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Alchemy
Electronic Dictionary A-S
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- ablution
The process of washing a
solid with a liquid, usually in water. Spiritually and psychologically, it is
facing one's emotions and letting feelings flow, so that innocence and purity
can be restored.
-
- Aion
(see
Ouroboros)
- Air
Air is one of the Four
Elements of alchemy. Air in the alchemical sense carries the archetypal
properties of spirit into the manifested world. It is associated with the
operation of Separation and represented by the metal Iron.
-
- alchemy
The word is derived from
the Arabian phrase "al-kimia," which refers to the preparation of the Stone or
Elixir by the Egyptians. The Arabic root "kimia" comes from the Coptic "khem"
that alluded to the fertile black soil of the Nile delta. Esoterically and
hieroglyphically, the word refers to the dark mystery of the primordial or First
Matter (the Khem), the One Thing through which all creation manifests. Alchemy,
then, is the Great Work of nature that perfects this chaotic matter, whether it
be expressed as the metals, the cosmos, or the substance of our souls.
- alembic
The upper part of a still; a
still-head. The term is often used to refer to a complete still. (see cucurbute;
Distillation)
- alkahest
The alkahest is the power
from Above that makes possible alchemical transformation. The word is usually
translated as "universal solvent," which alludes to the ability of the alkahest
to dissolve or reduce all physical matter to its basic essence. With metals,
this meant transmuting them to their purest form, which was gold. In the
human body, this meant the creation or revealing of a golden body of
consciousness, the Astral Body.
-
- aludel
A pear-shaped earthenware
bottle, open at both ends. It was used as a condenser in the sublimation process
and thus came to signify the end-stages of transformation. Also called the
Hermetic Vase, the Philosopher's Egg, and the Vase of the Philosophy.
-
- amalgam
The amalgam is a solid metal
formed by the combination of mercury with gold, silver, lead, or other
metals.
- angel
An angel in alchemical
treatises symbolizes sublimation or the ascension of the volatile
principle.
Ankh
The Ankh is a hieroglyphic
character used by Egyptian alchemists to denote the ascendancy of the life force
or spirit (the circle) over the material world (the cross). In other words,
through crucifixion, the soul rises and is reborn on a higher level. Its use
dates back over 3,000 years and is a symbolic rendition of the principles
expressed in the Emerald Tablet. In its design, the circular One Mind projects
downward into the One Thing, while the lateral manifested world on which we are
crucified is indicated by the horizontal bar.
animals
Animals are often used to
symbolize the basic components and processes of alchemy. They may be used to
symbolize the four Elements such as the lion or ox (Earth), fish or whales
(Water), eagles (Air), or salamanders or dragons (Fire). Aerial animals
generally indicate volatile principles, while terrestrial animals indicate fixed
principles. Whenever two animals are found, they signify Sulfur and Mercury or
some relationship between the fixed and the volatile.
antimony
The metal antimony symbolizes
the animal nature or wild spirit of man and nature, and it was often symbolized
by the wolf. Alchemist Basil Valentine named the metal, after feeding it to some
monks in a Benedictine monastery. The monks got violently ill and some even
died, hence the Latin name that means "anti-monk." Spiritually too, monks feel
most threatened by their own animal nature. Oddly enough, the Tincture of
Antimony cures venereal diseases.
Apollo
References to the Greek god
Apollo signify the Sun as spirit or solar consciousness.
- aqua fortis
Aqua fortis is Latin
for "strong water" and refers to nitric acid. Various grades of aqua
fortis were prepared depending on the length of Distillation, which
concentrated the acid.
- aqua regia
A mixture of aqua
fortis ("strong water," i.e., nitric acid) and spiritus
salis ("spirit of salt," i.e., hydrochloric acid) produces aqua
regia ("royal water" -- so named because it can dissolve gold). It was
first prepared by distilling common salt with aqua
fortis.
- aqua
vitae
The "living water" or water
"with spirit." An aqueous alcohol concentrated by one or more
Distillations.
- arcana
The arcana ("magical
secrets") are archetypal influences that transcend space and time. According to
the ancient text Archidoxies, the arcana are pre-existing powers that
"have the power of transmuting, altering, and restoring us." In this view, the
arcana are the secret workings of the mind of God, the logos of
the Greeks or what the alchemists referred to as the thoughts of the One Mind.
