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Concerning the Secrets of Alchemy
A Subtle Allegory
concerning the Secrets of Alchemy
very useful to possess
and pleasant to read.
By Michael Maier
The Secrets of Alchemy
After spending the best part of my life in the study of the liberal
arts and sciences, and in the company of wise men and judicious
scholars, I was compelled, as the result of my observation of mankind,
to arrive at the melancholy conclusion that the hearts of most persons
are set either on ambitious and vainglorious projects, on sensual
pleasures, or on the accumulation of wealth by all and any means; and
that few care either for God or for virtue. At first I did not quite
know whether to become a disciple of the laughing or of the weeping
philosopher, or whether to join in the exclamation of the wise Prince of
Israel: "All things are vanity." But at length the Bible and experience
taught me to take refuge in the study of the hidden secrets of Nature,
whether pursued at home, by means of books or abroad, in the Great
Volume of the World. Now, the more I drank of the mighty fount of
knowledge, the more painfully my thirst, like that of Tantalus, seemed
to increase. I had heard that there was a bird called Phoenix, the only
one of its kind in the whole world, whose feathers and flesh constitute
the great and glorious medicine for all passion, pain, and sorrow; which
also Helena, after her return from Troy, had presented in the form of a
draught to Telemachus, who thereupon had forgotten all his sorrows and
troubles. This bird I could not indeed hope to obtain entire, but I was
seized with an irresistible longing to become possessed of at least one
of its smallest feathers; and for this unspeakable privilege I was
prepared to spend all my substance, to travel far and wide, and to
endure every hardship. There was, of course, much to discourage me. Some
people denied the very existence of this bird; others laughed at my
faith in its wonder-working properties. I was thus brought for a time to
regard all that Tacitus, Pliny, and all other writers have said as
fabulous, and to doubt whether, after all, the different narcotics and
opiates were not a better remedy for anger and sorrow than the supposed
virtues of the Phoenix. Moreover, I had heard of the simple method of
curing these mental ailments suggested by a certain wise man to
Augustus, whom he bade run through the twenty-four letters before saying
anything whenever he was angry; and this suggestion appeared to
supersede all other remedies. I had also read the books of those moral
philosophers who undertake to prescribe an effective remedy for every
disease of the mind. But after giving all these boasted specifics a fair
trial, I found, to my dismay, that they were of little practical use. In
many cases, the causes of mental maladies appeared to be material, and
to consist in an excess or defect of the bile, or of some other bodily
substance; in all these cases a medical treatment seemed to be
indicated; whence Galen, that prince among physicians, was led to
believe that character depends on temperaments of the body. As a soldier
may lose all his bravery and strength by being starved and confined in a
close prison, so even a good person may yield to anger, simply through
some vicious habit of body. This opinion is most reasonable in itself,
and is borne out, amongst other things, by the testimony which is given
by Arnold of Villanova, in that book of his where he sets forth the
virtues of all medicines by means of tables of the four qualities: "The
medicines that conduce to intellectual excellence are those which
strengthen the digestion, and nourish the brain and the principal
vitals, purging out all superfluities, purifying the blood. and
preventing the ascent of vapours to the brain; hence you will find that
many medical writers speak of their medicines as productive of a direct
effect upon the mind, when it is only through the medium of the stomach,
the brain, the blood, the liver, etc., that they tend to brighten the
intellectual faculties, by improving the general health of the brain,
and quickening all processes of the body, that you may say they are
productive of joy, because they tend to strengthen the chief limbs,
purify the blood, and produce good animal spirits. Other medicines "lead
to Paradise," as they dispose the heart to charity and to every good
work. by their action upon the blood. Some medicinal herbs have the
power of exciting love, by increasing and clarifying the blood, and thus
quickening the sexual instinct; while others make men chaste and
religious, by inducing poverty and frigidity of blood, and taking away
the edge of all sensual appetite. In the same way, it is possible, by
means of certain drugs, to make men stupid and insane, as men are
rendered dull and stolid by drinking, too much wine. You may also
notice, sometimes, that after eating a certain kind of food, men become
light-hearted, joyous, and inclined to dance and sing- though they are
ordinarily staid and grave persons -- while other kinds of food have a
contrary effect upon them. Thus, a physician has power to make a miser
liberal, a chaste person lascivious, a timid person bold, simply by
changing the complexion of his vital juices. Such are the wonderful
secrets of the medical Art, though of course, they are hidden from the
foolish and the ignorant. There are a great many infatuated persons who
will not believe that medicine can do anything but cure a headache; but
such people know little of the resources of this science. Hippocrates
forbad the physicians whom he taught to reveal these secrets; and it was
a wise prohibition." A little further on the same writer says: " What
medicine can produce greater heat than anger? or chill the body more
than fear? or invigorate the nerves more thoroughly than joy? or nourish
and comfort more gently than hope? And what more certain cause of death
is there than despair?" These are the words of the philosopher, and they
shew that medicine may, through the body, cure the mind, and thus supply
a remedy for anger as well as other mental disturbances. It is true that
if there is a remedy for anger, it would, in the present state of the
world, hardly be very highly esteemed. Still it would calm the passions
of individuals, although other persons might not recognise its value.
