What I have hitherto Discours’d,
Eleutherius, (sayes his Friend to Him) has,
I presume, shew’n You, that a Considering Man
may very well question the Truth of those very Suppositions
which Chymists as well as Peripateticks, without proving,
take for granted; and upon which Depends the Validity
of the Inferences they draw from their Experiments.
Wherefore having dispach’t that, which though
a Chymist Perhaps will not, yet I do, look upon as
the most Important, as well as Difficult, part of
my Task, it will now be Seasonable for me to proceed
to the Consideration of the Experiments themselves,
wherein they are wont so much to Triumph and Glory.
And these will the rather deserve a serious Examination,
because those that Alledge them are wont to do it
with so much Confidence and Ostentation, that they
have hitherto impos’d upon almost all Persons,
without excepting Philosophers and Physitians themselves,
who have read their Books, or heard them talk.
For some learned Men have been content rather to beleeve
what they so boldly Affirm, then be at the trouble
and charge, to try whether or no it be True.
Others again, who have Curiosity enough to Examine
the Truth of what is Averr’d, want Skill and
Opportunity to do what they Desire. And the Generality
even of Learned Men, seeing the Chymists (not contenting
themselves with the Schools to amuse the World with
empty words) Actually Perform’d divers strange
things, and, among those Resolve Compound Bodies into
several Substances not known by former Philosophers
to be contain’d in them: Men I say, seeing
these Things, and Hearing with what Confidence Chymists
Averr the Substances Obtain’d from Compound Bodies
by the Fire to be the True Elements, or, (as they
speak) Hypostaticall Principles of them, are forward
to think it but Just as well as Modest, that according
to the Logicians Rule, the Skilfull Artists
should be Credited in their own Art; Especially when
those things whose Nature they so Confidently take
upon them to teach others are not only Productions
of their own Skill, but such as others Know not else
what to make of.
But though (Continues Carneades)
the Chymists have been able upon some or other of
the mention’d Acounts, not only to Delight but
Amaze, and almost to bewitch even Learned Men; yet
such as You and I, who are not unpractis’d in
the Trade, must not suffer our Selves to be impos’d
upon by hard Names, or bold Assertions; nor to be dazl’d
by that Light which should but assist us to discern
things the more clearly. It is one thing to be
able to help Nature to produce things, and another
thing to Understand well the Nature of the things produc’d.
As we see, that many Persons that can beget Children,
are for all that as Ignorant of the Number and Nature
of the parts, especially the internal ones, that Constitute
a Childs Body, as they that never were Parents.
Nor do I Doubt, but you’l excuse me, if as I
thank the Chymists for the things their Analysis
shews me, so I take the Liberty to consider how many,
and what they are, without being astonish’d
at them; as if, whosoever hath Skill enough to shew
men some new thing of his own making, had the Right
to make them believe whatsoever he pleases to tell
them concerning it.
Wherefore I will now proceed to my
Third General Consideration, which is, That it does
not appear, that Three is precisely and Universally
the Number of the Distinct Substances or Elements,
whereinto mixt Bodies are resoluble by the Fire; I
mean that ’tis not prov’d by Chymists,
that all the Compound Bodies, which are granted to
be perfectly mixt, are upon their Chymical Analysis
divisible each of them into just Three Distinct Substances,
neither more nor less, which are wont to be lookt
upon as Elementary, or may as well be reputed so as
those that are so reputed. Which last Clause I
subjoyne, to prevent your Objecting, that some of
the Substances I may have occasion to mention by and
by, are not perfectly Homogeneous, nor Consequently
worthy of the name of Principles. For that which
I am now to consider, is, into how many Differing
Substances, that may plausibly pass for the Elementary
Ingredients of a mix’d Body, it may be Analyz’d
by the Fire; but whether each of these be un-compounded,
I reserve to examine, when I shall come to the next
General Consideration; where I hope to evince, that
the Substances which the Chymists not only allow,
but assert to be the Component Principles of the Body
resolv’d into them, are not wont to be uncompounded.
Now there are two Kind of Arguments
(pursues Carneades) which may be brought to
make my Third Proposition seem probable; one sort of
them being of a more Speculative Nature, and the other
drawn from Experience. To begin then with the
first of these.
