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 10, 2025.
Pages
But and thou keep it sometimes wet and
sometimes dry,As thou mayst see in Timber,And so even likewise, &c.Sometimes our Tree must with the Sun be
brent.
BUt contrarywise, Timber which is
kept wet sometimes, and dry some∣times,
as usually the foundations of Tim∣ber
Houses are, if not secured by the
descriptionPage 359
Masons Art, it would tire the House∣holders
patience to see how soon such
Timber will rot, and molder away, and
become fit for nothing; which is a
thing so well known, that the expe∣rience
of every Rustick almost can teach
it him.
So resolve our Stone must be used, if
thou intend to have it putrefie kindly;
our Wheel for Putrefaction must go
round, in a constant Elevation or Ex∣traction
of the Water or Humidity from
the Body, by which Operation our Man
the Sun is helped in his acting; and this
Water must as constantly return to the
Earth, to moisten it, by which the Wo∣man
the Moon is helped in her acting.
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