Alchemical Manuscript Series V 12
Alchemical Manuscript Series V 12
Alchemical Manuscript Series V 12
Extracts include:
The Work with the Butter of Antimony
Chemical Moonshine
Alchemical Aphorisms
Instructions Respecting the Antimonial Labors for the Sophie Mercury
Aphorisms Concerning the Universal Salt of Nature
The Tincture of Antimony
Sir Kenelm Digby's Sal Enixum and Abbe Rousseau's Primum Ens Salis
Neuman on Nitre: The Nature and Difference of Salt Petre
Process for the Lapis with Nitre and Salt
Conserva Fontinalis
Letter by Joel Langlottus, M.D.
Myriam The Prophetess
The Epistle of Arnoldus de Villa Nova to the King of Naples
An Anonymous Letter to Mr. Ford on the Lapis Philosophorum
The Process of the American Adept - Obtaining the Tincture from Urine
The Work with Wolfram
Some thoughts on the Hint Given by Basil Valetine of a Via Sicca Regenerationus
Principiorum
The Work of the Jewish Rabbi
Three Processes for Obtaining the Tincture from Nitre and Sulphur
A Thought of Dr. Bacstrom, Saturday Night, 1/2 Past 8, 6th of April 1805
The Mineral Gluten or The Philosophical Double Mercury
Extracts include:
The Short Processes Indicated
Le Febre's Philosophical Lamp Furnace
Secret of Secrets, or, Magistery of Philosophy
On Short Processes
A Second Experiment on the Same Principal
Baron von Reusenstein's Chemical Processes
Baron von Reusenstein's Universal and Particular Processes
Annotations on the Hermetical Triumph
Mineral and Metallic Processes
The Process of Alexis Piemontese
Lapis de Tribus
A Thought of Sig. Bacstrom concerning Platina
Extract from Joh. Becher Explaining the Process of Paracelsus Explaining The Mercury of
Venus
Extract from Isaac Hollandus
Rhenaus' True Preparation of Philosophical Mercury
Becher: Animated Mercury of Claveus
79 Wonders of a Certain Subject (Bismuth)
Discourses on the Philsopher's Stone-John Clerke
Extract from Henricus Madasthanus
Extract from Rhenanus
Preparation of the Alkahest
Thoughts upon Jugel's Particular Process
Extracts from Wilson's Complete Chemistry Course
Extract from Fachsens' Art of Assaying
Extract from Digby's Chemical Secrets
The Science of Alchemy (from an old manuscript)
The Practice of the Philosophers
Extract from Solis e Puleo Emergentis J. Rhenan
Extract from Practice & Work of Brothers of R.C.
Conversation with Mr. B. and Mr. Ford April 1805
Further Notes to Mr. Ford
Recapitulation of the Whole Process
Universal Process of the Abbott Clairai
Various Notes
Excerpts from Baron von Reusenstein's Processes
A Process Upon Common Lead
-1-
F R AGME NT
OF THE
men who associate secretly for various purposes, and they are en-
Men who knew how to raise far above their age by the healthy,
-2-
the dark veils of superstition, the brutality of the customs
Athens. Those mysteries had only been instituted for the spread-
ing of the knowledge of one single God and for the attainment of
"All right, dear Doctor," said the yawning Sheikh, "but now
tue. To this end they also established certain degrees and cere-
curiosity, kept up zeal and activity, and in this way men became
reached the point where they were supposed to be. Another object
sible powers - but here, too, a genius arose, tore apart the veil
that covers the works of Nature and with a bold hand drew unadul-
terated deep wisdom from the most secret source. The perceptions,
-3-
"Yes, my fair lady. These people were the better-thinking
said to contain the tomb of their Prophet from the hands of its
lost their lives in the sand deserts before Palestine. Their Pro-
phet did not wish to - or could not - support the rescuers of his
tomb in their laudable intention, and so this holy purpose was de-
feated."
"By all my love for the honor of the Prophet," Sheikh Gemal
said, "I would nevertheless have had that drewish hung if he had
nize the beneficent ruler of Sheshian. May God preserve Your Ma-
Essenes and took their goals and discoveries with them to Europe
light, and transforming the customs of their age. But soon these
men rose to such power that the then ruling Sultan became afraid
tion. Some scoundrels among them (and where are none?) were se-
fication."
terrible!"
hid their writings and knowledge. Some of those who survived col-
.,. 5.,.
liminary historic details in order to . II
dear Doctor."
liest things can never remain long in the hands of men in their
thing?"
Danish. "One thing, and almost the same doctrine. There are
different sects among them, but they agree in the main point: the
cal doubt that alone benefits us mortals, but they cling to wonder-
working fantasies which are far above the range of human understand-
ing or are utterly impossible. Among all sectarians, Sir, the theo-
-6-
who do not wish to fight with the natural ones - those of reason?"
mahal (who listened to him with the greatest attention) "is a man
~1-, ~ha comforts him, illuminates him, and of whom one is assured
fluenced into having them. That they have also become popular with
men does not appear extraordinary, if one considers that this science
son."
Danish. "Not the least, Sir. A sign that they have the same
system and identical purposes is the fact that they have united
since some time and are making common cause.*) Now I really des-
strong opponents."
"In my States," said Sheikh Gebal, "I will not tolerate such
town - and then You Yourself, my Lord, shall judge of their logic."
-8-
Danishmede sent a message to the Most Venerable Ashmaim,
they gradually admit those whose mind and heart are, or have
who are the only ones to be initiated into the true goal. The
latter are using the bent for the miraculous of these poor pea-
ple to win them over for their political aims. These, called
-9-
To inculcate enthusiasm for their business in them, they
know each one's weak side, grasp and flatter them by it, burn
their brain with the most rediculous fancies, mislead them into
by this thread they lead them wherever they wish. These sub-
it to the Unknown Superiors, and these are the only ones who be-
c:-(;. ~: T"" his bag the known Aurea Catena Homeri (The Golden Chain
c~- ~.,-. ~1 a.nc read some passages.) Your Highness may judge these
taste, exclaimed.
-10-
is repelled by the shallowness of the most flagrant errors. I
hardly find any traces of the first and foremost quite incontes-
table tenets of the most common sciences! One can see that these
"No, no, Doctor," called Danishmede and kept him back by his
robe. "Do stay here. The Sultan would like to speak with you."
and dress of the wonderman, "it looks as if the Doctor were afraid
of our company."
Here Sheikh Gebal, who had fallen asleep, woke up, measured
the Doctor with sleepy eyes and turned his gaze upon Danishmede,
who understood.
Ashmaim bowed deep, kissed the edge of the Sultan's fur and
said with an embarrassed air: "My Lord and Master! Your Majesty
-11-
Glory . II
and even a Master among them. Well, I would like to hear you
nate enough to live among this holy fraternity - but may it please
tutions by the most terrible oaths and the might of our interest -
and I must all the more put my finger on my mouth as here (with
"You are here not dealing with a sophist, let alone a sham philo-
sopher, as you please to call me, but with a man who has made i t
his duty at all times to follow only the natural course of reason.
His Majesty would like to learn more about your secret doctrine.
then, tell us what good you teach in your secret societies - but
-12-
(This had always been a favorite saying of Sheikh Gebal's, and
tance (as the old knights used to pray to their ladies when they
and sciences (So one of our Brothers wrote) *") ' teach anything
against the good of Your Majesty's subjects? Our enemies, who
ven and the New Jerusalem, are everywhere seeking to cast the
virtue) seek to soil with a black venom everything they can never
-13-
Ashm. "Lord! It is our custom to do so. The holy enthu-
siasm which kindles our soul for the right cause of the Order is
them but wild imaginings and political goals for our aggrandize-
We answered those only with sayings from the Koran, and told him
cian, a dumbhead (here the Doctor became ever more hotheaded and
"Remember whe:ce you are and before whom you are speaking. I do
not know what is keeping me from having you thrown out of that
-14-
Ashmaim, trembling all over, tried to withdraw.
pardon our zeal for the honor and the business of God (which is
always ours) , and telling him that it is our desire for his great-
written: "You are the Sons of God, and whoever does not listen
"Our Prophet was the head of our society. He was the holy
this?"
they saw in Palestine in the temple of the Lord, but which no longer
them, and although they did not find such signs except Gothic or-
-15-
naments on an old wall, a remainder of Maracene (Saracene?)
as relating to us, may they apply or not. And this book greatly
are proving the holiness of your Order by the Koran, and the lat-
right."
Ashm. "None escapes us, Lord. We alone are the true re-
to our domain."
Sh. G. "Thank you, thank you very much. But what has one
Ashrn. "To be a true magus after the thought and the Will
of God, one has first of all to be equipped with the true, blind
faith, II
-16-
Ashrn. "Secondly, one has to know the powers of the plants,
wherever they wish - the magus is occupied with the Holy Spirit
civil society? 11
Ashm. "It does not concern us. Each for himself and God
for all - and aside from this, we are only citizens of heaven."
useless members? It must expel you, and then you can form a peo-
"That it will do," said Sheikh Gebal, who had already taken
a decision in his hearL. "Well, and what else has one got to do?"
