Many years ago, a group of people decided to publish different translations
of the Emerald Tablet and various commentaries upon it. The group broke up, the work was
never finished.... Here is some of what remained. Verses have been numbered for comparison. -
Jon Marshall.
History of the Tablet
History of the Tablet (largely summarised
from Needham 1980, & Holmyard 1957)
The Tablet probably first appeared in the West in editions of the psuedo-Aristotlean
Secretum
Secretorum which was actually a translation of the Kitab Sirr al-Asar,
a book of advice to kings
which was translated into latin by Johannes Hispalensis c. 1140 and
by Philip of Tripoli c.1243.
Other translations of the Tablet may have been made during the same
period by Plato of Tivoli
and Hugh of Santalla, perhaps from different sources.
The date of the Kitab Sirr al-Asar is uncertain, though c.800 has been
suggested and it is not clear
when the tablet became part of this work.
Holmyard was the first to find another early arabic version (Ruska
found a 12th centruy recension
claiming to have been dictated by Sergius of Nablus) in the Kitab Ustuqus
al-Uss al-Thani
(Second Book of the Elements of Foundation) attributed to Jabir. Shortly
after Ruska found
another version appended to the Kitab Sirr al-Khaliqa wa San`at al-Tabi`a
(Book of the Secret of
Creation and the Art of Nature), which is also known as the Kitab Balaniyus
al-Hakim fi'l-`Ilal
(book of Balinas the wise on the Causes). It has been proposed that
this book was written may
have been written as early as 650, and was definitely finished by the
Caliphate of al-Ma'mun
(813-33).
Scholars have seen similarities between this book and the Syriac Book
of Treasures written by
Job of Odessa (9th century) and more interestingly the Greek writings
of the bishop Nemesius of
Emesa in Syria from the mid fourth century. However though this suggests
a possible Syriac
source, non of these writings contain the tablet.
Balinas is usually identified with Apollonius of Tyna, but there is
little evidence to connect him with
the Kitab Balabiyus, and even if there was,the story implies that Balinas
found the tablet rather
than wrote it, and the recent discoveries of the dead sea scrolls and
the nag hamamdi texts suggest
that hiding texts in caves is not impossible, even if we did not have
the pyramids before us.
Ruska has suggested an origin further east, and Needham has proposed
an origin in China.
Holmyard, Davis and Anon all consider that this Tablet may be one of
the earliest of all alchemical
works we have that survives.
It should be remarked that apparantly the Greeks and Egyptians used
the termtranslated as
`emerald' for emeralds, green granites, "and perhaps green jasper".
In medieval times the emerald
table of the Gothic kings of Spain, and the Sacro catino- a dish said
to have belonged to the
Queen of Sheba, to have been used at the last supper, and to be made
of emerald, were made of
green glass [Steele and Singer: 488].
Translations
From Jabir ibn Hayyan.
0) Balinas mentions the engraving on the table in the hand of Hermes,
which says:
1) Truth! Certainty! That in which there is no doubt!
2) That which is above is from that which is below, and that which
is below is from that which is
above, working the miracles of one.
3) As all things were from one.
4) Its father is the Sun and its mother the Moon.
5) The Earth carried it in her belly, and the Wind nourished it in
her belly,
7) as Earth which shall become Fire.
7a) Feed the Earth from that which is subtle, with the greatest power.
8) It ascends from the earth to the heaven and becomes ruler over that
which is above and that
which is below.
14) And I have already explained the meaning of the whole of this in
two of these books of mine.
[Holmyard 1923: 562.]
Another Arabic Version (from the
German of Ruska, translated by Valentin Tomberg).
0) Here is that which the priest Sagijus of Nabulus has dictated concerning
the entrance of Balinas
into the hidden chamber... After my entrance into the chamber, where
the talisman was set up, I
came up to an old man sitting on a golden throne, who was holding an
emerald table in one hand.
And behold the following - in Syriac, the primordial language- was
written thereon:
1) Here (is) a true explanation, concerning which there can be no doubt.
2) It attests: The above from the below, and the below from the above
-the work of the miracle of
the One.
3) And things have been from this primal substance through a single
act. How wonderful is this
work! It is the main (principle) of the world and is its maintainer.
4) Its father is the sun and its mother the moon; the
5) wind has borne it in its body, and the earth has nourished it.
6) the father of talismen and the protector of miracles
6a) whose powers are perfect, and whose lights are confirmed (?),
7) a fire that becomes earth.
7a) Separate the earth from the fire, so you will attain the subtle
as more inherent than the gross,
with care and sagacity.
8) It rises from earth to heaven, so as to draw the lights of the heights
to itself, and descends to the
earth; thus within it are the forces of the above and the below;
9) because the light of lights within it, thus does the darkness flee
before it.
10) The force of forces, which overcomes every subtle thing and penetrates
into everything gross.
11) The structure of the microcosm is in accordance with the structure
of the macrocosm.
12) And accordingly proceed the knowledgeable.
13) And to this aspired Hermes, who was threefold graced with wisdom.
14) And this is his last book, which he concealed in the chamber.
