home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
- Taken from a 1960 reprint of "AN ENCYCLOPAEDIA OF OCCULTISM", by
- Lewis Spence; University Press, Hyde Park, New York. Originally
- Published in 1920, it is considered to be one of the most complete
- texts on the subject.
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- ALCHEMY: The science by aid of which the chemical philosophers of
- medieval times attempted to transmute the baser metals into gold or
- silver. There is considerable divergence of opinion as to the etymology
- of the word, but it would seem to be derived from the Arabic al=the, and
- kimya=chemistry, which in turn derives from the late Greek
- chemica=chemistry, from chumeia=a mingling, or cheein, `to pour out` or
- `mix', Aryan root ghu, to pour, whence the word `gush'. Mr. A. Wallis
- Budge in his "Egyptian Magic", however, states that it is possible that
- it may be derived from the Egyptian word khemeia, that is to say 'the
- preparation of the black ore', or `powder', which was regarded as the
- active principle in the transmutation of metals. To this name the Arabs
- affixed the article `al', thus giving al-khemeia, or alchemy.
- HISTORY OF ALCHEMY: From an early period the Egyptians possessed the
- reputation of being skillful workers in metals and, according to Greek
- writers, they were conversant with their transmutation, employing
- quicksilver in the process of separating gold and silver from the native
- matrix. The resulting oxide was supposed to possess marvelous powers,
- and it was thought that there resided within in the individualities of
- the various metals, that in it their various substances were
- incorporated. This black powder was mystically identified with the
- underworld form of the god Osiris, and consequently was credited with
- magical properties. Thus there grew up in Egypt the belief that
- magical powers existed in fluxes and alloys. Probably such a belief
- existed throughout Europe in connection with the bronze-working castes
- of its several races. Its was probably in the Byzantium of the fourth
- century, however, that alchemical science received embryonic form.
- There is little doubt that Egyptian tradition, filtering through
- Alexandrian Hellenic sources was the foundation upon which the infant
- science was built, and this is borne out by the circumstance that the
- art was attributed to Hermes Trismegistus and supposed to be contained
- in its entirety in his works.
- The Arabs, after their conquest of Egypt in the seventh century,
- carried on the researches of the Alexandrian school, and through their
- instrumentality the art was brought to Morocco and thus in the eighth
- century to Spain, where it flourished exceedingly. Indeed, Spain from
- the ninth to the eleventh century became the repository of alchemic
- science, and the colleges of Seville, Cordova and Granada were the
- centers from which this science radiated throughout Europe.
- The first practical alchemist may be said to have been the Arbian
- Geber, who flourished 720-750. From his "Summa Perfectionis", we may be
- justified in assuming that alchemical science was already matured in his
- day, and that he drew his inspirations from a still older unbroken line
- of adepts. He was followed by Avicenna, Mesna and Rhasis, and in France
- by Alain of Lisle, Arnold de Villanova and Jean de Meung the troubadour;
- in England by Roger Bacon and in Spain itself by Raymond Lully. Later,
- in French alchemy the most illustrious names are those of Flamel (b. ca.
- 1330), and Bernard Trevisan (b. ca. 1460) after which the center of of
- interest changes to Germany and in some measure to England, in which
- countries Paracelsus, Khunrath (ca. 1550), Maier (ca. 1568), Norton,
- Dalton, Charnock, and Fludd kept the alchemical flame burning brightly.
-
- It is surprising how little alteration we find throughout the period
- between the seventh and the seventeenth centuries, the heyday of
- alchemy, in the theory and practice of the art. The same sentiments and
- processes are found expressed in the later alchemical authorities as in
- the earliest, and a wonderful unanimity as regards the basic canons of
- the great art is evinced by the hermetic students of the time. On the
- introduction of chemistry as a practical art, alchemical science fell
- into desuetude and disrepute, owing chiefly to the number of charlatans
- practicing it, and by the beginning of the eighteenth century, as a
- school, it may be said to have become defunct. Here and there, however,
- a solitary student of the art lingered, and in the department of this
- article "Modern Alchemy" will demonstrate that the science has to a
- grate extent revived during modern times, although it has never been
- quite extinct.
