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- I am typing this treatise in from 'In Pursuit of Gold' by
- 'lapidus' (Neville Spearman Limited, 112 Whitfield Street,
- London W1P 6DP, ISBN 0 85435 043 8), without permission.
- This treatise describes the entire process of preparing the
- philosopher's stone. There are three seperate operations
- described here: the preperation of the 'secret fire' (the
- catalyst or solvent which is used throughout the whole work,
- without which nothing can be achieved, but which is seldom if
- ever mentioned in any alchemical treatise), the preperation
- of 'mercury' (a metallic vapor made from antimony and iron,
- said to resemble vulgar mercury (Hg) in appearance, necessary
- in the preparation of the stone) and the preperation of the
- stone itself.
-
- These operations are not presented in sequence. The reader will
- note that the language is allusive and recondite, that several
- names are used to refer to the same thing and that one name is
- used to refer to several things. This is, however, an exceptionally
- clear alchemical text.
-
- Artephius is said to have written this in the 12th century. I don't
- know (and lapidus doesn't say) who translated it (presumably from
- the latin).
-
- comments in [square brackets] are my own; typos are mine, and I have
- americanized spellings (color for color etc).everything else has been
- left as I found it, including the idiosyncratic punctuation.
-
- ___
- The Secret Book
- Artephius
-
- (1) Antimony is a mineral participating of saturnine parts, and has
- in all respects the nature thereof. This saturnine antimony agrees with
- sol, and contains in itself argent vive, in which no metal is swallowed
- up, except gold, and gold is truly swallowed up by this antimonial argent
- vive. Without this argent vive no metal whatsoever can be whitened; it
- whitens laton, i.e. gold; reduceth a perfect body into its prima materia,
- or first matter, viz. into sulphur and argent vive, of a white color, and
- outshining a looking glass. It dissolves, I say the perfect body, which is
- so in its own nature; for this water is friendly and agreeable with the
- metals, whitening sol, because it contains in itself white or pure argent
- vive.
-
-
- (2) And from both these you may draw a great arcanum, viz. a water of
- saturnine antimony, mercurial and white; to the end that it may whiten sol,
- not burning, but dissolving, and afterwards congealing to the consistence or
- likeness of white cream. Therefore, saith the philosopher, this water makes
- the body to be volatile; because after it has dissolved in it, and
- infrigidated, it ascends above and swims upon the surface of the water.
- Take, saith he, crude leaf gold, or calcined with mercury, and put it into
- our vinegre, made of saturnine antimony, mercurial, and sal ammoniac, in
- a broad glass vessel, and four inches high or more; put it into a gentle
- heat, and in a short time you will see elevated a liquor, as it were oil
- swimming atop, much like a scum. Gather this with a spoon or feather
- dipping it in; and in doing so often times a day until nothing more arises;
- evaporate the water with a gentle heat, i.e., the superfluous humidity of
- the vinegre, and there will remain the quintessence, potestates or powers
- of gold in the form of a white oil incombustible. In this oil the philosophers
- have placed their greatest secrets; it is exceeding sweet, and of great virtue
- for easing the pains of wounds.
-
- (3) The whole, then, of this antimonial secret is, that we know how by it
- to extract or draw forth argent vive, out of the body of Magnesia, not
- burning, and this is antimony, and a mercurial sublimate. That is, you must
- extract a living and incombustible water, and then congeal, or coagulate it
- with the perfect body of sol, i.e. fine gold, without alloy; which is done
- by dissolving it into a nature [sic? mature?] white substance of the
- consistency of cream, and made thoroughly white. But first this sol by
- putrefaction and resolution in this water, loseth all its light and
- brightness, and will grow dark and black; afterwards it will ascend above
- the water, and by little and little will swim upon it, in a substance of a
- white color. And this is the whitening of red laton to sublimate it
- philosophically, and to reduce it into its first matter; viz. into a white
- incombustible sulphur, and into a fixed argent vive. Thus the perfect body
- of sol, resumeth life in this water; it is revived, inspired, grows, and is
- multiplied in its kind, as all other things are. For in this water, it so
- happens, that the body compounded of two bodies, viz. sol and luna, is
- puffed up, swells, putrefies, is raised up, and does increase by the
- receiving from the vegetable and animated nature and substance.
-
- (4) Our water also, or vinegar aforesaid, is the vinegar of the mountains,
- i.e. of sol and luna; and therefore it is mixed with gold and silver, and
- sticks close to them perpetually; and the body receiveth from this water a
- white tincture, and shines with inestimable brightness. Who so knows how to
- convert, or change the body into a medicinal white gold, may easily by the
- same white gold change all imperfect metals into the best or finest silver.
- And this white gold is called by the philosophers "luna alba philosophorum,
- argentum vivum album fixum, aurum alchymiae, and fumus albus" [white phil-
- osophical silver, white fixed mercury, alchemical gold and white (some-
- thing)]: and therefore without this our antimonial vinegar, the aurum
- album of the philosophers cannot be made. And because in our vinegar
- there is a double substance of argentum vivum, the one from antimony, and
- the other from mercury sublimated, it does give a double weight and
- substance of fixed argent vive, and also augments therein the native
- color, weight, substance and tincture thereof.
-
-
- (5) Our dissolving water therefore carries with it a great tincture,
- and a great melting or dissolving; because that when it feels the vulgar
- fire, if there be in it the pure and fine bodies of sol or luna, it
- immediately melts them, and converts them into its white substance such
- s itself is, and gives to the body color, weight, and tincture. In it also
- is a powder of liquefying or melting all things that can be
- melted or dissolved; it is a water ponderous, viscous, precious, and worthy
- to be esteemed, resolving all crude bodies into their prima materia, or
- first matter, viz. earth and a viscous powder; that is into sulphur,
- and argentum vivum. If therefore you put into this water, leaves, filings,
- or calx of any metal, and set it in a gentle heat for a time, the whole will
- be dissolved, and converted into a viscous water, or white oil as afore-
- said. Thus it mollifies the body, and prepares for liquefaction; yea, it
- makes all things fusible, viz. stones and metals, and after gives them
- spirit and life. And it dissolves all things with an admirable solution,
- transmuting the perfect body into a fusible medicine, melting, or liquefying,
- moreover fixing, and augmenting the weight and color.
