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The Remonstration of Nature
The Remonstration of Nature, made to the erring alchemists,
and complaining of the sophists and other false teachers.
Set forth by John A. Mehung.
Nature speaks.
Good heavens, how deeply I am often saddened at seeing the human
race, which God created perfect, in His own image, and appointed to be
the lords of the earth, depart so far away from me! I allude more
particularly to you, O stolid philosophaster, who presume to style
yourself a practical chemist, a good philosopher, and yet are entirely
destitute of all knowledge of me, of the true Matter, and of the whole
Art which you profess! For, behold, you break vials, and consume coals,
only to soften your brain still more with the vapours. You also digest
alum, salt, orpiment, and atrament; you melt metals, build small and
large furnaces, and use many vessels: nevertheless, I am sick of your
folly, and you suffocate me with your sulphurous smoke. With most
intense heat you seek to fix your quicksilver, which is the vulgar
volatile substance, and not that out of which I make metals; therefore
you effect nothing. For you do not follow my guidance, or strive to
imitate my methods, rather mistaking my whole artifice. You would do
better to mind your own business, than to dissolve and distill so many
absurd substances, and then to pass them through alembics, cucurbites,
stills, and pelicans. By this method you will never succeed in
congealing quicksilver. For the revivification you use a reverberatory
fire, and make it so hot as to render everything liquid — thus do you
finish your work, and in the end ruin yourself and others. You will
never discover anything unless you first enter my workshop, where, in
the inmost bowels of the earth I ceaselessly forge metals: there you may
find the substance which I use, and discover the method of my work.
Do not suppose that I will reveal my secret to you unless you first
find the growing seed of all metals (resembling that of the animals and
vegetables). I preserve in the bosom of the earth both that which is
used for their generation, and that with which they are nourished up.
Metals Exist, vegetables Live and Grow, and animals Feel, which is
more than merely to grow. I make metals, stones, and the atramental
substances out of certain elements, which I mix and compound in a
certain way. These elements you must seek in the heart of the earth, and
nowhere else. Vegetables contain their own seed, and image; in like
manner, animals are propagated, and by the same means do generate their
own likeness. Everything proceeds by the laws laid down for it. Only
you, wicked man, who try to usurp my office, have departed further from
me than any other creature. Metals have no life, or principle of
generation and growth, if they lack their own proper seed. The first is
accomplished by the four elements in nine days; the Moon goes through
the twelve heavenly signs in twenty-nine and a half days.
By the aforesaid laws, winter and summer relieve each other, the
elements are changed, generations take place in the earth — through my
working, through the working of God and the heavens, do all things
subsist, the perceptible, the visible, and the invisible. Thus all
things in heaven which are comprehended under the Moon, do work, and
impart their influence to the substance, which, like a woman, longs to
conceive seed. Each star influences its own substance, and according to
their peculiar nature, they produce different things. They work first in
heaven above, then in the earth beneath in the elements, each according
to its own peculiar virtue; and hence arise species and individual
things.
You are to know that these manifold influences do not pour themselves
fruitlessly upon the earthly elements. For though their working is
invisible, yet it is a most certain and real thing. The earth is
surrounded by heaven, and from it obtains her best influences and
substances. Every sphere is ready to communicate its truth, and
therewith to pervade her centre. Through this motion and heat, there
arise upon earth vapours, which are the first substances. If the vapour
is cold and moist, it sinks down again to the earth, and is there
preserved; that which is moist and warm ascends to the clouds. That
which is shut up in the earth I change, after a long time, into the
substance of sulphur, which is the active, and into quicksilver, which
is the passive principle. The metals are another mixture of this first
composition. The whole is obtained from the four elements, which I form
into one mass. This process I repeat so often that you have no excuse
for a mistake.
After the putrefaction comes the generation, which is brought about
by the internal incombustible warmth heating the coldness of the
quicksilver, which gladly submits to this heat because it wishes to be
united to its sulphur. All these things, fire, air, and water, I have in
one alembic in the earth. There I digest, dissolve, and sublime them,
without any hammer, tongs, file, coals, vapour, fire, '' bath of S.
