A new light of alchymy : taken out of the fountain of nature and manual experience : to which is added a treatise of sulphur . t only of fome misfortune, but alfo death; I(hall over pafs them in iilence. They are prohibi-ted from being revealed to us, feeing they belongto the School of Secrets,and Divine Power. There-fore now I iLall put an end to this Book. FINIS. * chymiCal DitHonary: EXPLAINING Hard PLAGES and WORDS Met withal in the WRITINGS O F T A^IAC ELSRJS And other Obfcure AUTHORS. LOND ON, Printed by A. C. for 7. Williams, at the Golden Ball in Hofier-Lane. 16j^, m A, TREATISE OF THE
A new light of alchymy : taken out of the fountain of nature and manual experience : to which is added a treatise of sulphur . t only of fome misfortune, but alfo death; I(hall over pafs them in iilence. They are prohibi-ted from being revealed to us, feeing they belongto the School of Secrets,and Divine Power. There-fore now I iLall put an end to this Book. FINIS. * chymiCal DitHonary: EXPLAINING Hard PLAGES and WORDS Met withal in the WRITINGS O F T A^IAC ELSRJS And other Obfcure AUTHORS. LOND ON, Printed by A. C. for 7. Williams, at the Golden Ball in Hofier-Lane. 16j^, m A, TREATISE OF THE EXPLICATIOISr OF HWPLACES.^;/^ WORDSmet withal in the Writings ofParacelfus, and other hard Cbj-mical Authors. A Cetum T>hilofcfhcrum Is a MercurialWater, or otherwifc \s called VirginsMilk , wherein they fay Mecals a^cdiffolved. - Acetam Radicale is Vineger di=illed our of its own R^ot, and Matrix, and iscommonly called the DiiToIving ^ii^zw/V^ is a certain kind of ^deeb is our interiour and invilible man 5\vHich reprefems the forms of all things in mind; which afcerward our outward man d^.t^^. 3o5 a cwmicai Diaionatp, frame and imicace with its own hands; both ofth^m work according ^o their Nature. Aerdadi are corporeal fpirits living in the Air. e/£/ do:h not always (ignific Copper, butfometime Gold, or Silver, or any other Metalthat is pure, and generated by it fclf,without themixtion of any other Metal,or Stone; out of fomcfuch kind of Metal, they formerly made and coi-ned money. t/£thnn is called Subterranean fire, invlflbleand fulphureous, which burns Stones into Coals;like Jeat in the mountains, winch arc full of Re-fine and Bitumen. ^A-fl^hara is the burning of FlelL, or thefubftance of the body iiuo allies. tA:thmclsre called fiery {pirit«, or fpiritualmen burning in the fire, which appear in diversforms and (liapes, as fiery flames3firebrands,roundballs of Coals, and that efpecially in Sulphurmountains. Acaii is called all manner of Salt
Size: 1320px × 1892px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No
Keywords: ., bookauthorsedziwjmichaca1556ca, booksubjectalchemy, bookyear1674