Ash.rn. "In the fifth place," the theosophist said quite calmly,
"one has to possess the talisman Urim and Thummim, with which,
-17-
Lord, no devil can interfere and all hellish persecutions lose
that there still exist credulous individuals who buy such wild
thus lower your reason, this holy gift of the Godhead? Has one
Already the muscles of his face and mouth tensed in order to bring
Being draws the stars out of their orbits, arranges them in a ser-
-18-
intelligence in a more natural way than to act against the de-
Either God permits that man may learn his future fate, or he does
not. In the first instance, why are the oracles obscure? In the
second, why are there such oracles at all? This childish science,
Lord, stems from the natural, uneasy urge of man to see himself
beyond the cycle of times in order to hope for a better fate. Man
-19-
his interest required it, this Godhead would inspire him with
"I will not tolerate them in my States one more hour," said
Sheikh Gebal, who was already in great fear. "I will not tolerate
replied with angry looks: "I do not speak with you, you stubborn
eternal pit and be burnt from eternity to euernity under the great-
est pangs of your soul and conscience, for God's and our honor."*)
-20-
"Quiet! By all that is sacred," shouted the extremely
as Danishmede says?"
metal into the very purest gold - at any moment - to the honor
you must make gold for me. What, are you not going?"
bowed deep to the ground. "May Your Majesty pardon that the poor
der, but we cannot work before profane eyes. Only initiated eyes
flaming eyes. "Such excuses are not valid here. At once, make
said in the enthusiasm of his zeal. "For the honor of God and
our Order."
Sh. G. "Well! You have not said this in vain," and he rang
of the poor trickster, but it was in vain. The violence and stub-
-21-
borness of this Sultan are known.
down on the floor and willingly and calmly suffered the ceremony
rather than that his self-love would have allowed him to disclose
voice:
Nurmah. "Is there then no means for turning these men from
their fantasies?"
people and then remit them into the hands of philosophy. God knows,
I do not want any man's harm, but here the whole of mankind is
-22-
heart, to use all the forces of the laws at least to prohibit
against man's free will and spirit!) and their future enlisL~ents.
together impossible, that this beautiful dream may first have ari-
(they may quite possibly have done so) to lead men imperceptibly
into a habit of virtue, infusing in them the hope that they might
morals, and that the sages were unexpectedly helped in their en-
which he does not possess nor can possess: He must destroy iron
well how unhappy those are who are engaged in such chimeric sciences.
A sickly health, ruined by the vapors of the crucibles, and the beg-
gar's sta=f are the consequences of this disease of the human mind.
-23-
shall come and write down the reasons, so that they can after-
people."
verest punishnents. How much harm does not arise for entire fami-
lies when such books induce weak persons to seek this chimeric
"That must not be! Sure not," said the good Sultan. "In
twenty-four hours all these books shall be burnt and the whole
ple can easily believe that God will not change His eternal natural
natural affair. But they do not at the same time think that it is
And these so-called miracles are mostly useless and their cause
would not need to blind my eyes. Its might has the power to illu-
It can attune my head and heart in such a way that I find it im-
-24-
possible to object anything to the words told me.
sectarians can work even less. His holy name is not that magi-
cal wand that can change gardens into deserts and these into gar-
ful have existed for 2000 years that surely not one single mountain
thing, every area of Nature, all elements are inhabited and ruled
the teaching of spirits because it is very old and has made consi-
mightier beings than they were rolling the thunder, hurled the
lightning, and shook the earth. Man, swept away by the fast flow
of time, sees with alarmed eyes the time which carries him and
-25-
the distance he has already covered. He would like to extend
his gaze to the last limits of his course, question the mirror
of the future, and examine with one look the whole chain of his
existence.
ever active imagination always tries to tear the veil of the fu-
-26-
tence, only to wait for our orders? Or if they are at the place
of some dreamers?
The devil does not exist. I would send the man who can see
would have the person who shows me the devil imprisoned as a fraud.
Our devil is a bad copy of the Egyptian Typhon and the Persian
the good Principle builds, and this is the eternal battle of good
and evil, which was invented to solve the origin of evil - never-
theless, this battle has not solved the puzzle by one iota."
"It is not just these teachings that have set me against the
are not adored as sacred truth? But the inner spirit of the Order
to right and wrong, quite unhappy. To this may be added the hatred
and persecutions to which the individual is exposed whose heart,
get the idea to separate from such a Society. They have installed
the most loathsome scoundrel, and the adherents of the Order are
They gild this type oppression by saying that they are only
tests to lead the poor deluded soul (of the one who left the Order)
back from his wrong way and to obtain his true conversion. In the
meantime, these poor people often die in grief and misery and under
the burden of the chicaneries of these men of God, these poor ser-
say of themselves.
.... 28-
If a neophyte had previously been initiated into other so-
cieties about which solemn oaths prevented him from giving out
received from God the right to exonerate any person from whatever
oaths and duties, and they offer such an absolution to the new in-
The Order has nine Degrees which are all paid for dearly.*)
The last or Ninth Degree costs 99 Marks in pure gold, which sum
remodeled into a true magus, a second Moses and Aaron, and that
he obtains all the secrets of Nature and the supremacy over angels,
-29-
devils, and men. The Philosophers' Stone is the least treasure
earth really has such mirecle-workers and prophets. You poor un-
fortunate one, who are begging your bread from door to door in
grief and desolation, why are you there? And all of you who are
ses, why do you not get any relief in your suffering? And you
magi and miracle-workers, why do you not spread among men the be-
neficial discoveries which God has bestowed upon you, as you say?
If you reply that you cannot act againt the laws and God's Will
which require this poor man here to beg for his bread and another
to die in the greatest pain in his early youth - of what use are
you, by not saving the unfortunate mankind you are either the black-
est monsters that Nature has ever produced, or the greatest swind-
ing, then you possess the true Philosophers' Stone. Then you will
not lack in anything. Seek first to make the creatures around you
happy, those with whom you are destined to live. Then, if you
and order. This will keep the body strong and healthy till the
cycle of things will call you to be modeled into a new shape and
great mass of veiled natural secrets, but let common sense, which
ant part of the readers, for whom I certainly do not publish this
most with their own thinking. But dreamers will examine it, burn
it, slander it, insult it, perhaps even write a refutation with
ways carry the day, they will win. I, however, will easily con-
-31-
*) Danishmede, who read a great deal and had an excellent ma~
-32-
ADMISSION
cide the day and hour of his admittance, and after he has knocked
Touch, and the Word, they give each other the customary kiss.
your hands before you were admitted into the innermost of the
and without blemish, that is, devoid of vices, before God. That
vote your heart to virtue, piety, and the love of your fellowman;
-33-
thing like "Chief Warden'', and W.O.V. might mean "Worthy Chief
which means in the moral sense, to discard the old Adam of the
worldly man and to strive for the morals of the name of pious men."
-34-
The hat, the epee, the ornaments and the Apron of the Scot-
tish M. are taken off, and the O.V. himself removes the candi-
candidate. After it has been read, the W.O.V. asks: "My Brother!
THE OATH
I N.N. (name) vow freely and deliberately.
Thou beginning, middle, and end, Who liveth from eternity to eter-
nity, Amen."
-36-
Now the newly admitted Brother steps down from the globe,
pered into his ear. Then the threefold kiss is given. After the
Ke~
newly adrnitted Brother has made himself known to all
Clqv i~
~ ::ef::::::: he is given the explanation of the tapis,
11. "Dear Brother. You see here a view of the entire philo-
gence and work, and whose three kingdoms of Nature they investigate.
almighty Architect has created so that they may extend their in-
f luences into the center of the earth and promote the birth of
ters, represents Nature, the divine breath, the universal and cen-
(active and passive) , the male and female seeds of the whole of
-36-
g. ~ and~signify the proportion and measure, and
the weight of Nature.
12. Here you have, worthy Brother, the true and genuine re-
velation of the hieroglyphic pictures which you saw in part upon
-37-
NOTES
the Theorist of the laws, and the latter has promised to abide by
them by laying his hands on the Gospel of St. John, the Assembly
leisurely.
covered with a black silk cloth. In the center of the table stands
the candlestick with 7 arms, also an inkpot, pen and paper at the
service of the B.B. The Secretary who sits to the right of the
in the assembly.
perusal, so that all can prepare themselves. The B.B. are per-
-38-
mitted to make excerpts in order to assist their memory but
they must never copy the whole instruction, to prevent too many
his ability that which his Brothers had not understood. The B.B.
quiet fashion.