Mary", or other sophisticated contrivances. For I have my own heavenly
fire which excites the elemental according as the matter desires to put
on a suitable and comely form. Thus I extract my quicksilver from the
four elements, or their substance. This is always accompanied by its
sulphur, which is its second self, and warms it gradually, gently, and
pleasantly. Thus the cold becomes warm, and the dry moist and oily. But
the moist is not without its dry substance, nor is the dry without its
moist: one is conserved by the other in its first essence (which is the
elementary spirit of the essence, or the quintessence) from which
proceeds the generation of our child. The fire brings it forth, and
nourishes it in the air, but before that, it is decomposed in virgin
earth; then water flows forth (or it flows forth from the water), which
we must seek, since it is my first Matter, and the source of my mineral.
For contrary resists strenuously to contrary, and doth in such wise
fortify itself, lest perchance it be carried away in operating; then
does it suffer transmutation, and is stripped of its form by the
concupiscence of matter, which incessantly attracts a new form.
By my wisdom I govern the first principle of motion. My hands are the
eighth sphere, as my Father ordained; my hammers are the seven planets,
with which I forge beautiful things. The substance out of which I
fashion all my works, and all things under heaven, I obtain from the
four elements alone. Chaos, or Hyle, is the first substance. This is the
Mistress that maintains the King, the Queen, and the whole court. A
horseman is always ready to do her bidding, and a virgin performs her
office in the chambers. The more beautiful she is, the more beautiful do
I appear in her. Know also that I have power to give their essence to
all essences, that it is I who preserve them, and mould them into shape.
Moreover, observe the three parts into which God has divided the first
substance. Of the first and purest part He created the Cherubin,
Seraphin, Archangels, and all the other angels. Out of the second, which
was not so pure, He created the heavens and all that belongs to them; of
the third, impure part, the elements and their properties. First and
best of these is Fire. Fire admits of no corruption, and contains the
purest part of the quintessence. After Fire, He made the subtle Air, and
put into it a part (but not so large a part) of the quintessence. Then
came the visible element of Water, which has as much of the quintessence
as it needs. Last of all comes the Earth. All these (like all the rest
of Nature) He created in a moment of time. The earth is gross and dark,
and though it is fruitful, yet it contains the smallest part of the
quintessence. At first the elements remained as they were in their
separate spheres. So Air is really moist, but is properly tempered by
Fire. Water is really warm, but obtains its moisture from the air. The
Earth is really dry, but it is also cold; its great dryness renders it
akin to fire. Fire, however, is the first of elements which causes life
and growth by its heat.
Now all these elements influence and qualify each other, so that each
in its turn is now active, now passive. For instance, Fire works upon
air and earth. Earth is the mother and nurse of all things, and sustains
all that is liable to decay under heaven. Now God has given me power to
resolve the four elements into their quintessence; this is that first
substance which in every element is generically qualified. I resolve
them for my own purpose, and thereby bring about all generation. But no
one will be able to resolve me into my first substance, as he strives to
resolve the elements. For I alone can transmute the elements and their
forms, and he who thinks otherwise deceives himself. For you will never
be able to assign to each substance its proper influence, or to find the
correct proportions of the elements which are required by that
substance. I alone, I say, can form created things, and give to them
their peculiar properties and substance. By my heavenly mysteries I
produce perfect works, which are justly called miracles, as may be seen
in the Elixir which has such marvelous virtue, and is of my own forming.
No art upon earth can add anything to, or improve upon, my workmanship.
Every sane person must see that nothing can be accomplished without a
perfect knowledge of the heavenly bodies, or apart from the efficacy
which abides in them; without these everything is error and misuse; and
yet, whence is a mere man to obtain this influence, and how is he to
apply it to the substance? How can he mingle the elements in their right
proportions? Even if a man were to spend a long life in the
investigation of this secret (says Avicenna, De Vir. Cord., chap. ii.),
he would not get any nearer to its solution. It is entrusted to my
keeping alone, and can never be known to any man. By my virtue and
efficacy I make the imperfect perfect, whether it be a metal or a human
body. I mix its ingredients, and temper the four elements. I reconcile
opposites, and calm their discord.
This is the golden chain which I have linked together of my heavenly
virtues and earthly substances. I accomplish my works with such unerring
accuracy that in them all my power is strewn forth, and with so much
skill that the wisest of men cannot attain to my perfection. Go forth
then, and behold my works, you who think yourself so skilled a workman,
and (without any knowledge of me), with your coal fires and your S.