[Anon 1985: 24-5]
Twelfth Century Latin
0) When I entered into the cave, I received the tablet zaradi, which
was inscribed, from between
the hands of Hermes, in which I discovered these words:
1) True, without falsehood, certain, most certain.
2) What is above is like what is below, and what is below is like that
which is above. To make the
miracle of the one thing.
3) And as all things were made from contemplation of one, so all things
were born from one
adaptation.
4) Its father is the Sun, its mother is the Moon.
5) The wind carried it in its womb, the earth breast fed it.
6) It is the father of all �works of wonder' (Telesmi) in the world.
6a) Its power is complete (integra).
7) If cast to (turned towards- versa fuerit) earth,
7a) it will separate earth from fire, the subtile from the gross.
8) With great capacity it ascends from earth to heaven. Again it descends
to earth, and takes back
the power of the above and the below.
9) Thus you will receive the glory of the distinctiveness of the world.
All obscurity will flee from
you.
10) This is the whole most strong strength of all strength, for it
overcomes all subtle things, and
penetrates all solid things.
11a) Thus was the world created.
12) From this comes marvelous adaptions of which this is the proceedure.
13) Therefore I am called Hermes, because I have three parts of the
wisdom of the whole world.
14) And complete is what I had to say about the work of the Sun, from
the book of Galieni
Alfachimi.
[From Latin in Steele and Singer 1928: 492.]
Translation
from Aurelium Occultae Philosophorum..Georgio Beato
1) This is true and remote from all cover of falsehood
2) Whatever is below is similar to that which is above. Through this
the marvels of the work of one
thing are procured and perfected.
3) Also, as all things are made from one, by the condsideration of
one, so all things were made
from this one, by conjunction.
4) The father of it is the sun, the mother the moon.
5) The wind bore it in the womb. Its nurse is the earth, the mother
of all perfection.
6a)Its power is perfected.
7) If it is turned into earth,
7a) separate the earth from the fire, the subtle and thin from the
crude and course, prudently, with
modesty and wisdom.
8) This ascends from the earth into the sky and again descends from
the sky to the earth, and
receives the power and efficacy of things above and of things below.
9) By this means you will acquire the glory of the whole world, and
so you will drive away all
shadows and blindness.
10) For this by its fortitude snatches the palm from all other fortitude
and power. For it is able to
penetrate and subdue everything subtle and everything crude and hard.
11a) By this means the world was founded
12) and hence the marvelous cojunctions of it and admirable effects,
since this is the way by which
these marvels may be brought about.
13) And because of this they have called me Hermes Tristmegistus since
I have the three parts of
the wisdom and Philsosphy of the whole universe.
14) My speech is finished which i have spoken concerning the solar
work
[Davis 1926: 874.]
Translation of Issac Newton c. 1680.
1) Tis true without lying, certain & most true.
2) That wch is below is like that wch is above & that wch is above
is like yt wch is below to do ye
miracles of one only thing.
3) And as all things have been & arose from one by ye mediation
of one: so all things have their
birth from this one thing by adaptation.
4) The Sun is its father, the moon its mother,
5) the wind hath carried it in its belly, the earth its nourse.
6) The father of all perfection in ye whole world is here.
7) Its force or power is entire if it be converted into earth.
7a) Seperate thou ye earth from ye fire, ye subtile from the gross
sweetly wth great indoustry.
8) It ascends from ye earth to ye heaven & again it desends to
ye earth and receives ye force of
things superior & inferior.
9) By this means you shall have ye glory of ye whole world & thereby
all obscurity shall fly from
you.
10) Its force is above all force. ffor it vanquishes every subtile
thing & penetrates every solid thing.
11a) So was ye world created.
12) From this are & do come admirable adaptaions whereof ye means
(Or process) is here in this.
13) Hence I am called Hermes Trismegist, having the three parts of
ye philosophy of ye whole
world.
14) That wch I have said of ye operation of ye Sun is accomplished
& ended.
[Dobbs 1988: 183-4.]
Translation from Kriegsmann (?) alledgedly from the Phoenician
1) I speak truly, not falsely, certainly and most truly
2) These things below with those above and those with these join forces
again so that they
produce a single thing the most wonderful of all.
3)And as the whole universe was brought forth from one by the word
of one GOD, so also all
things are regenerated perpetually from this one according to the disposition
of Nature.
4) It has the Sun for father and the Moon for mother:
5) it is carried by the air as if in a womb, it is nursed by the earth.
6) It is the cause, this, of all perfection of all things throughout
the universe.
6a) This will attain the highest perfection of powers
7) if it shall be reduced into earth
7a) Distribute here the earth and there the fire, thin out the density
of this the suavest (suavissima)
thing of all.
8)Ascend with the greatest sagacity of genius from the earth into the
sky, and thence descend
again to the earth, and recognise that the forces of things above and
of things below are one,
9) so as to posses the glory of the whole world- and beyond this man
of abject fate may have
nothing further.
10)This thing itself presently comes forth stronger by reasons of this
fortitude: it subdues all bodies
surely, whether tenuous or solid, by penetrating them.
