Selected quad for the lemma: body_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
body_n death_n soul_n union_n 6,555 5 9.5716 5 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A76069 Basilius Valentinus, monk, of the Order of St. Bennet: his last will and testament Which being alone, he hid under a table of marble, behinde the high-altar of the Cathedral Church, in the Imperial City of Erford: leaving it there to be found by him, whom Gods providence should make worthy of it. Wherein, he sufficiently, declares the wayes he wrought to obtain the philosophers stone: which he taught unto his fellow collegians, so that they all attained the said philosophers stone, whereby not onely the leprous bodies of the impure, and inferior metals are reduced unto the pure and perfect body of gold and silver, but also all manner of diseases whatsoever are cured in the bodies of unhealthfull men, and kept thereby in perfect health unto the prolonging of their lives. A work long expected. Basilius Valentinus. 1658 (1658) Wing B1016; ESTC R231639 202,436 343

There are 8 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

for neither water nor earth ca●● do it any hurt because it received its first birth and beginning from a heavenly water which in due time is pou●● down upon the earth In these together driven goldish waters lieth hid that tr●● bird and Eagle the King with his heavenly Splendor together with its clarified Salt which three you finde shut up i● this one thing and golden property and from thence yo● will get all that which you have need of for your inte●●tion Therefore set that golden body you have obtained whic● in dignity and vertue is exalted beyond all other Gold in●● its due and lawfull dissolution its due time then the A●gel of the highest will appear unto thee and tell thee th●● it is the Resolver of all the mysteries in the World receiv●● it with joy and keep it safe for its quality is more heavenly than earthly therefore doth it heartily incline to striv● after that which is above from whence it had its Original If you have separated this Prophet from his matter whic● remained then you need not to undertake any further processe you were taught parabolically in my XII Keyes Fo● even in his remaining formal substance you may finde an● expect from thence a pure immortal Soul together vi●● the glory of the Salt both which are obtained by means 〈◊〉 the spirit and must be had from thence and no impure o● contrary thing must be added thereunto And it is do● in the same manner as I told you in my Keyes with the S●● and Salt of the Gold by the saturnal water in whose pla●● this spiritual Mercurial spirit might be used with better a●vantage Observe onely this difference that the Salt must be drawn forth from the Mercurial body as it hapned unto the Soul with the spirit of Mercury whereas on the other side the Salt of Gold must not be drawn forth with the saturnal water because it is too weak for the body of Gold but with a water which hath been expressed in the description of particulars This distinction must be exactly observ'd being of great concernment because the Salt of Vitriol is not so strongly guarded and is not in so fix'd a body as the Gold is but is still an open body which saw no coagulation as yet nor passed it through any melting fire therefore that body never came as yet to any compactnesse there is room left for its own spirit to enter into can embrace and unite with its like and a snow white extraction of Salt may be had whereas on the other side a sharper matter must penetrate Gold as you shall hear when I shall speak more of it in its due place Behold now my friend whatsoever thou art what minde I bare towards thee and how I am affected unto thee in my heart the like I never durst look for from thee Consider it well how sincerely and faithfully I disclose unto thee all the locks and bonds whereby the whole Philosophick wisdom is shut up which hitherto never entred any more ●houghts much lesse that ever it was practised or discovered and nothing caused me to do it but onely Gods infinite mercy my good will and love toward my Neighbour which my Predecessors have not done so compleatly and was put off unto me to do it Having thus separated your three Mineral bodies and ordered them into certain divisions and put away the dregs wherein they lye hid then look to it that you neglect none of it by the diminishing of the quantity which would prove a great fault to your work and keep each in its own and due quantity otherwise in your work you cannot come to a happy end This is the thrift which so many have missed and have written great volumes about it for all what cometh from our Philosophick Gold and hath divided it self into three parts the same must be brought into one without any losse and diminution which is to enter into a new form again and become a meliorated substance nothing of it must be done away but onely the feces terrae in which the glorious Salt had its dwelling Therefore do that I told you of joyn the spirit with the body bring the body also into a spirit dissolve exalt it into the highest spiritual power i● that dissolutiō the body turns to a spirit the spirit with the body uniteth and joyneth into one substance that after the exchanging of all manner of colours there cometh a white body like snow transcending all whitenesses This is the greatest mystery of this world about which among the learned and supposed wits such disputings in the world have been that a palpable thing and a visible one could be reduced into its prima materia and out of that may be made again a new clarified and better substance by the bountifull nature leading the way thereunto Thus you have made and brought into the world the Queen of Honour and the first born daughter of Philosophers which after her due perfection is called the white Elixir of which great volumes are extant Having brought your work thus far then you have deserved to be received into the Turba of Philosophers and you get more Art wisdom and understanding than all Sophisters which prate much of these mystical things and yet know not the least thing of it Therefore it is just that you should be preferred before them and let them sit below thee in shame and disgrace and in their darknesse of mis-understanding so long till nature doth enlighten them also That you may bring and lead that new Philosophi●● Creature by the means nature afforded unto the highest perfection after which your heart with all her endeavours doth strive then remember that neither man nor beas● without a living Soul can neither stir nor move and as ma● here in this life through temporal death loseth his Soul offering the same again unto the