'^^j^isj^^jfvis^Ksm^jmpjm^mm^'v^^
<3;c
ccc
i of it,
:ck not that altogether in
iookes , but rather beg it
t the Hands of God. for
is properly his Gift,'and
ever man attain'd to iCy
'ithout a clear and fenjib^
finance ftom above; N^-
^ not mf Advice in this,
lough it may feem ridicu^
1 ' lous
To the Reader.
louitothoCt that are oxtr
wife , and have the Mercie^
of God irr dsrifion. Many
men live in this World
without God; they have
no Vtfits from him ^ and
therefore laugh at thofe
that feek him , but much
more at thofe that have
found him. St faul glo-
ried in his (^Velations^ but
he that will do fo now 3^
fliall be numbered among/]:'
^nters and- Jnahaptijisj
But let not thcfe things'
divert thee ^ if thou fer^
vefl God a thou fervcft
a good Mafter, and he
will not keep back thy
Wages, Farewell in
Chrffi Jefus.
E, T.
Euphrates
T^i :^
:i.M^^
ffffff:fffff
Euphrates SCd
^-^"Vm T is written in
^^ ?^>y| thofc livhg 0-
racles^ which we
*^&i R.^ ^^^^^ received ,
mi^^m \"d believe, that ^^^^^^^^
there IS an Angel v,^^
f the Waters : and this feems
be fpoken in a general fenfe,
:s if the Jngel there mentio-
led , had been Prefident of all
hat Element. Elfewhere we ^
ind an Angel limited to a more
^articular Charge ^ as that
vhich defcended at a certain
eafon, zndftirred the Waters ^'^^ ^'^*
1 the Pool ot Bethejda. Nor is ^* ^'
B it
i- Euphrates ^ or the
it indecd^ny thmg ftrangethat
AngcUsihouldvifit and move
that Elcmcnt,on which the Sp-
rit oiGoi did move in the be-
Gen, c.i. ginning. IcitenotthcfepIaceSj
^* *• as ifthey were pertinent to my
purpofe y or made altogether
for y. , though I know they
make nothing againft it-, but I
cite them as Generals ^ to flicw
that God is converjant with Mat-
ter^ though he be not tycd to it ^
and this is all my Dcfign. Not-
• withftanding I know , that
lib.deAn. Y^xmct A'vicen ^ hathnumbred
^. 5. dL^t, Sf, ^ohn the Evangetiji a-
mongft-the Chjmifis : And cer-
ta-inly, if fomc Parages in the
Revelation were urged , and
that no farther than their own
fcnk would carry them , it
would be fcmwhat difficult to
refell hrs opinion. Surely I am
one that tbinkes very honou-
rably
Waters &fthe Eafi. j
rably of Nature^ and if I avoid
(iichBiffutes d.sx.hck ^ it is be-
caufe I would not offend weak
Vonfciences, For there are a
people, who though they dare
lot think the Majefiy of God
wasdimimjhed, in that he w^^i?
:he Worlds yet they dare think,
he Majejiy of his Word is much
jilijied^ if it be applied to what
le hath made. An Ofinion tru-
y, that carries in it a moft dark-
er ous Blafphemy 5 nanncly that
rods Word and Gods Work
lould be fuch difiPerent things,
hat the OM muft needs difgrace
'le other, I muft confefle I am
luch to feek , what Scripture
lall be applied to , and whom
was written for, if not for us, ,
"id for our infiruElion 5 for if v. 17,
^ej that are whole ( as our Sa-
bur teftifies ) have no need of
fhifitian^ then did God caufe
B 2 fcripturc
Euphrates, erthe
fc ripture to be written, neithc)
for himfelf^ nor for his Angels
but it was wrirten for thoft
Creatwes^viho having lo/} ihch
pfi Ejlate^ were fince fallcr
into Corruftton^ Now then ij
Icr'pture was written for us , ii
concerns us much to know
what uje we (hall make of />,anc
this we may gather from the
different conditions ok Manhc-
fore and after his Fall. Before'
bis fdll ^ Man was z Glorious
Creature^ having received from'
Co& Immortdlity ^ and ferfeH^
Knowledge ^ but in and after hi;'
Fall, he exchanged immortality
for death ^ and knowledge for ig-
norance. Now as to our redemf-
tion from this FalL we may not
fin refped oi Death) expc(3
it in this world , God having
decreed^ that all men jhoMcnct
die : But for our Ignorance^ we
may
Waters of the Baft.
■Qiy and ought to put it off in
his life, forafmuch as without
:he Knowledge of God , no man
:an be faved 5 for, it is both the
Caufe and the Earneft of our
future immortality. It remains
:hen that our /g';?^r/t;;r^muft be
put off in part, even in this life ,
before we can put oiFour mor-
talityt, and certainly to this end
was Serif ture written , namely
chat by-it we might attain to the
Knowledge of God^ and return
to him from whom we were
fallen. And here let no man be
angry with me , if I aske how
Serif ture teaeheth us to know
God? Doth it onely tell us there
is a God, and leave the reft to
our difcretion ^ Doth it (that
I may fpeak my mind ) teach
us to know God by his Works ,
or without his Works? If by his
Works ^ then by Natur all things^
B 3 for
6 Euphrates ^r^^^
for they are his Works^zvA none
other 3 if without his Works ^ I
defire to know what manner of
teaching that is 5 for I cannot
yet find it. If they fay k is by
Iftjfiration^ I fay too that God
can teach us fo, \mScrifture
cannot 5 for certainly Serif ture
never inffired any man, though
it came it fdf by inffiration.
But if it be replied , that in
Scripture \vt have the teftimo-
nies of men inffired^ I fay this
Anfwer is bcfides my Quefli-
on •, for I fpeak not here of the
hare ^y^uthoritj or I'efiimony
of Scripture^ but I fpeak of that
Bo^frine^ by which it proves
whatittcftifics , for with fuch
Docirin the Scripture abounds.
Sure I am 3 that Mofes proves
G^od by his Creation , and God
proves himfclf to Mofes by
TrmfmHtatm of hi$ Rod into
a
waters of the EafiJ 7
a Serpent, and of the fciipfetiriri^ : '
to a Rod. And to the Egypti^'
ans he gives more terrible Z)^-
manftraMns of his P-fi^er and-
SoveraigntjVLX Nature ^^ftav-^
ning their Rivers into Btood ^
and the Duft of their Landihto
Lice, by 4 Murrain of Beaftsi
by Blains and Boiles , and the
death of their Firft born. By
the feveral plagues of Froggs,
Locufts, Hail, Fire , Thunder ,
and Darknefs ; all which were
but great natural n>orks> by
which he proved his God-
head y as himfelf hath faid.
j^ndthe Egyptians fhall kr^or^
that I amthe LordjvbenI firttch ^^f^-^'^'
fortn my hand ufon ^t^gypt.
When he reveals himfelf to
Cyrus, he doih it not by a Ample
affirmation ^1^4^*^ is G^d^. but
he proves himfelf tobe fudi by
the W0ytd that he hath made.
B 4 /
Euphrates , cr the
I dm the Lord ( faith he ) and
there is none eljet^ there is no God
hejidesme-j I girded thee^though
thou hafi not known me, 1 formed
the Light^ and create Darknefs^
Jmakefeace^and create EvilL
J the Lord do all thefe things,
ih Ave made the Earth y and cre-
ated Man upon it, I^ even my
hands have ftrctched out the
Heavens y and all their Hojl have-
I commanded. Let any man read
thofcMajeftxk, and Philofo-
phicall Expojlulations between
God and ^ol^^ or in a word , let
him read over both Teftaraents
and he ihall find , if he reads
attentively^ that Scripture, all
the way, makes ufe of Nature,
and hath indeed difcovered
fuch natural Myfieries as are not
to be found in any of the Phi-
lofophers 5 and this fliall appear
in the foUpwing Pifcourft. For
my
Waters of the Bafl. f
my own part, I fear not to fay,
that Nature is fo much the bu-
fines of Serif ture , that to mc^
the Spirit of Cod , in thofe fa-
cred Oracles, fee ms not onely
to mind the Refiitutiou of Man
in f articular y but even the Re-
demftion of Nature in generaH*^
We muft not therefore confine
this Reftittitien to our own Sfe-
ciesy unleft we cgn confine cor-
ruption to,' it withaU 9 .-which
doubtlefs w^e can not do ; for it
is evident that Cp^ri^tion hath
not onely -S'^i^sV upon Man^
but on theJfT^r/^alfo for man's
fake. If it be true then thatf.T;*. ^
Ma» hath a Saviour^, it is alfo
as true:, that the whc>lc "Creati-
on hath the fame.-, Godifeaving
reconciled all things johimfclf
in Chrift Jefus. And if it be
true, that we look for th^ Re-
iemftUrr of our ^?//w,_and a
New
i^ Euphrates ^r the
Mm man : It is equally true
that we look for a Nivs^ Hex
xen^ and a Nei» Earth, where I
in dwelleth Rightcoufnefs .• foi
it is not Man alone, that is tc
be Kem^d at the general Re-
ft aur at im.^ but even the w$rU,
as v/dl^ iMdn, ask is writ-
nevei. 2 1 . ten : Beh&ld ! I make aU things
**^' New. I fpcak not this to dif-j
parage man, or to match any^
other G^:€ature with him : for
I know he is frincifoll 'm the
Reftanrathnj as he was in the
Fall^ the Corrupien that fuc-
., ^ceeded in the Elements, being
' butaChainj that this pHfoner
drags afiter him: but I fpeak
this to flle#5 that God -minds
the Re^ifutisnoi Ndfnre in ge-
neral, and not of Man ahne^
who though he be the rtobJeft
parr, yet certainly is but i fmall
part of Nature, fe^ ft^ipfure
then
^then mifapplied^ muclikfsvi^
^iificd, when it is applied to the
>bjeeprs for m
thefT twe^' confift the Advan-
tagcs of life and death. To be
ihort.* Experiences and Reafen
grounded thereupon , have
taught me, that Fhilofophie and
Divvnty are but one, and the
fame fcietice .* but Man hath
dealt With knowledge , as he
doth with Rivers , and Wells^
which being drawn into feve-
rall pipes arc made to run feve-
rall wayes , and by this Acci-
dent eome at laft to have feve-
rall naitre's: We fee that God
,^ in his \v6rk, hath united ffirit
' ^ni matter^ vifiblesixrt6. invi*
fihles^ ahfd out of tht union of
fftritHdly and nainralljuh fian-
ces
Waters ef the JEaJ}. ij
es rifetha perfed Compeurj/,^
vhofcvery Nature, zndBewg^
onfifts in that umo^Mow then
it poflible to demonftratc the
Mature of that Compound by a
ividcd Theory of Spirit by it
:lf, and matter by it felf ^ for - *
" the nature of a Compound
onfifts in the Compoficion of
firit and matter ythcn muft not
re feek that Nature in their fe-
^ration^ but in their mixture
id Temperature^ and in their
lutuall w/^^ K^6lions\ and
4///^;;^. Befides* who hath e-
:r feen a fpirit without matter,
r matter without fpirit, that he
tould be able to give us a true
heory oHoth principles in their
^plicitie 't Certainly, no man
zing. It is juft fo m Divimjy
)V if Ity evafion we confine
ivinity to God in the ab-
raftj who ( fay I ) hath ever
known
Euphrates or the
known him io^ Or, who hath
received iuch a Theologie from
him, and hach not all this while
delivered it unto us -f Verily,
if we confider God in the ab-
ftracl, and as he is in himfelfji
we can fay nothing of him fo
fitruelj 5 but we may fay fome-
thing Negatively^ as Dionyfius
hath done, that is to fay, wc
may aflfirme, what he is not,
but we cannot affirme, what
he is. But if by Divinity, we
underftand the Doctrine of Sal-
vation , as it is laid down in
Scripture , then verily it is a
Mixt Do£irine^ involving both
God and Nature. And here I
doubt nottoaffirme. That the
Myfierie of Salvation can never
be fully underftood without
Fhilojofhie , not in its juft la-
titude, as it is an Application o^
il&d to Nature ^znd a Cor^verfion
of
1
5 'Nature to Gody in which tm^
H 'o(Uf$s and their Mcunes , all
carituall and nacurall know-
, dgc is comprehended.