But as Carneades was going
to do as he had said, Eleutherius interrupted
him, by saying with a somewhat smiling countenance;
If you have no mind I should think,
that the Proverb, That Good Wits have bad Memories,
is Rational and Applicable to You, You must not Forget
now you are upon the Speculative Considerations, that
may relate to the Number of the Elements; that your
Self did not long since Deliver and Concede some Propositions
in Favour of the Chymical Doctrine, which I may without
disparagement to you think it uneasie, even for Carneades
to answer.
I have not, replies he, Forgot the
Concessions you mean; but I hope too, that you have
not forgot neither with what Cautions they were made,
when I had not yet assumed the Person I am now sustaining.
But however, I shall to content You, so discourse
of my Third general consideration, as to let You see,
That I am not Unmindful of the things you would have
me remember.
To talk then again according to such
principles as I then made use of, I shall represent,
that if it be granted rational to suppose, as I then
did, that the Elements consisted at first of certain
small and primary Coalitions of the minute Particles
of matter into Corpuscles very numerous, and very
like each other, It will not be absurd to conceive,
that such primary Clusters may be of far more sorts
then three or five; and consequently, that we need
not suppose, that in each of the compound Bodies we
are treating of there should be found just three sorts
of such primitive Coalitions, as we are speaking
of.
And if according to this Notion we
allow a considerable number of differing Elements,
I may add, that it seems very possible, that to the
constitution of one sort of mixt Bodies two kinds of
Elementary ones may suffice (as I lately Exemplify’d
to you, in that most durable Concrete, Glass,) another
sort of Mixts may be compos’d of three Elements,
another of four, another of five, and another perhaps
of many more. So that according to this Notion,
there can be no determinate number assign’d,
as that of the Elements; of all sorts of compound
Bodies whatsoever, it being very probable that some
Concretes consist of fewer, some of more Elements.
Nay, it does not seem Impossible, according to these
Principles, but that there may be two sorts of Mixts,
whereof the one may not have any of all the same Elements
as the other consists of; as we oftentimes see two
words, whereof the one has not any one of the Letters
to be met with in the other; or as we often meet with
diverse Electuaries, in which no Ingredient (except
Sugar) is common to any two of them. I will not
here debate whether there may not be a multitude of
these Corpuscles, which by reason of their being primary
and simple, might be called Elementary, if several
sorts of them should convene to compose any Body,
which are as yet free, and neither as yet contex’d
and entangl’d with primary Corpuscles of other
kinds, but remains liable to be subdu’d and
fashion’d by Seminal Principles, or the like
powerful and Transmuting Agent, by whom they may be
so connected among themselves, or with the parts of
one of the bodies, as to make the compound Bodies,
whose Ingredients they are, resoluble into more, or
other Elements then those that Chymists have hitherto
taken notice of.
To all which I may add, that since
it appears, by what I observ’d to you of the
permanency of Gold and Silver, that even Corpuscles
that are not of an Elementary but compounded Nature,
may be of so durable a Texture, as to remain indissoluble
in the ordinary Analysis that Chymists make
of Bodies by the Fire; ’Tis not impossible but
that, though there were but three Elements, yet there
may be a greater number of Bodies, which the wonted
wayes of Anatomy will not discover to be no Elementary
Bodies.
But, sayes Carneades, having
thus far, in compliance to you, talk’t conjecturally
of the number of the Elements, ’tis now time
to consider, not of how many Elements it is possible
that Nature may compound mix’d Bodies, but (at
least as farr as the ordinary Experiments of Chymists
will informe us) of how many she doth make them
up.
I say then, that it does not by these
sufficiently appear to me, that there is any one determinate
number of Elements to be uniformly met with in all
the several sorts of Bodies allow’d to be perfectly
mixt.