11a) And so everything whatsoever that the world contains was created.
12) Hence admirable works are accomplished which are instituted (carried
out- instituuntur)
according to the same mode.
13) To me therefor the name of Hermes Trismegistus has been awarded
because I am discovered
as the Teacher of the three parts of the wisdom of the world.
14) These then are the considerations which I have concluded ought
to be written down
concerning the readiest operations of the Chymic art.
[Davis 1926: 875 slightly modified.]
From Sigismund Bacstrom (allegedly translated from Chaldean).
0) The Secret Works of CHIRAM ONE in essence, but three in aspect.
1) It is true, no lie, certain and to be depended upon,
2) the superior agrees with the inferior, and the inferior agrees with
the superior, to effect that one
truly wonderful work.
3) As all things owe their existence to the will of the only one, so
all things owe their origin to the
one only thing, the most hidden by the arrangement of the only God.
4) The father of that one only thing is the sun its mother is the moon,
5) the wind carries it in its belly; but its nourse is a spirituous
earth.
6) That one only thing is the father of all things in the Universe.
6a) Its power is perfect,
7) after it has been united with a spirituous earth.
7a) Separate that spirituous earth from the dense or crude by means
of a gentle heat, with much
attention.
8) In great measure it ascends from the earth up to heaven, and descends
again, newborn, on the
earth, and the superior and the inferior are increased in power.
9) By this wilt thou partake of the honours of the whole world. And
Darkness will fly from thee.
10) This is the strength of all powers. With this thou wilt be able
to overcome all things and
transmute all what is fine and what is coarse.
11a) In this manner the world was created;
12) the arrangements to follow this road are hidden.
13) For this reason I am called Chiram Telat Mechasot, one in essence,
but three in aspect. In this
trinity is hidden the wisdom of the whole world.
14) It is ended now, what I have said concerning the effects of the
sun. Finish of the Tabula
Smaragdina.
[See Hall 1977: CLVIII,]
From Madame Blavatsky
2) What is below is like that which is above, and what is above is similar
to that which is below to
accomplish the wonders of the one thing.
3) As all things were produced by the mediation of one being, so all
things were produced from
this one by adaption.
4) Its father is the sun, its mother the moon.
6a) It is the cause of all perfection throughout the whole earth.
7) Its power is perfect if it is changed into earth.
7a) Separate the earth from the fire, the subtile from the gross, acting
prudently and with
judgement.
8 ) Ascend with the greatest sagacity from earth to heaven, and unite
together the power of things
inferior and superior;
9) thus you will possess the light of the whole world, and all obscurity
will fly away from you.
10) This thing has more fortitude than fortitude itself, because it
will overcome every subtile thing
and penetrate every solid thing.
11a) By it the world was formed.
[Blavatsky 1972: 507.]
From Fulcanelli (translated from the French by Sieveking)
1) This is the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth:-
2) As below, so above; and as above so below. With this knowledge alone
you may work
miracles.
3) And since all things exist in and eminate from the ONE Who is the
ultimate Cause, so all things
are born after their kind from this ONE.
4) The Sun is the father, the Moon the mother;
5) the wind carried it in his belly. Earth is its nurse and its guardian.
6) It is the Father of all things,
6a) the eternal Will is contained in it.
7) Here, on earth, its strength, its power remain one and undivded.
7a) Earth must be separated from fire, the subtle from the dense, gently
with unremitting care.
8) It arises from the earth and descends from heaven; it gathers to
itself the strength of things
above and things below.
9) By means of this one thing all the glory of the world shall be yours
and all obscurity flee from
you.
10) It is power, strong with the strength of all power, for it will
penetrate all mysteries and dispel
all ignorance.
11a) By it the world was created.
12) From it are born manifold wonders, the means to achieving which
are here given
13) It is for this reason that I am called Hermes Trismegistus; for
I possess the three essentials of
the philosophy of the universe.
14) This is is the sum total of the work of the Sun.
[Sadoul 1972: 25-6.]
From Fulcanelli, new translation
1) It is true without untruth, certain and most true:
2) that which is below is like that which is on high, and that which
is on high is like that which is
below; by these things are made the miracles of one thing.
3) And as all things are, and come from One, by the mediation of One,
So all things are born from
this unique thing by adaption.
4) The Sun is the father and the Moon the mother.
5) The wind carries it in its stomach. The earth is its nourisher and
its receptacle.
6 The Father of all the Theleme of the universal world is here.
6a) Its force, or power, remains entire,
7) if it is converted into earth.
7a) You separate the earth from the fire, the subtle from the gross,
gently with great industry.
8) It climbs from the earth and descends from the sky, and receives
the force of things superior
and things inferior.
9) You will have by this way, the glory of the world and all obscurity
will flee from you.
10) It is the power strong with all power, for it will defeat every
subtle thing and penetrate every
solid thing
11a) In this way the world was created.
12) From it are born wonderful adaptations, of which the way here is
given.
13) That is why I have been called Hermes Tristmegistus, having the
three parts of the universal
philosophy.