In the Tarot, the arcana are represented by symbolic drawings that the reader
tries to work with through meditation. In the Cabala, the arcana are represented
by the esoteric properties of the letters of the Hebrew alphabet, energies that
the cabalist tries to work with in the Tree of Life. In the in the ancient
Chinese system of divination, the I Ching, the arcana are
represented by the sixty-four trigrams, each with its own properties and
influences. The alchemists believed the arcana were expressed on all levels of
reality -- from chemical compounds to our innermost moods and desires.
- Arcanum
Experiment
-
- The early alchemists divided
their chemicals into major and minor arcana. The major arcana consisted of the
four compounds: Vitriol, Natron, Liquor Hepatis, and Pulvis Solaris. Three out
of the four consisted of dual ingredients that were easily separable. Vitriol
could be broken down into sulfuric acid and iron. Natron appeared as sodium
carbonate and sodium nitrate. Pulvis Solaris was made up of the red and black
varieties. Thus, the seven chemicals comprising the minor arcana were: Sulfuric
Acid, Iron, Sodium Carbonate, Sodium Nitrate, Liquor Hepatis, Red Pulvis
Solaris, and Black Pulvis Solaris. The alchemists believed that these secret
chemicals could be combined in the Arcanum Experiment, the single laboratory
experiment that would demonstrate the archetypal forces and evolution of the
universe. Ideally, such an experiment should succeed on many levels, not only
corroborating the deepest philosophical and psychological principles, but also
providing concrete evidence of their veracity. The Arcanum Experiment exposed
the hidden principles connecting heaven and earth, offering a framework in which
to explain both microcosmic and macrocosmic events.
-
- athanor
From the Arabic word
"al-tannur" (oven), the athanor is the furnace used by the alchemists to perfect
matter. Built of brick or clay, the athanor usually was shaped like a tower with
a domed roof and was designed to keep an even heat over long periods of time.
The alchemists considered it an incubator and sometimes referred to it as the
"House of the Chick." Symbolically, the athanor is also the human body and the
fire of bodily metabolism that fuels our transformation and the ultimate
creation of a Second Body of light. The mountain is a symbol for the athanor,
since the perfection of the metals takes place under the guise of Nature within
mountains. Sometimes a hollow oak tree is used to symbolize the atanor.
-
- Azoth
The term "Azoth" is
formed from the first and last letters of the English alphabet ("a" and "z"),
which stand for the beginning and end of all creation -- the alpha and omega of
the Greek philosophers, the aleph and tau of the Hebrew cabalists. Therefore the
Azoth is the ultimate arcanum, the universal spirit of God in all created
things. The alchemists believed that the liquid metal mercury carried the
signature of this omnipotent archetypal spirit.
Bain Marie
- The Bain Marie is a warm
alchemical bath. Chemically, it is a double-boiler in which a container of water
is suspended in a simmering cauldron. Psychologically, it is the gentle warmth
of emotionally centered meditation used in the Dissolution process. The Bain
Marie was named after Maria Prophetissa, a Jewish alchemist who wrote much about
the methods and equipment of the Water operations of Dissolution and
Distillation.
- balsam
-
- A balsam is a resinous or
waxy semi-solid compound that captures the essence of a liquid medicine or
perfume. To Paracelsus, the balsam was the "interior salt" that protected
the body from decomposition, and earlier alchemists considered the Balsam of the
Elements to be the Quintessence, the result of the Conjunction of alchemical
principles. Because of it amalgamating ability, mercury was considered the
balsam agent of the metals. In the chemical arcana, Liquor Hepatis mixed with
fat or wax was known as the Balsam of the Soul.
- Basilisk
The Basilisk is a
symbolic alchemical creature said to have the head of a bird and the body of a
dragon. The wingless serpentine animal was hatched from a hermaphroditic cock's
egg and nursed by a serpent. Psychologically, the Basilisk represents the
melding of our higher and lower natures in Conjunction, a process that must be
continued in the next three operations of alchemy for this "Child of the
Philosophers" to become the Living Stone of the fully integrated Self.