-
- (6) Work therefore with it, and you shall obtain from it what you desire,
- for it is the spirit and soul of sol and luna; it is the oil, the dissolving
- water, the fountain, the Balneum Mariae, the praeternatural fire, the moist
- fire, the secret, hidden and invisible fire. It is also the most acrid
- vinegar, concerning which an ancient philosopher saith, I besought the Lord,
- and he showed me a pure clear water, which I knew to be the pure vinegar,
- altering, penetrating, and digesting. I say a penetrating vinegar, and the
- moving instrument for putrefying, resolving and reducing gold or silver into
- their prima materia or first matter. And it is the only agent in the universe,
- which in this art is able to reincrudate metallic bodies with the conservation
- of their species. It is therefore the only apt and natural medium, by which we
- ought to resolve the perfect bodies of sol and luna, by a wonderful and
- solemn dissolution, with the conservation of the species, and without any
- distruction, unless it be to a new, more noble, and better form or generation,
- viz. into the perfect philosopher's stone, which is their wonderful secret or
- arcanum.
-
- (7) Now this water is a certain middle substance, clear as fine silver,
- which ought to receive the tinctures of sol and luna, so as the may be
- congealed, and changed into a white and living earth. For this water needs
- the perfect bodies, that with them after the dissolution, it may be congealed,
- fixed, and coagulated into a white earth. But if this solution is also their
- coagulation, for they have one and the same operation, because one is not
- dissolved, but the other is congealed, nor is there any other water which can
- dissolve the bodies, but that which abideth with them in the matter and the
- form. It cannot be permanent unless it be of the nature of other bodies, that
- they may be made one. When therefore you see the water coagulate itself with
- the bodies that be dissolved therein; be assured that thy knowledge, way of
- working, and the work itself are true and philosophic, and that you have done
- rightly according to art.
-
- (8) Thus you see that nature has to be amended by its own like nature; that
- is, gold and silver are to be exalted in our water, as our water also with
- these bodies; which water is called the medium of the soul, without which
- nothing has to be done in this art. It is a vegetable, mineral and animal
- fire, which conserves the fixed spirits of sol and luna, but destroys and
- conquers their bodies; for it destroys, overturns, and changes bodies and
- metallic forms, making them to be no bodies but a fixed spirit. And it turns
- them into a humid substance, soft and fluid, which hath ingression and power
- to enter into other imperfect bodies, and to mix with them in their smallest
- parts, and to tinge and make them perfect. But this they could not do while
- they remained in their metallic forms or bodies, which were dry and hard,
- whereby they could have no entrance into other things, so to tinge and make
- perfect, what was before imperfect.
-
- (9) It is necessary therefore to convert the bodies of metals into a fluid
- substance; for that every tincture will tinge a thousand times more in a soft
- and liquid substance, than when it is in a dry one, as is plainly apparent in
- saffron. Therefore the transmutation of imperfect metals is impossible to be
- done by perfect bodies, while they are dry and hard; for which cause sake they
- must be brought back into their first matter, which is soft and fluid. It
- appears therefore that the moisture must be reverted that the hidden treasure
- may be revealed. And this is called the reincrudation of bodies, which is the
- decocting and softening them, till they lose their hard and dry substance or
- form; because that which is dry doth not enter into, nor tinge anything except
- its own body, nor can it be tinged except it be tinged; because, as I said
- before, a thick dry earthy matter does not penetrate nor tinge, and therefore,
- because it cannot enter or penetrate, it can make no alteration in the matter
- to be altered. For this reason it is, that gold coloreth not, until its
- internal or hidden spirit is drawn forth out of its bowels by this, our white
- water, and that it may be made altogether a spiritual substance, a white
- vapor, a white spirit, and a wonderful soul.
-
- (10) It behoves us therefore by this our water to attenuate, alter and soften
- the perfect bodies, to wit sol and luna, that so they may be mixed other
- perfect bodies. From whence, if we had no other benefit bu this our antimonial
- water, than that it rendered bodies soft, more subtile, and fluid, according
- to its own nature, it would be sufficient. But more than that, it brings back
- bodies to their original of sulphur and mercury, that of them we may
- afterwards in a little time, in less than an hour's time do that above ground
- which nature was a thousand years doing underground, in the mines of the
- earth, which is a work almost miraculous.
-
- (11) And therefore our ultimate, or highest secret is, by this our water, to
- make bodies volatile, spiritual, and a tincture, or tinging water, which may
- have ingress or entrance into bodies; for it makes bodies to be merely spirit,
- because it reduces hard and dry bodies, and prepares them for fusion, melting
- and dissolving; that is, it converts them into a permanent or fixed water. And
- so it makes of bodies a most precious and desirable oil, which is the true
- tincture, and the permanent fixed white water, by nature hot and moist, or
- rather temperate, subtile, fusible as wax, which does penetrate, sink, tinge,
- and make perfect the work. And this our water immediately dissolves bodies
- (as sol and luna) and makes them into an incombustible oil, which then may
- be mixed with other imperfect bodies. It also converts other bodies into the
- nature of a fusible salt which the philosophers call "sal alebrot philoso-
- phorum", better and more noble than any other salt, being in its own nature
- fixed and not subject to vanish in fire. It is an oil indeed by nature hot,
- subtile, penetrating, sinking through and entering into other bodies; it is
- called the perfect or great elixir, and the hidden secret of the wise
- searchers of nature. He therefore that knows this salt of sol and luna, and
- its generation and perfection, nd afterwards how go commix it, and make it
- homogene with other perfect bodies, he in truth knows one of the greatest
- secrets of nature, and the only way that leads to perfection.
-
- (12) These bodies thus dissolved by our water are called argent vive, which
- is not without its sulphur, nor sulphur without the fixedness of sol and luna;
- because sol and luna are the particular means, or medium in the form through
- which nature passes in the perfecting or completing thereof. And this argent
- vive is called our esteemed and valuable salt, being animated and pregnant,
- and our fire, for that is nothing but fire; yet not fire, but sulphur; and not
- sulphur only, but also quicksilver drawn from sol and luna by our water, and
- reduced to a stone of great price. That is to say it is a matter or substance
- of sol nd luna, or silver and gold, altered from vileness to nobility. Now
- you must note that this white sulphur is the father and mother of the metals;
- it is our mercury, and the mineral of gold; also the soul, and the ferment;
- yea, the mineral virtue, and the living body; our sulphur, and our
- quicksilver; that is, sulphur of sulphur, quicksilver of quicksilver, and
- mercury of mercury.
