“every substance contains undeveloped resources and potentialities, and can be brought outward and forward into perfection.””
Quotes by H. Stanley Redgrove
“We have said that “Alchemy was the attempt to demonstrate experimentally on the material plane the validity of a certain philosophical view of the Cosmos”; now, this “philosophical view of the Cosmos” was Mysticism. Alchemy had its origin in the attempt to apply, in a certain manner, the principles of Mysticism to the things of the physical plane, and was, therefore, of a dual nature, on the one hand spiritual and religious, on the other, physical and material.””
“Coming to the alchemists, we find the view that the metals are all composed of two elementary principles”
“Paracelsus, in his work on The Tincture of the Philosophers, tells us that all that is necessary for us to do is to mix and coagulate the “rose-coloured blood from the Lion” and “the gluten from the Eagle,” by which he probably meant that we must combine “philosophical sulphur” with “philosophical mercury.” This opinion, that the Philosopher’s Stone consists of “philosophical sulphur and mercury” combined so as to constitute a perfect unity, was commonly held by the alchemists, and they frequently likened this union to the conjunction of the sexes in marriage.””
H. Stanley Redgrove was a British author and scholar known for his exploration of alchemical traditions and their intersections with modern science and mysticism. His notable work, "Alchemy: Ancient a...