Red Lion
Red Lion
Red Lion
By Joe Lello
http://www.amazon.com/Elixir-Immortality-Modern-Day-Alchemists-
Philosophers/dp/1594773033/ref=sr_1_1?
ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1254257270&sr=1-1
This is without a doubt the very best book on alchemy I have found in
over 10 years of reading and research. If you aspire to confect The
Stone and have not read it, please stop now and do so. If you have
already read it, then you know it presents much important information
but lacks a few critically important details, which I intend to provide
here as well as giving you a hands-on guide to actually performing
this Work, step-by-step. For this operation, you will need four main
ingredients:
1
Begin by breaking up the bismuth pellets into fine granules. This is
best done by placing a handful inside an old dishrag, setting it on a
hard surface like concrete and whacking the daylights out of it with a
hammer. Bi is a very brittle metal and shatters easily, much like
ceramic pottery. You can also crush the pellets with a heavy pair of
pliers like vise-grips. Crush them to a powder fine enough to pass
through a coarse strainer with mesh slightly larger than window
screening.
Pour about 1 lb. of Hg into your mortar and pestle and sprinkle in
about a spoonful or two of the powdered Bi. Let it steep for 15
minutes or so. The Hg will act upon the Bi and soften it up, making
the grinding much easier. Place the mortar under a constantly
trickling stream of water. An outdoor sink is good for this. Let the
mortar fill to the brim and gently overflow. As you begin to grind the
two materials together, a grayish-black “filth” or “feces” evolves that
will be washed away by the water. Keep grinding and rinsing until no
more filth comes out then add another spoonful of Bi powder and
repeat as before.
2
Figure 1
Figure 2
3
Figure 3
If you cannot locate or afford a retort made of quartz, plain black iron
pipe fittings are also usable - (See Fig. 2 above) - however, quartz is
highly superior since it does not rust , nor does it have the many
threaded joints of the iron device that are prone to leakage of toxic
hot Hg vapor. Another plus for quartz is that you can also see what‘s
going on inside as the distillation proceeds.
If you opt for the iron retort, make sure all of your fittings are plain,
un-plated “black iron pipe” and not are zinc galvanized. The smaller
adapter bushings can be made of stainless steel, but try to get
everything in black iron. Seal all threaded joints with PTFE Teflon
thread tape. Do not use any other adhesives or sealants. Before
assembling your retort, thoroughly degrease and clean all parts with a
brief bath in diluted 20% HCl, about 50 ml of acid to two gallons of
water. Neutralize the solution with baking soda afterwards and rinse
parts thoroughly in hot water. If you can obtain some phosphoric
acid, it will be better yet, since it will serve as a rust-remover and
inhibitor as well as a good cleaning agent.
Put all of your amalgam “cookie dough” into the retort and heat to
approximately 750F over a large propane burner (Hg boils at 636F).
4
The condenser tube must terminate at least 6 inches under water. I
recommend placing a small 250 – 300 ml beaker inside a larger (8L –
10L) glass vessel, positioned directly beneath the condenser tube
(See Fig. 3 above) to catch the droplets of Hg as they “fly over.” Use
cold distilled water, and be sure you can quickly and easily remove
the tubing from the water as soon as you stop the heating, so that no
water is sucked back up into the hot retort, or there is a risk of
causing a steam-pressure explosion. After you distill the Hg out of the
Bi amalgam, you can discard the Bi. With the quartz retort, you will
have to re-melt it and pour it out of the retort.
Distill the Hg two or three times to get it nice and clean, then pour it
into a large (2L) flask that has a broad neck so there is plenty of
surface area, and seal the flask with a tapered glass plug. Place it
into an oven at around 330C (about 635F) for approximately 3 days,
until you see a green, moss-like “growth” form on the surface of the
Hg. This is the Tree of Hermes or the Green Lion – “…which none
but the eyes of a true philosopher hath seen.” If these “flowers” begin
to turn yellowish or even orange, reduce the heat so that you do not
burn them.
5
Place about 4 ounces of Sb shot into a covered porcelain crucible
large enough so that it is filled only halfway. Place the crucible
into your oven and heat to 750F. This must be done OUTDOORS
in a well-ventilated area. Remove the cover from the crucible
briefly and add a half-ounce of pure 24K Au metal. It will
immediately melt like butter into the hot liquefied Sb.
Replace the cover and continue heating at 750F for at least 48 hrs.
then turn off the heat and allow the crucible to cool down slowly.
The Au will have been broken down into micro-clusters, some of
which are in groups of less than nine atoms. Many of these micro-
clusters will actually disaggregate and dissociate into ORME
Cooper pairs, a.k.a. M-state, or Bose-Einstein Condensate.