LAWS
FOR THE EMINENT ASSEMBLY OF THE THEORETICAL BROTHERS
S.l.
-39-
S.2.
On Religion.
country he comes.
S.3.
S.4.
-40-
those who have shown sufficient proof of their piety, love of
S.5.
from the o.v. If a Brother appears half an hour later than the
appoint time, he must suffer the payment of a penalty for the poor.
-41-
ring to the minutes in the course of the next Assembly.
S.6.
Of Dinner Assa~blies.
and bread. Only the three holidays of the Order, John the Bap-
brated by the Assembly with due modesty, so that our dinner As-
s .7.
year or more, as the Fund would be too small for assistance and
themselves scrupulously.
May God give blessings, peace, and unity to all worthy Brothers.
-42-
N 0 T E
gers of the right hand as a sign that we believe in the One Only,
and depth.
as a sign that we love and adore Him in our heart, with our whole
::::~1te tightly with both hands around the middle of the body. It
:, :-. ~ :._ !-. .J t this knowledge of himself, which is symbolized in the close
to go to the table, each Br. takes his place, and all remain stand-
ing while waiting for the w.o.v. who arrives several minutes later,
When the o.v. has taken his seat, he asks the W.B. Secretary.
-43-
A. "To provide the body with food and drink, to edify and
Now the Brothers kiss one another, and the W.O.V. says grace as
follows:
PRAYER.
desert with Manna, give us today our daily bread, so that our
and give honor to Thee alone, because Thou alone art the Eternal
The W.O.V. breaks off a small piece of bread and gives the
rest to the Brothers for each to take a piece of it, and speaks:
"May God bless this bread for us!" After he has sipped a little
wine, he says: "May God bless this wine for us!" Then he lets
-44-
of the bond of unswerving loyalty and love toward our Brothers."
4. Following this, the Brothers sit down and eat, but are
keeping silence. When the meal is over, the O.V. strikes the
table with a hammer and says: ;worthy Brothers, are you ready
to answer my questions?"
V A R I 0 U S Q U E S T I 0 N S .
this lump all things in this world have been created by the al-
mighty Word of God. This was the Materia in which all forms and
A. The Spirit of God hovered above the water, Gen. I., and
from the darkness, filled the void, illuminated the darkness, se-
parated what was mixed, ripened the raw with Its divine warmth,
-45-
A. The angelic, the heavenly, and the elementary worlds.
Powers and Forces, which are pure Spirits, created out of the
Light, and which have the good fortune to see God in His glory,
to praise Him, and to carry out His orders. Gen. III, 24.
the very purest of the abyss, and it receives its light from the
sun, which it incorporates with its own essence and then gradually
A. 'l'he other planets and stars all receive their light from
the other hand, the other stars constantly throw some of the es-
sence of their bodies back onto the sun, according to their order.
gives off its rays, fills the air with them, and sends them through
-46-
the air to the sublunary bodies.
perfect state?
A. The Almighty let this Spirit emanating from Him seek the
from which center it could generate several other beings, and then
spherical width.
A. Indeed, as we may see with our own eyes that even today
no thing, neither animal, plant nor metal can come into being with-
-47-
beings for the sake of manifoldness in this world.
Q. What other being did Spirit make through the said con-
traction?
than Spirit, it was yet all too spiritual, invisible, and simple.
to be done by us?"
Q. ;'Let us do both."
Now the O.V. has a hat covered with a handkerchief passed around,
is handed to the Master of the Cassa (Cash Fund), and the W.O.V.
P R A Y E R .
and are giving Thee infinite thanks for the charity which we have
satiate our body and soul, so that we may be provided for tempor-
praise Thee, our mouth shall thank rhee and glorify Thee without
end. Amen.
All B.B. speak: "Praise the Lord, all peoples, for heaven
-49-
T 0 A S T S .
the meal:
most precious health of our Superiors and wish them all good for-
gives the chalice of wine to the O.V., all B.B. rise, and the O.V.
speaks: "May God illuminate you through His Spirit and give you
11
wisdom, understanding, and counsel.
After the O.V. has drunk, the other Brothers take their glas-
our W.O.V. May God protect him, may His justice strengthen him,
I thank you for your well-meant wishes. May God fulfill them and
All the Brothers speak: "We are eagerly praying for it."
-50-
well-being of all Theoretical Brothers. May God give us bless-
Q U E S T I 0 N .
Assembly.
All the Brothers speak: "We are eagerly praying for it."
Philosopher?"
The Br. replies: "My Brothers and the sages will recognize
me as such."
-51-
every way to know God, his Creator, himself, and Nature, and to
acting visibly in bodies and which has its seat in the Divine Will."
A. "By~;,&,;-which
,~:. represents the divine Breath, the Universal
A. "Into 4 regions: the hot, the cold, the dry, and the
thing is made."
A.
Q.
"It changes into man and woman and is compared to
The W.O.V. knocks 7 times on the altar with the hammer, and speaks:
you let me have the sign, the touch, and the word of the Philoso-
phers?"
One Br. gives it to the others, and the last two give it to
-53-
The W.O.V. speaks: "The Assembly is hereby closed," and
he beats the altar 7 times. Thereupon the prayer after the As-
sembly is said.
P R A Y E R .
Who hast created the world out of the Chaos. We poor, ignorant
creatures come to Thy Throne in humility and pray Thee from the
ever around Thy Throne, send it down to us from Thy glory, that it
may pour into us, for without the wisdom that comes from Thee, we
do not understand Thy Holy Will. Guide us on Thy paths by Thy Holy
Spirit and let us be faithful to Thee till our end. Grant us also
PRAYER.
cannot be reached by any mortal; and; all who live on earth are
-54-
before Thee like grasshoppers (or: locusts). O, Immortal God!
Through Thee Nature lives, and Thy Breath animates her. We pray
Thee humbly, teach us to know her rightly and admire her in Thy
alone art great, Thou alone are merciful, to Thee alone are due
-55-
BEGINNING OF THE INSTRUCTION OF THE THEORETICAL BROTHERS
what is God?
A Brother speaks:
tures we can neither say nor think anything of this infinite Good,
just as the part cannot comprehend the whole. But the Solomonic
creation of the world. By His holy Word, the invisible has be-
come visible, and His divine breath animates the whole Nature.
Q. What is Nature?
find that the Chaos has been and still is the origin of all crea-
ted things.
S.l.
A. The Chaos was a mixed lump moved by the water, and the
-56-
latter was animated by the fire. Out of this lump all things
in the world were created and brought forth by the almighty and
eternal Word of God. This was the matter in which all forms are
by the Will of the eternal God. This shapeless lump, namely the
divided by God into an upper, middle and lower part. The upper
~ ~.: ::k. The middle part has something of both and is intermixed
~-1~r. ~he upper and the lower. Nevertheless, the lower part, or
~~=- s <ind essences of the creatures of the first class but with the
fested form, the upper creatures are in a potential power and hid-
nothing can be found in the lower whose nature, virtue and powers
the upper part does not comprise and contain. What the upper be-
ings are externally and manifestly, the lower are internally and
latent. However, the creatures of the upper and lower parts dif-
creatures can, if they wish, act like the lower; but the lower crea-
tures are prevented by their coarse and dark bodies from having
the same effects as the angels, unless they are illuminated from
above and endowed more with divine than with human virtue-power.
Above all, it should be noted from the aforesaid that the lower
out of them the upper or heavenly and also the lower or earthly
when the triple arrangement and division of the Chaos was created.
Man's soul will become quite like the holy angels as soon as it is
unknown to the sinful, sensual and animal man, and find, taste and
to God the wings of our soul, which we have acquired through the
-58-
long as we have to bear this troublesome burden of the body, we
Word and the glorious, brightly shining truth and clarity in all
His created works but especially in the human image which is crea-
mentary Water and contained the body and spirit for the generation
of both the subtle and gross bodies. This Water was cold, moist,
process of creation.
This t). , which existed before the elementary A gave life to all
,'6. , or still more clearly, the Universal Spirit which was poured
out quite subtly into this first formless Water. This A can be
The A. could not very well exist without the Water, which is actual-
ly its casing, its dwelling, its matter, or vehicle. This~ is
-59.,..
absolutely nothing but a tool unable to act in any way of itself.
His uncreated eternal Word, which is God's mouth from which the
from this mass and its central~ through the disposition of the
Divine Word.
In itself this~is no tangible body but it takes on a body
and arranges it for its ultimate goal and purpose. This~ much
has received from the eternal Word of God. It is hot, dry, pure,
and transparent. These last two properties are the causative source
mordial origin of all heat, both in the Elements and in all ele-
-60-
creatures. Its clearness or diaphaneity shows the subtle power
of the world, to perfect the creation into a glass sea whose out-
After the Chaos had thus been created, God worked further in
that dark body and shot a few of His rays into it. This was done
by means of the Spirit of God which moved and hovered upon the wa-
ters, separated the darkness from the light and gave the middle
divided the waters from the waters, and he placed the material and
coarse in the sea and the earth, but raised the subtle and spiritual
/::::..and placed it under and above the firmament, so that the firma-
-61-
This, however, was not yet enough. God made a third divi-
sion and divided the earth, the dry, from the water and the seas,
the upper, and from the dispersed light He gathered the lights.