Almighty God from whom 〈◊〉 had it first into his mercy and merits of Jesus Christ ●here after the departure of the Soul the dwelling as the ●●dy of it is left quite dead which is buried in the ground ●here it rotteth and must return unto dust and ashes being 〈◊〉 duly stipend which the fall of our first parents in Paradise ●we deserved and from them as by an inheritance is fall'n ●pon us after which putrefaction there are raised again on ●●e great day new and clarified bodies and the departed ●●ul taketh her dwelling up again in that new body after ●at there is no more parting of body nor spirit nor soul ●●t because the Soul finding a clarified body then with the ●●me she maketh an everlasting Union which neither De●●l nor death can destroy and disjoyn any more nor bring it ●to any corruption but from henceforth into all eternity ●e are and shall be like unto the best Creatures of God ●hich before our mortality and departure of the spirit of ●●e soul and the body could never be God help and grant
dwelling in a body but it is not consequent ha● he must abide there constantly though the body and ●hat spirit be at rest and that body with that spirit doth not contest about any controversie because both do want the strongest part which upholdeth and bindeth together s●ul and body protecteth and keepeth them from dangers namely the tender noble and fixed Soul for where the Soul is quite gone and lost there is never any redemption hoped for for a thing which hath no Soul is not perfect which is one of the highest mysteries which seekers ought to know and upon conscience I am commanded not to conceal this mystery but to make it known to those which seriously love fundamentals of truth And take carefully notice of what I say Spirits hidden in Metals are not alike some are more volatile and others more fix their souls and bodies are not alike neither that Met●l which containeth the three fixednesses that is blessed with a power to hold in the fire and so overcome all its enemies which onely is found in Sol. Lune containeth a fixed Mercury and is the reason why she doth not fly so soon in the fire as other imperfect Metals do but stands out her examens in the fire and sheweth the same victoriously because the devouring Saturn can rob nothing from her That arch-wench Venus is clad and possessed with an abounding tincture the most part of her body is a meer tincture like unto such a tincture which dwelleth also in the best Metal and by reason of the superfluity thereof is ●ing'd upon red and because her body being leprous that fixed tincture cannot have any abiding place in her unfix'd body but must vanish together with her body for the body being consumed by destruction or death that body cannot subsist neither but must give way and flie because the habitation is destroyed and consumed with fire so that her place is not known nor may any other dwell there from henceforth But in a fixed body she willingly dwelleth constan●ly Fixed Salt hath bestowed on valorous Mars a hard sturdy and grosse body whereby the gallantry of his minde is p●oved and is not so easily gotten from this warlike Prince because his body is hard and is not easily master'd or conquer'd But if his valour with Lune's fixation and with Venus her beauty in a mixture doth harmonize spiritually then a curious and melodious Musick may be made whereby some Keyes may be advanced and the needy labourer may get a piece of living Particulariter if he got up to the uppermost step of that ladder for the phlegmatick quality or moist Nature of Lune must be exsiccated through the hot bloud of Venus and her great pains must be allayed by the outward Salt There is no necessity to seek for seed in the Elements because our seed is not put so far back but there is a nearer place in which our seed hath its sure and certain habitation if you onely rectifie and regulate the Philosophick Mercury Sulphur and Salt so that of their soul spirit and body there be made an inseparable union which may never be separated again then the Band of love is perfectly made and the dwelling is well prepared for the Crown And note that this is onely a liquid Key like unto a heavenly property and a dry water addicted to an earthly substance all which is but one thing proceeding and growwing from three two and one if you can hit it then you have overcome the mastery and make a copulation betwixt Bride and Bridegroom let them feed and cherish one another with their own flesh and bloud let them increase and multiply infinitely by their own seed I could willingly communicate and disclose more unto you but the Creator hath forbidden it and is not meet for me to speak any further of it for fear the gifts of the highest should be misused and I should be the cause of committing of great sins and load Gods wrath upon me and fall with the rest into eternal punishment My friend if these expressions give thee no content to conceive of the thing and I lead thee unto the practick part of mine own how I have attained by Gods assistance unto the Philosophers stone I pray consider the same well peruse diligently my XII K●yes iterate their reading frequently then proceed according to my instruction which I set down fundamentally by way of a parable Take a piece of the finest Gold anatomize the same by such means as Nature hath afforded unto Artists even as a Physician anatomizeth mans body whereby he is inquisitive into the condition of mans internal parts reduce thy Gold unto that what it hath been at first then you will finde the seed the beginning middle and end out of which our Gold and its wife is made namely of a penetrating subtile spirit of a pure tender and undefiled Soul and of an Astral Salt and Balsam which after their uniting is nothing else but a Mercurial liquor the same water was brought to School to its own God Mercury who examined the water having sound it without deceit and falshood he made friendship with it and took the water into a Matrimonial state and both became an incombustible Oyl For Mercury grew so proud upon it that he knew himself no more he flung away his Eagles wings himself swallowed the smooth t●yl of the Dragon and offered a battel unto Mars Mars gathered his Champions together and gave command that Mercurie should be taken Prisoner and be kept closely imprisoned Vulcan was commanded to be Jaylor so long till a Female kinde came in to his deliverance This rumour being noised abroad the other Planets had a meeting where they consulted what further was to be done in that businesse the proceedings might wisely be prosecuted Then Saturn made a speech in this manner I Saturn the highest Planet in the firmament protest before this honourable Assembly of my Lords that I am the meanest and most contemptible among you all of a weak corruptible body of a black colour subject to many infirmities in this miserable World and yet am an examiner of you all for I have no abiding place and take along with me such tha● are like unto me I cannot lay the fault of this my misery to none but Mercury who by his carelesnesse hath pu this evil upon me Therefore my Lords I beseech you to be pleased to revenge my quarrel on him a●●●ei●● 〈◊〉 ●●st already into prison there to take his life aw●y 〈◊〉 s●●m ●ot there that not one drop of his bl●●d Saturn having ended his speech Jupiter rose up made a ●tch upon his knees bowing his Scepter began to com●●nd Saturns proposals commanding all those to be pu●shed which should neglect to put in execution that ●hich Saturn would have done unto Mercurie After him ●ose Mars with his naked sword which was full of strange ●●d admirable colours glittering like a fire-glasse casting ●●ange rayes put the