-
- (13) The property therefore of our water is, that it melts or dissolves gold
- and silver, and increases their native tincture or color. For it changes
- their bodies from being corporeal, into a spirituality; and it is in this
- water which turns the bodies, or corporeal substance into a white vapor, which
- is a soul which is whiteness itself, subtile, hot and full of fire. This
- water also called the tinging or blood-color-making stone, being the virtue
- of the spiritual tincture, without which nothing can be done; and is the
- subject of all things that can be melted, and of liquefaction itself, which
- agrees perfectly nd unites closely with sol and luna from which it can never
- be seperated. For it joined [joins?] in affinity to the gold and silver, but
- more immediately to the gold than to the silver; which you are to take special
- notice of. It is also called the medium of conjoining the tinctures of sol and
- luna with the inferior or imperfect metals; for it turns the bodies into the
- true tincture, to tinge the said imperfect metals, also it is the water that
- whiteneth, as it is whiteness itself, which quickeneth, as it is a soul; and
- therefore as the philosopher saith, quickly entereth into its body.
-
- (14) For it is a living water which comes to moisten the earth, that it may
- spring out, and in its due season bring forth much fruit; for all things
- springing from the earth, are endued through dew and moisture. The earth
- therefore springeth not forth without watering and moisture; it is the water
- proceeding from May dew that cleanseth the body; and like rain it penetrates
- them, and makes one body of two bodies. This aqua vite or water of life, being
- rightly ordered and disposed with the body, it whitens it, and converts or
- changes it into its white color, for this water is a white vapor, and there-
- fore the body is whitened with it. It behoves you therefore to whiten the
- body, and open its unfoldings, for between these two, that is between the body
- and the water, there is desire and friendship, like as between male and
- female, because of the propinquity and likeness of their natures.
-
- (15) Now this our second and living water is called "Azoth", the water
- washing the laton viz. the body compounded of sol and luna by our first
- water; it is also called the soul of the dissolved bodies, which souls we
- have even now tied together, for the use of the wise philosopher. How precious
- then, and how great a thing is this water; for without it, the work could
- never be done or perfected; it is also called the "vase naturae", the belly,
- the womb, the receptacle of the tincture, the earth, the nurse. It is the
- royal fountain in which the king and queen bathe themselves; and the mother
- must be put into and sealed up within the belly of her infant; and that is
- sol himself, who proceded from her, and whom she brought forth; and therefore
- they have loved one another as mother and son, and are conjoined together,
- because they come from one and the same root, and are of the same substance
- and nature. And because this water is the water of the vegetable life, it
- causes the dead body to vegetate, increase and spring forth, and to rise from
- death to life, by being dissolved first and then sublimed. And in doing this
- the body is converted into a spirit, and the spirit afterwards into a body;
- and then is made the amity, the peace, the concord, and the union of
- contraries, to wit, between the body and the spirit, which reciprocally, or
- mutually change their natures which they receive, and communicate one to
- another through their most minute parts, so that that which is hot is mixed
- with that which is cold, the dry with the moist, and the hard with the soft;
- by which means, there is a mixture made of contrary natures, viz. of cold
- and hot, and moist with dry, even most admirable unity between enemies.
-
- (16) Our dissolution then of bodies, which is made such in this first water,
- is nothing else, but a destroying or overcoming of the moist with the dry,
- for the moist is coagulated with the dry. For the moisture is contained under,
- terminated with, and coagulated in the dry body, to wit, in that which is
- earthy. Let therefore the hard and the dry bodies be put into our first water
- in a vessel, which close well, and let them there abide till they be
- dissolved, and ascend to the top; then may they be called a new body, the
- white gold made by art, the white stone, the white sulphur, not inflammable,
- the paradisical stone, viz. the stone transmuting imperfect metals into white
- silver. Then we have also the body, soul and spirit altogether; of which
- spirit and soul it is said, that they cannot be extracted from the perfect
- bodies, but by the help or conjunction of our dissolving water. Because it is
- certain, that the things fixed cannot be lifted up, or made to ascend, but by
- the conjunction or help of that which is volatile.
-
- (17) The spirit, therefore, by help of the water and the soul, is drawn forth
- from the bodies themselves, and the body is thereby made spiritual; for that
- at the same instant of time, the spirit, with the soul of the bodies, ascends
- on high to the superior part, which is the perfection of the stone and is
- called sublimation. This sublimation, is made by things acid, spiritual,
- volatile, and which are in their own nature sulphureous nd viscous, which
- dissolves bodies and makes them to ascend, and be changed into air and spirit.
- and in this sublimation, a certain part of our said first water ascends with
- the bodies, joining itself with them, ascending and subliming into one neutral
- and complex substance, which contains the nature of the two, viz. the nature
- of the two bodies and the water. and therefore it is called the corporeal and
- spiritual compositum, corjufle, cambar, ethelia, zandarith, duenech, the good;
- but properly it is called the permanent or fixed water only, because it flies
- not in the fire. But it perpetually adheres to the commixed or compound
- bodies, that is, the sol and luna, and communicates to them the living
- tincture, incombustible and most fixed, much more noble and precious than the
- former which these bodies had. Because from henceforth this tincture runs like
- oil, running through and penetrating bodies, and giving to them its wonderful
- fixity; nd this tincture is the spirit, and the spirit is the soul, and the
- soul is the body. For in this operation, the body is made a spirit of a most
- subtile nature; and again, the spirit is corporified and changed into the
- nature of the body, with the bodies, whereby our stone consists of a body, a
- soul, and a spirit.
-
- (18) O God, how through nature, doth thou change a body into a spirit: which
- could not be done, if the spirit were not incorporated with the bodies, and
- the bodies made volatile with the spirit, nd afterwards permanent and fixed.