- THE QUESTS OF ALCHEMY: The grand objects of alchemy were (1) the
- discovery of a process by which the baser metals might be transmuted
- into gold or silver; (2) the discovery of an elixir by which life might
- be prolonged indefinitely; and there may be added (3), the manufacture
- of and artificial process of human life. (for the latter see Homunculus)
- THE THEORY AND PHILOSOPHY OF ALCHEMY: The first objects were to be
- achieved as follows: The transmutation of metals was to be accomplished
- by a powder, stone or exilir often called the Philosopher`s Stone, the
- application of which would effect the transmutation of the baser metals
- into gold or silver, depending upon the length of time of its
- application. Basing their conclusions on a profound examination of
- natural processes and research into the secrets of nature, the
- alchemists arrived at the axiom that nature was divided philosophically
- into four principal regions, the dry, the moist, the warm, the cold,
- whence all that exists must be derived. Nature is also divisible into
- the male and the female. She is the divine breath, the central fire,
- invisible yet ever active, and is typified by sulphur, which is the
- mercury of the sages, which slowly fructifies under the genial warmth of
- nature. The alchemist must be ingenuous, of a truthful disposition, and
- gifted with patience and prudence, following nature in every alchemical
- performance. He must recollect that like draws to like, and must know
- how to obtain the seed of metals, which is produced by the four elements
- through the will of the Supreme Being and the Imagination of Nature. We
- are told the the original matter of metals is double in its essence,
- being a dry heat combined with a warm moisture, and that air is water
- coagulated by fir, capable of producing a universal dissolvent. These
- terms the neophyte must be cautious of interpreting in their literal
- sense. Great confusion exists in alchemical nomenclature, and the
- gibberish employed by the scores of charlatans who in later times
- pretended to a knowledge of alchemical matters did not tend to make
- things any more clear. The beginner must also acquire a thorough
- knowledge of the manner in which metals grow in the bowels of the earth.
- These are engendered by sulphur, which is male, and mercury, which is
- female, and the crux of alchemy is to obtain their seed - a process
- which the alchemist philosophers have not described with any degree of
- clarity.
- The physical theory of transmutation is based on the composite
- character of metals, and on the existence of a substance which, applied
- to matter, exalts and perfects it. This, Eugenius Philalethes and
- others call 'The Light'. The elements of all metals is similar,
- differing only in purity and proportion. The entire trend of the
- metallic kingdom is towards the natural manufacture of gold, and the
- production of the baser metals is only accidental as the result of an
-
- unfavorable environment. The Philosopher's Stone is the combination of
- the male and female seeds which beget gold. The composition of these is
- so veiled by symbolism as to make their identification a matter of
- impossibility. Waite, summarizing the alchemical process once the
- secret of the stone is unveiled, says: "Given the matter of the stone
- and also the necessary vessel, the process which must be then undertaken
- to accomplish the `magnum opus' are described with moderate perpicuity.
- There is the calcination or purgation of the stone, in which kind is
- worked with kind for the space of a philosophical year. There is
- dissolution which prepares the way for congelation, and which is
- performed during the black state of the mysterious matter. It is
- accomplished by water which does not wet the hand. There is the
- separation of the subtle and the gross, which is to be performed by
- means of heat. In the conjunction which follows, the elements are duly
- and scrupulously combined. Putrefaction afterwards takes place.
- `Without which pole no seed may multiply.'
- "Then, in the subsequent congelation the white colour appears, which
- is one of the signs of success. It becomes more pronounced in cibation.
- In sublimation the body is spiritualised, the spirit made corporeal,
- and again a more glittering whiteness is apparent. Fermentation
- afterwards fixes together the alchemical earth and water, and causes the
- mystic medicines to flow like wax. The matter is then augmented with
- the alchemical spirit of life, and the exaltation of the philosophic
- earth is accomplished by the natural rectification of its elements.