us for from them I had it next unto Gods revelation the reading of their books must be frequently iterated then the fundamentals thereof will the better stick to the memory and truth like a burning Candle be not extinguisht Be industrious in your carefull working search into Scriptures continually be not prepossessed with opinions follow after the unanimous concurrence of Philosophers a wavering man is easily brought into wrong wayes and such men which have wavering mindes seldom build firm houses Seeing the stone of the most ancient Philosophers doth not come or spring from things which are combustible because this stone is freed from all dangers fire may put him unto therefore trouble not thy self to seek for it in such things where Nature would not have thee to seek for As for example if one should tell thee this stone is a vegetable work because a growing quality is in it but it is not For if our stone were of a condition as other vegeta●●es are it would easily be consumed in fire nothing ●ould stay but onely its Salt Though there were men ●ho have written great volumes of the vegetable stone yet ●●y friend you must note that it will be very difficult for ●●e to conceive of it for they call our stone a vegetable ●●e because a growing and augmenting belongeth there●nto Note further irrational beasts have their increase of ●heir own kinde so you strive nor to seek for or to make ●his stone but onely of his own seed from whence it hath 〈◊〉 beginning and being Neither ought you to look out ●or any Animal soul for the making thereof flesh and ●loud which the great Creator hath bestowed upon Ani●als belongeth properly unto animals God composed ●hem of flesh and bloud whereby an Animal is made but ●●r stone which from the ancient Philosophers came as by ●n inheritance upon me is made of one and of two things which contain a third this is the naked truth and it is rightly spoken for the ancients understood by man and wife one body not in respect of the outward appearance but by reason of their innate love which they got at the first working of their Natures in that respect it is acknowledged that they are one and as both propagate and increase their seed even so the seed of that matter of which our stone is made can be propagated and augmented If you be a true lover of our Art you will take this expression into consideration to keep thy self out of the pit into which erroneous Sophisters usually fall which their enemy digged for them My friend that you may know further from whence this seed cometh then enquire first of thy self to what end you intend to seek after this stone Reason then will dictate unto thee that it must needs spring from a Metalline root which the Creator hath ordained for Metals to generate thereby if you will know the matter of it then note First when the spirit moved ●pon the water and the Universe was encompassed with darknesse then the omnipotent and eternal God who i● without a beginning and end whose wisdom was from eternity by his insearchable Decree created heaven and earth and the things contained therein be they visible or invisible by what name soever they may be called But of ●he manner of this glorious Creation my intent is not now to Philosoph●ze much upon let Scripture and Faith be impartial judges herein The great Creator hath given in the Creation to every Creature a seed whereby it should generate and encrease whereby Animals Vegetables and Minerals might continually be preserved Man hath no power bestowed on him to make or bring forth a new kinde of seed according to his fancy against Gods ordinance there is granted unto him a propagation and increase God reserved for his sole power to make seed else man could play the Creator also which doth not beseem him and belongs meerly to the highest Creator Conceive thus of the seed which worketh Metals there is a heavenly influence according to Gods good pleasure and ordinance from above it falls and mingleth with sydereal qualities When such conjunctions happen then these two beget an earthly substance as a third thing whic● is the beginning of our seed its first original whereby its first descent is proved from these three the Elements have their off spring as water aire and earth which work further by an Ae●nick fire to the bringing forth of a perfect thing which Hermes and all those before me for I could finde no more have called the three principles and were found to be an internal Soul an incomprehensible spirit and a visible body These three being together in one dwelling in processe of time yet by Vulcans help to be a comprehensible being as a Me cury Sulphur and Salt these three by an uniting be●●●●rought into a coagulation according to Natures miraculo●s operation there is brought forth a perfect body as Nature would have it and the Creator had ordained the seed for it He that purposeth to seek after the fountain of our work and hopeth to get the vi●tory in this warfar to h●m I tell this for a truth that where there is a Metalline Soul a Metalline spirit and a Metalline form of body that there must needs be there also a Metalline Mercury a Metalline Sulphur and a Metalline Salt these must needs produce a perfect Metalline body If you do not conceive of it now then surely you are not adapted for Philosophy and in brief it is thus it will not be possible for thee to reap the benefit of any Metalline body unlesse you have joyned compleatly the forenamed three principles Note further Animals are composed of flesh and bloud there is in them also a living spirit and breath which dwelleth in them but they are destitute of a rational Soul which before them man is endued withall This is the reason that when Animals lost their lives they are gone no more hopes of them for ever But man who offering his body to his Creator in time of death hath a Soul who at the day of ●esurrection is to receive a glorified body to his Soul and are to dwell together and so Soul Body and Spi●i come together again i● an heavenly clarification which in all eternity will never be separated again c. Therefore man by reason of his Soul is acknowledged to be a fixed Creature because he is to live for ever after this life ●hough in his body he is subject to a temporal death For death is unto man onely a clarification according to Gods ordinance by certain degrees is delivered from a sinfulnesse and transplanted into a better condition which doth not be●●ll other Animals therefore are they esteemed to be unfixed Creatures for these being once gone by death cannot expect nor look for any resuscitation because they want a rational Soul for which the sole Mediator Jesus Christ hath suffered and shed his innocent bloud A spirit ●●●y have a