- For this cause sake, they have passed over into one another, and by the
- influence of wisdom, are converted into one another. O Wisdom: how thou makest
- the most fixed gold to be volatile and fugitive, yeah, though by nature it is
- the most fixed of all things in the world. It is necessary therefore, to
- dissolve and liquefy these bodies by our water, and to make them a permanent
- or fixed water, a pure, golden water leaving in the bottom the gross, earthy,
- superfluous and dry matter. And in this subliming, making thin nd pure, the
- fire ought to be gentle; but if in this subliming with soft fire, the bodies
- be not purified, nd the gross and earthy parts thereof (note this well) be
- not seperated from the impurities of the dead, you shall not be able to
- perfect the work. For thou needest nothing but the thin and subtile part of
- the dissolved bodies, which our water will give thee, if thou proceedest with
- a slow or gentle fire, by seperating the things heterogene from the things
- homogene.
-
- (19) This compositum then has its mundification or cleaning, by our moist
- fire, which by dissolving and subliming that which is pure and white, it cast
- forth its feces or filth like a voluntary vomit, for in such a dissolution
- and natural sublimation or lifting up, there is a loosening or untying of the
- elements, and a cleansing and seperating of the pure from the impure. So that
- the pure and white substance ascends upwards and the impure and earthy remains
- fixed in the bottom of the water and the vessel. This must be taken away and
- removed, because it is of no value, taking only the middle white substance,
- flowing and melted or dissolved, rejecting the feculent earth, which remains
- below in the bottom. These feces were seperated partly by the water, and are
- the dross and terra damnata, which is of no value, nor can do any such service
- as the clear, white, pure and clear matter, which is wholly and only to be
- taken and made use of.
-
- (20) And against this capharean rock, the ship of knowledge, or art of the
- young philosopher is often, as it happened also to me sometimes, dashed
- together in pieces, or destroyed, because the philosophers for the most part
- speak by the contraries. That is to say that nothing must be removed or taken
- away, except the moisture, which is the blackness; which notwithstanding they
- speak and write only to the unwary, who, without a master, indefatigable
- reading, or humble supplications to God Almighty, would ravish away the
- golden fleece. It is therefore to be observed, that this seperation, division,
- and sublimation, is without a doubt the key to the whole work.
-
-
- [the first 20 chapters of this treatise were presented under the heading
- 'the secret book' (chapter 3 of 'in pursuit of gold'). at this point is
- begun chapter 4, 'the wisdom of artephius', which contains the balance of the
- treatise. I feel the division is significant, though I couldn't quite say
- why]
-
-
- (21) After the putrefaction, then, and dissolution of these bodies, our
- bodies also ascend to the top, even to the surface of the dissolving water,
- in a whiteness of color, which whiteness is life. And in this whiteness,
- the antimonial and mercurial soul, is by natural compact infused into, and
- joined with the spirits of sol and luna, which seperate the thin from the
- thick, and the pure from the impure. That is, by lifting up, by little
- and little, the thin and the pure part of the body, from the feces and
- impurity, until all the pure parts are seperated and ascended. And in this
- work is out natural and philosophical sublimation work completed. Now in
- this whiteness is the soul infused into the body, to wit, the mineral virtue,
- which is more subtile than fire, being indeed the true quintessence and life,
- which desires or hungers to be born again, and to put off the defilements
- and be spoiled of its gross and earthy feces, which it has taken from its
- monstrous womb, and corrupt place of its original. And in this our philo-
- sophical sublimation, not in the impure, corrupt, vulgar mercury, which has
- no qualities or properties like to those, with which our mercury, drawn from
- its vitriolic caverns is adorned. But let us return to our sublimation.
-
- (22) It is most certain therefore in this art, that this soul extracted from
- the bodies, cannot be made to ascend, but by adding to it a volatile matter,
- which is of its own kind. By which the bodies will be made volatile and
- spiritual, lifting themselves up, subtilizing and subliming themselves,
- contrary to their own proper nature, which is corporeal, heavy and ponderous.
- And by this means they are unbodied, or made no bodies, to wit, incorporeal,
- and a quintessence of the nature of a spirit, which is called, "avis
- hermetis", and "mercurius extractus", drawn from a red subject or matter. And
- so the terrene or earthy parts remain below, or rather the grosser parts of
- the bodies, which can by no industry or ingenuity of man be brought to a
- perfect dissolution.
-
- (23) And this white vapor, this white gold, to wit, this quintessence, is
- called also the compound magnesia, which like a man does contain, or like a
- man is composed of a body, soul and spirit. Now the body is the fixed solar
- earth, exceeding the most subtile matter, which by the help of our divine
- water is with difficulty lifted up or seperated. The soul is the tincture of
- sol and luna, proceeding from the conjunction, or communication of these two,
- to wit, the bodies of sol and luna, and our water, and the spirit is the
- mineral power, or virtue of the bodies, and also out of the bodies like as
- the tinctures or colors in dying cloth are by the water put upon, and diffused
- in and through the cloth. And this mercurial spirit is the chain or band of
- the solar soul; and the solar body is that body which contains the spirit and
- soul, having the power of fixing in itself, being joined with luna. The
- spirit therefore penetrates, the body fixes, and the soul joins together,
- tinges and whitens. From these three bodies united together is our stone
- made: to wit, sol, luna and mercury.
-
- (24) Therefore with this our golden water, a natural substance is extracted,
- exceeding all natural substances; and so, except the bodies be broken and
- destroyed, imbibed, made subtile and fine, thriftily, and diligently managed,
- till they are abstracted from, or lose their grossness or solid substance,
- nd be changed into a subtile spirit, all our labor will be in vain. And
- unless the bodies be made no bodies or incorporeal, that is converted into
- the philosophers mercury, there is no rule of art yet found out to work by.
- The reason is, because it is impossible to draw out of the bodies all that
- most thin and subtile spirit, which has in itself the tincture, except it
- first be resolved in our water. Dissolve then the bodies in this our golden
- water, and boil them until all the tincture is brought forth by the water,
- in a white color and a white oil; and when you see this whiteness upon the
- water, then know that the bodies are melted, liquified or dissolved.
- Continue then this boiling, till the dark, black, and white cloud is brought
- forth, which they have conceived.
