Take good crude antimony and native orpiment 1/4 lb or as much as you
like. Powder each finely by itself, and mix the powders. Beware of the
dust.
Put the mixture in a globe glass with a long neck. Place
your glass deeply buried in the sand, so that the best part of the globe
is under the sand, but the whole neck remains free. Your furnace must
stand under a chimney. Then light your fire which increase gradually.
After the humidity has evaporated, put a bit of soft clay upon the
opening of the neck of the glass and press it in gently.
Increase your fire, until the sand and glass grow so intensely hot, that the powders melt together in the globe.
When
you see this let the substance continue melting until the whole has
become of a fine deep red fluid massa. At the later end of the
operation, the iron sand pot must become red hot in the bottom.
When you have obtained the red fluid mass in fusion, take the fire out immediately, that the glass may cool gradually.
The
next day, break the glass and you will find a fine red transparent ruby
glass, called Lapis de Tribus because it consists of antimony, arsenic,
and sulphur.
Note – Of you admit the air into the neck of the
glass, the mixture takes fire, and you run great risk of your life;
therefore be careful. It is done in 4 hours time. This glass is very
volatile.
Take3iv of Lapis de Tribus in powder and 3J of fine gold in leaves.
Mix these in a mortar by rubbing. Let it melt together in a covered
crucible and suffer no coals to drop in. When the crucible begins to
grow red hot, the mixture melts and at last inflamed, and the Lapis de
Tribus fumes away and evaporates. When you find the Lapis evaporated,
take the crucible out and let it cool, but do not breathe the poisonous
fumes.
Take the gold calx out. Weigh it and mix it anew with 4
parts of fresh powdered Lapid de Tribus, by rubbing it in a glass. Put
the mixture into a new crucible. Melt again and keep it in the fire,
until the Lapis de Tribus is again evaporated. Repeat the same
operation, with 4 parts of fresh Lapis and your gold calx is well opened
for a further operation.
Cornelius de Winter said to W. Lentz,
‘You may proceed in this manner with silver, copper, or iron, and open
and volatilize them by means o the Lapis de Tribus, sooner than the
gold, and not that one single melting of four parts of the lapis to open
part of fin silver in leaves, or of a Crocus Martis, or Veneris, opens
and greatly volatilizes silver, iron or copper in one single operation.
You are also to not that you fire must not be excited by the blast. It
must not be a melting, but only a calcining fire. Otherwise your
volatilized metals fl out of the crucible, and you keep the empty nest’.
The
Lapis de Tribus has a power to volatilize all metals, gold and silver
not excepted, either by the first, second or third operation, according
to their natural volatility or fixity, and highly subtilizes them and
reduces them into a mercurial principle, which mercurialized metals can
be employed in labors of great consequence, as experience will teach
you. I tell you the truth, but beware of the mercurial fumes.
‘I
have made a Tincture in Via Sicca from this foundation, more than once
at Amsterdam, and although it acts only on a few parts of silver, yet it
is very profitable, as it can be accomplished very well in 3 or 4 days’
time, but this is not the brass founder’s work, by any means’, said de
Winter.
Take of the whitest and clearest river pebbles you can
get, a pound or more, and powder them finely in a clean iron mortar, and
sift your powder perfectly fine.
Of this fine pebble powder, take
3/4 lb, and good yellow litharge powdered and sifted, one lb. Mix the
two powders. Put them into a new crucible covered, and melt the mixture
to a glass in the wind furnace. When done take the crucible out and let
it cool. When cold, break the crucible and powder your glass and sift
it.
Now take one part of Lapis de Tribus in powder and mix it with
4 parts of the pebble glass by rubbing them well together in a glass
mortar. Melt these substances in a new crucible for 5 or 6 hours, so as
to keep the matter in constant fusion. Then take the crucible out, break
it, and when cold, poweder it, and your glass will look tinged with
yellow or orange. Weigh it, and mix it again, 4 parts of this tinged
glass with one part of fresh de Tribus. Melt again, in a new crucible
constantly covered, for 5 or 6 hours. You can very well accomplish 2
meltings in a day. Repeat this a third time, and your obtained glass
ought to be of a fine orange colour. This is already a kind of Tincture,
which if you melt it with silver, it enriches the silver with atoms of
fine gold, and if you separates such silver with aqua fortis, the black
calx, which falls, when washed, dried, and melted with borax, proves to
be fine gold of 24 carats, but this is not all.
Take your orange
coloured opaque glass, weigh it, and powder and sift it. Take of this 4
parts, say drachms, in proportion, as you have opened gold, which you
have prepared at first, one part or drachm of fresh Lapis de Tribus, and
one 3 of your opened mercurialized gold, and mix the whole diligently
in a porphyry or glass mortar. You must rub full 2 hours, and do not
breathe the dust. Melt this composition in a new covered crucible during
6 hours continual fusion, yet without any blast or violence, as fusion
is enough.
When the time is past, take out the pot and let it
cool. Break the crucible and separate the glass, which does now look of a
deeper red, like a new brick.
Powder and weigh this glass. Take
thereof 4 parts, and add one part of fresh lapis de Tribus in powder.
Mix the two powders diligently and melt them again in a new covered
crucible for 6 hours time, keeping the matter in constant fusion. When
cold, you will find your glass deeper in colour than before.
Repeat
this fusion a third time (which from the beginning, is now the sixth
melting, adding to 4 parts of this red glass, one part of fresh Lapis de
Tribus and proceed carefully, as you did before, but Note: ---
1. If any coals fall into the pot, the operation is spoiled, which has happened to me in the beginning:
2.
By the repeated fusions and fixations by the violent way, adding each
time a 1/5 part of fresh Lapis de Tribus, i.e., one part of the lapis to
4 parts of the fixed glass, your tinged glass becomes more and more
penetrating, more fusible ad more fixed.
I durst not go beyond 6
or 7 fusions, as the glass does at last run through the pores of the red
hot crucible. In this manner I once lost all my treasure.
6 or 7 fusions may be safely done.
This
red glass is a genuine Tincture upon fine silver. After 6 fusions, it
tinges sometimes 10, sometimes 12, sometimes 20 parts of silver in
fusion into fine gold of 24 carats. I could never make it twice alike,
the reason of which I cannot penetrate. It is profitable enough, but no
so profitable, as Myriam said to King Aros. At least I could never find
it so.