But that which men do. not care to have just now, may one day be in
great demand. Such is the vicissitude of all things human. Galen once
said that the savages of England and Germany were as hostile to the
science of Medicine as they were ignorant of it. But now the descendants
of Galen's countrymen are sunk in barbarism, while the English and
Germans are the most skilful physicians in the world. Thus it seems very
likely that this Remedy may be one day in great request, especially when
we consider its vast utility, and the innumerable evils which anger
brings upon men.
What has been said about anger applies with equal force to grief; for
while the symptoms of anger are more or less mental, those of grief
produce a more perceptible and lasting effect on the body. This great
Remedy for anger and grief, then, it would be most desirable to have, if
we could only find the Phoenix which affords it, Where shall I look for
it? Where shall I enquire after it? Whom shall I ask? I determined to go
abroad, and to search for it till 1 should have found it. Fortune
assists the brave: to the indolent and idle knowledge never comes. I
would leave my native country-dearly as I love it, and sadly as I should
miss my friends -- and wander from land to land until I should be able
to return with the eagerly coveted Medicine. All beginnings are
difficult: he who has never been sad, cannot rejoice; he who has never
erred, cannot be brought back to the right way; and as the Chemists say:
"There is in Alchemy a certain noble body, which is moved from master to
master. whose beginning is misery and sourness, whose end is sweetness
and joy." So I expected to endure hardships, and go through bitter
experiences, but I also expected them to be crowned with the delights of
success. Of the existence of the Phoenix I had no doubt. or I could not
have looked for it. It is enough for me to see the Sun and its rays,
even though I cannot touch it; and perhaps it is as well for us that we
cannot get so very close to the Sun. But as to this Medicine which I
seek; how can I have a perfect knowledge of it before I see and touch
it? How can I become a Master before I have been a scholar? The products
of all countries are not the same; and perhaps I may learn in one part
of the world what I cannot get to know in another. Moreover, I asked
myself the question: Can a pilgrim's life hurt any one? Are we not all
pilgrims here below to that land whither our Saviour Christ has gone
before? And is not the example of peregrination set us by the swallow,
the herald of spring by the crane, the stork, and other birds of
passage? Does not the whole world lie open before man as the air is
everywhere accessible to birds? Great Phoebus himself, the god of the
Sun, journeys day by day over the wide expanse of the sky. The heart of
man beats and pulsates in his bosom from the first to the last hour of
his life; and being surrounded by all these models and examples, it is
natural for man to lead the life of a pilgrim, particularly if that
pilgrimage be directed towards a certain goal. The merchant travels over
land and sea to buy the produce of distant climes; but a nobler
merchandise by far are science and knowledge, which are the wares of the
mind. He who stays at home will there bury his talents, and get to know
little about the secrets of the universe Moreover, it is both pleasant
to travel and honourable to be always several hours' journey in advance
of the Sun. That which is most spiritual is most swift in its movements,
while the lifeless earth alone is immovable. The other three elements
are in perpetual motion: the air sweeps over the earth in the shape of
winds, hurricanes and gales; fire devours everything before it as it
rushes onward in the conflagration of a great city; water runs along in
rivers and mighty streams, and hastes to reach the sea. Let us also look
up and behold the heavens as they move in their glory. The stars, the
sun, and the moon know the times and seasons of their rising and
setting. A cannon ball, if projected from one of our most powerful guns,
would be more than eight days in making the compass of the world (which
is more than 25,000 miles); but the Sun, notwithstanding its vast size,
accomplishes the same distance in 24 hours. It would make our thoughts
reel if we strove to realise the velocity with which Saturn moves round
the Sun, and with which the heavens revolve round their own axis. But
greater still, and far more wonderful, is the speed of human thought,
which, in a moment of time, travels from one end of the heavens to the
other. We may believe that the angels, as spiritual beings, move with
the quickness of that which is spiritual in man, viz. thought. God alone
does not move; for He is everywhere. For all these reasons, I conceived
that it would be both interesting, pleasant, honourable, and eminently
profitable for me to follow the example of the whole world, and to
undertake a pilgrimage for the purpose of discovering this wonderful
bird Phoenix. I therefore braced myself for a long journey, determining
to travel. first, through all the countries of Europe, then, if
necessary, to America, thence to Asia, and at last to pass on to Africa.
If, after carefully searching for the Phoenix in all these parts of the
world, I did not succeed in finding it or hearing of it, I might
reasonably give up all hopes of ever setting eyes thereon. The plan of
my journey was determined by the relative quality of the elements which
the different parts of the world represent, i.e., Europe stands for
earth, America for water, Asia for air, and Africa for fire; and earth
cannot become air except through the medium of water; nor can water
become fire except through the medium of air. I determined, then, to go
first to Europe, which represents the grossest, and last to Africa,
which represents the most subtle element. But my reasons will be set
forth more clearly as I come to speak of the different parts of the
world.
EUROPE: EARTH
I left my native town on the day of the vernal equinox, when the Moon
and Sun were both in the sign of Aries, with the intention of first
travelling through Europe, and to enquire everywhere after the Phoenix.
I took Europe to represent the element Earth, because earth forms the
foundation of all the ether elements, and stands out above the water, so
Europe is the mother of the whole world, and though smaller than other
continents, is vastly superior to them through the courage, energy, and
mental strength of its inhabitants. Some say that one handful of earth
gives ten handfuls of water, a hundred handfuls of air, and a thousand
handfuls of fire; and this is the relative importance of the different
continents, if Europe answers to earth. Europe has produced the bravest
warriors, and the most distinguished conquerors; and though she has
subdued other continents, she has herself never been subjugated by them.