And for the more distinct proof of
this Proposition, I shall in the first place Represent,
That there are divers Bodies, which I could never
see by fire divided into so many as three Elementary
substances. I would fain (as I said lately to
Philoponus) see that fixt and noble Metal we
call Gold separated into Salt, Sulphur and Mercury:
and if any man will submit to a competent forfeiture
in case of failing, I shall willingly in case of prosperous
successe pay both for the Materials and the charges
of such an Experiment. ’Tis not, that after
what I have try’d my self I dare peremptorily
deny, that there may out of Gold be extracted a certain
substance, which I cannot hinder Chymists from calling
its Tincture or Sulphur; and which leaves the remaining
Body depriv’d of its wonted colour. Nor
am I sure, that there cannot be drawn out of the same
Metal a real quick and running Mercury. But for
the Salt of Gold, I never could either see it, or be
satisfied that there was ever such a thing separated,
in rerum natura, by the relation of any credible
eye witnesse. And for the several Processes that
Promise that effect, the materials that must be wrought
upon are somewhat too pretious and costly to be wasted
upon so groundlesse adventures, of which not only
the successe is doubtful, but the very possibility
is not yet demonstrated. Yet that which most
deterres me from such tryalls, is not their chargeablenesse,
but their unsatisfactorinesse, though they should
succeed. For the Extraction of this golden Salt
being in Chymists Processes prescribed to be effected
by corrosive Menstruums, or the Intervention
of other Saline Bodies, it will remain doubtful to
a wary person, whether the Emergent Salt be that of
the Gold it self; or of the Saline Bodies or Spirits
employ’d to prepare it; For that such disguises
of Metals do often impose upon Artists, I am sure
Eleutherius is not so much a stranger to Chymistry
as to ignore. I would likewise willingly see the
three principles separated from the pure sort of Virgin-Sand,
from Osteocolla, from refined Silver, from
Quicksilver, freed from its adventitious Sulphur,
from Venetian Talk, which by long detention in an extreme Reverberium,
I could but divide into smaller Particles, (not the
constituent principles,) Nay, which, when I caused
it to be kept, I know not how long, in a Glasse-house
fire, came out in the Figure it’s Lumps had when
put in, though alter’d to an almost Amethystine
colour; and from divers other Bodies, which it were
now unnecessary to enumerate. For though I dare
not absolutely affirme it to be impossible to
Analyze these Bodies into their Tria Prima;
yet because, neither my own Experiments, nor any competent
Testimony hath hitherto either taught me how such
an Analysis may be made, or satisfy’d
me, that it hath been so, I must take the Liberty
to refrain from believing it, till the Chymists prove
it, or give us intelligible and practicable Processes
to performe what they pretend. For whilst they
affect that AEnigmatical obscurity with which
they are wont to puzzle the Readers of their divulg’d
Processes concerning the Analyticall Preparation of
Gold or Mercury, they leave wary persons much unsatisfyed
whether or no the differing Substances, they promise
to produce, be truly the Hypostatical Principles,
or only some intermixtures of the divided Bodies with
those employ’d to work upon them, as is Evident
in the seeming Crystalls of Silver, and those of Mercury;
which though by some inconsiderately supposed to be
the Salts of those Metalls, are plainly but mixtures
of the Metalline Bodies, with the Saline parts of
Aqua fortis or other corrosive Liquors; as is
evident by their being reducible into Silver or Quicksilver,
as they were before.
I cannot but Confesse (saith
Eleutherius) that though Chymists may upon
probable grounds affirm themselves Able to obtain their
Tria Prima, from Animals and Vegetables, yet
I have often wondred that they should so confidently
pretend also to resolve all Metalline and other Mineral
bodies into Salt, Sulphur, and Mercury. For ’tis
a saying almost Proverbial, among those Chymists themselves
that are accounted Philosophers; and our famous Countryman
Roger Bacon has particularly adopted it; that
Facilius est aurum facere quam destruere.
And I fear, with You, that Gold is not the only Mineral
from which Chymists are wont fruitlessly to attempt
the separating of their three Principles. I know
indeed (continues Eleutherius) that the Learned
Sennertus, even in that book where he takes
not upon him to play the Advocate for the Chymists,
but the Umpier betwixt them and the Peripateticks,
expresses himself roundly, thus; Salem omnibus
inesse (mixtis scilicet) & ex iis fieri posse omnibus
in resolutionibus Chymicis versatis notissimum est.