Mary's bath, strive to make gold potable in my alembics — and know that
I cannot bear the sight of your folly. Are you not ashamed, after
considering my works, to attempt to rival them with your malodorous
decoctions in your coloured and painted vials, and thus lose both your
time and your money? I am at a loss to conceive what you can be
thinking. Have pity upon yourself, and consider my teaching. Try to
understand rightly what I tell you, for I cannot lie. Consider how that
most glorious metal, gold, has received its beautiful form from heaven
and its precious substance from the earth. The generation of the
precious stones, such as carbuncles, amethysts, and diamonds, takes
place in the same manner. The substance itself is composed of the four
elements; its form and qualities it receives through heavenly
influences, although the capacity of being thus wrought upon slumbers in
the element and is only brought out and purified in the course of time.
All this is accomplished by my hands alone. I am the architect, and no
one else knows the secret of life. For, however wise he may think
himself, he does not know how much to take of each element, or where to
obtain it, or how to mingle hostile elements so as to allay their
discord, or how to bring the heavenly influences to bear on these
essences: He cannot even make iron, or lead, or the very basest of
metal; how then should he be able to make gold except by stealing my
treasure? The object which he desires can be accomplished by my art
alone — an art which it is impossible for man to know.
And even though we allow gold to be the most precious of metals, yet
gold by itself cannot cure diseases, or heal the imperfections of other
metals, or change them into gold. In the same way glass (which might
otherwise be the Philosopher's Stone) can never become so soft as to be
rendered malleable. Gold alone is the most precious and the most perfect
of all the metals. But if you cannot even make lead, or the minutest
grain of any metals, or produce the fruit of any herb, how hopeless must
your search after the art of making gold appear! Again if you say that
you wish to produce some chemical result, even if it do not turn out to
be gold, I answer that you thereby only give a fresh proof of your
folly. Can you not understand that the secret of my innermost working
must always remain a sealed book to you? What Nature does can never be
successfully imitated by any created being. Nay, if I made gold out of
seven metals, and you do not understand my method, how can you ever hope
to prepare the substance which itself changes all metals into the purest
gold, and is the most precious treasure that God has given me? You are
foolish and ignorant, if you do not know that this precious thing which
you seek is, to the created mind, the greatest mystery of Nature, and
that it is compounded by heavenly influences — and thus has power to
heal and deliver men from all diseases, and to remove the imperfection
of the base metals. If, therefore, it is in itself so perfect that it
has not its like upon earth, it must surely be the workmanship of the
highest Intelligence, since no one else can even make gold, and
certainly not produce a thing which has itself the power of making gold.
Surely, to maintain that you are able to prepare such a thing, is like
saying that you cannot carry ten pounds, but that you are strong enough
to carry a hundred pounds. Put to heart, therefore, the true scope and
responsibility of your intent.
I, myself, again, receive all my wisdom, virtue, and power from
heaven, and my Matter, in its simplest form, is the four elements. This
is the first principle and the quintessence of the elements, which I
bring forth by reductions, time, and circulations, by which I transmute
the inferior into the more perfect, the cold and dry into the moist and
warm; and thus I preserve stones and metals in their natural state of
moisture. This is brought about by the movements of the celestial
bodies, for by them the elements are ruled; by their controlling
influence like is brought to like. The purer my substance is, the more
excellent are the results produced by the heavenly influence. And do you
think that there in your alembic, where you have your earth and water, I
will be induced by your fire and heat, and by your white and red colour,
to bend my neck to your yoke, and to do your will and pleasure? Do you
think that you can move the heavens, and force them to shed their
influence upon your work. Do you think that that is an organic
instrument which gives forth sweet music only when it is touched by the
musician's fingers? You take too much upon yourself, you foolish man. Do
you not know that the revolutions of the heavens are governed by a
mighty Mind, which, by its influence, imparts power to all things?
I beseech you to remember that all great things proceed from me, and,
in the last instance, from God; and not to suppose that the skill of
your hands can be as perfect as the operation of Nature. For it is void
and vain, and, ape-like, must imitate me in all things. Nor must you
suppose that your distilling, dissolving, and condensing of your
substance in your vessel, or your eliciting of water out of oil, is the
right way of following me. Far from it, my son. All your mixing and
dissolving of elements never has produced, and never can produce, any
good result. Do you wish to know the reason? Your substance cannot stand
the heat of the furnace for a single half-hour, but must evaporate in
smoke, or be consumed by the fire. But the substance with which work,
can stand any degree of heat, without being injured. My water is dry,
and does not moisten what it touches; it does not evaporate, or become
less, neither is its oil consumed. So perfect are my elements; but yours
are worse than useless.