Tofpeakthcn of God with*
\t Nature > is more than wc
xi do, for wc have not known
m fo: and to fpeak of Nature
ithout Cody is more than wc
ay do, for we (hould rob God
.^his glorie, and attribute thofe
ffcfts to Nature, which be-
ng properly to God, and to
;c fpirit of God, which works
nature. We (hall therefore"
e a mean form of fpeech, be-
ireenthefe extremes, and this
>rm the Scriptures have
lught us, for the Prophets and
poftlcs, have ufcd no other^
et not any man therefore be
fended , if in this Difcourfc
e fhall ufe Scripture to prove
hilofofhie^ and Fhilofifhie to
C prove
'i8 Euphrates ^ arthe
^rovc Divinity , for of a trliti
om k^ervledgc isfuch, thatou
Divinity is not without Natun
aor oqr Philofophie withou
(7^. Notwithftanding, I dar
not thipk but mod men will re
pine at this courfc 3 though '
cannot think , wherefore the]
fliouldjforwhenl joyne Scrip
iure' and Phihjephie^ I do bui
joync C7(^^and Nature^ an unii
on certainly approved of b]|
God, though it be condemnec
ofmen. But ihls perverfeigno
rance^ how bold foevcr it be
I (hall not quarrell with , foi
befidcs Scripture, I have othcj
grounds, that have broughi
me very fairely , and fobcrlji
to this Difiourfe.
I have fojourn'd now foi
fome years, in this great Fa-
brick, which the fortunate caU
their Wfirld : and certainly 1
havcl
Waters iftheEaft. if
ve fpent my time like a Tra-
'jler, not to purchafe it, but
obferve it. There is fcarcc —
y thing in it, but hath given -
an occafion of fomc -
oughts ; but that which took
: up much, and pm^ was the
ntinuull action of fire upon wa* -
*. This Speculation ( I know
)t how J furpris'a my firft
uth, long before I (aw the
niverfity, and certainly Na-
Y, whole pupill I was, had
en then awakcn'd many No-
ns in me, which I met with
:erwards,in thcPlatonick Phi-
"ophie. I will not forbear to
ire, how I had then fanfied
:ertain pra^jcc on water, out
which,evenin thofe childilh
ycs^ I expeded wonders : but
rtainly neither gold, norfii-
r, for I did not fo much as
nk of them, nor ofanyfuch
C 2 CO-
20 Euphrates, irfhe
covetous artifice. ThisCortfide
ration of my felf^whcnl was
Child, hath made me fince ej
amine Children, namely, wh
thoughts they had of thefe El
mcnts^ we fee ab mt us, and
found thus much by them, th
Nature in her limplicity ,
much motf wife , than fon
men are with their acquire
part?, and Sofhiftriex, of a trut
I thought my fclf bound \
prove all things, that I migl
attain to my lawfull dcfires, bi
leaft you think , I have on!
convers'd with Children T (ha
confefs, I have conversed wit
children 2j\^
can do. ^ But that we may
Jome Order ^ and as f aras Cd^fc
ence W\\\ permit , cxprelTc wh
they figniiic : We do firft faj
That God is the principal ar
ic!kAi^hor of all thihgsM^o 1
'■'^^' '. 1
■^
WMers of the Eafi, 23.
is W^rd and Spirit,b2X\i formed
nd manife^edihoic things wc
f 3 and even thofc things
hich at prefcnt we .'cannot fee.
is for the matter whereof hc^
iww^^^cm^bclng zjuijtanccr
fdexj^eni^ot onely to /^/^ but
l^WorUit jelf^ moft men
lay think tlie Knowledge of it
mpoflible •, for how fhall wc
[now a thing that was fo long
cfore u$» and which is not now
xtant with us, nor ever was (in
^eir opinion ) fince the Creati-
w^ To this objeciian , which
t firft fight may fecm invinci-
le, we (hall return aii , Anfrver
lall break it*. For we will (hew
ow 5 and bj vphat means , wc
^ame to know^ this Matter , and
iipt onely to know it , but after -
png laboui;ito/^^ it^handle ity^-^
^ndtaje it. It is tvidfnc c-: -
loughy'that every IndividijalJL.
^ . ./ (iuppofc
J4 Eupht2Ltc% fCrthe
(fuppofc Man himfclf ) i$ madcjl
6f a Seed J and this feed when!
the Body is perfcfted , appears
no more , for it is altered and
transformed to a 5tf*^v/^^ where meeting with the coldL
V>^ A?^aire , it fubfifts and congeals toL,
^ JL/f^^'^^'^^' ^^^^ congelation is j/j,
Uor not ftiddah, but requires fonnic ^jjj
j57f4fl fi^ff^, for if you. find itj'
whiles it isfre(h, it is an excee-
ding fttbtillmojfliire ^ but^i«
finous, (ox it will fpin mtoj;
firings as ifmall as any hair, and
had it paft up to the Branches ,
it had. b?exi formed, in time, to
zPhntmot Cherry. This hap-
pens to it by cold 5 and above T,
groundybut in the Bo wells oflj
the Earth it is cangealed by a gi
fftlfhuriotts heat into Metalls^ j,
and if the place of its congelati- ^
0n be fure , then into a bright p
(JHetall 5 for this Sperme is im-
pregnated with lighty and is full
of the Star-fre , from whence
allMetalls have their Luftre.
The fame might be faid of
F carles and Freci^s Stones ,
this
Waters of the £4/. t^
his ftarrie feed being the M0^
her cf them aU^ for when it is
Miner allifedhy it fclf, and with-
out any f esculent mixture , then
^omit igniculos fuvs^ it flieds
;nd (hoots its -F/r^/ 5 and hath
o much of Heaven^ that if wc
Jid not know the Conffiracj ^
vc (hould wonder how it could
ove the Earth^ Let us now in
few words 5 re fume what wc
iavefaid5'and the rather, bc-
aufe we would explain our
vlahod, for we intend to fol-
ow Rajmond Lullie , who in
he Fifth Chapter of his Tefta-
nent hath laid down a certain
igure^ which fully anfwers to
hofe words we have formerly
itcd out of Rh^f^ Ceftrenfis. c/^t c^ ^'^
' We have already men tion'd ^
wo Principles , God and iV4-
ure^ or Cod and the created
Vorld : For that third Princifli
or
5P Euphrates or the •
or Ci^^i^s that was pr^eexifie^^t
to the Worlds we fliall Ipcak
of no more , but ia iieti ot' it
we fhall have reciDurfe to the
fecondarj Sfermc or Chaes that
now is r and comes out of the
*vifible World '^ for we will
ground our Difcourfe upon no-
thing but what is vifiblc , and
in the Front of It we place the
Divine Majejlie^ who is the fole
Centrall EterriAll Princifle and
Architect of all*
$1 Euphrates ^r /^^
This Figure is RAjmondLui
lies^ and in the Center of ic
you fee the/r/ Hjle or Matte
whereof the World was madt
In this Hjle (faith Raymond) z\
the Elements and all natura,
Principles , afwcll Means a
Extreams , were mingled po
tenrially In forma confufa A
qua •, and this Primitive fpef
matic Ocean filled all that fpacj
which we now attribute to tij
K^ir^ for ( (aith he ) Attingf,
bat upjue ad circdum LunArem
Out of this centrali My lei wit
which we'have now done ) di
rife all thofc Principles an
( Bodies , which you find wril
I ten In^t Circumference of th
i, Figure, ^ndi here begiruis ou
' Thilofofhie,
In the firft place over th
Hjle^ you fee the Elements, o
the Vifiblc created World
who!
Waters efthe lajt. .j2
/fiofG parts are commonly cal- ^^
:d. Elements , namely Earth, /
^Ater 5 Air and Heavers 5 for
lere is no other Fire but that ••
^«^ fatuus 5 which AriftotU
indled under the Moon. From
lie Elements on the right hand,
y raref Action and refolution of
leir fubjlance you fee deri-
rd another Principle , namely
jc Vapours of the Elements or
le Clouds i in which Vapours t^/'^'* ■
le inferiour and Juperiour Nat ^j^i^uH^'
r^j meet and are there marjri- >yi-^^i^h
L and out of their mixture ie*J^;£^!i:!:l^
Its th2Xlecondai^^
^AoTpBUJophfCAli y which w?
oTfor. Nextto uie Clouds ^ , .
Vapours of the Elements ^^^^^^
^u will find in the Figure a "IL^il- ^
rW Principle^ n3:rtic\y 3. deAr-'^ofhf^p'
^/^r, which proceeds immedir ^^^.'^^'t,
i:ly from the Clouds: £M'/7^ V'%r
Re% ( faith Z»iZ/e ; Argents '^^^^\
err Q<'^o^^c^U^^^,]s Gold Philofophicall , th^
Jfa^ ',- SulfhuryKhc Edrt^h^^^ and thf
U/ /la^^ Ude 5 as the Vtjcueus VFater i ^
L, . ^ -U^ j},g ^^^^^^'^ 3nd the Femali^
- /^^^g«^The reft of the Principle?
pfk i^^' ^ w^ich are ranged in the Figure f
k^ '^^'^^arc arttfcidll Princifles , an) :^
'Uuuu^^y (C^aiinot be known or manifefto ^
fe*^A^^fi<^ without y#r^5 excepting th<*'
|,^.j.^/u;:a>^ feventh and laft Principle^'
^^/??^e Miwbich is either G^U or Silver "^^
\^ •^/^ for thefe are perfed Metalls ^'
^r ^ and Fermertts that fpccifie tb"^^
'^"^"^^medidnc. which of it felf is«'^!
Wdters$fmEap. 351
4
Heart ot the Worlds namely ir
: the Barih ( as he did in th( i .
heart of every other Creature j
O a Fire lif e J which_P4r4££//^.
dlls thc^ Anh^us ^ andjjnjdi
von^ the C entrall Sunn. Thi!