And in the next Page, Quod de sale dixi, saies
he, Idem de Sulphure dici potest: but
by his favour I must see very good proofs, before I
believe such general Assertions, how boldly soever
made; and he that would convince me of their truth,
must first teach me some true and practicable way
of separating Salt and Sulphur from Gold, Silver, and
those many different sort of Stones, that a violent
Fire does not bring to Lime, but to Fusion; and not
only I, for my own part, never saw any of those newly
nam’d Bodies so resolved; but Helmont,
who was much better vers’d in the Chymical Anatomizing
of Bodies then either Sennertus or I,
has somewhere this resolute passage; Scio
(saies he) ex arena, silicibus & saxis, non
Calcariis, nunquam Sulphur aut Mercurium trahi posse;
Nay Quercetanus himself, though the grand stickler
for the Tria Prima, has this Confession of the
Irresolubleness of Diamonds; Adamas (saith
he) omnium factus Lapidum solidissimus ac durissimus
ex arctissima videlicet trium principiorum unione
ac Cohaerentia, quae nulla arte separationis in solutionem
principiorum suorum spiritualium disjungi potest.
And indeed, pursues Eleutherius, I was not
only glad, but somewhat surprized to find you inclined
to Admit that there may be a Sulphur and a running
Mercury drawn from Gold; for unlesse you do (as your
expression seem’d to intimate) take the word
Sulphur in a very loose sence, I must doubt whether
our Chymists can separate a Sulphur from Gold:
For when I saw you make the experiment that I suppose
invited you to speak as you did, I did not judge the
golden Tincture to be the true principle of Sulphur
extracted from the body, but an aggregate of some
such highly colour’d parts of the Gold, as a
Chymist would have called a Sulphur incombustible,
which in plain English seems to be little better than
to call it a Sulphur and no Sulphur. And as for
Metalline Mercuries, I had not wondred at it,
though you had expressed much more severity in speaking
of them: For I remember that having once met
an old and famous Artist, who had long been (and still
is) Chymist to a great Monarch, the repute he had of
a very honest man invited me to desire him to tell
me ingenuously whether or no, among his many labours,
he had ever really extracted a true and running Mercury
out of Metalls; to which question he freely replyed,
that he had never separated a true Mercury from any
Metal; nor had ever seen it really done by any man
else. And though Gold is, of all Metalls,
That, whose Mercury Chymists have most endeavoured
to extract, and which they do the most brag they have
extracted; yet the Experienced Angelus Sala,
in his Spagyrical account of the seven Terrestrial
Planets (that is the seven metalls) affords us this
memorable Testimony, to, our present purpose; Quanquam
(saies he) _&c. experientia tamen (quam
stultorum Magistrum [Errata: Magistram] vocamus)
certe Comprobavit, Mercurium auri adeo
fixum, maturum, & arcte cum reliquis
ejusdem corporis substantiis conjungi, ut nullo
modo retrogredi possit._ To which he sub-joynes,
that he himself had seen much Labour spent upon that
Design, but could never see any such Mercury produc’d
thereby. And I easily beleeve what he annexes;
that he had often seen Detected many tricks and
Impostures of Cheating Alchymists. For, the
most part of those that are fond of such Charlatans,
being unskilfull or Credulous, or both, ’tis
very easie for such as have some Skill, much craft,
more boldness, and no Conscience, to impose upon them;
and therefore, though many profess’d Alchymists,
and divers Persons of Quality have told me that they
have made or seen the Mercury of Gold, or of this or
that other Metal; yet I have been still apt to fear
that either these persons have had a Design to deceive
others; or have not had Skill and circumspection enough
to keep themselves from being deceived.