In conclusion, let me tell you that your artificial fire will never
impart my heavenly warmth, nor will your water, oil, and earth supply
you with any substitute for my substance. It is the gift of God, shed
upon the elements from heaven, and upon one more than upon another; but
how, is known only to me, and to the Great Artist who entrusted me with
this knowledge. One thing more let me tell you, my son. If you would
imitate me, you must prepare all out of one simple, self-contained
Matter, in one well-closed vessel, and in one alembic. The substance
contains all that is needed for its perfect development, and must be
prepared with a warmth that is always kept at the same gentle
temperature. Let me ask you to consider the birth and development of
man, my noblest work. You cannot make a human body out of any substance
whatsoever. Of my method in forming so subtle a body neither Aristotle
nor Plato had the remotest knowledge. I harden the bones and the teeth,
I make the flesh soft, the muscles cold, the brain moist, the heart,
into which God has poured the life, warm, and fill all the veins with
red blood. And in the same way, I make of one quicksilver, and of one
active male sulphur, one maternal vessel, the womb of which is the
alembic. It is true that man aids me with his art, by shedding external
heat into the matrix; more than this, however, he cannot do. He, then,
that knows the true Matter, and prepares it properly in a well-closed
vessel, and puts the whole in an alembic, and keeps up the fire at the
proper degree of warmth, may safely leave the rest to me. Upon the fire
all depends, and much, therefore, does it behove you to see thereto.
Consider, therefore, the fire, which they call epesin, pepsin, pepausin,
and optesin, or natural, preternatural, and infranatural fire, which
burns not. Without the true Matter and the proper fire, no one can
attain the end of his labour. I give you the substance; you must provide
the mere outward conditions. Take, then, a vessel, and an alembic of the
right kind and of the right size. Be wise, and perform the experiment in
accordance with my laws. Help me, and I will help you. I will deal with
you as you deal with me. To my other sons, who have treated me well,
have obeyed their father and mother, and submitted themselves to my
precepts, I have given a great reward, as John de Mehung, for instance,
will tell you. His testimony is also borne out by Villanova, Raymond,
Morienus the Roman, Hermes (whom they call Father, and who has not his
like among the Sages), Geber, and others who have written about this
Art, and know by experience that it is true.
If you, my son, wish to prepare this precious Stone, you need not put
yourself to any great expense. All that you want is leisure, and some
place where you can be without any fear of interruption. Reduce the
Matter (which is one) to powder, put it, together with its water, in a
well-closed vessel, and expose it to continuous, gentle heat, which will
then begin to operate, while the moisture favours the decomposition. The
presence of the moisture prevents the dryness of the quicksilver from
retarding its assimilation. Meanwhile, you must diligently observe what
I do, and remember the words of Aristotle (Meteor iii. and iv.), who
says: ''Study Nature, and carefully peruse the book concerning
Generation and Corruption." You must also read the book concerning
heaven and the world, in which you will find indicated the beautiful and
pure substance. If you neglect this study, you will fail. On this
subject consult Albertus Magnus, De Mineralibus. But if your eyes are
opened by such studies, you will discover the secret of the growth of
minerals, viz., that they are all produced from the elements.