Biologically, the Basilisk represents the mammalian embryology, the genetic
replaying of the stages of evolution within the egg or womb. The Basilisk also
has chemical connotations, which probably have to do with a metallurgical
process involving cinnabar.
-
- baths
Baths in alchemy symbolize the
Dissolution process in which the metals are cleansed and purified.
- birds
Ascending birds indicate the
volatilization of compounds or their sublimation. Descending birds indicate the
fixation of compounds or their condensation and precipitation. Birds shown both
ascending and descending indicate the process of Distillation.
- bezoar
Some chemical compounds,
such as sulfur auretum when mixed with either red mercuric oxide or black
antimony, clump together inseparably as soon as they are mixed together. The
alchemists considered such compounds to be chemical bezoars, which are hard
clumps of undigested food or solid balls of hair sometimes found in the
intestines. In the Middle Ages, physicians thought the strange mass protected
people from poisons and actually prescribed it to their patients. Egyptian
priests discovered bezoars during the preparation of mummies and believed the
hard balls were magical pills formed by the large serpent in man (the
intestines). Some evidence suggests that the Egyptians also looked for a similar
pill in the small serpent in man (the brain) and found it there in the form of
the pineal gland. This pine-shaped gland is imbedded with tiny crystals of dark
melanin, and could explain the Egyptian pinecone emblems and the origin of the
caduceus itself. And, in the same way that bezoars were formed in the serpentine
contours of the intestines, so was gold formed in the bowels of the earth: gold
was considered a mineral bezoar.
-
- Black
Phase
The Black Phase (or Melanosis)
is the first stage in alchemy. It phase begins with the operation of Calcination
and lasts through the Putrefaction stage of Fermentation.
- brimstone
(see Sulfur)
- caduceus
The caduceus is the
magical staff of Hermes, the Messenger of the Gods and revealer of alchemy. The
staff is entwined by two serpents representing the solar and lunar forces. Their
union is the Conjunction of alchemical principles and their offspring, if it
lives, is the Stone. This Stone is represented as a golden ball with wings at
the top of the caduceus.
-
- Calcination
The first operation in
alchemical transformation. It is denoted by the symbol for the first sign of the
zodiac, Aries.
-
- Ceration
A part of the
Fermentation process during which a waxy substance flows from the putrefied
matter. This is the Ferment, the precursor of the Stone. Ceration is the
softening or mollification of a hard material to change it into a more waxy
state; covering with wax or salve.
-
- child
A naked child symbolizes the
innocent soul. In alchemy, the child is the offspring of the King and Queen, the
result of their marriage or union. A child crowned or clothed in purple robes
signifies Salt or the Philosopher's Stone.
- cibation
Cibation is the addition of
new material to the contents of the crucible. During Dissolution, it requires
adding liquid to the desiccated matter at precisely the right moment.
- cinnabar
Cinnabar is the bright
red ore of mercury sulfide. Known as "Dragon's Blood," the roasted rocks emit a
thick reddish smoke, as pure glistening mercury oozes from cracks.
Psychologically, cinnabar represents the hardened habits and terrestrial
marriages of soul and spirit that must be broken asunder in Calcination to free
the essences with which the alchemist intends to work.
-
- circle
The circle or sphere is
symbolic of unity, the One Mind of god. It is mathematically and psychologically
an "irrational" experience beyond the duality of reason.
-
- Coagulation
The seventh and last
operation in alchemical transformation is Coagulation.
-
- Cohobation
A kind of Distillation in
which the distillate is poured back into its residue; a method of
redistillation.
- Conjunction
Conjunction is the fourth
operation in alchemical transformation. It is the coming together of the
opposing archetypal forces of the Sun and Moon or the King and Queen.
-
- Congelation
A loose or temporary
Conjunction of opposites; a mixture in which a liquid is gelled or made
semi-solid; intercourse. The process is represented by the sign for the
constellation of Taurus.
- copper
Copper is one of the
seven metals of alchemy. Copper (and sometimes bronze and brass) is associated
with the operation of Conjunction and the element Earth.
croslet
(see
crucible)
crown
The crown symbolizes the
successful completion of an alchemical operation or the achievement of a
magisterium. It also signifies chemical royalty or the perfection of a
metal.
crows
Crows are the symbols of the
black phases of Calcination and Putrefaction.