Of the four great world empires, only one was founded by an Asiatic
prince; the Macedonian, the Roman, and the Teutonic Empires, have all
had their centres in Europe. Alexander the Great and Julius Caesar were
among her sons. If we look at a map of Europe we may easily perceive
that in shape this part of the world resembles a virgin; but her heart
is that of a lion. For these reasons, I determined to travel first
through this Virgin Lion, because it clearly corresponds to the
fundamental element: earth.
Europe is a Virgin because of her beauty and spotless purity; a Lion
because she has conquered others, but has never herself been conquered.
Among the heavenly bodies the Sun answers to Europe, and among the
metals, gold. For though she produces little gold, and the sun shines
upon her with less fierceness than on Africa, yet she is worthy of being
compared to the Sun and gold because of the excellence of her people,
though a few years ago even some real lions were born in Germany, yet we
call her a Lioness only on account of her stoutness of heart. Europe is
the Mother of the World, and Germany is her heart.
Nor is Europe without her marvels. In Pannonia, it is reported, men
live in compact stone houses under water. The hot springs of Carlsbad,
it is said, are hardened into stones. On the coasts of Prussia, a
transparent and pellucid stone (amber), formed out of subterraneous
vegetable juices, is cast ashore in large quantities. I do not mention
the coral of the Sicilian sea, which, originally a plant, hardens
outside water into a white or red tree of stone, or the sealed earth of
Germany and Silesia... Europe then, is the Lion Earth. This
expression is for those who hear not with their ears only but also with
their brains, it is earth which resists the fire, like gold, and is not
resolved into air. Like the boundary pillar of the gods of old, it
"yields to none." Hence Europe (the gold of the universe) seemed the
very place in which I should be most likely to hear of the Phoenix and
its Medicines But most of those whom I met laughed at my quest, and said
that, like Narcissus, I had fallen in love with the shadow of my own
mind, the echo of my vain and ambitious thoughts, which had no
substantial existence apart from my own folly. "The words of the
Alchemists," said they, " are like clouds: they may mean and represent
anything, according to the fancy of him who hears them. And even if
there were such a medicine, human life is too brief for the search, all
that makes life worth living will have to be neglected and thrust aside
while you are engaged in hunting after it. If we can pick up a knowledge
of this secret casually, and whilst devoting ourselves to other
pursuits, well; but if not, we can very ill spare the time for a closer
search." These objections (at least the latter half of them) I met as
follows: "The quest of this Medicine demands the whole powers of a man's
body and mind. He who engages in it only casually, cannot hope to
penetrate even the outward rind of knowledge. The object of our search
is a profound secret, and a man who is not prepared to give himself
wholly to this enquiry had much better abstain from it altogether. I
readily acknowledge that the powers of my mind are not such as to
justify me in anticipating success. But the spirit within me impels me
to undertake this search; and I am confident that God will at the last
reward my patience, and my humble waiting upon Him. As every King loves
his Queen, as every bridegroom is devoted to his bride, so I regard this
science as more beautiful and lovely than anything else in the world
besides Now, beautiful things are hard to win, and hard toil is the way
to all that is great and glorious." This was the gist of my answer. Now
I had already travelled through a great part of Europe, when it occurred
to me that Italy and Spain are constantly mentioned by the Ancients as
the great seats of secret knowledge, and I therefore directed my steps
thitherward. In Spain I heard that some Arabs (Geber, Avicenna, and
others) had lived there a long time ago, and these had possessed the
wonderful Medicine; I was also told a great deal about Hercules and his
achievement in securing the golden apples of the Hesperides, and also
the golden cup, wherein he received the medicine for anger and sorrow.
Now all prudent men have decided that it contained a small portion of
the feathers of the Phoenix. I saw that Geryon with the three bodies was
the theme of the philosopher's writings, that Hercules was a laborious
artist, seeker of the Medicine. But nobody was able to give me any
definite information. I did not, however, wish to leave Europe without
visiting the Canary Islands, which are seven in number and are named:
Lancerotta, Bonaventura, Great Canaria, Teneriffe, Gomera, Ferro,and
Palma. Three of them, Lancerotta, Gomera, and Ferro, are governed each
by its own King. Ferro is naturally destitute of good drinking water,
but the inhabitants get a supply of it out of certain broadleaved trees,
which distil sweet water in such quantities as to suffice for the whole
island. Strangers and pirates who land in the island, being ignorant of
this fact, are prevented by want of water from staying in Ferro very
long. Now, it happened about this time that the King of Gomera had died
without leaving a male heir, and his subjects refused to acknowledge the
authority of his beautiful daughter Blanche, unless she accepted the
hand of some royal wooer, because they said that it was unworthy of men
to be ruled by a woman, and calculated to injure the manliness of the
national character-as was shewn by the experience of those peoples over
whom women have borne sway for any length of time. For there women had
assumed the place of men, while men were degraded to the position of
women; and, as a consequence, there followed the wildest excesses of
profligacy and lewdness. So the royal maiden was prevailed upon to think
of bestowing her hand in marriage. Now, there was in the island a royal
youth, named Brumazar (with beautiful dark locks and a splendid golden
robe),who was passionately enamoured of the royal maiden Blanche, and
was loved by her in return. He wooed and won her, and the wedding was
celebrated on condition that she should bring to him as her dower a
diamond of great value and magnitude, while he should present to her a
splendid ruby of incalculable worth (i.e., worth a million ducats); he,
as her King and Lord, should protect her from all dangers and from the
robbers with whom that country swarms, while she, on the other hand,
promised humbly to obey him without either subterfuge or tergiversation.
