Stoddart-Life of Paracelsus
Stoddart-Life of Paracelsus
Stoddart-Life of Paracelsus
PAKACELSTJS, From
AGED TWENTY-FOUR.
now
in the
Louvre Gallery.
[Frontispiece
THE
LIFE OF
PARACELSUS
THEOPHRASTUS VON HOHENHEIM
H93
BY
ANNA
M.
STODDART
WITH ILLUSTRATIONS
THIS
BOOK
IS
DEDICATED
TO
PREPARATION OF IT
PREFACE
IN 1833, at the age of twenty-one, Robert " Browning wrote his Paracelsus," a poem which
has to this day held
its
own
as
perhaps the
most penetrating of his sympathetic revelations. The poet himself characterised such a poem
as the dramatic revelation of a soul, generally that of an imaginary person. For this cause " " Paracelsus many readers and admirers of
have classed it with others which owed their emergence from subjective chaos to the poet's creative power. But other readers were vaguely aware that a man bearing this name, and held for an extravagant and pretentious charlatan,
made some
small
stir in
Browning knew more than his readers, for he possessed some of Hohenheim's own writings and a few biographical notes of his career mainly derived from the books of the man's inveterate foes and now known to be mendacious calumnies. The
and disreputable.
vii
viii
PREFACE
astonishing fact is that through this paucity of evidence and this cloud of hostile obscuration
the poet discerned his greatness. About a quarter of a century ago, students at Leipzig, Berlin, Vienna, and Salzburg began to examine the neglected traces of Hohenheim's
and to estimate its importance to With that infinite patience, accuracy, and experienced judgment which distinguish German from nearly all other scholars, these
career
science.
men
web
masterly inquiry into the accumulated writings attributed to Paracelsus and published its " results in the two volumes of his Attempt at
a Critical Estimate of the Authenticity of the Paracelsian Writings," the first of which ap-
the
portraits
and graphic,
;
oil-paintings,
and woodcuts,
pursuance of
and
in
almost as
many
pil-
made and
discovered
from legendary and oral tradition a mass of subsidiary but important biographical data.
continued too the surgical examinations of Hohenheim's skull and bones which were
He
begun
in Salzburg
by
his father
PREFACE
ix
authentic wiritings of
to
his
Hohenheim and
all
collected
references
journeys and personal what resembles an autoexperiences, compiling biography, which is a sine qua non to all students
his
Professors Franz Strunz at Leipzig and Carl Strunz at Vienna make the amazing genius
of this persecuted to their students,
man
edition of his works in their original German with notes of explanation, and already both " "
the
Paragranum
appeared.
These
search
students.
men
and
are pioneers
their
Paracelsian re-
work
is
attracting
many
To Browning's poem
sus
this
"
Life of Paracel-
owes inspiration; to those pioneers and to his own works it owes its authenticity. Attracted to the subject by the tentative but unsatisfactory work of the Browning Society, of whose committee I was a member for some
its
"
based on accurate research should as far as possible reconstruct the sequence of his circum-
PREFACE
memory
In 1840 Ambroise
Fare's gifted biographer, Dr. Maignan, admitted and emphasised Hohenheim's brilliant services
an English writer on the him as a quack, was time that a which might place him in his due biography relation to the European renascence, one unprejudiced by outworn theory, uninfluenced by the purposes of an exotic cult, should be
to science
;
in 1895
written for readers in England. Work of other kinds hindered this under-
taking until the early spring of 1910, when I was set free to carry out a project which after
years of pondering had assumed the character At its outset of an imperative and sacred duty.
I was encouraged by the opinion and advice of Dr. John Comrje, M.A., whose lectures in the University of Edinburgh upon the History of
Medicine have already created wide interest in all that illuminates his subject, and to him I
owe my thanks. To the Librarians of the Royal College of Physicians, and of the Advocates' Library in Edinburgh, and to those of other libraries at home and abroad, in which I became acquainted
with the earliest editions of Hohenheim's works, I am indebted for constant courtesy and help.
And
of
whose ready acceptance the early chapters gave me just that experito Mr. Murray,
PREFACE
enced sympathy which
influence
rallies
xi
mind and
my
sincere
recognition.
ANNA M. STODDART.
SIENA,
June
12, 1911.
NOTE
with deep regret that I have to announce the death of Miss Anna Stoddart within a few hours of
IT
is
the passing for press of the last sheets of this volume. This is not the place in which to give a biographical account of her, but the notices which have appeared
in the leading
the high esteem in which she and her educational work were held by a large circle of friends and admirers.
For some years past her whole life and energies had been devoted to this work on Paracelsus. Her previous
studies
and her
her for the task, and she spent many months in Germany and Italy in order to investigate on the spot the career of a very remarkable man who is known to the
British public mainly through the
works of Robert
Browning.
I
a favourable
re-
ception to this scholarly and conscientious work for the sake both of the author and the subject of it.
JOHN MURRAY.
September
1,
1911.
CONTENTS
CHAPTER
DR. WlLHELM VON HOHENHEIM
I
...
CHAPTER
II
23
CHAPTER
III
43
IV
. .
.
.61
.
CHAPTER V
81
.....
VII
VIII
103
CHAPTER
PERSECUTION
127
CHAPTER
No ABIDING
CITY
xiii
149
xiv
CONTENTS
CHAPTER
IX
PAGB
.
"
VOLUMEN
PARAMIRUM "
.171
CHAPTER X
"
OPUS PARAMIRUM
"
195
CHAPTER
XI
RENEWED WANDERING
CHAPTER
TEACHER, MYSTIC, CHRISTIAN
XII
222
....
249
LAST YEARS
.......
CHAPTER
XIII
274
APPENDIX A
297
298
LAMPOON ON PARACELSUS
299
INDEX
301
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
PORTRAIT OF PARACELSUS AT THE AGE OF TWENTY-FOUR, PAINTED BY SCOREL, 1517, NOW IN THE LOUVRE
GALLERY
.......
.
.
Frontispiece
FACING PA.GB
PORTRAIT OF DR. WILHELM VON HOHENHEIM, FATHER OF PARACELSUS, PAINTED 1491, NOW IN THE MUSEUM CAROLINA-AUGUSTEUM, SALZBURG
....
.
.
. .
20
WHEN HE
.72
.144
FACSIMILE
PORTRAIT OF PARACELSUS, PAINTED IN NUREMBERG IN 1529 OR 1530, NOW IN THE ROYAL GALLERY AT
SCHLEISSHEIM, NEAR MUNICH
. .
.168
176
IN ST.
GALLEN, BUILT
1485,
PULLED
PORTRAIT TAKEN AT LAIBACH, OR VIENNA, WHEN PARACELSUS WAS FORTYSEVEN YEARS OLD
:
BY HIRSCHVOGEL
......
280
LIFE OF PARACELSUS
CHAPTER
DR.
And
I
its
were
all
THE
valley of Einsiedeln stretches from the two Mythen mountains on the south to Etzel on the
to the end of the eighth century Its streams this high valley was uninhabited. and brooks found their way through forests to
north.
Up
These forests knew the howl and the vulture's scream, but the voice of man was unheard beyond their fringe, where a few hovels here and there might be The whole district was a wilderness found. and was feared by the dwellers near the lake. The great snow-mountains which pass through the valley of Glarus, through Schwyz, Uri, and it Unterwalden, bounded it on the south pushed its way northwards to the meadows by the lake it reached Altmatt on the west, and on the east it skirted the upper lake and the march.
; ;
wilderness
DR.
[CHAP,
diocese of the Bishops of Constance but althe nobles of Alemannia may have though
sometimes hunted on
generally as the
sinister reputation.
Such it was before the time of Meinrad, who was born towards the end of the eighth century. His family belonged to a branch out of the stem from which sprang the ancestors of the Imperial House of Germany, and his father was a Count
of Zollern.
valley
He
Meginrat, spent his childhood. The boy was serious-minded, and his father saw in this quality a monition that he was suited for the Church
Reichenau, probably influenced in his choice by the fact that a relation of his own, called Erlebald, was one of its instructors. Much
country round the lakes of Zurich and Constance was already christianised, some of it by the
and the
latter's
memory
is
enshrined in the
name
For Ireland was a base of missionary enterprise in those days, and with the
of St. Gallen.
Cross
it
Ger-
for schooling, because its learning, its music, its arts of design and manufacture were in advance of the crude
822]
Still,
MEINRAD
part of Helvetia and Alemannia was heathen to all intents and purposes, and only the nobles sought learning for their sons in
*
\
insight
was
endorsed
by the event. From the beginning Meinrad He took lent a willing ear to his instructors.
and theology, was diligent in the scriptorium, became expert in Church formula and ritual, and sought the grave exercises of the cloister rather than boyish sports and distractions. So gentle and
to study with zeal, mastered Latin
and
willing a pupil endeared himself to the monks, they encouraged his bias towards the
life.
priestly
He
manhood
old.
at Reichenau
priest's orders
In 822,
monastery, and shortly afterwards Meinrad entered the order of St. Benedict and submitted
himself wholly to
fitted
rigorous Rule. His learning for scholarly rather than for physical
its
of the Scriptures
as
several
books
of
devotion.
He
some time was sent to Bollingen on the upper Lake of Zurich, where Reichenau had a dependent house and school, established to meet the Emperor Charand
after
Meinrad performed
and
DR.
[CHAP,
diligently, but his heart was in the devotional, not in the secular vocation of monasticism.
when after a night of prayer he watched the sun rise on its mountains. Their dark recesses drew him with irresistible magnetism. Yonder was solitude, and he yearned Had not St. Benedict for solitude with God. " the battle of the soul in in his Rule enjoined the desert, where only God is present, and other help there is none to maintain the soul's warfare
wilderness
?
by the lake's shore without experiencing an agony of longing as he gazed. At last he decided to cross the lake and explore
the ground. Some of his pupils accompanied him, and they climbed till they reached the slopes of the High Etzel. Here the boys stopped to fish in the Sihl, but Meinrad pushed upwards
and found a spot on the lower slope fit for a hermitage. As teacher and pupils fared back to the southern shore, they
into the forest,
came upon a
little village,
now
called Altendorf,
promised to provide those things that were necessary to existence, and to carry them to a point on the forest's edge from which at stated times he could fetch them. Meinrad returned to Bollingen with his boys and then sought Abbot Erlebald to lay before
woman
him
his
heart's
desire.
Erlebald
talked
the
829]
be obeyed.
Meinrad
received
his
permission
and made
to the
his preparation for the change, giving monastery of Reichenau nearly all the
copies which he transcribed there. He retained the Rule of St. Benedict, his Mass-book,
He
left
for
the
there, just
now
little
where hut
sought There was a great mental restlessness in those difficult days of transition, and
Unfortunately,
was disturbed.
and
the spectacle of a man who knew his own mind set himself to win a closer communion with
God than even the monastery could afford appealed to many wistful men and women. They climbed the rough hill that led to his
cession.
hermitage to seek counsel, comfort, and interOthers followed out of curiosity, and
the object of his renunciation seemed to be thwarted. He bore the intrusion bravely for
seven
years.
is
Doubtless
in
winter,
when the
re-
High Etzel
cover, but during the greater part of the year His pilgrims flocked to seek his blessing.
hermitage was too near the world, and he decided to push further into the heart of the dark forest to escape its contact. About four miles he travelled towards the pyramidal
DR.
[CHAP,
Mythens, which stand sentinel on the south, and there he found a plain thickly wooded but level and walled on the east by the prolonged
semi-circular
He
of
heights of the Freiherrenberg. halted just below them, and with the help
some woodcutters he rebuilt his hermitage. In the neighbourhood the Alp rustled through the fir-trees, a streamlet whose pure water
ministered to his daily needs. Round the shores of Lake
religious one of these, a convent, the
Zurich
many
established.
a king's daughter and a holy woman, presided. Moved to admiration and compassion for a renunciation which lacked even the objective
Meinrad a Madonna and Child carved in wood, and it is supposed aided him to build a little sanctuary in which to place this treasure. Another abbess, Heilwiga of Schannis, gave him an altar, candlesticks, incense, and wax, perhaps too the priestly
aids to devotion, she sent
Our Lady was installed, no more to leave of Einsiedeln the spot in which her honour dwells. For the Madonna and Child of the Holy Chapel in the monastery -church of Einsiedeln, at whose shrine more than a hundred thousand pilgrims yearly
equipment
for his daily services.
"
"
pray, kneeling while they listen to the Salve Regina sung every afternoon the most touching
intercessory laud surely ever heard, with wail as of the wind amongst the fir-branches,
its
its
836]
THE EINSIEDELEI
cry for deliverance as of lonely souls in conflict is the wooden statue sent thither by the Abbess
Hildegard nearly eleven hundred years ago. Here Meinrad had peace from the world,
although
again distressed souls sought his help, and from time to time one of the brothers from Reichenau would come to visit
now and
him.
From
darkness he suffered fierce assault, but overcame in the might of the Cross, and we are told that
God
once
sent
visible messengers of consolation in the form of Jesus, the little Jesus. His
of
him
hour
was passed in the forest, walking to and fro, and a pair of young ravens whom he fed from his hand with crumbs of
recreation
his scanty
meals attached themselves to him, as long centuries before two ravens had attached themselves to St. Benedict.
his axe,
and he cleared
a space round the chapel and cell. When this was done he began to clear the plain in front
of
them and
For
twenty-five
hermitage
pilgrims, many of them nobles, sought him out in their times of affliction and contrition, and
the
way
to the Einsiedelei
became a well-trodden
their
path.
restore
He would
receive
confessions,
for
re-
and console them, celebrate Mass them and send them away renewed and
solved.
DR.
[CHAP,
But the fame of these visits reached the ears men, and they reasoned that in his solitude he must have much wealth accumulated, gifts of gold and silver vessels for his sanctuary,
of evil
which could be converted into wealth. A Gera Rhaetian resolved to kill him. Father Odilo Ringholz tells the story of their
man and
crime.
Meinrad,
while
celebrating
of
his
early
approaching death and of special divine preparation. He spent the whole day in prayer. At evening his murderers came. He received them with friendly greeting and shared his bread and water with
Mass, was
made aware
them. When it grew dark, they fell upon him with clubs and beat him to death. But as he died they saw lighted tapers round his body and a perfume as of incense came from it. In terror they fled, not daring to enter the sanctuThe ravens, who had watched their crime, ary. rose from their perch screaming with rage and
pursued them all the way to Zurich, so that they were unable to find refuge and were thrown into prison. Their brutal sacrilege was discovered and the Archduke Adalbert condemned them to be burnt to death. When the news reached Reichenau, Abbot Walter and some of the monks went up to the hermitage and carried Meinrad's heart to his hut-chapel on the Etzel and his body to Reichenau, there to be buried with every sacred This was in January 861.
rite.
927]
BENNO
far
So
we have
Einsiedeln,
memory
of its saint
it
and out
of the pilgrimages
which kept
v.
alive.
at the events of the six centuries which separate the death of St. Meinrad from the birth of
A Paracelsus,
and at these
growth of Einsiedeln. }( For nearly half a century there is nothing to The chapel and hermitage fell almost record.
into ruins, for the occasional pilgrimages did not avail to keep them in repair. But early
in the tenth century, a dignitary of Strassburg
Cathedral
came with
some
followers,
drawn
by the two-fold cord of St. Meinrad's memory and the longing for solitude. Benedict, better
known
as Benno, set to
work to
the hermitage, one for each, for they practised the hermit life, not that When the building of an established order.
cells to
they
followed
Meinrad's
trees in front of
Bruel
is
due to
a large stretch
of arable land west of the Alp and still called Bennau. But in 927, Benno, against his will, was made Bishop of Metz and had to leave his little flock in the Dark Forest. He found the city of Metz given over to wickedness and admonished its citizens from the pulpit. His reward was their hatred, and when King^Henry,
10
DR.
[CHAP,
two knaves to lie The ruffians added blows to this his eyes. crime, and Benno sought release from the Synod and went back to Einsiedeln. He was very gladly welcomed and cared for and lived eleven
peaceful,
him, was absent, they hired in wait for him and put out
devout years till his death in 940. Six years before he died there came to join him another Canon of Strassburg, like himself a man of noble birth and possessing a large fortune. He brought with him a number of
followers,
and Benno made him abbot. This Eberhard proposed to devote his money to the building of a church and monastery on the site of St. Meinrad's hermitage, to reorganise the hermit into the monastic life and to adopt the Rule of St. Benedict. To all this Benno gladly consented, but it was not till
after his death that the buildings were begun. Amongst Eberhard's relatives were the wealthy
Duke Hermann
sums on these
Suabia and his wife the Duchess Reginlinde. The Duke bestowed large
of
buildings, and his name is coupled with that of Eberhard as founder of the Church at Einsiedeln. He gave the ground on
which it was built as well as the neighbouring land as far as the Etzel to the monastery, and secured from Emperor Otto I. a decree granting
to
liberty to elect their abbot without interference. This decree admitted the
the
monks
947]
It
ANGELIC CONSECRATION
was towards the end
of
11
947 that the buildThe church stood round ings were finished. and over St. Meinrad's little chapel which was
original form with its altar Church and chapel were ready for consecration. They were within the diocese of Constance to which Einsiedeln belonged till the beginning of the eighteenth century and the Bishop of Constance was asked to perform the solemn rite. The Bishop of Augsburg was invited to be present and brought with him some relics of St. Maurice as a gift. Bishop Conrad of Constance was a man of deeply devotional nature and habit and rose about midnight on the eve of the consecration to pray in the new church. As he entered, the most wonderful singing met his ear. Some of the Benedictine monks were in the church and with him they went to the door of the little Lookchapel, from which the sound proceeded. in with reverent astonishment, they found ing the chapel lighted up and a great choir of angels conducting its consecration with chant and prayer and ceremony according to the ritual
preserved in
its
and Madonna.
of the
They listened till the celestial function was ended and then returned to the monastery with hearts uplifted and amazed. The Bishop felt that in the human ceremony of the following day the chapel had no share, for God had consecrated it. When Eberhard and the assembled monks
Church.
12
DR.
[CHAP,
they were astonished and troubled, and feared that Conrad and their brothers had seen a mocking vision, or were carried away
were
told,
by a
fantasy.
arranged. He yielded very the consecration began at the chapel. Scarcely had the first words been spoken when a voice
"
:
in
consecrated by God." Afterwards, when Bishop Conrad was in Rome, he related all that he had seen and heard to
Pope Leo VIII. and received from him a Bull forbidding any attempt in future to reconsecrate the chapel. This incident roused the whole neighbourhood, and pilgrimages began to a spot so honoured
by Heaven. These have continued in increasing numbers during the nine centuries and a half which have elapsed. To-day there is no diminution in their number, no relapse in their
devotions.
In
the
thirteenth
century,
the
monastery was permitted to use a seal and chose the Madonna and Child for its impression,
while the abbot's shield includes the two faithful
full
speed as
The
wooded
1513]
MARIA EINSIEDELN
in
18
boys playing near a little church apparently at snowballing, with a few grave and reverend There was a school seniors watching the sport. three centuries before this date, superintended by the Benedictines, and the schoolmaster at the beginning of the fourteenth century composed some lines in honour of the church, which freely translated run as follows
:
Some minsters from relics of saints have renown, Some from dignities kings have bestowed in their But ours can glory in both, and for crown, In her great consecration by choirs from above. Holy Virgin God set apart here to thy praise His temple that we might be saved at thy shrine Here pilgrims implore thee in love and amaze
!
love,
Weak and
all
favours divine.