- crucible
The crucible is the melting
vessel of the alchemists. It is made of inert material such as porcelain and can
withstand great heat. Used to liquefy the metals.
- curcurbite
The lower part of a still,
containing the original liquid. It is made of glass or earthenware and was also
known as a "gourd" on account of its shape; a receiver. (see alembic;
Distillation)
cupel
A small cup or dish made of
bone-ash or other porous and infusible material. Cupellation is the process of
heating a substance in a cupel in a current of air, such as done in the refining
of silver and gold.
- dew
Dew is symbolic of divine
incarnation or manifestation from Above. Alchemists believed natural dew
contained the divine Salt (thoughts of the One Mind) that could transform the
Sulfur and Mercury of the First Matter. In many ways, dew represented the Elixir
or contents of the cup of God, the Holy Grail.
- Diana
Appearances of the Greek
goddess Diana in alchemical drawings and treatises signify the Moon and Lunar
consciousness.
- Digestion
A kind of Putrefaction in
which the the nutrients or essences are reabsorbed.
-
- Distillation
Distillation is the sixth
operation in alchemical transformation. Denoted by the symbol for the
constellation Virgo. It is essentially a process of concentration, no matter on
what level (physical, mental, or spiritual) it occurs.
-
- Dissolution
The second operation in
alchemical transformation is Dissolution. The process of dissolving a solid in a
liquid; the reduction of a dry thing in water. Represented by the sign for the
constellation of Cancer.
-
- dogs
Dogs signify primitive
matter, natural sulfur, or material gold. A dog being devoured by a wolf
symbolizes the process of purifying gold using antimony.
-
- dove
The dove is a symbol of
renewed spirit or infusion of energy from Above. Chemically, it signifies the
change from the Black Stage to the White Phase of transformation.
-
- dragon
The dragon in flames is a
symbol of fire and Calcination. Several dragons fighting is symbolic of
Putrefaction. Dragons with wings represent the volatile principle; dragons
without wings represent the fixed principle. A dragons biting its own tale
is the Ouroboros and signifies the fundamental unity of all things.
- eagle
The eagle is always a symbol
of volatilization. For instance, an eagle devouring a lion indicates the
volatilization of a fixed component by a volatile
component.
- Earth
Earth is one of the Four
Elements of alchemy. Earth in the alchemical sense carries the archetypal
properties of manifestation, birth, and material creation. It is associated with
the operation of Conjunction and represented by the green ore of copper.
-
- Elixir
The Elixir of the
alchemists is essentially a liquid version of the Philosopher's Stone and has
the same ability to perfect any substance. When applied to the human body, the
Elixir cures diseases and restores youth.
-
- egg
The egg is symbolic of
the hermetically sealed vessel of creation. Stoppered retorts, coffins, and
sepulchres represent eggs in many alchemical drawings.
- Fermentation
The fifth operation in
alchemical transformation is Fermentation. It is represented by the sign for the
constellation of Capricorn.
-
- Filtration
A kind of Separation, in which
material is passed through a sieve or screen designed to allow only pieces of a
certain size to pass through. The operation is represented by the sign for the
constellation of Sagittarius, the Archer.
- Fire
Fire is one of the Four
Elements of alchemy. Fire in the alchemical sense carries the archetypal
properties of activity and transformation. It is associated with the operation
of Calcination and represented by the metal lead.
-
- Fixation
The process of
stabilizing and incarnating a substance; depriving a substance of its volatility
or mobility to congeal or combine it. The process is represented by the sign for
the constellation of Gemini.
-
- fountain
The alchemical Fountain
of Fountains is a symbol of the Ouroboros. Three fountains represent the three
principles of Sulfur, Mercury, and Salt. The King and Queen sitting in a
fountain signifies a bath or the Water operations of Dissolution and
Distillation.
- Geber
The Latin name of Jabir ibn
Hayyan (721 - 815 A.D.). He is the father of both Islamic and European alchemy.
He knew of the existence of the Emerald Tablet and spread the doctrines of the
Four Elements and the Mercury-Sulfur theory of the generation of the
metals.
- gold
Gold is the most perfect
of the metals. For the alchemist, it represented the perfection of all matter on
any level, including that of the mind, spirit, and soul. It is associated with
the operation of Coagulation.
