight of the perfect solution, and although Azoth appears white in
the first mixtion and conjunction, by reason the woman overcometh with
her colour, nevertheless in putrefaction, by the benefit of the fire,
they
are both made black by the fire increasing in moist, it putrefies the
colour
black, which is tincture, and therefore to be kept a great secret.
The nature of Gold being putrefied in strong water excels all
natures
therefore in the making of the Stone, it is to be noted that no stone
excelleth
the mineral stone in virtue.
The Philosopher: Make a round circle of the Man and Woman,
and
draw out of it a quadrangle, and out of the quadrangle a triangle, make
a round circle, and thou shalt have the Stone of the Philosophers.
Geber proves in his Book of Trials that if Sol and Luna are
incorporated
together by Art, they will not easily be separated, and so the one
converteth
the other, because the one is dry and the other is moist, and after the
one hath taken the other, they embrace themselves with such strong
knitting
and hold themselves so fast, that the one can hardly be plucked from
the
other. This would be much more stronger if one of them were spiritual,
that is medicinal, and so tangible by reason of his spiritualness. Gold
is Gold in act and in matter, but if it were spiritualised, then is
made
of act --- power, and of matter --- form and of a thing done --- a
thing
doing, of a woman --- a man, and of a thing born --- a thing bearing.
Therefore,
since there is no matter of Gold, no Gold which was not first Silver as
the Philosopher says, if therefore such a form be joined to this
matter,
that is to Luna, surely they will most desirously embrace themselves
and
make that which is the less perfect more perfect, and this is done
naturally
and amicably, because every nature desires to be perfect and naturally
abhors to be destroyed.
Avicenna: The intention of labourers in this Art, yea
rather
the intention of the Art itself, according to the possibility of the
nature
of things, is that the matter of one thing may put on the form and
nature
of another thing.
Verbi Gratia: Copper is to put on the nature and form of
Silver,
or Lead is to put on the nature and form of Gold, and so likewise of
all
other metals. For since form is the nature of everything, then any
thing
being despoiled of his form, and another form brought to it, I doubt
whether
the nature of it be changed from its form. We say therefore, that the
name
of Alchemy in Greek signifies Transmutation and thereupon we say that
Alchemy
is the knowledge and science of transmuting things from their forms and
shapes according to how the forms of things are divided.
The Extraction or Impregnation of the Soul
And the Soul is most subtly severed from the Body".
Of Blackness ~
Hermes (in his second treatise): Know my Son, that this our
Stone
of many names and diverse colours is ordained and compounded of four
Elements,
which we must divide and cut into members and more straightly
sequestrate
them and mortify the parts and turn them into that nature which is in
them.
We must keep the water and fire dwelling in them, which is of four
Elements,
and we must contain those waters with his water, even if it were not
water
but a fiery form of true water ascending in the vessel, which contains
the spirits in the bodies and makes them tingeing and permanent.
Sorin: Take of it little and little, divide the whole,
grind
it earnestly, until it be possessed with death of the intensity of
blackness
like dust. This therefore is great design, in searching out of which
many
men have perished, and afterwards thou shalt discern every thing
separately
and grind them diligently.
Hermes: We must mortify two Argent vives at once. Take the
brain
thereof, and grind it in most sharp vinegar or in children's urine
until
it be obscured. This being done it liveth in putrefaction, and the
thick
clouds which were upon it and in his body before he was mortified, are
returned, and this being begun again as I have written it, may again be
mortified as before. But we must sequestrate it from two sulphurs and
decoct
it continuously, till the water be made black. He therefore that maketh
earth black shall come to his purpose and it shall go well with him.
Arnoldus: When the first is black we say it is the Key of
the
Work, because it is not done without blackness.
Speculum: Therefore my dear Son, when thou art in thy work
see
that in the beginning thou have black colour, and then assure thyself
that
thou putrefieth and proceedeth in the right way.
