Alchemy Explained
ALCHEMY: The science by aid of which the chemical philosophers of medieval
times attempted to transmute the baser metals into gold or silver. There is
considerable divergence of opinion as to the etymology of the word, but it would
seem to be derived from the
Arabic al=the, and
kimya=chemistry, which in turn derives from the late Greek
chemica=chemistry, from
chumeia=a mingling, or cheein, `to pour out` or `mix', Aryan root ghu, to pour,
whence the word `gush'. Mr. A. Wallis Budge in his "Egyptian Magic", however,
states that it is possible that it may be derived from the Egyptian word khemeia,
that is to say 'the preparation of the black ore', or `powder', which was
regarded as the active principle in the transmutation of metals. To this name
the Arabs affixed the article `al', thus giving al-khemeia, or alchemy.
HISTORY OF ALCHEMY: From an early period the Egyptians possessed the reputation
of being skillful workers in metals and, according to Greek writers, they were
conversant with their transmutation, employing quicksilver in the process of
separating gold and silver from the native matrix. The resulting oxide was
supposed to possess marvelous powers, and it was thought that there resided
within in the individualities of the various metals, that in it their various
substances were incorporated. This black powder was mystically identified with
the underworld form of the god Osiris, and consequently was credited with
magical properties. Thus there grew up in Egypt the belief that magical powers
existed in fluxes and alloys. Probably such a belief existed throughout Europe
in connection with the bronze-working castes of its several races. Its was
probably in the Byzantium of the fourth century, however, that alchemical
science received embryonic form. There is little doubt that Egyptian tradition,
filtering through Alexandrian Hellenic sources was the foundation upon which the
infant science was built, and this is borne out by the circumstance that the art
was attributed to Hermes Trismegistus and supposed to be contained in its
entirety in his works.
The Arabs, after their conquest of Egypt in the seventh century, carried on the
researches of the Alexandrian school, and through their instrumentality the art
was brought to Morocco and thus in the eighth century to Spain, where it
flourished exceedingly. Indeed, Spain from the ninth 559 to the eleventh century
became the repository of alchemic science, and the colleges of Seville, Cordova
and Granada were the centers from which this science radiated throughout Europe.
The first practical alchemist may be said to have been the Arbian Geber, who
flourished 720-750. From his "Summa Perfectionis", we may be justified in
assuming that alchemical science was already matured in his
day, and that he drew his inspirations from a still older unbroken line of
adepts. He was followed by Avicenna, Mesna and Rhasis, and in France by Alain of
Lisle, Arnold de Villanova and Jean de Meung the troubadour;
in England by Roger Bacon and in Spain itself by Raymond Lully. Later, in French
alchemy the most illustrious names are those of Flamel (b. ca. 1330), and
Bernard Trevisan (b. ca. 1460) after which the center of of interest changes to
Germany and in some measure to England, in which countries Paracelsus, Khunrath
(ca. 1550), Maier (ca. 1568), Norton, Dalton, Charnock, and Fludd kept the
alchemical flame burning brightly.
It is surprising how little alteration we find throughout the period between the
seventh and the seventeenth centuries, the heyday of alchemy, in the theory and
practice of the art. The same sentiments and processes are found expressed in
the later alchemical authorities as in the earliest, and a wonderful unanimity
as 547 regards the basic canons of the great art is evinced by the hermetic
students of the time. On the introduction of chemistry as a practical art,
alchemical science fell into desuetude and disrepute, owing chiefly to the
number of charlatans practicing it, and by the beginning of the eighteenth
century, as a school, it may be said to have become defunct. Here and there,
however, a solitary student of the art lingered, and in the department of this
article "Modern Alchemy" will demonstrate that the science has to a grate extent
revived during modern times, although it has never been quite extinct.