- When these processes have been successfully completed, the mystic stone
- will have passed through the chief stages characterized by different
- colours, black, white and red, after which it is capable of infinite
- multication, and when projected on mercury, it will absolutely transmute
- it, the resulting gold bearing every test. The base metals made use of
- must be purified to insure the success of the operation. The process
- for the manufacture of silver is essentially similar, but the resources
- of the matter are not carried to so high a degree.
- "According to the "Commentary on the Ancient War of the Knights" the
- transmutations performed by the perfect stone are so absolute that no
- trace remains of the original metal. It cannot, however, destroy gold,
- nor exalt it into a more perfect metallic substance; it, therefore,
- transmutes it into a medicine a thousand times superior to any virtues
- which can be extracted from its vulgar state. This medicine becomes a
- most potent agent in the exaltation of base metals."
- There are not wanting authorities who deny that the transmutations of
- metals was the grand object of alchemy, and who infer from the
- alchemistical writings that the end of the art was the spiritual
- regeneration of man. Mrs. Atwood, author of "A Suggestive Inquiry into
- the Hermetic Mystery", and an American writer named Hitchcock are
- purhaps the chief protagonists of the belief the by spiritual processes
- akin to those of the chemical process of alchemy, the soul of man may be
- purified and exalted. But both commit the radical error of stating the
- the alchemical writers did not aver that the transmutation of base metal
- into gold was their grand end. None of the passages they quote, is
- inconsistent with the physical object of alchemy, and in a work, "The
- Marrow of Alchemy", stated to be by Eugenius Philaletes, it is laid down
- that the real quest is for gold. It is constantly impressed upon the
- reader, however, in the perusal of esteemed alchemical works, that only
- those who are instructed by God can achieve the grand secret. Others,
- again, state that a tyro may possibly stumble upon it, but that unless
- he is guided by an adept he has small chance of achieving the grand
- arcanum. It will be obvious to the tyro, however, that nothing can ever
-
- be achieved by trusting to the allegories of the adepts or the many
- charlatans who crowded the ranks of the art. Gold may be made, or it
- may not, but the truth or fallacy of the alchemical method lies with
- modern chemistry. The transcendental view of alchemy, however, is
- rapidly gaining ground, and probably originated in the comprehensive
- nature of Hermetic theory and the consciousness in the alchemical mind
- that what might with success be applied to nature could also be applied
- to man with similar results. Says Mr. Waite, "The gold of the
- philosopher is not a metal, on the other hand, man is a being who
- possesses within himself the seeds of a perfection which he has never
- realized, and that he therefore corresponds to those metals which the
- Hermetic theory supposes to be capable of developing the latent
- possibilities in the subject man." At the same time, it must be
- admitted that the cryptic character of alchemical language was probably
- occasioned by a fear on the part of the alchemical mystic that he might
- lay himself open through his magical opinions to the rigors of the law.
- RECORDS OF ACTUAL TRANSMUTATIONS: Several records of alleged
- transmutations of base metal into gold are in existence. These were
- achieved by Nicholas Flamel, Van Helmont, Martini, Richthausen, and
- Sethon. For a detailed account of the methods employed the reader is
- referred to several articles on these hermetists. In nearly every case
- the transmuting element was a mysterious powder or the "Philosopher's
- Stone".
- MODERN ALCHEMY That alchemy has been studied in modern times there
- can be no doubt. M. figuier in his "L'Alchimie et les Alchimistes",
- dealing with the subject of modern alchemy, as expressed by the
- initiates of the first half of the nineteenth century, states that many
- French alchemists of his time regarded the discoveries of modern science
- as merely so many evidences of the truth of the doctrines they embraced.
- Throughout Europe, he says, the positive alchemical doctrine had many
- adherents at the end of the eighteenth century and the beginning of the
- nineteenth. Thus a "vast association of alchemists", founded in
- Westphalia in 1790, continued to flourish in the year 1819, under the
- name of the "Hermetic Society". In 1837, an alchemist of Thuringia
- presented to the Societe Industrielle of Weimar a tincture which he
- averred would effect metallic transmutation. About the same time
- several French journals announced a public course of lectures on
- hermetic philosophy by a professor of the University of Munich. He
- further states that many Honoverian and Bavarian families pursued in
- common the search for the grand arcanum. Paris, however, was regarded
- as the alchemical Mecca. There dwelt many theoretical alchemists and
- "empirical adepts". The first pursued and arcanum through the medium of
- books, the other engaged in practical efforts to effect transmutation.
