Medicina practica, or, Practical physick shewing the method of curing the most usual diseases happening to humane bodies ... : to which is added, the philosophick works of Hermes Trismegistus, Kalid Persicus, Geber Arabs, Artesius Longævus, Nicholas Flammel, Roger Bachon and George Ripley : all translated out of the best Latin editions into English ... : together with a singular comment upon the first book of Hermes, the most ancient of philosophers : the whole compleated in three books / by William Salmon ...

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Title
Medicina practica, or, Practical physick shewing the method of curing the most usual diseases happening to humane bodies ... : to which is added, the philosophick works of Hermes Trismegistus, Kalid Persicus, Geber Arabs, Artesius Longævus, Nicholas Flammel, Roger Bachon and George Ripley : all translated out of the best Latin editions into English ... : together with a singular comment upon the first book of Hermes, the most ancient of philosophers : the whole compleated in three books / by William Salmon ...
Author
Salmon, William, 1644-1713.
Publication
London :: Printed for T. Howkins ... J. Taylor ... and J. Harris ...,
1692.
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Subject terms
Medicine, Ancient.
Medicine, Arab.
Medicine, Medieval.
Alchemy -- Early works to 1800.
Link to this Item
http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A60662.0001.001
Cite this Item
"Medicina practica, or, Practical physick shewing the method of curing the most usual diseases happening to humane bodies ... : to which is added, the philosophick works of Hermes Trismegistus, Kalid Persicus, Geber Arabs, Artesius Longævus, Nicholas Flammel, Roger Bachon and George Ripley : all translated out of the best Latin editions into English ... : together with a singular comment upon the first book of Hermes, the most ancient of philosophers : the whole compleated in three books / by William Salmon ..." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A60662.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 12, 2025.

Pages

CHAP. XVI. Of the Colours of Our Philosophick Tincture, or Stone.

I. QUoad Colores, qui non nigrefacit, dealbare non potest, quia nigredo est al∣bedinis principium, & signum putrefactionis, & alterationis, & quod corpus penetratum & mortificatum jam est.

II. Ergo in hac putrefactione in hac aqua, primò apparet

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nigredo, sicut brodium sagina∣tum piperatum.

III. Secundò terra nigra continuò decoquendo, dealbatur, quia anima horum supernatat ut remor albus, & in hac al∣bedine uniuntur omnes spiritus sic quod denuò aufugere non pos∣sunt.

IV. Et ideo dealbandus est laton, & rumpendi libri ne corda nostra rumpantur, quia haec albedo est lapis perfectus ad album & corpus nobile ne∣cessitate finis, & tinctura al∣bedinis exuberantissimae reflexio∣nis & fulgidi splendoris, quae non recedit à commixto cor∣pore.

V. Nota ergo hic, quod spiritus non figuntur nisi in al∣bo colore, qui ideo nobilior est caeteris, & semper desiderabi∣liter expetenda, cum sit totius

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operis quodammodo complemen tum.

VI. Terra enim nostra pu∣trescit in nigrum, deinde mun∣datur in elevatione, postea desiccata, nigredo recedit, & tunc dealbatur & perit tene∣brosum dominium humidum mulieris, 〈◊〉〈◊〉 etiam fumus albus penetrat in corpus novum, & spiritus constringuntur in siccum.

VII. Atque corrumpens, deformatum, & nigrum ex humido, evanescit, tunc etiam corpus novumresuscitat clarum, album, ac immortale, ac vi∣ctoriam ab omnibus inimicis reportat.

VIII. Et sicut calor agens in humido generat nigredinem primum colorem, sic decoquen∣do semper, calor agens in sicco generat albedinem secun∣dum colorem, & deinde citri∣nitatem

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& rubedinem agens in mero sicco, & satis de colo∣ribus.

IX. Sciendum igitur nobis est, quod res quae habet caput rubeum & album, pedes verò albos & postea rubeos, & oc∣culos antea nigros, haec res tan∣tum est magisterium.

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I. NOW as to the Co∣lours, that which does not make black cannot make white, because black∣ness is the beginning of whiteness, and a sign of Pu∣trefaction and Alteration, and that the body is now penetrated and mortified.

II. From the Putrefaction therefore in this Water, there

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first appears blackness, like unto Broth wherein some bloody thing is boyled.

III. Secondly, The black Earth by a continual digesti∣on is whitened, because the Soul of the Two Bodies swims above upon the Wa∣ter, like white Cream; and in this only whiteness, all the Spirits are so united, that they can never flie one from another.

IV. And therefore the lat∣ten must be whitened, and its leaves unfolded, i. e. its body broken or opened, lest we labour in vain, for this whiteness is the perfect Stone for the white work, and a body enobled in order to that end; even the Tincture of a most exuberant glory, and shining brightness, which never departs from the body it is once joined with.

V. Therefore you must note here, that the Spirits are not fixed, but in the white Colour, which is more noble than the other Co∣lours,

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and is more vehe∣mently to be desired, for that it is as it were the Com∣plement or Perfection of the whole work.

VI. For our Earth putri∣fies and becomes black, then it is putrified in lifting up or Separation; afterwards be∣ing dried, its blackness goes away from it, and then it is whitened, and the feminine dominion of the darkness and humidity perisheth; then also the white Vapor penetrates through the new Body, and the Spirits are bound up or fixed in the dryness.

VII. And that which is corrupting, deformed and black through the moisture, vanishes away; so the new body rises again clear, pure, white, and immortal, ob∣taining the Victory over all its Enemies.

VIII. And as heat work∣ing upon that which is moist, causeth or generates black∣ness, which is the prime or first Colour; so always by decoction, more and more

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heat working upon that which is dry, begets white∣ness, which is the second Colour; and then working upon that which is purely and perfectly dry, it produ∣ceth Citrinity and Redness, Thus much for Colours.

IX. We must know there∣fore, that the thing which has its Head red and white, but its Feet white and after∣wards red; and its Eyes be∣fore hand black, that this thing, I say, is the only matter of our Magistery.

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