First learn to know me, before you call yourself Master. Follow me,
that am the mother of all things created, which have one essence, and
which can neither grow, nor receive a living soul, without the heavenly
and elementary influences. When you have learned by persevering study to
understand the virtues of the heavenly bodies, their potent operations,
and the passive condition of the elements, and its reason — if you
further know the media of transmutation, the cause of generation,
nutrition, and decay, and the essence and substance of the elements —
you are already acquainted with the Art, notwithstanding that a most
subtle mind is still needed for the studying of my operations. But if
you do not possess part at least of this knowledge, you will be
fortunate indeed if you succeed in discovering my secret. It is a secret
that is read not by those that are wise in their own conceits, but by
those that humbly and patiently listen to my teaching Therefore, if you
desire to own this treasure, which has been the reward of the truly wise
in all ages, you must do as I bid you. For my treasure has such virtue
and potency that the like of it is to be found neither in heaven nor
upon earth. It holds an intermediate position between Mercury and the
Metal which I take for the purpose of extracting from it by your art and
my knowledge that most precious essence. It is pure and potable gold,
and its radical principle is active humidity. Moreover, it is the
universal Medicine described by Solomon (Eccles. xxxviii.); the same
also is taken from the earth, and honoured by the wise. God has assigned
it a place among my mysteries, and reveals it to the Sages, although
many who call themselves learned doctors of Theology and Philosophy,
hold it in ignorant contempt — as Alchemy is also despised by the
doctors of Medicine, because they do not know me, and are ignorant of
that which they profess to teach. They must be insufficiently furnished
with brains, or they would not direct their foolish scorn against the
panacea which renders all other medicines unnecessary. Happy is the man,
even though he be sinking under the weight of years, whose days God
prolongs until he has come to the knowledge of this secret! For (as
Geber says) many to whom this gift was imparted late in life, have,
nevertheless, been refreshed and delighted by it in extreme old age.
He that has this secret possesses all good things and great riches.
One ounce of it will ensure to him both wealth and health. It is the
only source of strength and recreation, and far excels the golden
tincture. It is the elixir and water of life, which includes all other
things. In my treasure are concealed quicksilver, sulphur, incombustible
oil, white, indestructible, and fusible salt. I tell you, frankly, that
you will never be able to accomplish its preparation without me, just as
I can do nothing without your help. But if you understand my teaching,
and cooperate with me, you can accomplish the whole thing in a short
time.
Have done with the charlatans, and their foolish writings; have done
with all their various alembics, and phials; have done with their
excrements of horses, and all the variety of their coal-fires, since all
these things are of no use whatever. Do not perplex yourself with
metals, or other things of a like nature: rather change the elements
into a mutable form. For this is the most excellent substance of the
Sages, and is rejected only by the foolish. Its substance is like, but
its essence unlike, that of gold. Transmute the elements and you will
have what you seek. Sublime that which is the lowest, and make that
which is the highest, the lowest. Take quicksilver which is mixed with
its active sulphur; put it into a well-closed vial, and one alembic,
plunge one-third of it into the earth, kindle the fire of the Sages, and
watch it well so that there may be no smoke. The rest you may leave to
me. I ask you to do no more, but only bid you follow my unerring
guidance.
The Answer of the Chemist,
In which he confesses his errors, asks pardon for them, and returns
thanks to Nature.
Dearest Mother Nature, who, next to the angels, art the most perfect
of all God's creatures, I thank thee for thy kindly instruction. I
acknowledge and confess that thou art the Mother and Empress of the
great world, made for the little world of man's mind. Thou movest the
bodies above, and transmutest the elements below. At the bidding of thy
Lord thou dost accomplish both small things and great, and renewest, by
ceaseless decay and generation, the face of the earth and of the
heavens. I confess that nothing can live without a soul, and that all
that exists and is endued with being flows forth from thee by virtue of
the power that God has given to thee. All matter is ruled by thee, and
the elements are under thy governance. From them thou takest the first
substance, and from the heavens thou dost obtain the form. That
substance is formless and void until it is modified and individualized
by thee. First thou givest it a substantial, and then an individual
form. In thy great wisdom thou dost cunningly mould all thy works
through the heavenly influences, so that no mortal hand can utterly
destroy them. Under thy hands God has put all things that are necessary
to man, and through thee, He has divided them into four kingdoms,
namely, those that have being and essence, like the metals and stones;
those that have essence and growth, like the vegetables; those that have
feeling and sensation, like the beasts, birds, and fishes. These are the
first three classes; in the fourth it pleased God to place only the
noblest and most perfect of His works, namely, man, to whom He also gave
a rational and immortal soul. This soul is obscured by the defilement
which found its way into the body through the senses, and, but for the
grace and mercy of God, would have become involved in its condemnation.
Hence the chief perfection of man is not derived from thee, nor dost
thou impart to us our humanity. Nevertheless, the material part of man
is the work of thy hands alone.
And, surely, our bodies are cunningly and wonderfully made, and, in
every part of them, bear witness to the masterly skill of the workman.