Through good and evil days Maria Einsiedeln endured. Working people and tradespeople
gathered to the little town, to provide for the needs of the multitudes who visited the Holy
Chapel, and a secular
life
in
sympathetic
subjection
the
Benedictine
authority. But before the end of the fifteenth century much trouble had befallen this enerThe Benedictines were misgetic community.
sionaries, church-builders, founders of religious houses, promoters of education and of learning.
Part of their revenues, whether from gifts or from their increasing territorial property, was expended on these important undertakings.
The
first
14
DR.
[CHAP,
were burnt down through either malice or mishap, but certainly by an enemy called Eberhard, whose interference with their elections of an abbot had been thwarted.
church and
The neighbouring nobles detested the liberty enjoyed by the monks to elect their abbot and But added tried to arouse hostility against it.
to this
probable that their influence and energy in reform of the neglected inhabitants within a wide radius of Einsiedeln were at the
it
is
The struggle lasted fifty and by strength of arms the nobles once years, managed to force an abbot of their choosing upon the monastery. When this danger was
root of this enmity.
past,
strife
there
followed
lengthy
intermittent
with the townspeople of Schwyz, who in 1314 broke violently into the church, plundered all its valuables and flung the monks into prison. Austria interfered in 1315 on behalf of Einsiedeln,
were so prolonged and so mischievous that the Benedictines lost by them a full half of their land in the Dark Forest, but
managed to
rights.
and
their
the arbitration of
at
one time a monk of Einsiedeln. These successive quarrels embittered more than two centuries, and during the troubles with Schwyz, in 1226, the cloister was burnt down a second time.
1327]
ABBOT JOHN
15
Before the fourteenth century began even, the prosperity of the tenth seemed to have dwindled
away. But even at its lowest secular estate, the abbots of Einsiedeln were constantly called to
episcopal office in other places. Abbot John I. had much to do with
ation.
its restor-
A man
of affairs, of piety
and
of learning,
he raised the standard of worship as well in he improved the methods detail as in spirit of study, and worked without pause to provide
;
the means for restoring the much- injured buildings. Pilgrimages had become rarer during the
troubles,
his
encouragement.
died in 1327, and was fortunately succeeded by men whom he had himself inspired, and by the beginning of the fifteenth century Einsiedeln
He
had
partially
recovered
lost.
her
prosperity.
Her
reli-
During
gious
dependent
in
houses
were established
the
neigh-
bourhood of the monastery, some of them for women, and these in the following century were combined into a community of Benedictine
nuns.
aristocratic
in
its
social
abbot unless
He must show
noble ancestors.
16
DR.
"
[CHAP,
shall be a hospital of refuge for the Princes, Counts, landowners and their children, as it is written in the chronicles and has been in custom for a long
This house of
time."
Four abbots of high rank succeeded each other during the fifteenth century, the last of these being Conrad of Hohenrechberg, who was
elected in 1480.
observance of this qualification was considerably It was said that the devotional discussed.
character of the monastery suffered from its social influence and that its discipline was greatly
relaxed.
In
common
open to
criti-
of
the
reformation
had
roused serious thinking in Bohemia and England, and when the wind of the Spirit is set in motion
may surmise that passes from land to land. the failure of the Christian Church to maintain
it
We
high purpose in the fourteenth and -fifteenth centuries was the main cause of that revolution
its
which men call the Reformation. Like science, the Church in those times had become a discordant echo of its past. Its spiritual life was failing, and the forces which gathered their impetus slowly and silently, in men touched by the Spirit, from the spectacle of a Church at odds with God, at odds with man, found a
1481]
SUMMONS TO EINSIEDELN
fire.
17
and a challenge
on their tongues of
Under the gentle Conrad of Hohenrechberg there was no attempt at Einsiedeln to meet or He was abbot from 1480 refute the charges.
to 1526,
town and
devolved
of the pilgrim-hospital.
upon the abbot. Bombast von Hohenheim, of whom " Life Archbishop Netzhammer in his admirable
Dr. Wilhelm
of Paracelsus
"
says
Wilhelm von Hohenheim was no bath and barber doctor, but a celebrated physician, trained in the best schools, who had acquired
at Tubingen his degree of Licentiate of Medicine, as a chronicle of Villach tells us."
indicates his rank, but for fuller information we have to thank the latest authorities
"
The name
on the parentage
hoff,
mann, who have made careful investigation into his status by birth. Were it not for the of his son's enemies, contemporary malignity and posthumous, it would be unnecessary to dwell at length on Wilhelm von Hohenheim 's ancestry, but mendacious biographies of Paracelsus have been so long credited that it be2
18
DR.
[CHAP.
comes a duty
latest research.
Conrad Bombast von Hohenheim lived in 1270 and was known then as a feudal tenant of the Count of Wirtemberg.
soldier called
He
rich
von Hohenheim.
close relation
between
the Counts of Wirtemberg and this family is evidenced by the lands and revenue which the
Bombasts von Hohenheim could claim. This Conrad lived at Castle Hohenheim near Stuttgart and collected tithes from Plieningen and one-half of the revenue of Ober-Esslingen, and these rights lasted through the fourteenth and
well into the fifteenth century. family called Spat bought the feudal tenancy and rights
from them
berg's
in
von
Hohenheim
who
a knight 1461 rode with Count Ulrich against the Count Palatine Friedrich and in 1492 shared
He was
the expedition to Landshut under Count Eberhard of Wirtemberg, accompanied by his brother
This hapGeorge Bombast von Hohenheim. pened just a year before the birth of Paracelsus, whose father had been already eleven years in
Einsiedeln.
This George von Hohenheim had accompanied Count Eberhard on a pilgrimage to the Holy Land in 1468, and in his later life had entered
the Order of the Knights of St. John, in which
1481-91]
19
He had
Bombast, Bambast, Baumbast, or in its oldest form Banbast, was special to this branch of Its fortunes were dethe von Hohenheims. who lived at Riet, was clining and his father, The son was neither a soldier nor wealthy. educated for a profession in which he could
make
lived
his
own way.
and laboriously, studying too, both chemistry and botany, and making herbal He had many medicine a special interest.
quietly
valuable manuscripts, copies perhaps made in Tubingen, and they comprised the chief thinking
his
and
four years old, he married a lady of a family well known in Einsiedeln, Ochsner by name, whose father was probably the Rudi Ochsner
who
the
tion of
lived at the Sihl bridge. She held the posimatron of the pilgrim-hospital, under
abbot's administration, and the doctor must have come into frequent contact with her
while attending invalid pilgrims professionally. In honour of his marriage, which took place in 1491, Dr. Wilhelm von Hohenheim had his
portrait taken.
It
is
now
in Salzburg in the
Museum
illuminates
20
DR.
[CHAP,
many matters which might otherwise have remained doubtful. His age is stated on a scroll to his left, just under the von Hohenheim shield, which bears three blue balls on a white band. On his right, in the left
for us
the head of an ox, not but probably connected heraldically displayed, with the family name of his bride. In his right hand he holds a carnation, the customary sign of a bridegroom. A small arched window on his right looks upon a road bordered by rocks and fir-trees, down whose slope a man on horseback and a pedestrian are wending, and this may be intended for the pilgrim-way to the High Etzel. The portraiture is most interesting and is well painted in oil upon a wooden It shows a man of thirty-four years panel. old, dressed in professional black and wearing a beret which covers the upper part of the head, all but a ring of thick and curling hair high on his brow and rather low on his neck. The face
corner of the picture,
is
is
deeply lined round the mouth, with delicately arched eyebrows and eyes in which wisdom,
humour, and some sadness dwell. He wears two rings, one on the third finger of either hand. We gather that in 1491 Wilhelm von Hohenheim was a student, a man of kindliest temper, a gentleman who had the right to bear the arms of his family and to transmit them to his son, who always used them.
DR.
1491]
21
Dr. Carl Aberle suggests some of the picture's probable vicissitudes before it was placed in It is said to have the museum at Salzburg.
been seen in 1760 in the house of a merchant of that city, and its owner spoke of it as having
hung
in
Paracelsus 's
;
sitting-room,
when
lived there
a century later, it was in the posHerr Josef Mossl, who died in 1885, and who inherited it from his father, by whom it had been bought from a man called Schamhuber in the service of the Archbishop of Salzsession of
burg
lived in a house
on the
further side of the bridge over the Sihl and close to the ascent to the Etzel. The original house
was burnt down about 1838, and the building which took its place is not altogether a reproduction. In a map of old Einsiedeln and its neighbourhood, bridge and house are given as they were when Dr. von Hohenheim brought There were two his wife to her father's home. good stories in the long building, and the upper of these was assigned to the young couple. We hear little more of the doctor's wife. She was doubtless a quiet, devout, capable woman,
who kept to her home duties after marriage. The home was beautifully placed. It was
approached from Einsiedeln by a hilly road which reached the Sihl bridge down a steep descent. The river rushed through a gorge, its banks clad with fir-trees and rich in plants and
22
DR.
[CHAP,
wild flowers.
little
from the end of the covered bridge, its looking towards the pilgrim- way up the Etzel. Behind it stretched meadows where cattle grazed. The bridge, known as the Teufels-briicke, was rebuilt a century and a half ago, but as nearly as possible in its original form, so that one can realise to-day most of the features familiar to the inmates of the Ochsner house.
back windows
CHAPTER
II
all
the while
till
HERE, on November 10, 1493, their boy was He was christened Theophrastus in born. honour of a Greek thinker and follower of Aristotle, JTheophrastus Tyrtamos of Eresusj physician, botanist, and mineralogist, whom his " " father specially admired. Philip may have been prefixed to this name, but it was not used " by Paracelsus himself at all, and for Aureole," it seems to have been conferred on him by his admirers in later life, and in 1538 he used it Aureolus was a in the title of a document.
name
of honour given to Theophrastus Tyrtamos and may have been playfully used by the doctor There was perhaps some faint to h}s son. luminous effluence from his face, as there has been from other men of genius, which won him this pet name. In looking at the portrait, wrongly ascribed to Tintoretto, drawn when Paracelsus was twenty- eight years old, there is an apparent attempt to indicate such a light
23
24
[CHAP,
about his head. But it was not till after his death that the name was freely used by his biographers and publishers. His full name, set down without hypothetic additions, was Theophrastus Bombast von Hohenheim. He was a difficult child to rear.
fragile,
Small,
with a tendency to rickets, he required constant attention. This he received from his
father,
ness.
tender-
himself the healing and strengthening value of open air, and when he was old enough Theo-
phrastus was his constant companion and learned from him the names and uses of herbs for healing
tidotes.
for lotions, for potions, for poisons, for anThis was his first reading of a page
of
No
fuller
or
more
round
own home.
mounand roadtains, forest, meadow, lake, swamp, side, and in his little book, published by Messrs. Benziger, we can discover what the little boy
has catalogued the
flora of Einsiedeln, of
discovered in his earliest perusal of it. Pharmacy had not reached a registered and
acknowledged status in Europe, as it had done in China, Egypt, Judea, and Greece more than a thousand years before the Christian era. Indeed, the
died.
first
But most
known
1500]
FLORA OF EINSIEDELN
now were known
in the
25
to us
the religious houses cultivated them in their gardens and so kept up their use. But they
and patients were forced to swallow mixtures which added to their suffering and sometimes hastened The decoctions from herbs, however, their end. were less repulsive than the mineral and animal brews given with prayers and holy water and a devout abstinence from fresh air. On the meadows, banks, and in the woods, by the Sihl streams and in the Sihl valley, where swamps abound, spring, summer, autumn, and winter bring countless plants to bloom and
often
were
administered
inaccurately,
colchicum,
borage,
angelica,
fennel,
kummel,
each poppies, martagon In the woods, pirolas of five varieties, other. woodroof, belladonna, datura, violets, and wild
lilies
and
succeed
On
taurea,
many
different veronicas,
thyme,
vervain,
smilax,
lychnis,
On wort, potentillas, ribes, and witch-herb. the swamps are the mealy primrose in great
patches of lavender and purple, sundews, myosotis, pinguiculas, mallows, equisetums, selaginan older world ella, a rare orchis relic of
;
slopes erica,
26
[CHAP,
dianthus, wild plum and wild berries abound. These are but a few of the plants in Father Gander's list, which includes a large number of other medicinal herbs and some to which magical powers were ascribed. Theophrastus must have learnt them all by
his
father's
side,
his
professional rounds on foot. They were long rounds, sometimes leading him over the Etzel
Lake Zurich,
sometimes taking him southward to Einsiedeln and its outlying farms, on other days needing briefer trudging to the hamlets and farms
within a mile or two of the Sihl bridge. When early summer brought the pilgrims, his attend-
his
home
served
came down from the chapel and that a wheel was hung up on pilgrimage days to indicate
that wine could be bought there. This rests on an assumption due to the presence of a
wheel lying by the roadside in the landscape of his portrait, but it is nowhere confirmed.
What
is
quite possible
is
delicate
pilgrims found rest and care there and perhaps restoring draughts of wine. These days would lead to many questions from the child and many answers from his father.
1500]
EARLY TEACHING
27
construct his childhood, that the mother was no longer there, but had passed away while he was
young. He was so entirely in his father's care, and he suffered much from lack of suitable
still
nourishment.
in
a religious
were only two subjects of paramount interest in life God in Heaven to be worshipped and God in nature. and. in man to be passiontrusted, ately sought a,ftpr. As a child he would accept all that he was taught, in youth and manhood he thought for himself, but never once lost
:
To him, as sight of the great eternal truths. we shall see, Jesus Christ was the divine teacher
and
example, wh_ose...._jfeto required positive obedience, not casuistic interpretation to vanishing point. We may accept from his own later reminiscences that his father was his first instructor
in
Latin,
botany,
alchemy,
history
.
herbal
These were due to the spirit of his time and were not only born within him, but were rapidly both mentally
responsible.
and
Young
century,
and
in
the
had defended
28
[CHAP,
the confederacy against Charles of Burgundy and Austria. In the very year which brought his father to Einsiedeln, the Convention of
Stanz had taken place, which not only included new cantons but endorsed the older constitutional decrees
Con federation
and was the basis of the Swiss The for thrfifi hundred years.
sentiment of individual canton self-government combined with a united executive found expression in those centuries,
and
of that rapid
development in liberty and law Theophrastus for Schwyz had always taken a prominent part in the wars, foreign and internal,
outside Switzerland events were taking place which were soon to draw this Confederacy into the whirlpool of their results, on whose
And
verge most of Europe found itself. Dr._JFranz Strunz in the able and eloquent " Life and Personality of introduction to his
Paracelsus
"
calls
A
men
new
era
was
the
science reconsidering arts turning to nature its formulas and its assertions theology called
:
to account for
its
systems and
its
limitations
new freedom opening its vistas to men's minds the giant Antaeus awaking from slumber on his mother earth to renew his struggle with ignorance, superstition, and prejudice.
a
:
1500]
THE RENASCENCE
29
an infant.
"
Strunz,
its
thousand
thousand voices,
crowds who followed the philosophic methods of the middle ages how to him it may have seemed that old things were doomed to pass The away and all things to become new. Renascence concealed a deeply rooted spiritual condition, an immense inner cleavage between the dying age and its bondsmen's creed and the world given over to the devil between the absence of law and lawlessness. It was from the spirit of the Renascence that Paracelsus received his impulse towards the light of nature, towards scientific Induction and comparison. Its alliance with the spiritual forces of the Reformation in both the narrower and wider sense of the word along with its influence upon men's souls an influence not directly due to Luther explains to us the other side of his
. . .
character."
fore
These influences were in active diffusion beLuther on the one side and Paracelsus on the other had given them voice. Two hundred and fifty years earlier another lonely soul had received vision, which pierced through
30
[CHAP,
centuries
stifled
and
his writ-
Majus
and forgotten. His " Opus was not rescued from its tattered manu-
so unready was the Western world to accept a solution of the great enigmas till it was shaken
loose from mental
and the Reformation. The time was now eager to bring to new birth, In 1483 Luther, in 1493 Paracelsus was born
:
Pico della Mirandola died a year afterwards in 1510 Girolamo Cardano, in 1517 Ambroise
:
LjLQrary.
It
was
all
expression, new thought, new science, new art. And these were only amongst the many voices of that great human restlessness which desired
what
It
it is
could not formulate until they came. impossible now to estimate how far the
into contact with Benedictine in-
child
came
to
allusion
Apparently there is only one mocking him in the monastic archives of Einsiedeln, written after his death when he
fluence.
could
years
make no reprisal. He was only nine old when he left, but sufficiently old to
the
church and
its
1502]
It
BOYHOOD AT VILLAGE
31
was burnt down in 1465, in 1509, and again We do not know its form between 1493 and 1502 but there is an old picture of Einsiedeln in 1577, which preserves for us its
in
1577.
its last destruction by The rebuilding was long delayed for lack of funds, so that the present church was erected
Hohenheim was
appointed to be town physician at Villach in Karinthia. We have a trustworthy record of the thirty-two years which he spent there in
a document dated
after his death.
Its
May
12,
1538,
four years
to his son's
which
6
it
We, the magistrates, council, and whole community of Villach, bear open testimony in this letter that the learned and famous Wilhelm Bombast von Hohenheim, Licentiate of Medicine, lived amongst us in Villach for thirty-two years and all the time of his residence led an honourable life and behaviour. With good will we witness to his rectitude and to his just and
blameless conduct, as it is incumbent on us to do. In 1534, exactly on the birthday of our Beloved Lady, he departed this life here in Villach. May God the Almighty be merciful to his soul. Of the said Wilhelm Bombast von Hohenheim, the most honourable and learned
32
[CHAP,
Doctor
both Arts of Medicine, is son by marriage and next heir, and was held by the
aforesaid
his
for
. .
son by marriage and his next heir. And that this letter may serve as absolutely trustworthy, we give it with the seal of the town
of Villach
appended."
Theophrastus was now old enough to go to school, and in Villach there was a school founded by the famous Fuggers of Augsburg, who were engaged in working the lead mines at Bleiberg, a short distance from Villach. Their Bergschule was intended to train overseers and
analysts to superintend and instruct the miners and to analyse the metals and ores discovered. " " In his Chronicle of Karinthia Paracelsus
wrote
"
many
its
minerals
At Bleiberg is a wonderful lead-ore which provides Germany, Pannonia, Turkey, and Italy
with lead
at Hiitenberg, iron-ore full of speci; fine steel and much alum ore, also vitriol ally ore of strong degree ; gold ore at St. Paternion ;
also zinc ore, a very rare metal not found elsewhere in Europe, rarer than the others ; excellent
cinnabar
ore
which
of
is
not
without
quicksilver,
the same character which cannot all be mentioned. And so the mountains of Karinthia are like a strong box which when opened with a key reveals great treasure."
and others
1502-9]
THE BERGSCHULE
33
Fuggers, and the doctor and his son must often have walked through the ancient larch forests
to Bleiberg on the slope of the Doberatsch to watch the processes which converted the ore
In the Bergschule the doctor was teacher of chemistry, or of alchemy in progress towards
chemistry.
Father and son lived in the Haupt Platz, or Market Place, of Villach at No. 18, and the school was in the Lederer Gasse. Theophrastus went to it daily and sat on its benches when
father taught. Dr. Wilhelm von
dicates
his
Hohenheim
for
in chemistry, and we had already learnt some may boy of its principles and knew the fascination of its experiments. His father had his own little laboratory in the house on the Market Place, in which he made his own tests. Dr. Karl Aberle saw this room in 1879 and a knob on the railing of some steps rising from the courtyard, which he was told Paracelsus had gilded. The boy was sent to the famous Benedictine school at St. Andrew's monastery in the Lavantall for higher scholastic instruction, and it is probable that there he came in contact with
proficiency
34
[CHAP,
his native
equipped
study at this period. The climate of Karinthia would favour his physical
him
for
development into fairly healthy boyhood. The country as well as Karniola had recently come through a terrific struggle with the Turks, who were driven from the very gates of Villach
in 1492.