You recall to my mind (sayes Carneades)
a certain Experiment I once devis’d, innocently
to deceive some persons, and let them and others see
how little is to be built upon the affirmation of those
that are either unskillfull or unwary, when they tell
us they have seen Alchymists make the Mercury
of this or that Metal; and to make this the more evident,
I made my Experiment much more Slight, Short and Simple,
than the Chymists usuall processes to Extract Metalline
Mercuries; which Operations being commonly more Elaborate
and Intricate, and requiring a much more longer time,
give the Alchymists a greater opportunity to
Cozen, and Consequently are more Obnoxious to the
Spectators suspicion. And that wherein I endeavour’d
to make my Experiment look the more like a True Analysis,
was, that I not only pretended as well as others to
extract a Mercury from the Metal I wrought upon, but
likewise to separate a large proportion of manifest
and inflamable Sulphur. I take then, of the
filings of Copper, about a Drachme or two, of
common sublimate, powder’d, the like Weight,
and Sal Armoniack near about as much as of Sublimate;
these three being well mingl’d together I put
into a small Vial with a long neck, or, which I find
better, into a Glass Urinall, which (having first
stopped it with Cotton) to avoid the Noxious Fumes,
I approach by degrees to a competent Fire of well
kindled coals, or (which looks better, but more endangers
the Glass) to the Flame of a candle; and after a while
the bottom of the Glass being held Just upon the Kindled
Coals, or in the flame, You may in about a quarter
of an Hour, or perchance in halfe that time, perceive
in the Bottom of the Glass some running Mercury; and
if then You take away the Glass and break it, You
shall find a Parcel of Quicksilver, Perhaps altogether,
and perhaps part of it in the pores of the Solid Mass;
You shall find too, that the remaining Lump being
held to the Flame of the Candle will readily burn
with a greenish Flame, and after a little while (perchance
presently) will in the Air Acquire a Greenish Blew,
which being the Colour that is ascrib’d to Copper,
when its Body is unlocked, ’Tis easie to perswade
Men that this is the True Sulphur of Venus,
especially since not only the Salts may be Suppos’d
partly to be Flown away, and partly to be Sublim’d
to the upper part of the Glass, whose inside (will
Commonly appear Whitened by them) but the Metal seems
to be quite Destroy’d, the Copper no longer appearing
in a Metalline Forme, but almost in that of a Resinous
Lump; whereas indeed the Case is only this, That the
Saline parts of the Sublimate, together with the Sal
Armoniack, being excited and actuated by the Vehement
heat, fall upon the Copper, (which is a Metal they
can more easily corrode, than silver) whereby the
small parts of the Mercury being freed from the Salts
that kept them asunder, and being by the heat tumbled
up and down after many Occursions, they Convene into
a Conspicuous Mass of Liquor; and as for the Salts,
some of the more Volatile of them Subliming to the
upper part of the Glass, the others Corrode the Copper,
and uniting themselves with it do strangely alter
and Disguise its Metallick Form, and compose with it
a new kind of Concrete inflamable like Sulphur;
concerning which I shall not now say any thing, since
I can Referr You to the Diligent Observations which
I remember Mr. Boyle has made concerning this
Odde kind of Verdigrease. But Continues Carneades
smiling, you know I was not cut out for a Mountebank,
and therefore I will hasten to resume the person of
a Sceptick, and take up my discourse where You diverted
me from prosecuting it.
In the next place, then, I consider,
that, as there are some Bodies which yield not so
many as the three Principles; so there are many others,
that in their Resolution Exhibite more principles than
three; and that therefore the Ternary Number is not
that of the Universal and Adequate Principles of Bodies.
If you allow of the Discourse I ately [Errata:
lately] made You, touching the primary Associations
of the small Particles of matter, You will scarce
think it improbable, that of such Elementary Corpuscles
there may be more sorts then either three, or four,
or five. And if you will grant, what will scarce
be deny’d, that Corpuscles of a compounded Nature
may in all the wonted Examples of Chymists pass for
Elementary, I see not, why you should think it impossible,
that as Aqua Fortis, or Aqua Regis will
make a Separation of colliquated Silver and Gold,
though the Fire cannot; so there may be some Agent
found out so subtile and so powerfull, at least in
respect of those particular compounded Corpuscles,
as to be able to resolve them into those more simple
ones, whereof they consist, and consequently encrease
the number of the Distinct Substances, whereinto the
mixt Body has been hitherto thought resoluble.