How marvellous are the uses of our various members! How wonderful that
the soul can move them and set them to work at will! But, alas! oftener
still the body is master of the soul, and forces it to do many things
which pure reason condemns. If we consider the matter from this point of
view, it seems as though thou hadst begun well, and yet thy work had,
after all, turned out an abortion. Wert thou wanting in wisdom, or
knowledge; or couldst thou not do otherwise? Pardon me if I speak too
presumptuously about thy wisdom, I only desire to be rightly and truly
informed. For, indeed, even now thy stern rebuke has made many things
clear to me. I have spent my whole life in attending to thy lessons; and
the more closely I have listened, the more clearly have I understood my
mistakes and the depth of thy wisdom. Now, whether I lie, or stand, or
walk, I can think of nothing but thy great mystery. And yet I am unable
to conceive what substance and form I must take for it. Thou didst
sternly rebuke me for not following thy way; but thou knowest that, if I
do not obey thee, it is only because I do not know what thou wouldst
have me do. I shall never be able to attain any satisfactory result in
this Art, unless thou wilt enlighten my blindness. Thou hast rightly
said that it is not for man to know the mystery of thy working: how then
can I be guided to this knowledge, unless thou wilt take me by the hand?
Thou sayest that I must follow thee; and I am willing to do so. But tell
me what I must do, and what books I must study for that purpose. Of the
books which I have read, one says, ''Do this," and the other, "No, do
that"; and they are full of unintelligible expressions and of dark
parables. At last I see that I cannot learn anything from them.
Therefore I take refuge with thee, and instantly beseech thee to advise
and to tell me how to set about this difficult task. On my knees I
implore thee to show me the way by which I can penetrate into the lower
parts of the earth, and by what subtle process I am to obtain the
perfect mercury of the metals. And yet I doubt whether any man, even
after obtaining this mercury, can really make gold. That is thy work,
and not the work of man; as thy words and my own experience most clearly
shew.
We see that the cold and moist mercury needs the assistance of its
sulphur, which is its seed after its kind, or its homogeneous sperm, out
of which the metal or Stone must be produced. But thou sayest only: Take
the proper substance, the proper vessel, the proper mineral, the proper
place, and the proper fire; then form, colour, and life will grow and
spring forth from thence. Thou art the Architect; thou knowest the
glorious properties of the Matter. The active principle can do nothing
unless there be a passive principle prepared to receive its influence.
Thou knowest how to mix the warm and the cold, the dry and the moist; by
reconciling hostile elements, thou canst produce new substances and
forms. For I did indeed understand all that thou didst tell me, but am
unable to express it so well as thou. This thou hast firmly impressed on
my mind, that the Elixir is composed by the reconciling and mutual
transmutation of the four elements. But what man is sufficient for such
a task? For who knows how earth can have its essence in common with air,
or how it can be changed into moisture which is contrary to its nature?
For humidity will not leave a cold and humid element, not even under the
influence of fire. This, too, is the work of Nature, that it becomes
black, and white, and red. These three visible colours correspond to the
three elements, earth, water, and fire, and are pervaded by the air.
Then, again, thou sayest that the Stone is prepared of one thing, of
one substance, in one vessel, the four (elements) composing one essence
in which is one agent which begins and completes the work; man, thou
sayest, need do nothing but add a little heat, and leave the rest to thy
wisdom. For all that is needed is already contained in the substance, in
perfection, beginning, middle, and end, as the whole man, the whole
animal, the whole flower is contained each in its proper seed. Now, in
the human seed the human specific-substance is also included, as flesh,
blood, hair, &c.; and thus every seed contains all the peculiar
properties of its species. In the whole world men spring from human
seed, plants from plants, animals from animals. Now I know that when
once the seed is enclosed in the female vessel, no further trouble or
work of any kind is required — everything is brought to perfection by
thy gradual and silent working. And the generation of the Stone, thou
sayest, is performed in a similar manner. Only one substance is
required, which contains within itself air, water, and fire — in short,
everything that is needed for the completion of this work. No further
handling of any kind is necessary, and a gentle fire is sufficient to
rouse the internal warmth, just as an infant in the womb is cherished by
natural heat. The only thing in which man must aid thee, is, by
preparing the substance, removing all that is superfluous, enclosing
this simple earth, which is combined with its water, in a vessel, and
subjecting it to the action of gentle heat in a suitable alembic. This,
thou sayest, is all that needs to be done by man; when all has been
prepared for thee, thou dost begin thy part of the work. Thou dissolvest
the substance, and makest the dry watery; then thou sublimest it, and
bearest it upward into the air, and thus, without any further aid,
bringest that to perfection which can itself impart perfection to all
imperfect things. Therefore, thou, Nature, art the first mother, since
thou dost cunningly combine the four elements into an essence by a
process of which none but thou has any knowledge. Thus far have I
understood thee, and do not quite despair, if it be pleasing unto God
and to thee, of seeing thy great reward with my own eyes.
