When you observe that no more Oil comes off, unlute your vessels; and in the receiver you will find an acidulated water, and the æthereal Oil floating on it. These two liquors may be easily separated from each other, by means of a glass funnel.
In the cucurbit will be left some of the water you put in, together with the remainder of your turpentine; which, when cold, instead of being fluid as it was before distillation, will be solid, and of the consistence of a resin, and is then called Rosin.
Put this residuum into a glass retort, and distil it in a reverberatory with a naked fire, gradually increased according to the general rule for all distillations. At first, with a degree of heat a little greater than that of boiling water, you will see two liquors come over into the recipient; one of which will be aqueous and acid, the other will be a transparent, limpid, yellowish Oil, floating on the acid liquor.
Continue your distillation, increasing your fire from time to time, by slow degrees. These two liquors will continue to come off together: and the nearer the operation draws to its end, the more acid will the aqueous liquor become, and the thicker and deeper coloured will the Oil grow. At last the Oil will be very thick, and of a deep reddish-yellow colour. When nothing more ascends, unlute your vessels: in the retort you will find only a very small quantity of a charred, light, friable substance.
OBSERVATIONS.
All Natural Balsams, as well as Turpentine, are oily, aromatic matters, which flow in great quantities from the trees containing them, either spontaneously, or through incisions made on purpose. As these matters have a strong scent, it is not surprising that they should greatly abound with Essential Oils. They may even be considered as Essential Oils, that naturally, and of their own accord, separate from the vegetables in which they exist.
Indeed these Natural Balsams differ from the Essential Oils obtained out of plants by distillation, in this alone, that the former contain a greater proportion of Acid; and, for that reason, are thicker than Essential Oils distilled with the heat of boiling water. But it hath been shewn, that these same distilled Essential Oils, though ever so fluid and light at first, gradually lose their tenuity as they grow old, and at last become considerably thick. On that occasion we observed that they are thus changed, because the lightest, most fluid, and least acid parts, are little by little dissipated and evaporated; so that at last there remains only the thickest and heaviest part, which owes these qualities to the Acid wherewith it is over-dosed.
Hence it follows, that Natural Balsams, and Essential Oils grown thick with age, are exactly one and the same thing. Accordingly we see that fire and distillation produce the same effects on both. The rectification of an Essential Oil, thickened by keeping, is nothing but a decomposition thereof, by separating, with the heat of boiling water, all those parts that are light enough to rise with that degree of heat, from what is so loaded with Acid as to remain fixed therein.
This operation is therefore precisely the same as our first distillation of Balsams with the heat of boiling water, by which the Essential Oil contained in them is drawn off. The residues of these two operations are also the same: each of them is a thick Oil, loaded with Acid, that is wholly, or nearly, deprived of the principle of odour peculiar to the original vegetable, and requires a degree of heat greater than that of boiling water to decompose it, by separating part of the Acid from the Oil; which will be rendered still the more fluid, the more the thickening Acid is separated from it by repeated distillations.
The newer Natural Balsams are, the thinner they are, and the more Essential Oil do they yield; and this Essential Oil, like all others, grows thick in time, and at last turns again to an actual Balsam.