that are commonly call’d Water-drinkers.
For though not only the vulgar, but ev’n many
persons that are far above that Rank, have so much
admir’d to see, a man after having drunk a great
deal of fair water, to spurt it out again in the form
of Claret Wine, Sack, and Milk, that they have suspected
the intervening of Magick, or some forbidden means
to effect what they conceived above the power of Art;
yet having once by chance had occasion to oblige a
Wanderer that made profession of that and other Jugling
Tricks, I was easily confirm’d by his Ingenious
confession to me, That this so much Admir’d
Art, indeed consisted rather in a few Tricks, than
in any great Skill, in altering the Nature and Colours
of things. And I am easy to be perswaded; that
there may be a great deal of Truth in a little Pamphlet
Printed divers years ago in English, wherein the Author
undertakes to discover, and that (if I mistake not)
by the confession of some of the Complices themselves,
That a famous Water-drinker then much Admir’d
in
England, perform’d his pretended Transmutations
of Liquors by the help of two or three inconsiderable
preparations and mixtures of not unobvious Liquors,
and chiefly of an Infusion of Brazil variously diluted
and made Pale or Yellowish, (and otherwise alter’d)
with Vinegar, the rest of their work being perform’d
by the shape of the Glasses, by Craft and Legerdemane.
And for my part, that which I marvel at in this business,
is, the Drinkers being able to take down so much Water,
and spout it out with that violence; though Custome
and a Vomit seasonably taken before hand, may in some
of them much facilitate the work. But as for
the changes made in the Liquors, they were but few
and slight in comparison of those, that the being
conversant in Chymical Experiments, and dextrous in
applying them to the Transmuting of Colours, may easily
enough enable a man to make, as ev’n what has
been newly deliver’d in this, and the foregoing
Experiment; especially if we add to it the things
contained in the XX, the XXXIX and the XL. Experiments,
may perhaps have already perswaded You.
EXPERIMENT XLV.
You may I presume (Pyrophilus) have taken notice,
that in this whole Treatise, I purposely decline (as
far as I well can) the mentioning of Elaborate Chymical
Experiments, for fear of frighting you by their tediousness
and difficulty; but yet in confirmation of what I have
been newly telling you about the possibility of Varying
the Colours of Liquors, better than the Water-drinkers
are wont to do, I shall add, that Helmont used
to make a preparation of Steel, which a very Ingenious
Chymist, his Sons Friend, whom you know, sometimes
employes for a succedaneum to the Spaw-waters, by
Diluting this Essentia Martis Liquida (as he
calls it) with a due proportion of Water. Now
that for which I mention to you this preparation,
(which as he communicated to me, I know he will not
refuse to Pyrophilus) is this, that though