After these preliminaries, they were linked together in close and
indissoluble marriage, in which they lived long and happily; and it was
predicted that a son should be born to them, who would be a mighty
conqueror, and would carry his victorious arms as far as the Pillars of
Dionysus in India... So you see that I was unable to get any information
whatsoever about the Phoenix in the course of my wanderings through
Europe; I therefore determined to set sail for America, in the hope that
I might be more fortunate among the savages of that Continent For I
remembered the words of the poet:
"Accident is a mighty helper; let your hook always be baited; in the
least likely river you may catch your fish."
AMERICA: WATER
In these days, when commerce has opened up, as it were, a highroad
across the seas to America (or India in the West), there is no very
great difficulty in reaching that continent; but far different were the
circumstances under which it was first discovered. After leaving the
"Islands of the Blessed," I became a passenger on board of a ship which
had an eagle for its figurehead; and, after weathering many severe gales
and hurricanes, we at length landed in Brazil, a great province of
America, entirely covered with forests. The surface of the country is
only dotted here and there with the homestead of a settler; there are
few towns, and the inhabitants are sunk in ignorance, and unskilled in
the arts of civilisation. How, then, could I hope to hear anything about
the Phoenix among people who could hardly read or write? Yet there are
in this country many rare and beautiful birds which are not found
elsewhere, though, of course, the Phoenix, being a miraculous bird, must
not be sought among common fowls. The trees of the land are of a rich
colour and sweet fragrance; and one day when I was enjoying the wild
beauty of the forest, and listening to the natural music of the birds, I
happened to find an apple of unusual and exquisite beauty, which on a
closer view exhibited the following inscription:
Within is that which, if you deliver it to its
grandmother, there will thence arise a son who
may cling to his mother in loving embrace.
From this union will arise in a- short time a
noble tree which will render to the husbandman
a golden harvest.
After much thinking, it occurred to me that the seed which was in the
fruit must be placed in the earth (its grandmother, since the parent
tree was its mother). So I took it as a gift of God, sowed the seed, and
when there had sprung up a little tree, I grafted it into the parent
tree (first having sawn off that tree close to the ground) and when the
two had grown together, they became a much more glorious tree than
either of them had been before, and the fruit was that of the scion
which had been inserted into the parent tree.... It is said that before
the Spaniards reached Brazil, there were no horses in that country, so
that the natives regarded a horse soldier as a monster half man and half
beast; but when both horses and asses had been introduced by the
strangers, it was thought most desirable to obtain also some mules which
are the common offspring of these two animals. Now, there was a certain
chief who possessed a large number both of asses and horses, and he took
particular interest in this matter. He knew very well how to breed
horses from horses, and asses from asses, but he was not acquainted with
the proper method of breeding mules from both; while he was au are that
all experiments which are made in the dark, i.e., without the light of
previous experience, are both dangerous and uncertain. The consequence
was that all his efforts to produce a mule out of a stallion and a she
ass were doomed to failure, no doubt because their seeds were not mixed
in the right proportion. At last a Sage who was passing that way, and
whose insight into the secret working of Nature was infinitely keener
and more complete than that of those ignorant people, gave our chief the
following advice:
If you would obtain a mule resembling the
paternal ass in length of ear and slowness of
gait, you should feed each of the parents with
just as large a quantity of food as their nature
requires. Would you know what this proportion
is? Give to the male twice as much as to the
female, then a mare will conceive a mule from
an ass.
This advice was taken by the chief and, after several failures, his
perseverance Was crowned with complete success. Nor does it appear
contrary to Nature's general plan that two different parents should
produce offspring which differs from them both. Look at the leopard,
which is said to be the offspring of the pard and the lioness; in the
same way the wolf and bitch beget the lynx; a scion inserted into a good
tree produces fruit different from those of the parent stock- new
varieties of flowers are obtained by a judicious mingling of the pollen;
and the red powder called "our Tincture," being mixed with quicksilver
over the fire, produces gold which is utterly unlike either the one or
the other. Now, these Americans are able to perform a most singular
experiment with metals, and particularly with gold. They have a kind of
water in which gold becomes soft like wax and capable of being moulded
with the hand into any shape they please. This water is not a corrosive,
since it does not burn the fingers of those who take up the gold. But we
need not doubt that it is some chemical discovery, and that it is
obtained by a distilling process... As I could gain no further
information in America, I began to think of taking the first opportunity
of crossing to Asia: I took with me a very heavy and valuable piece of a
certain kind of wood, the most precious I saw here in Brazil, and which
is remarkable for its brilliant ebony colour, for this black colour
seems proper to America by reason of the blackish poplars and the soil
dyed with various hues. The colour of this wood seems to arise from the
heat of the sun, and the wonderful peculiarity of the American soil, of
which Monandez, that learned physician of Seville, writes as follows:
"The variety of colour exhibited by the soil of Peru is most remarkable.
If you look at it from a distance, it has the appearance of a patchwork
quilt spread out to air in the sun: one part of it is green, another
blue, others again are yellow, white, black, and red. Now all these are
different kinds of mineral earth: the black earth, if mixed with water
or wine, makes an excellent ink, the red soil is said to be the ore of
quicksilver, and the Indians paint themselves with it." -- Well, I took
my wood, went aboard a ship, with a white unicorn for its figure head,
and setting sail for Asia, soon arrived in the Persian Gulf.
