A great deal of the Acid of the plant remains, as was said, combined with the two sorts of Oil here obtained; which we have reason to think differ no otherwise from one another, than as there is more or less Acid united with each. The best way of freeing these Oils from their redundant Acid is to distil them frequently from Alkalis and Absorbents. Some of our best Chymists have taken this pains with several sorts of Oils; but the method might be still extended, and the operation carried further than hath yet been done.

The Acid is in the same circumstances nearly as the Oil. The first that rises is mortified with much water, to which it owes a good deal of its volatility. That which comes over last is much more concentrated, and consequently heavier; yet it is still very aqueous. It might be freed in a great measure from this adventitious water, and so rendered much stronger; which would give us a better opportunity to discover its nature and properties, of which we know but very little.

Water is not the only heterogeneous substance that disguises the vegetable Acid: a pretty considerable quantity of the Oil of the plant is also combined with it, and contaminates its purity. The proof of this is, that, when these Acids are kept, in the same condition in which they first come over, for any length of time, in a glass vessel, they gradually deposite, on the bottom and sides of the vessel, an oily incrustation, which grows thicker and thicker the longer it stands; and, as this oily matter separates from it, the Acid liquor appears less unctuous and saponaceous.

A very good way to separate this Oil more effectually from the Acid is to combine the whole with absorbents, and abstract the Oil again by distillation. By this means a very sensible quantity of Oil may be separated that was not perceived before. On this occasion it is proper to remark, that the Oil thus united with the vegetable Acid is perfectly dissolved by it; seeing it is thereby rendered miscible with water, so that it doth not, like Alkaline soaps, in the least obscure its limpidity, or give it a milky cast: for these aqueous, oily Acids are very transparent, especially after they have stood for some time.

The air that is discharged with impetuosity in the operation, and must be let out, is loaded with many particles of Acid and Oil reduced to vapours, which it carries off; and by this means the quantity of the principles extracted from the mixt cannot be accurately determined: nor are the vapours, of which the vessels remain full after the operation, any other than particles of Acid and Oil, which the violence of the fire hath rarefied exceedingly, and which do not easily condense.

If we distil in this manner a vegetable aromatic substance, which of course contains an Essential Oil, provided it hath not been previously extracted by the appropriated process, this Essential Oil will rise first, as soon as the distilling vessel acquires the heat of boiling water: but its scent will not be near so sweet or grateful, as if it were distilled in the manner before directed as properest for it. On the contrary, it will have an empyreumatic smell: because in this way it is impossible to avoid scorching and half-burning some of the matter distilled; especially that part of it which touches the sides of the retort. Moreover, the very same equable degree of heat can hardly be kept up with a naked fire. The Essential Oil, therefore, though it rises first, will not be pure, but contaminated with a mixture of the empyreumatic Oil that first comes over, and will be confounded therewith.

If a substance abounding with Fat Oil, that hath not been expressed from it, be distilled according to the present process, it will yield no Fat Oil by distillation; but only much more of the first clear Oil, and of the second thick Oil, than if all the Fat Oil it would have afforded had been first drawn off by expression: for as the Fat Oil will not rise in distillation, without a degree of heat greater than that of boiling water, neither can it endure such a degree of heat without changing its nature, without losing that mildness, and, in a great measure, that unctuosity which is natural to it. It will therefore be confounded with the other empyreumatic Oil, which, in all probability, would itself be no other than a Fat Oil, if it could be wholly extracted, without the aid of fire, from the vegetable substances containing it.

Most vegetable substances, when distilled with a strong fire, yield the same principles with that which we have chosen for an instance. Entire plants of this kind, those from which the odorous principle, the Essential Oil, or the Fat Oil, hath been drawn, those of which extracts have been made by infusion or decoction, or the extracts themselves; all such matters being distilled yield a Phlegm, an Acid, a thin Oil, Air, and a thick Oil, and the products of their several analyses differ from each other, only on account of the different quantity or proportion that each contains of the principles here enumerated.

But there are many other plants, which, besides these substances, yield also a considerable quantity of a Volatile Alkaline Salt. This property is possessed chiefly by that tribe of plants which is distinguished by having cruciform flowers; among which there are some that being analyzed greatly resemble animal matters. We shall now analyze one of these; Mustard-seed, for instance.

PROCESS II.