And if that be true, which I recited to you a while
ago out of Helmont concerning the Operations
of the Alkahest, which divides Bodies into
other Distinct Substances, both as to number and Nature,
then the Fire does; it will not a little countenance
my Conjecture. But confining our selves to such
wayes of Analyzing mix’d Bodies, as are already
not unknown to Chymists, it may without Absurdity
be Question’d, whether besides those grosser
Elements of Bodies, which they call Salt Sulphur and
Mercury, there may not be Ingredients of a more Subtile
Nature, which being extreamly little, and not being
in themselves Visible, may escape unheeded at the
Junctures of the Destillatory Vessels, though never
so carefully Luted. For let me observe to you
one thing, which though not taken notice of by Chymists,
may be a notion of good Use in divers Cases to a Naturalist,
that we may well suspect, that there may be severall
Sorts of Bodies, which are not Immediate Objects of
any one of our senses; since we See, that not only
those little Corpuscles that issue out of the Loadstone,
and perform the Wonders for which it is justly admired;
But the Effluviums of Amber, Jet, and other
Electricall Concretes, though by their effects upon
the particular Bodies dispos’d to receive their
Action, they seem to fall under the Cognizance of our
Sight, yet do they not as Electrical immediately Affect
any of our senses, as do the bodies, whether minute
or greater, that we See, Feel, Taste, &c. But,
continues Carneades, because you may expect
I should, as the Chymists do, consider only the sensible
Ingredients of Mixt Bodies, let us now see, what Experience
will, even as to these, suggest to us.
It seems then questionable enough,
whether from Grapes variously order’d there
may not be drawn more distinct Substances by the help
of the Fire, then from most other mixt Bodies.
For the Grapes themselves being dryed into Raysins
and distill’d, will (besides Alcali,
Phlegm, and Earth) yield a considerable quantity of
an Empyreumatical Oyle, and a Spirit of a very different
nature from that of Wine. Also the unfermented
Juice of Grapes affords other distil’d Liquors
then Wine doth. The Juice of Grapes after fermentation
will yield a Spiritus Ardens; which if competently
rectifyed will all burn away without leaving any thing
remaining. The same fermented Juice degenerating
into Vinager, yields an acid and corroding Spirit.
The same Juice turn’d [Errata: tunned]
up, armes it self with Tartar; out of which may be
separated, as out of other Bodies, Phlegme, Spirit,
Oyle, Salt and Earth: not to mention what Substances
may be drawn from the Vine it self, probably differing
from those which are separated from Tartar, which
is a body by it self, that has few resemblers in the
World. And I will further consider that what force
soever you will allow this instance, to evince that
there are some Bodies that yield more Elements then
others, it can scarce be deny’d but that the
Major part of bodies that are divisible into Elements,
yield more then three. For, besides those which
the Chymists are pleased to name Hypostatical, most
bodies contain two others, Phlegme and Earth, which
concurring as well as the rest to the constitution
of Mixts, and being as generally, if not more, found
in their Analysis, I see no sufficient cause
why they should be excluded from the number of Elements.
Nor will it suffice to object, as the Paracelsians
are wont to do, that the Tria prima are the
most useful Elements, and the Earth and Water but
worthlesse and unactive; for Elements being call’d
so in relation to the constituting of mixt Bodies,
it should be upon the account of its Ingrediency,
not of its use, that any thing should be affirmed
or denyed to be an Element: and as for the pretended
uselessness of Earth and Water, it would be consider’d
that usefulnesse, or the want of it, denotes only
a Respect or Relation to us; and therefore the presence,
or absence of it, alters not the Intrinsick nature
of the thing. The hurtful Teeth of Vipers are
for ought I know useless to us, and yet are not to
be deny’d to be parts of their Bodies; and it
were hard to shew of what greater Use to Us, then
Phlegme and Earth, are those Undiscern’d Stars,
which our New Telescopes discover to Us, in
many Blanched places of the Sky; and yet we cannot
but acknowledge them Constituent and Considerably great
parts of the Universe. Besides that whether or
no the Phlegme and Earth be immediately Useful, but
necessary to constitute the Body whence they are separated;
and consequently, if the mixt Body be not Useless
to us, those constituent parts, without which it could
not have been That mixt Body, may be said not to be
Unuseful to Us: and though the Earth and Water
be not so conspicuously Operative (after separation)
as the other three more active Principles, yet in this
case it will not be amiss to remember the lucky Fable
of Menemius Aggrippa, of the dangerous Sedition
of the Hands and Legs, and other more busie parts
of the Body, against the seemingly unactive Stomack.