14) This, that I have called the solar Work, is complete.
[Translated from Fulcanelli 1964: 312.]
From Idres Shah
1) The truth, certainty, truest, without untruth.
2 )What is above is like what is below. What is below is like what
is above. The miracle of unity is
to be attained.
3) Everything is formed from the contemplation of unity, and all things
come about from unity, by
means of adaptation.
4) Its parents are the Sun and Moon.
5) It was borne by the wind and nurtured by the Earth.
6) Every wonder is from it
6a) and its power is complete.
7) Throw it upon earth,
7a) and earth will separate from fire. The impalbable separated from
the palpable.
8) Through wisdom it rises slowly from the world to heaven. Then it
descends to the world
combining the power of the upper and the lower.
9 )Thus you will have the illumination of all the world, and darkness
will disappear.
10) This is the power of all strength- it overcomes that which is delicate
and penetrates through
solids.
11a) This was the means of the creation of the world.
12) And in the future wonderful developements will be made, and this
is the way.
13) I am Hermes the Threefold Sage, so named because I hold the three
elements of all wisdom.
14) And thus ends the revelation of the work of the Sun.
(Shah 1964: 198).
Hypothetical Chinese Original
1) True, true, with no room for doubt, certain, worthy of all trust.
2) See, the highest comes from the lowest, and the lowest from the
highest; indeed a marvelous
work of the tao.
3) See how all things originated from It by a single process.
4) The father of it (the elixir) is the sun (Yang), its mother the
moon (Yin).
5) The wind bore it in its belly, and the earth nourished it.
6 )This is the father of wondrous works (changes and transformations),
the guardian of mysteries,
6a) perfect in its powers, the animator of lights.
7) This fire will be poured upon the earth...
7a) So separate the earth from the fire, the subtle from the gross,
acting prudently and with art.
8) It ascends from the earth to the heavens (and orders the lights
above), then descends again to
the earth; and in it is the power of the highest and the lowest.
9) Thus when you have the light of lights darkness will flee away from
you.
10) With this power of powers (the elixir) you shall be able to get
the mastery of every subtle
thing, and be able to penetrate everything that is gross.
11a) In this way was the great world itself formed.
12) Hence thus and thus marvellous operations will be acheived.
[Slightly altered from Needham 1980: 371.]
TEXTUAL REMARKS
On #3 Some Latin texts have meditatione (contemplation), others mediatione
(mediation). Some
texts have adaptatione (by adaptation), some have adoptionis (by adoption).
On #6 �Telesmi' is a greek word, some texts have �thelesmi'.
On #6, 7 In some texts �Its Power is Complete' is a separate line. In
the generally accepted
reading, this runs into #7 producing �Its Power is complete if versa
fuerit to earth'. Where possible
this has been indicated by diving these lines in 6, 6a, 7, & 7a
On #7, 8 In some texts the �Wisdom, capacity' (magno ingenio) is read
as referring to #7, and
hence the operation of Separation is to be carried out �carefully',
in other readings the �wisdom' is
held to refer to #8 and the product of the Separation which thus ascends
with �wisdom'.
Needham quotes Ruska to the effect that sections 3, 12 and 14 are probably
late additions (op.
cit)
COMMENTARIES
On #1
Hortulanus: "... the most true Sun is procreated by art. And he says
most true in the superlative
degree because the Sun generated by this art exceeds all natural Sun
in all of its properties,
medicinal and otherwise" (Davis modified by `Linden')
On #2
Albertus Magnus: Hermes says "the powers of all things below originate
in the stars and
constellations of the heavens: and that all these powers are poured
down into all things below by
the circle called Alaur, which is, they said, the first circle of the
constellations". This descent is
"noble when the materials receiving these powers are more like things
above in their brightness and
transparency; ignoble when the materials are confused and foul, so
that the heavenly power is, as it
were oppressed. Therefore they say that this is the reason why precious
stones more than anything
else have wonderful powers" (60 -61). While the "seven kinds of metals
have their forms from the
seven planets of the lower spheres" (168).
Hortulanus: "the stone is divided into two principle parts by the magistry,
into a superior part which
ascends above and into an inferior part which remains below fixed and
clear. And these two parts
moreover are concordant in their virtue since the inferior part is
earth which is called nurse and
ferment, and the superior part is the spirit which quickens the whole
stone and raises it up.
Wherfore separation made, and conjunction celebrated, many miracles
are effected."
Burckhardt: "This refers to the reciprocal dependence of the active
and the passive... essential
form cannot be manifested without passive materia.. the efficacy of
the spiritual power depends on
the preparedness of the human �container' and vice versa.... �Above'
and �below' are thus related
to this one thing and complement one another in its regard".
Schumaker: "There are corresponding planes in various levels of creation,
hence it is safe to draw
analogies between macrocosm and microcosm, the mineral kingdom and
the human, animal and
vegetable kingdoms etc".
Needham: "the whole affirmation looks remarkably like the doctrine that
extreme of Yang
generates Yin, and vice versa".
