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The Book Of Lambspring

*
"The Hermetic Museum, Vol. I", by Arthur Edward Waite, [1893],

p. 271

The Book Of

Lambspring,

\"A Noble Ancient Philosopher",

Concerning The

Philosophical Stone;

Rendered Into Latin Verse By

Nicholas Barnaud Delphinas,

\"Doctor Of Medicine, A Zealous Student Of This Art".

p. 272 p. 273

Preface.

\"I Am Called Lambspring, Born Of A Noble Family, And

This Crest I Bear With Glory And Justice.

p. 274

Philosophy I
have read, and thoroughly understood,

The utmost depth of my teachers' knowledge have I sounded.

This God graciously granted to me,

Giving me a heart to understand wisdom.

Thus I became the Author of this Book,

And I have clearly set forth the whole matter,

That Rich and Poor might understand.

There is nothing like it upon earth;

Nor (God be praised) have I therein forgotten my humble self.

I am acquainted with the only true foundation:

Therefore preserve this Book with care,

And take heed that you study it again and again.

Thus shall you receive and learn the truth,

And use this great gift of God for good ends.

O God the Father, which art of all the beginning and end,

We beseech thee for the sake of our Lord Jesus Christ

To enlighten our minds and thoughts,

That we may praise Thee without ceasing,

And accomplish this Book according to Thy will!

Direct Thou everything to a good end,

And preserve us through Thy great mercy.--

With the help of God I will shew you this Art,

And will not hide or veil the truth from you.

After that you understand me aright,

You will soon be free from the bonds of error.

For there is only "one" substance,

In which all the rest is hidden;

Therefore, keep a good heart.

Coction, time, and patience are what you need;

If you would enjoy the precious reward,

You must cheerfully give both time and labour.

For you must subject to gentle coction the seeds and the metals,

p. 275

Day by day, during several weeks;

Thus in this one vile thing

You will discover and bring to perfection the whole work of Philosophy,

Which to most men appears impossible,

Though it is a convenient and easy task.

If we were to shew it to the outer world

We should be derided by men, women, and children.

Therefore be modest and secret,

And you will be left in peace and security.

Remember your duty towards your neighbour and your God,

Who gives this Art, and would have it concealed.

Now we will conclude the Preface,

That we may begin to describe the very Art,

And truly and plainly set it forth in figures,

Rendering thanks to the Creator of every creature.

Hereunto follows the First Figure,

p. 276

The Sages will tell you

That two fishes are in our sea

Without any flesh or bones.

Let them be cooked in their own water;

Then they also will become a vast sea,

The vastness of which no man can describe.

Moreover, the Sages say

That the two fishes are only one, not two;

They are two, and nevertheless they are one,

Body, Spirit, and Soul.

Now, I tell you most truly,

Cook these three together,

That there may be a very large sea.

Cook the sulphur well with the sulphur,

And hold your tongue about it:

Conceal your knowledge to your own advantage,

And you shall be free from poverty.

Only let your discovery remain a close secret.

p. 277

Figure I.

Be Warned And Understand Truly

That Two Fishes Are Swimming In Our Sea.

\"The Sea as the Body, the two Fishes are Soul and Spirit".

p. 278

The Sage says

That a wild beast is in the forest,

Whose skin is of blackest dye.

If any man cut off his head,

His blackness will disappear,

And give place to a snowy white.

Understand well the meaning of this head:

The blackness is called the head of the Raven;

As soon as it disappears,

A white colour is straightway manifested;

It is given this name, despoiled of its head.

When the Beast's black hue has vanished in a black smoke,

The Sages rejoice

From the bottom of their hearts;

But they keep it a close secret,

That no foolish man may know it.

Yet unto their Sons, in kindness of heart,

They partly reveal it in their writings;

And therefore let those who receive the gift

Enjoy it also in silence,

Since God would have it concealed.

p. 279

Figure Ii.

Here You Straightway Behold A Black Beast In The Forest.

\"Putrefaction".

p. 280

The Sages say truly

That two animals are in this forest:

One glorious, beautiful, and swift,

A great and strong deer;

The other an unicorn.

They are concealed in the forest,

But happy shall that man be called

Who shall snare and capture them.

The Masters shew you here clearly

That in all places

These two animals wander about in forests

(But know that the forest is but one).

If we apply the parable to our Art,

We shall call the forest the Body.

That will be rightly and truly said.

The unicorn will be the Spirit at all times.

The deer desires no other name

But that of the Soul; which name no man shall take away from it.

He that knows how to tame and master them by Art,

To couple them together,

And to lead them in and out of the forest,

May justly be called a Master.

For we rightly judge

That he has attained the golden flesh,

And may triumph everywhere;

Nay, he may bear rule over great Augustus.

p. 281

Figure Iii.