-
- grain
Grain, seeds, or grapes
symbolize the matter of the Stone.
-
- Griffin's
Egg
The griffin is a
half-lion and half-eagle creature that symbolizes the Conjunction of the fixed
and volatile principles. An allusion to the Vessel of Hermes.
- Hermaphrodite
The Hermaphrodite
represents Sulfur and Mercury after their Conjunction. Rebis (something
double in characteristics) is another designation for this point in the alchemy
of transformation.
- Iosis
(see Purple
Phase)
-
- iron
Iron is one of the seven
metals of alchemy. It is associated with the operation of Separation.
- Jabir
(see Geber)
-
- Jungian
Alchemy
Psychiatrist Carl Gustav
Jung rediscovered the images and principles of alchemy surfacing in the dreams
and compulsions of his patients and began a lifelong study of the subject. He
concluded that alchemical images explain the archetypal roots of the modern mind
and underscores a process of transformation leading to the integration of the
personality.
- King
The King in alchemy
represents man, solar consciousness, or Sulfur. The King is naked in the early
operations of alchemy and regains his royal robes at the end of his
transformation. The King united with the Queen symbolizes Conjunction.
- lead
Lead is the first and
oldest of the seven metals of alchemy. It is associated with the operation of
Calcination.
Leukosis
(see White Phase)
Liquor
Hepatis
Liquor Hepatis was the name
given to a sulfurous liquid used by the alchemists. Considered the arcanum of
the soul, Liquor Hepatis was prepared by distilling a solution of sulfur, lime,
and sal ammoniac. The early alchemists secured lime (calcium oxide) by heating
limestone and made sal ammoniac (ammonium chloride) by gently heating camel dung
in sealed containers. The distillation for Liquor Hepatis produced a combination
of hydrogen sulfide and ammonia gases. Since no solids precipitated, alchemists
considered this an ascending reaction only. That was a significant fact to the
Egyptians, who associated the Liquor with the soul. They believed the soul
resided in the liver, and the reddish-brown color of Liquor Hepatis convinced
them they had isolated the soul's essence. The name comes from "hepar," the
Greek word for liver. The Liquor exuded an unnatural, pungent odor that the
alchemists found quite mysterious. They assumed it was due to an ethereal
presence concealed in the sulfur and activated by the fertile principle in
ammonia. To the Egyptians, the odor symbolized a soul or a spiritized presence
hidden within the liquid. They solidified that presence by adding wax and fat to
Liquor Hepatis and turning it into a thick paste. The emulsion became known as
the Balsam of the Alchemists or Balsam of the Soul. The possibility of
coagulating an invisible potential into a second body, like a balsam, became a
basic tenet of alchemy.
litharge
The litharge (or letharge) is
the left-over scum, spume, or ashes of a metallic operation.
- Magnesia
Magnesia was a mystical
term to the alchemists that denoted the primordial transforming substance in the
universe. It was one of many symbols used to describe the central mystery of
alchemy that was never to be spoken of in common wording.
-
- matrass
A round-bottomed flask
with a very long neck. Also called a "bolt-head."
-
- Melanosis
(see Black
Phase)
- menstruum
An alchemical term meaning a
solvent or alkahest having both the power to dissolve and coagulate at the same
time. Based on the belief that the ovum takes its life and form from the menses,
the menstruum was also referred to the as the Mercury of the Philosophers.
- Mercury
Mercury, called
quicksilver by the ancients, is a liquid metal that could be found weeping
through cracks in certain rocks or accumulating in small puddles in mountain
grottos. It was also obtained by roasting cinnabar (mercury sulfide). The shiny
metal would seep from the rocks and drip down into the ashes, from which it was
later collected. The early alchemists made red mercuric oxide by heating
quicksilver in a solution of nitric acid. The acid, which later alchemists
called "aqua fortis," was made by pouring sulfuric acid over saltpeter. The
reaction of quicksilver in nitric acid is impressive. A thick red vapor hovers
over the surface and bright red crystals precipitate to the bottom. This
striking chemical reaction demonstrated the simultaneous separation of mercury
into the Above and the Below. Mercury's all-encompassing properties were
exhibited in other compounds too. If mercury was heated in a long-necked flask,
it oxidized into a highly poisonous white powder (white mercuric oxide) and
therapeutic red crystals (red mercuric oxide). Calomel (mercury chloride) was a
powerful medicine, unless it was directly exposed to light, in which case it
became a deadly poison. When mixed with other metals, liquid mercury tended to
unite with them and form hardened amalgams. These and other properties convinced
alchemists that mercury transcended both the solid and liquid states, both earth
and heaven, both life and death. It symbolized Hermes himself, the guide to the
Above and Below.
