From what hath been already said, it must be concluded, that Essential Oils suffer great diminution by being rectified; and that in proportion to the quantity of resinous matter left behind. All this resinous matter, while combined with a proper quantity of the odorous principle of the plant, (that is, at the time of its being distilled, and a little while after), was really an Essential Oil: the change of its nature, therefore, is entirely owing to its having left that principle.

An Essential Oil, though rectified, is still as apt to change and be spoiled as before, because it still continues to lose its odorous principle by degrees. After some time, therefore, it requires a second rectification, which again lessens its quantity. In short, it is plain that Oils will, in a number of years, greater or smaller according to their nature, and the manner in which they are kept, be wholly changed, and metamorphosed into a resinous matter, from which no thin Oil can be drawn with the heat of boiling water: and this is a proof of the fugacity of that odorous principle, or Spiritus Rector, of plants, which, when united with their lightest Oil, gives it the character of an Essential Oil.

This resinous matter, to which Essential Oils are finally reduced, being subjected to repeated distillations, with a degree of heat superior to that of boiling water, is still capable of yielding a certain portion of a thin, limpid, sweet-scented Oil, which is as light as an Essential Oil; as we observed before is the case with Fat Oils drawn by expression: but the thin Oil obtained by this means, though it possesses almost all the properties of an Essential Oil, is not for all that a genuine one; seeing it hath not the same odour with the plant from which it was originally drawn.

Essential Oils must be rectified in the balneum mariæ, as ordered in the process: for, as some of the Oil touches the sides of the vessel in the operation, if that vessel be made hotter than boiling water, the thick matter will rise with the thin Oil, which therefore will not be rectified.

Rectification is of use not only for procuring to Essential Oils the tenuity and levity they may have lost by age, but also to separate them from other oily matters with which they may be adulterated. If, for instance, an Essential Oil be not properly distilled; if, by the addition of too much Salt, the water have acquired a degree of heat greater than that of pure boiling water, and if, in consequence thereof, some of the heavy Oil of the plant have risen with the Essential Oil, and mixed therewith, the Essential Oil may, by rectification, be separated from this heterogeneous Oil; which, being heavier and incapable of rising with the heat of pure boiling water, will remain at the bottom of the vessel.

The effect will be the same, if your Essential Oil be falsified with a mixture of any Fat Oil, as is often the case: for, some of them being extremely dear, the vender frequently adds a portion of Fat Oil to increase the quantity. For this purpose Oil of Ben is generally used.

When an Essential Oil is thus falsified with a mixture of any Fat Oil, it may be discovered by letting a few drops of it fall into rectified Spirit of Wine; which will dissolve the Essential Oil only, leaving the Fat Oil quite untouched.

Essential Oils are sometimes falsified by mixing them with a certain quantity of Spirit of Wine. This fraud doth not render their smell less fragrant: on the contrary, it becomes rather more agreeable and quicker. In order to try an Oil suspected of being falsified in this manner, drop a little of it into very clear water. If a milky cloud appear in the water, be assured the Oil is mixed with Spirit of Wine: for as this liquor unites more readily with water than with Oil, it quits the Oil with which it was mixed to incorporate with the water: mean time a good deal of the Oil that was dissolved by the Spirit of Wine, and is now separated from it by the intervention of water, necessarily remains dispersed through this water in very small particles; and these form the milky cloud produced on this occasion.

An Essential Oil may also be adulterated with another Essential Oil that is much more common, and of much less value. Those who practise this fraud generally employ Oil of Turpentine for that purpose, on account of its cheapness and tenuity. The cheat is easily discovered, by moistening a linen rag with the Oil supposed to be thus falsified, and then holding the rag a little before the fire, which presently dissipates the odorous part of the falsified Oil. This odour, which prevented our distinguishing that of the Oil of Turpentine, being vanished, the peculiar smell of the Turpentine, which is much more permanent, remains alone; and is so perceptible that it cannot easily be mistaken.

Those who are much accustomed to see and examine Essential Oils, have seldom occasion to make the experiments here proposed for discovering their qualities. A certain degree of thickness, partaking of unctuosity, in an Essential Oil, convinces them that it is falsified with a Fat Oil: on the other hand, a greater degree of tenuity, together with a quicker smell, than a pure Essential Oil ought to have, discovers the admixture of Spirit of Wine. Lastly, any one, whose sense of smelling is not very dull, will easily discover the odour of the Oil of Turpentine, though disguised by that of the Essential Oil with which it is mixed.