Thus time was divided into seasons and the lights could act upon
tures had been created out of the separated Elements of the lights,
they were also to live with the help of these lights and inhabit
this lower building, the world, the dominion over which the Creator
S.2.
have an exact affinity and community with each other and one can
causes the~ to rise from the center of the earth and penetrate
the latter. Water carries it along in the form of a vapor and re-
-62-
ceives the subtle earthly nature through this evaporation, so
vapor is therefore raised from the earth by the heat of the cen-
tral sun, and when the raised vapor has been hanging about in the
air for some time and has been digested, as it were, it is changed
another, to make heavy things light and light things heavy, can
of this general Chaos must comprise the virtues of the upper and
the lower, I mean to say, of the heavenly or astral and the earthly,
to change ;a. into 'Q , this into 6. , and -6, into~ There is never
a round sphere nor give birth to anything without the help of the
other Elements. bi,. purifies the ;/;;J,, , A the V , and V the SV-, and
by the motion of the~ one is perfected and exalted in the other.
In all things ~is always the purest in quantity but the first and
hindered by the other Elements, nothing can result but imperfect and
unripe fruit.
from it are called active ones; the passive ones, however, are
those which permit that something is worked and made within them
-63..,.
"'\/ works in~ by locking and concentrating, as it were,
and this continues till all the Elements are brought to a glorious
The upper Elements are much more perfect and much stronger
wer and the effluence of the upper Elements the life of Nature and
the whole world can be observed and seen. The lower draw their
breath and life from the effluences of the upper beings, which the
ation of the upper and inhalation of the lower is caused and fur-
self visible and tangible by a vehicle which adopts it. This hap-
pens when the heavenly messenger or~ , to bring the heavenly mes-
sage down to earth, takes on wings which speed up his flight and
then visible and palpable, but the Spirit itself of this instru-
-64-
and superior to them. ~ is a middle Element between the subtle
b. and~ . The crude "V has its place between ~and TtJ- . To
raise~ and bring it to perfection by a, it is necessary that
a purify and separate the crude9 from all impurity. To achieve
this, the cruder;;. must lie so long in the belly of the A and there
But this pure and essential~ cannot act without a middle Ele-
steam the A unites with the~ and Nature. From this it is evi-
dent that the sole purpose of Nature is to unite the lower with
the upper through the middle in order to bring it to the desired
perfection.
The earth, which is a dense body, cannot be changed by "\!
into a watery nature all at once. For that, the V must be fre-
quently drawn up by the heat of the sun and dribble down npon the
earth and the latter, together with its seeds etc., be dissolved
by frequent such sprinklings. The seeds contained in the3iV-have
in themselves the heavenly or Nature A in the form of a steaming
-65-
driven by the heat, begins to evaporate into the~, to rise
and unite again with the essence of the~. Thus we see how
the other.
a crude and visible matter. These Elements cannot rest but are
In their diversity some of these Elements are more suited and in-
When these Elements are at some time in a future new creation re-
bodies and spirits will then be linked in the same weight by the
motion which is now caused by time and change within time, will
than any other matter. Therefore we can expect from gold a me-
dicine for the human body that surpasses all others in its effects.
and attuned to human nature and its vital sap. It is also certain
that such a medicine will yet have quite other effects than only
the obstacles which the curse of sin has cast upon us and all food-
consuming creatures were not in the way. Of this more will be said
-66-
clearly later when the correspondence of all things will be dealt
the whole great world together with its Elements in the form of a
that we cognize such only in part because sin drove us from Para-
a branch that grows across the walls of the garden of Eden, and
s. 3.
OF THE SPECIAL ELEMENTS: OF~
and mightier than the others. The Universal Spirit has its seat
penetrate the A Element nor unite completely with it, unless it has
ven together. This happens when its rays are strengthened and
-67-
Elements and all elementized things (V.II) and enclosed the
gether into some lights, so that they might pour their radiant
cessive fluid from the body into the -es, so that that evaporation
the other achieve its perfection. f:::. is the only Element that pro-
and this is done through the motion of Nature. That motion then
-68-
8. This Element does not tolerate the crude"Q' but drives
the stars whose visible effluences accuse all those of error who
.,... . . : : ::: dare to deny them.
through the impression of the light and Grace. Such a soul, there-
fore, expects nothing but to satisfy its desire for the everlasting
fied body.
11. The heavenly bodies receive their power from the upper
-69-
heaven and pour their rays or effluences upon the earth to main-
much of the earth as they send down to it. This is the means by
the spiritual astra (stars) which have no dense but very pure light-
bodies. They have a much subtler and glorious existence than the
are spirits of whom each forms and represents all the moral powers
of the whole world, and enjoys perpetual bliss because of his great
inner and outer eyes in this perishable world prevents us from see-
ing these heavenly spirits who are standing before the sacred Ma-
very pure, subtle and radiant substance, the dwelling of the angels
and the elect, the true paradise composed of the incorruptible and
perfect Elements, like that which existed before the Fall and sin.
14. All that the lower world has, the upper also possesses. In
the lower world there is nothing that is not vivified and arranged
-70.,,-
This is done when that imperishable water imparts itself to the
from there it is thrown into the crude"\} , and from the latter
into the~ . From all this we can clearly see that the lower
God.
in the eyes of the common man, but considered very high and pre-
cious in the eyes of the wise and the knowers of Nature and wis-
dom.
S.4.
ON AIR
1. The-bis a very subtle, translucent, invisible and light
Element. It is the link between the upper and the lower things,
a casing of the airy signs and meteors (meaning: dew, hail, etc.).
creatures draw food and life from it. It strengthens their gen-
-71-
would be born in this world if the~did not permeate everything
S.S.
ON WATER
depc:-._~~ ~:-. the excellence of the upper Elements. For the attain-
that t.:1c A in the innermost of the Si' may appear and be actualized.
Water never returns empty to the earth, always bringing along some
trate the~if it were not impregnated by the upper and lower heat,
as it happens in the summer when the heat of the inner and outer
getables and to digest them in order to make them grow into plants,
3. Heat draws the moisture upward like fog which, when it has
been raised, falls down upon the earth as raindrops because of its
-72-
heaviness, giving moisture to the earth, which makes it fertile.
for birth, and a factor by which all bodies of the lower Elements
the other three and serves to produce, sustain and increase all
who can congeal and fix this Element with its spirit.
6. If Nature wishes to unite the upper things with the lower
by means of an intermediary, she only uses water to give to the
s;;/- that which the heavenly~ distills and pours through the~
into the~, because the essence of the""'1 falls into the~,
it absorbs their heat and power, as may be seen in the hot baths.
If it passes through some mineral veins, however, it absorbs their
-73-
power in like manner. From that then arises the assidulous water,
9. See how the universal Lord and manager performs his fiery
ther will glorify and exalt His High Majesty at the end of times
all'\/ will turn into.q , the~ be calcined and turn into ash, so
that the6. may consume all impurity and the pure'V circulated in
were, befogs our souls in this miserable life - will live and, as
Isaiah 6.60 shows, behold and enjoy the divine Glory face to face.
10. O Holy God! When shall we behold Thy holy face? How long
life in them.
-74-
S.6.
ON EARTH
ing.
sions of the upper influences better than all the other Elements.
"'\! and~ do not retain them easily. These influences penetrate
to the innermost center of the earth and frequently emerge from
every compound and its form. "1 and!:::.. struggle unceasingly with
each other in the JV. If V dominates, frail things grow up; but
if~ dominates, durable things are produced.