Theophrastus was now preparing for the high school, or college, probably at Basel. He was even engaged in studying the occult with his father and by help of his father's collection of books. Without a knowledge of the
arts belonging to at that time to
occultism
it
was impossible
^
become a physician.
There
was no such thing scienceA All as"j positive collegiate and monastic training was founded upon authority and consisted in a degenerate and much falsified inheritance of dogma from the Greek and Roman physicians copied studi-^ ously for centuries and stultified with errors in its transference from Greek to Latin, from Latin to Arabic, and from Arabic back to mediaeval Latin. \
" Father of Medicine," Hippocrates, the great was succeeded in the fifth century before Christ
by Aristotle the
science.
Stagyrite,
who had
all
the instinct of
He
wrote
on
subjects
physics,
meteorology, mechanics, anatomy, physiology, biology, the vital principle, animals, parts
131-200]
CLAUDIUS GALEN
35
memory, sleep, dreams, His work was great and he attained to the gate if not to the strait and narrow way of School succeeded school of medicine science. for six hundred years in Greece, Alexandria, and Rome. But transference from language to language impaired and confused the,. bases founded by Hippocrates and Aristotle, jwhile the Platonic transcendentalism and metaphyetc.
of animals, generation,
obscuration disturbed logical thinking and fired men's imagination at the expense of patient
sical
investigation.
that there was to be acquired in his time and a little more of his own, founded upon in-
He wrote on every adequate experiment. branch of what was comprehensively called philosophy, five hundred clever treatises, and of these one hundred have survived. His merit was that he urged the importance of anatomical Otherwise, he dictated a system knowledge. of medicine fusing theory and practice retrograde in
not developed from the sound principles of Hippocrates and Aristotle so imposing in its reduction of all departments of
itself,
knowledge to authoritative assertion that it prevailed over all Europe for twelve centuries and dissent was accounted sacrilegious. While
Hippocrates urged the importance of vation, Galen confounded it with theory.
obser-
When
36
[CHAP,
the
sphere of European enlightenment, they were struck with admiration for this
it
mass
of
erudition
and accepted
without question.
was that copies were made in Arabic of Galen's treatises and of Latin versions of the Greek physicians. Avicenna and
result
The
Averroes were
hard-and-fast
disciples
of
the
Galenic system, fascinated by its pose of omniscience, and their support not only stamped out such illuminated protest as Roger Bacon's, but
made
of the decrees of
to bind men's minds for three centuries beyond As Latin was the general lanBacon's time.
guage
of teaching, copies of the Arabic were transferred into mediaeval Latin and errors
increased and multiplied. To such an extent were the works of even Aristotle debased in Roger Bacon's time, that their conceptions
were
stultified,
and
in his great
Majus," written for Pope Clement IV., the Franciscan scientist declared that "if he could he
would burn
the works of the Stagyrite, since their study was not only loss of time, but the cause of error and multiplication of ignorance."
all
It
is
mented
of
dogmatic
:
The testimony of nature Milan said more valid than the argument of doctrine." is But such consultation of nature was punished as wizardry. None the less it was hazarded.
"
ignorance.
St.
Ambrose
1510]
AT COLLEGE
37
"
William Howitt, Friend and mystic, has written: True mysticism consists in the direct relation
of the
human mind
to
God
false
mysticism
accomplishes no true community and proHow should pitiation between God and man." it, when it leaves the naked soul at the mercy The mind absorbed in God is shielded of evil ? from assault. It was the true mysticism that
Theophrastus sought to acquire, the union of his mind with the Divine Mind, that he might be enabled to understand its workings in nature. When he went to Basel, he was already practically acquainted with surgical treatment and had
helped his father in dealing with wounds. He tells us in his "Surgical Books and Writings" that he had the best of teachers and had read much
by famous men, both past and present. Amongst them he instances Bishop Erhart of Lavantall and his predecessor. Lavantall was in the valley where the Fuggers had their smelting furnaces and laboratories, and there the
written
bishop
probably attained experimental acquaintance with the alchemy of metals. We know next to nothing of Theophrastus at
Basel in 1510.
or University
was
in the
hands
of the time.
He
tions of
he had nothing to gain from their dull reiteraaeon- old formulas which his intellect disowned. The dust and ashes to which these " barren minds deferred had laboured and grown
38
[CHAP,
famous and the fruits were best seen in a dark and groaning earth given over to a blind and endless strife with evil what of all their lore
abates
?
"
incident belongs to this time. It was a fashion for scholars to adopt a latinised version
of their family
One
name and
in
some cases to
hellen-
ise its form. Erasmus, Frobenius, Melancthon are examples of such changes. The habit predominated in Basel, and Theophrastus trans-
ferred
Hohenheim
into
Paracelsus.
There
is
name on him
a boy, meaning by it that he was already more learned than Celsus, a physician who lived in the time of the Emperor Augustus, and who wrote a work upon
still
while he was
ing
hygiene than was usual then. But Dr. Sudhoff and Dr. Karl Aberle agree in considering " Para" to be a paraphrase of Hohenheim carrycelsus " Home " the
into High spiritual and we are safe in accepting their opinion. region, From 1510 he was known by this name, and
the
although he rarely included it in his signature, he affixed it to his greater works, those on
philosophy and religion, and was universally
cited
by
it
whether in discipleship,
in contro-
versy, or in contumely.
1511]
39
all
fusion
Opus Majus lay frayed and tattered at Rome and Oxford. Paracelsus had read some manuscript by the Abbot Trithemius, perhaps a copy in his father's collection, and it decided him to go to Wiirzburg and seek enrolment amongst his pupils. Trithemius was called after his birthplace, Treitenheim, near Trier. His own name was
Johannes Heidenberg. Even as a young Benedictine monk he was celebrated for his learning, and was made Abbot of Sponheim when he was
And
"
the
From Sponheim only twenty -one years old. he was transferred in 1506 to the monastery of St. Jacob close to Wiirzburg, where he died
December 1516. and more especially
in
He had
a great renown,
ing that the hidden things of nature were in the keeping of spiritual forces. Students came
to him,
they proved themselves worthy were admitted to his study where his grim experiments were made. He was learned in
if
and
the knowledge of his day, influenced too the Renascence, a lover of art and poetry by as well as a historian and a physician, an alall
own
Hartmann.
long road to such conditions Wiirzburg, probably just as Erasmus describes in his letter about the
travelled
in
So Paracelsus
40
[CHAP,
vessel.
He
In mystical exmagnetism and telepathy. periments he had found himself able to read
the thoughts of others at a distance. He used a cryptic language and a secret chronology
by which he interpreted the prophetic and mystical portions of the Bible and of cabalistic Above all study he insisted on that writings. of the Holy Scriptures, for which he had a deep devotion and which he required his pupils to examine with exact and reverent care. In
he influenced Paracelsus for life, for Bible study was one of the preoccupations of his later
this
years,
and in his writings we have constant witness not only to his mastery of its language,
but of its* deepest spiritual significance. That he studied occultism with the abbot and was aware of its mysterious powers is also sure, for later he sought to systematise them anew. But he shrank from its more dangerous experiments because he believed them to be opposed to the divine will, and above all he
1511]
NECROMANCY
the
41
necromancy practised by less scrupulous men, being convinced that it opened an outlet for the forces of evil. He abjured all personal profit from the exercise of beneficent magic, and believed that only the good of others could authorise it, and particularly the healing of others under the direction of God. Robert Browning has well defined his attitude towards
all
abhorred
cabalistic
efforts
:
to control
purposes
I can abjure so well the idle arts These pedants strive to learn and teach Black Arts, Great Works, the Secret and Sublime, forsooth too intimate a tie Let others prize A sullen friend Connects me with our God To do my bidding, fallen and hateful sprites
;
:
!
To help me what are these, at best, beside God helping, God directing everywhere,
So that the earth shall yield her secrets up, And every object there be charged to strike, Teach, gratify her master God appoints ?
It
was with
this
clear
purpose
that
he
returned to active personal and experimental research. He could discern between the mental food convenient for him and that which unfitted his aspiring soul for union with God. To heal men as Christ had healed them would be best of all, and in time this union might invest him with such healing power, but in the meantime the divine behest and the divine commission had come to him to search out all means of healing with which the Creator had
stored nature.
42
[CHAP,
pulse which pushed him into the van of God's battalion, for this time was the crisis of his life arid he had to choose whether to go forward
into the wilderness
all things which could emprise. lead to worldly preferment and went out to seek wisdom with as little provision for his
He
forsook
CHAPTER
III
And God
all
God's intercourse
its
use
is
to
to make neither gold nor silver make the supreme essences and to
:
diseases." This was the Hohenheim's researches in Schwatz. But when he went thither, it was with some curiosity as to the possible discovery of a combination which would transmute the baser metals into gold. He had read so much and
direct
them against
of
outcome
heard
that
it
so
much
of
this
fabled
achievement,
was
difficult for
glamour He was
old
of its possible
joined Fiiger's little army of workers in the silver-mines and laboratories of Schwatz,
his residence there
when he
and
influential
The
to the Fuggers of
44
their
[CHAP,
mines were in the Tyrol about thirty kilometres from Innspriick. Sigmund Fiiger
more
Paracelsus,
who
two groups of workers the miners with their directors and the chemists with their crucibles, retorts, and phials. The
Paracelsus found
chemists were
still
alchemists.
Their analyses
and combinations belonged to occult experiment. They were seeking Nature's mysteries mysteriously with rites and offerings and old convenwith observance of days and hours and tions astral influences, with conjurations and invocations and cryptic measurements and weights.
;
They
tried
by
all
taking
cabalistic
sudden revelation, preparing for it by fasting and meditation. Belonging to Christendom, they inherited their occult creeds and methods from a world more ancient than we can imagine, a world of which they knew nothing but in .^ fragments and whispers and strange survivals*
Sumerian, Accadian, Babylonian, Assyrian, Egyp-1 tian, Indian, Persian, Phoenician, Arab, Hebrew, \
Greek, Roman, Goth, Celt, Teuton, Tartar, ""Mongolian practised and bequeathed what they' were practising. But polytheism favoured occultism more than Christianity, for polytheism was occultism, and from its terminology and rites the alchemists inherited theirs.
Paracelsus
He
1514]
AT SCHWATZ
and hardships
of mining,
45
and
studied the veins of precious ore, molten by means at which he could only guess, which, flowing into fissures and cracks within the mountains, had hardened there in glittering Three forces had produced them, fire, streaks. and solidification. fluidity, His first biographers, or rather those of them whom spite had not perverted, maintain his
of penetrating natural things.
power
into
the
very
soul
of
" entered Paracelsus," wrote Peter Ramus, into the innermost recesses of nature and explored and saw through the forms and faculties of metals and their origins with such incredible acumen as to cure diseases."
"
__
__
Melchior
Adam
testified
that
"
in
universal
mines themselves, he frequented at first the laboratory where the alchemists pursued their phantom quest, and after a time left them, " convinced of the futility of gold-cooking."
in the
But
to
their combinations
and
solutions,
if
applied
he believed that
46
[CHAP,
mental or physical held as the very basis of divine disease^He creation that every substance, whether endowed with organic life or apparently
of value in cases of either
some variety
cal
called
he realised to be no divine quest at all, and he the men who muttered and sweated over the crucible fires in Schwatz " fools who
thresh
empty straw." But the crucible fires had great uses and they who claimed God's direction might turn them into purifying flames
for the healing of the nations.
Paracelsus was
cesses
of
wd^^qukinted with
:
experimental^l&remy
at
the proVillach
and at Sponheim he had assisted at many a test, and he now began to submit the minerals
at his disposal to the trial of solution, disintegration, and combination, so as to discover
what treasure each held and could impart. " In his earliest work, Archidoxa," he gave some
of the results of these investigations at Schwatz. It was published nearly thirty years after his
known
manuscript
its first
it
form.
Peter
was
publisher.
lished
in Strassburg later in the same year, and towards the end of the century many " Archidoxorum " Perna's editions appeared.
THE ARCHIDOXORUM
order
of
its
47
is
The
:
contents
as
follows
The
first
book
of
Renovation
and
Restoration.
II.
III.
IV.
Concerning the Separation of the Elements. Concerning the Fifth Essence. Concerning the Arcane. Concerning the Magisteriis (medicinal
virtues).
V.
VI.
VII.
VIII.
IX.
we
include
is
there are only nine in this edition, unless the lecture on the Microcosm,
which Perna
heard
The
errors
are numerous
list
improved by a a reprint.
Rihel's
'
of corrections at the
version
'
is
better.
entitled
Archidoxa
:
of Philip
Theophrastus Paracelsus
Bombast
famous
of the highly experienced and most Doctor of Philosophy and of both Medi-
48
cines,
[CHAP,
of
Nature."
De Mysteriis Microcosmi. De Mysteriis Elementarum. De Mysteriis Quintae Essentige. III. IV. De Mysteriis Arcani. V. De Mysteriis Extractionum. VI. De Mysteriis Specificorum. VII. De Mysteriis Elixir. VIII. De Mysteriis Externis. IX. De Renovatione and Restauratione. X. De Vita Longa.
II.
And
list are two supplemen" Tinctura Physica and " De tary treatises, Occultse Philosophise," which do not belong to the "Archidoxa."
De
These books contain the therapeutics of Paracelsus. To understand them we require the It was the habit of alchemaid of a glossary. ists in those days to veil their secrets from the
by expressing them in cabalistic terms. Paracelsus was familiar with those used by the Abbot Trithemius and not only adapted most of them to his own terminology, but added many other terms and phrases, some of which were imported from India and Persia.
uninitiated
There
is
glossary
of
these,
the
"
Lexicon
Alchemicum," compiled by Martin Ruland and published at Prague in 1612. Fifty years later it was translated into English and printed in
1612]
ALCHEMICAL TERMINOLOGY
of
its
49
compilation.
J.
It
is
now
is
in
the
Chymica
Curiosa,
by
F. Mangels.
It
interesting
to find that occultists of to-day, the Theosophists, use a cipher still. I find in one of their publi-
"
cations,
words
"
deciphering a profound cipher. works are written in the cipher used by the it has been of which I speak and poets of all time. It great philosophers is used systematically by the Adepts in life and knowledge, who, seemingly giving out their greatest wisdom, hide in the very words which frame it, its actual mystery."
In fact
it is
All alchemical
In this glossary we find that Paracelsus calls the principle of wisdom Adrop, Azane, or Azar, perhaps a spiritual rendering of the so-called philosopher's stone. Azoth is the creative principle in nature, or the spiritual vitalising force. The Cherio is the quinta-essentia of a body,
its fifth
principle or potency. The Derses is an occult breath from the earth promoting growth. The Ilech Primum is the primordial force or causation.
Magic
of
ment
effects, as of
the
will, of love, of
imagination
human
spirit to control
50
all
[CHAP, in
not sorcery.
examples,
Hartmann's list, sufficiently indicate its character. With its help the new system of natural philosophy which Paracelsus began to organise about 1515, after his researches in Schwatz, has been recovered in his own words. His pupils and disciples were of course provided
with a key to his its obscurity terminolog)jnbut his books and lectures from hostile guarded
misrepresentation.^ We gather that he divided the elements discoverable in all bodies, animal, vegetable, and
mineral, into water, fire, the ancient philosophy,
in every body,
air,
and more or
earth, as did
less
present
whether organised or not, and which can be separated each from the other. To the processes of such separation, laboratories were essential with good arrangements and
vessels.
The ordinary
did the
neither
hotter
and revolving fire, which could make the crucible glow through and through, and the Athanare or stove whose heat could be constantly maintained and increased for operations requiring protracted care. There must always
be a constant supply of water, steam, sand, iron-filings, to keep the heat even and to cool
1515]
THE QUINTA-ESSENTIA
51
the furnace by degrees. The examination of substances in so high a temperature required For the laboratory a reflector and insulator.
and tables there must be good balancing scales, mortars, phials and alembics, well-glazed crucibles, cans and other vessels of glass, as well as an alembic with mouthpieces in which most of the distillations could be carried out.
shelves
substances
submitted
its
for
analysis,
its
quintessence,
its intrinsic
Such properties
resided
in
the quinta-essentia, or virtue, of each substance. It was often infinitesimal in quantity, even
in large bodies, but none the less had power to affect the mass through and through, as a
single drop of gall embitters or a few grains Metals of saffron colour a quantity of water.
furnished with the quinta-essentia just as are organised bodies, for although held as lifeless
bodies as distinguished from animals and plants they contain essences drawn from bodies that
have
lived.
is
This
strengthened by his theory of the transmutation of metals into varying substances, a theory
52
[CHAP,
held by the occultist experimentalists, but in Hohenheim's view indicating medicines, not
shows a very advanced view kingdom. We are urged in candour to acknowledge that Paracelsus was a true scientist, and by research of an infinitely careful character had attained glimpses of mysteries in what we call inanimate nature which are only now in process of revelation by
precious metals, of the mineral
it
the extraordinary discoveries of observers like Madame Curie and her collaborators.
of
Natural
we must
forget that nearly four centuries of researcff~\ have expired since his time, a research which \
minds
of his
own and
the
is
The
historic
its
spirit
right apprecia-
His great forerunner, Roger Bacon, met with obloquy and imprisonment from the mortpoint Paracelsus was unaware of his stifled cry for experimental research in the thirteenth century.
main
of
scholasticism,
and up to
this
We
must honestly face the conditions of the sixteenth century in order to appreciate what Paracelsus achieved, to realise his high ethical
standards
that
roused
unrelenting
hatred
in
baser and mentally more clouded men, and his steadfast courage in despite of rancorous opposition.
1515]
ANALYTICAL RESEARCH
,
53
<
.-..
His analyses were made with different agents with fire, with vitriol, with vinegar, with corroMetals were sives, and with slow distillation. his main study atfSchwatz, \ and he had for his fellow-analyst the famous Bishop Erhart
of Lavantall, of
his
whom
instructors.
substances
this
which
he
which he catalogued
substance
Madame Curie has eliminated and it may have been from bismuth
mutation./
He
discovered zinc
classed
it
many
ad-
Amongst them were preparations oi iron^ 5T antimony, of mercury, and of lead A Sulphur and sulphuric acid were subjects "of especial interest and experiment, and represented to him a
and and
its
amalgam
of
calcination.
What was
considered
of
left
as ashes
by
and
calcination
he
the
indestructible
its
a substance,
salt
incorruptible. These researches eventuated in his theory of the three basic substances necessary to all bodies.
He
and
[CHAP,
in his cipher terminology. Sulphur stands for water, and salt for mercury
earth7\
otherwise for inflammability, fluidity, and solicP" Air he omitted, considering it a product ity. of fire and water. All bodies, be they organised
or metal, iron, diamond, lily, herb, were for him varied combinations of these basic elements. His teaching on the bases or mineral,
man
and
all
qualities of matter
is
this theory
of
the
of
Three Principles.
They
are
the premises
and the
soul,
one.
They are the and spirit of all matter, which is body, But the shaping power of nature, which
he called the Archeus, made out of matter a myriad forms, each informed with its own alcol, or animal soul, and each with its ares, or specific
character.
or pure
of
In
man
there
is
nature
artist
is an invisible and lofty spirit, nature's and craftsman altering the types and
reproducing
conceptions
to
of
express the great world of the universe and the little world of the individual man, the
I
one mirroring the other. Besides the results of his experimental research already noteji^ he discoy^redlchloride and sulphate of mercury, \
calomel,/ flower of sulphur, and many distillaTSven late in the last century strawtions.
