93. If any one following the Letter of Morienus, should take for his subject common Mercury, Sol and Sal Armoniack, neither will he be mistaken, but if he rightly proceeds will have a good Work, though it be not at all necessary to make use of common Sol and Mercury, because our natural subject contains both a living Sol and Mercury.

94. It is no prejudice to our Animal Subject, if we join Minerals with it, because our Sol joins it self with all subjects, and unites it self readily with them. But if we be ignorant of the due proportion and composition of Sol, Mercury, Sulphur, or any other metal or mineral, then it is better to prepare our Medicine out of this one subject onely, because so there is less danger of erring, as I can witness by experience.

95. I have also found by experience that this Microcosmical Subject is alone sufficient, without the addition of any minerals or metals, to meliorate all imperfect metals.

96. As to a particular this of all others hath pleas’d me best, viz. Recipe common Sol, and with the help of our Magnet disanimate it so, that it may be no longer Sol, as not enduring the Test, and smoaking away with a small Fire like Arsenick.

97. Then take this Sol and conjoyn it with our Microcosmical Subject, with which digest a solution of Lune, by which means the Lune will be meliorated, and on the Cupel leave Sol to good profit.

98. But if we joyn common Mercury and common Sol with it, and cast this mixture into a solution of Mars, and digest it for some days then the pure Sol and easily flowing Mercury graduates a good part of the gross and difficultly flowing Mars into good Sol, to the great satisfaction of the Artist.

99. And if we unite Lune and Jupiter therewith, and cast this mixture into a solution of Venus, and digest it the moist way, then by means of our secret Salt these two white united metals change the red Venus with little loss of weight into good Lune that will abide the Test. And it is indeed matter of wonder, that our universal Salt, should be of so great virtue, when fermented with white or red metals, to change other imperfect metals into good Sol and Lune on the Test.

100. Wherefore this shall be my conclusion, that in Man is hid the greatest virtue of changing all metals, as well as the Bodies of Men, both universally, and particularly; which if intended for the melioration of metals, the adding of fixt Sol and Lune for a ferment will facilitate the ingress into other metals, and further diffuse its tinging virtue.

N. B. I shall not be satisfied till I have given a fuller and plainer description of this Royal Labour, which I intend to do in the sixth Century, if God permit.