Hear Without Terror

That In The Forest Are Hidden A Deer And An Unicorn.

\"In the Body there is Soul and Spirit".

p. 282

The Sages do faithfully teach us

That two strong lions, to wit, male and female,

Lurk in a dark and rugged valley.

These the Master must catch,

Though they are swift and fierce,

And of terrible and savage aspect.

He who, by wisdom and cunning,

Can snare and bind them,

And lead them into the same forest,

Of him it may be said with justice and truth

That he has merited the meed of praise before all others,

And that his wisdom transcends that of the worldly wise.

p. 283

Figure Iv.

Here You Behold A Great Marvel--

Two Lions Are Joined Into One.

\"The Spirit and Soul must be united in their Body".

p. 284

Alexander writes from Persia

That a wolf and a dog are in this field,

Which, as the Sages say,

Are descended from the same stock,

But the wolf comes from the east,

And the dog from the west.

They are full of jealousy,

Fury, rage, and madness:


One kills the other,

And from them comes a great poison.

But when they are restored to life,

They are clearly shewn to be

The Great and Precious Medicine,

The most glorious Remedy upon earth,

Which refreshes and restores the Sages,

Who render thanks to God, and do praise Him.

p. 285

Figure V.

A Wolf And A Dog Are In One House, And Are

Afterwards Changed Into One.

The Body is mortified and rendered white, then joined to

Soul and Spirit by being saturated with them.

p. 286

A
savage Dragon lives in the forest,

Most venomous he is, yet lacking nothing:

When he sees the rays of the Sun and its bright fire,

He scatters abroad his poison,

And flies upward so fiercely

That no living creature can stand before him,

Nor is even the Basilisk equal to him.

He who hath skill to slay him, wisely

Hath escaped from all dangers.

Yet all venom, and colours, are multiplied

In the hour of his death.

His venom becomes the great Medicine.

He quickly consumes his venom,

For he devours his poisonous tail.

All this is performed on his own body,

From which flows forth glorious Balm,

With all its miraculous virtues.

Hereat all the Sages do loudly rejoice.

p. 287

Figure Vi.

This Surely Is A Great Miracle And Without Any Deception--

That In A Venomous Dragon There Should Be The Great Medicine:

\"The Mercury is precipitated or sublimed, dissolved in its own proper water, and then once more coagulated".

p. 288

A
nest is found in the forest,

In which Hermes has his brood;

One fledgling always strives to fly upward,

The other rejoices to sit quietly in the nest;

Yet neither can get away from the other.

The one that is below holds the one that is above,

And will not let it get away from the nest,

As a husband in a house with his wife,

Bound together in closest bonds of wedlock.

So also do we rejoice at all times,

That we hold the female eagle fast in this way,

And we render thanks to God the Father.

p. 289

Figure Vii.

We Hear Of Two Birds In The Forest,

Yet We Must Understand Them To Be Only One.

The Mercury having been often sublimed, is at length fixed, and

becomes capable of resisting fire: the sublimation must

be repeated until at length fixation is attained.

p. 290

In India there is a most pleasant wood,

In which two birds are bound together.

One is of a snowy white; the other is red.

They bite each other, and one is slain

And devoured by the other.

Then both are changed into white doves,

And of the Dove is born a Phnix,

Which has left behind blackness and foul death,

And has regained a more glorious life.

This power was given it by God Himself,

That it might live eternally, and never die.

It gives us wealth, it preserves our life,

And with it we may work great miracles,

As also the true Philosophers do plainly inform us.

p. 291

Figure Viii.

Here Are Two Birds, Great And Strong--the Body And

Spirit; One Devours The Other.

Let the Body be placed in horse-dung, or a warm bath, the Spirit

having been extracted from it The Body has become white

by the process, the Spirit red by our Art. All that

exists tends towards perfection, and thus is

the Philosopher's Stone prepared.

p. 292

Now hear of a wonderful deed,

For I will teach you great things,

How the King rises high above all his race;

And hear also what the noble lord of the forest says:

I have overcome and vanquished my foes,

I have trodden the venomous Dragon under foot,

I am a great and glorious King in the earth.

There is none greater than I,

Child either of the Artist or of Nature,

Among all living creatures.

I do all that man can desire,

I give power and lasting health,

Also gold, silver, gems, and precious stones,

And the panacea for great and small diseases.

Yet at first I was of ignoble birth,

Till I was set in a high place.

To reach this lofty summit

Was given me by God and Nature.

Thence from the meanest I became the highest,

And mounted to the most glorious throne,

And to the state of royal sovereignty:

Therefore Hermes has called me the Lord of the Forests.

p. 293

Figure Ix.

The Lord Of The Forests Has Recovered His Kingdom,

And Mounted From The Lowest To The Highest Degree.