5. .s:;r draws heavy things into itslef, but it repels the
lighter ones. It is the mother of all seeds and compounds. Just
--75-
the same degree. To obtain this medicine from~ , the latter
s::f, which cones from above, we draw the perpetually moving being,
taken on the form of the Chaos, which the Elements had before their
S.7.
the Elements and have some affinity with them. They are either
ted out of the purest and subtlest heavenly Elements. The subtler
they are, the stronger, more powerful and excellent is their effect
bitants the very purest heavenly spirits which stand ready to car-
Those of the first dwell in heaven and are again divided into two
classes. Those of the first class are very pure and inhabit the
fire heaven. Because they are above the firmament and the assigned
motion of the stars, they are not subject to time. They do not un-
They are subdivided into certain orders and dominions (Coloss. I.16),
-76-
3. The spirits of the second class are those which dwell
the action of the astralD. and effect it, they are not unjustly
lower creatures what God has commanded them to do, because the
they have specific and various functions, just as all other earthly
ences there are in their spirits. Some are solar, others lunar,
the earth through their influences and cause various customs among
men, of which the best are those which produce an honest and civil
piety. But because this piety stems only from the outer heaven,
man also requires the rays of the Holy Spirit to enable him to rule
and sanctified by the power of the Holy Light, so that he may give
the human mind that go beyond the outer nature stem directly from
in their own nature the Chaos which, as has been said above, is
-77~
things. They guide and lead the meteors (dew, hail, snow, etc.)
line with their disposition. The other earth and water spirits
Creator, but the water and earth spirits are not as strong and
their fall, the impure, perishable, frail Elements and sinful hu-
man beings have been assigned to the evil spirits as their habi-
tation. These evil spirits affect both the bodily and the spirit-
foe of the eternal image of God lodged within man. 'l'hat is why
glorify the splendid light of the Almighty, because the vain and
I will now also undertake to consider the lower visible and tangi-
add that we also have a corporeal nature from the external Ele-
-78-
ments, but a spiritual from the inner ones.
s. 8.
ON CORPOREAL THINGS,
which they are well moderated and proportioned, but in bodies that
show the contrary, the substance is impure and fragile. Purity
-79-
the~ volatile like themselves and brought it to their identical
to them a fixed and dry nature, and binds everything fluid. When
dense bodies, just as on the other hand its fixed nature consoli-
ciple.
S.10.
ON SULPHUR
the other two Principles, namely, the dry and moist, together and
but the whole substance of the fixed E3 , which has been extracted
-80-
from the innermost part of the ~ and is distributed in all parts
which such a coagulation takes place does not give off any odor,
S.11.
ON MERCURY
S.12.
-81-
light in which lie hidden all sidereal powers and which is the
of the form. This is the power by means of which the seeds imi-
seed, because the former decays and putrefies while the real seed
contains the spirit, is but the middle substance which binds and
united the heavenly and the elementary by being akin to both the
and darkness, combines the two extreme degrees of light and dark-
in the body of the seed and animates it. Through heat this seed
in the fragile Elements, it would not last long. Let all those
note this who believe that they will find a fixed medicine in the
-82-
when joined to a thing that is not of its species. All seeds
tion when all obstacles have been moved out of the way. For
there exists no matter that does not have its special and mea-
Grace and Mercy, without which it will remain hidden and untouched.
S.13.
ON GENERATION
own seed in its own womb, and if the seed is not perfect and the
womb not pure and natural, no generation can occur. The seed of
as not to make the common mistakes that are daily made by many in
-83-
the ~ Art. Only that is a good and suitable womb which is really
appropriate for the seeds of its species. And how can a seed fail
fore we can see from this that it is impossible to promote any in-
necess3ry that Nature unite totally with the Art, and the latter
s~it :~~ 3Ctions to her example. For Nature alone possesses the
co!'..::.:. : : .:, those who have not yet learned this wonderful order
should carefully think it over and should stop their messy cook-
Besides, if they have not yet learned this foundation, they would
Art, as otherwise they will only promote their own ruin and that
who try to copy an original which they do not understand and engage
tinguish first the seeds and later the wombs of all species. After
-84-
that, they can select the proper seed and womb as they are formed
and used by Nature, put the good and well-purified seed in its
s;i or womb, leaving the rest to the boiling of the Nature ~ al-
ready contained in them. Then they can expect good progress and
the desired end. But in this work it is not enough to know the
seed proper ot each body in the three king'doms and that every liv-
heavenly and imperishable Spirit which flows dcwn from the light
into this lower world through the motion of the heavenly bodies.
But no one will be able to extract and seize this Universal Spirit
heat and its inner 6) dissolved into a suitable liquid. Then this
-85-
liquid penetrates the substance of the seed and the enclosed
take place. But this liquid must have an affinity with each spe-
cies, both in regard to its essence and quality as also the quan-
tity.
trate the power of the acting spirit and putrefy the matter. In
addition, the matter must not be removed from the vessel in this
ing to the condition of the womb. The seeds, the male as well as
sown into the soil, grows and multiplies. Artificially, when the
-86-
tilled and opened in the philosophical way. Then he must water
it, make it soft, subtle, nourish and ripen it. After that it is
more than perfect and can multiply abundantly in a new or other
life. It is then the Phoenix which rises alive from the ashes.
it.
9. Consider well the wonderful analogy which the external
things have with the temporal, and the spiritual with the corpor-
real. Pay attention to the lights which God has given us, to see
if you do not find in the lower things an image of the upper, even
rebirth corrupt and impe~fect men can now be renewed by union with
the Savior and become perfectly good and partake of eternity. Those,
however, who have no part in this go to their destruction.
10. From this behold, dear friend, the unspeakably great won-
der of God's wisdom and Providence which are thus po~trayed and
-87-
of putrefaction in order to perfect it, as we may see every day
ing its children how this Universal Spirit incorporates the .s;z.
and combines with it in a secret and wonderful manner, leading
The wise men were shown a new and extraordinary star which they
recognized and distinguished among all others. This star then led
as the manifest Word of God, and show how the eternal Divine Will
be ready and fit some day to perfectly honor, glorify and praise
-88-
S.14.
ON PRESERVA'I'ION
the same power that causes generation, but with the difference
bined and incorporated with her, while the other, being against
Nature, is rejected.
in the food; the other is visible, tangible and not as fine and
3. The more the Elements and the food that nourishes some
bodies are purified, the more perfect is the nutritive power de-
rived from them. That which makes food most nourishing and per-
strong, it can produce a renewal in the body that has absorbed it.
Plants likewise become green and are renewed when they are again
given their medicine, the Universal Spirit. The golden eagle also
-89-
into a liquid by means of L:::;. I could well say more about such
instead of an instruction.
S.15.
ON DESTRUC'l'ION
perfect nature. Then the coagulation of the new body causes the
destruction of the old. Let this be said enough of the three acci-
S.16.
1. To the upper stars are due the influences for the pro-
stars does not rest but works and endeavors at all times to at-
are simple, that is, coming from a single star, their effect is
also only a simple one. But the influence composed of many mingled
-90-
rays acts variedly in the lower bodies by speeding up or imped-
ing their effect. Fixed stars are those whose motion is hardly
stars whose motion and particular effects are partly known. Their
aspects are very potent, whether they are to the right or to one
3. The noblest among the planets are the Sun and the Moon.
The <::) can rightly be called a rich and abundant source of light
and heat. The World Soul, or the Universal Spirit, has its habi-
tation in this planet more than in all the others, and it gives
life and motion to all things with its beaming rays. This planet
possesses the powers of all things. Its motion causes and governs
the various seasons and all emerging and growing things. As God
willed that all upper things should have their seal and image in
the lower, it so happens that this planet - into which God has per-
fectly impressed His many virtues and image, locking them in this
By its magnetic power the Sun attracts the subtlest and purest bo-
dies, and after perfecting them, sends them back again to invigorate
4. The Moon receives its light and influence from the Sun,
sends them down to the earth at night and causes the months by its
course. This Eve, who had been created out of Adam's side (the()),
-91-
does the work of a woman in her aforementioned ef feft and has
dry matter.
carries out its rotation in 30 years, the second in 12, the third
the metals.
S.17.
OF THE AIRY SIGNS OR METEORS
They are born in the air just as mineral vapors are born in
the earth, and are formed into specific shapes by the power of
the stars. Just like the Elements, they differ in many ways.
Comets and shooting stars represent Fire; winds, Air; rain and
snow "\/ ; sleet and hailstones, Earth. Now we still have to con-
sider the elementized and lower things, such as the animal, plant,
S.18.
ON METALS
-92-
Its birth takes place in the belly of the earth. It is tangible,
white, moist, and cold, but in its action it is warm, red, and
dry. It readily absorbs things that are of its own nature, and
S.19.
occurs when the 1(. hidden in ~ rises and becomes dominant. Then
-93-
or impure ~ , because an impure matrix and impure ~ prevent
moderate and constant heat which comes to the aid of the inner
S.20.
GOLD
we can make (:} alive, spiritual, and like the root balsam of human
with it. To do this, know that God has also ordained that if a
grain of gold is cast into a field of its own nature, it will dis-
dead gold is of no use and unproductive, but when it has been made
lying in a dense and closed body, but when its potential changes
-94-
to actuality, it can work for the multiplication of its species
and impart strength to the animal body and also restore frail
health, for just as the heavenly Sun imparts its radiance to the
and virtue to the other metallic bodies, and this is why the old
and metals. Also, they acted with special deliberation when they
indicated the Sun and gold by a whole circle and a central point,
into the circumference, will acquire the powers of all upper and
precisely this spiritual and volatile nature that contains the me-
that in its corporeal and compact nature <:) is not suitable for
indicates its perfection which casts its rays from the center to
-95-
gold represent the four rectangular lines which together form
an equilateral square.
of this metal the true squaring of the circle, but because there
are few who understand the secrets of Nature and know how to make
S.21.