0 blessed is nature, and blessed is thy operation, because of imperfection thou makest perfect with true putrefaction, which is black and obscure. Afterwards thou makest diverse new things to spring up, and with thy greenness thou cause divers colours to appear. That blackness is called earth, which is reiterated so often with light decoction, until the blackness remains alone, and so you have two elements. The first water by itself, and then earth of water.
Avicenna in his book of Moistures: The agent heat in a
moist
body doth first engender blackness, as we may see in Calx, which is
made
by the common sort.
Menabdes: I will that posterity makes bodies no bodies by
dissolution,
and to make no bodies bodies by pleasant decoction. Wherein we must
take
great heed that the spirit be not converted into fume and vanish away
by
overmuch fire.
Maria: Keep it and be careful that none of it fly into
fume,
and let the nature of the fire be according to the heat of the Sun in
July,
until the water be thickened and the earth made black, by the long
decoction
thereof. So therefore thou hast another element which is earth, and let
it suffice thee for blackness.
Stephianus: Open thy eyes and thy heart, hearken and
understand
I will show and speak unto thee words that are to be understood, if
thou
be one of them which should understand. Know this, that from man
nothing
cometh forth but man, and so of every animal the like engendered, but
we
see some things engendered of their roots to be unlike one to another,
because we see some things that have wings to be engendered of things
that
have no wings. We see and know also some things that we know not of
what
nature cometh forth, although we know it sufficeth us, but cannot give
any reason for it, because they are dark and profound and perhaps
hidden
underneath the earth. And know that of that mineral nature the Art is
made
and of nothing else.
Avicenna: Know therefore the mineral root, making your work
of
them.
Aristotle in his second Book of the Soul: It is a most
natural
and perfect work to engender like to like, as a plant to engender a
plant,
and a goat to engender a goat.
Aristotle: The work of the Art of Alchemy would not profit
in
itself, unless we know the apparent natures without error.
Hermes:
0, Water remaining in form, the creatress of the Royal Elements. 0, Nature the chief creatress of natures, which contains Nature and meanly overcometh by Nature, which cometh with light, and is begotten with light.
Out of the Lucidary of Arnoldus ~ Some men have said that
all
the colours which may be devised in the world do appear in the work of
the Stone, but that is the deceit of the Philosophers. For there appear
but four principal colours, and because all the other colours draw
their
original out of them, therefore they called them all colours, and
although
all colours do not appear to thee yet care not so long as thou mayest
segregate
the elements. For yellowness signifies burnt choler and fire. Redness
signifies
blood and air. Whiteness, phlegm and water. Blackness melancholy and
earth.
Whereupon Hortulanus says there are four Elements, having four colours
and know that the aforesaid colours appear in our dissolution.
I demand in what time this blessed Stone may be made, to which it
is
answered as a certain author Lelius the Philosopher witnesses, that his
magistery was finished in eight days, and that another did it in seven
days, and another in three months, and some in four months, and some in
half a year, and some in the space of a whole year, and Maria says she
did it in three days. To this I say that the cause of diversity, that
is
of shortness and length of time, might be defect in the virtue of the
water
of Mercury or because it worketh of Sol and Luna. And some of the
Philosophers
added more and some less. But Sol is fixed and not flying, and with
that
only did they work. Whereupon, for his impotency of fixion and
impatiency
of fire when it was mingled with Sol by melting, it caused it to ascend
for a great part. And when it did ascend, so they called it water and a
soul and a spirit, saying that their water was not common water nor
water
of Mercury. And then the earth remained in the bottom, then they
reduced
that water above the body and made it again to ascend by virtue of the
fire, and they mingled it again with earth, until they carried out the
earth with them in their belly. "The wind carried him in his belly."
Therefore
of necessity they must have a great quantity of the aforesaid water.
And
then the spirit was fixed in the body, therefore they began that
subliming
again until all the whole remained fixed and that which was weak
ascended.
