B. Amen. And thus will we now put an end to our work, that so we may sanctifie to morrow, which is the seventh Day, to the Honour and Glory of the Divine Bounty.
A. Ah, my dearest Friend; let me intreat you not to involve me by your immature departure, in greater troubles and difficulties. There are divers scruples and doubts, and these weighty ones too, that perplex my mind, which unless you remove afore, your going away (but I hope you’l stay) I shall of a certain Truth be tormented all this ensuing Night with the most bitter Pill of Disquiet and Anxiety, and then you may well guess with what mind I am likely to celebrate the to morrow Sabbath. For I am yet as plainly ignorant, what use to put that Salamander to. As concerning those things, which you have faithfully disclosed unto me hitherto, I trust, I shall not err in their Operation, but as touching Inceration and Multiplication, in which, as in two Cardinal main Points, the very [Pillar or] hinge of the whole Operation lyes, as you said, I must needs confess my self more Blind, as to them, than Tiresias was: I must needs say, that I behold the promised Land situate afore mine Eyes, but the way that leadeth thereunto is hedged in with such Thickets, and so many Brambles, that I do not see which way I shall extricate my self out of them. Unless the mercy of God, and your help come in to my assistance, I see that all my Labours will be in vain.
B. ’Tis no small trouble you bring me, by your importunity, don’t you see the approaching Evening. You Act just according to the Custom of importunate Men, who having once gotten ones out-held Finger, do snatch in the whole hand. At first, you only entreated me to discover unto you the Matter and Key of the Art, and said, that you would easily find out the rest your self. Why then do you not seek thereafter, and let me go?
A. Good Sir, be not displeased with this my importunity, proceeding from the too earnest desire, I have, of knowing so great a Secret: And Christ himself saith, if ye shall knock, the Gate shall be opened unto you.
B. Well, since I see, that I must expect no quiet from you, till you do likewise learn something from me, concerning Inceration and Multiplication, I will in a few words set afore your Eyes, things of great moment. Look to it, that you listen very Attentively.
A. I do.
B. Have you not read in the Philosophers, when they speak of Inceration, that the out-driven Soul is to be restored to the dead King, that the dead Body may be recalled back to Life, and that it, arising with a more glorious Body, and a more excellent Crown, may prove an helper to its meaner Brethren. The Philosophers words are, as follows. Here the Soul lets it self down, and refresheth the dead Body. For it is not sufficient, that the King be deprived of Life and so left dead: No, no, for necessity requires, that its Soul be restored unto it, which may restore its Motion, and lost Life, to the dead Body. Now, by how much the oftner, the Soul and Life is taken away from the King, and that which is taken away be again restored thereunto, which so much the stronger and more active Body, and so much the Magnificenter a Crown will he arise withal. By these few words have I laid open unto you, Inceration and Multiplication. But yet there are other ways of increasing our fixt Salamander, and rendring it fusible, viz. by the addition of Mercurial things, which, by their speedy Flux and penetrating Property, do pierce into this our destroyed Gold, dissolve it, and so bring to pass, that there is made of them both (viz. of the destroyed Gold, and which admits not of any reduction, and of the Volatile Mercury) a certain fusile midling Body, which said Body, thus conjoyned of the two, is to be maturated by the bare Regiment of the Fire. And by this Maturation, is this universal Medicament rendred so fusible, as to have Ingress into all the Metals, and to penetrate them.
A. [But pray Sir,] Is not this way of giving a more easie Ingress and Flux to our destroyed, and irreducible, Gold, by the Mercury of Metals, more facile, and a nearer one than that abovesaid way, which requires a great many Operations, by the reiterating of Inceration and Multiplication?
B. Yes Verily, it is a shorter and easier way, as being void of many tedious Labours, for it needs nothing else, but that the Mercury of some Metals be put into some good strong Glass with the inverted Gold, and be so brought unto Fixation. But yet this Medicament, that is on this wise wrought up with the ☿ to a constancy in the Fire, cannot extend its Colour so largely, as that, which is rendred fusible by so many reiterated Operations, because, in every reiteration, the Tincture is exalted and multiplied. And now, have you any other demands? if so, be brief, for the Evening approacheth.
A. Yes, Sir, there are many things, that I would ask about, but seeing that my importunity is troublesome, I will at present rest content with those things, I have heard. Only, this one thing more would I gladly know, viz. where I ought to seek for the Soul of the King.