SILVER
J....i~~t ,,- 0 has an affinity with man's heart, so silver has with
man's brain, and they give to both parts a special medicine when
S.22.
One kind is soft, like tin and lead, the other kind hard
like iron and copper. Both kinds contain an impure sulphur and an
tain degree, and they can therefore achieve little in the philoso-
plished provided they have before been purified and turned into
-96-
a subtle and penetrating essence.
S.23.
PRECIOUS STONES
they receive their color and power. This ~ is not unlike that
of metals.
S.24.
They are dark and full of shadows. They have been coagula-
ted by a fat and impure r;;J. , and they are mingled with a viscous
moisture. When that is dried up, it produces hard and gravelly
S.25.
MINERALS
<Ii}, , ~ , and O are most akin to the metallic nature. The lat-
-97-
Actually, they are nothing but a mountain juice that is viscous
some soft and liquid. The hard ones are spar, cobalt, and yellow
amber; the liquid ones are naphtha, and Arabian amber. Another
S.26.
PLANTS
In their analysis you will find their proper flesh and in it their
veins and ducts through which the Universal Spirit imparts itself
to them. The separate parts of the plants are the root, the bark,
the stalk, the marrow, the wood, the twigs, the leaves, the flowers,
the fruits, the moss, the juice or sap, and the gum or resin.
-98-
be revealed to you by your own reflection on what we have told
kinds of sex are found, a male and a female, as we have learned from
experience.
served in the body of every living thing. When the body of a seed
outer form and signature, i.e., when their inner astrum (star,
and the plants are gathered in its constellation and used for their
signed diseases.
-99-
s. 27.
THE ANIMAL KINGDOM
ing ones.
by the animal soul. The parts of their bodies are more or less
thick or thin, hard or soft, like the Elements of the Great World.
The bones, which are the driest part, compare with the rocks,
the flesh with the earth. The other parts, such as the skin, the
nerves, etc. also compare with the Elements: the dry with the
or lower ones. They are either earthy or watery and possess those
parts of the body which suit them best and are akin to them on
The upper animal spirits stem from the astral~ and dwell in the
heart by means of which they animate the others, that is, the
lower spirits and impart them their reality. These astral spirits
completely follow the Sun in their effects, for just as the latter
vivifies and rules all the Elements by its power, it also vivifies
-100-
ference in the sensory and the rational souls. The sensory soul
and implanted in the seed for the government of the animal. The
the Spirit of God, because the sensory soul, as said above, stems
only from the sidereal stars. Therefore it cannot lift its wings
above its home, and the soul, together with its animal and lower
which pertain to the dwelling-place of the sensory soul and the per-
fect or imperfect reason, and depend on it. That is why some ani-
-101-
their instruments are proportioned and shaped.
S.28.
MAN
that of other animals, except for the form of the human parts,
4. Not a word is said that the human soul was created from
a bit of dust when the almighty Creator fashioned man out of earth,
but that He breathed a living breath into his nose. By that, man
and judge all there is in the Great World and in itself. It can
the earthly soul are bound to earthly things and blemished by them.
This is also the reason why all knowledge derived by the rational
-102-
to the mind the most distant things and makes past matter pre-
sent. The sensory soul cannot do anything like it. With its
and tangible things, and when it mingles and befogs itself with
in rising to the upper and immaterial things. But when God's es-
assists it, it can easily rid itself of all earthly images and de-
the upper and lower stars receive their life and light from the
concentrated sunlight, the reasonable souls cannot do anything
unless they are vivified and illuminated by the rays of the Grace-
Sun of Jesus Christ. Then all sensual desires and blindness will
of Creation with the eyes of common sense, we find that the won-
and dispersed light was only gathered at the beginning of the fourth
Day of Creation and formed into the body of the Sun, so that it
should shine in the earthly world. The same thing happened with
the sacred Light-Sun, the Son of God, who came to us, incarnating
rule the eternal world. Therefore our souls, which have their
origin in God, will attain to the new life that is God if they
and temple of the Holy Spirit, by which they are led and made per-
-103-
f ect to feel and taste the powers of the future world which has
earthly soul and cast under its subjection, which is called the
from one thing to another, till they have cast off all the defi-
again reside in their purified bodies after this life. The body
and infected by the spirit. The spirit rules the body as the skip-
per his boat. Likewise, the soul rules the spirit if no violence
is done to it. The body cannot move without the spirit, and simi-
-104-
anything without the soul, as may be seen with animals. The
its work, as may be seen with drunkards. From this we can infer
body. Hereby we also recognize the struggle between the body and
because the body is earthly while the soul is divine and heavenly.
other, and the spirit stands between them. True, the spirit should
obey the soul as the upper part, but it happens nevertheless fre-
grasped and putting them together again. It does this with such
quick agility that with every external occasion for imagining things,
-105-
new images of the thing recognized, it is called learning; if
it poetry.
conscience, are together considered one and called the mind. Un-
from the unknown, and the certain from the uncertain, and to learn
by the evil or good recognized. If it does not strive for the true
the will has done or not done it according to this rule, and how
God will reward both the doing or the not-doing. From this we can
see the triple action of the soul, the selecting, showing, and eva-
and a judge. Woe to him who does not heed this monitor, despises
-106-
12. From what has been said about man we see in what way
come anything, because his body comes from the Elements, his spirit
from heaven, and his soul from God, and he represents both the
S.29.
MAN'S DISEASES.
it is called an "accident."
Dislocation of members occurs when the bones are moved out of their
the like. A rupture occurs in the cavity walls of the body and
-107-
six causes:
1. Indigestion 4. Constipation
2. Flatulence 5. Putrefaction
3. Discharge 6. Inflammation
es: " ... ~ .. : i::': the natural heat is not stimulated and used. Such
iri.;: " : t l '~n -:.hem produces many troubles in the body. In the sto-
~act. ;t causes a disgust for food or an inordinate desire to eat
soil, chalk, coal, etc. As the slimy crudities adhere to the sto-
mach and intestines and are heated, putrefaction occurs which pro-
duces worms. By gnawing and moving they cause bad vapors and trou-
heat.
-108-
2. Flatulence in the body is a strong and thick vapor which
evaporates from the collected crudities and puffs the members up.
ziness, and in the whole body laziness and extension; (b) it often
are cured with good physical exercise, such as those which divide
the vapors of flatulence, thin them and drive them out through
the pores. Such a cure can also take place if the harmful moisture
is purged.
the tough slimes collect and combine due to the discharge of the
crude moistures. For when the crude vapors rise into the head and
they turn into a snotty and thick-slimy matter which flows into
and a drip in the throat and mouth, hoarseness in the lungs, gasp-
For when the festering lung does not properly perform its
stirred in the heart, and then it does not refresh the flesh but
-109-
spirit attacks and consumes the liver itself, and this is followed
of the members.
fluxes stay in the head, they cause headaches if they are subtle
If they are salty and bilious, they bring about deafness. They
-110-
because the gastric juice cannot properly be cooked into blood.
motion causes inflammation, and the same can happen through con-
stipation. We can see that watery and rotten things give off
some heat and finally become inflamed, as may also be seen with
hay that has been put in a barn wet. If the inflammation occurs
cure is a phlebotomy.
The first inflames the spirits, the second the moisture, and the
third all parts of the body. Therefore the first can be compared
-111-
to a burning wind, the second to a burning water which heats
vessel which heats the water poured into it, because the cardiac
It therefore lasts only one or two days till either the cause of
the reason why it brings either health or death within two days.
are the most common and vary greatly. If the moisture begins to
the liver, they are inflamed by the spirit and fought till the
That is why such fevers are oftentimes fatal and are called con-
tinuous fevers.
When the moistures are not in their vessels, that is, in the
because this struggle is far from the heart, the spirit returns
and that is why this fever is called a one-day fever. If the yel-
low gall constitutes the moisture, the struggle takes place every
-112-
three days, and this is the three-day fever. If it is the black
gall, it is the four-day fever. The reason for this uneven fight
of the vital spirit with the rotten moisture is that the watery
moisture soon collects again and gives the spirit plenty to do,
the three-day fevers the fight is the most violent, because the
hot in itself. For this reason they are also called hot fevers.
another, after which the rotten moisture is fought now here, now
there.
That fevers start with a cold is due to the fact that the
spirit which intends to fight the moistures attracts all the body
heat as its aids. Then the outer members shiver with cold. This
may also be seen in great frights, when the vital spirits converge
and the outer members get cold. That fever is followed by weak-
ness is because the vital spirits leave the outer members after
vital spirits do not cook at that time but must get ready for the
cooks the food and attacks the illness in a milder way, or it leaves
-113-
the food altogether uncooked. But if it wants to do both si-
power, as we not only gain our health by it but also our bread,
lives in laziness.