ASIA: AIR
Asia is the third continent of the world, the continent which answers
to the element of Air, and its climate is more temperate than that of
the other continents, as it is equally remote from the intense cold of
Europe, and the intense heat of Africa. Being both warm and moist, it
most admirably corresponds to the element of air; its heat is almost
everywhere tempered by the vapours which ascend from the sea. Moist,
warm air has fire for its father, and water for its mother, and retains
the most active qualities of both its parents. Thus air is a mediator
between the two hostile elements, and in its own composition reconciles
their strife. In the same way Asia binds Europe (earth) and Africa
(fire) together, the grossest and the most subtle of the elements; but
without Asia (air) there would be no union between them. By means of
air, fire clings gladly to earth, and fosters it; but without air, the
fire soon goes out. It is the prerogative and distinctive mark of Asia
to be the centre of the world, and to bring forth such fruits as require
a warm soft air, as, for instance, dates, balsam, spices of all kinds,
and gold itself. Asia is the cradle of our race, the seat of the first
Monarchy, the birthplace of our Redeemer. From the Persian gulf I
travelled straight through the continent, till I reached those parts of
Asia Minor where Jason is said to have obtained the golden fleece. So,
being greatly interested in these old world occurrences, I walked out
one day to a place said to be the field of Mars, and the site of the
Palace of Aetes, the descendant of the Sun; there I met an old man of
venerable aspect and authoritative port, who saluted me graciously, and
to whom, after returning his salutation, I addressed the following
words: "Master, if I am not troubling you too much, kindly enlighten my
ignorance, as I can doubt neither your ability nor your willingness to
help a stranger." He having signified his willingness to do for me all
that lay in his power, I asked him whether those things which were
related in history and poetry concerning Jason and his golden fleece,
were real facts or mere poetical fictions. He smiled, and made the
following reply to my question: "I myself am Jason, and better able than
any one else to give you information concerning those things which have
happened to myself. You need not be afraid, for during my lifetime I was
no man's enemy, but succoured all, like a good physician; and now that I
no longer belong to this world, I am still as kindly disposed towards my
mortal brethren. On this spot stood the royal seat of my father-in-law,
Aetes, whose father was the Sun-not, indeed, that heavenly luminary
(which would be incredible), but one likest to him in name, and face,
and dignity. The golden fleece of the ram, which Mercury had transmuted,
and which Aetes had hung in the grove of Mars, I obtained in the
following manner: Medea was my chief adviser, and she enabled me by her
wise counsel to contend successfully against the fierce and venomous
monsters. The watchful Dragon I stupefied with a narcotic, which I cast
into his maw; and while he was in that helpless state, I hastened to
extract his teeth. These had to be buried in earth first prepared and
ploughed up by means of bulls vomiting fire, which fire was extinguished
by water poured into their mouths. Then Medea gave me the images of the
Sun and Moon, without which, she said, nothing could be done." I asked
where I should find all these things. His answer was that he obtained
them Medea, but he could not tell me where she was be found. "When she
left me in her madness," he said, " she was to wedded to old Aegeus, to
whom she bore Medus; Medus afterwards went to Asia, and became the
founder of the Median race." I wished to ask Jason many more questions,
but he excused himself from answering them, and vanished before my eyes.
Then I saw that he had been speaking of the Medicine of which I was in
search, which also he had shadowed out under the figure of the golden
fleece. For the crest of the Phoenix and its feathers are described by
the learned as exhibiting a golden splendour. I did not indeed meet with
many learned men in Asia; but I was well satisfied to have explored that
blessed "aerial earth," especially as Syria and the Holy Land (with
their rivers of Adonis and Jordan, in which the leper Naaman was
cleansed) form part of it. In Syria, it is related that Adonis was
killed by a boar, hounded on by Mars, and that from his wounds there
flowed forth that balm by means of which human bodies are preserved from
decomposition. On this continent stood the Holy of Holies, into which
our Most High Priest entered when He had made atonement for the sins of
the whole race on the Cross of Calvary; to Him let us now utter forth
the most ardent desires of our hearts in the following prayer:
O great and merciful Saviour of the world, Jesus Christ, who being
God from all eternity, next madest man in time, in order that, as our
Mediator, Thou mightest unite God and man, by satisfying the eternal and
infinite power of God which human sin had provoked to wrath, that is to
say, Thyself, the Father, and the Holy Spirit. For this purpose Thou
wast born into this world and didst go about doing good among men and
didst sanctify this earth by Thy miracles, Passion, Resurrection, and
Ascension. To Thee I pray from the very bottom of my heart that as Thou
hast given this Medicine for the use of men by ordinary means, and
meanwhile hast Thyself cured incurable diseases by Thy Divine power, Who
art the Great Physician: so Thou wouldst bestow the gift of this most
precious Medicine upon me, the very humblest of thy servants, who for
the sake of this most blessed knowledge have taken upon myself so weary
a pilgrimage, and so many toils and hardships, as Thou well knowest --
in order that I may use it to the glory of Thy Name, and for the relief
of my suffering brethren. Thou who art a searcher of hearts, knowest
that I despise all worldly pomp, and desire to consecrate my life to
Thee, if Thou wilt but work in me both the will and the power of
performance: Grant to me the power of exercising boundless charity, of
relieving all sufferings, both bodily and mental: Bless me with the
gracious gift of Thy Medicine, which comes next in value after the peace
of mind and eternal happiness which Thou hast gained for us, in order
that its virtue may be effectual in the cure of human sorrow, disease,
and pain; to the everlasting praise of the everblessed Trinity, world
without end, Amen.