judge of the situation of the ●eart Brain Liver Lungs Reins Bladder of the Entrals ●●d of all the Veins and knoweth in what form and condi●on they are But before he hath made this anatomy all ●ese were hid from him a Myner which seeketh so Oars 〈◊〉 doth not know what riches he may expect from Metals ●●lesse he open the Oar and so fine it what he findeth in 〈◊〉 by fire then he may know really in his calculation what ●●hes he may expect from it So other things must be pro●●ded in which true Naturalists will endeavour to do and not prate of things onely without experimental knowledge disputing of colours with the blinde man learn to know the ground with your own eyes and hands which Nature hideth within her then you may speak wisely of them with good reason and you may build upon an invincible Rock If you do not so then you are but a Phantastick prater whose discourse is grounded on sand without experience and is soon shaken by every winde and ruined in the end The ground of this knowledge must be learned as you heard by anatomizing and separating of things which by distillation is made known where every Element is separated apart there it will be made known what is cold or moist warm or dry There you learn to know the three principles how the spirit is separated from the body and how the Oyl is separated from the water and how the Sale is drawn from the Caput mort of each matter and is reduced again into a spirit and how these three are afterward joyn'd again and by fire are brought into one body Further is here learn'd how each after its separation and afterward in a conjunction may profitably and safely be used for their several uses they are prepared for all which must be done by a medium At the first Creation man is earthy grosse but his Soul Spirit and Body being separated by death putrifieth under ground and when the Highest cometh to judgement he is raised again his Body Soul and spirit cometh together according to Faith and Scripture that body is no more earthy as it was formerly but is found heavenly and clarified glittering as the Stars in the East and like the Sun is seen when all the Clouds are past So it is here when earthinesse is broken divided and separated then the three principles of the dead substance are made apparent the dead one is forsaken the living power comes to her perfection because her obstruction is laid aside that the vertue in the operation may be manifested In this separation and manifestation is then known what these three principles are which are so much discoursed of namely Mercury Sulphur and Salt according to the condition of the subject He that doth not think it to be true let him go to the end of the World where he shall feel all what in his dumb capacity he could not comprehend if any one should intend to teach me any other with a prolixity of words he may fill me with words but he must prove it really also for without that I am not bound to believe his words but desire some sign as Thomas one of the Twelve who look'd for an Ocular demonstration I might have left out Thomas but being there is a clift between a spiritual and worldly unbeliever I gave liberty to my minde to speak it for there is a great difference in heavenly and worldly matters touching faith and things comprehensible and there is that difference found also in fidereal earthly things for fidereal things are comprehended by sharp imagination and Arithmatick rules but to the finding out of earthly things there belongeth speculation and separation with speculation must be joyned an intention and an apprehension is annexed to speculation the former is done spiritually because the spirit of man doth not rest desireth to apprehend more qualities of the spirit in things natural every spirit stil draweth its like the rest is earthy for an earthy body separateth by manuals the earthly body from the spiritual part and so the one may be discerned before and from the other Whereas the soul in both sheweth her self really therefore is she in all really for she tieth the heavenly and earthy together like a bond but when the heavenly is ●●●arated from 〈◊〉 ●●●rthy that the soul also must forsake her body then you 〈◊〉 ●●●arated and received the three each apa●t which a●●●● 〈◊〉 true knowledge and conjunction can afford such a trium●●ing and clarifyed body which is found in a better degree of many thousand times because the grossest is laid aside from the earthy For when heaven and earth come to be refined by the great Creator then the greatest part will be consumed by fire and by that purging it will be exalted to the same degree with the heavenly and set into the same line for each all is created by one each all is ordained by one and though through sin by one man all was corrupted unto death yet all is by one brought to a better State of life and the onely Creator intends to judge all by fire and all must again become one which will be that heavenly essence to which the earthl gave way by means of the fire the eternall glory leaving a room for devil and death from whence they shall look on the elect admiring the great Majesty and glory of God which in a divine essence of three distinct persons is all in all and hath created all Thus the three persons in the deity have held forth in us their invisible essence giving thereby to understand by an insearchable wisdom what their creature order is we men are too weak to come higher God is and will be God and we men must be content with such gifts aff●●ded unto us hereafter shall be accomplished that which is prophesied of by Prophets and Apostles and now are conceived of onely by way of faith therefore we ought now to be contented what by Nature is intimated in a visible way other things incomprehensible unto us matters of faith wil appear better to be understood at the end of the world God grant unto us all a true knowledge of ●●mporal goods and of the eternall At the closing of this I say that this is the whole Art and whole foundation of all the Philosophick speech in which is that sought which many desire taking great pains and making great expences namely to get wisdom and judgement a long life health riches of this world comprehended in few words as for example First you must know that I wi●● shew unto you such an example of th●● 〈◊〉 ●●nals which in the appearance is a mean and poor on● 〈◊〉 ●f a mihgty consequence if rightly considered The 〈◊〉 ●ayeth an egg the same egg is by heat brought to a hard 〈◊〉 or coagulation by a further heat it is brought to a putrefaction where it it corrupted in this putrefaction the egg receiveth