-
- (25) Put therefore the perfect bodies of metals, to wit, sol and luna, into
- our water in a vessel, hermetically sealed, upon a gentle fire, and digest
- continually, till they are perfectly resolved into a most precious oil. Saith
- Adfar, digest with a gentle fire, as it were for the hatching of chickens, so
- long till the bodies are dissolved, and their perfectly conjoined tincture is
- extracted, mark this well. But it is not extracted all at once, but it is
- drawn out by little and little, day by day, and hour by hour, till after a
- long time, the solution thereof is completed, and that which is dissolved
- always swims atop. And while this dissolution is in hand, let the fire be
- gentle and continual, till the bodies are dissolved into a viscous and most
- subtile water, and the whole tincture be educed, in color first black, which
- is the sign of a true dissolution.
-
- (26) Then continue the digestion, till it become a white fixed water, for
- being digested in balneo, it will afterwards become clear, and in the end
- become like common argent vive, ascending by the spirit above the first
- water. When there you see bodies dissolved in the first viscous water, then
- know, that they are turned into a vapor, and the soul is seperated from the
- dead body, and by sublimation, turned into the order of spirits. Whence both
- of them, with a part of our water, are made spirits flying up in the air; and
- there the compounded body, made of the male and female, viz. of sol and luna,
- and of that most subtile nature, cleansed by sublimation, taketh life, and
- is made spiritual by its own humidity. That is by its own water; like as a
- man is sustained by the air, whereby from thenceforth it is multiplied, and
- increases in its own kind, as do all other things. In such an ascention
- therefore, and philosophical sublimation, all are joined one with another,
- and the new body subtilized, or made living by the spirit, miraculously
- liveth or springs like a vegetable.
-
- (27) Wherefore, unless the bodies be attenuated, or made thin, by the fire
- and water, till they ascend in a spirit, and are made or do become like water
- and vapor or mercury, you labor wholly in vain. But when they arise or
- ascend, they are born or brought forth in the air or spirit, and in the
- same they are changed, and made life with life, so as they can never be
- seperated, but are as water mixed with water. And therefore, it is wisely
- said, that the stone is born of the spirit, because it is altogether
- spiritual. For the vulture himself flying without wings cries upon the
- top of the mountain, saying, I am the white brought forth from the black,
- and the red brought forth from the white, the citrine son of the red; I
- speak the truth and lie not.
-
- (28) It sufficeth thee then to put the bodies in the vessel, and into
- the water once nd for all, and to close the vessel well, until a true
- seperation is made. This the obscure artist calls conjunction, sublimation,
- assation, extraction, putrefaction, ligation, desponsation, subtilization,
- generation, etc.
-
- (29) Now the whole magistery may be perfected, work, as in the generation
- of man, and of every vegetable; put the seed once into the womb, and shut
- it up well. Thus you may see that you need not many things, and that this
- our work requires no great charges, for that there is but one stone, there
- is but one medicine, one vessel, one order of working, and one successive
- disposition to the white and to the red. And although we say in many places,
- take this, and take that, yet we understand, that it behoves us to take but
- one thing, and put it once into the vessel, until the work be perfected.
- But these things are so set down by obscure philosophers to deceive the
- unwary, as we have before spoken; for is not this "ars cabalistica" or a
- secret and a hidden art? Is it not an art full of secrets? And believest
- thou O fool that we plainly teach this secret of secrets, taking our words
- according to their literal signification? Truly, I tell thee, that as for
- myself, I am no ways self seeking, or envious as others are; but he that
- takes the words of the other philosophers according to their common signif-
- ication, he even already, having lost Ariadne's clue of thread, wanders in
- the midst of the labyrinth, multiplies errors, and casts away his money for
- nought.
-
- (30) nd I, Artephius, after I became an adept, and had attained to the
- true and complete wisdom, by studying the books of the most faithful
- Hermes, the speaker of truth, was sometimes obscure also as others were.
- But when I had for the space of a thousand years, or thereabouts, which
- has now passed over my head, since the time I was born to this day, through
- the alone goodness of God Almighty, by the use of this wonderful quintessence.
- When I say for so very long a time, I found no man had found out or obtained
- this hermetic secret, because of the obscurity of the philosophers words.
- Being moved with a generous mind, and the integrity of a good man, I have
- determined in these latter days of my life, to declare all things truly and
- sincerely, that you may not want anything for the perfecting of this stone
- of the philosophers. Excepting one certain thing, which is not lawful for
- me to discover to any, because it is either revealed or made known by God
- himself, or taught by some master, which notwithstanding he that can bend
- himself to the search thereof, by the help of a little experience, may
- easily learn in this book.
-
- (31) In this book I have therefore written the naked truth, though clothed
- or disguised with few colors; yet so that every good and wise man may
- happily have those desirable apples of the Hesperides from this our philo-
- sophers tree. Wherefore praises be given to the most high God, who has
- poured into our soul of his goodness; and through a good old age, even an
- almost infinite number of years, has truly filled our hearts with his love,
- in which, methinks, I embrace, cherish, and truly love all mankind
- together. But to return to out business. Truly our work is perfectly per-
- formed; for that which the heat of sun is a hundred years in doing, for the
- generation of one metal in the bowels of the earth; our secret fire, that is,
- our fiery and sulphureous water, which is called Balneum Mariae, doth as I
- have often seen in a very short time.
-
- (32) Now this operation or work is a thing of no great labor to him who knows
- and understands it; nor is the matter so dear, consideration [sic, considering?]
- how small a quantity does suffice, that it may cause any man to withdraw
- his hand from it. It is indeed, a work so short and easy, that it may well be
- called woman's work, and the play of children. Go to it then,, my son, put
- up thy supplications to God almighty; be diligent in searching the books of
- the learned in this science; for one book openeth another; think and med-
- itate of these things profoundly; nd avoid all things which vanish in or
- will not endure the fire, because from these adjustible, perishing or con-
- suming things, you can never attain to the perfect matter, which is only
- found in the digesting of your water, extracted from sol and luna. For by
- this water, color, and ponderosity or weight, are infinitely given to the
- matter; and this water is a white vapor, which like a soul flows through
- the perfect bodies, taking wholly from them their blackness, and impurities,
- uniting the two bodies in one, and increasing their water. Nor is there any
- other thing than Azoth, to wit, this our water, which can take from the
- perfect bodies of sol and luna, their natural color, making the red body
- white, according to the disposition thereof.
