Ripley reviv'd, or, An exposition upon Sir George Ripley's hermetico-poetical works containing the plainest and most excellent discoveries of the most hidden secrets of the ancient philosophers, that were ever yet published / written by Eirenæus Philalethes ...
About this Item
Title
Ripley reviv'd, or, An exposition upon Sir George Ripley's hermetico-poetical works containing the plainest and most excellent discoveries of the most hidden secrets of the ancient philosophers, that were ever yet published / written by Eirenæus Philalethes ...
Author
Philalethes, Eirenaeus.
Publication
London :: Printed by Tho. Ratcliff and Nat. Thompson, for William Cooper ...,
1678.
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Subject terms
Ripley, George, d. 1490?
Alchemy.
Link to this Item
http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A61326.0001.001
Cite this Item
"Ripley reviv'd, or, An exposition upon Sir George Ripley's hermetico-poetical works containing the plainest and most excellent discoveries of the most hidden secrets of the ancient philosophers, that were ever yet published / written by Eirenæus Philalethes ..." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A61326.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed May 24, 2025.
Pages
Joyn kind therefore with kind, as good rea∣son
is,For every Burgeon answers his own seed,Man getteth Man, a Beast a Beast I wis,Further to treat of this it is no need.But understand this point if you will speed,Each thing is first Calcin'd in his own kind,This well conceiv'd, fruit therein shalt thou
find.
STep therefore not one step further till
you have learned this Lesson, name∣ly,
to wed Consanguinity with Consan∣guinity,
descriptionPage 136
and consider well what it is you
desire to produce, and according to that
let be your intention. Take the last
thing in your Intention, for the first thing
in your Principles: this is according to
Nature, and it is the true ground of all
Generation, for out of kind nothing doth
engender; a Man begetteth a Man, and
not a Lion, nor doth a Lion beget a
Sheep, a Rose doth not produce a Thorn,
nor a Nettle a Gilliflower; and so, if
need were, I could particularly demon∣strate
it throughout all Vegetable, Ani∣mal,
and Mineral Bodies, but it is so plain
a thing that I need say no more, but
leave it with you as the Foundation-stone
on which you shall build whatever
you intend. Attempt nothing out of its
own nature and kind, lest you reap a
fancy instead of truth. Whatever you in∣tend
to increase by way of Multiplica∣tion,
attempt it only in its own kind;
and so in this work especially, in which
Calcination is the mingling of Seminal
influence, which must be done in the
same way of homogeneity. If you ap∣prehend
this in its cause aright, and know
descriptionPage 137
how to apply this doctrine in your ope∣ration
as you ought, in this you will find
great benefit, and a door hereby opened
to the discovery of greater Mysteries.
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