■^Tire , leaft it fliould confumc
jits own ^^^/ the Earth, hzh^t\\
ovcrc^'ft with j f^/Viir» oiliey jdt- '
( \ ^Wat_e f , which we call tjic .
y^ a»(f^ijSeai For Searvater( as we have ,'
"\^ tticd ) not to (peak of its Sah^ .
I is full of a ftdfhureous volatili
fatnef^ which doth not quench
fire like the conoinion water, but ^'
feeds it. The like Providence
we fee in the bodies oiAnimalsy
whofe
Waters of tht Eaft. 57
;hofe heat or life is tempered
nth a falphureouSi falr.Jh mci-
«r^,naraclY with^/W,and the ^
lood wjth the breathy as tne Sea
with Wirid and yiire. Over ^
lis K^rchaus^ or centrall fre^ --^
Jod hath placed his Heaven , ^
le 5«;? and Starrs ^ as he hath
laccd the Head and the E)es o-^^^^-*^
cr the //e4r^ .• For between -'
f4^and the ^(?r/^there is no
tiall accord 5 and he that
nows not the one ^ can never
now the other. We may ob-
:rvc alfoj that the mnd pafTeth
tween the inferiour and jufe-
'our fires ^xhdX is between the
ntr all and ca^lejiiall Sun*, and
Man the Breath hath all its -
xrty and motion between the
^eart and the Ejes , that is be-
^^ecn the fire and the light that
in us. We fee moreover in
'an and the JVorld^ a moft even
D 3 cor-
5$ Euphrates er the
CQtrc fpondency of effeSis 5 foi^
__ I as the Blo(^^ even fo the ^e^^
I hatha conftant Fulfe or y^^i/^-
! tion 5 both fpirits ftirring and
working alike in their Bodies, f
Nor ought we to negUiS ano-^
thcr Conftderation % That the
Light of the World is in the fu- J^
pc) tour parts of it , namely Ivt
the 5/#;? and Starrs: But the orif "
final firc^ from whence thcff^
parks fly upwafds^appears nd:^^
-but lives imprijojied in th( ^'^
"Marth, even fo certainly, all th^"-
brightnefs of CUa^ is in hP^\
JFace,(ot there he (beds his %y5 ""J
^t the £yes , but the firft fiurg "'^*
of it 5 namely thatjfre which i '^"
at the Heart , is no more fcei ^^
than that which is in the Earth ^°i
Onely this we may fay , thii!f^^'
boththcfe imfrijoned fires at "^'^
manifefted to 72e4^;« by ih'^S
fame efeifi 5 namely by th'^N
vulj
WdUrs $fthe Baft. |^
ulfe , that the one caufctb m
he ^/W, and the other in the
ea • to which may be added
izttranffiration or e^uafonr^^
ion of Humours^ which both
iefc fpirits produce alike in
heirfcverall Bodies. And that
re may further prove that thefe
rroes of i^nh^us and Sol
entralis are noi vam words,
t us but confidcr what a ftrong
leat \% required to x\{\%[Mima*
on of Vapours and ExhaUti^
)is 5 for it is not fimplc ^ater \
lac is driven upwards^ but a-
undanceof^y^/^and Oile y to*
ether with the water. If any
lan thinks the Suncdin dothisj
muft tell him heknowes not
^e operations of the Sun , nor
)r what ufe it fervcs in Nature*
he Sun ferves onely to dry up
je fuperfluous humidity ,whi€h
le Night leavs behind her on
D 4 the
•J
^if Euphrates , er the I
"^theoutfidc of things 5 for thil
irJi^es all Vegetables celd anc
flaccid •, hinders their DigeJUen
arid Maturity t,hut thx Sun with i
cleare heat, taking off that ex^
iraneous Moifture , forward]
their ancociiony and helps tc
ripen that which is raw. Thij
muft be done with a mod gentk
heat^not with fuch as (hall mak(
the Earth to (hioak and ex-
^ tra(5h Clouds from it , for thij
would not bririg things to s
maturity , but rather burn and
calcine them. We know, that
if we ftand long in the Sun ^ wc
fhall grow hintie ,and com-
mon fire will not burn in the
light of it 5 for the Sun , whicfi
isthe true Element of Fire , at-
trads it 5 fo that by degrees it
^ goes offand forfakes his FucU^
^ but if you convey the fire out of
the Suny'^QTi it will more
^y^cT'yf^^ vC^t/>»/^^ Itrongly
WdUrs of the Eafi. ^j
crongly app^ to the Fue/J, and
ni^e it fcif to It aric b'rn ic. Ic
; juft fo \T th the Earthy for
;hilcs xh^heat of the Sun is prc-
:nr, the hear of the Earth is
oore bufie with the Sun rf an
/ith its own Body. For dL%i:>eridf'
k-^n;hath well written, !n fa--
\erfick Terrs. Radii r adits ju.^-
m?itur. In the F..ce of the Earth
be Beapis of both LtiminAries
neetj and there is fuch a Con-
piracy between Fire and Fire,
[hat the centra!! breaking forth
Qmcctthc cceie/liaU, fuffers a
iind of Extafie and dqth not
auch mind his own Body. Give
qe leave to fpeak thus , for
here is fuch an affinity bctweert ..^
hefe /ir^5 'that they ha'cfratlicr
pin with one another,than with
my third Nature i, butthut is it
vhich cannot be but in part^and
y way of influence ^ God ha-
ving
42 Euphrates or the
vtng confined the one to thj
Center and the othtr to the Cir \
cumference* I could demonij
i!iX2xcxii\^ SjmfAthiehy a motf
noble CUagnetifm , which i||
have fcen to my admiration.;
between the Sun and Jtveet oilt.
^^ or rather the fire xxn d fouL oi
Nitre •, and here I (ball tell yoi^
/ ^hanjie Earth is full of Nitre \
' \y> 1 tiay ,1 muil: affirm that fure eartl
r/^i^/U!^ is nothing ellc but Nitre, Yvho(c
^ Belly is full of IVind^ Air^ and
W^- f ftrc'^ and which d iffers no more
from Heaven, than the /?(?^foji
a Tree^ tfiat lodgeth in the dtrt^
doth horn the Branches of to
that grow in the :^un fhme^
'This attraction oi Fire by Fire^
is the true caufc why the heat of
the Earth is fo weak in Sum-
mer, and foftrong in Winter,
for in^ the VVmter when the
Sun is abfent , ihccentrall fire
keeps
WdUnoftheJEAjt, 4j
:p5 altogether within thc^^r^A
1 being irritate-
• , than they are in the fum-
^r, which could not be if the
^n were the caufe of thentr.
d tothis, that an oucward dry
iat ^ as that of the Sun is, fal-
ig immediatly on the earthy
lift needs hum the earth Se-
re it can make it fmoak-^ but
1 i/marJfire ^ that is mingled
ith the moifiure of the earth ^
innot burn^ be it never fo ir^-
nfe 5 for it is qualified with tlic
'rf^^r, and tempered to a moift
eat 5 and without doubt fuch a
Vemvfvtxy naturaUj refolve
3me pars of the earth ^^nd caufc
icm to exhale 5 as our own in-
i^ard heat[^ being moiftened
with
44 ^ Euphrates, i^A-/;^^
with the blood, makes us fwe,, ^1
without any violence. To re '
duce all this to a Corrollarie^ w '"
fay that in the Winter Godfeaif
the face of the Earth with Froj '^ '
^ jand Cold^ as a man would fqr '"
, fej:^. > and this to keep in th( ''*
'\congelative f^ermatic Humidi^^
, /-Uj, which otherwife might a''
l| ;^ m^P\ (cend with the more crude Va- ^^
r/*"^ S;^(?«rj that break out ^(?/^/^/sr/?v at 9
jiM^^ j that time.and filling^the $phm °^
^hf^ ^ i gf^hl^g ^ake in like fo ma- 1^'
I ^iM^^ngs,, for we n:iuft know, f'
that iV4/»re begins to /^^/^r^^J '^i
;/i«^^ the Earth about the end o( "^
^»///;w» ; and continues it all'^'
the ^/;^^^r, the ferie fukilljn. I'
/«^ of the Heavens being then ?
condenfed by the r^Wand 5»i?/- f^'
ftureoiiht Moon^ who isi^^r-'
^^;/^ ajl the Winter , and elc va- ^1'
ted above the Sun, This you '
Waters of the Eafi. 45
ay fee in Sf^ow , which falls
hard Froft, which being ta- ^
n up whiles ic js/rcihj, and -
gc ft ed in a BlindgUfs'in ajhef^ ~ ^
r twenty four houres , if then
)u open the glafs, whilft the
lution is warm, you (hall per^
ivcinthe ^r^d^^of the tvater
the odours inthc world, and
rtainly far more pleafant than
cyarc in the Flowers at Maj^
pok into the bottom of the
lafsandyou will find there^
fatt grey/lime^ not unlike to
illile Jodpe. 5 Separate the
legme from it by a foft diftil-
:ion in baheoy and put the re-
lence in a Boltfhead well
)pt, in a drie heat o( ajhes^
ep it then warm for an hour
two 5 and fuddainly the glafs
11 fly to pieces, for the mndy
i life or fpirit/is not well fet-
I in the Body. Here you
ly fee the firft Attempts of
46 hu^nntcsoythg
_ 1 Nature , but if you know ho
^\ to work upon Water, you flis
.. I Bnd gredter things than I ha^
V. 1 cold you.
The Magnejld then ("as Sit
^j divow hath. written ) is geni
rated in the Winter , and n|
without reafon^ for then tl
heat of the earth is ftrongel
and beft able to digcft the Nt
triment that comes down froj
-\ Heaven^ and coneoU it to a -zJ,
"S fcous fferme. But in the ^r/;?
and Summer feafom , when tj
^tt;? hath chaft offthe Frofi^zi^
the centraUzndi calefiiall Lum
naries have , by their mutua
mixture |and conflux of ^^/afzvi
rclaxated and dilated the Fon
of the earthy then there is a wa
made for the fperme to afcen
more freely , which fMimin^
Vi^^zxdsis attracted znd inter
hefted by the vegetable King
dm
waters of the Eajt 47
if,whofe imediat aliment it is.