1515]
grey powder and administered in a teaspoon unwilling children, a medicine due to the therapeutic ingenuity of Paracelsus, and zinc ointment, rhich prevails to this day, dates from SchwatzT He guarded the use of all medicines in later
treatises
know
"
minister
" For," he said, every experiment with medicine is like employing a weapon which must be used according to its kind as a spear to thrust, a club to fell, so also each experiment. And as a club will not thrust and a spear will not fell, neither can a medicine be used otherTherefore it wise than for its own remedy. is of the highest importance to know each thoroughly and its powers. To use experimental medicines requires an experienced man who discerns between the thrust and the blow, that is to say who has tried and mastered the The physician must nature of each kind. be exactly acquainted with the illness before he can know with what medicine to conquer it. A wood-carver must use many kinds of tools in order to work out his art. So, as the physician's work is also an art, he must be well practised in the means which he employs."
:
Paracelsus wrote not only with a clear sense of what he wished to convey, but also with a
There
is
no involution
56
[CHAP,
the tide of overwrought and tortured language which followed the Renascence. He speaks as
man
having authority.
we recognise the brief and pregnant utterance of a seer, and his thoughts are clothed in language which gives them the rank of aphorisms
availing for all time
:
" is a luminous star that Faith," he says, seeker into the mysteries of leads the honest nature. You must seek your point of gravity
"
divine,
and strong faith and cling to it with your whole heart and sense and thought, full of love and confidence. \ If you possess such a faith, God will not witnhold His truth from you, but He will reveal His works credibly, " Faith in the things visibly and consolingly." of the earth should be based upon the Holy Scriptures and upon the teachings of Christ, and it will then stand upon a firm basis."
In none of his writings is this directness of " Book of the style more observable than in his
Three Principles, their Forms and Operation," an abstract of which will give a clearer conception of his system than pages of description. It was published at Basel in 1563 by Adam von Bodenstein, who tells us in an editorial preface that Paracelsus had been shamefully calumniated and that many doctors had given out as their own what they had learnt and abstracted from him.
1515 and
later]
SALT, SULPHUR,
book,
"
MERCURY
57
In this
little
doctrine of the
and
their cures.
evi-
dence that the chapters contain the subjectmatter of one or more lectures to his students.
begins by laying down the premiss already noted, that every substance or growth is lormed of salt, sulphur, and mercury7\and is a
He
conjunction
of
these three
that a~"*threefold
operation is therefore always proceeding in each body, that of cleansing through salt, of
and
of carrying
\
away what
is
mercury.
Salt
an
mercury a liquor. apart from the others. In diseases which are complicated, mixed cures are necessary. Great care must be taken to understand each disease, whether it be simple, or of two kinds, or of three whether it proceeds from corporeal kinds salt, sulphur, or mercury, and to what extent from each or all, and how it stands in relation
;
consumed through alkali, sulphur an oil, Each has its own power
is
to
the
adjacent
parts
of
the
body, so
is
as
to be
observe
the
rule
that
two
diseases
should
not
be
jQonfused.
In the second chapter he describes the three ways in which salt cleanses and purges the / body daily by virtue of the Archeus or presiding in each organ, which ordains the ^life-power
/ /
58
[CHAP, in
manner
elemental
called
;
world
alkali, as cassia,
is
which
;
is
antimony
as sal gemmae,
is
which
;
is
sour
sharp
as
colocynth, which
natural,
bitter.
Some
alkalis
are
some are extracted, some are coaguand they must be used accordingly, lated, whether for expulsion by perspiration or in
the other modes.
In the third chapter the operation of sulphur corporeal as well as elemental is explained.
Every
sickness, he says, brought about by the superfluous in the body, has its antidote in
elemental nature^ so that from the genera of plants and minerals the genera of diseases can be discovered ; one points out the other. Mercury takes upon itself what salt and sulphur
reject
such as disease of the arteries, ligaments, articulations, joints and so on, and in such
the fluid mercury must be taken in its special form which answers to the form of the disease.
The
Paracelsus goes on to specialise the diseases arising severally out of salt, sulphur, and mercury, to be cured severally by salts, sulphuric medicines, and mercurial medicines. Diseases
in
their
genera
are
divisible
into
and leaves
branches, Mercurial
by mercurial
HOMOEOPATHIC TREATMENT
59
medicines, either common mercury, metallic mercury, or mercurial antimony, and the cures
must be understood. Some contain both consolidated and incarnative strength. Mercury is manifold. Metallic mercury appears as a mineral; in juniper, hebeno, as a wood; in prassatella and persicaria as a plant, and yet it is the same mercury in many forms. Some ulcers are cured by persicaria, some by arsenical mercury, some by mercury of boxwood. Three
things
salt,
one
necessary for diseases sulphur, and mercury, each of two kinds, elemental and one healing. No doctor
in
:
wood
are
need break into two trees to extract one cure. At the base there are only three diseases and
three medicines, therefore peace to the endless chatter and cavilling about those old fiddlers,
insists
that
all
<
(
by the
name
of their
medicinally named, and the name It is better to call points out the remedy \ for it is cured by epilepsy / vitriol-disease,
for so it
vitriol.
"
My
theory has ended. The the mysteries of nature, which the old theorists locked up. But I prove my theory from nature and from its life in all
clear to
evils
me what
art
lies
doctor's
in
generations."
60
[CHAP, in
"
by the and in
plants.^ Every doctor must search discover these for himself, so that he may know
and
the things in which mercury lies, and know how to prepare each, one kind in topaz, one in a special spirit, each in the exaltation in which it is at its best, so as to extract it from the mass holding it. You will be called doctors if you can deal with each substance knowing how to extract from it. Experiment must be
The eighth chapter deals with distillation and balsams, with gums and substances which The attract, and with sulphuric percussives. whole treatise is wound up with a chapter on
heart of the elements," the shaping, protecting, vitalising spirit present, in the macrocosm as in the microcosm.
the
Archeus,
the
"
It brings a tree out of a seed. It is by the power of the elements that the tree grows and lasts and stretches itself up high. It is by this that the animals live and move and stop. power In man's body it is in every organ, which would
"
each organ has its own kind otherwise perish to strengthen and renovate it and so the power of the Archeus is in his members, the power of the macrocosm in the microcosm."
;
CHAPTER
I go to prove
I see
IV
YEARS OF TRAVEL
my
soul
!
as birds their trackless way. In some time, His good time, I shall arrive He guides me, and the bird.
my way
PARACELSUS stayed about ten months at Schwatz and then decided that his experience
a university having been as barren of results as if he were "in a garden where the trees were all stumps," he would "transplant himself
of
into
tall
another garden," where the trees grow and bear all manner of fruits. He was twenty-three years old when he
left
Villach to graduate in the university of the world. He was not prepared to settle down
and to relapse into tedium and mental stagnation. -JHe followed what to was a divine call, " God's great commission,''
as a doctor
mind of the Most High hail touched his own and had inspired him with apprehension of a vaster universe and potentialities and spiritual unknown to physical and that it called him to venture scholasticism,
sensible that the
forth, a pilgrim, a pioneer,
a conqueror, or a
martyr.
61
62
YEARS OF TRAVEL
[CHAP, iv
How know I else such glorious fate my own, But in the restless, irresistible force That works within me ? Is it for human will To institute such impulses ? ... Be sure that God Ne'er dooms to waste the strength he deigns impart.
In his " Surgical Books and Writings," Paracelsus indicates his reasons for the long time
spent "
travel,
cient at
in
the universities how is it possible three or four years to understand nature, astronomy, alchemy, or physic f\ Physic
:
is not posto the art of a doctor belongs that an immature boy of four-and-twenty can-
sible, for so
much
all
not
46
know
is
it
and
is
not
fit
to be a doctor."
It
their
not only the knowledge of minerals and medicines that makes a doctor that
:
devote
themselves
its
benefit
to
whom
it
could help.
Hartmann has lightened our task in following the course of his travels. In " his Theophrast von Hohenheim," published in 1904, he has collected the itinerary statistics
Dr. R. Julius
1517]
63
from
works and has given them to us in a masterly sequence. We can accept this safely, enriching its incidents from the discoveries of Dr. Carl Aberle and other eminent investigators.
doctor must be a traveller," said Para" because he must inquire of the world. Experiment is not sufficient. Experience must verify what can be accepted or not accepted.
celsus,
"
Knowledge
In
spite
is
experience."
his
disappointment with one university, he did not avoid the others, but tried them in every country which he visited, hoping to find some kindred spirit, some one " in whom was the questioning spark from heaven." He went first to Vienna and then to Cologne,
of
/*
where the universities were amongst the oldest in Europe. From Cologne he went to Paris, ut we know nothing of his residence there, except that he studied local diseases. There is in the Louvre Gallery a portrait of him at about the age of twenty-four, a very beautiful picture in oil upon wood, which at one time was in the museum of Nancy. It bears the " Famoso Doctor Paracelsus " and inscription is ascribed to a French or Belgian artist called Scorel, who lived from 1493 to 1562. Dr. Aberle gives us what details have been discovered about it. There are many assertions
64
YEARS OF TRAVEL
[CHAP, iv
but few that can be verified. A replica somewhat altered used to belong to the gallery at Blenheim. The portrait now in the Louvre was till quite recently ascribed to Albrecht
Diirer, just as the
cribed to Rubens.
of Diirer's, for style reminiscent of the great German artist. The face is beautiful, in repose, the eyes large, clear,
Blenheim portrait was asPerhaps Scorel was a pupil and treatment are certainly
" as if where'er they look they gazed there stood a star." But if the eyes are those of a seer, the broad brow, the
and meditative
strong nose, the small, resolute mouth and the firmly moulded chin and jaw are those of a
man
of
action.
He
trimmed with
fur, and his right hand holds a half -open book. Both hands rest lightly on a diagonal scroll, on which is the inscription already quoted. His hair falls in waves on either side. The background is occupied by a landscape, in the manner of the Flemish, Dutch, and Italian painters, and this represents a castle and rocks, a stone bridge and a little town, and critics have sought to identify Dinant and its Bayard rocks in this landscape. The Blenheim replica is smaller in size but It was removed resembles the other closely.
tence
from the gallery in 1886. There are in exismany woodcuts and engravings of this portrait, the most famous being Hollar's woodcut, but it is regrettable that these vary from
1517]
AMBROISE PARfi
65
We can only surmise that the was painted by a gifted contemporary portrait as young as himself, either at Nancy, Paris, or Montpellier, while Paracelsus was in France. It was in 1517, just at the time of this residence, that Ambroise Pare was born, afterwards " Father of Modern Surgery." to be called the Those who so honoured him were ignorant or
the original.
oblivious of the fact that in the
first
edition of
his works published in his lifetime, Pare acknowledged his indebtedness to Paracelsus in all
This
acknowledgment was omitted from all later editions of Pare's works except from that of M. J. F. Malgaigne in 1840.
journeyed south to the way wherever there Montpellier, halting by At Montwas opportunity for observation.
Paris
From
Paracelsus
pellier the
was
in full force,
He was thoroughly conversant strongholds. with those theories and could quote them at
length
by
heart.
The books of the ancients never satisfied .me," he wrote afterwards, "for they are not 'thorough but uncertain and serve rather to mislead than to direct to the straight way."
"
66
YEARS OF TRAVEL
[CHAP, iv
he left France it was to make his way to Italy, where he visited Bologna, Padua, and
Ferrara, centres of learning where some of the philosophers had felt the transforming touch
of the
When
Renascence.
tim^Girolamo CardancK was a boy at Milan, carrying his father's heavy books and papers when the lawyer went abroad on business, and not very kindly treated at home.
this
At
truths of medicine, he took ship for Spain and " As I did not wish to journeyed to Granada.
submit myself to the teaching and writings of " Book of these universities," he tells us in his " the Greater Surgery," I travelled further to
Granada and then to Lisbon through Spain." He sailed from Lisbon to England, of his visit to which we have only one mention without But having regard to his purpose, details.
we
are justified in believing that he visited Oxford, and that some of his time was given
and the
tin
mines in Cornwall. Perhaps he heard of Roger Bacon when he visited Oxford. The fame of this great man, obscured for three centuries,
had begun to pierce through the clouds. Some effort was being made to recover his works, more serious in France than in England, for
it
is
1518]
AS
ARMY SURGEON
67
been more jealous to assert and prove his greatness than his native country, where his discoveries were appropriated to add to another man's
glory.
While Paracelsus was in England, news reached him that there was fighting in the
^Netherlands.
He
left for
applied for the post of barber-surgeon to the Dutch army. This he tells us in his " Hospital
rity in scientific research, and now he claimed " The the wounded for his book in surgery.
sick should
selled
his
Hippocrates
earlier.
had
War was
opportunity for enlarging his knowledge of wound-surgery, which he had already practised
with his father, and he eagerly sought employment in a series of campaigns which
occurred during his wander-years. Dr. Julius Hartmann thinks that he may have picked up
or
in all
Christian
II.,
King
of
Denmark,
appeared with a powerful fleet before Stockholm, where in 1520 he was acknowledged King of Sweden. Paracelsus journeyed from
the Netherlands to
as
service
army surgeon.
He was
calls
which he naturally
Denmark
68
in
YEARS OF TRAVEL
the circumstances.
soldiers
[CHAP, iv
and Swedish
he pursued his healing the cures which the men themart, observing selves practised and the wonder-working beverages and febrifuges administered by the country " Greater people to their wounded. In his " he tells of a Swedish lady who comSurgery pounded a miraculous drink which healed even
severed veins after three doses, and he probably overcame his usual avoidance of women to
secure
mines of Sweden not only for the sake of their produce, but to make himself better acquainted with the accidents and Diseases to which miners were subject. He wrote a book on the r Diseases of Miners \' many years afterwards, wnen he had further
studied
He
Saxony, Bohemia, Hungary, Poland, and Prussia. Transylvania, The minerals which he identified in Sweden
them
in
iron,
copper,
zinc,
lead,
When he had work and exploration, he mounted and resumed his travels through
; ;
Transylvania,
Carniola,
Croatia,
Dal-
He He
matia and southwards by the coast to Fiume. mentions these countries in several books. seems to have had an illness in Transylvania It or to have run some risk of losing his life.
1518-20]
ON THE ROAD
69
wonderful regions for his eager them a new chair in the worlduniversity, or as he himself has said, a new
series of
was a
interest, each of
can picture him little burdened by personal baggage his doctor's gown and beret perhaps in a sack dressed in a serviceable
doublet of strong twill, riding a hired horse from inn to inn or taking advantage of a train
;
We
of
fair
or finding room enough with laden pack-horses or in the in a jolting cart going to market
;
a rough corps and its reckless following or with a string of pilgrims bound for leader
of
;
or falling in with a band healing well or shrine of merry lads seeking apprenticeship away from their homes ; or making a comrade of
;
pedlar, friar, gipsy, travelling journeyman, perhaps not averse to a beggar, and camping by
But
it
is
certain that
wherever he was and with whatever itinerant humanity, he was serving, helping, healing,
comforting, and learning.^ In towns where he sojourned a while, he was called to the houses and castles of the wealthy
and was paid for the cures which he effected, so that he had money for his hostelry and food and could renew his doublet and beret as he needed. These cures won him renown indeed but hostility as well from the local practitioners, and hostility was apt to take a dangerous form.
70
YEARS OF TRAVEL
[CHAP, iv
He was
thanks in every-
thing, and we
him
praising
God
for the
poverty of his childhood, for its coarse oaten bread and rough garments, which had made
privation of no account, and had prepared him to seek the things invisible which endure, rather
than the outward and visible luxury which There were patients of all kinds and perishes.
conditions
him, by the roadside, in the at the inns, in the villages, and lazar-houses, for healing these his fee was some old wise
for
woman's lotion, some soothsayer's mystic hint, some barber's trick, perhaps some executioner's grim experience. It sufficed him, for what increased his store of knowledge needed no packhorse to carry.
for it lies
probably knew Carniola well already, but a few leagues from Villach, where he doubtless rested a few weeks on his way to
the
region exists than the valley of the Save, with its lakes and healing waters, its sun-warmed air perfumed amongst the pines, its marvellous flora and its
river
like
He
south.
No more
beautiful
flowing
aquamarine,
golden orioles
He flashing from bush to bush upon its banks. would reach it by a narrow pass below the robber castle of Katzenstein, where Pegam the magic horse was stalled in olden days, and he would see the tabors erected at every church porch for refuge and defence against the Turks and the cascade of fiery molten metal at Jauer-
1520-22]
IN
71
tells,
old
Slovenic
off
poem
the Turkish
turned at Zeugg, south of Fiume, took ship across the Adriatic to Venice and spent some time as army surgeon to the Venetians,
at
He
that
time
V.
occupied
of
against
the
Emperor
Charles
One
their
man
defence of the Island of Rhodes against SuleiII. the Magnificent, and he seems to have
been present in the campaign. Venice helped the Knights of St. John, but their efforts were unavailing, and in 1522 Rhodes was abandoned to the Soldan. This surmise is founded on " his including Rodiss "in a list of places visited and on his observations of arrow-wounds
The bow and arrow were no used in western wars. He mentions, too, longer a disease which he found amongst " Saracens,
made
personally.
Turks, Tartars, Germans, and Wallachians." It has been said that the young Tintoretto met him in Venice and was so impressed with
appearance that he painted his portrait from life, but this has been disproved by Dr. Aberle. Tintoretto was a child of two years on his first visit to Venice and not more than
his
on the second. Probably some other Venetian artist was the painter. Paracelsus is represented as sitting in an old armchair,
four clad
in
doctor's
gown,
his
hair
growing
72
visible.
YEARS OF TRAVEL
[CHAP, iv
He
holds the
It
is
arm
the portrait of a
man
between thirty and forty years of age, and when he was in Venice he was either not yet thirty or only just thirty. His great fatigues and had probably aged him even then, privations but the picture cannot have been painted by
It is certainly Tintoretto, fine although it be. a portrait of Paracelsus and has been frequently
engraved and photographed. Had he been in Venice eight years later, the ascription to Tintoretto would have been just barely credible.
He now
Cossacks of
visited
the
nomadic tribes of Southern Russia, for the term " Tartar " was indiscriminately applied to the migratory hordes which wandered over the steppes and to Turks and Cossacks in the Balkan Peninsula. He went north as far as Moscow, sharing the tent life and privations of his hosts, from whom he could learn more respecting the treatment of horses, cattle, and goats than from any western people. From them he would win the respect which a character so courageous and beneficent and a power so generously employed for others evokes from
natural
peoples,
undegraded by
self-interest,
1522]
sorcerer.
OCCULT LORE
73
He went no
"
:
He
says himself
has been so reported." Africa, although From Turks and Tartars he added to his stores
it
knowledge as well as to his acquaintance with that force which the culture of will and imagination renders powerful for either good or evil, to subdue disease or to create it, to calm and fortify or to surrender to malignant and destructive influences. We know that Paracelsus had already studied the occult and had " mere rejected much which seemed to him had accepted superstition and phantasy." He
of positive
doctrine of the ever-present working of the spirit of life with its miracles in elemental
its finer
nature,
versal,
its
insight
and
the
its
bringing
macrocosm
into
touch
with the microcosm, so that man lives not by bread alone but by every thought of the
divine.