Then was the spirit fixed in the body, and Luna was incorporated to Sol
and commixed by the least, and so the operation was finished. Whereupon
the aforesaid diversity in working might be in adding too much of the
fixed
body and too little of the body not fixed, and because there was not
more
of the unfixed body, therefore it ascended the sooner, and when there
was
more of the fixed then it ascended more slowly.
But what say you of this? The Philosophers say plainly, "Our Gold
is
not the common Gold, and our Silver not common Silver". I say that they
call water Gold because it ascendeth to higher things by the virtue of
the fire, and in truth that Gold is not common Gold, for the common
people
would not believe that it could ascend to higher matters by reason of
its
fixedness. Know moreover that such a manner hath been accustomed of the
Philosophers, as to halt and dissemble in a most plain way, and to hide
the matter that is spoken of, by figures and parables and sometimes by
metaphorical words and sometimes by false and strange practise in way
of
similitudes.
Geber: Wheresoever we have spoken plainly, there we have
spoken
nothing, but where we have used riddles and figures, there we have
hidden
the truth.
Metrista: Salts and Alums are not the Stone but helpers of
the
Stone. He that hath not tasted of the Savour of the Salt shall never
come
to the wished ferment of ferments, for it fermenteth finitely by
excellency,
such is the superior as is the inferior.
Burn in water, wash in fire.
Decoct, recoct and decoct again.
Often times make moist and always coagulate.
Kill the quick and revive again and raise from the dead.
And thou shalt have truly which thou seekest,
If thou know the Regimen of the fire,
Mercury and fire are sufficient for thee.
If thou Our Copper well do know
All the other things thou mayest let go.
Out of an Ancient little book --- Hortulanus upon the Epistle
of
Hermes: He only that knows how to make the Philosophers Stone
understandeth
their words concerning the Philosophers Stone. For the Philosophers
have
manifestly endeavoured to make this Art known to the worthy and to
conceal
it from the unworthy. And so they always speak truth of the virtue of
intention
but not of the virtue of speech. And so they say the Philosophers Stone
to be made of an egg, because there are three things in an egg, which
are
like to three things which make perfect the Stone. Hermes says, "Sol is
its father and Luna is its mother", and thus he granteth that two
things
enter into the composition of the Stone, and that Hortulanus proves
because
the water of Sol is volatile and his body fixed, and in the contrary
way
with Luna. And then these words spoken by Geber and other philosophers
are declared "make fixed volatile, and volatile fixed, and fixed
volatile".
For they persuade that there is manifest solution, because the whole
work
consists in Solution. Likewise when he says that it is superior and
inferior,
hereby superior is understood the worthier and inferior the unworthier,
that one may be made of those three or that one thing may be made of
Sol
and Luna whose parts are equal. And this conjunction is called the
Sublimation
of the Philosophers, and Sublimation is called Exaltation, or
Dignification,
because Luna and Mercury are dignified. For when Union is made in so
great
dignity,
then Luna is as Sol and Mercury. Likewise when fixation is made which
is
called the dead body, then Sol is as base as Mercury.
Likewise, the Stone is said to have four Elements, which Arnoldus
expoundeth.
Because when solution is made then water is called one element, and
when
the body is impure, the earth is called the second element, and when
the
earth is calcined, it is called fire, and when the Stone is again
dissolved
it is called air.
Likewise the Stone is said to have body, soul and spirit. By the
body
we understand the impure body as was said before, by the soul is
understood
the ferment, and by the spirit which hath its being in projection which
is called by another name, Fifth Essence, which this compostion having
gotten, it has the true virtue of converting.
Likewise the aforesaid Stone is called Rebis, that is one thing
which
is made of two things, that is of body and spirit, or of Sol and Luna
of
a body purified and fermented.