THE QUESTS OF ALCHEMY: The grand objects of alchemy were
(1) the discovery of a process by which the baser metals might be
transmuted into gold or silver;
(2) the discovery of an elixir by which life might be prolonged
indefinitely; and there may be added
(3), the manufacture of and artificial process of human life. (for the
latter see Homunculus)
THE THEORY AND PHILOSOPHY OF ALCHEMY: The first objects were to be achieved as
follows: The transmutation of metals was to be accomplished by a powder, stone
or exilir often called the Philosopher`s Stone, the application of which would
effect the transmutation of the baser metals into gold or silver, depending upon
the length of time of its application. Basing their conclusions on a aab
profound examination of natural processes and research into the secrets of
nature, the alchemists arrived at the axiom that nature was divided
philosophically into four principal regions, the dry, the moist, the warm, the
cold, whence all that exists must be derived. Nature is also divisible into the
male and the female. She is the divine breath, the central fire, invisible yet
ever active, and is typified by sulphur, which is the mercury of the sages,
which slowly fructifies under the genial warmth of nature. The alchemist must be
ingenuous, of a truthful disposition, and gifted with patience and prudence,
following nature in every alchemical performance. He must recollect that like
draws to like, and must know how to obtain the seed of metals, which is produced
by the four elements through the will of the Supreme Being and the Imagination
of Nature. We are told the original matter of metals is double in its essence,
being a dry heat combined with a warm moisture, and that air is water coagulated
by fir, capable of producing a universal dissolvent. These terms the neophyte
must be cautious of interpreting in their literal sense. Great confusion exists
in alchemical nomenclature, and the gibberish employed by the scores of
charlatans who in later times pretended to a knowledge of alchemical matters did
not tend to make things any more clear. The beginner must also acquire a
thorough knowledge of the manner in which metals grow in the bowels of the
earth. These are engendered by sulphur, which is male, and mercury, which is
female, and the crux of alchemy is to obtain their seed - a process which the
alchemist philosophers have not described with any degree of clarity.
The physical theory of transmutation is based on the composite character of
metals, and on the existence of a substance which, applied to matter, exalts and
perfects it. This, Eugenius Philalethes and others call 'The Light'. The
elements of all metals is similar, differing only in purity and proportion. The
entire trend of the metallic kingdom is towards the natural manufacture of gold,
and the production of the baser metals is only accidental as the result of an
unfavorable environment. The Philosopher's Stone is the combination of the male
and female seeds which beget gold. The composition of these is so veiled by
symbolism as to make their identification a matter of impossibility. Waite,
summarizing the alchemical process once the secret of the stone is unveiled,
says: "Given the matter of the stone and also the necessary vessel, the process
which must be then undertaken to accomplish the `magnum opus' are described with
moderate perpicuity.
There is the calcination or purgation of the stone, in which kind is worked with
kind for the space of a philosophical year. There is dissolution which prepares
the way for congelation, and which is performed during the black state of the
mysterious matter. It is accomplished by water which does not wet the hand.
There is the separation of the subtle and the gross, which is to be performed by
means of heat. In the conjunction which follows, the elements are duly and
scrupulously combined. Putrefaction afterwards takes place.
`Without which pole no seed may multiply.'
"Then, in the subsequent congelation the white colour appears, which is one of
the signs of success. It becomes more pronounced in cibation. In sublimation the
body is spiritualised, the spirit made corporeal, and again a more glittering
whiteness is apparent. Fermentation afterwards fixes together the alchemical
earth and water, and causes the mystic medicines to flow like wax. The matter is
then augmented with the alchemical spirit of life, and the exaltation of the
philosophic earth is accomplished by the natural rectification of its elements.
When these processes have been successfully completed, the mystic stone will
have passed through the chief stages characterized by different colours, black,
white and red, after which it is capable of infinite multication, and when
projected on mercury, it will absolutely transmute it, the resulting gold
bearing every test. The base metals made use of must be purified to insure the
success of the operation. The process for the manufacture of silver is
essentially similar, but the resources of the matter are not carried to so high
a degree.