To return then to thofe firft
»rds of Rh£(us Cefirenfisi, wc
, this Jperme -is made of the
pours or clouds y8c the vapours
made by elevation and de-
^ffionoi E element s y and not
ely of the elements^but fas he
th ) of elementats alfo , that
of Bodies Compounded of
elements , and this b^ars a
^ble fcnfc. For wc muft
ow that the earth is charged
th many f articular natures^
Miner alls of all forts and Ca-
verous Reliques •, for our Bo-
^ alfo lodge in the earthy /^
f^n the fpirit of life hath left
:m. All thefeas well as the
rtb it felfe, fuffcr a rarefacii-
I, and refolution oi fubfiancc ^
t inTo thek Vapours faith Raj*
mdLnlljy Omnia corpora elc
mtata refolvmtur ad intran*
I iurnl
4^ Euptiratcs or ths
dumnQvlim (^enerationem, T
puts me in mind of an Opini
I have read fomctimcs in
Cal>a/iJ}s t, namely that this k
or <5^^y we have attained tool
attraction and tranfmutation
putrment, rifeth not in the J
furreclion'^ but out of that fern
nail particle , which original
attr^a^ingxht nutriment^ did
^ercajlitfel/ethcxcmtb^ the
^ fliill (pring another new bod^
and this feminall f article ( Q
they ) lurketh fomcwhere in tl
bones , nor in that part whic
moulders in:oZ)«/. OfatrutI
we fee that bones arc very fei
manent and lading , and th
^ojefh was not ignorant of
when dying in artake not onely of the natun
f Earth and Water , but of .
ivcns -mother particular Mine^ \
^///fwhereof th? earth md rva^
tr ^sxd\fulL -
To make this nnore clear, the
/4^i?«ri properly fo called , rife
rom the Sea^ and from zWfrefh
ratsrs. . Thefe partake of- the
ibft'ance^nA. qualUties of fuch
Mjjtpc^ls as are iq [the rvater^
bme 0(f them being bituminous^
omo faltifh yiomt mercurially
nd all -of them moifi and'phleg-
'jafic: On the contrary, thoftTj
xHlTitiom that come from the = •
artk arc drie ^ for the earth W- ,
«orc hati- and miner all than th^ \ \j
vatcr.Thcikferitearthyfumei^} \ ]
acccifignvith the coldniafonrf ' '
E 2 of
52 liuphratcs, $rthe,
of the rvater.;, oftentimes" pto
duce moft terrible Tctripefts ^.
%f^\ fome of thefe beii;g jtitrous i"
fome arfemcall^ fome [ulfhure ^
OHs^ and all het •, and feme , hi '^
reafon of their copious julphur °
'inflamahle. Both thetc, ^I nieai ""
the ^4r/^^ exhalations^ land th( '°^
watery vapcursmcct intkat^vafl ''^'
circulatory of the ^/> ^ where''
^heir contrary Complexions o\^
-'"■ htat and cold^Kt mingled togc- '*^
.^therlike agent and patient-^ ot^^
I ^Sulphur and Mer curie •, And thd ^^
y particular Natures and^^^wi/^
;SiCf°^ ^ which they accqiiired from the
miner alls , are resolved by the
n^/>^5 and totally reduced, into
generall Principles, It is fttange
to confider what a powenwU
revolving faculty there i^/ in
wind ox atre 5 for windh no o-
thcr thing than me ftirr'd, land
that by/r^ , as wc fee in nran^
that
waters of the Eafi. 5j
■lat the n^.otion of the breath is
aufed by hcat^ afwell as that of '
'le blood^both proceeding from
le fame hot ^rmcifle of Life.
o certainly the life of the
wrld cauleth wind or a com-
lotion inthe^ir^, afwell as a
'ux in the Sea , for both thefe
re Seas^ and have their fluxes^
5 we lliall prove elfewherc -h
lore fully. Aire then , as wc -<<
ave faid , refolves all things , "^n^
.ndcfpeciallyrv/W, f5r it re-^^A^^^ .
;to^i aU /i/^j into jr^f^r 5 and^^. '^ -;
•tUs fotfitiofi be diflird,we fhal ■s«iv-;.\u-t>vH
!nd fome part of the fait redu- : ^ ■ :.^
ed inzo frefh water. As for the
ejidue ^i{ it be cxpofed to the
v>i, it will refelve again , and
ou may diftill it the fecond
me: In a word, if you repeat ^
hisPr^^e/i:,you will bring the
/hole ^^^^ of the fait into a ^tf-
itillfrejh water , nothing difle-
E 3 , ' ^ rent
54 Euphrates , or the
rcntfroni the common either ir
fi^ht or tafte.hnd here you mpf
i not think your /4/ns loft^for i!
I you know how to congeal the
' vPAter y you will find it again .
but fo alter diiovci what it was.
that you will wonder to >fce it
This praflice , if well under
flood, fufficiently declares the
7iature ofair-^ but he that know?
where to find congealed air y anc
a^'^4^u*^C2in(X\Qo\vt'\ihy heat to a vij-
^/^ ^J^!^Gus rvater^ he hath attained tc
^^^ /' fomthing that is excellent.
^it^Muchmorel could fay of thij
rvonderfuli and [firituall Ele-
7J7€nt^\vhok penetrating , rejol-
ving factdtie I have fometimes
contemplated in this following
and fimple expeiment. Com-
mon Qjfickfilver hath a'^miracu-
lous union of parts , and of all
compomds is the firongefi ex-
ccipungGoU'^ for if you diftiU
ii
j^C^u^
W4terj fi/theEaJl. 55^
by Retort a hundred times , it "
;ill be ' Quickfd'i/er ftiil not-
dthhanding all thofe reittera-
*d rarefactions oihxs body . But ^
you take a thoufand weight ""
fit and vafour them away but
nee in the of en air , it will nc- -
er come to Quickfilver again 5
or the Fumes will be lifted up --
) the tt^/W^where they will fuf- ^
V ^tonlldijfolution ^ and will v
ome down meer Rain-water. U'^'f^'''^''
'his is the very reafon why alfo ^^^^^^'^
le vapours of the Elements are - rj i/^
fted up to the middle Region Z4i^i
fthe^/r ^fprtherethen^/Wis ^ ■
\o9icold^ and hath moft libery^^ ^^
e^ an^d in n^o other place caiv^^ ^^W<^<
le ir Rejolution ^ which ^{ ature^ y
itcnd s,^ ht ferfeoied . This if ?
ndcrftood , is a moft noble Je- \
yet of Nature: nor was ^^^ ig-
orant of it , when complain-
ig of the decaycs of his own
E 4 body
5 6 Euphrates \ or the
bodj^ he delivered himfelf thusirf^
chap. 50. j-jjQf^ liftefl me up to the wind fi
thou caujejp me to ride ufon tt r
and diffohejl my jub fiance . %
Wc have hitherto (hewe^m
you ho^ Fire rarifies all thing? (f
and how wind and air refolvi f)
' them yet further than fre^ a'i'
we have exemflified in ^ickf
ft her. And this is it wc hav jinda determinate one. For true
it is, that the metcuriall diffoU
'^i^^/i^^-'^t^- J? in^'^'^ '^^^j and in
■ aiery things t^ and the fulfhu-
rious congealing virtue is in the
earthy that is to fay, in fome mi
« '^^^ nerall natures and fubjlances
PJC^4iiyr/ which
Wafers of the Bap, 5^
vhieh God hath hid in the '^ ^
arth. Take therefore n?^/^^r of^^''^'*/
:/>, which 'is a great di[jolvent^^ ^^^^
nd ferment it with earth , and ^^^^*r«
»n the contrary, earth with b?4- i^c^CPc
er 5 Or to fpcak nnore obfcurc- - ^ ^^«^
/, ferment Mercury with ^^^' zl^^^
hur 3 and Sulphur with Merca-p^ ^jf*
J. And know that this c^;?^^/f-*C^/? ^
/>^ faculty is much adjuvated
y heat'^ efpccially in fuch pla-
es where the /jp^rw cannot eX'
ale^ and where the ht at is tem'^
erate/j but if the place be ^^7^;^, L ^^
nd the heat excejjtve^ then iti-.
'iff pates. It remains now that'^
i^e fpeak fomething of the two
ajftve'. materiall Blements ,
amely oi Earth and Water t, for
ihefe are the bodies that fuffer ^
>y jfr^ > and whofe parts are
perpetually regenerated by a -
ircular rarefacfion^znd conden* v^
It
58 Euphrates ^rrA^
It is the advice of the Bro
thers of R» C. that thofc whc
would be Proficients in this Ar
fliould ftudy the elements anc
their oferatkn^ before they feel
after the Tinctures of Metalls. I
is to be wifhed indeed that mer
would do fojfor then we (houlc
not have fo many Brojlers^ anc
fo few Philojofhers, But here it
may be queltioned 5 who is he
that ftudies the elements^ for a-
ny fuch end as to ohferve anc! ^
imitate their Operations i For in n
the Univerfities , we ftudy thera if
onely toattainto a falfe book-i
Theerie , whereof no use can be |j
made but Qtucking^ Difputing^ 5(
and making a Noife. Verily [
the 1)0 Brine of the Schoolmen^ K
hzxh allaf d zi\d per verted even
that defire of Knowledge which
God planted in Man. For thei^
Traditions we receive there , ^
com-
JJjming from our Superiours ^ .
^rry with them the awe of the
utor, and this breeds in us an
)inion of their certainty 3 fo
a an Unwerfity-man , eannoc
all his life time , attain to fo
uch Reafon and Confidence^ as
look beyond his Led'on. I
ive often wonhred that any
her hirits can think Arijiotles
hilolophic ferfe^ , when it
infifts in /wrerr words without
ly further effects 3 for of a
uth, the faiftty and injuffid-
I'r; of ameer Notionall Know-
ige is fo^apparent,that no wife
an will aflert it. This is beft
lown to the Fhifitians , who
hen they have been initiated
this tvhirlygigg^ are forced at
ft to leave it , and to a(lume
'•fl? Principles f if they will be
ch as their Profeffion requires
ey fliould be. Arijiotle will
very
^0 Euphrates 3 ^r /^tf .