On #3
Hortulanus: "our stone, which was created by God, was born and came
forth from a confused
mass, containing in itself all the elements- and hence our stone was
born by this single miracle".
Trithemius: "Is it not true that all things flow from one thing, from
the goodness of the One, and that
whatever is joined to Unity cannot be diverse, but rather fructifies
by means of the simplicity and
adaptability of the One" "What is born from Unity? Is it not the ternary?
Take note: Unity is
unmixed, the binary is compounded, and the ternary is reduced to the
simplicity of Unity. I,
Trithemius, am not of three minds, but persist in a single integrated
mind taking pleasure in the
ternary, which gives birth to a marvelous offspring" (Bran)
Burckhardt: "the undivided, invisible Light of the unconditioned One
is refracted into multiplicity by
the prism of the Spirit". As the Spirit contemplates the Unity without
full comprehension "it
manifests the �many-sided' All, just as a lens transmits the light
it receives as a bundle of rays".
Schumaker: As God is one, all created objects come from one thing, an
undifferentiated primal
matter.
On #4
Hortulanus: " As one animal naturally generates more animals similar
to itself, so the Sun artificially
generates Sun by the power of multiplication of...the stone.... in
this artificial generation it is
necessary that the Sun have a suitable receptacle, consonant with itself,
for its sperm and its
tincture, and this is the Luna of the philosophers"
Redgrove: Sun and Moon "probably stand for Spirit and Matter respectively,
not gold and silver".
Burckhardt: Sun "is the spirit (nous), while the moon is the soul (psyche)".
Schumaker: "If the moon is associated with water, as because of its
�moisture' [as] was usual, and
the sun with fire, the prima materia is understood to have been generated
by fire, born of water,
brought down from the sky by wind, and nourished by earth".
On #5
Albertus Magnus: by this Hermes "means the levigatio [making light
weight] of the material, raising
it to the properties of Air. And why he says the wind carries the material
[of the stone] in its belly
is that, when the material is placed in an alembic- which is a vessel
made like those in which
rosewater is prepared- then by evapouration it is rendered subtle and
is raised towards the
properties of Air... And there distills and issues from the mouth of
the alembic a watery or oily
liquor with all the powers of the elements" (17). In metals the moisture
is not separated from the
dryness, but is dissolved in it; and being so dissolved, it moves about
there as if it had been
swallowed by the Earth and were moving about in its bowels. And on
this account Hermes said
�The mother of metal is Earth that carries it in her belly'".
Hortulanus: "It is plain that wind is air, and air is life, and life
is spirit... And thus it is necessary that
the wind should bear the whole stone.... [However] our stone without
the ferment of the earth will
never come to the effect, which ferment is called food"
Trithemius: "the wind carries its seed in her belly".
Maier: By "the wind carried him in its belly" Hermes means " �He, whose
father is the Sun, and
whose mother is the Moon, will be carried before he is born, by wind
and vapour, just as a flying
bird is carried by air'. From the vapours of winds, which are nothing
else but wind in motion,
water proceeds, when condensed, and from that water, mixed with earth,
all minerals and metals
arise". The substance carried by the wind is "in chemical respect..
the sulphur, which is carried in
mercury". Lull says "�The stone is the fire, carried in the belly of
the air'. In physical respect it is the
unborn child that will soon be born". To be clearer, "�All mercury
is composed of vapours, that is
to say of water, which the earth raises along with it into the thin
air, and of earth, which the air
compels to return into watery earth or earthy water" As the elements
contained within are each
reduced to a watery condition, they either follow the volatile elements
upward as in common
mercury, or they stay below with the solid elements as in philosophical
Mercury "and in the solid
metals". So "Mercury is the wind which receives the sulphur... as the
unripe fruit from the mothers
womb, or from the ashes of the burnt mother's body and takes it to
a place where it may ripen".
Ripley says "our child shall be born in the air, that is the belly
of the wind" [de Jong 1969: 55- 7.]
Maier (2nd Comment) on "The earth is its nurse": Food changes into the
substance of the eater
and is then assimilated. "This harmony dominates the whole of nature,
for the like enjoys the like".
The same happens in the Work and Nature "just as is the growth of the
child in the mother's
womb. So also a father, a mother and a nurse have been attributed to
the philosophical child... it
comes into being from the twofold seed and then grows as an embryo
does". As a woman must
moderate her diet to avoid miscarriage, "in the same way one must set
about philosophical work
with moderation". The Seeds also have to be united. "Philosophers say
that the one comes from
the East and the other from the West and become one; what does this
mean but combining in a
retort, a moderate temperature and nourishment?". "One may wonder why
the earth is referred to
as the nurse of the philosophic child, since barreness and dryness
are the main properties of the
element earth". The answer is that not the element, but the whole Earth
is meant. "It is the nurse of
Heaven not because it resolves, washes and moistens the foetus, but
because it coagulates, fastens
and colours the latter and changes it into sap and blood... The Earth
contains a wonderful juice
which changes the nature of the one who feeds on it, as Romulus is
believed to have been changed
by the wolf's milk into a bellicose individual" [de Jong 1969: 63 -5.]