-
- (33) Now let us speak of the fire. Our fire is mineral, equal, continuous;
- it fumes not, unless it be too much stirred up, participates of sulphur,
- and is taken from other things than from the matter; it overturns all
- things, dissolves, congeals, and calcines, and is to be found out by art,
- or after an artificial manner. It is a compendious thing, got without cost
- or charge, or at least without any great purchase; it is humid, vaporous,
- digestive, altering, penetrating, subtile, spiritous, not violent, incom-
- bustible, circumspective, continent, and one only thing. It is also a
- fountain of living water, which circumvolveth and contains the place, in
- which the king and queen bathe themselves; through the whole work this
- moist fire is sufficient; in the beginning, middle and end, because in it,
- the whole of the art does consist. This is the natural fire, which is yet
- against nature, not natural and which burns not; lastly, this fire is hot,
- cold, dry, moist; meditate on these things and proceed directly without
- anything of a foreign nature. If you understand not these fires, give ear
- to what I have yet to say, never as yet written in any book, but drawn
- from the more abstruse and occult riddles of the ancients.
-
- (34) We have properly three fires, without which our art cannot be perfected;
- and whosoever works without them takes a great deal of labor in vain. The
- first fire is that of the lamp, which is continuous, humid, vaporous,
- spiritous, and found out by art. This lamp ought to be proportioned to the
- enclosure; wherein you must use great judgement, which none can attain to,
- but he that can bend to the search thereof. For if this fire of the lamp
- be not measured, or duly proportioned or fitted to the furnace, it will be,
- that either for the want of heat you will not see the expected signs, in
- their limited times, whereby you will lose your hopes and expectation by a
- too long delay; or else, by reason of too much heat, you will burn the
- "flores auri", the golden flowers, and so foolishly bewail your lost expense.
-
- (35) The second fire is ignis cinerum, an ash heat, in which the vessel
- hermetically sealed is recluded, or buried; or rather it is that most
- sweet and gentle heat, which proceding from the temperate vapors of the
- lamp, does equally surround your vessel. This fire is not violent or forcing,
- except it be too much excited or stirred up; it is a fire digestive;
- alterative, and taken from another body than the matter; being but one only,
- moist also, and not natural.
-
- (36) The third fire, is the natural fire of water, which is also called
- the fire against nature, because it is water; and yet nevertheless, it makes
- a mere spirit of gold, which common fire is not able to do. This fire is
- mineral, equal, and participates of sulphur; it overturns or destroys,
- congeals, dissolves, and calcines; it is penetrating, subtile, incombustible
- and not burning, and is the fountain of living water, wherein the king and
- queen bathe themselves, whose help we stand in need of through the whole
- work, through the beginning, middle, and end. But the other two above
- mentioned, we have not always occasion for, but only at sometimes. In reading
- therefore the books of the philosophers, conjoin these three fires in your
- judgement, and without doubt, you will understand whatever they have written
- of them.
-
- (37) Now sa to the colors, that which does not make black cannot make
- white, because blackness is the beginning of whiteness, and a sign of
- putrefaction and alteration, and that the body is now penetrated and
- mortified. From the putrefaction therefore in this water, there first
- appears blackness, like unto broth wherein some bloody thing is boiled.
- Secondly, the black earth by continual digestion is whitened, because the
- soul of the two bodies swims above upon the water, like white cream; and
- in this only whiteness, all the spirits are so united, that they can never
- fly one from another. And therefore the laton must be whitened, and its
- leaves unfolded, i.e., its body broken or opened, lest we labor in vain;
- for this whiteness is the perfect stone for the white work, and a body
- ennobled to that end; even a tincture of a most exuberant glory, and
- shining brightness, which never departs from the body it is once joined
- with. Therefore you must note here, that the spirits are not fixed but in
- the white color, which is more noble than the other colors, and is more
- vehemently to be desired, for that as it were the complement or
- perfection of the whole work.
-
- (38) For our earth putrefies and becomes black, then it is putrefied
- in lifting up or seperation; afterwards being dried, its blackness goes
- away from it, and then it is whitened, and the feminine dominion of the
- darkness and humidity perisheth; then also the white vapor penetrates
- through the new body, and the spirits are bound up or fixed in the dryness.
- And that which is corrupting, deformed and black through the moisture,
- vanishes away; so the new body rises again clear, pure, white and immortal,
- obtaining the victory over all its enemies. And as heat working upon that
- which is moist, causeth or generates blackness, which is the prime or first
- color, so always by decoction more and more heat working upon that which is
- dry begats whiteness, which is the second color; and then working upon that
- which is purely and perfectly dry, it produces citrinity and redness, thus
- much for colors. WE must know therefore, that thing which has its head
- red and white, but its feet white and afterwards red; and its eyes beforehand
- black, that this thing, I say, is the only matter of our magistery.
-
- (39) Dissolve then sol and luna in our dissolving water, which is
- familiar and friendly, and next in nature to them; and is also sweet
- and pleasant to them, and as it were a womb, a mother, an original, the
- beginning and the end of their life. That is the reason why they are
- meliorated or amended in this water, because like nature, rejoices in
- like nature, a md like nature retains like nature, being joined the one
- to the other, in a true marriage, by which they are made one nature, one
- new body, raised again from the dead, and immortal. Thus it behoves you
- to join consanguinity, or sameness of kind, by which these natures, will
- meet and follow one another, purify themselves and generate, and make one
- another rejoice; for that like nature now is disposed by like nature, even
- that which is nearest, and most friendly to it.
-
- (40) Our water then is the most beautiful, lovely, and clear fountain,
- prepared only for the king, and queen whom it knows very well, and they
- it. For it attracts them to itself, and they abide therein for two or
- three days, to wit, two or three months, to wash themselves therewith,
- whereby they are made young again and beautiful. And because sol and luna
- have their original from this water their mother; it is necessary therefore
- that they enter into it again, to wit, into their mothers womb, that they
- may be regenerated and born again, and made more healthy, more noble and
- more strong. If therefore these do not die and be converted to water, they
- remain alone or as they were and without fruit; but if they die, and are
- resolved in our water, they bring forth fruit of a hundred fold; and
- from that very place in which they seem to perish, from thence shall they
- appear to be that which they were not before.