a new Genus wherein is raised a new life and a chicken is hatch'd This chicken being perfect the shell openeth making way for the chichen to creep forth this chicken coming to a further ripeness age increaseth further in her kinde Thus Nature furthereth her own kinde and augmetteth Usque ad infinitmm True the egg is not prima materia of the Cock or Hen but the prima materia of their flesh is the first seed out of which the egg is gone into a form which by the equal nature of the motion of both is driven together and united from thence by a further heat it went to a putrefaction from thence into a new birth which new birth still propagateth and increaseth So it is with man for one man alone cannot produce a new birth unless both seeds of male and female be united for after this conjunction through the Nutriment of the body and continued naturall heat of these two seeds which in the Center are known for one Nature get a new life and more men are begotten which propagate further by their seed by this means the whole world is fill'd with men This seed of man is the noblest subtilest blood of a white quality in which dwelleth the vital Spirit which is driven together by motion If these seeds of both kindes by their desire of lust are together united and their Natures be not corrupted or else are contrary one to another then there is preserved a life by a heat and brought to perfection in the mothers womb and another man is brought forth Thus much be spoken of the seed of Animals The vegetable seed is made palpable and visible which from each kinde of herb is separated and propagated in the earth for an increase which seed must first putrifie in the earth and then must be nourished by a temperate moisture at last this seed by a convenient warm air is brought to a perfection thus vegetables are increased and in their kinde preserved but the first beginning of a vegetable seed is a spirituall essence or astral influence whereby in the earth was gotten an imagination and became impregnated with a matter out of which by the help of the Elements it came to be something what form of seed the earth was desirous of after the heavenly impression that form it received first and brought it to a kinde which bringeth a further increase by its palpable seed in the generation hereby man may try his futher skill but he is not able to create a new seed as Nature doth by an influence from above onely he is able to increase a formed seed Of Metals and Minerals I inform you this that there is one onely Almighty Being which is from eternity and abideth unto eternity which is the Creator of heaven and earth namely the eternal Deity in three distinct persons which three in the Deity are a perfect divine being and though I confess and acknowledge these three persons yet I confess onely one God in one Being This I do now speak as a Type of the first seed of the three principles that the first beginning to beget Metallin seeds is wrought in the earth by a fideriall impression which quality presseth from above into the neather as in the belly of the earth and worketh continually a heat therein with the help of the Elements for both must be together the earthy affords an imagination that the earth is fitted for conception and is impregnated the Elements nourish and feed this fruit bring it on by a continued hot quality unto perfection the earthy substance affords a form thereunto thus at the beginning the Metallin and Mineral seed is effected namely by an astral imagination Elemental operation and terrestriall form the astral is heavenly the Elementary is spiritual and the earthy is corporeall these three make of their first Center the first essence of the Metallin seed which Philosophers have further searched into that out of this essence there is become a form of a Metallin matter p●●pably joyned together of three of a Metalline Sulphur ●eavenly a Metalline Mercury spritual and a Metalline salt bodily which three are found at the opening of Metals for Metalls and Minerals must be broken and opened Minerals are of the same sanguinity of the same quality and nature as Metals are onely they are not sufficiently ripened unto coagulation and may be ackowledged for unripe Metals for the spirit in them is found as mighty Metalline as it is in the perfectest Metals For Metals may be destroyed and easily reduced unto Minerals and of Minerals are prepared Medicaments which ripen and transmute Metals which must be noted and it is done when Spirit Soul and Body are separated purely reunited The remaining terrestrity being put off then followeth a perfect birth and the perfect ripening by heat performs her office that Spirit Soul and Body at the beginning in their first seed have been a heavenly water which begot these three out of which three is become a Metalline Sulphur a Metalline Mercury a Metalline salt these in their conjunction made a fix visible palpable body first began a Mineral one then a Metalline by an astral imagination digested and ripened by the Elements and by an earthly substance are made formal and Material Now when these bodies of Minerals and Metals are reduced to their first beginning then the heavenly seed doth appear and is spirituall which spirituall must become an earthy one by the copulation of the Soul which is the medium and midle bond of their Union to make a Medicine out of it whereby is obtained health long life wisdom riches in this mortall life this is the true sperme of Philosophers long sought after but not known whose light was desired of many to be seen and is even the first matter which lieth open before the eyes of all the world few men know it is found visibly in all places Namely Mercury Sulphur and Salt a Mineral water or Metalline liquor as the Center separated from its form and made by these three principles The Heavenly Phisician the eternal Creator and inexhaustible fountain of Grace the F●●●●●●f all wisdom Father Son and Holy Ghost in one Dei●● 〈◊〉 us to know really in a due gratefulness his wond● 〈◊〉 ●orks and make us coheyres of his everlasting goods 〈◊〉 we after a temporal revelation may in a true light seek for heavenly treasures and may possess them eternally with all the elects where there is unspeakable glory without end which is attained unto by faith in our Saviour by bringing forth good fruits by loving of our neighbours and helping the needy which must be made evident with an unblameab●● 〈◊〉 and due obedience to God Amen FINIS