If Fortune Smile, You May From A Rhetor Become A Consul;

If Fortune Frown, The Consul May Become A Rhetor.

\"Thus you may know that the Tincture has truly attained the first degree".

p. 294

In all fables we are told

That the Salamander is born in the fire;

In the fire it has that food and life

Which Nature herself has assigned to it.

It dwells in a great mountain

Which is encompassed by many flames,

And one of these is ever smaller than another--

Herein the Salamander bathes.

The third is greater, the fourth brighter than the rest--

In all these the Salamander washes, and is purified.

Then he hies him to his cave,

But on the way is caught and pierced

So that it dies, and yields up its life with its blood.

But this, too, happens for its good:

For from its blood it wins immortal life,

And then death has no more power over it.

Its blood is the most precious Medicine upon earth,

The same has not its like in the world.

For this blood drives away all disease

In the bodies of metals,

Of men, and of beasts.

From it the Sages derive their science,

And through it they attain the Heavenly Gift,

Which is called the Philosopher's Stone,

Possessing the power of the whole world.

This gift the Sages impart to us with loving hearts,

That we may remember them for ever.

p. 295

Figure X.

A Salamander Lives In The Fire,

Which Imparts To It A Most Glorious Hue.

This is the reiteration, gradation, and amelioration of the

Tincture, or Philosopher's Stone; and the whole is

called its Augmentation.

p. 296

Here is an old father of Israel,

Who has an only Son,

A Son whom he loves with all his heart.

With sorrow he prescribes sorrow to him.

He commits him to a guide,

Who is to conduct him whithersoever he will.

The Guide addresses the Son in these words:

Come hither! I will conduct thee everywhere,

To the summit of the loftiest mountain,

That thou mayest understand all wisdom,

That thou mayest behold the greatness of the earth, and of the sea,

And thence derive true pleasure.

I will bear thee through the air

To the gates of highest heaven.

The Son hearkened to the words of the Guide,

And ascended upward with him;

There saw he the heavenly throne,

That was beyond measure glorious.

When he had beheld these things,

He remembered his Father with sighing,

Pitied the great sorrow of his Father,

And said: I will return to his breast.

p. 297

Figure Xi.

The Father And The Son Have Linked Their Hands

With Those Of The Guide:

Know That The Three Are Body, Soul, And Spirit.

p. 298

Says the Son to the Guide:

I will go down to my Father,

For he cannot live without me.

He sighs and calls aloud for me.

And the Guide makes answer to the Son:

I will not let thee go alone;

From thy Father's bosom I brought thee forth,

I will also take thee back again,

That he may rejoice again and live.

This strength will we give unto him.

So both arose without delay,

And returned to the Father's house.

When the Father saw his Son coming,

He cried aloud, and said:--

p. 299

Figure Xii.

Another Mountain Of India Lies In The Vessel,

Which The Spirit And The Soul--

That Is, The Son And The Guide--have Climbed.

p. 300

My Son, I was dead without thee,

And lived in great danger of my life.

I revive at thy return,

And it fills my breast with joy.

But when the Son entered the Father's house,

The Father took him to his heart,

And swallowed him out of excessive joy,

And that with his own mouth.

The great exertion makes the Father sweat.

p. 301

Figure Xiii.

Here The Father Devours The Son;

The Soul And Spirit Flow Forth From The Body.

p. 302

Here the Father sweats on account of the Son,

And earnestly beseeches God,

Who has everything in His hands,

Who creates, and has created all things,

To bring forth his Son from his body,

And to restore him to his former life.

God hearkens to his prayers,

And bids the Father lie down and sleep.

Then God sends down rain from heaven

To the earth from the shining stars.

It was a fertilizing, silver rain,

Which bedewed and softened the Father's Body.

Succour us, Lord, at the end,

That we may obtain Thy gracious Gift!

p. 303

Figure Xiv.

Here The Father Sweats Profusely,

While Oil And The True Tincture

Of The Sages Flow Forth From Him.

p. 304

The sleeping Father is here changed

Entirely into limpid water,

And by virtue of this water alone

The good work is accomplished.

There is now a glorified and beautiful Father,

And he brings forth a new Son.

The Son ever remains in the Father,

And the Father in the Son.

Thus in divers things

They produce untold, precious fruit.

They perish never more,

And laugh at death.

By the grace of God they abide for ever,

The Father and the Son, triumphing gloriously

In the splendour of their new Kingdom.

Upon one throne they sit,

And the face of the Ancient Master

Is straightway seen between them:

He is arrayed in a crimson robe.

p. 305

Figure Xv.

Here Father And Son Are Joined In One,

So To Remain For Ever.

p. 306

To The Invisible King

Of

The World,

To

The Only True And Immortal

God

Be

Praise And Glory

Now

And

Evermore.

Amen
.

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