very gravely tell us. Mi defim Jj^
fhikjophm^ ibi incifit Medicm
But I admire what affiftance ^^
Phifitian can receive from thi \^
Fbilojopher, vfhok fcience tdl .^j
us, Scientia non eji particuUri ,j^
um: for without parUcuUrsi^^
Phifitian can do nothing. But ii ^
in good carneft, did not o/ri J
fiotle's Science ( if he had any
arifc from particulars, or did
defcend immediately from Uni
verjals? If from Uni'verfals ",
how came ^e to be acquainrc<^^
? Did he know tb l
VI
in
with them
Genus, before he knew the Spe
cies^ or the /pedes before the in
dividuals': I think not: He knev S
the individual firft, and having
obferved his nature and propri
etjy he applied that to the vvhol
Species 5 -or to fpeak jenfe, to al
individuals of that kind ; anc
this aplication made that know
ledg(
Waters of the Eafi. ^x
ig^general^vvhich at firft was
rtieuUr , as being deduced
Dm zparticuUr ohjeB, This is
iCjand Arifiotle will tell us fo,
DUgh he give himfclf the Lie 5
r elfe where he affirms , Nihil
• in intelUBft , qued non fuit
''.us in Jenfr, Which if it be
ie, then Scientia non e^farti-
Urium is falfe. But I have
; ncwithhimat prefcnt , and^
' : my own part I have learnt
J'lgago,' nor of Arijlotle but
' Roger Bacon , Quokl commu- Qt^^z*
\ \ fauci funt valor^s 5 nee fro- J>^
efcquerda, nifi propter parti- ff^^
f aria. And this is evident in"
I fra^ifes and profeffions that
" iduce^ny thing to the bene-
^' oitnan. For Nature her fclf
I h imprinted the Univerfall
tions and Conceptions in eve*
^^ soul^ whether learned or u»-^
^^ nd^io that we need not ftudy
Uni-
q
^z Euphutts cir tit
Unkjer falls , and this our Frik^
had ehfervedj for, faitfa he. Jl
communihus K^mmi cence]
tidnibus vnlgus. cpntwdAt cu
fafientiht^ ^ in parficularik i
ver$ 5 &.propijs err at ^ & drfca n
dati And for this very rcajo. Di
he condemns Arijl4)tle and G \
len^ QjiU in commtmihrn & uh \
'uerfalihus fe occufaverunt , ' 1
ferduBi funt ad feneciutem^ % i
tamco7iJHmentesin fe^o^ribfis k:
vulgatisy nee vias ad h^^c [cert i
magna ferceperu^i. Let not . u
do as thofe hut hens did^thc^j ni
in this very point, rfic gxcm it
part of the world' follows thei »
Let^s rather fipllm!^wljierc,i\f (
tf^re leads •, for iSbe: having u f
ffefi thefe U/fiverfa/U^ inoiifc
mMsyhBXb not done it in vai i
.bui/to theend we^ihould apf n
th^em to outward jevfibU part i
eplar^ , S< fo attain to a /r/^^^ e: ic
-Vv/il per
WdterscfthEafi. 6.p
rimentdU knowledge , which ^^
this life is our oncly crown ^
dpcrfe^ion. Ifamanfliouid
iinthclfare Theorie oi Hus^
»^rj^, and oncly read r/>^/7's "
crgkks^ never putting his
nd to the Plcw^ I fuppofe
S Theorie could not help him
his daily bread : And if wc
1: in the Notions and ndmes of
tngs , never touching the
'ngs themjelves^ we arc hke to
^duce no effects ^nor to cure any
^eafes , without which perfor-
inces Philofophie is ufejles ^znd
t to be numbrcd amongft our-
sceffaries 5 But how f alfe this
J God knows, and man alfo
i 'ly knowJt if he Jconfidcrs but
3 )fe two Obftrudions of Life^
ii knefs and poverty. But they
51 : not oncly effe^s that arc
f! nting to Arifiotles Fhilojofhj
t : even his Thurk is for the
If moft
^4 Euphrates or the
moft part/4//e, and where It »
true yxi'is fo flight and fuperf;'
ciall, that it doth not further i \
at all. He is none of our mxiti "'
dries bdeive it , but the ver ^
Mewora to all naturall tiijcovi |j
. r/Vj^andhehath for many Pi^
ges , not onely ebjiru5ied bi ^1
exftinguifhed the Truth. Muc
might be faid of this fellow an
his ignorance ^yj\(ic\\ is not moi
grfijsihzn ferverfe : I omit t
fpeak ot his ^^theifm, and tt
eminenc) of his /^^//V^ , whic
was not onely deftrudivc to ih
JFAme of the old Fhilofopher.
whofe Books tlus Scribli
burnt, but even to the happwe^
zndjfrogrefs of pofieritj^ whoi
he rob'd of thole more antien
more excellent and invaluabl
Monument f ^vT :
U have digrefi thus far to coi
r€2; sj
^ ; I fliall now refurae my D \i
fcmrfid^E^rth andWater^ m
thofe %e are f en fiBh fuh {target
not um^vtr^alls and ChymAra i
fuch C5 the Ferifateticis fane
when they couple Nature ai
Nothipg^
By £tfrf^ 5 I undcrfland n
this impure fa»culcttt hdy , x
tvhich we tread ^ but a mo
dtnflc f^tc tlcmcm 9 name
Ci
waters $f the Eafi. e^
:he naturall centr all fait Nitr^^
his [alt is fixed or permanent t?^^^ ^
n the Fire , and it is the fdfhur ^^ui^ ^
)f M^/^r^3 by which (he retains^ If /v^w;^
md congeales her Mer curie. ^-^"^^
vhenthefetwo meet,! mean the ^
>ure earth and the water , then
he earth thickens the rvater^znd,
mc the contrary the rvater fub^
Uiates the earthy and from thefc
3?/? there rifeth a third thing ^-
ot fo thick as earthy nor fo thin "^
5 jv^^er , but^fajncan i/i/^
^mflexien , anT^thS^w^cSled^
f^ rr/^r/'g^ whlchTsliofliii^ clfe
uta c&mfofition oLWi^iLMd^^^^^
ilt. For we muft know, that f^
lefe two are the prime materia, jj^
I s of nature , without which_-
tc can makc no fpermfotfeedi
)r is thaTail, for whciTthc
i^^is Riade , it will never grow
I a hodj , nor can it be refolved
ddifpos'd to a further Gene-
F 2 r4-
6i Euphrates or the
ration , unlets ttefe t\yoare^r^- ^5
fent & alfo^^/'^rtf^withit.This ^^
/ ^ we may (cc all.the y ear long by ■ ^
, a frequent and daily experience i ^^^
/For when it Rains ^ this Heaven- ^j
f ly rviiter meets with the Nitn
that is in the e^rth, and ^///i/i^^J
I it, and the Nttre with his jicri- ^^
' monie fliarpcns the water , f( ^^
; thatthis;^//'r^«^ rvater diffolveij^
i all the Seeds that are in th( ^^
Lground: And thus Solution i ^
C
the )t^7 oi Generation^ not one!
in our <^rt^ but in Nature alfo j
.which is the Art of God. W«-
necdnot fpeak much more
xhc earthy forthefcfew words
if rightly underftooc',ue fuffici
enr, and carry in then! a dce2i
[evje than an ordinary Readi ^^
M O wiirpercclvc. I know there i
^' another ^yW^^- Oriental Earth
which is all golden 'and //#//'*«
f (?^/^/, and yet is not C?p/^, but
baf
Waters efthelEafl. 69
n(c C9y7ternffible thtng^ that -
:ofts nothings for it may be had ^
W the taking up. This is th^' -
'arth of fty£thtofia ^ that hath aif -
olours ink: This is that Jn*
Irodamas of Democritus , the
;rccn Duenech and Sulphur that
lever touch'd thejfr^^vvhich if it
)e rejolvd, then it is our glafjie ^
Azoth^ or vitriol of f^enus Phi- e "^^ •^'^'
fJophicalL "
I hisjscnough as to the__g4^ l
^jXi2£lh£iiii^ , and now wc 1
/ill fpeak of the Water. This !
llemerJt is the Deferent ^ on Fe- \
iculumoi d\\ Influences what-;!
oever^ For what efflux foever '
' be that proceeds from the r
*rreftiall Center ^ the fame a- |-
!:cnds and is carried up in her h
') the Air • And on the contra- r
Mil that comes from H aven
:fcends in her to the earthy fpt
|i her Bellj the inferlot^r and y^- ^
V V 3
V
70- Euphrates , ^y fA^
I femur natures meet and mm
glc, n6r xanthey be manifefiu
j il^rithput a fingular artifice i
I Iftence it is that whatfoever i. !
fure in the earthy all that (he re \
^^eiues from the rvater: Am'
here I mean fuch fure Subfian ^
JV^jbu^/'^i? ^^ ^^^ ^^"^^^ "^y ^^^ Philofo I
7,^ / /^ phers I)ecomfofitaT\ For th(t<
* Eagle leaves her Egg^ that is t(
fay, the n?4f^r leaves her Limo
^ty in the earth, and this X/w^ <'
}?/;f is co^voffed into Nitre 5 anc
^ to other innumerous Mineralls
We have formerly told you o:
.. two Suns or JFires , the Car left i
,^,4VZand the Centrall. Now botf
^thefe difpence their efflttxions
or influences , and they meet ir
fhe vapour of the jv^^^r^ Fortht
\ Vul can or earthly Sun . makci
t the rr^^cr afirend to the ^:g^^
f oFthe 4/;^art?herc tEc^ ^4/gr i;
^ /^^fpread unde7 thcjf ^fcrim jres.
^A.
! -'
Waters of the Ma>fi. 71
(orjhe isegpofe j to tfto^^ df^ -
|ncLg/4;gg>jr7 and th is in a naked^
feSSZ^^^ ^^4>^ The 4/>
j>f a truth,isthat Temfle, whcrf
nferiotirs arc married to their
Hfcriours •, for to this place the
heavenly Light defcends, and
(5 united to the aereaS oleous
iflumidity , jvhich is hid in the
l^eSy of the ^4r^r-,This light be-
ing hotter than the rvater^mzkcs
ler turgid and vitally and />-
Ireafeth hex feminall vifcotis moi-
\hre 5 fo that (he is rgady to de-
po fe her fperme or limofitie^ -
I vere flic but j»;££/£^jQ^ her j>r'
i7r.^ ^4/gr ~Burthis cannot be'
mlds flie returns to her own
Country, Imeantothe Earth-^ ^
br here the CeU^ftrnm c^t MaLc '
efides. To this purpofe llie d^ ^^^'^^ , X/^^f hid in ^ ^ a^ueous Nit re, irc
^o<^/^^ wjiidLLV*^^ fuch mc
thing 5 For as foonas the fui- i
phurtous terreftriall heat begins i\
CO work 3 fofoonitavvakes andrk
^ ftirrcs
y
Wditrsoftht E4ji *r5
.lirres up the Heave f^lj light "^ "
whichbcing now fortified with^
hc MaJculine 7in£tu re^ orjure^
ire^oi i\\^_[ulfhuL'i begin$_to ,
yor k onitsoj vn^^^ , namely ^ ^^^ V/^
on the aqueous Nitre , and fepa-
rates from it, ih^ feculent extra^
ieous parts of the Sulphur , and
b remains by it felt a bright ^ v'/^^
3celeftiall«;ff^//m Wy. Ob- '''
fervethcn that th e t incture or, ^
\0ul^,.^^L.Jul2ht^j^
x^ene ratcd in i c s own i m^Mt^ ^
7odj[ butlTmuft forfake that /4 X^^i^-'
hdarkand earthy Carcafs ^ znd /ir^^A
put on a new furijiedhodj before ^^^/ i?"*^
lit can be united to the Itght of
Heaven. XH^niE^odj^nngs * j
out of the water , ' foFmcivater ,
brought it down from Heavenj
and certainly by tt^^^er and [pi-
rityjc muft be all Regenerated ^
which made fome learned Di-
vines affirm that the element of
water
Oca,
74 Euphntc%^0rttfe
f^Afer was not^ but oncly tha' i
oitht edrih. Nor can I hew If
omit the Dodrine of St. John w
who makes the WATEHjt
one of thofe three WitnelTaili
which ^teft God here on earthy id
And mach to this purpofe ind
that Speech of Sc. Pad: Houtn
That God m times fafi^ f^ffcrd i
all Nations to tpalke in their own \t
tva^esx, hut never thelejsiidxih hej k\
he left not himfelfe without An
JVITNE S ^ inafmuch as hti
gave them RAIN from Hea- n
ven &c. The Benedidlions oi
Bieffings that defcend from
God, are not a form of words^
like the Bcnedidions of Men 5
They are all jfirit and effence ,
and their Deferents are natu-
ral vifible Suhflances, and thefe
are the Bieffings which the Pa-
triarch wiftit to his Son:Godgive
tbu ^f the DEW $f BE A-
VEN
Waters of the Eajt. 75
"EN from A^OVE^andof
heF ATNES of the EARTH \ ■^-'
romBENEATH. He was f-
otignorant ofthofe BleflingS) -
7hich the God of nature had
iclofed in thofe natural things-^
Tid therefore he faith in the
ame place, Thefmellofmy Son -
r like the fmell of afield^ rohich
he Lord hath hlefjed. And St, i
'aul ii\^his Epiftle to the He-
retvs tells us , That the Earthy
^hich drinketh inthe Rain^ that
ometh oft upon it y receiveth .
leffingfrom God-^ but that which I
itarethThomes and Briars isre-
ecfed and nigh unto Curfing ,
vhofeendistobeburnt.
