The Phosphorus obtained by a violent fire, from the caput mortuum of this distillation, seems to throw a light of probability on this conjecture. There is certainly a great deal of Acid in the composition of Phosphorus. Perhaps this Acid was originally combined with our second Volatile Alkali, and formed therewith, as was said, a sort of Sal Ammoniac. Moreover, almost all the plants that yield a Volatile Alkali by distillation, yield also a considerable quantity of Acid: which may perhaps be the remains of such a Sal Ammoniac decomposed by the operation. This is a subject for curious and useful inquiries. This second Volatile Alkali appears in a concrete form, because very little phlegm comes over along with it; so that the vapours thereof are not sufficient to dissolve it, as they did the first.
[CHAP. VII.]
Of the Substances obtained from Vegetables by Combustion.
PROCESS I.
To procure a Fixed Caustic Alkaline Salt from a Vegetable Substance, by burning it in the open Air.
Take any vegetable matter whatever; set it on fire, and let it burn in the open air till it be wholly reduced to ashes. On these ashes pour a quantity of boiling water sufficient to drench them thoroughly. Filter the liquor in order to separate the earthy parts; and evaporate your lye to dryness, stirring it incessantly; and you will have a yellowish-white Salt.
Put this Salt in a crucible; set it in a melting furnace, and make a moderate fire, so as not to fuse the Salt. It will turn first of a blue-grey colour, afterwards of a blue-green, and at last reddish. Put on the dome of the furnace; fill it with coals; make your fire strong enough to melt the Salt, and keep it in fusion for an hour, or an hour and half. Then pour it into a heated metal mortar; pound it while it is red-hot; put it, as soon as possible, into a glass bottle, first made very hot and dry, and shut it up close with a glass stopple rubbed with emery. By this means you will have the pure Fixed Alkali of the vegetable substance you burnt.
OBSERVATIONS.
Burning a vegetable substance in the open air is a kind of violent and rapid analysis made by fire, which separates, resolves, and decomposes, several of its principles.