And to this case also we may not unfitly apply that
Reasoning of an Apostle, to another purpose; If
the Ear shall say, because I Am not the Eye, I am
not of the Body; Is it therefore not of the Body?
If the whole Body were Eye, where were the Hearing?
If the whole were for hearing, where the smelling?
In a word, since Earth and water appear, as clearly
and as generally as the other Principles upon the
resolution of Bodies, to be the Ingredients whereof
they are made up; and since they are useful, if not
immediately to us, or rather to Physitians, to the
Bodies they constitute, and so though in somewhat a
remoter way, are serviceable to us; to exclude them
out of the number of Elements, is not to imitate Nature.
But, pursues Carneades, though
I think it Evident, that Earth and Phlegme are to
be reckon’d among the Elements of most Animal
and Vegetable Bodies, yet ’tis not upon that
Account alone, that I think divers Bodies resoluble
into more Substances then three. For there are
two Experiments, that I have sometimes made to shew,
that at least some Mixts are divisible into more Distinct
Substances then five. The one of these Experiments,
though ’twill be more seasonable for me to mention
it fully anon, yet in the mean time, I shall tell you
thus much of it, That out of two Distill’d Liquors,
which pass for Elements of the Bodies whence they
are drawn, I can without Addition make a true Yellow
and Inflamable Sulphur, notwithstanding that the
two Liquors remain afterwards Distinct. Of the
other Experiment, which perhaps will not be altogether
unworthy your Notice, I must now give you this particular
Account. I had long observ’d, that by the
Destillation of divers Woods, both in Ordinary,
and some unusuall sorts of Vessels, the Copious Spirit
that came over, had besides a strong tast, to be met
with in the Empyreumaticall Spirits of many other
Bodies, an Acidity almost like that of Vinager:
Wherefore I suspected, that though the sowrish Liquor
Distill’d, for Instance, from Box-Wood, be lookt
upon by Chymists as barely the Spirit of it, and therefore
as one single Element or Principle; yet it does really
consist of two Differing Substances, and may be divisible
into them; and consequently, that such Woods and other
Mixts as abound with such a Vinager, may be said to
consist of one Element or Principle, more then the
Chymists as yet are Aware of; Wherefore bethinking
my self, how the separation of these two Spirits might
be made, I Quickly found, that there were several
wayes of Compassing it. But that of them which
I shall at present mention, was this, Having Destill’d
a Quantity of Box-Wood per se, and slowly rectify’d
the sowrish Spirit, the better to free it both from
Oyle and Phlegme, I cast into this Rectify’d
Liquor a convenient Quantity of Powder’d Coral,
expecting that the Acid part of the Liquor would Corrode
the Coral, and being associated with it would be so
retain’d by it, that the other part of the Liquor,
which was not of an acid Nature, nor fit to fasten
upon the Corals, would be permitted to ascend
alone. Nor was I deceiv’d in my Expectation;
For having gently abstracted the Liquor from the Coralls,
there came over a Spirit of a Strong smell, and of
a tast very piercing, but without any sourness; and
which was in diverse qualities manifestly different,
not only from a Spirit of Vinager, but from some Spirit
of the same Wood, that I purposely kept by me without
depriving it of its acid Ingredient. And to satisfy
you, that these two Substances were of a very differing
Nature, I might informe you of several Tryals
that I made, but must not name some of them, because
I cannot do so without making some unseasonable discoveries.
Yet this I shall tell you at present, that the sowre
Spirit of Box, not only would, as I just now
related, dissolve Corals, which the other would
not fasten on, but being pour’d upon Salt of
Tartar would immediately boile and hiss, whereas the
other would lye quietly upon it. The acid Spirit
pour’d upon Minium made a Sugar of Lead,
which I did not find the other to do; some drops of
this penetrant spirit being mingl’d with some
drops of the blew Syrup of Violets seem’d rather
to dilute then otherwise alter the colour; whereas
the Acid Spirit turn’d the syrup of a reddish
colour, and would probably have made it of as pure
a red as Acid Salts are wont to do, had not its operation
been hindered by the mixture of the other Spirit.