But to explain what this blcf- . ~
ing is , we remember we ha\^c
written clfe where 5 that Water yditlrm.
s of a double Complexion,! -^
Zircumftrentiall and Centrall. ^
in the Circumference ftie is
crude -
rj$ Euphrates 6r the
crude, volaiill and phlegmatic
I but in the Ceriter ftic is bcttc:
I concoftcd, vijc^HSy airedU^ am
^^ferie. T his Centrall part is fef
/and faltifh , outwardly whit
,and Lundr , but inwardly ra
and 5^/4r, nor can it be well ex
^/trafted without a lunar ox [oU^
/Magnet , whofc ipropcr alimen,
l^it island with which it hath i
[wonderful! Sjmpathie. Henc<
^ /that obfcure faying of the Phi-
lofophers , who when they de-
fcribe unto us their Mercuric ,
give it this Chara6ier as mofl
naturall , Q^odadhdret cor fori-
J>us . That it adheares to the bo-
dies or met alls. And as Vitha-
, got as faith in the 'Xurba , Suum
absque igne confequitur focium.
And therefore it is written in
the fame book , Magna efi fro-
finquitas inter Magnefiam &
I err urn. We fee indeed by a
vulgar
WdtersoftheEaJf. 77
jgat Experience , that if any K
dmary ftone ftands long but '-
common water 5 there fticks .
it a certain limojitie ^ which ^^
t water dcpofetb. But not- -^
ithfiindingjdijJiis^ andLalL||
iey^fa yy we muft needs afSrm, H
lat even their Mercune^^&d^l
ztcs not t o the vulva r metaHs
g^ JnTEi s^ word Mercur ie,^zsjnl ;
dSthcLSimcsithcy_ar^
tt1g _ambiguous and fub tillj!
Here is ind_ecd^a mjjierk_£Al,
icirsjn__^it/^ > ^ndjjcnotty^
ncTwlth which many learned
Men have been gravel'd 5 and
ow fince we have menrion'd
, we care not much if we fpeak
\berly of it.
There is nothing fo frequent,-
nd indeed nothing fo confide-^
able in their Books as Fire and
VAter 5 but the rciprocall and
onfufed nfi of both termcs ,
puzzles
7o EuphvMS or the
„ puzzles much, as when they te
us that their waur is their /n
Of xhis they have written I
. ftrangcly, that I have fomtirnc
Q^ been angry with them •, but z
mongft them all 5 I found on
* had a good will to fatisfie m(
This Author cojtifeffed he mij
carried two hundred feveraj
times , notwithftanding hi
knowledge of the true matter
and this becaufc he did no
know xhtfire or agent by whici
the matter is altered. Thefe mij
yfprtmes oi his o'wn moved hin
it fcetns, to a commiseration a
Pofleritj • but I muft needs af-
firm he hath taken his liberty^
and expreft his own n^indy^^
\:' - Jljiownj^. 0t4rjre{ faith he)
\y ^ ^^^^^^^ p ^0^^ -> cmtinna//^
it ^i^^afmrsmt nnleffe ^e heat be
top^eaii^it parttcifaPts of S^h
pifmr.%.^it Dt^dv^es , Calcines ^
WMers ef the Eap^ ff
And congeales aU% it u artificial
ff 9find^ dnd not chargeable > a»d
\\t is taken elsewhere than from
^ he Matter. To alhhis he adds
\ iiatatlaft, whereof he would
o{ lave us take moft notice. This
^ke ( faith he) is not alt^e/d cf
^, ranfmuted with the Matter* He
ril bought certainly he had fpo-
|5 :en enough^znd truly fo he hath
tr ml it is to fuch as know it alrea-
id ^ For my own part I have found ~
;/| \ certain mineral jinking water ^
ii vhich partakes of the nature of
(V ^ulphftr^ and w hofe frefaration
oj. s artificiall , which is not of the
iiffentiaJl parts of thew/nf/^r^but
lii^ccidentMl and extraneous y
^ which vaf ours not unkft it be
imer-hVatedy v;hkh piffolves y
ii Zalomesyzrid Congas alU but
l snac congealed 'y for it is cx-
], )el'd at laft by tbcfircoinatitrt^
f- and
'^ Jbupnratcs or the
and goes off in windy fumt^
This mcnftruous fulphuriou
fire againft Nature , hath taugh
j( me how natural our work 1S5 to:
T it dot h that here , which com
mon water doth in the grea jj
worjd In this rcfped it is calVc
of fomc Philofophers Fhlegma,
Ros^ Aqua Nubtumi, not certain-
ly that it is fuch , and therefore
let us not deceive our felvcj
mth Mifc^njiruffions, He tha
would know the Reafon ol
ihokTermes^kt him take thii
Account irom a moft knowing
Philofopher, fAqua Nuhium vo-
catur ( faith he ) quia difiillata.
eji veluf Res Idatj, tenuijfima-
rum fartium. Efi quoque eadem
aqua acetum acerrinum , quod^
corf us fecit merum Jpiritum. Ui
enim, acetum diverfarum qudi-
tatum eft 9 mmpe ut in frcfu»*
dHmfenetret\ & aftringat y fii
1
WdtersoftheEafl. ti
f£c aquafolvit , & codgulat^ non
ittem coaguUtur, quia non ejl de
tbjecio froprio. Thus much as ~
othe Termes , and now let us
cturntothe f^;>^itfdf. I faid
ijfhis /fre cffcds that in the Glafs^ .
vhich common water doth in
he great World 5 for as this ^
hlegmatkk element coagulates
lot 5 nor is it at all diminifticd ,
otwithftanding that infinite
umber of individualism which i j
Mature ftill produceth 5 even fo 1 -4=-
isinour «7^r^.5 fox our water V" '
flfo alters notj though the mat-
frbealtcr'd in her l?elly^ and j
lur very Principles generated !
here, namely Sulphur and ^£er' '
uriephilofophicaU. Norfliould
ny man wonder that I affirm
ommon water to be incoagulable
ty heat at leafi , for in this I
]l peak not unadvifcdly . I know
*hcre arc in water fome natnus
G coagiii^
82 iiupnratcs, »rthe
ccagulahle , but they arc nc fb
parts of the ir^f^r^ but of othcJ^
elements •, Nor will I deny bu 111
fomefhlegme^ nay, a very grcspoi
quantity, and fomtimes all5ma;iii(
be retain'dby mixture with ofoi
ther natures J and feem to bin
coagulated into Stones ^ an«i
thofe fomctimes tranjparent ka
but coagulation in this fenfc
namely by mixture oi parts , a
in meal andrpater^ I mind not
but by coagulation I under ftanc Ij
a trafmutation of the Jubfianck
of «?^er rvater into .E^r/^ or 4/>;
and this in fimple water cannoi
I be. r kno\y there i s a water ,
\ t hat of it felf^ without all extra-
neous additions jynW c oagulafe
in a foft heat toTa fuft lle fak
more pretious_th an Gg/^-^ but
this is not any water that the eye
^^^^ 5 but anothe, r invifible HU'
miditj\ which is indeed every
Waters 9f the Eafi, 83
J where ^fed non videtur ( (aith ^^^j
ti Sendivow ) donee artifici placeat , ]^ 1
i This might fatisfic as to this"^^^"^ J
point, but I will add fomething/^^A<^i^
more^lcaft I fpeak without Rea- p/eJ^A
fon, efpecially to thofe , who
are not willing to allow others
a better judgment than they
have themfelves.