- M. Figuier states that in the forties of the last century he
- frequented the laboratory of a certain Monsieur L., which was the
- rendezvous of the alchemists in Paris. When Monsieur L`s pupils left
- the laboratory for the day, the modern adepts dropped in one by one, and
- Figuier relates how deeply impressed he was by the appearance and
- costumes of these strange men. In the daytime, he frequently
- encountered them in the public libraries, buried in gigantic folios, and
- in the evening they might be seen pacing the solitary bridges with eyes
- fixed in vague contemplation upon the first pale stars of night. A long
- cloak usually covered the meager limbs, and their untrimmed beards and
- matted locks lent them a wild appearance. They walked with a solemn and
- measured gait, and used the figures of speech employed by the medieval
- illumines. Their expression was generally a mixture of the most ardent
- hope and fixed despair. Among the adepts who sought the laboratory of
-
- Monsieur L., Figuier remarked especially a young man, in whose habits
- and language he could nothing in common with those of his strange
- companions. He confounded the wisdom of the alchemical adept with the
- tenets of the modern scientist in the most singular fashion, and meeting
- him one day at the gate of the Observatory, M. Figuier renewed the
- subject of their last discussion, deploring that " a man of his gifts
- could pursue the semblance of a chimera." Without replying, the young
- adept led him into the Observatory garden, and proceeded to reveal to
- him the mysteries of modern alchemical science.
- The young man proceeded to fix a limit to the researches of the modern
- alchemists. Gold, he said, according to the ancient authors, as three
- distinct properties: (1) that of resolving the baser metals into itself,
- and interchanging and metamorphosing all metals into one another; (2)
- the curing of afflictions and the prolongation of life; (3), as a
- 'spiritus mundi' to bring mankind into rapport with the supermundane
- spheres. Modern alchemists, he continued, reject the greater part of
- these ideas, especially those connected with spiritual contact. The
- object of modern alchemy might be reduced to the search for a substance
- having the power to transform and transmute all other substances into
- one another - in short, to discover that medium so well known to the
- alchemists of old and lost to us. This was a perfectly feasible
- proposition. In the four principal substances of oxygen, hydrogen,
- carbon, and azote, we have the tetractus of Pythagoras and the tetragram
- of the Chaldeans and Egyptians. All the sixty elements are referable to
- these original four. The ancient alchemical theory established the fact
- that all the metals are the same in their composition, that all are
- formed from sulphur and mercury, and that the difference between them is
- according to the proportion of these substances in their composition.
- Further, all the products of minerals present in their composition
- complete identity with those substances most opposed to them. Thus
- fulminating acid contains precisely the same quantity of carbon, oxygen,
- and azote as cyanic acid, and "cyanhydric" acid does not differ from
- formate ammoniac. This new property of matter is known as "isomerism".
- M. Figuier's friend then proceeds to quote support of his thesis and
- operations and experiments of M. Dumas, a celebrated French savant, as
- is well known to thous of Prout, and other English chemists of standing.
- Passing to consider the possibility of isomerism in elementary as well
- as in compound substances, the points out to M. Figuier that id the
- theory of isomerism can apply to such bodies, the transmutation of
- metals ceases to be a wild, unpractical dream, and becomes a scientific
- possibility, the transformation being brought about by a molecular
- rearrangement. Isomerism can be established in the case of compound
- substances by chemical analysis. showing the identity of their
- constituent parts. In the case of metals it can be proved by the
- comparison of the properties of isometric bodies with the properties of
- metals, in order to discover whether they have any common
- characteristics. Such experiments, he continued, had been conducted by
- M. Dumas, with the result the isometric substances were to be found to
- have equal equivalents, or equivalents which were exact multiples of one
- another. This characteristic is also a feature of metals. Gold and
- osmium have identical equivalents, as have platinum and iridium. The
- equivalent of cobalt is almost the same as that of nickel, and the
- semi-equivalent of tin is equal to the equivalent of the two preceding
- metals.