"According to the "Commentary on the Ancient War of the Knights" the
transmutations performed by the perfect stone are so absolute that no trace
remains of the original metal. It cannot, however, destroy gold, nor exalt it
into a more perfect metallic substance; it, therefore, transmutes it into a
medicine a thousand times superior to any virtues which can be extracted from
its vulgar state. This medicine becomes a most potent agent in the exaltation of
base metals."
There are not wanting authorities who deny that the transmutations of metals was
the grand object of alchemy, and who infer from the alchemistical writings that
the end of the art was the spiritual regeneration of man. Mrs. Atwood, author of
"A Suggestive Inquiry into the Hermetic Mystery", and an American writer named
Hitchcock are purhaps the chief protagonists of the belief the by spiritual
processes akin to those of the chemical process of alchemy, the soul of man may
be purified and exalted. But both commit the radical error of stating the the
alchemical writers did not aver that the transmutation of base metal into gold
was their grand end. None of the passages they quote, is inconsistent with the
physical object of alchemy, and in a work, "The Marrow of Alchemy", stated to be
by Eugenius Philaletes, it is laid down that the real quest is for gold. It is
constantly impressed upon the reader, however, in the perusal of esteemed
alchemical works, that only those who are instructed by God can achieve the
grand secret. Others, again, state that a tyro may possibly stumble upon it, but
that unless he is guided by an adept he has small chance of achieving the grand
arcanum. It will be obvious to the tyro, however, that nothing can ever be
achieved by trusting to the allegories of the adepts or the many charlatans who
crowded the ranks of the art. Gold may be made, or it may not, but the truth or
fallacy of the alchemical method lies with modern chemistry. The transcendental
view of alchemy, however, is rapidly gaining ground, and probably originated in
the comprehensive nature of Hermetic theory and the consciousness in the
alchemical mind that what might with success be applied to nature could also be
applied to man with similar results. Says Mr. Waite, "The gold of the
philosopher is not a metal, on the other hand, man is a being who possesses
within himself the seeds of a perfection which he has never realized, and that
he therefore corresponds to those metals which the Hermetic theory supposes to
be capable of developing the latent possibilities in the subject man." At the
same time, it must be admitted that the cryptic character of alchemical language
was probably occasioned by a fear on the part of the alchemical mystic that he
might lay himself open through his magical opinions to the rigors of the law.
RECORDS OF ACTUAL TRANSMUTATIONS: Several records of alleged transmutations of
base metal into gold are in existence. These were achieved by Nicholas Flamel,
Van Helmont, Martini, Richthausen, and Sethon. For a detailed account of the
methods employed the reader is referred to several articles on these hermetists.
In nearly every case the transmuting element was a mysterious powder or the
"Philosopher's Stone".
MODERN ALCHEMY That alchemy has been studied in modern times there can be no
doubt. M. figuier in his "L'Alchimie et les Alchimistes", dealing with the
subject of modern alchemy, as expressed by the initiates of the first half of
the nineteenth century, states that many French alchemists of his time regarded
the discoveries of modern science as merely so many evidences of the truth of
the doctrines they embraced. Throughout Europe, he says, the positive alchemical
doctrine had many adherents at the end of the eighteenth century and the
beginning of the nineteenth. Thus a "vast association of alchemists", founded in
Westphalia in 1790, continued to flourish in the year 1819, under the name of
the "Hermetic Society". In 1837, an alchemist of Thuringia presented to the
Societe Industrielle of Weimar a tincture which he averred would effect metallic
transmutation. About the same time several French journals announced a public
course of lectures on hermetic philosophy by a professor of the University of
Munich. He further states that many Honoverian and Bavarian families pursued in
common the search for the grand arcanum. Paris, however, was regarded as the
alchemical Mecca. There dwelt many theoretical alchemists and "empirical
adepts". The first pursued and arcanum through the medium of books, the other
engaged in practical efforts to effect transmutation.