When I had poured forth this prayer to the Giver of all good things,
I remembered that besides the land which once flowed with milk and
honey, but now, under Turkish rule, has become utterly barren and
sterile, there was also in Asia, Paradise, which was created for man
while he was still perfect. Knowing that this blessed garden was
situated near Babylon, I journeyed to the spot, but found nothing except
a confluence of certain rivers. Thence I travelled to the maritime parts
of India, and found a city, called Ormuz, of which there ran a proverb,
that if the world was a ring, Ormuz would be its gem. In this city there
was a great concourse of eager visitors from the whole neighbourhood;
and when I asked one of them whither he was hastening, he said: To the
terrestrial paradise. "What," said I, "was I unable to find the ancient
garden of Eden, and do these people speak of a new Paradise! "But the
man left me standing there, and pursued his journey as fast as he could.
While I was considering whether I should follow him, it occurred to me
that I should do well to adopt the plan of Columbus, the discoverer of
America. So I went to the different gates of the city, and determined to
leave it by that one where the sweetest and most fragrant odours were
borne towards me on the air. This I did, and I soon found myself on a
road where the air was such as might well come from an earthly Paradise,
yet was frequented by very few travellers. Ormuz being situated on an
island, we soon had to cross a sea, where I saw men fishing, up pearls
of the purest whiteness. Having obtained some of these for love and
money, I had no doubt that I had come into possession of one of the most
important substances of the Medicine, for the whiteness of these pearls
was such as to defy exaggeration. After pursuing my journey on the
mainland, along a very narrow by-path, for some time, I reached a point
where two roads met, and there was a statue of Mercury, of which the
body was silver while the head was overlaid with gold. The right hand of
this statue pointed towards the Earthly Paradise, and when I had
followed for some time the road which it indicated, I came to a very
broad and deep river, which it was impossible to cross without a boat,
though far and wide there was no boat to be seen; but the beauty of the
other shore convinced me that it must be the Earthly Paradise. The trees
which grew there were covered with golden, orange, citron coloured,
purple, and intensely red flowers. There were evergreen laurels,
junipers box-trees, and great store of blossoms of all colours and of
the sweetest fragrance: sunflowers, amaranths, lilies, roses, hyacinths,
&c. The ear was charmed with the songs and cries of nightingales,
cuckoos, parrots, larks, thrushes, and hundreds of other known and
unknown birds; nor was there wanting the sweet music of instruments and
sweet-toned organs; the taste was gratified, as it seemed, with all
manner of delicious fruits, and the fragrance which streamed out on the
breeze was such as charmed while it rendered insensible the olfactory
nerves of all the people who lived round about, just as the noise of the
Nile cataracts becomes inaudible to those who are used to it. But what
did the sight of all these glories profit me, who, for want of one
little boat, was unable to get at them? So I turned away, with the firm
resolution of coming back, as soon as I could do so with a better chance
of success; in the meantime, I should be most likely to find the Phoenix
that I was in search of, if I crossed over to Africa without further
delay. So I directed my course towards the Red Sea, and there landed in
Africa.
AFRICA: FIRE
When I reached Africa, more than a year had elapsed from my first
setting out; the Sun had once more entered the sign of the Lion, the
Moon was at her height in the house of Cancer. All these were
circumstances which inspired me with hope. The intense heat of the
African climate renders the whole continent torrid, sterile, and dry. It
has few rivers, but many wild beasts, which meet together at the
riverside, and bring forth among themselves many new and strange shapes,
for which Africa is so well known. Satyrs, cynocephali, and semi-human
beings are said to live there. There are the Mountains of the Moon, and
Atlas that bears up the heavens on its shoulders: all these abound in
minerals and in serpents. There also is collected the blood of the
Dragon which the Dragon has sucked from the Elephant; but when the
Elephant falls dead, the Dragon is crushed, and the blood which it has
drunk is pressed out of it. Again, in the neighbourhood of the Red Sea,
an animal named Ortus has been observed, the colour Of whose head
is red, with gold lines up to the neck, while its eyes are deep black
and its feet white, to wit, the fore feet, but the hind feet are black,
the face up to the eyes white--a description which tallies exactly With
that which Avicenna gives of our Medicine. Now I heard that not far from
the Red Sea there lived a prophetess, named the Erytheraean Sibyl, in a
rocky cave; and I thought well first of all to enquire of her concerning
this Phoenix. It is she that prophesied and predicted the coming of the
Son of God in the flesh This assertion has indeed been questioned by
many writers, but it is borne out by Eusebius, the great historian of
the Early Church, and by Cicero. the great orator, who, as is well
known, translated this prophecy into the Latin tongue. Abundant evidence
to the same effect may also be collected from the works of Virgil, the
prince of Roman poets. The passage of Cicero which is referred to by
Eusebius, will be found in the second book of his treatise, De
Divinatione (On Divination). . . . When I came to her, I found her
sitting in her cave, which was beautifully overgrown with the spreading
boughs of a green tree, and covered with green sod. I saluted her with
the lowliest and most deferential humility. At first she seemed somewhat
startled at my sudden appearance, and hastily retreated to the interior
of the cave. But she was soon won over by my earnest entreaties, and
prevailed upon to shew herself at the entrance of her habitation. "Who
art thou, stranger?" she enquired, "and what wouldest thou of me? Dost
thou not know that a man may not approach a virgin that dwells in
solitude?" "It is not forward boldness that has brought me hither," I
replied; " but I have come after mature deliberation, because I feel
that it is you, and you alone, that can resolve certain doubts which lie
heavy on my mind. If you will shew me this great kindness, I, on my
part, promise to do you suit and service, and to fulfil all your
commands, as far as lies in my power" When she heard these words, her
countenance cleared, and she asked me in a more kindly tone what my
business was. "I cannot," she continued, "deny anything to men like you
who are anxious to learn." "There are two things," I returned,
concerning which I would crave plain and straightforward instruction
from you. namely, whether there was and is in these countries of Arabia
and Egypt a wonderful bird named Phoenix; whether its flesh and feathers
are really an effectual medicine for anger and grief; and, if so, where
the bird is to be found? "The object of your search," she rejoined, "is
a great and glorious one; doubt is the first stage of knowledge, and you
have also come to the right place and the right person. For the country
in which you now find yourself is Araby the Blest, and nowhere else has
the Phoenix ever been found; moreover, I am the only person who could
possibly give you any definite information about it. I will teach you,
and this land will exhibit to you, the glad sight of which I speak.
