Riches, Oh the Water of our Sea! Oh our Sal Nitre appertaining to the Sea of the World! Oh our Vegetable! Oh our fixt and volatile Sulphur! O the Caput mortuum, or faeces of our Sea!
Tridensine in his secret work of the Philo∣sophers Stone, saith: The Water which Philosophers used for the complement of the Work, they called Lac Virginis, Coagulum, the Morning-dew, the Quintessence, Aqua∣vitae, the Philosophers Daughter, &c.
Paracelsus variously also, Azoth, Spirit of Wine temper'd and circulated, Mercurial-Water, Sendivogius, Chalibs; Rupeseissa, Vi∣negar most nobly distilled.
Van-Helmont (that most profound Philo∣sopher by Fire) called it, the Liquor Alka∣hest, and thus describ'd it: The Liquor Al∣kahest resolves every visible and tangible bo∣dy into its first matter, preserving the power of the Seed, concerning which the Chymists say, the Vulgar burn by Fire, but we by Wa∣ter.
We, by the Philosophers leave, are those that can at will give names to their pro∣ducts, do call it the Mercurial Oyl of Salt putrefied and alembicated: for Oyl is ex∣alted to an higher degree of a fiery quality, as it is the foundation of the whole metal∣lick solution, (which is to be well observed)