it is collected that there is some distinctnesse betwixt seed and fertility If we will enquire narrowly wha● fertility is the best and surest way is to consider life an● death of creatures how they hold together for death i● barren but a living life is fertil because it stirreth and moveth It is seen by all the works that are undertaken about metals that there is nothing so volatile as metal is and so nothing stirs and moveth more subtilly than it but this stiring and moving I will call here the Ferch of metals by reason of its continual proceeding and uncessant moving and because the same is not visible in metals and doth i● in a twofold way therefore I will let the old word stand and call its stirring a Lubricum and its Ferch a Volatile fo● with the vertue and power of both these it performeth a● that what it needs for the perfection puritie and fixation o● its work Seeing Ferch is a perpetual living and forthgoing thing one might admire and say of what condition is metal the● which we behold with our eyes and feele with our hands which being thus hard and coagulated whether the same b● alive or dead and whether the life or Ferch in meta● may be destroyed which is impossible what is the cond●tion of it or how comes i● so to passe I answer that a metal may be alive when it resteth as well as when it groweth or stirreth and here a distinction must be made again betwixt the death of metals and their rest and quietnesse● For death toucheth only the bodies when they perish b● the life it self or Ferch cannot perish or cease therefore 〈◊〉 a metalline body be extant then is it at hand visibly tw● manner of wayes The one is in liquido and is discerne● in its moving too and fro and if it be forced by a strang● dangerous heat then it turns to a volatility and flyeth away The other way is when it is at hand in coagulat● wherein it resteth so long till it be reduced into its liqu●dum and that is done in a twofold way and lasteth so lon● as the body lasteth but as soone as the body is destroye● or gone and is come or entred into a more either noble● ignoble body men its Ferch or life is gone also therefore if you will reserve and keep a body then take good notice of i●s Ferch or life for if you once stir it and hunt it indiscreetly you do it with the losse o● d●minu●ion of the body wherein it is for that life never goeth away empty but still carrieth along one life or Ferch after the other carrying it away so long that at the last it leaveth none But what the condition is of the moving and quietnesse of that life and how Nature bringeth it to a rest must be exactly considered For an accurate knowledge demonstrateth that there is a diff●rence betwixt the life of the seed and of the body for deale with the seed which way you will you cannot bring it to a volatilitie because it is against its kind and so the body also is of the same condition but the Ferch alone may be brought to it For if you provide food for the Ferch then you strengthen its whole work even as a mother doth her child which she feedeth and cherisheth well and bringeth the same the better to its rest so ●s it also with the Ferch Therefore all such which gaze and view only the seed and body and know not the fundamentals about the Ferch lose the body because they ob●erve not Natures progresse and proceedings putting the ●art before the horse or the formost they put hindmost This rest and sleep of the Ferch serveth for that use because ●t preserveth the body from destruction or co●●umption be●ng once come into its perfection For as long as it awaketh so long it consumeth but when it is at rest then it ●andeth close in a lastingnesse and when it hath nothing ●o feed upon then it corrodeth and seizeth on its own bo●ie consuming it quite at last it stirreth ●nd moveth to a●other place Hence is it that treasures or pag●ment which ●e buryed awaken at last consume their own bodyes re●cing them to dust so that nothing of them remaines but ther a meere stone or flux as in many places is to bee ●n CHAP. II. Of the seed of Metals ALl those Authors which have written about the metaline seed agree in that when they say sulphur is the masculine seed of metals and Mercurie is the foeminine seed which saying must be taken in its genuine sense for common Sulphur and common Mercury are not meant thereby For the visible Mercury of Metals is a body it self out of bodies and so it cannot be a seed and being cold its coldnesse per se cannot be a seed and the Sulphur of metals being a food how can it be a seed Yea a seed consummeth sulphur how can one seed destroy the other if so what body should it produce It is therefore an error if that should be taken in the common sense if the Mercurie of bodies is in a work and hath taken food then all the sex Mercuries protrude one body as the one of the sex is in its predominancy so the body riseth Seeing there are seven of these Mercuries it happeneth that when the seed of Mars and Venus hath the predominancie they produce a masculine body of Sol but if the seed of Saturne and Jupiter doth predominate then is produced a soeminine body which is called Lune Mercury is an assistant on both sides The same happeneth unto other bodies but these are alwayes and in every and each work together for they are indivisible as it is meet also what manner of body could be produced else For Nature hath perfect bodyes though in themselves they must be dissolved again yet are they perfect for in their time For what manner of seed could that be if it should be defective in any of its branches Therefore every body hath its perfect seed hence the trasmutation hath its ground in the ascention and descenti●● of metals which otherwise could not be if they were not homogeneal in their seed For if any man saith that silver is not gold clowns beleeve that also because they have not fundamental knowledge of the seed how it is to go out of one body into the other or else it wants its fertilitie neither can it be naturally without a body wherein it reste●h There belong seven distinct parts to an unformal body of metals to bring it by nourishment into a forme viz. 1. An earth 2. A stone 3. An earthash 4. Earthly streams 5. glasse or subterraneal metal 6. The subterranean tincture 7. The subterranean fuligo or seed fume All these are the materials of the body and as earth is mans matter out of which God made him unto which he must returne again so all other bodyes also at last return to earth that Myner which is judicious