-
- (41) Let therefore the spirit of our living water be, with all care and
- industry, fixed with sol and luna; for they being converted into the
- nature of water become dead, and appear like to the dead; from thence
- afterwards being revived, they increase and multiply, even as do all
- sorts of vegetable substances; it suffices then to dispose the matter
- sufficiently without, because that within, it sufficiently disposes
- itself for the perfection of its work. For it has in itself a certain
- and inherent motion, according to the true way and method, and a much
- better order than it is possible for any man to invent or think of. For
- this cause it is that you need only prepare the matter, nature herself
- will perfect it; and if she be not hindered by some contrary thing, she
- will not overpass her own certain motion, neither in conceiving or gen-
- erting, nor in bringing forth.
-
- (42) Wherefore, after the preperation of the matter, beware only lest
- by too much heat or fire, you inflame the bath, or make it too hot;
- secondly, take heed lest the spirit should exhale, lest it hurt the
- operator, to wit, lest it destroy the work, and induce many informities,
- as trouble, sadness, vexation, and discontent. From these things which
- have been spoken, this axiom is manifest, to wit, that he can never know
- the necessary course of nature, in the making ot generating of metals,
- who is ignorant of the way of destroying them. You must therefore join
- them together that are of one consanguinity or kindred; for like natures
- do find out and join with their like natures, and by putrifying themselves,
- and mix together and mortify themselves. It is needful therefore to know
- this corruption and generation, and the natures themselves do embrace
- one another, and are brought to a fixity in a slow and gentle fire; how
- like natures rejoiceth with like natures; and how they retain one another
- and are converted into a white consistency.
-
- (43) This white substance, if you will make it red, you must continually
- decoct it in a dry fire till it be rubified, or become red as blood, which
- is nothing but water, fire, and true tincture. And so by a continual dry
- fire, the whiteness is changed, removed, perfected, made citrine, and still
- digested till it become to a true red and fixed color. And consequently by
- how much more it is heightened in color, and made a true tincture of perfect
- redness. Wherefore with a dry fire, and a dry calcination, without any
- moisture, you must decoct this compositum, till it be invested with a most
- perfect red color, and then it will be the true and perfect elixir.
-
- (44) Now if afterwards you would multiply your tincture, you must again
- resolve that red, in new and fresh dissolving water, and then by decoctions
- first whiten, and then rubify it again, by the degrees of fire, reiterating
- the first method of operating in this work. Dissolve, coagulate, and reiterate
- the closing up, the opening and multiplying in quantity and quality at your
- own pleasure. For by a new corruption and generation, there is introduced a
- new motion. Thus we can never find an end if we do always work by reiterating
- the same thing over and over again, viz. by solution and coagulation, by the
- help of our dissolving water, by which we dissolve and congeal, as we have
- formerly said, in the beginning of the work. Thus also is the virtue thereof
- increased, and multiplied both in quantity and quality; so that if after the
- first course of the operation you obtain a hundred fold; by the second fold
- you will have a thousand fold; and by the third; ten thousand fold increase.
- And by pursuing your work, your projection will come to infinity, tinging
- truly and perfectly, and fixing the greatest quantity how much soever. Thus
- by a thing of small and easy price, you have both color, goodness, and weight.
-
- (45) Our fire then and azoth are sufficient for you: decoct, reiterate,
- dissolve, congeal, and continue this course, according as you please,
- multiplying it as you think good, until your medicine is made fusible as
- wax, and has attained the quantity and goodness or fixity and color you
- desire. This then is the compleating of the whole work of our second stone
- (observe it well) that you take the perfect body, and put it into our
- water in a glass vesica or body well closed, lest the air get in or the
- enclosed humidity get out. Keep it in digestion in a gentle heat, as it
- were of a balneum, and assiduously continue the operation or work upon
- the fire, till the decoction and digestion is perfect. And keep it in this
- digestion of a gentle heat, until it be purified and re-solved into
- blackness, and be drawn up and sublimed by the water, and is thereby cleaned
- from all blackness and impurity, that it may be white and subtile. Until
- it comes to the ultimate or highest purity of sublimation, and utmost
- volatility, and be made white both within and without: for the vulture
- flying in the air without wings, cries out that it might get up upon the
- mountain, that is upon the waters, upon which the "spiritus albus" or
- spirit of whiteness is born. Continue still a fitting fire, and that spirit,
- which is the subtile being of the body, and of the mercury will ascend upon
- the top of the water, which quintessence is more white than the driven snow.
- Continue yet still, and towards the end, increase the fire, till the
- whole spiritual substance ascend to the top. And know well, that whatsoever
- is clear, white-pure and spiritual, ascends in the air to the top of the
- water in the substance of a white vapor, which the philosophers call their
- virgin milk.
-
- (46) It ought to be, therefore, as one of the Sybills said, that the son
- of the virgin be exalted from the earth, and that the white quintessence
- after its rising out of the dead earth, be raised up towards heaven; the
- gross and thick remaining in the bottom, of the vessel and the water.
- Afterwards, the vessel being cooled, you will find in the bottom the black
- feces, scorched and burnt, which seperate from the spirit and quintessence
- of whiteness, and cast them away. Then will the argent vive fall down from
- our air and spirit, upon the new earth, which is called argent vive sublimed
- by the air or spirit, whereof is made a viscous water, pure and white. This
- water is the true tincture seperated from all its black feces, and our
- brass or latten is prepared with our water, purified and brought to a white
- color. Which white color is not obtained but by decoction and coagulation of
- the water; decoct, therefore, continually, wash away the blackness from the
- latten, not with your hands, but with the stone, or the fire, or our second
- mercurial water which is the true tincture. This seperation of the pure
- from the impure is not done with hands, but nature herself does it, and
- brings it to perfection by a circular operation.
-
- (47) It appears then, that this composition is not a work of hands, but a
- change of the natures; because nature dissolves and joins itself, sublimes
- and lifts itself up, and grows white, being seperated from the feces. And
- in such a sublimation the more subtile, pure, and essential parts are
- conjoined; for that with the fiery nature or property lifts up the subtile
- parts, it seperates always the more pure, leaving the grosser at the
- bottom. Wherefore your fire ought to be gentle and a continual vapor, with
- which you sublime, that the matter may be filled with spirit from the air,
- and live. For naturally all things take life from the inbreathing of the
- air; and so also our magistery receives in the vapor or spirit, by the
- sublimation of the water.