Therefore, listen to my words Arabs the Blest and Egypt have from of old
rejoiced in the sole possession of the Phoenix, whose neck is of a
golden hue, while the rest of its body is purple, and its head is
crowned with a beautiful crest. It is sacred to the Sun, lives 660
years, and when the last hour of its life approaches, it builds a nest
of cassia and frankincense, fills it with fragrant spices, kindles it by
flapping its wings towards the Sun, and is burnt to ashes with it. From
these ashes there is generated a worm, and out of the worm a young bird
which takes the nest, with the remains of its parent, and carries it to
Heliopolis (or Thebes), the sacred city of the Sun in Egypt. Now, this
whole tale which you find in the books of the Ancients is addressed to
the mind rather than to the ear; it is a mystical narrative, and like
the hieroglyphics of the Egyptians, should be mystically (not
historically) understood. An ancient Egyptian writer tells us that the
Phoenix rejoices in the Sun, and that this predilection is its chief
reason for coming to Egypt. He also relates that his countrymen were in
the habit of embalming the Phoenix if it died before its time. If you
therefore regard this tale as an allegory, you will not be far wrong;
and you know that the flesh and feathers of this bird were of old used
in Heliopolis as a remedy for anger and grief." When I heard her say
this, I was full of joy, and asked her whether she could tell me how to
become possessed of this Blessed Bird and Medicine. She promised not to
forsake me, and to do all in her power to help me out of my difficulty.
"Nevertheless," she continued, "the most important part of the
enterprise must be performed by the toil of your own hands. I cannot
describe to you in exact and unmistakable terms the place where the
Phoenix lives, yet I will endeavour to make it as plain to you as I may.
Egypt, you know, owes all her fertility to the Nile, whose sources are
unknown and undiscoverable; but the mouths by which it is discharged
into the sea, are sufficiently patent to all. The fourth Son of the Nile
is Mercury, and to him his father has given authority to shew you this
bird, and its Medicine. This Mercury you may expect to find somewhere
near the seven mouths of the Nile; for he has no fixed habitation, but
is to be found now in one of these mouths, and now in another." I
thanked the Virgin Prophetess most cordially for her gracious
information, and at once set my face towards the mouths of the Nile,
which are seven:-the Canopic, the Bolbitic, the Sebennitic, the
Pelusian, the Tenitic, the Phoenetic and the Mendesic. The way to the
Canopic mouth led me through an ancient Christian burial ground, where a
most miraculous occurrence is witnessed every year on a certain day in
May. From dawn to noon on that day the dead bodies gradually rise from
their graves until they are completely visible to the passers by; and
from noon to sunset they gradually sink back again into their tombs. If
this be true, as eye-witnesses testify, it is a most certain proof of
the resurrection of the human body, and exhibits a close analogy to the
resuscitation of the dead Phoenix...When I reached the island of
Canopus, I enquired where Mercury was to be found. But the people were
only hopelessly puzzled by my questions. Some said that, according to
Hermes, Egypt exhibits an image of the heavens, and the seven mouths of
the Nile (of which the Canopic is the most considerable) correspond to
the seven planets, the Canopic mouth they called the habitation of
Saturn, the grandfather of Mercury; Mercury was to be found domiciled in
some other mouth of the river. At the Bolbitic mouth none of those
persons of whom I enquired knew anything about Mercury. Near the third
or Sebennitic mouth stood the city of Sebennis, of which the inhabitants
were so savage and cruel towards strangers, and so utterly destitute of
all the arts and graces of civilization, that I could not conceive of
Mercury, the god of culture and science, living in their midst.
Moreover, a certain peasant whom I asked whether Mercury's house was
there, old me that he had a house in the town but that he never lived
there. So I at once went on to the fourth or Pelusian mouth of the file.