He had
nant experiments of necromancy. Already he had made experiments in magnetism, in telepathy, and in psychic divination. But it was not till he had wandered with eastern nomads for a summer, till he had learned from Saracens and Turks the lore of their saints, and had wiled from Jewish physicians and astrologers
became convinced
the secrets of their dread Kabbala, that he of the reality of that occult
74
YEARS OF TRAVEL
[CHAP, iv
power which amongst all nations of antiquity was accounted the highest endowment of the priesthood. It was the wisdom taught to Moses at Heliopolis, the wisdom that qualified him to be the deliverer and lawgiver of his It was the wisdom of Solomon, who people. knew all created things and was accredited with control over mighty spirits. It was the wisdom of Samuel and of the prophets and was taught in the schools of the prophets, and at its highest it was and is a seeking after God. We owe to it all that the Scriptures of the Old Testament have taught us of God. It foretold the coming of Christ in the far east as in Judea the wise men were its adepts and the kings of
;
the east
its
illuminated.
lay in the healing it endows the
He
east with a greater reverence for the gifts invisible, for the manifold powers of a hallowed
and energised
*te*
will.
:
The universities do not teach all things^ so a doctor must seek out old wives, gipsies,
sorcerers,
wandering tribes, old robbers, and uch outlaws and take lessons from them."
We must seek for ourselves, travel througfrx the countries, and experience much, and when
we have experienced
hold fast that which
all sorts of things,
is
we must
good."
1522]
VALUE OF TRAVEL
75
:
Again, in the Fourth Defence he reiterates " My travels have developed me no man becomes a master at home, nor finds his teacher behind the stove. For knowledge is not all locked up, but is distributed throughout the whole world. It must be sought for and captured wherever it is." " Sicknesses wander here and there the whole length of the world, and do not remain in one If a man wishes to understand them place. must wander too. Does not travel give he more understanding than sitting behind the stove ? A doctor must be an alchemist. He must therefore see the mother-earth where the minerals grow, and as the mountains won't come to him he must go to the mountains. How can an alchemist get to the working of nature unless he seeks it where the minerals Is it a reproach that I have sought the lie ? minerals and found their mind and heart and kept the knowledge of them fast, so as to know how to separate the clean from the ore, to do
:
which
"
have come through many hardships." did the Queen of Sheba come from the ends of the sea to hear the wisdom of Solomon ? Because wisdom is a gift of God, which He gives in such a manner that men must seek it. It is true that those who do not seek it have more wealth than those who do. The doctors who sit by the stove wear chains and silk, those who travel can barely afford a smock. Those who sit by the stove eat partridges and those who
I
Why
follow
knowledge eat milk-soup. Alhave nothing, they know that as though they
after
76
YEARS OF TRAVEL
'
[CHAP, iv
He only travels happily who has nothing.' I think it is to my praise and not to my shame that I_have accomplished my travelling at little cost.] And I testify that this is true concerning Nature whoever wis know her must tread her books on their Jbo
Juvenal says,
:
Writing is understood by its letters, Nature by land after land, for every land is a book. Such is the Codex Naturce and so must
feet.
a
>ii
man
r*
Paracelsus
Constantinople
for
Venice
some time in 1522, to act as army surgeon in the war between the Emperor Charles V. and
the King of France, Francis I., for the possession of Naples. The Venetians took part against the Emperor. This war lasted some years,
and Paracelsus continued at his post till 1525 and was present wherever the campaign was conducted, part of the time in the Romagna. He was an experienced surgeon as well as a distinguished physician by that year and had
taken his doctor's degree in both
at
Salerno.
arts,
He was renowned
as
probably a healer
wherever he went, and had often been sent for by men of high rank whom he successfully
treated for diseases given up as hopeless by the rank and file of doctors. He cured nearly a score of princes, and wherever he halted for
watch
In
his
Bohemia
1525-6]
77
minerals of
in Slavonia, he had instructed numbers and had won many disciples. But already the practi-
tioners
of
the
day,
his
doctors,
barbers,
friars,
sorcerers,
upon
his
new
own. The simplicity of his twill doublet, for he wore his black robe only on special occasions,
exposed him to their coarse derision, and his marvellous skill provoked their active malignity, so that he was sometimes obliged to escape from its hazards. In this way he fled from himPrussia^ Lithuania, and Poland. He says
self
:
whom
of
healedA
We
1525.
father.
sight
of
him
for
in
some months
Villach
He was
probably
with his
as
Early in 1526 he had come as far west Wirtemberg, had settled in Tubingen to
and had
student
But
were too
many
university town to tolerate his interference with He went to Freitheir trade and teaching.
He preferred university burg-im-Breisgau. towns because students were assembled in them, and it was from the younger generation that he
was able to win a hearing, although the jealousy of professors and doctors alike was invariably roused by his remarkable teaching and equally
78
YEARS OF TRAVEL
[CHAP, iv
remarkable cures. The students who came to him were indisposed to submit tamely to the dull routine of Galenic instruction when they had once seized his doctrine of a living, progressive science, whose possibilities were infinite and which he obstinately defended against
aspersion.
It
fic
a wonderful page in the history of scientiprogress that tells of this brave man, alone,
is
poor, maintaining against all Europe the great cause of personal research into nature,
delicate,
undismayed by ill-treatment, scorn, and failure, unshaken by the combined hostility of doctorculi and pedagogues, steadfast to the truth to which he had dedicated his life. What chance had he against such odds ? Socrates was treated with the cup of hemlock Roger Galileo with the Bacon with imprisonment Giordano Bruno with dungeon and the rack
;
;
the stake.
Again and again his life was threatened and he had to fly. While he was in Wirtemberg, he visited a
of mineral springs at Goppingen, WildZellerbad or Liebenzell, and Nieder Baden, bad,
number
now
He analysed their called Baden Baden. waters and declared that the last three springs
had one common source, and this opinion was endorsed only last century by Walchner the He visited Liebenzell more than geologist. once and is said to have been there again in
1526]
AT STRASSBURG
79
the year of his death. Johann Reuchlin had been there in 1522 for convalescence after yellow fever, and there are many other records of
the popularity of mineral springs during the whole of the fifteenth century. Paracelsus cured the Abbess of Rottenminster
on his way to Freiburg, where he was as little welcomed as at Tubingen, so he decided to try Strassburg. Here there was as yet no university, but much talk of establishing one, although the city contented itself with building an Academy some years later. Towards the end of
December 1526, Paracelsus bought the citizenship of Strassburg and prepared to settle down. He was obliged by the local law to become a
one of the civic guilds or corporations, and he chose that of the cornchandlers and millers, to which at that time surgeons were admitted. It almost seemed as if the wanderer had found a home and rest. At Strassburg there was not so much strife between surgery and medicine as elsewhere, and a man might practise both without being held for an impostor. But no sooner was he
of
member
settled
given
by the
doctorculi,
and
his
cures
awoke the professional rancour which followed him everywhere. He was challenged to encounter a famous
upholder of the Galenic School called Vende" linus in a Disputation," and was so disgusted
80
YEARS OF TRAVEL
futilities
[CHAP, iv
opponent that he would not condescend to answer them. The doctor culi buzzed with triumph. But the disconcerting cures went on and it became a He was sumprofessional duty to crush him.
of his
moned to attend Philip, Markgrave of Baden, who was ill with dysentery and whose life had
been despaired
of.
Paracelsus
soon
stopped
the dysentery, so soon, indeed, that the household doctors insisted that they had done the
healing,
It
and that he was not worthy of his fee. was refused by their advice and he never forgot an insult so deliberate and so unmerited.
CHAPTER V
TOWN PHYSICIAN AND LECTURER AT BASEL
Here
I stand
till
And
forced to
flit.
WHEN
a
Paracelsus returned to western Europe great change had taken place. Luther's
challenge had given courage to the protest in more countries than those of Hanover, Prussia, and England. The Swiss Reformation lagged
behind that of the north, because its leader, Zwingli, was not fully prepared for his great
undertaking
till
1518.
He was
two
years,
from 1516 to 1518, and had begun to attack the peddling of indulgences from his pulpit The Renascence affected him quite as there.
much as the Reformation, and it is interesting to find that his reading of the Fathers Origen,
Jerome,
Chrysostom, and Augustine in the monastery library of Einsiedeln led him to a more searching study of the New Testament,
and particularly
of
Hebrews, all of which he copied into a little book from the first edition of Erasmus, which
appeared in March 1516. He made a friend of the treasurer of the monastery, and together they talked over the
6
81
82
[CHAP, v
coming
Christ,
the Virgin
and agreed that the worship of Mary had led Christianity away from and that the coarse expedient of selling
indulgences through the medium of an itinerant friar was an insult to the pardoning mercy of
God, who freely forgave the penitent. Zwingli preached against both in the cloister church of Maria Einsiedeln, and induced Abbot Conrad to take down the document which had been affixed to the gate and which offered full remission of sins for money. He was called to Zurich at the end of 1518, to one of the minor churches, and his great
services
appointment as Canon
in
the
Grossmiinster
1521.
From
that
year he was the mouthpiece of the Reformation in Switzerland. He preached against fasting in Lent, maintained Scripture authority against
that of the Church, and published sixty-seven " Conclusions," which contained the first public statement of the reformed faith in Switzerland,
rejecting the
primacy
of
Mass,
the
invocation
saints,
pilgrimages,
He claimed Jesus celibacy, and purgatory. Christ as the only Saviour and Mediator. In 1523, at a public disputation, the magistracy declared judgment in favour of Zwingli 's " Conclusions." Two further disputations were held, and at these the Bishops and the
1525]
83
The Canton
established
daries.
its
the
reformation within
whole people on Thursday, Good Friday, Easter Sunday, in April 1525. Zwingli
for the trans-
the whole Swiss Bible, which was at Zurich in 1530, four years before published Luther's Bible. The Reformation spread to
Basel,
and with
its
of Paracelsus
were
acceptance in Basel was mainly due to OEcolampadius, who was settled there as pastor of the Church of St. Martin and Professor of
Theology in the University. He sought Zwingli's friendship, and began his work on the plan of
that at Zurich. Amongst his helpers was the famous Johann Froben, whose guest, Erasmus of Rotterdam, favoured reform, although on broader and more intellectual lines than those possible at the time. Erasmus lived eight years with Froben. The latter had disabled his right foot in a fall and was suffering as much from the rough and ignorant treatment of local physicians In the summer as from the original injury. came to a head and of 1526 this suffering amputation was suggested. Happily, the fame of Paracelsus had reached Basel, and Froben
sent a messenger to Strassburg to fetch him. He stayed in the house, commenced his treat-
84
[CHAP, v
at once, that of an experienced surgeon, and the cure began with the treatment. After a few weeks Froben was able not only to walk but to resume the long journeys necessary to his business of printer and bookseller. During these weeks Paracelsus made the acquaintance of Erasmus and won his fervent admiration. Erasmus consulted him by letter as to his own health, which Paracelsus found to be undermined by gout, hepatic and kidney troubles,
ment
the last apparently gravel. In his reply * he gave Erasmus a diagnosis of these, protested against the medicines which he was using, and offered
to prescribe for his ailments
To
"
this
Erasmus answered
not unreasonable, O Physician, through gives us health of body, to wish eternal health for thy soul. ... In the liver I suffer pains, the origin of which I cannot I have been aware of the kidney trouble divine. for many years. The third ailment I do not sufficiently understand, still it seems to be probable that there is some harm. If there is any citric solution which can ameliorate the pain, I beg that thou wilt communicate it to me. ... I cannot offer a fee equal to thy art and thy learning, but certainly a grateful spirit. Thou hast recalled Frobenius from the shades, who is my other half, and if thou restorest me thou restorest two in one. Farewell,
It is
whom God
"ERASMUS ROTERODAMUS."
*
Appendix A.
Appendix B.
1526]
BASEL
85
The
mus, who wished that Paracelsus could stay some length of time in Basel, and doubtless his
admiration for the great physician influenced the magistrates in their decision a few weeks
later.
Basel was divided on the Church question. The Catholics were led by Ludwig Bar, preacher in the cathedral and professor in the faculty
of theology in the University. (Ecolampadius was the head of the protesting party. He had
accepted the appointment to St. Martin's Church on the condition that he need not use Catholic
rites,
in the simple fashion of the rewith a liturgy composed by himself. formers, He was detested by the Catholic party. The
Communion
magistrates of Basel were not all of one mind, but at Lent, 1526, the majority were in favour of the Catholics, and issued a prohibition against
the slaughter and sale of animal food during the weeks of fasting.
Ludwig Bar sent a special deputation to thank them for this decree and offered as a
token of gratitude to extend the inclusion of citizens to the canons' seats in the cathedral,
and to give these new citizens equal protection for life and property, equal taxes and the right to belong to any guild which they preferred. But, as the months went on, the party division became more marked and the magistracy showed
86
[CHAP, v
Soon many of the majority for reform. churches were using congregational psalmody in German, and in September the magistrates
a
issued a decision that the Gospel was to be preached freely and openly as it was contained
in the four Evangels, in the Epistles of Paul, and in the Old Testament, and that all canon
teaching not authorised by these was to cease. On October 29 another decree was issued,
which appropriated monastic property for the use of the poor and the general welfare. These rapid changes were due to (Ecolampadius, whose personal influence had become
supreme. But in the University the Catholics remained authoritative and hostile to the reformers,
who sought
to
The post of town physician was vacant. was one of considerable importance, as in
dition to medical care of Basel,
it
ad-
included a
and
the superintendence of the town apothecaries, a large body living on exorbitant prices de-
manded
drugs and disgusting decoctions of the Galenic school. This appointment was in the gift of the
for
the
stale
not of the University. But the faculty of medicine had the right to interfere with both the medical practice and the lecturing
magistrates,
if
the doctor appointed did not satisfy their standards and had probably advised and even
decided
the
choice
on former occasions.
It
1526]
INFLUENCE OF REFORMERS
it
8T
had already chosen a candidate to be elected by the magistrates, who were at the He was an indiscretion of CEcolampadius. timate friend of Froben and Erasmus, who were anxious to bring Paracelsus to Basel, and
seems
he probably knew the latter already. It is not easy exactly to characterise the sympathy shown at this time by Paracelsus
towards the reformers, but it must have been He knew of a quality to win their confidence.
well to
how
it
gress.
what a depth the Church had sunk, canonised ignorance and withstood proWe shall learn from his own wor
of
what he thought
"
the
"
pfaffenzahl." "
In his
he main-
tained that neither priest nor monk was fit to be a physician, so ignorant, greedy, and immoral
was the whole crew. The most malignant of his foes had been the friar-doctors, who had chased him out of the Markgrave Philip of Baden's sick-room and cheated him of his fee.
Here
drivelled the physician,
;
infallible nostrum was at fault There quaked the astrologer, whose horoscope Had promised him interminable years Here a monk fumbled at the sick man's mouth With some undoubted relic a sudary Of the Virgin while another piebald knave Of the same brotherhood (he loved them ever) Was actively preparing 'neath his nose Such a suffumigation as, once fired, Had stunk the patient dead e'er he could groan.
Whose most
I cursed the doctor and upset the brother, Brushed past the conjuror, vowed that the first gust
88
[CHAP, v
Of stench from the ingredients just alight cross-grained devil in my sword and ere an hour the prince Slept as he never slept since prince he was.
:
life,
as Para-
Of Luther he wrote
"
of Luther are composed to a extent of fanatics, knaves, bigots, and great rogues. Why do you call me a medical Luther ? You do not intend to honour me by giving me that name, because you despise Luther. But I know of no other enemies of Luther than those whose kitchen prospects are interfered with by his reforms. Those whom he causes to I leave suffer in their pockets are his enemies. it to Luther to defend what he says, and I
The enemies
Whoever is Luther's enemy deserves my contempt. That which you wish to Luther you wish also to me you wish us both to the fire."
shall
I say.
and urged his appointment. But it is probable that however strongly he sided with the op" ponents of the pfaffenzahl," he was preoccuwith the reform of medicine and had too pied many contests on his own hands to desire those of other men. His convictions were certainly more nearly allied to those of the reformers
than to those of the recreant ecclesiasticism.
1526]
CALLED TO BASEL
89
Perhaps he was held back by some uncertainty as to how far the inrush of free thought would
lead the protestants ; as to principle of secession once
might
carry
men
as sole authority, without check over the inevitable and countless misconceptions of its
teaching, which, as a matter of fact, have been the disruption of Protestantism. He knew
was
it
safe
from misuse by the ignorant in religion ? But when his call to Basel reached him at Strassburg towards the end of the year 1526, it came from the protestant majority in the
magistracy.
citizenship to the old
self at
He
accepted
in
it,
and house
the university had the right to elect its own professors, but this right had fallen into abey-
As (Ecolampadius had been appointed lecturer in theology by the magistrates, he was unpopular in the University and his advocacy
rity.
of
latter.
Paracelsus created a prejudice against the The Galenic light recommended by the
medical faculty was naturally a ready-made foe. Paracelsus had lectured for only a few weeks, when the academic authorities interfered and
prohibited his continuance.
magistrates.
He
appealed to the
90
[CHAP, v
They think," he wrote, that I have neither right nor power to lecture in the college without their knowledge and consent and they note that I explain my art of medicine in a manner not yet usual and so as to instruct every one."
;
"
was not the contents of his lectures that annoyed them, but his departure from old methods, which prescribed explanation and commentary on the canonical systems, and for which he presumptuously offered his own experience and his own experiments. Then, too,
It
all
might
understand, and that the new teaching might be freed from the fetters of the old. " I thank " that I was God," he wrote long afterwards,
of his
own
research in
German words.
But
to the
irate faculty it
science
and
its
England had found its own language and its Chaucer, and was soon to find its Shakespeare Italy had found its own beautiful speech, its Luther was giving GerDante and its Tasso Bible. Eberlin, Geiler, and many its German (Ecolampadius were preaching in German, and their congregations were singing German psalms and hymns. But what the churches welcomed was forbidden in the lecture-halls of the uni:
:
versities.
1527]
LECTURES IN GERMAN
what a doctor should be
all
91
He
r^so that
fspised
might understand."
"
German7\
I
because I
am
alone, because I
am deam new,
/because I
am German."
Crowds flocked to
<
them, the students, the physicians of Basel, his enemies, and a small number of nobler listeners,
men
like Basil
stand
and appreciate.
these
was the unlearned audience whom Paracelsus invited, and all the barbers, bath-men, and alchemists in Basel, who came in their ignorance
to scoff.
Dr. Julius
f*+
Hartmann
says
"
in
The glory of being the first man who taught the German language in a German univerall
German, Theophrastus _\
von Hohenheim, to
-
time."
it
was because he
well their
his
knew no Latin, although they wot own lie. They tried to disparage
degree
and to insinuate that he had never received it. They sought to incense him that they might catch him tripping. But he went on
with his lectures finding disciples amongst his students and admirers amongst the nobler spirits
in his audience.
He
gait,
92
[CHAP, v
He
sought to win
experiment and lucid explanation. We can almost see him in the long, low-ceilinged hall clad in a plain doublet, making his chemical illustrations with a crucible
by
careful
and
on the table before him, describing each in clear language always to the point, while the beautiful Rhine flowed ever beneath the windows. We can see him too going about the streets of Basel on his round of professional visits, dressed in grey damask, and wearing a black damask cap. The coat was often used in the laboratory and might be stained with the tinctures and medicines which he made himself, but he did not account the stains dishonourable, till they spread too far, and then he bought himself a new coat, always of grey damask and
retorts
gave the old away. He thought little of the gorgeous Basel doctors and would praise simplicity of dress coupled with knowledge and capacity of mind and hand.
"
I praise the
membering
go about silk, and
said,
re-
do not
like idle fellows finely dressed in velvet, taffeta, gold ring on the finger, silver
;
dagger at the side, white gloves on the hands but work day and night with patience. They are not always promenading, but seek their
laboratory, wear clothes of leather and an apron wear of skin on which to wipe their hands
;
1527]
PROFESSIONAL HOSTILITY
93
no rings on their hands which they need to thrust into the charcoal and which are as black as a charcoal-burner's. That is why they use
little
splendour."
in his
So he wrote
gery."
book
of the
"
Greater Sur-
Whatever might be his dress, he girded on his long sword, to which he held as tenaciously as the fine doctors to their rings and red pole.
doctor should be full of experience, not about with red coats and spangles. hung To have the name and not to do the work of a doctor is dead the two things must go together, to be a doctor and to do a doctor's work master and physicians and physic
. . . : : :
"
"
mastery.