M. Figuier states that in the forties of the last century he frequented the
laboratory of a certain Monsieur L., which was the rendezvous of the alchemists
in Paris. When Monsieur L`s pupils left the laboratory for the day, the modern
adepts dropped in one by one, and Figuier relates how deeply impressed he was by
the appearance and costumes of these strange men. In the daytime, he frequently
encountered them in the public libraries, buried in gigantic folios, and in the
evening they might be seen pacing the solitary bridges with eyes fixed in vague
contemplation upon the first pale stars of night. A long cloak usually covered
the meager limbs, and their untrimmed beards and matted locks lent them a wild
appearance. They walked with a solemn and measured gait, and used the figures of
speech employed by the medieval illumines. Their expression was generally a
mixture of the most ardent hope and fixed despair. Among the adepts who sought
the laboratory of Monsieur L., Figuier remarked especially a young man, in whose
habits and language he could nothing in common with those of his strange
companions. He confounded the wisdom of the alchemical adept with the tenets of
the modern scientist in the most singular fashion, and meeting him one day at
the gate of the Observatory, M. Figuier renewed the subject of their last
discussion, deploring that "a man of his gifts could pursue the semblance of a
chimera." Without replying, the young adept led him into the Observatory garden,
and proceeded to reveal to him the mysteries of modern alchemical science.
The young man proceeded to fix a limit to the researches of the modern
alchemists. Gold, he said, according to the ancient authors, as three distinct
properties:
(1) that of resolving the baser metals into itself, and interchanging and
metamorphosing all metals into one another;
(2) the curing of afflictions and the prolongation of life;
(3), as a 'spiritus mundi' to bring mankind into rapport with the
supermundane spheres. Modern alchemists, he continued, reject the greater part
of these ideas, especially those connected with spiritual contact. The object
of modern alchemy might be reduced to the search for a substance having the
power to transform and transmute all other substances into one another - in
short, to discover that medium so well known to the alchemists of old and lost
to us. This was a perfectly feasible proposition. In the four principal
substances of oxygen, hydrogen, carbon, and azote, we have the tetractus of
Pythagoras and the tetragram of the Chaldeans and Egyptians. All the sixty
elements are referable to these original four. The ancient alchemical theory
established the fact that all the metals are the same in their composition,
that all are formed from sulphur and mercury, and that the difference between
them is according to the proportion of these substances in their composition.
Further, all the products of minerals present in their composition complete
identity with those substances most opposed to them. Thus fulminating acid
contains precisely the same quantity of carbon, oxygen, and azote as cyanic
acid, and "cyanhydric" acid does not differ from formate ammoniac. This new
property of matter is known as "isomerism". M. Figuier's friend then proceeds
to quote support of his thesis and operations and experiments of M. Dumas, a
celebrated French savant, as is well known to thous of Prout, and other
English chemists of standing.
Passing to consider the possibility of isomerism in elementary as well as in
compound substances, the points out to M. Figuier that id the theory of
isomerism can apply to such bodies, the transmutation of metals ceases to be a
wild, unpractical dream, and becomes a scientific possibility, the
transformation being brought about by a molecular rearrangement. Isomerism can
be established in the case of compound substances by chemical analysis. showing
the identity of their constituent parts. In the case of metals it can be proved
by the comparison of the properties of isometric bodies with the properties of
metals, in order to discover whether they have any common characteristics. Such
experiments, he continued, had been conducted by M. Dumas, with the result the
isometric substances were to be found to have equal equivalents, or equivalents
which were exact multiples of one another. This characteristic is also a feature
of metals. Gold and osmium have identical equivalents, as have platinum and
iridium. The equivalent of cobalt is almost the same as that of nickel, and the
semi-equivalent of tin is equal to the equivalent of the two preceding metals.