Burckhardt: "The wind which carries the spiritual germ in its body,
is the vital breath". Vital breath
is the substance of the realm between heaven and earth, it "is also
Quicksilver which contains the
germ of gold in a liquid state". The earth is "the body, as an inward
reality".
On #6
Burckhardt: the word talisman is derived from Telesma. Talismans work
by corresponding to their
prototype, and by making a "�condensation', on the subtle plane, of
a spiritual state. This explains
the similarity between the talisman, as the bearer of an invisible
influence, and the alchemical elixir,
as the �ferment' of metallic transformation".
On #7
Hortulanus: The stone is perfect and complete if it is turned into
earth "that is if the soul of the
stone itself.... is turned into earth, namely of the stone and is fixed
so that the whole substance of
the stone becomes one with its nurse, namely the earth, and the whole
stone is converted to
ferment"
Trithemius: it is the seed from #5 that must be cast upon the earth.
Bacstrom: "Process- First Distillation".
Burckhardt: "when the Spirit is �embodied', the volatile becomes fixed".
Schumaker: if the prime matter is to be used it must be fixed into a
substance "capable of being
handled".
On #7a
Hortulanus: "You will separate, that is, you will dissolve, because
solution is separation of parts.."
Burkhardt: The separation "means the �extraction' of the soul from the
body".
Schumaker "Since the volatile principle is fire -or sometimes, air-
stability is produced by its
removal. Or, alternatively but less probably, the earth is impurity
(�the gross') and a purified fire
(�the subtle') is
what is wanted.
On #8
Albertus Magnus: In intending to teach the operations of alchemy Hermes
says the stone "�ascends
to heaven' when by roasting and calcination it takes on the properties
of Fire; for alchemists mean
by calcinatio the reduction of material to to powder by burning and
roasting. And the material
�again descends from heaven to earth' when it takes on the properties
of Earth by inhumatio, for
inhumation revives and nourishes what was previously killed by calcination".
Hortulanus: "And now he deals with multiplication [of the stone]." "Although
our stone is divided in
the first operation into four parts... there are really two principle
parts". The ascending, non fixed,
and the earth or ferment. "It is necessary to have a large quantity
of this non fixed part and to give
it to the stone which has been made thoroughly clean from dirt....
until the entire stone is borne
above by the virtue of the spirit"
"Afterwards it is necessary to incerate the same stone,..with the oil
that was extracted in the first
operation, which oil is called the water of the stone" Roast or boil
by sublimation until the "entire
stone descends... and remains fixed and fluent". "That which is coporeal
is made spiritual by
sublimation, and that which is spiritual is made corporeal by descension".
Trithemius: "When the ternary has at last returned to itself it may,
by an inner disposition and great
delight, ascend from the earth to heaven, thereby receiving both superior
and inferior power; thus
will it be made powerful and glorious in the clarity of Unity, demonstrate
its ability to bring forth
every number, and put to flight all obscurity".
Bacstrom: "Last Digestion". "The Azoth ascends from the Earth, from
the bottom of the Glass, and
redescends in Veins and drops into the Earth and by this continual
circulation the Azoth is more
and more subtilised, Volatilizes Sol and carries the volatilized Solar
atoms along with it and
thereby becomes a Solar Azoth, i.e. our third and genuine Sophic Mercury".
The circulation must
continue until "it ceases of itself, and the Earth has sucked it all
in, when it becomes the black
pitchy matter, the Toad [the substances in the alchemical retort and
also the lower elements in the
body of man -Hall], which denotes complete putrifaction or Death of
the compound".
Read, suggests this section describes the use of a kerotakis, in which
metals are suspended and
subject to the action of gasses released from substances heated in
the base, and from their
condensation and circulation.
Burckhardt: "dissolution of consciousness from all formal �coagulations'
is
followed by the �crystalisation' of the Spirit, so that active and
passive are perfectly united."
Schumaker: "Separate the volatile part of the substance by vaporization
but continue heating until
the vapour reunites with the parent body, whereupon you will have obtained
the Stone".
On #9
Trithemius: When the ternary has returned to Unity cleansed of all
impurities "the mind understands
without contradiction all the mysteries of the excellently arranged
arcanum".
Bacstrom: the black matter becomes White and Red. The Red "having been
carried to perfection,
medicinaly and for Metals" is capable of supporting complete mental
and physical health, and
provides "ample means, in finitum multiplicable to be benevolent and
charitable, without any
dimunation of our inexhaustable resources, therefore well may it be
called the Glory of the whole
World". Contemplation and study of the Philosopher's Stone ("L. P.")
elevates the mind to God.
"The Philosophers say with great Truth, that the L.P. either finds
a good man or makes one". "By
invigorating the Organs the Soul makes use of for communicating with
exterior objects, the Soul
must aquire greater powers, not only for conception but also for retention".
If we pray and have
faith "all Obscurity must vanish of course".
Burckhardt: "Thus the light of the Spirit becomes constant..[and] ignorance,
deception,
uncertainty, doubt and foolishness will be removed from consciousness".
