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Passages similar to: Secret Teachings of All Ages — The Hermetic and Alchemical Figures of Claudius De Dominico Celentano Vallis Novi from a Manuscript Written and Illuminated at Naples A.D. 1606
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Western Esoteric
Secret Teachings of All Ages
The Hermetic and Alchemical Figures of Claudius De Dominico Celentano Vallis Novi from a Manuscript Written and Illuminated at Naples A.D. 1606 (31)
Leaf 17. The verse at the top of the page reads: "Not only must this material be fixed, but it must be allowed to enter into everything so that this material may be well completed and have infinite virtue. Then by making it thick, it becomes at once all white, sublimation from white it becomes shining." Above the sun are the words: "God and Nature do nothing in vain." The man on the left is a mediæval conception of Hermes, the great Egyptian philosopher; the one on the right is Christopher, the philosopher of Paris. Above the latter is written: "If the Stone is black, it is not useless." The words over the retort are: "There is air, fire, water, and earth." Below is added: "A dissolution of the body is the first step. " The curious chemical apparatus must be considered purely symbolic in this work and, as its author himself says, is intended to give only a hint of the "Art."
Alchemical
The Sixty-Fifth Dictum (65)
Horfolcus saith:t You must know, O all ye who love wisdom, that whereas Mundus hath been teaching this Art, and placing before you most lucid...
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Alchemical
The Fifty-Sixth Dictum (56)
ANSWER: Demonstrate, therefore, what are those four? And he: Earth, water, air, and fire. Ye have then those four elements without which nothing is ever gener...
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Alchemical
The Forty-Second Dictum (42)
Ascanius saith: Too much talking, O all ye Sons of the Doctrine, leads this subject further into error! But when ye read in the books of the...
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Alchemical
The Thirty-Sixth Dictum (36)
AFFLONTUS,* the Philosopher, saith: I notify to you all, O ye investigators of this Art, that unless ye sublime the substances at the commencement by...
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Alchemical
The Seventy-Second Dictum (72)
Philosophus* saith: The first composition, that is, the body of Magnesia, is made out of several things, although they become one, and are called by...
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Alchemical
The Fiftieth Dictum (50)
Pandolphus saith: If, O Belus, thou dost describe the sublimation* of sulphur for future generations, thou wilt accomplish an excellent thing! And...
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Alchemical
The Fifty-First Dictum (51)
Horrotcos* saith: Thou hast narrated nothing, O Pandolphus, save the last regimen of this body! Thou hast, therefore, composed an ambiguous...
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Alchemical
The Fifty-Third Dictum (53)
For the Philosophers have ordered the doctors of this art to make coin-like gold, which also the same Philosophers have called by all manner of names....
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Alchemical
The Twenty-First Dictum (21)
Panpbo.trus saith:—O Belus, thou hast said so much concerning the despised stone* that thou hast left nothing to be added by thy brethren! Howsoever,...
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Alchemical
The Fifty-Fourth Dictum (54)
Anaxacoras saith: Take the volatile burnt thing which lacks a body, and incorporate it. Then take the ponderous thing, having smoke, and thirsting to...
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Alchemical
The Ninth Dictum (9)
Eximenus saith:—God hath created all things by his word, having said unto them: Be, and they were made, with the four other elements, earth, water,...
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Alchemical
The Thirty-Second Dictum (32)
Bonellus saith: According to thee, O Pythagoras, all things die and live by the will of God, because that nature from which the humidity is removed,...
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