But at present I earnestly desire to know but one thing: and that is,
how can that substance be obtained, what are its qualities, and what its
powers to impart perfection to imperfect things
I am well aware that gold is the most precious of the metals; but I
cannot see that it has any capacity of becoming more potent than it
already is. For whatever man may do with it, it will never be able to
perfect anything but itself. If any one told me to dissolve it and
extract from it its quicksilver, I should regard that as a very foolish
direction; for nothing can be got out of gold but what is in it. These
philosophasters betray their ignorance by saying that they can reduce
gold to its first substance; but thy instruction has made it clear to me
that the first substance cannot be obtained, except by destroying the
specific properties of a thing, nor can any new species be brought forth
by such a destruction, unless the species be first universalized into
the genus. Moreover, I make bold to affirm that no man can first resolve
gold into its generic substance, and then restore it again; for when it
has once lost its specific properties, no mere human skill can change it
back into what it was before. Nor can any one really reduce gold to the
first form imparted to it by the elements. For gold is not transmuted
either by heat or by cold, and is so perfect in its kind that fire only
renders it purer. It does not admit of any further development, and
therefore no other metal or quicksilver can be obtained from it.
It is true that plants and animals are constantly producing their
like by means of their seed, and their capacity of organic nutrition.
But I do not see how the same can be said of metals, seeing that at the
expiration of any given period they still retain the same size and
weight which they had at the beginning. Through thee they receive their
being out of the elements without any sowing, planting, or development
of any kind. Moreover, I know that no credit is to be attached to the
fanciful notions of the old Sages who would prepare our Stone out of a
crude metallic substance, and do not understand that the form and
substance of a thing are conditioned by its essential nature. Now, I
remember a certain juggling charlatan, who was looked upon as a great
philosopher, telling me that the only true material was common
quicksilver, which must be well mingled with gold, since in such an
union the one brought the other to perfection. If I did this, continued
that impostor, I should be able to prepare the Elixir. First, however,
the four elements must be separated from each other, then, after each
had been purified, they must be reunited, the great being combined with
the small, and the subtile with the gross. This, he said, was the right
way of making the Stone. But I know that all this is sheer nonsense, and
that such men are only deceiving themselves and others.
I am also aware that only God can produce anything out of the
elements. He alone knows how to mingle and combine them in their due
proportions. For He alone is the Creator and Author of all good things,
and there is nothing in the world that He has not made. Therefore, let
the charlatans cease their vain-glorious talk, and remember that they
can never hope to gather where they cannot sow; let them make an end of
their false calcinations, sublimations, distillations, by which they
extract the spirit in a vaporous form, and of their juggling
coagulations and congelations, by which they pretend, even among the
initiated, to be able rightly to separate the elements of gold and
quicksilver. It is certainly true that all things under heaven are
composed of the four elements, and mixed of them according to the due
proportion of their genus and species; but it is not simply the union of
the four elements, but their being combined in a certain way, which
constitutes the substance of the Philosophical Stone.
I also understand that in the red quicksilver and perfect body, which
is called the Sun, the four elements are combined in a peculiar way, and
so inseparably conjoined, that no mere human art can divide them. For
all ancient and true Sages say that fire and air are enclosed in earth
and water, and contend so violently with each other that none but God
and Nature can loosen their grappling embrace. This I can truly affirm
and also prove. For we can neither see the fire nor grasp the air; and
if any one says that the several elements can be seen he is an impostor,
seeing that they are inseparably and inextricably conjoined. For,
although the Sophists pretend, and confidently affirm, that they can
divide gold and quicksilver into the four elements, yet for all that
they speak not the truth. If two elements, fire and air, were thus taken
away, all the rest must vanish into nothing. They may say that those two
are retained, but they are, nevertheless, densely ignorant as to what
becomes of them; for air and fire cannot be seen or perceived. Again,
that extract which they call fire and air renders humid, which is not
the property either of fire or of air.