The famous city of Pelusium is said to have been founded by Peleus, the
father of Achilles. It separates Asia and Arabia from Egypt, and was at
one time a most wealthy town. When I heard of its greatness in commerce
and industry, and of the large quantities of Arabian gold which are
imported in this city, one of the wealthiest marts of Egypt, I felt
assured that I should find the dwelling of Mercury here; but I was told
by the inhabitants that he did not come there very often, though he was
received as a most welcome guest whenever he did visit it. This answer
filled me with dismay, which was in proportion to the hopes which I had
conceived, but I determined not to abandon my search till I should have
visited the three remaining mouths of the river.
At the Tenitic mouth of the Nile, I learned quite as much as I had
learned everywhere else, namely-nothing. When the people who lived there
told me that Mercury never came to them at all, I began to bewail my
hapless fate, and the many fruitless journeys I had undertaken; and I
now saw that perhaps it would have been wiser to have begun at the other
end. There. however, I was; only two mouths of the river were left; and
in one of these Mercury would be found, if indeed the Prophetess had
spoken true. At the Phoenetic mouth another disappointment awaited me.
Mercury had once lived there, but had long since migrated somewhere
else. At the seventh, or Mendesian mouth, nothing whatever was known
about him. It may easily be imagined that, after this long series of
disappointments, I began to suspect the Sibyl very strongly of having
sent me on a fool's errand, for I had now visited every one of the
mouths of the Nile, and yet had not found even a trace of Mercury in any
of them. Or if the words of the prophetess had been true, it seemed as
if the various people of whom I had enquired must have deceived me with
false information. But after more mature consideration of the answers
which had been returned to my questions in the different places I
arrived at the conclusion that I had merely misapprehended their
meaning. So I retraced my steps, and at length succeeded in finding
Mercury in one of the mouths, where the people had at first appeared to
know nothing about him. He shewed me at great length, where I must look
for the Phoenix and where I could obtain possession of it. When I
reached the place to which he directed me, I found that the Phoenix had
temporarily deserted it, having chanced to be chosen umpire between the
owl and other birds which pursue it, of which battle we have treated
otherwise. It was expected back in a few weeks; but, as I could not
afford to wait so long just then, I thought I might be content with the
information I had gained, and determined to consummate my search at some
future time. So, having returned to my native land, I composed the
following epigrams in honour of the Sibyl, Mercury, the Phoenix, and the
Medicine.
EPIGRAM
In Honour of the Erythreaean Sibyl, named Herophyle
I thank thee, great prophetess, Whose inspiration is not of the
fiend, but of the Spirit of God, that thou didst direct me on my way to
the Son of Nilus, who should shew unto me the bird Phoenix. Full of
sacred knowledge, thou didst utter forth thy oracles when thou didst
sing of God who should come in the fashion of a man. Thou dost love Him
who, bearing the sentences of highest justice, will be the omnipotent
judge of the whole world, though thou wert called a Gentile Maiden, and
though men said that thou couldst know nothing of Him. The cave near the
Red Sea cannot hold thy. greatness, when Christ shall claim thee for His
own in Heaven.
EPIGRAM
Dedicated to Mercury of the Sages.
The Latins call thee Mercury, the Messenger of the Gods; among the
Greeks thy name is that of great Hermes. Thou art called Tenthius on the
soil of Egypt; thy father is Nilus, who enriches that soil, and has
bequeathed unto thee untold wealth. Thou hast duly conveyed to the
peoples of Egypt the laws which Vulcan, being in the secret with thee,
has given. All nations of the world behold thee with delight, yet thou
desirest to be known to very few. Of how many secrets of Nature have the
keys been entrusted to thy keeping! Thy face is red, thy neck is yellow,
thy bosom is whiter than purest snow. Thy feet are shod with black
sandals, a wand with a double snake in no wise hurts thy hand. This is
thine apparel whereby thou art known to all, O Hermes ! Thy complexion
is fittingly of four hues. Thou didst shew to me the glorious bird
Phoenix by the mouth of an interpreter, and I thank thee for thy love
with all my heart; though the words be light, they are weighty with
gratitude.
AN EPIGRAM
In Praise of the Phoenix
O Marvel of the World, prodigy without a blot, unique Phoenix who
givest thyself to the great Sages! Thy feathers are red, and golden the
hues of thy neck; thy nest is built of cassia and Saboean frankincense.
When thy life is drawing to a close, thou knowest the secret way of
Nature by which thou art restored to a new existence. Hence thou gladly
placest thyself on the altar of Thebes, in order that Vulcan may give
thee a new body. The golden glory of thy feathers is called the Medicine
of health, and the cure of human woe. Thou has power to cast out disease
and to make the old young again. Thee. Blessed Bird, I would rather have
than all the wealth of the world, and the knowledge of thee was a
delight which I sought for many years. Thou art hidden in the retreat of
thine own nest, and if Pliny writes that he saw thee in Rome, he does
greatly err. Thou art safe in thy home, unless some foolish boy disturb
thee: if thou dost give thy feathers to anyone, I pray thee let him be a
Sage.
On the Hermetic Medicine of the Phoenix
If all the mountains were of silver and gold, what would they profit
a man who lives in constant fear of death ? Hence there cannot be in the
whole world anything better than our Medicine, which has power to heal
all the diseases of the flesh. Wealth, and riches, and gold, all yield
the prize to this glorious possession: and whoever does not think so, is
not a man, but a beast.
If anyone will not acknowledge the force of reason, he must needs
have recourse to authority.
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