A few drops of the compound Spirit being Shaken into
a pretty quantity of the infusion of Lignum Nephriticum,
presently destroyed all the blewish colour, whereas
the other Spirit would not take it away. To all
which it might be added, that having for tryals sake
pour’d fair water upon the Corals that
remained in the bottom of the glass wherein I had
rectifyed the double spirit (if I may so call it) that
was first drawn from the Box, I found according to
my expectation that the Acid Spirit had really dissolved
the Corals, and had coagulated with them.
For by the affusion of fair Water, I Obtain’d
a Solution, which (to note that singularity upon the
bye) was red, whence the Water being evaporated, there
remained a soluble Substance much like the Ordinary
Salt of Coral, as Chymists are pleas’d to call
that Magistery of Corals, which they make by
dissolving them in common spirit of Vinager, and abstracting
the Menstruum ad Siccitatem. I know not
whether I should subjoine, on this occasion, that
the simple spirit of Box, if Chymists will have it
therefore Saline because it has a strong tast, will
furnish us with a new kind of Saline Bodies, differing
from those hitherto taken notice of. For whereas
of the three chief sorts of Salts, the Acid, the Alcalizate,
and the Sulphureous, there is none that seems to be
friends with both the other two, as I may, e’re
it be long, have occasion to shew; I did not find
but that the simple spirit of Box did agree very well
(at least as farr as I had occasion to try it) both
with the Acid and the other Salts. For though
it would lye very quiet with salt of Tartar, Spirit
of Urine, or other bodies, whose Salts were either
of an Alcalizate or fugitive Nature; yet did not the
mingling of Oyle of Vitriol it self produce any hissing
or Effervescence, which you know is wont to ensue
upon the Affusion of that highly Acid Liquor upon
either of the Bodies newly mentioned.
I think my self, sayes Eleutherius,
beholden to you, for this Experiment; not only because
I forsee you will make it helpful to you in the Enquiry
you are now upon, but because it teaches us a Method,
whereby we may prepare a numerous sort of new spirits,
which though more simple then any that are thought
Elementary, are manifestly endow’d with peculiar
and powerfull qualities, some of which may probably
be of considerable use in Physick, as well alone, as
associated with other things; as one may hopefully
guess by the redness of that Solution your sour Spirit
made of Corals, and by some other circumstances
of your Narrative. And suppose (pursues Eleutherius)
that you are not so confin’d, for the separation
of the Acid parts of these compound Spirits from the
other, to employ Corals; but that you may as
well make use of any Alcalizate Salt, or of Pearls,
or Crabs eyes, or any other Body, upon which common
Spirit of Vinager will easily work, and, to speak
in an Helmontian Phrase, Exantlate it self.
I have not yet tryed, sayes Carneades,
of what use the mention’d liquors may be in
Physick, either as Medicines or as Menstruums:
But I could mention now (and may another time) divers
of the tryals that I made to satisfy my self of the
difference of these two Liquors. But that, as
I allow your thinking what you newly told me about
Corals, I presume you will allow me, from what
I have said already, to deduce this Corollary; That
there are divers compound bodies, which may be resolv’d
into four such differing Substances, as may as well
merit the name of Principles, as those to which the
Chymists freely give it. For since they scruple
not to reckon that which I call the compound Spirit
of Box, for the spirit, or as others would have it,
the Mercury of that Wood, I see not, why the Acid
liquor, and the other, should not each of them, especially
that last named, be lookt upon as more worthy to be
called an Elementary Principle; since it must needs
be of a more simple nature then the Liquor, which
was found to be divisible into that, and the Acid
Spirit. And this further use (continues Carneades)
may be made of our experiment to my present purpose,
that it may give us a rise to suspect, that since
a Liquor reputed by the Chymists to be, without dispute,
Homogeneous, is by so slight a way divisible into
two distinct and more simple Ingredients, some more
skilful or happier Experimenter then I may find a way
either further to divide one of these Spirits, or
to resolve some or other, if not all, of those other
Ingredients of mixt Bodies, that have hitherto pass’d
among Chymists for their Elements or Principles.