The commerce that is main-
tain 'd between Heaven and
£(irth , by the afcent and voUti-
litie oi water ^ may fufficiently
inform us of what dangerous
:onfequence , the ceagnUtion of
:his element would be. It is im-
probable tfien that the wife God
3f Nature ^ fhould make that
Htimiditj coagulable^ whofc ve-
ry ufe and office requires it
iiould be other wife j For if in ~
be ejfenceoi water yZS it is fim*
fie water ^ there were an aftrin-
^/nt cong^ealhgfacultj^ii v/ould -
G 2 by
84 Enphratci # r^lf
by degrees attain to a total j?Af- ili
athn^ and then there could bi tc
no further generamn ^ cither oiici
fpermes or bodies -j Reafon form
. it is this, if the water were fx-l
ed^ there would be no valour oi k
j cloudy and there being no va,- Bi
j four^ there could be nofferme , f;
■ for the elements cannot meet to t
make the /per m but in a vapour, k
ror example , the earth cannot ri
-afcend, unlefs the water be firfllf
^ tarejiedj for in the ^^//y of the i
- water \sxht earth carried up5p
find if the earth ajcends not, ha- )i
I Ving put off her groHfe bodj , and i
^facing fubtiliated and purgea]
I tvith the water , then will not J
I the /f/> incorporate with it , foi i|
I thcmoijlure of the «^4/rr intro- «
I duccth the ^/r into the rareJieA
i & di^ohed earths And here a- ^
gain as then?4f^r rccocil'd the ait
to the earth , fo doth the Atr re-
concile
Waters 0ftheEafi, 8 5
f :ilc the w^ur to the j&-£, as if it %^^
X vould r^^iute one courtefy with i ^
iinother^ For the^4ir with it|
'^^*'^J*oRtj, ^nd fitpefs^ y intyg-
<• lucctn th^ into the ivater ,
3ihc/rffolJovvingtlie 4/>, and
i'lkUngto it as to its fue^ and
'^Ttment. It remains now, that
to v^ Obfcrvc, that the vaf$nr of
r. he water ^ was the /^^/>j or ma-
iO!Wx 5 wherein the other three
iiements did meet , and without ^
fa /hich they had never come to-
pi ;ether 5 F or this vAf surms the
11 )(g fgre;;i/ that camedHSplhc ^
IK urejLvr^5_e4r£5_]toiit^4^^
[«^o the _^f(W and_ and
101 ow again Se brings her down
[01 1 her belly , impregnated with
fo le milk of the \orte , and the
!^i loodoiiht other ^ namely with
; a r, and J?r^ 5 which Principles
iix fredominant in thofe two
K feriour Luminaries* But fomc
4 : G 3 wife
$S Euphrates "", tfr f^^
wife one may argue and tell mc\
that this vapo»r being thus im
pregnated, may now be ceagu
tated 5 and fxed , by help o
thofe hot Principles oi air an
fire. To this I anfwer, that thcP^
vijcmsjemwal ^art of the^ft^- ^f
(^-f^ terjMy, buftEe£^^^LilS£Sl/
andTwill fhcw as much by ex-""'
ample. When this vapout isP
fully impregnated, it ftaicsnof
longcrin that Region, but re-'^
turns prefcntly to the eartb^
from v/htncc it afcended. But J
, how doth it return ^ Certainly J
I not in a violent Aormic predpi-^
Jumen de\tation\\V^ Rain^ but as I have"^
lumme. . ^^.j^^^^ elfewhere,it/^4/idownf
invifiblj znd filently -J For if it {^
> be a vapour^ fuch as I fpeak of, *(
In cjuo ejtimaginatumjemen A* ^^
fir ale certi ponder is , then it i% %
neither ^4r<:/ of nor feen till a ^'
long time after. But to pro. ^
cccdjin wfiat I have promifcd
Waters of the Eafl. 87
tnifcd to prove , I (hall inftancc
in common Bew : For dew hath
» in it fomc imzXldofe oithcfiar-
fire, Wc fee therefore that this -
111 humiditj comes down filently,
for its inclofcd jire keeps it ra-
^^efied in the form of air , and
will not fuffcr it to condcnfe to
jvater^ ztthsLt height z$ the va-
pour of Rain doth 5 But when
jijit is defcended neer the earth ,
it mingles with other crude, va-
(j pours 5 and borrowing from
chera a great quantity oifhlegrh^
fettles at laft into Dro/ps. But
before we go any farther let us
here confider thofe words of
the Son of Sirach. Looke ( faith
he ) on all the Works of the mojl
high^ and there are Trvo and Two
one Againfi the other. In this he
agrees with that little fragment
which goe under the name of
CMofes , where God tcacheth
m G 4 hioa
I
85 Euphrates 5 ortht
liim thus. S^cixs^ quod unicuique^ *
Creature 5 & campar, & contra-, J'
rium creavi^ I will not pcrcmp*^ w
torily affirm that Mofes is the au^ hi
thor of this piece, or that God w
taught him ill thofe very rvordsy U
but I affirm that thofe wordsf
cxprcffe the truth of God , and H
point at fomc great Mjfiertes of t'
his Wife dome- Nor will I here tl
qmy: ^ confidcrabk CirGum- ka
ftancCj^ na^^c-ly that this pie<:e i»i
hath in it fomc Hebrew words^ h
and this proves the Author was tk
a> ^ctvi( not Mofes. But to pafs. or
by the Author and come to his^ a
I - Senfe •,. I, fay that God created u
' -- water to oppofe it to the earthy oi
O and this appears by their diffe- f
- 7;±nt copiflexuom and qualities^ i
For the earth is ^^'^//i? and felid:, . il
the jv^;
>r as our Saviour faith, as long
ts it abideth alone\ that is to fay
is long as it is without water , fo
ong it can bear no fruit : But
fit falls into the Ground and
iies^ that is to fay, if it be dif
elv'd thereby the Humidity of ^
^^41;^;? C for Death Is but Dif-
blution^ then it will bring
orth ipuch fruit , ^s gur Savi-
our
po Euphrates 3 ^r f)^^
. our tcftificth. It is the waterk
then that diplves^ and life fol- />/> , to which
/^Au-'^e defires to be uriiteJ. This
i^'^^nf fprit is the dr inclofed in the
tOep^Jhjj: led m the Philolophers Books ,
L^^^yW i^-- x^q^a, Mat is no^ri y aqm vita
i^^^^-^^^mdms non madefaciem^ But
^-^"'^ -Iwhowillbcleive that there is a
-^drie water hid in the moijl ?
^ Certainly few : and this Sendi-
vow tells us of fome Sophi-
fters of his acquaintance, Non
i^J ^^ credebant Aciuam efjein mari
■^<^ noftr(>^& i^men PhHofophi vi-
.V..-7 derivolehant. I have my felf
- ^'^ known many fuch Philofo-
pherSj and of whom I xan fay
the very fame. But to return to
our
fVdieys of the Eajl. px
our bufincfs 5 It is called aqua. -
viUy becaufe this air involves -
in it felf afire^ which isli/e uni- -^
verfall , not yet fpccified, and ^
therefore it agrees with all /»4r-
fkuUrlives^ and is amicable to
allkindofGreaturs. Now the
particular fpecificd j?r^ 5 or life
^f the Grdihy which is the vege-
table magnet , attrads to him- ^ -:(:■
fclf the univerjall fire or life/^ j^ ,^
which is hid in the water , and -^-^^^ "^^
with the fire he attrafts the Air ^*^ ^^
which is the veftiment oxbodyjt^f^^^
of the jfr£j called by the Plato- -i^a *^ fC.
ntcks\ Curfus AntmA^ and fom-^,-//^ ^
times Nimbtts ignis defcenden- jj^-^£^ ^
tis. Here then is the ground -^ ^^^^^
upon which the whole Myft^-^'^^f^^^
rie of Naturall Augmentation^' ^^,
and Multiplication is built 5 For ^^^,,^ >,. '
the body of the Grain or Cern^^^a4^cuJ\^^
is augmented with the aliment-/^'' /^^
of air ^ not ftmple but decern-^ '^'^'^^
\
511 Euphrates or the
.^ founded^ which /i/> is carried ii^
the water ^ and is a kind of vola^
till fwect fdt 5 but the fre or-
iife of the Grain, is fortified
with the i^niverjall fye , andli
thisjfre is involved in the 4/>, as. in
thc4ir is in the wjUr. hnii
here we naay obferyc tJbat it is 5(
not waUr onely, that cpnduccth^ n
to the Generation or KtgtmrA-^ i
ilon of things, but xojiter and k
Jfre 5 th^t is vpdter and fprity it
or water that hath life in it 5 m
And this, if rightly underftqod, le
is a gr^at ManuduUien to Divi- «
, iw/^.; j^^ • -"' ^'^ ' . . ^i
ToGOjncIudCj the Summcof fi
all we would fay is this , the tj
Hootesznd Seeds of all Fegeta^ t
i/tfj are placed in the earthy inii
the midft of this dewie feuntainy %
as a Lamp is placd in the mid'ft :o
of (?;7e- and the ^t or ///i ?!
oixktSuM attra i$ drawn /j,,///, jji
mo^xht water ^ thtnattraSHen
:eafeth,and coj$co6iion or tranj-
nutation begins 5 but if the
rude rvater 5 which was the ve-
^iculum of the air ftaics with
he feeds^ then it hinders con- ^ ji
^ffionyZnd therefore the /Sun^^i'^^^d
nd the i^rcheus jointly cxpcll ^^^^J ^\ "
ler.fo that {he takes wing and^^;^^;/^
eturnes to thcRegion of the air y ^
vhere again (he fills her belly ^^^^/^'^^
vith thzt ftarrie milk, and then'^^'S^^^
le fiends zs before. This is th'c-^^''*^ J
eafon why there is in Nature -^/^.^^
iich a vicijjitude of Jhott^res and ^^^//^^^^
t$n-fhines^ forxhe jhowres bringh^'f^^^
lowntheii^r^4/;?»/r/^^ ^ ^ **^t
yhenthe Plants have attra^ed | , ^\/|
:. then xbtfun-Jhines call w ^hc j ?.
P4 Euphrates w the ;
j crude^ water , which othcrwifii^
l^alion. This then is the traddi
that common water drives, but if
flie could be coagulated^ thiff
trade would ceafe , and all lifii
would ceafe with it. I havejqt f
on a SirJ'thu flies to herJVV/? ,f^
anTfr^ltigainXiS^di^
-^ youngones^jindft^hing fooBl
> fc forjRem'>towTRi$anewfan-!i
^^^ifw; cy oTlnine , for fome learned^
fc^^^ tncn cotifider'd as much before^
PJ-i'/^fii which refped that milkie\
^^ tneifiure which is found in hetk
\// yv. /'CriftallBrefts^iscairdbyfomel
\^M /^>^^":5f them lac volatiliumy the milk i
^^^of Birds , and they have left it)
written, that Birds, do brings
their ft one unto them. \
To make an end, obferve that ;
there is a great difference be-j)i
'"^. ^ tween this common water , an "
^Cu^*^ and covered the Camp , and in
li the morning the Dew lay round
\\ iboftt the Hofie. And when the
i\ dew that lay wasgoni up , behold
:^ upon the face of the Wildernejs
ihere lay a round fmall thing , as
mall as the hoare Frofi upon the
\\ rround, and when the Children of
] JxaQljaw it^they faid one to anO"
:ii hermit is Manna{for they wifl not;
111 yhat it was; And Moks /aid unto
^j hem^ this is the Bread which the
tJ^ord hath given you to e^te, E-
oi/eryChild knows that dew fet-
(Idles into round drops J and here
iMofesidhus ^ that when the
!; phlegmatic humidity was gone
3j jp, the congelative part^ that
\ laid behind, was a round fmall
■j, hing,, for it retained ftill the fi-
ll ^ H gurc
Euphrates, ertht
gurc ol the drop, in whofc bel
ly it was hid. T his congehtii
fart is deous :;nd fuftbte ^ an-
with this alfo the Scnprurc ac
cords, telling us , That t^hen th
St$n waxed hot , it melted. It i
wirhall of a muft f^cih^ quic ^^
^^Iteratiany and therefore cafil ^
' tran[mutable or convertible ini
'^ny form i, and for this rcafo
Mofes charged the pcopk t
leave none o^ It tiH the morning
hurfome of them ( fatrh the text
left of tit til the mcrrivg , and\
^red worma -and (iank-^ Whenc
%e may gather , that it; is i
fome degree animalL We fc
then that the ^f^^^^ ^f God :
-ftill bufic with vpater ,' and t
this houre moves not onely u\
en It , but in it, nor do I doul
bur th'S is the ground of thj
deep quejiion , which ( among
many others) Godpropofcdt
W4Urs 9f the Eafi, ,y^ ^^
{^ob. Hath the RAIN 4 father ^ chap, ^^>
0r tvha hath begotten the DROPS ^''^^'
IcfDEWt It Ts worth our ob-
piervation, that the Children of
\lfrael^ when they faw this things
j,( though iheyknewitnoc ) faid
^jonc to another, it is Manna -^ for
|, what argues this j but that Man-
].na ( as the word imports ) was
yfomc fecret gift of God , which
they knew not, but had former-
ly heard of by Tradition from
their Fathers ^ and perhaps by
fuch a defer iption as Hermes
gives it in the ^radi , namely,
that it afcendsfrom the earth t9
Heaven^znd defcends again fronts
Heaven to the Earths, and this
might make them call it Manna^
rbecaufe it defcended with the
:deiv, I
of the 4ir. Thus we fee how the
materiall part of the jeedis ^
made^and now to this body ot it
, theHc^vengivcs//A,theMoon -
H 4 S^v^^S
io4- Euphrates 5 ^r fA^
giving it ffirit, and the Sup gi-
ving it 5t;«7 5 and thus are, the
fgure Luminarks brought toge-
ther, the fuferiour contributing
that to the y^c^5 which is jubttll
and vitall'j and the infer tour
that which is corpulent and ma-
ter tall, lhis.Sfe^is carried in-
'jvifibly in the belli of the wind ^
jand It is maniftfted in Water , L
jfa y in water as clear zs Criftai ,
1?5^- .P^t of ;*.M^^£^?;.^ici; nnuft.^
idrawn^ foV there is not under
1 Heaven^ any other ^^^^^ where
lirmay be found. I have fought
itn^y fc!f in the common me-
talls^ in Q^iickfihcr ^ in Antimo-
nie 5 and in Regulus of Antimo-
nie^ alfo in Regulus oiMars^ Vc-
nus^ and Saturn^ and of all the
io^iies: but I loft my labour, for
T foijght it where it was not. All
rhcfe Errors^did I run irico afttr
/I had known tfie true 'matter-^
r * for
Watirsofthe Eafl loy
for having raifcarried in my
firfl attempts upon it , I left it as
a thing untra6tahle -, and this
Tergiverfation of mine^brought
me into many inconveniencies^
I conceived indeed , that a vi-
trioll made of thofe four imper-
fed bodies ^ Antimonie y Iron^
Lead^ and C offer y might be
that glajfie Azoth of Lullie ^
whofe jprit or water he hath
fo magnifiej
Antimonio inveniati^r Mercuri
u
Warns of the Bafi. loj
us fhilof$fhicus y frimum Ens ,
Argent'tmrftii^my^& aqaa pri-
ma fketdlofum ftrf^viornm , €X
qua Jit magnus lapis antiquorum
fhilojophQrHm.t, Sedhcprmum ,
Ens in Alia Miner alt invenitur^
in quo metallic a ratio^ieeferatio
altior efi , quam Jiiiij, And the
fame JSaJill a little afterwards ^
fipcdkingoi Stella Mart is ^ de-
livers himfclf thus. Pleriquepu^
tarunthanc flellam ejje.materi'
am veram lapidis philojofhorumy
cogita^t€s Je veraciter hoc ima-
ginariyquianatura ftellamhanc *
fponte fm Jormavit-j Ego vero
mgo : hi viri^ Regia via. reiiBa^
per avias rupes^ ubi ibices habi^
tant y&f'rxdatrices Aves ntdi-
Jicanf i it^yjnjlitmnt : Non id
debetar huic (lelU ^ ut materia
fit lapidis nobilijfimi , licet in eo
latet medicina optima. It re-
nuins then Reader^ that we lay
^ ' afidc
loS Euphrates ^rfy^Ftf ^
^ afide all common mhallsj as
C?tf ^ Silver 9 Cop fir ; Irony Tin^
Lead^ Antimonie and Quickfil-
,ver. For if we feck the fper me
inany ofthcfe, we (lull never
find ic 5 becaufe we feek it in me-
tallis vulgi , m qtiibus non ejl ,
as Sendtvorv hath told us. We
muft therefore feek another bo-
dy^ which is not common , nor
. is it made by mixture or other-
wifCjOf any metall that is com-
mort'^ but is a certain black Juli_
fhjtr^ lui dc by Ndtw e , and
■^ which never .touch'd the jfr^.