His own mastery was proved by his cures, and the other doctors were moved to jealousy and sought to subject him to the judgment of the whole medical body in Basel. The question was whether he might or might not practise in the city. The academic charter contained
a clause to this effect concerning any newcomer, with a fine of thirty gulden did the newcomer
disregard this condition. Paracelsus refused to submit himself to any such formality, but this attempt, in the face of his appointment by the
magistrates, forced him to expostulate. He wrote to the magistrates, whom he addressed " as his grave, pious, strong, foreseeing, wise,
94
[CHAP, v
In this gracious, favourable gentlemen." detect a spice of irony, for their foresight
we
and
which
him.
these
He
They put him in his office and they must endorse He had been his power to exercise his duties. given no notice of the faculty's power to intervene, and he had left work at Strassburg to
comply with their appointment. Another matter broached in this letter concerns the conduct of the city apothecaries. He had enraged that class by refusing to administer or prescribe their medicines, which brought
them in large profits. He made his own medicines in his laboratory, and used them instead He used his tincture of their nauseous brews.
opium, which, he called labdanum, his solutions of antimony, mercury, and arsenic, his
of
of these.
He
and worthless, their found their stock As town physician he prices absurdly high. had the oversight of the apothecaries, and he discovered not only their carelessness and neglect, but also that they had a secret understanding with the doctors. All this may be read in
his
letter
of
expostulation.
their
He
desired
that
the
apothecaries and
their stores
should
be
inspected,
that
proceedings
should
be
1527]
PROGRAMME OF LECTURES
95
be submitted to the opinion of the town physician, and that apothecaries should submit
to
examination
their
before
and
that
lives
power,
their
the
charged according to a fixed rate, and the exorbitant prices which had drained the people
brave,
determined,
and beneficent, had effect, and Paracelsus was freed from the immediate persecution. On June 5, 1527, he attached a programme
of his lectures to the
versity inviting
all
to
come
to them.
It
began
students of the art of healing. He proclaimed its lofty and serious nature, a gift of God to man, and the need of developing This it to new importance and to new renown.
by greeting
all
he undertook to do, not retrogressing to the teaching of the ancients, but progressing whither
nature pointed, through research into nature, where he himself had discovered and had verified by prolonged experiment and experience. He was ready to oppose obedience to old lights as if they were oracles from which one did not dare to differ. Illustrious doctors might be graduated from books, but books made not a
single physician.
flu-
ency, nor the knowledge of old languages, nor the reading of many books made a physician,
96
[CHAP, v
and with much toil. He would teach it as he had learned it, and his lectures would be founded on works which he had composed concerning inward and external treatment, physic and surgery. " Let God ordain and may you apply yourselves in such a manner that our effort to advance once more the art of healing may succeed." So ended the programme and so
he answered his adversaries.
A
the
fortnight later
built
of St. John.
The students
and lit was blazing when ParaUniversity. celsus arrived, holding in his hand Avicenna's Canon of Medicine, which he flung into the flames
a bonfire in front of
It
"
saying fortune
It
all
mis-
may go
his
was
school.
So Luther challenged the papacy when he burned the papal Bull and Statutes by the Elster Gate of Wittemberg. And Roger Bacon had wished that he could burn all the works of the Stagy rite. Paracelsus burned the dead and done with lore of Galen and Avicenna. It was a symbolic act, as he explained later
in
the
"
Paragranum
"
"
What
has perished
1527]
97
must go to the fire, it is no longer fit for use: what is true and living that the fire cannot burn." Man was in bondage to the dead Church, to the dead learning let them be done with for ever. Night and day Paracelsus worked at his lectures, dictating them to his secretaries with extraordinary vigour, striding up and down
the room, his eyes gleaming
spired."
"
like
man
in-
ignored the Basel holidays, which lasted from the middle of July to August 21, determined to retrieve the time which academic
opposition had wasted, and the hall was always It was his constant aim filled to overflowing.
to do his utmost for those whom he taught, " to keep back nothing which could be of use to the sick."
of
He
Had
not Christ
made
the healing
paramount duty
He
supplemented
lectures
with
practical
The most advanced amongst his students accompanied him to the sick-beds of his patients and learned by observation of his diagnoses and his treatment. Experience, he said, was better than all the anatomy lessons
demonstrations.
of the lecture-room.
stand a disease,
let
watch
its
symptoms, study
phases, measure
their duration, classify for themselves its cause and the sequence of its condition, discover
7
98
its
[CHAP, v
its
compound
themselves
remedies.
He
led
them
How
should
they recognise them in tinctures and powders even skilfully compounded ? Better than all
books,
however complete, were the open spaces where Nature was the gardener, for there the medicines grew by choice, drawing from soil and air the virtues which made them potent, " out in Nature, which is covered by only one roof, where the apothebetter
than
physic-gardens,
caries
are
the
and
forests,
He drew them on
to
they must be their own apothecaries, and must distil, combine, dissolve their own medicines, and this could be taught
experiment,
for
and developed only by constant observation and constant practice. We have a list of some of his lectures, and this alone touches many
departments of medicine
I.
:
and
of natural substances.
face,
II.
IV.
1527]
HIS SECRETARIES
Concerning open wounds and ulcers.
Surgical
in war.
99
V.
VI.
VII.
lectures
on wounds received
Concerning pharmacy.
"
"
He
own
took some of the poorer students into his house, gave them food and clothing, and In return they acted
and when they knew enough, as his assistants. They had a good deal to bear, for he knew no fatigue himself and would keep them busy till after midnight. Sometimes he would rouse them from sleep because a recollection, an experience, a new line of thought had occurred to him. But these were
the
men whom he educated so highly that they could share his work, make experiments themwatch and report upon processes. The best man amongst them he found one day in the sick-room of a poor patient.
selves in the laboratory,
100
[CHAP, v
He
asked him where he came from. I come " from Meissen," said the boy, and have wasted in Heidelberg. I should like my money
to teach this winter so as to
"
pay
for
my
If
you
find
better
to
me and
as
"
the
by
his
"
whom he spoke long afterwards dear teacher Theophrastus Paracelsus, of blessed memory." His diligence was rewarded, for he became a distinguished physician.
his master, of
as his
"
to
him
were some bent on their own petty and neHis healing was supposed by farious designs. them to depend on the knowledge of certain secret and magical cures which they purposed to find out while they pretended to serve him, hoping thereby to make a profit as famous doctors without the toil of study and experiment. His power rested on these last as well as on
his personal influence.
gift
But
magic drugs and enchantments, these baser spirits hoped to surprise him in their use and to learn them to His most effective drug their own advantage. was doubtless laudanum, of which he made
as
men
whispered in those
days of
1527]
LABDANUM
101
and which he gave to restore sleep to the sleepless, and to still pain and to prepare
no
secret,
convalescence.
Probably he had a
little
store
of
opium
acquired in Constantinople, from which he prepared his Labdanum, and which he kept concealed, perhaps in the handle of his sword. He accounted his tincture of Labdanum as It was opium or his best chemical discovery.
Labdanum that cured the Markgrave Philip of Baden, and for which on waking from the
had induced he thrust a jewel into his physician's hand, before Paracelsus was turned feeless from the house a jewel which he wore to his dying day as a protest against the unmerited outrage. But what was more potent than laudanum was his faith in the power
slumber
it
of God, his
own
blameless
life,
his
deep desire
to
Something of the was vouchsafed to him. power One of these time-servers, and it may be not the worst of them, although the most notorious, was Johannes Herbst, called Oporinus. In order to have money for study, he married an
help
his
fellow-men.
of Christ
elderly widow,
scolding.
who embittered
He went
that he might surprise the secrets with the possession of which he accredited him, and
might make fame and money on his own account. He stayed two years with him and was at first trusted and apparently faithful.
so
102
[CHAP, v
was baffled, for Paracelsus read his thoughts and knew what was in his heart, or because he was bribed by the enemies of his master, he calumniated him in the document which he published, and which
But
in his old age he bitterly repented. Who, of the world's helpers, has not had his betrayer ?
Oporinus discovered no magic nostrum, for was none. Paracelsus himself spoke of " the use of such a nostrum as riding all horses
there
good
is
effected."
CHAPTER
VI
THE
Intimatio Theophrasti, as Huser calls the programme in his index to the seventh volume
of his collected
celsus,"
still
"
teenth
by phorum
Paragrain 1575, and by Huser in 1591, we should not now know the course of lectures given by
reprints
his
Probably the programme was introductory and was meant to lead up to a comprehensive and detailed system of physic and surgery the new internal and external treatment which the events of 1528 cut short, for Hohenheim's enormous productiveness during the thirteen years which followed his departure
103
104
[CHAP, vi
from Basel dealt with almost every conceivable form of disease, whether suggested by outbreaks of pestilence, fevers, and epidemics, or by constitutional, accidental, and contagious maladies
encountered in the daily exercise of his profession.
We may
"
Principles
delivered are contained in the ten books of " " the " Archidoxa and in the Book of the Three
;
on salt, vitriol, arsenic, sulphur, antimony on pharmacy and its on medicinal springs on on tinctures and powders preparations on open wounds, on ulcers and their cures
;
seizures
tures,
and paralysis, the fractures, contracand cripplings to which men are liable
by
accident,
by
gestion
in war,
and
circulation, or
by wounds received
belong to this period. Very important were the lectures on what constitutes a good
doctor in opposition to one who, graduated in the schools, neither knows illness when he
sees it nor has the experience
its
to guide
it is
him
in
treatment.
of this wealth of material
Out
not easy
to select, but a brief precis of one or two lectures, in addition to that already introduced on his
basic
principles,
may
indicate
what
manner
of teaching the students at Basel in 1527 and 1528 received from this inspired and inspiring
reformer of medicine.
1527]
105
In considering these lectures, we must keep the period when he taught clearly before us, so as not to confound his point of view with the
advance which medicine has made within the last century, a position to which his courage
and insistence pointed the generations succeedwall ing him. He turned his back to a dead to the far off horizon which ever and looked
recedes as
men
attain.
sciences rend inutile les ont le plus aide a ce progres. ouvrages qui Comme ces ouvrages ne servent plus, la jeunesse croit de bonne foi qu'ils n'ont jamais servi a rien."
"
Le progres des
Anatole France in these significant words has laid bare our intellectual ingratitude, our inability to realise the miracles of a past which
engendered our miraculous present. In 1571 Toxites published at Strassburg,
" An Excellent Treathrough Christain Miiller, tise, by Philip Theophrastus Paracelsus, the
famous and experienced German philosopher and doctor." This book also contains lectures " Excellent Treaon four other subjects. The " " was later published as " Antimedicus in tise " Huser's Surgical Books and Writings." It is a most forcible appeal from Paracelsus to his students to bring character as well as knowledge to their professional work. The edition of Toxites has the advantage of being printed
106
[CHAP, vi
come to
and a long preface, both by Toxites. " Paracelsus indicates the Three Qualifications which a good and perfect surgeon should
possess in himself." The first of these concerns the doctor's
own
:
character and
is
"
"
1.
He He
He
competent
"3.
treat each
case
knowledge and
give
it
shall
up.
"4.
"
5.
He
shall consider the necessity of the sick his art rather rather than his own
than his fee. "6. He shall take all the precautions which experience and knowledge suggest not to be attacked by illness. " 7. He shall not keep a house of ill fame, nor be an executioner, nor be an apostate, nor belong to the priestcraft in any form."
He
fully
:
explains
these
seven
particulars
more
"
1.
made
doctors with
1527]
107
a hurry, and But the asses go about the town just as if it were a crime for the sick to contradict a doctor. Barbers, bathmen, and others are of the same persuasion, and think they have learnt everything with blood-letting, scraping, stroking, as if that were true medical treatment, and these calves think themselves great masters, for did they not go through their examination at Nuremberg, where indeed many such do go through ? "2. Let a doctor be as wise and learned as possible, there comes an hour when a case puts
time, read their books over in retain but little in their heads.
to
startles
shame all books and all experience and him by its unfamiliarity, so that how-
ever learned he may be, he is lost with regard to it. This is why you must daily learn, note, observe diligently, despise no teaching nor trust in yourselves too much, and above all realise how little you can do, even although a doctor and a master. Therefore, you must be always learning, for who can do everything, or who can foresee everything, or who can know where all cures are to be found ? You must travel and accept without scorn all that comes to your hand, and do not bring to shame your degree of doctor and master. For the mock doctor is a mere puppy and a court-dandy, through whom truth and true knowledge fall into contempt. "3. When an ignorant doctor treats a case,
all
goes wrong and it is his fault, because he only thinks of the shekels. But a wise physician does not judge at a glance, nor does he think himself able to overcome all diseases he is
;
108
[CHAP, vi
not always riding to the same patient, or promenading on the streets, for these things give no But if he knows that the patient can help. be cured with his help, seeing no wiser only doctor comes, he continues his own treatment for the sake of duty and conscience. "4. If a doctor is temperate, he will not be full of other matters he will not always be nor taken up with every stranger he talking, meets, nor with love affairs, nor with fine cooking, nor with going about from shop to shop. He will be sober, free from all fraudulent tricks, will mix up no roguery with what he does. And he will refrain from unchastity, for the doctor who is not chaste is a horror. He is no good doctor, he is not to be trusted. "5. If a doctor only considers his own wants, he ceases to study what a doctor should be.
;
learns how to gossip and flatter and he knows how to coax his victuals out of monks and nuns in the cloisters, and gives advice at random that he may not want. For God gives
He
the thief a long respite before he is hanged he often escapes altogether. Those who lecture out of books only last still longer than the thief they abuse the blind and are themselves blind. They are obstacles in the way. But if the doctor loves his art, cares for what the sick require, he undertakes not twenty cases but
;
:
five, for we can no more approach all than a mother can bring her child emperor's presence. If he is righteous, not only regard the fee, he does not say self Get on, make your own way,
' :
diseases
into
an
he does to himconcoct
1527]
109
he does men say Now's Who can make the whole world the time If you want honour and money and sound ? gifts from women, observe you cannot cure all the world, so off with you and leave the sick
prescriptions.'
!
'
unbattered, for you know well that you only do them harm and that there is nothing else
in you.
"6. They who think only of their fee need neither knowledge nor experience, for they take up an oblique position. Who will accuse thee ? or say that thine is the fault ? Thou knowest thy Avicenna (not very well !), thou knowest Come Hippocrates and ever so much more what will, thou thinkest, whether death or recovery, I am not to blame, for one or the other must come. If any one but Dr. Bononiensis and an old dead sophist not so highly instructed did it, he would not know what to say. Such a doctor should not practise. Let him consult the experience of another and learn from his daily practice and advice. 44 7. If a physician keep a house of ill fame, he puts medicine to shame. He makes a hospital of his house, worthless for medicine, but bringing him in money. If he is an executioner,
!
he will
kill
his
patients.
He must
keep his
conscious pure and not rejoice that no one dare accuse him. He must have God before his eyes and fear Him, for God can see murder in the heart when thou art working it diligently, and He will regard neither the emperor's hushing it up nor the pope's absolution. He will settle with the murderer.
110
[CHAP, vi
"If he is an apostate, be sure he has been worthless in the cloister, so what should he do For monks who doctor do it in medicine ? out of evil motives. If he should be an apostate of some other sort, he will make a very dubious doctor and work for the skekels. No man from the priest-crew, no one from the holy orders is fit for medicine, for medicine needs its own man and the priesthood needs its own man. No one can serve two masters ; each has enough to do working for his own. The priest, too, has
Fate is against him. cannot tolerate him on account of his wantonness. There are many others who should have nothing to do with surgery, such as doctors who have greedy wives and so on, for through such medicine is
his
own
The
ruined and is only practised for the shekels. Actors and the race of poets should not enter medicine ; they are too witty, and it is not
The Second Qualification concerns the patients. A doctor must know the sick and all matters that belong to their state, as a carpenter knows
his
wood.
:
1.
doctor must know how many kinds of tissue there are in the body, and how each kind stands in relation to the
man.
"2.
He must know
ribs
all
and
1527]
111
between one and another, their relations to each other and their articulations.
"
3.
He must know
"
4.
"
all the blood vessels, the the cartilages and how they nerves, are held together. He must know the length, number, form, condition, and purpose of each member of the body, its particular flesh, and all other details. marrow,
5.
emunctoria lie and how they are to be averted also what is in every cavity of the body and everything about the
all
:
intestines.
"
6.
He must
with all his might and being seek to understand about life and death, what the chief organs in man mean, and what each member can and may
suffer."
a physician does not know the variehuman flesh, and where each kind is placed, how shall he recognise the needs of each wound and select what shall be helpful ? Each several kind has its own several accident,
"1.
If
ties
of
and even if they could all be healed with one treatment, the result will be different in each A surgeon who case, for each has its own nature. does not know how to distinguish these is not suitable for the art of surgery, even though he may rank as a doctor and master. For both
112
[CHAP, vi
these titles belong to knowledge and yet knowledge he has none. 44 2. If he does not know the bones, how shall
he put right such and such an injury ? How shall he understand its nature, or what its consequences may be ? It is not enough that we handle a wound outwardly we must know its inward condition better than the outward, for whoever knows well the bones of the body understands a wound to the brain, a wound in the ribs, and what he may venture to do in either case and what he must not do. If he does not know, he falls back upon what is written and will account for it with lies and will injure
;
the sick by neglect through his ignorance, and although he may ten times over receive the names of doctor and master, he is none the less a mere gold- seeker and a thing to be avoided by the sick. " 3. Every vessel in the body has its own kind, and the doctor who is not acquainted with each cannot heal any, for if you do not know the degree of danger in the wound, how shall you You know not where the veins are heal it ? situated, nor how to hold them fast so that the sick man keeps his life, for these things proceed
from knowledge only. And yet you may become doctor and master like other fools. "4. If you do not know the length, number,
form, situation, and purpose of each member with all that belongs to it, it is a sign that you know nothing else, because this is the very least that you should know you do not even
:
how you
1527]
A DOCTOR MUST
KNOW MEDICINES
!
113
a clever hold yourself. A fine master, truly barber and bather, who must make a parade with his mouth because he can do nothing. " 6. A doctor must be able to look ahead and to give his verdict from observation of symptoms. It is no use boasting of scholastic learnAll such talk is ing, of books and travels. " trumpery, if he does not know
!
The Third Qualification concerns the treatment, what it behoves a doctor to know, and
is
"
1.
He
44
2.
shall know plants of every kind and understand well for what purpose they are serviceable to him. He shall know which medicines cleanse and heal quickly, which slowly, as the nature of the wounds makes ad-
visable.
44
3.
He must
know what
it
is
4.
and what
is
suitable
44
5.
and what is not suitable. He must know which medicine is of most value for the contingency and must not experiment with others which he does
44
6.
He must
not understand. be aware of the effect of each medicine, how to strengthen or weaken it as is necessary, and he must not always harp on one string.
