A Modern Inquiry into the Hermetic Mystery
Part II: A More Esoteric Consideration of the Hermetic Art and Its Mysteries
Chapter 1: The True Subject of the Hermetic Art, Part 2
Introduction: The esoteric heart of alchemy deepens, revealing humanity’s soul as the vessel for the universal essence. In this section, adepts like Böhme and Sendivogius guide us toward the transformative power of this hidden root, aligning nature’s principles with divine wisdom.
The Soul as the Golden Seed
Basil Valentine declares, “He who knows the golden seed or magnet and searches its properties holds the true root of life, fulfilling his heart’s longing.” This seed, no mere fantasy, is a certain truth for diligent seekers. Oswald Crollius, a Paracelsian, reveals that this “mineral vapour” producing gold in the earth resides in humanity, the generating spirit of all creatures. Albertus Magnus adds, “Gold exists everywhere, but its highest virtue burns most gloriously in man, where the fiery principle of life shines erect.”
Hermes echoes, “Our Mercury is philosophic, fiery, vital, mixable with all metals yet separable, prepared in life’s innermost chamber where it coagulates.” This essence, found where metals grow, is most potent in humanity’s soul. Ripley’s verse captures this:
Man, the noblest creature wrought,
Holds nature’s elements in proportion.
A natural Mercury, costing nothing,
Drawn from its mine by art,
For metals are but minerals too,
As Raymond Lully wisely said.
Maria notes philosophers speak sparingly of this essence due to life’s brevity and the art’s length, yet they found and enhanced these hidden elements. Alipili exclaims, “O man, you unite the elements through your breath and power, producing a miraculous essence—fiery water surpassing all elements. It dissolves gold into black earth, like thick spittle, revealing a pure salt without odor or corrosiveness, a treasure accessible to all.” This essence, the soul’s vital spirit, is the Hermetic art’s core.
The Adept’s Virtues
Hermes advises, “To master this hidden wisdom, one must reject vice, be just, good, rational, ready to help others, and guard these secrets from the idle or vicious.” Crollius adds that a true alchemist, sincere and skilled in vital analysis, knows all bodies contain salt, Mercury, and sulphur—principles of attraction, repulsion, and circulation, the universal accord of life. Morien tells King Calid, “This essence is extracted from you, where it resides. Through love and delight, it grows, revealing enduring truth.”
Nature’s Three Principles
Attraction, repulsion, and circulation govern all motion, from planets orbiting stars to chemical affinities. Attraction draws matter together, repulsion pushes it apart, and circulation balances them, forming circles when equal or ellipses when imbalanced. In nature, these principles are unequal, causing dissolution. Alchemists claim only their “antimonial spirit,” rectified by art, can harmonize these forces, creating a perfect, star-like circulation.
Böhme explains, “The Invisible Mercury, the spiritual air of Antimony, harmonizes these discordant principles—attraction, repulsion, circulation—in the arterial blood, where repulsion dominates, drawing life outward from its divine source.” The Hermetic art reverses this, restoring balance through dissolution and purification. He cites Paracelsus: “Nature gives blood and urine, pyrotechny yields salt, which art circulates into Paracelsus’ circulated salt. This salt, transmuted through a ferment, loses its outer life, retaining its essence.”
Hermes reiterates, “Unless you know how to mortify, generate, vivify, and cleanse the spirit, freeing it from darkness through contention, you achieve nothing. But mastery brings great dignity.” Böhme details the process: “In three months, digestion turns the powder black, halting the opposition of attraction and repulsion. The fixed attracts the volatile, both dying into rest. In three more months, a brilliant whiteness emerges, then a red or purple tincture, signaling the reign of sin’s end and the king’s scarlet robe.”
This cyclical process—dissolution, blackness, whiteness, redness—fortifies the spirit, unlike common matter that combusts. The alchemical Mercury, enhanced by fresh antimony, grows tenfold stronger with each digestion, becoming a “terrestrial Sun,” a magnetic chariot of life.
Closing: This section reveals humanity’s soul as the alchemical vessel, harmonizing nature’s principles to create the philosopher’s stone. The transformative process begins to unfold, promising deeper insights into this sacred art in our next post.