When cooled to room temperature, you will find a brittle cake in the
crucible that must be removed and pulverized into a powder just
as you did with the Bi pellets in the first section. Place another
pound of Hg into your mortar & pestle – [Note: use fresh, triple-
distilled Hg, NOT the PM you just made]. Add a tbsp. or so of the
ground-up Sb powder and let it steep for about 15 minutes.
Place the mortar into the sink and again let a small stream of water
fill and overflow the mortar and begin grinding the powder into the
Hg as before. Once again, a filth or blackness will evolve from the
mixture that must be washed away, only this time the blackness is
the Sb being separated and removed from the physical mixture,
leaving behind only the finely divided Au amalgamated together
with the Hg.
When you have ground and washed away all of the powder and
no more blackness evolves, place the Au / Hg amalgam into your
retort and distill off the Hg as before. Keep this Hg completely
separate from the first batch of PM that you made. Most of the
6
finely divided Au will remain behind in the bottom of the retort as a
dry brittle cake, but the super-fine Au micro-clusters in ORME
configuration will fly over with the Hg and seed it with “the body” or
“the sulfur” of Au.
You are now ready to perform the final phase of The Great Work, the
marriage of the Sun & Moon, or the mixture of the Philosophical Gold
with the Philosophical Mercury. This mixture, when combined, is
7
known as “The Rebis,” a word that literally means “a mixture of two
dissimilar things.” They are very difficult to combine, and once they
are combined, they have a tendency to separate again very quickly.
It is therefore important to have everything prepared in advance and
ready to go so that you can immediately place the Rebis into “the
Egg” and place the Egg into the oven.
The Egg should be a tightly sealed very thick-walled quartz flask that
is either round-bottomed or slightly elongated (egg-shaped) with a
long neck so that a “circulation” process may proceed within it – this
will be further explained a bit later. The ratio of PG to PM for the
Rebis should be somewhere between 1:1 and 2:1, (Au:Hg). The two
materials can be persuaded to combine by either grinding them
together in a mortar & pestle, or shaking them together vigorously in
a long, slender covered jar. Either process will be lengthy and
arduous, but eventually they will grudgingly form a marginal sort of
colloidal suspension.
Combining the two parts should be the very last thing you do, so that
you may immediately place the Rebis into the oven. A sand bath
placed inside a gas-fired ceramics kiln makes a good set-up. Once
you begin heating the Rebis, the heat must not be interrupted for the
duration of the procedure, not even for 5 minutes or the process will
fail and all will be lost. For this reason, gas heat is infinitely
preferable to an electric oven, since there would be little chance of
the heat being interrupted for example, by a temporary power outage.
A sand bath holds heat well and cools very slowly, thereby providing
a reliable safety buffer should it be necessary to change out an empty
gas canister.
Incubation
Maintain the temperature at right around 330C (636F), and other than
periodic observation it should not be necessary to lay hands upon the
egg again until the entire process in completed. Carefully regulate
the heat so that a steady, even circulation occurs within the Egg.
Think of it as a process similar to the circulation by which rain occurs
8
in nature. The hot vapor of the “animated” PM should evaporate up
into the neck of the egg where it will condense back into a liquid upon
the cooler surfaces, and then “rain down” to seep back into the
“seeded earth” below. Too much heat will tend to dry out the “earth”
in the bottom of the flask and create excessive “moisture” clinging to
the walls inside the neck. Too little heat and the earth will appear
“flooded,” with very little condensation visible in the neck.
Multiplication
Remove the material from the Egg, and separate the bright red
powder from the dross. Using only the red powder and a fresh
quantity of PM, make up another Rebis, place it within the Egg, and
incubate it. The operation will proceed as before, only the time
between phases of the Peacock’s Tail will be greatly lessened and
the entire process should only take about 28 days. The Stone is now
complete and “fixed in the fire” meaning that if heated in a spoon it
should not scorch or burn, merely flow like wax and then re-harden.
To dilute the Stone to a safe level for consumption, take up the tiniest
grain of the material with a needle point and drop it into a pint of white
wine. The wine will be dyed a deep red color. Take an eyedropper
and place a drop of this reddened wine into another pint of white wine
and it will turn a lighter shade of red. Continue in this manner until
the wine turns a golden hue; this is the true “Potable Gold” and is now
sufficiently diluted to the point where 1 or 2 DROPS of it may be
consumed. No person should ever take more than 7 drops of this
material at once. An average dose is 1 or 2 drops twice per year.
10