^. This is that body whereof ^^Al-
berttis Magnus hath thus writ-
ten .• Datur in Rerum natura
corpus metallicum quoddam^fa-
ctlts folutionis ^ fdctlifquc yfitre-
faBionis , [i prafarationem ejus
nojli, fdltx Medicus.eris, And
aher him, his Difciple Thomas
Jquinod fpeaking of the fame
- Mi*
Mhera y cites thcfe notable
words out of another Philofo-
jphcV'jEji quadam ffccies mttatli^
quam Gens nunqtiam invenit.
This is the mctAll wc muft feck -
for , and it is hard to find , be-
^^"^^ ^g mu finot digto come r^^-^-r?^
At it ^ for if we know where it \-
is, we need no more but ftoop U
and take it up gratis. Yet it is |-
neither CUubers Antimonic^ nor — -
common Lead, nor is it 2^ flints
fione^ nor the Marie oi Peter Fa-
her^ who after he had wearied -^'
himfelf, and deceived his Rea-
ders with Difcourfes of Anti-
monie , and fublimatc mthfaks
o( common metalls , fought the
fulphur at laft in this Clod^ or
Marga^ as he calls it. But to pafs
by thefe Fooleries and come to
a Conclufion .• I fay that this \^\.
black fulfhur is the Male^ which
being found, wc arc in the next
place
tio Euphrates ^^/^e
.place t9 feck the 'Female 5 And
here obfervCj'.that :<3od All-
mighty hdxhiti far ticuhr bodies
made no difference of ^A'^,but
onely in the animail Kin^dome^
for in Vegetables and Miner alls
there is no fuch thing . V Vc fee
\jl that in grains oiCorn ( (uppofc
of wheat) there is- no divifion
inro ^aJes and Females , (ox the
truth IS thev are all Males ^ and
God hath allowed them no Fe-
male . but the univerfal one ,
namely rvater^ whofe vijcous ge-
neral fee^)OYning with the par-
tieular jecd and fpirit thzz is in
the Grain^ is therewith fermen-
ted and congealed into the fame
;!r4^/#yr -with the Grain it felf ,
and fo propagates and multi-
^ /^pliestheCt^r;;: even fo it is in
'/ //mM-^ metalts y for eki'y- ort£ of them
. yf / is- rndfcMiity fulphffred^s , and
/c^^^'^Oifolertc^h^ Nor hath Goidor*
daincd
WaimoftheEafi. m
dained that any of them fliould
propagate and multiply the o-
^hcr, either xiaturally or artifi- '
eially^ though we deny not but "-
they may be multiplied by h^lp -
phcedjjbe^ldfing,.^^
cation. In Met alls then, ihcix ^
is no Diftindion or D flFerencc
of Sexes , fo that out of thcn i
it is impoflible to cxrrad Ma-
fculine^ri^ Feminine Sper*?teTl
for fuch cannot he cxtt-acftrrd
-li)ut from hodies that are Male
and Female ; which metalls arc
not , for if they were, thsy
-would propagate without Art ,
God having fo ordained it. ]x
is plain then , that m itaHs^i fae-
iSgjiot Malear^Temale J breed
withmtHem felvcs no^Jjed ^ anfl
by_^ con (c quence" ' cannot givc^
tliat ^EicRjhey fa avc not l^oF
tFc trufifcis^Jie Jeed iKhcreof
they
II* Euphrates ^r /^tf
f / they fpring, is chit general /^^^
^j'^'^^^'^^yOixht dements^ namely a ccr-
Vcrfj^ic^^M^'^i^ humidity , which appears
fei ^^ J y^ ^ as Sendivow tells us ) /;^/^r
cT'o^ '' tnli Ac^UA finguis ^ ih^jsjulb^
>y^y '^l^^-^^j^fonnjo^'ajat water. This tva-
' ^^^/^is theiryJ'^^, their CMjtSS^
^fa£ ' an3^tH ar Female . for of this
v^ ;^ they were originally i»4^^ , and
cv /^^ if in this they be again dijjhlved^
rA^vi^^-^.then the Child will attraft the
'^ fi^ Mother to it , and convert her
L^^.^'^ totally to his own nature x and
J ;^6^, on the contrary, th e //?/>/> or t he.
\i^jM&lkrw\^^ tbc_JfiriL
i/Ljfi ^Sf^ the child , and ^ xak lt„ toa
I,- to \<^ perfedion more than ordiiiary>
k!
^'^ .This islHe way, and be fides it
^*^^ ^, there is none •, For there is no
n^^i^'^-*^^ f^ater under Heaven , from
7.y 4^ \vb^.t hdies foever ii he cxtra-
^ '/'' ": by which means -
Nature is firangelj exalted and
multiplied. Labour therefore
to unite thcfc two fubftantial-
ly and thoroughly , and thou
canft not w//}, if thou knowcft
the applications ', For fuffcr me
to tell thee a/^rr^f", that the ap-
plication of A^ives to Pafjives,
I mean the Manner of it , is the
greatffi difjicultj in all the Art^
I Fare-
fi 9 lEupfw^tts 5 0r ike ^
Farewell Reader, and enjoy
thefe my Labours which I free-
ly communicate to thee: not
ric affure thee, out of apy De-
fign, fori fcek not my own
gIotj 5 but that of God and
thy benefit.
11
_ ^»<5^M5^»§f^'g
A ^drt Apfendix bj way of
Admonition to the Redder.
T was no^
my intention
to adde any
thing unto
what hath
been allreadf
^^^ written: but
when I re-
fleet on thofe vexations I have
indur'd myfelf, in the purfuic
of this Science^ I begin to.think
Ihave not faid enough. To be
a little more plain then, know
Reader, that whpfoever fceks
the fhilofovhers Mercurie in
miuSsy or what kind Ibevcr
*i2o r.upnrai:c5 or t^jc
^ they be 5 is already out" of the
way, for that Phi lejfip^kk
J Mercurj^io much talk'd of, is a
Water ^ and in meta/ls ^ water
there is none •, for tl e julfhur
,, hath not onely <;ongeled it there,
but hatfv withaJl dried it up.
This is evident in common
Quickftl'vcr-y and K^ntimome^
•tvhich of .all metalline bodies ^
are the moft crude , and yet as
'^r»t^^as,t{'icyare, xhc\x water is
^^xiccattahyi-hdr fire '^ for if we
vforce thcn:^ iiito a fume, thar
^^ume (cities not to a litjiuid Jpi-
rir^butiniO'drieFlcrvres, This
inacie the Phiiorcp ers fcek a
more crude mi^erat'whoJc_Jum€
VJZ^MOift-i and would fettle into
iV4te r, as being not yet maftcr'd
by ibt Sulphur. Such there was
none but the Mother of Mercu-
rie^ or the firji mAtter , whereof
Jfrf^»^^ makes the cemrnQn Mcr-
V^r' ^uric
Witters oj tfjc Eap. m
curic\ and this alfo they call'd
Quickfilver , and a vifcous wa-
ter ^ for fuchitis. In this Mi-
nera the menurUlL vdfour was
not fo drie , but it would fettle
into nater^ and with this water^
thcydiffolved the metalline ho-
Me J -J for the moifi fume of this -
mintr a reduc d^die T netdline i
drielumes^ fo that both t urned ~^
in to ene water ^ and_jhiijrih€^__
called, MerfHrie ^fhilojofh icdl^
a nd dupitcdted Mercurje . In this ^ ^
point I need not fay more , and
if they be not willfully blind 5
here is Light enough for our
Metallmongers , and cfpecially
for thofc confident Roafters o
Antimonie^ who over the foioak
of that T>rugg dream of m'^jte-
ries ^ as if they were tranfpor-
tcd into a certain Cafnomancic.
For my part I denic not but
Aiitimmt may be rcduc'd to a
mercu'
Co e^A*-t ^, — - ^
\%i Jtiupnrarcs ^;: /^f
mercuriall wAter , though I
know not to what purpofc, for
neither out Mercurie nor o«r
Tincture xlkxhixom it y i( B/tfill
Valentine may be believed.
True it is , the Philofophcrs
u{cjt^ but as a meet Ihftrumenc
thaTgoes off again, and fo they
/C^/y^«Aiie even Kiichin jire , but it is
^-IH'']\C
>J»S
^^1
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0S> 0)
»J1
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