S.30~
MENTAL ILLNESSES
or suffering to the mind. These vices are nothing but the corrupted
much, possessing much, and receiving great honors. The real names
cause those who are indulging in those vices are always desirous
-114-
and restless.
while fleeing from the extremes, and at never doing more than we
are able to do, at remembering at all times that we are human be-
also that all things are impermanent, and that a mind conquered
S.31.
with the fear of God, that God, I mean to say, Who sees everything,
3. Nothing can cure despair but the blood of the Lamb of God,
-115-
us with God the Father, justifies us (Rom., 3,4) and gives us
S.32.
thing but a correspondence of the inner with the outer, the upper
with the lower, and the spiritual with the corporeal. Nor do I
3. As the Elements all stem from the Chaos, they are not
ture, when we see how everything has been created and made to work
truction or opening of the three realms, you will see that they
all accord and converge in this regard. They get their growth
-116-
from the three Fundamental Principles of Nature, where man is
active and woman passive. This growth is due to the inner heat
of the seed and the external heat of the cooking. It does not
the help of the external heat, it is used as its food and for
evenly.
Every body in the three kingdoms must have its seed, its womb, its
differ from one another as to their situation and form, and seek
lower parts with the upper. The visible Sun has a close relation-
ship with the earthly and invisible Central Sun. One sends its
promotes the course of the motion of all creatures. The Moon and
the stars likewise act on the astral forces that are locked in the
the correspondence that the spiritual world has with the material.
-117-
One reflects the image of the other, and what is visible in the
was, Who is, and Who will be. When He appears directly in the
nite Light will separate that which He had separated from the Chaos
and satiate us with His blessings, for the sake of Jesus Christ.
ture and all creatures. I do not doubt that you will well under-
-118-
ANNEX TAKEN FROM THE THIRD AND FIFTH DEGREES
THE PRACTICUS
For the sake of true brotherly love, our greatly committed
loyalty, and a promise made some time ago, we have issued this
~ ';1,,. i ng order. This will enable them to see (which must al-
..,.. :~::: :ie the main purpose of our undertakings) a ray of the in-
the majesty and glory of the Creator from His works, and at last
sink their souls into the abyss of His Wisdom and remain inse-
parately united with it, which the Triune may graciously grant
-119-
with a white, very fine earth by an extremely moderate heat.
This mingling continues until the moisture of the water and the
fire with all its parts, or it rises with all its parts and van-
earth. This is also why our people have called it a dry water.
This dry water, however, had been destined to become solid gold
of its spiri~ual sulphur or active fire, and the rest had not been
a running, dry water. From this springs its great love for metals,
but especially for gold. Aside from this, however, we have to con-
~i20~
be brought to perfection unless it be freed from them. One,
ated with warm water and dried. Now this =v= must be sublimated
and all other impurities for further operations. The entire oper-
ation must be repeated seven times, then it is very well and ex-
cellently prepared for complete animation (that is: life, the ac-
-121-
to be sought elsewhere. That is why they looked for it in gold
in various bodies of the said realm but found none better suited
a::.! ~ .. :~:1...:se they found in its innermost being a dry, hot tempera-
th_.::_ '--'"Y little, 'g ial "\/ . Upon this they based their fur-
iron, in which its true, inner, and pure nature is enclosed and
achieve it, the iron had to be completely purified and freed from
it.
To do this, the old wise Masters did not find anything more
of which it not only purifies gold to the highest degree but also
-122-
graduates its color very highly. For it consists of a thickened
and fine golden earth, in which there is moisture and cold. Its
combustible earth when they are melted together, they leave their
mineral water and their fine earth of golden quality and both sink
vour the ~ial water of cJf , its metallic salt and solor spiritual
are far too gross to be able to hold fast to the aforesaid fine
-123-
THE MANIPULATION OF THE SECOND WORK
from the first casting in a glass, in a warm place, till they are
needed.
This ffl is molten three more times, each time with 1/8 of a flux
be repeated 7 times.
"Of the aforesaid scor iae '~~ lb; with ~ crude lb. 5/4
melted for 1/4 ~ and 6ed. Of this if[, iiij with lb; this
Now let them flow together for 1/2 ~ , then pour them out.
This work can and should be repeated 5 times, and at last the 1J/
is to be most carefully cleansed of all external impurity.
that these scoriae are not empty but are full of a goldish fire
-124-
and reverberate them gently one after another for 3 f> O(a strong
can be:O:::: ed, carefully leach thees fr cm the crocus' grind this
equal weight of melting cupeled 'J). Drain this with lead on the
iron, had risen into the scoriae by means of its fiery, spiritual
parts of the J) cornua that adhere to the fixed parts of silver and
-125-
THE THIRD WORK, AND THE
lowing way:
"Of our 111 melt 3iiij with fine cupel J) .3ij. When it
is flowing well, add some of the aforementioned flux of Scorn.
fus. and~ '
and let it;::= together for 1/4 x . Then it is
poured out, the 1/1 of ~ meticulously washed off, dried and <f ed
-126-
THE FOURTH WORK, AND THE
"Take the aforesaid finely cfed II/and with twice the weight
and the aaa at last turns white and silvery. Put the dirt and
grey ~that has been pounded and washed off it aside. Put the
beautiful white silvery aaa into a glass~ bound with metal and
times, always with the same ~ and the ~r mass (which must each
shorten the work and reach the end sooner, as experience itself has
proved their hope. Therefore, now follows the instruction for:
-127-
THE FIFTH WORK AND THE BETTER
PREPARATION OF THE a- a- a.
-
through 6, laminate it very thin and cut it into very small pieces
and make from this, using well purified (clean)~ vivi iiij, a
fine and subtle aaa. Then let cornmon~3ij flow in a glazed ves-
sel, making a paste of it with the aforesa~d aaa, then let it cool,
set it in a cupel, under a muffle, light the fire slowly, let the~
and the~ evaporate very gently, then cool it down for a ~ X, and
pulverize it. Then again, as before, make an aaa with the same a-
cally open all the more easily. For the finer, purer and subtler
the <:)of the amalgamation is prepared, the more easily, faster and
after the 0 's extreme hardness has already been shattered, is all
.
27. "Now take some of this subtilized pure 0 ';>, put it in
a glass bowl, placed on hot , add twice .its weight of animated
fiery ~ , and grind i't until it turns into a delicate iiii:ii:. Put
-128-
this into a chamois-leather, to press out of it as much~ as
phial which must be so spacious that the aaa will only fill 1/4
of it, at most 1/3. Now place the phial with the aaa over gentle
little bit of paper to prevent any dust from falling into it while
allowing all watery moisture which the aaa might still contain,
the latter's parts are still raw and unripe, while those of 0
have progressed to maturity and consequently their sterling form
-129-
the pure rock salt, supplies food and substance to the plants,
four Elements, also that ray of light which acts again as the
ted. As soon as the light-ray has caused the shells, husks and
other hard parts that bind the seed to soften and dissolve, it
forges a new body for itself after the manner of its natural im-
ber into the many new grains of seed which it produces. The light-
its shell and dissolved its fetters. This is also the reason why
31. But just as no plant seed can accomplish its whole work
into activity, but must be nourished and imbibed from time to time
its own Leffas, i.e., our fiery~ , and that frequently, in pro-
put into the still warm phial which is stoppered as before and set
in the same degree of heat till the precipitate has again changed
Now the third imbibition is made with the 6th part or 1 Lot
with the 5th part or with 1 Lot and 2 1/2 drams of the animated
-131-
and then into the so-called raven's head. The degree of heat
cipitate is imbibed, which is done with the 4th part of the weight,
a stronger heat. But all future imbibitions are each time done
with the 4th part, that is, with ~ i of animated ~ through all
colors, again to redness, and that as often as necessary. But
the whiteness will appear within 5 ~ , when the full 3rd degree
of ~will be given and regulated up to perfect redness, as it was
mise that the raven's head would appear within 4oc/J', after the
first imbibition made with the 4th part of the anL~ated ~ , the
whiteness after the second, and again within 4oc//', after the
third, as also with the 4th part of the animated ~ , the perfect
redness. But that method is not only very slow but also danger-
the imbibitions would inundate and spoil the precipitate all too
-132-
35. However, as the precipitate imbibed in the prescribed
of heat till it has again changed from the red to the black color.
Then add once more a 4th part of animated ~ and gradually in-
crease the external heat to the second degree, when the mass will
take on a grey color. After this, the /::::.. is increased to the 3rd
By and by the yellow color will appear and, according to the re-
dark-red color.
taught above, in the 1st degree of heat, and the precipitate will
turn black again. Now add again 1/4 of the animated ~ and gra-
dually regulate the fire from the 1st to the 2nd and toward the
-133-
3rd degree of heat, up to the brilliant white color. Then add
prescribed.
wer and virtue. For as often as its Leffas is opened, that is,
39. From one repetition of the work to the next, the colors
-134-
THE SEVENTH WORK,
flash of lightning.
