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THE THIRTEENTH BOOK OF Natural Magick: Of tempering Steel. (Book 13)
THE PROEME.
I Have taught you concering monstrous Fires; and before I part from them, I shall treat of Iron Mines; for Iron is wrought by Fire: not that I intend to handle the Art of it; but onely to set down some of the choicest Secrets that are no less necessary for the use of men, in those things I have spoken of already, besides the things I spake of in my Chy∣mical works. Of Iron there are made the best and the worst Instruments for the life of man, saith Pliny. For we use it for works of Husbandry and building of Houses; and we use it for Wars and Slaughters: not onely hard by; but to shoot with Arrows, and Darts, and Bullets, far off. For, that man might die the sooner, he hath made it swift, and hath put wings to Iron. I shall teach you the divers tempers of Iron, and how to make it soft and hard, that it shall not onely cut Iron and other the hardest substances, but shall engrave the hardest Porphyr and Marble Stones. In brief, the force of Iron conquers all things.
CHAP. I.
That Iron by mixture may be made harder.
IT is apparent by most famous and well-known Experience; that Iron will grow more hard by being tempered, and be made soft also. And when I had sought a long time whe∣ther it would grow soft or hard by hot, cold, moist or dry things; I found that hot things would make it hard and soft, and so would cold and all the other qualities: wherefore som∣thing else must be thought on to hunt out the causes. I found that it will grow hard by its contraries, and soft by things that are friendly to it; and so I came to Sympathy and Antipathy. The Ancients thought it was done by some Superstitious Worship, and that there was a Chain of Iron by the River Euphrates, that was called Zeugma, wherewith Alexander the Great had there bound the Bridge; and that the links of it that were new made, were grown rusty, the other links not being so. Pliny and others think, That this proceeded from some different qualities; it may be some juices or Minerals might run underneath, that left some qualities, whereby Iron might be made hard or soft. He saith. But the chief difference is in the water that it is oft plunged into when it is red hot. The pre-eminence of Iron that is so profit∣able, hath made some places famous here and there; as Bilbilis and Turassio in Spain, Comum in Italy: yet are there no Iron Mynes there. But of all the kindes, the Seric Iron bears the Garland; in the next place, the Parthian: nor are there any other kindes of Iron tempered of pure Steel: for the rest are mingled. Justine the Historian reports, That in Gallicia of Spain, the chiefest matter for Iron is found; but the water there is more fortible then the Iron: for the tempering with that, makes the Iron more sharp; and there is no weapon approved amongst them, that