-
- Multiplication
A process of Distillation
in which the power of transmutation is concentrated; an increase in the amount
of the Stone as obtained from its pristine form. It is represented by the sign
for the constellation of Aquarius.
- Natron
-
- Natron means salt. To the
early alchemists, however, the word Natron stood for the basic principle in all
salt formation and the creation of bodies in general. The Egyptians accumulated
the white salts formed from the evaporation of lakes and used them to preserve
mummies. Known as soda ash (sodium carbonate), the oldest deposits are in the
Sinai desert. Another naturally-occurring sodium compound mined by the Egyptians
was cubic-saltpeter (sodium nitrate). The alchemists referred to both these
salts as Natron (from the Arabic word for soda ash), because they suspected that
both had a common signature or archetypal basis.
- Ouroboros
The Ouroboros (or
Uroboros) is the symbolic rendition of the eternal principles presented in the
Emerald Tablet. The great serpent devouring itself represents the idea that "All
Is One," even though the universe undergoes periodic cycles of destruction and
creation (or resurrection). In Orphic and Mithraic symbology, the Ouroboros was
called the Agathos Daimon or "Good Spirit" and was a symbol for the
"Operation of the Sun." In Greek terminology, the Ouroboros was the
Aion, which Herakleitos likened to a child at play. To the Greeks, the
Aion (from which our word "eon" is derived) defined the cosmic
period between the creation and destruction of the
universe.
- Pelican
A circulatory vessel with
two side-arms feeding condensed vapors back into the body. It has a fancied
resemblance in shape to a pelican pecking at its breast.
-
-
- Philosopher's
Stone
(see
Stone)
- Precipitation
A process of Coagulation in
which solid matter is created during a chemical reaction and falls out of
solution.
- Projection
The final stage of
Coagulation in which the power of transformation is directed toward a body; the
final process in making gold, in which the Stone or powder Stone (the powder of
projection) is tossed upon the molten base metal to transmute it. It is
represented by the sign for the constellation of Pisces.
-
- Pulvis
Solaris
Pulvis Solaris was the
chemical arcanum that represented spirit. The "Powder of the Sun" was a mixture
of two powders, Black Solaris and Red Solaris. Combining black antimony with
sulfur auretum made Black Pulvis Solaris. Black antimony was a common sulfide of
antimony, now known as stibnite. The mineral was smelted and ground fine. Pure
sulfur auretum, or "golden sulfur," was made by adding sulfuric acid to a dried
mixture of sodium carbonate, sulfur, lime, and antimony. The reaction gave off
hydrogen sulfide gas, while the sulfur auretum precipitated to the bottom of the
container. Red Pulvis Solaris was made by combining sulfur auretum with a
compound of mercury known as red mercuric oxide. Egyptian alchemists associated
the serpent with the red mercuric oxide and referred to Red Pulvis Solaris as
Pulvis Serpentum. Later alchemists became convinced that Red Pulvis Solaris was
indeed the powder of projection that would enable them to transform virtually
anything into pure gold.
-
- Purple
Phase
The Purple Phase (or Iosis) of
the Great Work is the third and final stage of transformation. It is marked by
the purpling or reddening of the material and occurs during the Coagulation
operation.
-
- Putrefaction
The first stage of the
Fermentation operation; a digestion in which decomposing essences are
reabsorbed. The process was represented by the symbol for the constellation of
Leo.
- Queen
The Queen symbolizes
woman, lunar consciousness, and Mercury. The Queen is naked during the early
stages but regains her royal robes at the end of her transformation. The Queen
united with the King is the operation of Conjunction.