On #10
Trithemius: The Philosopher's Stone is another name for the �one thing',
and is able to "conquer
every subtile thing and to penetrate every solid". "This very noble
virtue... consists of maximal
fortitude, touching everything with its desirable excellence".
Bacstrom: "The L.P. does possess all the Powers concealed in Nature,
not for destruction but for
exhaltation and regeneration of matter, in the three Departments of
Nature". "It refixes the most
subtil Oxygen into its own firey Nature". The power increases "in a
tenfold ratio, at every
multiplication". So it can penetrate Gold and Silver, and fix mercury,
Crystals and Glass Fluxes.
Burckhardt: "Alchemical fixation is nevertheless more inward... Through
its union with the spirit
bodily consciousness itself becomes a fine and penetrating power".
He quotes Jabir "The body
becomes a spirit, and takes on... fineness, lightness, extensibility,
coloration... The spirit...
becomes a body and aquires the latter's resistance to fire, immobility
and duration. From both
bodies a light substance is born , which.. precisely takes up a middle
position between the two
extremes".
Schumaker: The product of the distillation and reunion will "dominate
less solid substances, but
because of its own subtlety it will �penetrate' and hence dominate,
other solid things less pure and
quasi-spiritual than itself".
On #11
Burckhardt: "the little world is created according to the prototype
of the great world", when the
human realises their original nature is the image of God.
Schumaker: "The alchemical operation is a paradigm of the creative process.
We may note the
sexual overtones of what has preceeded"
On #12
Burckhardt: "In the Arabic text this is: �This way is traversed by
the sages".
On #13
Hortulanus: "He here teaches in an occult manner the things from which
the stone is made." "the
stone is called perfect because it has in itself the nature of minerals,
ofvegetables and of animals.
For the stone is three and one, tripple and single, having four natures....
and three colours, namely
black, white and red. It is also called the grain of corn because unless
it shall have died, it remains
itself alone. And if it shall have died... it bears much fruit when
it is in conjunction..."
Newton: "on account of this art Mercurius is called thrice greatest,
having three parts of the
philosophy of the whole world, since he signifies the Mercury of the
philosophers.... and has
dominion in the mineral kingdom, the vegetable kingdom, and the animal
kingdom".
Bacstrom: the wisdom of the world (?) is hidden in "Chiram and its Use".
Hermes "signifies a
Serpent, and the Serpent used to be an Emblem of Knowledge or Wisdom."
Burckhardt: "The three parts of wisdom correspond to the three great
divisions of the universe,
namely, the spiritual, psychic and corporeal realms, whose symbols
are heaven, air and earth".
Schumaker: "The usual explanation of Tristmegistus.. is that Hermes
was the greatest philosopher,
the greatest priest, and the greatest king".
General
Trithemius: "our philosophy is celestial, not worldly, in order that
we may faithfuly behold, by
means of a direct intuition of the mind through faith and knowledge,
that principle which we call
God...."
Trithemius: "Study generates knowledge; knowledge prepares love; love,
similarity; similarity,
communion; communion, virtue; virtue, dignity; dignity, power; and
power performs the miracle".
Newton "Inferior and superior, fixed and volatile, sulphur and quicksilver
have a similar nature and
are one thing, like man and wife. For they differ from one another
only by degree of digestion and
maturity. Sulphur is mature quicksilver, and quicksilver is immature
sulphur: and on account of this
affinity they unite like male and female, and they act on each other,
and through that action they are
mutually transmuted into each other and procreate a more noble offspring
to accomplish the
miracles of this one thing". "And just as all things were created from
one Chaos by the design of
one God, so in our art all things... are born from this one thing which
is our Chaos, by the design
of the Artificer and the skilful adaptation of things. And the generation
of this is similar to the
human, truly from a father and mother".
Blavatsky: the mysterious thing "is the universal, magical agent, the
astral light, which in the
correlations of its forces furnishes the alkahest, the philosopher's
stone, and the elixir of life.
Hermetic philosophy names it Azoth, the soul of the world, the celestial
virgin, the great Magnes,
etc" It appears to be that which gives organisation ("the maze of force-correlations"),
and form i.e.
the perfect geometry of snowflakes.
Sherwood Taylor: "the operation of the Sun.. was carried out by a �spirit',
universal, the source of
all things, having the power of perfecting them. Its virtue is integral
[# 6a] (ie having the power to
convert the diverse into a single substance), if it be turned into
earth (ie. solidified). This conveyed
that the Stone was to be a solidified pneuma. Pneuma was the link between
earth and heaven,
having the virtue of the celestial and subterranean regions- the power
of the whole cosmos from
the fixed stars to the centre of the earth. It overcomes every nature
and penetrates every solid. It is
the source of the whole world and so it can be the means of changing
things in a wonderful way.
The three parts of the philosophy of the whole world are presumably
of the celestial, terrestrial,
and subterranean regions".
Shah: The table is "the same as the Sufi dictum... �Man is the microcosm,
creation the macrocosm
- the unity. All comes from One. By the joining of the power of contemplation
all can be attained.