114
[CHAP, vi
"
He must
despise no art nor arts, but learn from all to understand the more. "For know, there are two kinds of doctors those who have regard to the
:
who attend
to the
These quotations throw a lurid light on the condition of the medical profession and on the character and conduct of its practitioners
in the first half of the sixteenth century. Paracelsus lost no opportunity of denouncing the latter,
their face, for just such men crowded into his lecture hall, and it was an act of ex-
and that to
traordinary heroism on his part. He was compelled to denounce the shameless ignorance,
and greed of the vulture doctors of his time that he might make his students good doctors and urge them to study, to make
insolence,
all their
heart
and mind, to set in its right place the claim He did of the wounded, the sick, the stricken. it fearlessly, perhaps not without an undercurrent of satisfaction in his exposure of the miscreant crew. He felt that his just indigna-
was essential to the ruin of the mischievous system which prevailed in medical craft. To illustrate his medical teaching, we must select one or two of the treatises into which he
tion
we take
1527]
115
of
the
quoted in the volume edited by Toxites at Strassburg in 1571, we have a striking example of the manner in which he applied his theory.
reproduce these lectures at because of the space which their full length, they would occupy, but what is quoted is given
It is impossible to
as
much
The
as possible in his
own
language.
treatise begins with an expansion of his theory and reiterates his contention that God provides the healing means in nature alone, and
that
He
All
and
use.
salt
"
as
skin
it
rusts iron so
Many
thus
rusts the tissues of the body. kinds of rust or harm occur in the minerals,
for each
metal has
is
its
own
peculiar
nature;
iron.
copper
And knowledge
that such
harm
has a sore and it is healed by treatment. The metal too has a sore and it can be healed by treatment. What happens in the one case for these are the secrets happens in the other of nature, the Magnolia Artium, with which God endows the physician. He is ordained to this wonderful knowledge, to receive it from nature's illumination, and from the sick whom he can observe and from whom he can work it out. The doctor must therefore know what harms the skin and what heals the harm, both kinds of knowledge to be found in nature. "Salt is of such a nature that it devours
;
116
[CHAP, vi
in substantial form, or like the sting of a nettle. especially the spices their
leaves, their flowers, their fruits
burn
like little
So
such are water-cress, mustard, nettles. ; also note animals that bite and sting. All
possess and set in action invisible fires, whose is visible. Just as in the things of external nature, so is it in man. In him are salts
result
kinds, which in time come to be like flames in the body. One of these may set the other on fire, and this it does by nature's powers. Many salts, too, are to be found in In some there is a kind of salt which trees. gnaws away the wood in wormlike fashion. So in man, in wolves, in other animals there are salts, such as arsenic, which crawl about putrefying and devouring. This happens where ever salts may be, according to their nature. And there are many natures and kinds in man, so that no one harm is like another. Some
of
many
little
salts
burn
like nettles, some like vitriol, some some blister like mustard, for all
these
things in men must be separated like the things in nature and classified according to this or that family and species. " Salt works in its own kind, that is, it devours
itself,
mercury and sulphur the cause of its own destrucitself, tion, as is the case with all created things assured of destruction, which do not devour the These rust, the gnawings, and the scrapings. concern the power of nature which takes them away and destroys them. Therefore a man
but
it
also devours
is
with
and
1527]
SALTS IN THE
HUMAN BODY
117
must consult a doctor who knows the power of nature. For medicine is a gift, and to whom it is given he has it, and to know what nature
has is the beginning of the gift. This is wisdom. For the doctor gradually becomes a physician from the illustrations, verifications, learning, and instruction of the work and revelation
Therefore every doctor must understand that he be furnished with the power of medicine as God has created it, and not attempt to do without it. There is a secret fire then in the things of nature and in men, in which, when it burns, men lie like lime seething in water. For the body, just where the salt is placed and where it burns like pepper or It alkali, may be compared to a fluid body. devours the very thing which is its own body
of nature.
;
salts
of
iron
burn
own copper, and each the blood-vessels, the tissues, the marrow, the bones, the articulations, each according to its nature. Whoever knows these kinds well knows how the sores come to the body. " There was an old saying amongst the learned
salt,
burn
the philosopher ends there the physician begins.' This means that the doctor should observe and gain experience of the active powers of natural things, so as to know them where he finds them. There are in the human body a salt of fire (flamulse), a salt of borax, a
that 'where
and many others. There is no about them as the ancients did, or theorising learning about them as the philosophers did, for the sores and wounds have their laws and
salt of arsenic,
118
[CHAP, vi
nothing to be built on conjecture and For the physician cannot begin until philosophy ends. These laws must be handled
there
fantasy.
by themselves, and
nothing.
of
this
philosophy knows
teaching is that nature has included us in her work, because man is the microcosm, and it is upon this foundation that the doctor must dedicate himself. There are wide differences between what the ancient doctors taught and what we here teach, and therefore our
healing art widely differs from theirs. For we teach that what heals a man also wounds him and what has wounded will also heal him. For the nettle can be so changed that it does not burn, the flame does not scorch, the chelidony
"Our
does not cicatrise. Thus similars are good in such and such a salt to such and such healing a sore. And the things which heal a wound in nature heal the same sort of wound in man. The doctor must learn to recognise these similar
:
1527]
NATURE'S TEACHING
119
but not so a doctor. Medicine does not allow itself to be carpentered as he chooses, but remains as it is, and he must so treat it. Therefore it is well to learn in the place where knowledge is to be found, and that is in its own examples, which can tell and teach nothing with the mouth, but with signs, can paint,
point out, exercise the power that is in it. If Nature does not wish every man to know, she indicates her teaching to those who understand by parables and mysteries. Thus our wisdom teaches us in figures and forms and by similes, so that if we have the desire to learn, we learn
inwardly through these. Has not Christ said It is not given to all to understand, but to them it is and has been given ? To him only who can understand. Therefore it is reasonable to ridicule the old theories with their causes, And those who follow reasons, and the like. whither they lead, may be even more ridiculed. Such people fulfil the proverb 'A blind man leads the blind,' and if one falls into the ditch, just so many fall into medicine without recognising that it is a gift not given to every one without knowing knowledge, without understanding its art, without consciousness of their own deficiency, without seeing. There are many people in our day in whom there is nothing and in whom nothing can ever be, who have neither mind nor heart for medicine, to whom the monkish doctors even are not contemptible, and who do not so much as recognise their ignorance although the monk-doctors have
:
'
'
tried
before
they
fled
120
[CHAP, vi
ledge and your motives. For many amongst you are not doctors but have been bawlers and leaders astray."
In the next
his
lecture Paracelsus
returned to
"Three Principles":
Salt is that body which preserves the other two from corrupting, for where there is no salt there is no corruption in process. Salt is placed
in all bodies, that each may be preserved in freshness. Therefore there are many kinds of
salt.
"
So, too, there are many kinds of mercury of sulphur. And therefore
there are many kinds of trouble and going to it may All that has savour is salt pieces.
;
it is salt. is
In gentian salt
savours are,
and
all
yet,
however
different these
are differentiated like flesh, one like this, one like that, one the flesh of an ox, one the flesh of a fowl, one the flesh of a fish, one that of a reptile, yet all flesh, in which is the soul or life-spirit of each. But however
all
are salt.
But
much we may
differentiate, one man will hold a particular tissue for flesh, another will not. And so one man will say that honey has no And yet both have salt, but that pepper has salt. salt, for they could not exist as honey and pepper without salt. Now, there are many kinds of salt visible, so that the doctor can see of what kinds they are, and these differentiate into many species, and as in nature so in man, each kind
1527]
PROPERTIES OF SALTS
121
according to its specific nature. The salts that man uses are of many kinds, which flow through water, which have seethed in the earth and are drawn out of it by water. Others are drawn from metals, others are coagulated, so that there are many varieties. We prepare a fine salt, a pure salt, a supreme salt, and so on. But all these salts are alike in that they all tear to pieces. Some salts tear and heal again, as do the salts of alum. For alum both devours
and
in
heals.
many
forms.
Vitriolic salts are also visible, and Salts of lead are of many
:
kinds and of different natures also salts of lime and salts which can be separated from other bodies. Note well that they do not exist for themselves, but are mixed as a third body in everything to complete it. For every substance contains metallic bodies, according to its several members. From which it follows that the metallic bodies are as liable to death as the
others,
for
is
their salt
is
arsenic.
Understand
that this
the case with all the other genera of bodies. The whole earth is linked together through these bodies and with man. Throughout all men there pass the fountain veins the salt-veins which penetrate to every part of the human body, in all regions of the earth. Some are in its pores, and as when it rains out of heaven, moisture gushes out of the pores. Earth and heaven are in the body and are separated there. And as by the action of water on the earth stones are formed, so are gravel and stone formed in the body. And this is for the physician to discover rather than for the
;
122
[CHAP, vi
surgeon. Therefore the matter must be exbut the surgeon plained from the beginning should know all about those sores which come of themselves, that they are due to the salts which flow throughout the anatomy, nature and being We know the thing to be so in of the body.
nature and
the more thoroughly In a natural state investigated no harm occurs, because these things are in the earth and in the body. They are not visible But when they are prepared in that state. from the earth, we discover them through our As through the seething of salt we learn art. how food is torn asunder by the digestive viscera, so we make other discoveries through the preparation of alum, the fuming of lime, and so on. And as the things are sought and found, they become powerful to separate. It is man who is the artist, who brings the body into preparait
must be
all
in
medicine.
tion
his art.
and makes of it what it becomes through His operation completes it. But the preparation must be the exaltatio paroxismi, else is there no result and the body is as useless as if it were still in the earth."
The
and
is
followed
by another giving a sequence of lessons in healing the sores and diseases which come from the action of salts grown corrupt. But enough
has been quoted to suggest the vitality of his his its depth and reach quite teaching
; ;
extraordinary
recognition
of
life
of
the
universality
and similarity
in minerals, plants,
and
1527]
123
animals, a recognition which is only now becoming a part of our positive science, although
it
prevailed
in
very early
mystic
teaching
made macrocosm
and microcosm interdependent in all physical essentials, so that what man needs in his own little world is provided for him in the mightier
impassioned ethical sense of the healing virtue of a good and well-ordered
world of nature
;
his
life,
and
is
and
vice.
evident from this brief excerpt that Paracelsus was the father of homoeopathy, and
this
Perhaps a short account of his two treatises on paralytic and other seizures which disable the members may illustrate another side of These treatises were published his teaching. in the same collection of Hohenheim's works
in 1571,
tells
of Toxites
they had been printed in 1563 in Adam von Bodenstein's collection at Basel, and in 1564 at Cologne, in the appendix " of Philosophia ad Athenienses." Toxites gives his edition as the third, and
was the
third, as
adds to its title the quotation from Psalm cxiv. " Not unto us, O Lord, not unto us, but to Thy name be the glory." In Adam von Bodenstein's edition, from
:
Ixiv.
124
is
[CHAP, vi
They that hate me unjustly and persecute me without cause are more than the hairs upon my head. But Thy salvation, O God, doth deliver me." A fourth edition was included in Huser's
quoted
Strassburg edition in the beginning of the seventeenth century. In the first of these treatises Paracelsus treats
of the causes of paralysis and like attacks, with their results in powerless or crippled members of the body ; in the second he deals with their
cures and the form, length, and order of the treatment necessary to each kind of seizure.
They are due, he says, to external and internal causes. The former are brought about by
falls, shocks, gunshot wounds, and wounds from the arrow of the cross-bow. The latter come from stoppage in the digestion or in the blood-vessels some from gravel or stone in the kidneys which produce crookedness some from diseases in the back and lameness and hips which produce deformity of the spine some from disease in the intestines which are some invisible and where the pain is agonising from diseases in the knee and foot. But sometimes the whole body becomes paralysed, and It is the this may be caused by sudden rage. worst form and affects women more than men. Anger sets the gall in action, and its heat engenders both the acid and the bitter throughout the body. Another cause is immoderate drink;
accidents, sudden
1527]
ing,
TREATMENT OF PARALYSIS
125
which engenders and increases acidity, provokes gout and other lythiac diseases.
To
heal these
of life
necessary that the spirit should reach the cause of disease and
it is
drive out
its
vicious strength
by
its
own power.
The
special
humours
set in
motion.
be directed towards opening the pores so as to heat the pores which moisten the blood-vessels
and nerves.
if
Care
medicines are in
they are weaker they will not expel it. They must be serviceable in quality, because not all aperitives will do they must have a specific
;
fitness,
so
that
they
If
may
specific diseases.
the disease
nor moisture avails, then a medicine compounded of natural substances as follows may help.
to recover the life-spirit, which can recuperate and renew to the great
is
It
must be restored to
power
members
its
with
may
By
disease.
And
the
medicine
No common, requires special consideration. coarse compound will do. If the disease raises
great waves of heat through the body, it needs a spirit medicine, for only a spirit can penetrate
its
subtle way through the whole body, for the members have torn and twisted the body as if
126
it
[CHAP, vi
were tied in knots. Great restoratives may a cure, such as aurum-potabile, oleum solis, materiam perlarum, essentiam antimonii, arcana
effect
quintce-essentice,
oleum vitrioli and others. And truly man cannot enoiigh praise God with all diligence, and thank Him for His
"
aquavitce,
fatherly
grace
it
and goodness
suffices."
in
giving
this
medicine, for
Another treatment is through the fumes of powerful balsams as terebinth, laurel, oleum ^ranarum, adipum gummorum, etc. At the end
he explains how to make these medicines by
extract and distillation and prescribes the quantity suitable for a dose.
CHAPTER
VII
PERSECUTION
"No
For
doubt these dogmas fall not to the earth all their novelty and rugged setting."
as are these quotations from the body of his doctrine, they suffice for the present to
SCANTY
indicate
the
revolution
which
he
projected.
He
boldly denied
The
established points
Ages had sanctified and men supposed Could never be oppugned while earth was under And heaven above them.
He framed
a system which was workable, which no authority except that of nature followed and experience, which disregarded the dead and deleterious literature of the past and opened the wholesome pages of the Codex Naturae, a system which led straight to exact knowledge and rejected useless reiterations unParacelsus set men's feet verified by research.
the right path, although it took centuries to restrict them to it. Men have in their igin
norance classed him with impostors and charBut he delivered us from imposture latans.
127
128
PERSECUTION
set before us the truth
[CHAP,
vn
for
and
for goal
and
reward.
Paracelsus was a pioneer as doctor, as student of nature, as theologian, for he beheld nature and the world as they are, and saw all things in the light of nature, so that he roused to new life, orderly induction, and
comparison."
However
little
the
Germans
stood him, their best thinkers of to-day generously acknowledge his importance to the German
renascence
which
he rescued from captivity and placed in light and liberty his combination of minute observation, patient research, insight and massive
;
intellectual grasp, in the exercise of which all facts that came before him took their places
in
a symmetrical and comprehensive synthesis his his wide culture and generous humanity deep sense of the spiritual world within and
; ;
and the eternal hold firm the imperfect and the transitory and in the fulness of time rescue it from its vicissitudes. Paracelsus observed and chronicled facts not as an amateur of fragmentary knowledge, but because they led him to the mighty underlying laws whose working they signified and whose pressure on all things and through all
1528]
MISUNDERSTANDING
129
things he realised laws wielded by omnipotence, working in order potent in the microcosm as
in the
macrocosm.
it
was
to
make
his
Basel
students understand either his starting-point or reach. They wished to learn his secrets, " not his knowledge. [He said himself They
:
will
fly to
not study it before their wings have grown. "^ Many of them came as mere boys -to the
for their degree,
but want to
college, too
young, too rough, and too ignorant to understand. They were influenced against him by the faculty and by the whole medical
the University. His straight words concerning the profession were not calculated to propitiate its members. His cures " " doctorculi especially in cases which the had aggravated by their ignorance and mal-
body outside
treatment, inflamed their jealousy. It took the form of a vile crusade against him. His
lectures, his treatment, his character
were de-
famed
the most despicable insinuations against were circulated. Doctors, apothecaries, and the parasitic nondescripts who bled, bathed, and tortured their unhappy clients
;
his probity
banded together for this campaign. Professors who were his colleagues were not ashamed to join the heterogeneous crew. Their aim was to oust him from his lectureship and his
practice, to be rid of this agitating interloper, who held up the mirror of truth to their in9
180
PERSECUTION
[CHAP,
vn
competency, and to restore the academic fatuity whose primeval peace he had disturbed. Naturally the enemies of Luther and Zwingli were the promoters of this crusade, although
Paracelsus considered that his contentions deserved inquiry upon grounds entirely removed from those of the Church reformers. Name " after name was hurled at him the Luther " of medicine," a vagabond who assumed the
:
title of
doctor."
The
a
faculty
fell
He was
"
liar,"
"
fool,"
He was
were
"
The doctors
a misbegotten crew of approved asses," " the apothecaries were scullions," and their " foul broths." potions were
The doctors take more trouble to screen their movements than to maintain what concerns the sick, and the apothecaries cheat the people with their exorbitant prices and demand a
gulden for messes not worth a penny."
"
His
retorts
were
barbed
with
truth
and
rankled.
When
the
autumn
fray.
He was
enthusiastically
welcomed by
the medical students there, feasted, applauded, He was happy in their listened to with delight.
1528]
BANQUET AT ZURICH
called
131
company and
phrastus."
them
with
"
our
own Theo-
Upon
compliments was founded the ludicrous accusation of habitual drunkenness which served the medical canaille of Basel for renewed attack when he returned. Considering the habits of
Swiss and
burgesses both then and now, their consumption of wine and beer on every trivial occasion, it was indeed a case of the
vpot
German
the
tankard and the toast is inconceivable, and these were as popular in the sixteenth as in the twentieth century. It was no reproach to our Tudor monarchs that they could empty a flagon of foaming ale, and the combibones of Paracelsus were quite as used to the thinner brew of their cantons as English royalty was to heady October. But it was a convenient and the drunkards hurled their own contumely
repute with gusto at their foe. An ill-timed death accentuated the outcry. Frobenius, whom Hohenheim had cured more
than a year
plectic
fit,
earlier,
and the
"
Theophrastus killed his patients as effectually as they did themselves. No doubt his wonderworking tinctures had proved too powerful.
The persecution assumed a new and still more discreditable character. The stroke was brought
182
PERSECUTION
[CHAP,
vn
on by a journey on horseback taken by Frobenius, against Hohenheim's advice, to the Book Fair
at Frankfort.
his
ill
But
it
calumniators, servant. Insulting and anonymous letters were left at his house accusing himself and his medicines of murder. One of these indicated
who contemned
holy laudanum," the tincture whose recipe had vainly sought to steal. As he said " would rather laugh than growl himself, he at them, but they had libelled and slandered the basis of his medicine and attempted to get
his
his foes
"
him out of the way." It was his system that he fought for, the system so dearly bought, of whose importance he was convinced, for whose sake he stood alone
against the world.
His enemies reached the climax one Sunday morning when on the doors of the Cathedral, the churches of St. Martin and St. Peter, and on that of the new Exchange, they affixed a
document compiled
in excellent Latin
and pur-
porting to be a letter from the shade of Galen. It was the habit of some members of the tribe
to
sit
just
University,
make
notes
of
his
invectives
against Galen and Avicenna and to record his mordant attacks on the whole farcical faculty of medicine in Basel. These men were the agents
of his
foes,
who
constructed
it
the
lampoon.
:
Roughly translated,
runs as follows
1528]
138
my
Or having
it
!
failed in practice expert to employ it. have I not known the commonest simples garlic and hellebore, well do I know them.