and to all things in the world if they play the masters CHAP. XXXIII ●f Aurum metallicum of the metalline gold or of the Metalline-bed THere is another fatnesse under ground where metals 〈◊〉 grow neither is it the hull of the seed nor the stone ●um Petroleum or Naphta but is like unto an Uredo or ●ne-soap It differs much from soap soap doth not ●n because it containeth a hidden Sulphur not a com●stible one but an incombustible one this is the reason ●y it doth not burn in a flame neither doth it seize on a● other thing but onely on the pure metal if that should ●t continue with it the metal could not come neither in● ascension nor descension it consumeth first of all in the ●etal even as grease doth in the animals This fatnesse is ●t far from the oar when it is predominant it consumeth ●e metal quite and evaporateth Oil is of that vertue put on the top of a drink be it what it will it keeps in 〈◊〉 strength and coolnesse this fatnesse shuts up the oars ●dy that no breathing can passe Fatnesse hath a great ●finity with iron and is one of its next kinde of the ●hich great volumes could be written In the County of Schwartzburg at Wackersberg there is ●ore of such fatnesse looks like quick silver and swimeth ●nd tinctureth red like Bole this colour it took hold on ●nd it may be extracted from it some call it a Mercurial ●ody or a Tin-glasse Lead-glasse Wismuth or Antimony 〈◊〉 seizeth on all those and when this fatnesse doth ●ot turn to a fatnesse of such metals where the seed ●s predominant then it turnes to a volatility and to a great Robber This fatnesse is a greasie earth glit●ering like a salve of a red and browne glowing as if it were Quick-silver or beaten Talk or glasse strow into In the Rocks of Bohemia and Transsylvania there great store of it at Goslar and at Slackenwald even as qui● silver or lead oars are many of them are found here a● there CHAP. XXXIV Of Metalline streames VVHen Ferch and seed must part from their work 〈◊〉 reason of the sediments be they what they wi● and expire not naturally then the oars turn to stones whi● Miners call Fluxes though they know not from when● they come nothing can be made out of them they are f●sible or fluid when melted in fire but nothing can 〈◊〉 brought into them because they are not porous or no 〈◊〉 can get into which maketh them more noble It is strang● in Nature if any good thing be driven out of the body will not return thither for if life be gone from man th● body receiveth it no more but these are things possible 〈◊〉 God alone My intent is not here to write of miraculo● things but onely of things natural I wave the former 〈◊〉 is to be admired that the body of dead metals is so fai● whereas other bodies which are dead consume away 〈◊〉 nothing metals also come into a corruption but in a lon● time their death is like any glass keeps its colour especiall● if it was of a Marcasite hence are learned the colours o● Marcasites for green blue white fluxes are found therein as metalline flowers have been which are generated 〈◊〉 three bodies CHAP. XXXV Of Creta Chalk or stone meal VVEE see in this our air that no fume or wind ascendeth in vain it dissolveth again into one thing ●●other thither resort many meteors the like meteors ●h the earth under ground For the fume which ascend● from the fire-halation of the oar or of the metal and ●ords the stone meal Creta wherever it falls or lighteth grindeth more and increaseth abundantly having a dan●rous salt whereby it hurts those places where metals 〈◊〉 especially when they are in their ascension hindering ●eir colour It is apparent in the slat at Mansfield where ●ieth betwixt the spoaks of the ores and can hardly be ●tten from thence it robbeth and consumeth Folium and ●olium The stone-meal maketh a Kuff with stone-mar●w turning it to a kind of marble called the Potstone or ●●lit a double stone and is dark and very firm it striketh ●e being for the most part of fire Hither belong the ●alks but intending to make mention them in another place I wave them here however they so are such a meal and differ from others herein because inclineth more to a cold fire wherein it melteth like ●ow as the others do and dissolveth sooner into water ●an into meal and this turnes sooner to meal than to wa●r if it be of lesse matter than it hath of the stone-●arrow then it affords a fair ice or crystal called Vitrum ●lexandrinum or Mary's Ice which cannot be mastred in ●ot fires but it melteth in cold fires is very hurtful unto ●etals insomuch that by reason of it Mine-works fall to ●ine as it happened at Stolberg CHAP. XXXVI Of Spiro or of the Blast THe Spiro or blast in an instrument which bringeth 〈◊〉 right the weather or obstructed air otherwise all wou● turn to stone where it is and would be at a stand there the lower fire should enter instead of the air and exic●teth though it doth not kindle if a piece be beaten off 〈◊〉 it then it appeareth so and this piece which flieth thus 〈◊〉 side giveth to understand how it maketh the stone ho● Nature frameth the oar and metal but jewels and precio● stones are from another off-spring out of sweet waters In this instrument there dwell together fire air whic● take their power and matter from the malignant weathe● where they consume all ponderous matters through fir● inlightening the remaining matter it hath Make that Spiro or blast into a ball of copper of an heads bignesse s●der it bright and light let no air get into it leave a sma● hole where a needle may enter attracting the water whic● purposely must be made and set for it there must be had pan of coals at hand which must be kindled and the ba● laid into it turning the little hole toward the coal-fire an● it will blow the fire forcibly which being done it groweth hot and maketh the water boil in the ball which fumeth and carrieth it forth with a great fiercenesse blowin● on the coals strongly and thus it maintaineth the fire by breathing strongly in the manner of a pair of bellowes driven from without hereby several good things are effected and the condition of this ball is that it sheweth what may be done above ground with the like no use can be mad● of it behinde that place because Nature herself hath suc● a blast for her fire CHAP. XXXVII Of Pulfa or of the Break-stuff or brittle matter THis salt is ingendred usually by a malignant fume which the Mine-fire should have And when the ●nes be very hard then there must be made a fire of wood ●here the fume draweth to the stone-fire and groweth ●ick and if the fumes of Succinum and of other things are