M. Dumas. speaking before the British Association, had shown that when three
simple bodies displayed great analogies in their properties, such as chlorine,
bromide, and iodine, barium, strontium, and calcium, the chemical equivalent of
the intermediate body is represented by the arithmetical mean between the
equivalents of the other two. Such a statement well showed the isomerism of
elementary substances, and proved that metals, however dissimilar in outward
appearance, were composed of the same matter differently arranged and
proportioned. This theory successfully demolishes the difficulties in the way of
transmutation. Again, Dr. Prout says that the chemical equivalents of nearly all
elemental substances are the multiples of one among them. Thus, if the
equivalent of hydrogen be taken for the unit, the equivalent of every other
substance will be an exact multiple of it - carbon will be represented by six,
axote by fourteen, oxygen by sixteen, zink by thirty-two. But, pointed out M.
Figuier's friend, if the molecular masses in compound substances have so simple
a connection, does it not go to prove the all natural bodies are formed of one
principle, differently arranged and condensed to produce all known compounds?
If transmutation is thus theoretically possible, it only remains to show by
practical experiment that it is strictly in accordance with chemical laws, and
by no means inclines to the supernatural. At this juncture the young alchemist
proceeded to liken the action of the Philosopher`s Stone on metals to that of a
ferment on organic matter. When metals are melted and brought to red heat, a
molecular change may be produced analogous to fermentation. Just as sugar, under
the influence of a ferment, may be changed into lactic acid without altering its
constituents, so metals can alter their character under the influence of the
Philosopher`s Stone. The explanation of the latter case is no more difficult
than that of the former. The ferment does not take any part in the chemical
changes it brings about, and no satisfactory explanation of its effects can be
found either in the laws of affinity or in the forces of electricity, light, or
heat. As with the ferment, the required quantity of the Philosopher`s Stone is
infinitesimal. Medicine, philosophy, every modern science was at one time a
source of such errors and extravagances as are associated with medieval alchemy,
but they are not therefore neglected and despised. Wherefore, then, should we be
blind tot he scientific nature of transmutation?
One of the foundations of alchemical theories was that minerals grew and
developed in the earth, like organic things. It was always the aim of nature to
produce gold, the most precious metal, but when circumstances were not favorable
the baser metals resulted. The desire of the old alchemists was to surprise
nature’s secrets, and thus attain the ability to do in a short period what
nature takes years to accomplish. Nevertheless, the medieval alchemists
appreciated the value of time in their experiments as modern alchemists never
do. M. Figuier`s friend urged him not to condemn these exponents of the hermetic
philosophy for their metaphysical tendencies, for, he said, there are facts in
our sciences that can only be explained in that light. If, for instance, copper
be placed in air or water, there will be no result, but if a touch of some acid
be added, it will oxidize. The explanation is that "the acid provokes oxidation
of the metal because it has an affinity for the oxide which tends to form." - a
material fact most metaphysical in its production, and only explicable thereby.
He concluded his argument with an appeal for tolerance towards the medieval
alchemists, whose work is underrated because it is not properly understood.
LITERATURE:
Atwood, A Suggestive Inquiry into the Hermetic Mastery, 1850
Hitchcock, Remarks on Alchemy and the Alchemists, Boston, 1857
Waite, Lives of the Alchemystical Philosophers, London, 1888
The Occult Sciences, London, 1891
Bacon, Mirror of Alchemy, 1597
S. le Doux, Dictionnaire Hermetique, 1695
Langlet de fresnoy, Histoire de la Philosophie Hermetique, 1792
Theatrum Chemicum, 1662
Valentine, Triumphal Chariot of Antimony, 1656
Redgrove, Alchemy Ancient and Modern
Figuier, L'Alchimie et les Alchimistes, Paris, 1857
Taken from a 1960 reprint of "AN ENCYCLOPAEDIA OF OCCULTISM", by Lewis Spence;
University Press, Hyde Park, New York. Originally Published in 1920, it is
considered to be one of the most complete texts on the subject.
|