Likewise it is called a Stone found in every place, because of the
true
composition, when Sol, Luna and Mercury are conjoined together, the
virtue
of the Stone is wholly through the world, in mountains and plains, that
is in bodies and Mercury, and in the Sea, that is in dissolved water,
and
flying things take help and nourishment of it. Things flying are quick
Mercury and imperfect bodies which are converted into Sol and Luna, and
it is called Scorpio, that is poison, because it mortifies itself and
reviveth
itself again, for that threefold thing being cast upon Mercury doth
revive
it, because it maketh a true body and yet it is called mineral Argent
vive
of the Philosophers. But the matter of the Philosophers Stone is water,
and it is understood of the water of these three, as Hortulanus proves,
neither ought there to be more or fewer. And he says that Sol is the
man
and Luna the woman, and Mercury the sperm. But that there may be
generation
and conception, it is meet that the man be joined to the woman, and so
conception and Impregnation ought to be made before fermentation, and
when
the matter is multiplied and fermented, then it is said that an infant
increaseth in the womb of the mother. Hortulanus and Arnoldus say that
the soul is poured into the body and a crowned king is born.
In the book of The Turba of the Philosophers these words are
recited,
"dissolve bodies and imbibe the spirit". They say bodies in the plural
because there must be two, and they say spirit in the singular because
it is meet there should be one. And there is no sperm without the
matter
of bodies unless Mercury. And when it is said, imbibe the spirit then
that
operation is understood which fixes Mercury and the Stone is
multiplied.
Multiplied, that is reiterated.
Likewise,when Mercury mortifies the matter of Sol and Luna, the
matter
remains like ashes, and it is called of the Philosophers searing or
grinding
of them. Of these ashes it is said in the book of the Turba and in the
book of Arnoldus, make no small account of these ashes.
Likewise the aforesaid ashes,which is of these three things, is
called
by the Philosophers an impure body, because it must be decocted and
calcined
unto whiteness. Therefore Morienus says in the book of the Turba,
"unless
you purify the unclean body and make it white and send a soul into it,
you have directed nothing well in this magistery". And in this sort
there
are two had, that is Calcination of the Stone itself and Fermentation.
Calcination, that is in manner of white Ash or earth, or of white calx
by the spirits, which reduction of operation is done and made with our
fire, that is with water of our Mercury.
Likewise, when it is called tincture it tincteth. It is understood
that
if this medicine be calcined, dissolved and coagulated, it is
fermented,
for white is made Luna, with Sol it is made Sol.
Likewise, Geber proves and says, of the medicine of the third
order,
because both white and red are one and the same way with Sol and Luna,
yet they differ in fermentation, of which third order this medicine is
double, that is Solary and Lunary, and yet it is in one essence, and
the
manner of doing is one. But there is an addition of yellowness, or of
yellow
colour of which medicine is perfected of the substance of fixed
Sulphur.
That is, either medicine is begun with Sol or Luna, for red ferment is
made with Sol and white with Luna. Sol is taken two ways, one way for
water
of Sol, another way for the body of Sol as has been said before.
Likewise, when it is said that all colours appear, it is true,
because
before fermentation, in calcinations, dissolutions and fixations, all
colours
appear.
Light of Lights: And know that they are the same things
which
make both white and red, inwardly and outwardly, that is Sol, Luna, and
Mercury. Which three being dissolved and fermented, he calleth them
Argent
vive, saying Argent vive hath in itself, Body, Soul and Spirit.
Likewise decoct the man and the woman together, till they be
coagulated
and made a Stone.
Likewise, you must note that Our Elixir is not made but of
minerals,
and note moreover, the Dragon dies not unless he be killed by his
brother
and sister, and not by one only but by two at once. Sol is the brother
and Luna is the sister.
Lastly, Arnoldus says, because the Philosophers speak true of the
Stone
whatsoever they speak, because they speak of the virtue of speech to
conceal
it from the unworthy, but of the virtue of intention they speak to the
worthy and speak a truth. And the Philosophers know that such matters
ought
to be declared mystically, as poetry in the manner of a fable and
parable,
and when the Philosophers speak of great matters, they do not mingle
parables
and fables, as Macrobius says.
.... Cdn ....
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