-
- (48) Our brass or latten then, is to be made to ascend by the degrees of
- fire, but of its own accord, freely, and without violence; except the
- body therefore be by the fire and water broken, or dissolved, and
- attenuated, until it ascends as a spirit, or climbs like argent vive,
- or rather as the white soul, seperated from the body, and by sublimation
- diluted or brought into a spirit, nothing is or can be done. But when it
- ascends on high, it is born in the air or spirit, and is changed into
- spirit; and becomes life with life, being only spiritual and incorruptible.
- And by such an operation it is that the body is made spirit, of a subtile
- nature, and the spirit is incorporated with the body, and made one with it;
- and by such a sublimation, conjunction, and raising up, the whole, both body
- and spirit are made white.
-
- (49) This philosophical and natural sublimation therefore is necessary
- which makes peace between, or fixes the body and spirit, which is impossible
- to be done otherwise, than in the seperation of these parts. Therefore it
- behoves you to sublime both, that the pure may ascend, and the impure may
- descend, or be left at the bottom, in the perplexity of a troubled sea.
- And for this reason it must be continually decocted, that it may be brought
- to a subtile property, and the body may assume, and draw to itself the
- white mercurial soul, which it naturally holds, and suffers not to be
- seperated from it, because it is like to it in the nearness of the first
- pure and simple nature. From these things it is necessary, to make a
- seperation by decoction, till no more remains of the purity of the soul,
- which is not ascended and exalted to the higher part, whereby they will both
- be reduced to an equality of properties, and a simple pure whiteness.
-
- (50) The vulture flying through the air, and the toad creeping upon the
- ground, re the emblems of our magistery. When therefore gently and with
- much care, you seperate the earth from the water, that is from the fire,
- and the thin from the thick, then that which is pure will seperate itself
- from the earth, and ascend to the upper part, as it were into heaven, and
- the impure will descend beneath, as to the earth. And the more subtile
- part in the superior place will take upon it the nature of a spirit, and
- that in the lower place, the nature of an earthy body. Wherefore, let the
- white property with the more subtile part of the body, be by this operation,
- made to ascend leaving the feces behind, which is done in a short time. For
- the soul is aided by her associate and fellow, and perfected by it. My
- mother, saith the body, has begotten me, and by me she herself is begotten;
- now after I have taken from her, her flying she after an admirable manner
- becomes kind and nourishing, and cherishing the son whom she has begotten
- till he come to a ripe or perfect age.
-
- (51) Hear now this secret: keep the body in our mercurial water, till
- it ascends with the white soul, and the earthy part descends to the
- bottom, which is called the residing earth. Then you shall see the water
- coagulate itself with the body, and be assured the art is true; because
- the body coagulates the moisture into dryness, like as the rennet of a
- lamb or calf turns milk into cheese. In the same manner the spirit
- penetrates the body, and is perfectly comixed with it in its smallest
- atoms, and the body draws to itself his moisture, to wit, its white
- soul, like as the loadstone draws iron, because of the nearness and
- likeness of its nature; and then one contains the other. And this is
- the sublimation and coagulation, which retaineth every volatile thing,
- making it fixed for ever.
-
- (52) This compositum then is not a mechanical thing, or a work of the
- hands,, but as I said, a changing of natures; and a wonderful
- connection of their cold with hot, and the moist with the dry; the hot
- is mixed with the cold, and the dry with the moist: By this means is
- made the mixture and conjunction of body nd spirit, which is called a
- conversion of contrary spirits and natures, because by such a dissolution
- and sublimation, the spirit is converted into a body and body in a spirit.
- So that the natures being mixed together, and reduced into one, do change
- one another: and as the body corporifies the spirit, or changes it into
- a body, so also does the spirit convert the body into a tinging and white
- spirit.
-
- (53) Wherefore as the last time I say, decoct the body in our white
- water, viz. mercury, till it is dissolved into blackness, and then by
- continual decoction, let it be deprived of the same blackness, and the
- body so dissolved, will at length ascend or rise with a white soul. And
- then the one will be mixed with the other, and so embrace one another that
- it shall not be possible any more to seperate them, but the spirit, with
- a real agreement, will be unified with the body, and make one permanent or
- fixed substance. And this is the solution of the body, and coagulation of
- the spirit which have one and the same operation. Who therefore knows
- how to conjoin the principles, or direct the work, to impregnate, to
- mortify, to putrefy, to generate, to quicken the species, to make white,
- to cleanse the culture from its blackness and darkness, till he is purged
- by the fire and tinged, and purified from all his spots, shall be the
- possessor of a treasure so great that even kings themselves shall venerate
- him.
-
- (54) Wherefore, let our body remain in the water till it is dissolved into
- a subtile powder in the bottom of the vessel and the water, which is called
- the black ashes; this is the corruption of the body which is called by
- the philosophers or wise men, "Saturnus plumbum philosophorum", and pulvis
- discontinuatus, viz. saturn, latten or brass, the lead of the philosophers
- the disguised powder. And in this putrefaction and resolution of the body,
- three signs appear, viz, a black color, a discontinuity of parts, and a
- stinking smell, not much unlike to the smell of a vault where dead bodies
- are buried. These ashes then are those of which the philosophers have spoken
- so much which remained in the lower part of the vessel, which we ought not
- to undervalue or despise; in them is the royal diadem, and the black and
- unclean argent vive, which ought to be cleansed from its blackness, by a
- continual digestion in our water, till it be elevated above in a white color,
- which is called the gander, and the bird of Hermes. He therefore that
- maketh the red earth black, and then renders it white, has obtained the
- magistery. So also he who kills the living, and revives the dead. Therefore
- make the black white, and the white black, and you perfect the work.
-
- (55) And when you see the true whiteness appear, which shineth like a
- bright sword, or polished silver, know that in that whiteness there is
- redness hidden. But then beware that you take not that whiteness out of the
- vessel, but only digest it to the end, that with heat and dryness, it may
- assume a citron color, and a most beautiful redness. Which when you see,
- render praises and thanksgiving to the most great and good God, who gives
- wisdom and riches to whomsoever He pleases, and takes them away according
- to the wickedness of a person. To Him, I say, the most wise and almighty
- God, be glory for ages and ages. AMEN.
-