-
- quicklime
Quicklime is unslacked lime or
calcium oxide. Calcium oxide is obtained by heating limestone, egg shells, or
any material containing Calcium Carbonate, which is one of the seven arcana of
alchemy.
- quicksilver
(see Mercury)
-
- Quintessence
The Quintessence is the
fifth element with which the alchemists could work. It was the essential
presence of something or someone, the living thing itself that animated or gave
something its deepest characteristics. The Quintessence partakes of both the
Above and the Below, the mental as well as the material. It can be thought of as
the ethereal embodiment of the life force that we encounter in dreams and
altered states of consciousness. It is the purest individual essence of
something that we must unveil and understand in order to transform it.
- Rebis
(see
Hermaphrodite)
-
- retort
The retort is a spherical
container (usually glass) with a long neck or spout. It is used to distill or
decompose solutions by the action of heat or acids.
- Salt
Salt is the third
heavenly substance in alchemy and represents the final manifestation of the
perfected Stone. The Emerald Tablet calls it "the Glory of the Whole Universe."
For Paracelsus, Salt was like a balsam the body produced to shield itself from
decay. It has also been associated with the Ouroboros, the Stone, and the Astral
Body. In general, Salt represents the action of thought on matter, be it the One
Mind acting on the One Thing of the universe or the alchemist meditating in his
inner laboratory.
-
- Separation
The third operation in
the alchemy of transformation. Symbols of Separation include swords, scythes,
arrows, knives, and hatchets. The operation is symbolized by the sign for the
constellation of Scorpio.
-
- serpents
Two serpents represent the
opposing masculine and feminine energies of the Work. Three serpents stand for
the three higher principles of Sulfur, Mercury, and Salt. Wingd serpents
represent volatile substances; wingless serpents represent fixed substances. A
crucified serpent represents the fixation of the
volatile.
- silver
Silver is one of the seven
metals of alchemy. It is associated with the operation of
Distillation.
- skeletons
Skeletons signify the
process of Putrefaction, on all the levels in which it occurs.
Soul
Soul in alchemy is the passive
presence in all of us that survives through all eternity and is therefore part
of the original substance (First Matter) of the universe. Ultimately, it is the
One Thing of the universe. Soul was considered beyond the four material elements
and thus conceptualized as a fifth element (or
Quintessence).
Spirit
Spirit in alchemy is the
active presence in all of us that strives toward perfection. Spirit seeks
material manifestation for expression. Ultimately, it is the One Mind of the
universe.
square
The square or cube is symbolic
of matter and the Four Elements of creation.
- Stone
The Stone is the goal of the
Great Work. It was viewed as a magical touchstone that could immediately
perfect any substance or situation. The Philosopher's Stone has been associated
with the Salt of the World, the Astral Body, the Elixir, and even Jesus
Christ.
- Sublimation
The first stage of
Coagulation, in which the vapors solidify; represented by the sign for the
constellation of Libra. The vaporization of a solid without fusion or melting,
followed by the condensation of its vapor in the resolidified form on a cool
surface. The elevation of a dry thing by fire, with adherency to its vessel. The
astrological symbol association with Sublimation is the sign of Libra, the
scales.
-
- Sulfur
Sulfur (Sulphur) is one
of the three heavenly substances. It represents passion and will and is
associated with the operation of Fermentation.
- tin
Tin is one of the seven
metals of the alchemists. It is associated with the operation of Dissolution and
the element Water. Pewter (a mixture of lead and tin) represents a metallic
state between the operations of Calcination and Dissolution.
-
three levels
The key to understanding
alchemy is to realize that alchemical thought is extremely dynamic and takes
places on three levels at once: the physical, the psychological, and the
spiritual. Thus turning lead into gold meant not only physically changing the
base metal into the noble metal, but also transforming base habits and emotions
into golden thoughts and feelings, as well as transmuting our dark and ignoble
souls into the golden light of spirit. By developing this ability to think and
work on all three levels of reality at once (becoming "thrice-greatest"), the
alchemists created a spiritual technology that applied not only to their
laboratories but also to their own personalities and to their relationships with
other people -- and with God.
- tree
Trees symbolize the
processes of transformation. A tree of moons signifies the Lesser or Lunar Work;
a tree of suns signifies the Greater or Last updated: December 31, 1969
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