Put into a cucurbit the plant from which you design to extract the Essential Oil. Add as much water as will fill two thirds of your vessel, and dissolve therein half an ounce of Sea-salt for every quart of water you use. To this body fit on an alembic-head, and to the nose thereof lute a receiver, with sized paper, or wet bladder. Set it in a furnace, and let the whole digest together, in a very gentle warmth, for twenty-four hours.

This being done, light a wood-fire under your vessel, brisk enough to make the water in it boil immediately. Then slacken your fire, and leave it just strong enough to keep the water simmering. There will come over into the receiver a liquor of a whitish colour, somewhat milky; on the surface of which, or at the bottom, will be found an Oil; which is the Essential Oil of the vegetable you put into the cucurbit. Continue your distillation with the same degree of heat, till you perceive the liquor come off clear, and unaccompanied with any Oil.

When the distillation is finished, unlute the receiver; and, if the Essential Oil be of that sort that it is lighter than water, fill the vessel up to the top with water. On this occasion a long-necked matrass should be used for a receiver; that the Oil which floats on the water may collect together in its neck, and rise up to its mouth. Then in the neck of this vessel put the end of a thread of cotton-twine, so that the depending part without the vessel may be longer than that in the Oil, and the extremity thereof hang within the mouth of a little phial, just big enough to contain your quantity of Oil. The Oil will rise along the yarn as in a siphon, filter through it, and fall drop by drop into the little phial. When all the Oil is thus come over, stop your little bottle very close, with a cork coated over with a mixture of wax and a little pitch.

If your Oil be ponderous, and of the sort that sinks in water, pour the whole contents of the receiver into a glass funnel, the pipe of which must terminate in a very small aperture that may be stopped with your fore-finger. All the Oil will be collected in the lower part of the funnel: then remove your finger, and let the Oil run out into a little bottle through another small funnel. When you see the water ready to come, stop the pipe of the funnel, and cork the bottle containing your Oil.

OBSERVATIONS.

Essential Oils, though they all resemble each other in their principal properties, are nevertheless very different in some respects: for which reason almost every one of them requires a particular management, for obtaining it with the greatest advantage possible, both as to quality and quantity.

One of the first things requisite is, to chuse the proper time for distilling the plant, from which you desire to extract the Essential Oil; because the quantity of Oil varies considerably, according to the season of the year, as well as the age of the plant. For example, the most favourable time for obtaining these Oils from the leaves of ever-green plants or trees, such as Thyme, Sage, Rosemary, the Orange, the Bay, the Fir, &c. is the end of Autumn; because these vegetables contain a great deal more Oil at that season than at any other. With regard to annual plants, they must be chosen when in their prime, and just before they begin to decline. The time therefore of gathering them is when they begin to flower: and if you want to extract the Oil from the flowers themselves, you must pull them just when they are newly blown.

Secondly, it must be observed, that the Essential Oils of plants are, as it were, the chief residence and reservoir of their odorous principle; that they are to be found wherever that principle exists, and never where it is not: so that what we said concerning the Spiritus Rector of plants is applicable here. It must be remembered, that all the parts of some vegetables are odoriferous. Such plants may be put into the alembic all together, and the Essential Oil distilled from all their parts at once. But others, and indeed the greatest number, have no odour, or at least none that is very perceptible, except in some particular parts; as in their leaves, flowers, roots, or seeds: therefore, when you want to have the Essential Oil of such a plant, you must chuse that part in which the Odour resides. The sense of smelling must be the artist's principal guide on this occasion.

Thirdly, all vegetables, and all the parts of vegetables, have not the same texture: some are hard and compact, as woods, barks, and some roots; others are tender and succulent, as most annual plants, and some fruits. For this reason, they must be differently prepared for distillation. It may be laid down as a general rule, that the closer and more compact their texture is, the more they require to be opened and divided, either by comminuting them into small particles, or by digesting them a considerable time in water acuated with Salt.

Fourthly, though all Essential Oils be capable of rising in distillation with the heat of boiling water, yet they have not all an equal degree of levity and weight: on the contrary, they vary exceedingly in this respect: some, as, for instance, those of all our European aromatics, being lighter than water, so that they always float on its surface; whereas others, such as those of Cloves, Sassafras, &c. which are Indian aromatics, are heavier than water, and always sink in it by their specific gravity. These differences therefore require different methods of distillation. It is proper, for example, to make use of a low alembic in distilling such Essential Oils as are heavier than water; and, moreover, to facilitate their separation, by applying a degree of heat somewhat stronger than that of boiling water. This is easily done by impregnating the water with a proper quantity of Sea-salt, or the Vitriolic Acid; for, the more saline matters are contained in water, the more will the degree of heat it acquires, by being brought to boil, exceed that of pure boiling water.