got onely the calxes of ●e bodies exuviums Therefore neither themselves nor ●thers have any cause to marvel if they do no good 〈◊〉 that way CHAP. XLV Of the corroding fire THis fire ought to be set among the coal fires being of a consuming nature and their corrosivenesse 〈◊〉 in the cold fire and it hath the same qualities which ●he burning fire hath it shineth and burneth its burn●g is corroding in that it is better than the other ●ecause it doth not burn it to ashes but brings the bodies to dust or sand which would be toilsome if by filings it should be brought to stars the next neighbour to this fi● is the glowing fire of the which I will give onely 〈◊〉 hint CHAP. XLVI Of Ignis candens or of the glowing fire THis fire is purposely ordered upon metalline bodies 〈◊〉 consumeth them being their matter is naturally inclined thereunto This fire is of great concernment making their bodies very malleable their exuvium's stay on the Float and is the best quality they have that they put off i● that glowing the thing which will be gone and the good thereof remains Things now adayes are slighted the world supposeth to have skill enough it wants no further knowledge Quot capita tot sensus every one thinks his wit best though some have scarce begun to know any of these things which is the reason why men are sti● kept to their rudenesse Men may suppose I mean by this corrosive water an Aquafort it is no such matter how many runs of precious Aquasort is used in vain at Goslar on the Hartz which would serve for better use and the expences laid out for wood might have been saved CHAP. XLVII Of Ignis incubans or of the Lamp-fire THis fire serveth when metals are wrought openly and not luted in then the metal doth not flie away in a dust nor doth its best run away for you heard that a flaming fire is hurtful for to work metals withall Lamp-di●es are commonly of glasse set in an earthen pan filled ●ith ashes or sand kept in a sweating in that sweat many ●ppose the metal receiveth its body or the one changeth ●o the other I leave this transmutation in its worth and ●not approve of it Touching this warmth I cannot ●prove nor find fault with it and all metals indeed should 〈◊〉 dealt withall in this manner These two fires of oars and the Lamp-fire if they were ●de use of in medicinal wayes would do better than the ●cining or flaming fire can do where these are of no use ●d the long fire must orderly be kept in an equal heat if ●y good shall be done Some kept the lamp fire in a Stove-●rnace where all things were spoiled in the working it ●s either too hot or too cold it was of no equall heat ●hich the work in the end did shew because it was not ●ell governed CHAP. XLVIII Of the cold fire THis is a strange fire little can be said of it to those which cannot conceive of it whether it was not ●ken notice of or whether they did despair of it I know ●ot this is it which elsewhere is called coagulating it ●nnot consume the other fire it can melt the work but 〈◊〉 consume it is impossible it works in the air as well as in ●e fire where it sheweth its efficacy and is the sole proof ●f its fusiblenesse metalline mercury is of a cold fusion ●l other fusions are hot if you believe it not feel it ●e fixation of the warm flux is called coagulation there ●e one opposeth the other the one congealeth the o●er keeps in a liquidnesse this difference must be known by those which are imployed about melting of metals an● their fluxes It is of concernment to govern this fire well or ho● stones are to be weighed and things that are excessively cold are a death to a tempered body what animals do li● either in too cold or too hot a fire and to speak precisely of life it is impossible to do that as to speak really o● God therefore gaze not upon definitions what human● reason is able to conceive of Philosophy is strangely conditioned and it appeareth by this fire also a thing which i● very cold may contein a life however When it is in its highest degree of ascension then it come down again it turnes to silver then to copper if the nether hot fire doth it not then surely the cold fire must do it for it dissolveth again into its mercury which is the flux of the cold fire if it layeth hold on it then it must ru● to all bodies in its running it puts off not onely the nethermost but the uppermost body also take this into further consideration CHAP. XLIX Of the warm fire OF this I have spoken already it can be made and governed several wayes coals wood pitch oil and other combustible things are fit for it There I would onely speak of an heat which is good for the flux of metals whereby they are purged as you heard above needlesse to be repeated here Thus much of this first Part where I infirmed about the nether work or fore-work governed and observed by nature whereby she holds forth unto us metals and minerals in their formes He that conceiveth aright of this work ●d considers it worketh with advantage and utility and is great help to proceed successfully in Alchymie which ●itateth and treadeth into her steps I wish hearty suc●sse to all such which bear an affection and love thereun● ●raise Honour and Glory be unto the Supream Master of Mines by whose word and will all things are made ordained and brought to their forms Amen End of the first Part. THE ●ECOND PART Of the Last TESTAMENT OF BASILIUS VALENTINUS Friar of the Order of St. Benedictus Wherein are repeated briefly some principle Heads of the first Part what course Nature observeth under ground and how metals are generated and produced to light as Gold Silver Copper Iron Tin Lead Quicksilver and Minerals 〈◊〉 like manner of precious Stones and of tinctures of Metals how they are discerned and what relation they have to the Holy Scriptures LONDON Printed Anno Domini MDCLVI THE SECOND PART OF BASILIUS VALENTINUS CHAP. I. Of Mines and Clifts and what manner of middle works and second in oars are IN the first place there lieth a necessity upon every Miner to know how to search and dive into metalline passages how they strike along and they must be well acquainted with all their occasions and conditions and if at any place he intends to fall to work 〈◊〉 must know how to use the Magnet of the Compasse ●here East South West and North lieth and learn the ●ayes of this and that oar and where their issue is and 〈◊〉 w●ll informed of the long and short stroaks of metalline ●ss●ges and where they d●aw together to a metalline ●m The forms of metalline oar are several some car● Talk slats an oar which containeth silver and