Now increase the fire and let it flow for 1/4 ~ , and you
and put on any imperfect metal you wish in the process of melt-
persed and largely lost in the slag with which the melting metals
-135-
worthy Brothers may easily find this proportion, they are hereby
a larger proportion.
Besides, with all the reverence and respect due to our wise
less, the Creator has put an amazing and glorious power and effect
powers of our souls and prepares them for higher mysteries. Open,
light. Let the fear of the Lord, His justice, and the perfect love
of the Supreme Architect and your fellowman ever guide you through
ture up to the Great Work of the Universal Stone of the Wise and
-136-
INSTRUCTIONES - EXPERIMENTALES
Processus Imus
(Q, is not calcined but only slowly processed in : :. all the way
to the 3rd degree. When the'\r has been distilled over, add to
it l lb. of fresh ':f and pour both together back on the ~in
the retort. Dissolve them together and digest lclJ'. Then dis-
till again slowly, only up to the 3rd part, and the ~will lie
not rise, it must be cohobated till it has all gone over without
leaving the least bit of residue. This is again driven over, 1,
-137-
2, or 3 times, by itself, and the right mineral menstruum is
Processus IIdus
lb., pour it over 1/2 lb. of~ in a retort and distill the mois-
been distilled over, add again 1/2 lb. of fresh -A- and pour every-
together and digest lt:/)', then distill again slowly to the 3rd
part, as before, and usually your ~ will already have turned into
an
o Now take the distilled -n.. and add once more 1/2 lb. of
till it again by SlOW degrees I and thee 9 Will again rise OVer
without any residue. In this way you have also well and properly
-138-
Processus IIItius
it in B.M. at the 1st degree, let it stand and putrefy for 14r/f',
then distill everything that will go by degrees, in B.M., and pre-
serve it. Now remove the retort, put the residual matter in a
the alkaline part. Remove this substance, mix it with the thick
Now add to what has gone over all your volatile-n....with its phleg-
everything goes over and nothing is left - and your animal men-
struum is ready.
Processus IVtus
1\-n.. eand (J) aa: Pour them together and distill them.
-139-
Of this-A- take 1/2 lb. and pour it over 1/2 lb. of <D and E3
mixed together. Put it in a retort and distill the~ by slow
degrees, in such a way that the E3 s are not calcined but only
go slowly up to the 3rd degree in .::. . When all the _n_ is dis-
tilled, add 1/2 lb. of fresh ...n... and pour everything together
Repeat this work once more and do in everything as you were taught
for the first process. When everything has gone over and nothing
is left behind, your universal menstruum has also been well and
properly prepared.
NOTE
Here now you have the four principal menstrua together, each
Stone can be prepared in the wet way. And although these four
waters differ greatly on the outside, they are yet only one on
the inside, and every Brother should know that in each such water
these are also two, as man and woman, active and passive, CD and
Just as Frater Homerus says in his Golden Chain. But so that the
-140-
Class 4, may not bore one or another Brother eager to learn the
Art, as they do not yet show any profit, we have taken the spe-
-141-
INSTRUCTIO MYSTERII MAGNI DESCRIPTIO
L a b o r Imus
has no sand cupel, is round and in which the retort fits well.
Fill the joints with glue to prevent any flames from beating
around the glass. Add also a large receiver, and when you have
well sealed everything, begin with the .l:::., first a gentle one,
move all the sublimate together with the residue, mix again
Repeat this work at least three times. Here we must take care
-142-
tied and hot water be added each time. Now put all the-==:= to-
gether into hot water and mix and revivify your ~ , wash it
L a b o r IIdus
.::i :--,c.:i ted greased casting mold. When everything has cooled, se-
parate the scoriae from the "111 , melt it again and pour some (I)
on it. Pour it out as fast as before and separate the scoriae
from it. Repeat this work once again, and your 1J1 will be well
prepared.
L a b o r IIItius
-143-
stand at 3 fingers' width from the earth. Put bricks around
it and make a~' but take care that the coal be not higher than
the matter in the vessel. The ~must not be too strong or else
the/:::,, go out and open the vessel. You will find your snowwhite
a glass. Put the glass back on the tripod, add some fresh '1f1 ,
grow for you. Continue in this way till you have 10 or 16 Lots
L a b o r IVtus
in a glass dissolving bowl on hot ... for one X Put this aaa
into aG::\ and add a receiver. As usually, seal it well. But be-
fore sealing it, some hot water must be poured into it. Now be-
and you will have a ~ that is quite fiery and full of wonderful
power. Proceed with it as follows.
-144-
L a b o r Vtus
mixture has turned into a delicate aaa. Now put it into a chammy
the left-over aaa into a phial of white thick glass, provided with
find that within 4 or 6 weeks your work changes and begins to en-
the.6t. again somewhat and continue doing this till you have obtained
the perfect blackness. Then increase the ~again so that you can
hardly put your hand on the sand cupel. Continue with this degree
Now you must have ready another sand cupel that contains pure
filtered and calcined hot :.. . Remove the ash cupel with the phial,
put the other one with the \l> in it, carefully remove also the
-145-
will increase of its own without your giving more~ . Continue
with this heat till your matter looks bright red. After this,
give a strong calcining fire for one X i so that the mass will
L a b o r VItus
u~ ~~>.:- redness. Repeat this work twice, and your ""K. will ob-
toi~ sJch an ingress that one part tinges 100. With several im-
bibitions you can increase this from 100 to 1,000 parts and more.
L a b o r VIItus
Projection.
-146-
melting fl. for 1/4 .X , and pour it out, and you will have a good
-147-
THE FIFTH R.C. DEGREE
the fat of the "'V-, in other words, the saline and sulphurous~
py end; but since most of our Brothers have failed for lack of
a convenient place and the necessary tools for this work, and have
have changed it, but without diverging from the means to dissolve
siders who have a little knowledge of Nature; all the more reason
sole et sale naturae sunt omina - In the sun and salt of Nature is
everything.
-148-
1st Observation.
than perfect wet way and convert it forever into the most per-
feet medicine, as much for the human body as for metals. The
that derives its origin from the luminous Principle and whose
-149-.
is converted into~ by being mixed with the other principles.
Thus we have two parts which emanate and derive their birth
from the light; namely, one cold and moist, the other dry and
hot. This sulphurous and mercurial /:::,. of Nature, like the two
2nd Observation.
practice and experience the nature and property of all salts, wish
-150-
together unfeasible without salted~ or fiery ~,which alone
whatever kind they may be, either from the plant, animal, or min-
At bottom they have all sprung from the same base which is the
universal ~ of Nature. Consequently, their interior is impreg-
nated by the luminous mercurial ~ . This is what all ancient
3rd Observation.
from its treated "'ii/- , reunited with its ~ , then turned into a
menstruum which would not only have the power to dissolve c:) al-
together but even to destroy it, with the result that the Artist
can separate the Principles from it, purify them and transmute
-151-
into very fine gold, in other words, into 1\ ; or, by :making
we can put into practice what we have just said. The instruc-
THE PROCESS
of "1 . Make sure that the beak of the retort is so long that
it nearly touches the V contained in the receiver. When the lute
is quite dry, begin your distillation with a moderate degree of
~, increase the~ every six hours for one day and one night.
Powder the G) , wash the 9 from it with;\~ . Distill this vine-
this "\] to separate it until the 9 turns red. Make sure it does
not start to melt; wash this~ once more with rain water, evapor-
ate this " ' I imbibe your e again With your~ I and proceed as
-152-
before.
into all of the~ , it will improve and get stronger. Now dis-
solve this salt completely. After filtering it, pour this solu-
tion gently in your 'vr: , which will turn into a good "'\]= .
12. Dissolve in this"\;;C' as much 0 as you can. Then take
8 oz. of~~ 4 oz. o f * I mix them and put them into a phial
which you must keep warm enough in a sand bath to liquify them.
Now allow this mixture to cool, then powder it and throw about
twice the weight of <::) into the ~ solution. Put this solution
in an ash bath and digest it for 20 days.
13. N.B. During this distillation, the cucurbit has to be
gone over into the receiver on the dry matter at the bottom of
the alembic, and make as many cohobations as necessary to trans-
form your matter into o and to leave only some useless phlegma
in the receiver. Now put the ala~bic in a sand bath, repeat your
-153-
this degree of ~ , let it fall upon a red-hot copper plate,
work is perfect.
the last degree of fire of which we have spoken till you have
will grant them the Grace necessary to complete this work which we
protection and exhort them to use this gift for the glory of God
wise it will turn into a stony substance. After that, put it with
ly draw it off with a strong /:l,. , when a green liquid will appear.
F I N I S
-154-