Moreover, as thou hast said, even the most learned Doctor cannot know
the proportion of each element in any given substance. For God has
entrusted this knowledge to thee alone. Nor is any Sage wise enough to
be able to mingle and put together the elements so as to produce any
natural object. If then he dissolves anything into its elements, how, I
pray thee, is he to put them together again into any abiding form, since
he is ignorant of their proportionate quantity and quality, and of the
method of their composition? Yet it is of no use to separate them, if
they cannot be put together again. To thee, O Nature, we must entrust
this task, since thou knowest the art of preparing the Philosopher's
Stone, and of combining the elements without first separating them.
Nevertheless, for the preparation of the true Elixir, thou needest the
aid of a wise and truly learned man. Aristotle says: "Where the
physicist ends, there the physician begins." Nor can we attain to true
alchemy, until we begin to follow Nature, and to be guided by a
knowledge of her principles. Where the study of Alchemy is rightly
carried on, it is mightily advanced by Nature. But, for all that, we
must not suppose that every natural substance must be useful to the
alchemist. We must remember that Alchemy has a threefold aim: First, to
quicken and perfect the metal, and so to digest its spirit that none of
it is lost; secondly, so to digest and heat the substance in a small
phial that (without the addition of anything else) the body and spirit
are changed into one. The mingling of the elements is performed, not by
the artist, but by thee. Thirdly, it (alchemy) proves that the process
of preparing the Stone does not include any separation of the four
elements (of the quicksilver and the Sun, which is called red and
glorious gold). To believe that such a separation must take place is a
great mistake, and contradicts the fundamental principles of philosophy.
Again, it is an undoubted fact, that every elementary substance is
fed by the elements themselves. If, then, that which now forms one
object is dissolved, the object as such is destroyed, the bond which
held the elements together being violently broken, and each returning to
that from which it was first taken. A father that begets a son must not
be destroyed for that purpose; it suffices that the generating spirit
shall go forth with the seed, and be conceived by the female seed, and
cherished with its warmth. Such a generating spirit has power to beget
an infant of the same species, as Avicenna says. Now, it is the same
with pure gold, which is the true master of the Philosophical Stone. For
the father is the active principle, and must not be destroyed, or
resolved into its elements, but it is sufficient for the paternal Sun
(gold) to breathe its virtue and strength through the mother into the
son. When the mother (who is of the earth) brings forth, the son is seen
to have the father's substance.
Thus, I have learnt from thee, O Nature, that Alchemy is a true
science, and that the deep red gold, which is called Sun, is the true
father of the Stone or Elixir, from which this great and precious
treasure proceeds; which heats, digests, and cunningly tinges (without
the least diminution or corruption) the other principle of that gold,
and thus brings forth so glorious a son. It is worse than useless,
therefore, to meddle with the composition, or to separate the elements,
which Nature has so skillfully combined in the quicksilver, and in the
perfect body of the gold. All we have to do is to imitate Nature, and
use the instruments with which she combines the elements, and which she
uses in moulding minerals, and in giving its form to the quicksilver. If
we act otherwise, we destroy thy works, and sever the golden chain which
thou hast forged. Nevertheless, we must, as Aristotle says, transmute
the elements that we may obtain the object of our search.
Thus thou hast wisely led me into thy way, and hast shewn me the
utter folly of my own doings. Unto thee I render the most heartfelt
thanks for that thou hast delivered me from my own ignorance, and from
the disgrace and ruin to which all my endless alembics quicksilvers,
aquae fortes, dissolutions, excrements of horses, and coal fires, must
at length have brought me.
In future, I will read thy book more diligently, and obey thee more
implicitly. For this is the surest and safest way that a man can go,
because the Art is entirely in thy hands, although, by reason of its
gigantic aim, its progress must necessarily be slow. Therefore, I will
lose no more time, and first begin to think about the substance, the
active principle of which shall yield me most potent quicksilver. That I
will enclose in a clean, air-tight phial, and under it I will place an
alembic; thereupon thou wilt wait upon thine office. From the bottom of
my heart I once more render unto thee the debt of unspeakable gratitude,
for that thou hast deigned to visit me, and to bestow upon me so
precious an inheritance. In token of my gratitude I will now do thy
bidding, and let it be my ceaseless aim to attain to this most glorious
Tincture of the Elements, feeling assured that with the help of the
thrice great and good God, I shall succeed.
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