During this time a small quantity of liquor will come over into the receiver, which must be poured into the retort. Then distil with a somewhat stronger degree of heat, but still very gently, till nothing be left in the retort but a thick matter. In the receiver you will find a spirituous liquor, of a quick grateful smell, which will excite a very smart sensation on the tongue, but without any corrosive acrimony. This is The Sweet Spirit of Nitre.
OBSERVATIONS.
By this operation Spirit of Nitre is combined with Spirit of Wine; these two liquors being united with each other, much in the same manner as the Vitriolic Acid is with Spirit of Wine in Rabel's Water.
The proportion of the liquors which form this combination is not absolutely determined, and the several authors who have written on the subject differ much about it. Some require equal parts of the ingredients; others again from two as far as ten parts of Spirit of Wine to one of Spirit of Nitre. This depends on the degree to which the Spirit of Nitre made use of is concentrated, and on the greater or less acidity which your dulcified Spirit of Nitre is intended to have.
The Dispensatory of the College of Paris orders one part of Spirit of Nitre distilled from dried clay, that is, of Spirit which doth not smoke, to be mixed with two parts of rectified Spirit of Wine, and the whole to stand in digestion for a month, without distilling the mixture at all. This is a very good method: because the long digestion supplies the place of distillation, and the Spirit of Nitre, not being highly concentrated, doth not greatly alter the Spirit of Wine; besides that many inconveniences, to be presently taken notice of, are by this means avoided.
But as our design is not to describe such Chymical preparations only as are commonly used in medicine, our plan requiring us to treat particularly of those which may give any light into the fundamental properties of bodies, the process here set down appeared the fittest for our purpose; because the action which Spirit of Nitre exerts upon Spirit of Wine is therein stronger and more perceptible.
One of the first particularities attending the mixture of those two liquors, is the great effervescence, accompanied with violent heat, abundance of fumes, and loud hissing, which arises as soon as the Spirit of Nitre and the Spirit of Wine come into contact with each other. There is great reason to think, that these phenomena are produced only by the rapidity and vigour with which the Nitrous Acid rushes into union with the inflammable part of the Spirit of Wine. We observed, in treating of the Æther, that phenomena of the same kind appear at the instant when the Vitriolic Acid unites with Spirit of Wine: but on that occasion, how highly soever the Vitriolic Acid be concentrated, all these effects are in a less degree than those produced in the present experiment; because the Nitrous Acid, though weaker than the Vitriolic, generally acts much more vigorously and violently on the bodies with which it unites, than any other sort of Acid.
Concerning these mixtures of Acids with Spirit of Wine, Mr. Pott observes, that it is not a matter of indifference whether you pour the Spirit of Wine upon the Acid, or the Acid on the Spirit of Wine; but that every thing passes much more quietly, when the Acid is poured to the Spirit of Wine, than when the contrary is done: and he gives the true reason thereof; to wit, that when the Acid is poured on the Spirit of Wine it finds in that liquor a great quantity of water, with which it immediately unites; that this weakens it, and hinders it from acting on the inflammable part with so much impetuosity as it otherwise would; and therefore he advises that such mixtures be always made in this manner. But it is evident that this advantage is gained only by mixing the Acid with the Spirit of Wine very gradually, and drop by drop, as directed in the process after Mr. Pott. For, if the two liquors were to be mixed together suddenly, and all at once, it is certain that the Acid would not meet with a single drop of phlegm more or less in that way than in the other.
Therefore the chief, and, in some measure, the only precaution necessary to be taken, in the making of such mixtures, to prevent the violent effervescence and other inconveniences that may attend it, such as explosion, and the bursting of the vessels, is to pour but a very small quantity of one liquor into the other at a time, and to add no more till the effervescence, and even the heat, produced by the first portion, be entirely ceased. With these precautions you may proceed either way, and be always sure that the vessels will not burst; because it is in your power to add such a small quantity of liquor at a time, as shall scarce produce a sensible effervescence. We own, however, that Mr. Pott's observation is a very just one. There is even an advantage in pouring the Acid to the Spirit of Wine, as he directs; which is, that the mixture is a little sooner made, and without any danger.