These Balsams, by being long exposed to the heat of the sun, acquire such a consistence as to become solid. They then take another name, and are called Resins. Resins yield much less Essential Oil, when distilled, than Balsams do. Hence it follows, that Resins are to Balsams, what Balsams are to Essential Oils. All these effects are produced by the causes assigned above, and confirm the analogy we have established.
We have no other observations to make on this analysis of Turpentine, except that when Rosin is distilled in a retort with a naked fire, the operation must be carried on very slowly, and the fire duly governed: for the matter is apt to swell, and to rise in substance into the receiver, without being at all decomposed. In order to avoid this inconvenience, it is adviseable to make use of a long-bodied retort, such as is known by the name of the English Retort.
If you stop the distillation of Rosin about mid-way, or when the Oil that comes over begins to grow thick, you may, by changing the receiver, keep the first Oil apart: it is pretty fluid, and of a middle nature between the æthereal Oil, obtained with the heat of boiling water, and the last thick Oil, that doth not rise till towards the end of the distillation. This last thick Oil is that which Mr. Homberg fired with concentrated Oil of Vitriol.
If we examine the matter contained in the retort, when the distillation is thus stopped short, it appears, when cold, in the form of a solid substance, almost perfectly diaphanous, of a deep reddish-yellow colour, and friable: It is known by the name of Colophony.
This analysis of boiled Turpentine, is a specimen of the analysis of almost all other resins; so that what hath been said on this occasion is in a manner general, and applicable to other decompositions of the same kind. We shall now proceed to examine some other oily matters, which exhibit peculiar phenomena, and do not come under the general rules.
PROCESS II.
The Analysis of Resins: instanced in Benjamin: The Flowers and Oil of Benjamin.
Into a pretty deep earthen pot, having a border or rim round its mouth, put the Benjamin you intend to analyze. Cover the pot with a large conical cap of very thick white paper, and tye it on under the rim. Set your pot in a sand-bath, and warm it gently till the Benjamin melt. Continue the heat in this degree for an hour and half. Then untie the paper cap and take it off, shaking it as little as possible. You will find all the inside of the cap covered with a great quantity of beautiful, white, shining Flowers, in the form of little needles. Brush them off gently with a feather, put them into a bottle, and stop it close.
As soon as you take off the first cap, cover your pot immediately with a second like the former. In this manner go on till you perceive the Flowers begin to grow yellowish; and then it is proper to desist.