This essence must be separated from the body first, then combined with
the body. This is the
Work. Start with yourself, end with all. Before man, beyond man, transformation'".
A COMMENTARY OF IBN UMAIL
HERMUS said the secret of everything and the life of everything is Water....
This water becomes
in wheat, ferment; in the vine, wine; in the olive, olive oil.... The
begining of the child is from
water.... Regarding this spiritual water and the sanctified and thirsty
earth, HERMUS the great,
crowned with the glorious wisdom and the sublime sciences, said [#1]
Truth it is, indubtible,
certain and correct, [#2] that the High is from the Low and the Low
is from the High. They bring
about wonders through the one, just as things are produced from that
one essence by a single
preparation. Later by his statement [#4] Its father is the Sun and
its mother the Moon he meant
their male and their female. They are the two birds which are linked
together in the pictures given
regarding the beginning of the operation, and from them the spiritual
tinctures are produced. And
similarly they are at the end of the operation. Later in his statement
[#7 ?] the subtle is more
honourable than the gross, he means by the subtle the divine spiritual
water; and by the gross the
earthly body. As for his later statement [#8] with gentleness and wisdom
it will ascend from the
earth to the sky, and will take fire from the higher lights, he means
by this the distillation and the
raising of the water into the air. As for his later statement [#8a]
It will descend to the earth,
containing the strength of the high and the low, he means by this the
breathing in (istinshaq) of the
air, and the taking of the spirit from it, and its subsequent elevation
to the highest degree of heat,
and it is the Fire, and the low is the body, and its content of the
controlling earthly power which
imparts the colours. For there lie in it those higher powers, as well
as the earthly powers which
were submerged in it.
The natural operation and decay causes it to be manifest, and hence
the strength of the earth, and
of the air, and of the higher fire passed in to it. Later he said [#9]
it will overcome the high and the
low because it in it is found the light of lights: and consequently
the darkness will flee
from it. [See Stapleton et al. p 74, 81.]
APPENDIX
Translation from Roger Bacon's edition of Secretum Secretorum made c
1445
1)Trouth hath hym so, and it is no doubt,
2) that the lover is to the heigher, and the heigher to the lower aunsweren.
The worcher forsoth of all myracles is the one and sool God, of and
fro Whom Cometh all
meruelous operacions.
3) So all thynges were created of o soole substance, and of o soole
disposicion,
4 ) the fader wherof is the sone, and the moone moder,
5) that brought hym forth by blast or aier in the wombe, the erthe
taken fro it,
6) to whom is seid the increat fader, tresour of myracles, and yever
of vertues.
7) Of fire is made erthe.
7a) Depart the erthe fro the fire, for the sotiller is worthier than
the more grosse, and the thynne
thynge than the thik. This most be do wisely and discretly.
8) It ascendith fro the erth into the heven, and falleth fro heven
to the erthe, and therof sleith the
higher and the lower vertue.
9)And yf it lordship in the lower and in the heigher, and thow shalt
lordship aboue and beneth,
which forsoth is the light of lightes, and therfor fro the wolle fle
all derknesse.
10) The higher vertue ouer-cometh all, for sothe all thynne thyng doth
in dense thynges.
11a) After the disposicion of the more world rynneth this worchyng.
13) And for this prophetisyng of the trynyte of God Hermogenes it called
Triplex, trebil in
philosophie, as Aristotle seith.
[See Manzalaoui 1977: 65 -6.]
Translation of same source, made c. 1485.
1) The trwthe is so, and that it is no dowght,
2) that lower thyngis to hyer thyng, and hyer to lower be correspondent.
But the Werker of
myraclis is on Godde alone, fro Home descendyth euiry meruulus werk.
3)And so alle thyngis be creat of one only substauns, be an only dysposicion,
4) of home the fadyr is the sonne, and the mone the modyr,
5 ) qwyche bar her be the wedyr in the wombe. The erthe is priuyd fro
her-to.
6 )This is clepyd or seyd the fadyr of enchauntmentis, tresur of myracclys,
the
yessuer of vertuys.
7) Be a lytil it is made erthe.
7a) Depart that qwyche is erthly fro that qwyche is fi Fry, for that
qwyche is sotel is mor wurthy
han that qwyche is grose, and that rar, porous, or lyght, is mor bettyr
than qwiche is thyk of
substauns. This is done wyseli or dyscretly.
8) It ascendyth fro the erth in-to heuyn and fallyth fro heuyn in-to
erth, and ther-of it sleth the ouyr
vertu and the nedyr vertu, so it hath lorchyp in the lowe thyngis and
hye thingis,
9) and thu lordschyppist vppeward and downward, and with the is the
lyght of lyghtys. And for
that alle derkness schal fle fro the.
10) The ovyr vetu ouircomyth alle, for euiry rar rhyng werkyth in to
euiry thyk thyng.
11a) And aftyr the dysposicion of the mor world rennyth thys werking.
13) And for that Hermogines is clepyd threfold in filosophye, and of
the meruellys of he world.
[See Manzalaoui 1977: 174-5]
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See also:
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