- M. Dumas. speaking before the British Association, had shown that when
- three simple bodies displayed great analogies in their properties, such
- as chlorine, bromide, and iodine, barium, strontium, and calcium, the
-
- chemical equivalent of the intermediate body is represented by the
- arithmetical mean between the equivalents of the other two. Such a
- statement well showed the isomerism of elementary substances, and proved
- that metals, however dissimilar in outward appearance, were composed of
- the same matter differently arranged and proportioned. This theory
- successfully demolishes the difficulties in the way of transmutation.
- Again, Dr. Prout says that the chemical equivalents of nearly all
- elemental substances are the multiples of one among them. Thus, if the
- equivalent of hydrogen be taken for the unit, the equivalent of every
- other substance will be an exact multiple of it - carbon will be
- represented by six, axote by fourteen, oxygen by sixteen, zink by
- thirty-two. But, pointed out M. Figuier's friend, if the molecular
- masses in compound substances have so simple a connection, does it not
- go to prove the all natural bodies are formed of one principle,
- differently arranged and condensed to produce all known compounds?
- If transmutation is thus theoretically possible, it only remains to
- show by practical experiment that it is strictly in accordance with
- chemical laws, and by no means inclines to the supernatural. At this
- juncture the young alchemist proceeded to liken the action of the
- Philosopher`s Stone on metals to that of a ferment on organic matter.
- When metals are melted and brought to red heat, a molecular change may
- be produced analogous to fermentation. Just as sugar, under the
- influence of a ferment, may be changed into lactic acid without altering
- its constituents, so metals can alter their character under the
- influence of the Philosopher`s Stone. The explanation of the latter
- case is no more difficult than that of the former. The ferment does not
- take any part in the chemical changes it brings about, and no
- satisfactory explanation of its effects can be found either in the laws
- of affinity or in the forces of electricity, light, or heat. As with
- the ferment, the required quantity of the Philosopher`s Stone is
- infinitesimal. Medicine, philosophy, every modern science was at one
- time a source of such errors and extravagances as are associated with
- medieval alchemy, but they are not therefore neglected and despised.
- Wherefore, then, should we be blind tot he scientific nature of
- transmutation?
- One of the foundations of alchemical theories was that minerals grew
- and developed in the earth, like organic things. It was always the aim
- of nature to produce gold, the most precious metal, but when
- circumstances were not favorable the baser metals resulted. The desire
- of the old alchemists was to surprise nature`s secrets, and thus attain
- the ability to do in a short period what nature takes years to
- accomplish. Nevertheless, the medieval alchemists appreciated the value
- of time in their experiments as modern alchemists never do. M.
- Figuier`s friend urged him not to condemn these exponents of the
- hermetic philosophy for their metaphysical tendencies, for, he said,
- there are facts in our sciences that can only be explained in that
- light. If, for instance, copper be placed in air or water, there will
- be no result, but if a touch of some acid be added, it will oxidize.
- The explanation is that "the acid provokes oxidation of the metal
- because it has an affinity for the oxide which tends to form." - a
- material fact most metaphysical in its production, and only explicable
- thereby.
- He concluded his argument with an appeal for tolerance towards the
- medieval alchemists, whose work is underrated because it is not properly
- understood.
-
- LITERATURE:
- Atwood, A Suggestive Inquiry into the Hermetic Mastery, 1850
- Hitchcock, Remarks on Alchemy and the Alchemists, Boston, 1857
- Waite, Lives of the Alchemystical Philosophers, London, 1888
- " The Occult Sciences, London, 1891
- Bacon, Mirror of Alchemy, 1597
- S. le Doux, Dictionnaire Hermetique, 1695
- Langlet de fresnoy, Histoire de la Philosophie Hermetique, 1792
- " " Theatrum Chemicum, 1662
- Valentine, Triumphal Chariot of Antimony, 1656
- Redgrove, Alchemy Ancient and Modern
- Figuier, L'Alchimie et les Alchimistes, Paris, 1857
-