Hellebore I send unto thee, a cure for brains that are addled I send it as well as all others which benefit fools and the witless True 'tis I know not thy mad alchemical vapourings, I know not what Ares may be, nor what Yliadus, Know not thy tinctures, thy liquors divine of Taphneus
:
spirit preserver of
everything living in
all
All Africa bears not so many portentous creations. And yet, thou nonsensical fool, thou contendest in parley with me
Art thou itching to measure with mine thy weapons in wrath, Thou who answeredst nothing to Wendolin's well-reasoned word ? I doubt me if thou art worthy to carry Hippocrates' wash-pot Or even art fit to give food to my swine or to herd them. Hast thou made thyself pinions that fell from the wings of a crow ? Thy glory is false and abides scarce a moment in view. Hast thou read ? Thou shalt lose what in cunning of speech thou
hast won And thy works of deceit will bring thee to poverty's pain. What wilt do, thou insane, when within and without thou known ?
art
it were to hang thyself up by the neck. Let us live," doth he say, " we can always change our abode If imposture avail not, some other adventure I plan What if a second Athenas, a universe new I proclaim ? Not one of the audience I speak to can so much as guess what I
Good counsel
"
mean."
forbids
me
now
to digest
Reader and
Out
of Hell.*
"
spiteful
Appendix
C.
134
PERSECUTION
Hartmann
calls
it,
[CHAP,
vn
Julius
to the honour of
his
cowardly foes
slanders,
and a public insult a deeply injured man. While confined themselves to anonyhe
did
mous
not
condescend
to
retaliate.
lampoon carried their perwas the work of neither barber nor bathman. The apothecaries had
secution too far.
It
But
this
not learning enough to contrive it. It bore internal evidence of being constructed by one of the medical faculty conversant with Latin,
conversant too with his system and with his
lectures.
was this which wounded him to the quick. He had poured out the treasures of his research and his induction to men who treated them as fantastic ravings and himself
It
as a
madman.
In vain his
sick, in
vain his cures, his rational treatment, his reform of drugs, his reverence for a duty
which he esteemed as no less than sacred. He addressed an indignant appeal to the Town Council no deferential petition, but a
demand
"
for
:
rigorous
intervention
against
his
slanderers
In unbearable anger and distress it is fitting that the sufferer should call upon the magisIf trates to protect, counsel, and help him. he has been silent concerning the many slanderous letters sent to him, it is now impossible for him patiently to suffer such an injurious libel and outrage as this which has now been openly posted up. From the tenor of the lampoon
1528]
it is
135
He had already suspected that there were some who instigated and suborned other doctors of medicine to write against him. But now, he demanded that the whole body of his hearers should be summoned and examined so as to discover who wrote the lampoon that the libeller might be dealt with as he deserved. He could not himself vouch that his temperament might not urge him to say or do something injudicious were he to receive no support in this matter, or were he to be further incensed. In no circumstances would he suffer more inlisteners.
.
.
solence."
I pointed out to you, my noble gentlemen, to whom I comstrict, wise, mend myself with dutiful submission, your obedient subject, " THEOPHRASTUS VON HOHENHEIM, " Doctor of Medicine and City Physician."
"
discern between the lines an indignant <c strict, wise, noble gentlecontempt for the
We
power nor the wit to protect him. He sent a copy of the lampoon along with his letter, so that nothing might be wanting to endorse his demand. Outwardly he mastered himself and kept back the vituperation which would have relieved him, but in private he spoke his mind. " Even a turtle-dove would be enraged by these " sordid beasts." Knaves did it shall I be a lamb ? rather do they turn me into a wolf,"
neither the
:
136
PERSECUTION
[CHAP,
vn
Amongst his friends he let himself go, and invented new nicknames for his foes, of which
the
mildest
were
"
"
Dr.
"
doctors and
caries.
Simpleton "
for
the
scullery-cooks
He
edly
his
rivals
the sick believed in him and his ignorant were powerless to rob him of his skill or patients of their faith. No longer were the
:
and barber.
The most
virulent
enmity could not damage his reputation as a physician, but it could do worse.
happened that at this crisis a certain wealthy canon of the Cathedral, called Liechtenfels, was attacked by an illness, and offered a hundred gulden to whoever should cure him. Many tried and failed. The Catholic dignitary would have nothing to do with Paracelsus,
It
the
friend
of
Basel's
reformers,
until
death
stared
him
in the face
by
last
foul air,
foul brews,
he sent for Hohenheim, who in three days him of pain and sleeplessness. It was too easily done, and the ugly story of man's Canon Liechingratitude has to be told again. tenfels refused to pay what he had promised and tried to put off his healer with six gulden and his compliments, " knowing his life's worth
relieved
best."
The
insult
self -repression.
1528]
BASEL'S DISHONOUR
187
He
gave counsel and medicine to the poor for nothing, but from a wealthy priest the promised fee was his due and he appealed to the law, such as it was, in Basel. The law refused to
endorse the validity of Liechtenfels' promise, and adjudicated the six guldens a sufficient
fee for visits
and medicine.
This gross miscarriage of justice, coming so soon after the lampoon, upset the last reserve He had been inof Hohenheim's discretion.
sulted on every hand.
ing,
his
;
skill
fools
him
him.
the magistrates had failed to avenge the judges had betrayed and insulted
He
them out
own
coin.
He
sheet" in which he took the judges to task for their shameful verdict and gave free vent to
his anger
and scorn
should they understand the value of medicines ? Their method was to vilify the physician. Should a sick man be healed they must needs tell him not to pay for his cure, so that the sick and the law judged of
his
"
How
healing as
if
it
were shoemaking."
can find no libel in these well-deserved strictures, but apparently the sensitive souls of Basel's judges suffered, and orders were given that Paracelsus should be seized and imprisoned. The city was in an uproar, His enemies were
We
138
PERSECUTION
[CHAP,
vn
triumphant. It was said that he was to be outlawed and exiled to an island on the Lake
His friends warned him secretly and he left Basel during the night. This was early in the year 1528. His revenge was to
of Lucerne.
come, and
of
it
was
drastic.
Browning holds that the supposed illness Canon Liechtenfels was a deliberate scheme to incense Paracelsus, and this is only too The poet puts into Hohenheim's possible.
of the
:
whole episode
To play
off
Fantastic gambols leading to no end, but one can ne'er keep down I got huge praise Our foolish nature's weakness. There they nocked,
devils, jostling, swearing, and perspiring, the walls rang again, and all for me I had a kindness for them which was right But then I stopped not till I tacked to that A trust in them and a respect a sort
Poor
Till
Of sympathy for them I must needs begin To teach them, not amaze them, " to impart The spirit which should investigate the search
;
I spoke out Of truth," just what you bade me Forthwith a mighty squadron in disgust,
!
Filed off
"
Redoubling
my
The
rest.
When
one
man had
tarried so long
supported This tenet of his or that another loved To hear impartially before he judged And having heard, now judged this bland disciple Passed for my dupe, but all along it seems Spied error where his neighbours marvelled most. .... The end Was a clear class-room and a quiet leer
;
;
Only to ascertain
1528]
HOHENHEIM'S ANSWER
From grave folk, and a sour reproachful glance From those in chief who, cap in hand, installed The new professor scarce a year before And a vast flourish about patient merit
;
189
Obscured a while by flashy tricks, but sure Sooner or later to emerge in splendour Of which the example was some luckless wight
arrival had discomfited, But now it seems the general voice recalled, To fill my chair and so efface the stain Basel had long incurred. I sought no better,
Whom my
my
Basel then
proposed to rid the tribe Of my obnoxious back I could not spare them The pleasure of a parting kick
!
This
"
parting
mild
compared
kick," to the
was
the
deliberate
indictments
and
invectives
' '
which
he drew up for the preface to his Buch ParaThe Basel of 1528 is pilloried in these granum."
and as they embody his defence against accusation, insult, and calumny, they
to all time,
belong rather to
more
especially
granum
"
"
:
had made known the errors of " on no trivial grounds medicine," he wrote, of guess-work, but from close observation of many diseases, the doctors were highly inI
When
censed
not only those whom my thereby arguments touched, but the ignorant crew as well, who knew nothing of medicine, but who were stirred up to take part against me and to
;
140
PERSECUTION
[CHAP,
vn
to open shame concerning my teaching. behalf of my present as well as my future ' standing, I write this book Paragranum,' and treat in it of the sources of my knowledge, sources outside of which no doctor can be developed, and I shall reveal myself so fully in this that my very heart shall be laid open, for which I shall doubtless excite in those people
put
me
On
not merely opposition, but bloodthirsty rage, a thing of no importance to me should my book serve for the good of the sick. ... I neither reproach nor slander, as will be imagined, but exercise the privilege of authority to bring error to light and to hold up offences to their merited punishment with well-grounded explanation and without anger. What I maintain will be better propounded in my future writings, with greater practice and special experiment, although I expect to meet with just the same treatment. " I have written already much that affects
my
enemies,
and above
all
concerning their
prices of drugs, purgatives, are
kept up by the doctors, and how senselessly they practise cauterising, cutting, burning on every pretext. I have had to suffer contempt those concerning acidity, for my other writings
the origin of pustules, pharmacy, the method of letting blood, and all that I have written in the Paragraphorum,' writings which they do not understand. They even proposed to expel me to the Island called of Pontius Pilate. Therefore I remain in Germany, the soil on
'
1528]
THE DOCTORCULI
141
my pillars of medicine shall stand, and ask those of you who have read my writings to judge whether they shall be discontinued, I undertake or whether I shall go on writing. to explain briefly how they attempt to reveal my folly and reveal their own, to show up my experience and show up their own, to lay bare my reason and truth and lay bare their own evident to all men, their inward heart which resembles the outward doctor. They reproach me that my writings are that is the fault of their undernot like theirs not my fault, for my writings are standing, well rooted in experiment and evidence and will grow and bear their young shoots when the They have good cause right may-time comes. to complain of my writings, for no one cries out no one is hurt unless he is unless he is hurt sensitive no one is sensitive unless he is transiThey cry out because tory and not eternal. what is their art is destructible and mortal mortal cries out, and they are mortal and cry out against me. " The art of medicine does not cry out against me, for it is immortal and set upon such an eternal foundation that heaven and earth shall be shattered e'er medicine perish. So long as I am at peace with medicine, how can the outcry of a doctor trouble me ? They cry out it is a sign that because I wound them they themselves are sick in a dying medicine the
which
I
4
symptoms
of
and
exposed.
...
seek
the
142
PERSECUTION
[CHAP,
vn
foundations of
my
ing, experience, and duty, and so break up their attack and their arguments against me, for
each
of
them wields a
different
is
And
ments are developed from fragments, therefore the doctor defends this, the bachelor of medicine that, the barber this other, and the
bathman what
"
is left.
Their worst contention against me is that I do not come out of their schools, nor write out of their erudition. Did I so write, how should I escape punishment for lying, for the old writings are manifestly false. What then should be developed from them except falsehood ? Should I write the truth about their
medicine,
about
I
its
students,
masters,
and
should need to band them all preceptors, together shouting out what medicine is, for their outcry needs to be exposed just as much as their art. So, if I attempt to write the truth about them, I must point out those bases upon which true medicine stands, that people may recognise whether I have or have not authority. " I place the foundation of which I write
noting whether any phystands outside the four will rise up against me. Scorners are they of Philosophy ; scorners of Astronomy scorners of Alchemy scorners of the Virtues. How shall they escape the scorn of the sick since they despise what
sician
who
1528]
143
For with the ? same measure with which they mete will it be meted to them again, and their works will bring them to contempt. " Christ was the source of blessedness, for which He was scorned, but the true scorn overtrue medicine gives to the sick
took the scorners when neither they nor Jerusalem remained. And I may well compare the doctors of the Schools and the barbers and bathmen to the hypocrites who loved the highest There is seats in the assembly of scorners. no doctor except the man who becomes one from the foundation of the four pillars. He must collect his knowledge from these four it is they who make the doctor, not the man
; ;
they are knowledge of all sickness, they are its symptoms they are medicines in them lies in them too lie the the physician's healing faith and hope of the sick, as in the Cross of Christ lies the resurrection of the dead. " And because I write from the true source of medicine, I must be rejected, and you who are born neither of the true origin nor of the true heredity must adhere to the spurious art which Who is there raises itself beside the true. amongst the instructed who would not prefer what is grounded on a rock to what is grounded on sand ? Only the abandoned academic Bacchantes who bear the name of doctor must
;
;
no deposition They abide, painted doctors, and if they were not painted with this Their works title, who would recognise them ? would certainly not reveal them. Outwardly
suffer
!
144
PERSECUTION
What
who
is
[CHAP,
vn
dunces.
man
?
desires a doctor
What
from which no Philosophy issues, in which no Astronomy can be noted, in which no Alchemy is practised, and in which there is no vestige of Virtue ? And because I point out these things essential in a physician, I must needs have my name changed by them and be called Cacophrastus, I, who am Theophrastus, both by my christening and for
instructed
desires,
man
Understand then thoroughly that I make clear the bases of medicine upon which I stand and will stand Philosophy, Astronomy, Alchemy, and the Virtues.
:
my art's "
sake.
The
first pillar,
of earth
and water
Astrology, is full of knowledge of air and fire the next, Alchemy, is knowledge through experiment, preparation, and fulfilment of the four elements mentioned and the fourth pillar,
:
Virtue, should be in and remain in the doctor until death, for this completes and preserves the other three. And mark me for you too
must enter here and come to understand the three pillars, else it will be known by the very
peasants in the villages that your trade is to physic princes and lords, towns and countries, through lies and deception only and that you neither know your trade nor the truth, for the education which prepares you fits you for fools
and hypocrites,
all
^M
&w 1 lit ;p
I
:>
1528]
GALEN'S DISCIPLES
145
And
as I take the four pillars so must you take them too and follow after me, not I after you. " Follow after me, Avicenna, Galen, Rhasis,
Montagnana, Mesue. Follow you me and not I you, ye from Paris, from Montpellier, from Wirtemberg, from Meissen, from Cologne, from Vienna, from the Danube, the Rhine, and the Islands of the sea Italy, Dalmatia, Sarmatia, Athens Greek, Arab, Israelite, follow you me of you will no one survive, not and not I you even in the most distant corner. / shall be monarch and mine will be the monarchy, which
: :
your countries. you shout ers endure it when your becomes a prince of the monarchy Cacophrastus and you become chimney-sweeps ? How will it seem to you when the sect of Theophrastus triumphs and you are driven into my philoO poor soul of Galen, had he sophy ? but lived in immortal medicine his shade had not been flung into the abyss of hell, whence he wrote to me a letter dated from hell. I had not thought, I had not imagined that the prince of doctors would have been sent to the devil's
shall
all
.
bind
"
How
will
certainly his disciples must follow stronghold Is that a prince of medicine and shall after him. medicine be founded upon him ? Then must doctors be the greatest rogues under the sun, and in sooth they prove well that they faithfully
:
all
had
146
PERSECUTION
[CHAP,
vn
been rejected, insulted, treated with foulest contumely. Paracelsus knew that he was right he never doubted that his light came from God, was " God's lamp, whose splendour soon or
;
gloom."
after his death, his doctrine was " driven into his taught at Basel. Basel was He has been blamed for exphilosophy."
Ten years
pressing his anger in terms of fierce contempt. Fifteen centuries before Paracelsus there was a
Healer, in whom he believed, who used no mincing words to veil His indignant grief that the men whom He came to save received Him not.
" an evil and adulHypocrites, liars, vipers, " " thou whited terous generation," sepulchre
form no feeble category of epithets under which Christ classed His foes. " ParaIt is in this Introduction to the book
granum
tempt
"
"
of his
in
:
what
He
says
Serpents are you and I expect poison from you. With what insolence have you blazoned out that I am the Luther of Medicine, with the interpretation that I am a heresiarch. I
Theophrastus and more so than him to whom you compare me. I am that and am monarch of doctors as well, and may inform you of what you are not willing to know. Luther can justify his own affairs, and I will account for mine, and will surpass those marvels which you sum
am
1528]
147
the arcana will exalt ? the very gang me. that hates me. And what you wish to him you wish to me to the fire with us both. The heavens did not make me a doctor, God made me one it is not the business of the heavens but a gift of God. I can rejoice that rogues are
to that
up against me
Who
the truth has no foes except liars. I need wear no harness, no coat of mail against you, for you are neither very learned nor very
my
foes, for
experienced, since what you bring against me I will guard my monare the merest trifles. with arcana, not such as the apothecaries archy brew, foul broths. But you must guard your-
How
with dilly-daddles and sugar-candies. long think you they will last ? You scoundrels, you have sought to drag me under the harrow, but for the harrow your own backs will be bared and into your own wolf-traps
selves
will
"
you
I tell
fall.
you the
all
down on my
your
writers,
my
more learned than Galen and Avicenna, and beard has more experience than all your
.
. .
universities.
God
will
make
other doctors
who
understand the four elements and the Kabala, which to you are as cataract magic, in your eyes they will be geomantists, adepts,
will
:
they will possess the Where have the tinctures. arcana, they Who will then will your foul broths be then ? redden the thin lips of your wives and wipe
archei,
spagyrists
will
their
noses
The
devil
with a
148
PERSECUTION
takes
[CHAP,
vn
He
them
for their ignorance of healing definite diseases, as anthrax and pestilence ; for their carelessness
in
diagnosis,
and
"
"
of the pulse
Remember these things," he concludes, you may come into the higher medicine and not into that which neither God nor nature has planned, so that you may tread in the
so that
have pointed out to you written from the source of many volumes the four pillars, Philosophy, Astronomy, Alwherein it is my chemy, and the Virtues desire to urge you, my listeners, that you may accept nothing outside these four corner-stones upon which I base what follows, so that you may comprehend the foundation and the origin
straight paths which I
in
:
of
my
is
what
them and on
according
to
its basis,
" Dixi."
CHAPTER
VIII
NO ABIDING CITY
I will fight the battle out
;
little
spent
Perhaps, but
still
an able combatant.
PARACELSUS grieved to leave the city to which his work amongst the poor, his lectures, and a few understanding friends had greatly endeared
him, the battle with his foes perhaps not hindering, since he was a proved Titan amongst the
pigmies,
end had overcome by pitiable intrigue. Amongst his friends was the humanist Boniface Amerbach, the son of a
in
who
the
printer
in
Basel,
who
died
in
1514,
Johann
day works of
Amerbach, a
St.
man
who published a
ture.
Augustine, as well as other patristic literaHe had another son called Basil, and
both these
men
of the renascence.
Of Boniface we know that he was a close who made him his heir, and of Hans Holbein, to whom he was helpful. At this time he was Professor of Law at Basel, and to him Paracelsus wrote two letters from Colmar soon after his flight. The flight was
friend of Erasmus,
149
150
NO ABIDING CITY
Had
he
lingered
[CHAP,
vm
he
urgent.
another
hour,
But once out of the of the judges of Basel. canton he was free from their jurisdiction. Much that we know of his faring hither and
thither during the spring and summer of 1528 we learn from these two letters, whose originals
are preserved in the ecclesiastical archives of Basel. Up to March 4, which is the date of
the
or
first,
its
he had heard nothing from Basel " " I authorities. Perhaps," he wrote,
spoke somewhat too freely against the magistrates and others, but what does it matter since
I
am
made
"
He
against claims
he did
the
attacks
made upon
'
his
honour and
first
truthfulness.
Truth
draws hatred,
fellows,
hatred
hatred,
from
anger,
my
professional
then
envy
from
judges."
his friend
And he
asks
cuse him.
He
fight
seems now to have dedicated himself to out the battle with what he called the
"
Aristotelian
Swarm."
"
first
am
Book
not afraid of them," he wrote in the " " of the Paramirum," but I am afraid
of
me
the discredit which they will thrust upon and of the out-of-date Law, Custom, and
call
Jurisprudence."
1528]
METEORIC STONE
151
already something of his campaign " in the Introduction to his book Paragranum," was not written until after he had finished which " Paramirum." the
fugitive made his way into Alsace and halted at Ensisheim to see a meteoric stone
We know
The
which had fallen there a year before his own birth, and which may still be seen in the Town It was in the choir of the church when Hall. Paracelsus saw and examined it. He declared its components to be stone and iron and its
weight 110
cherished
lb.,
much
to the consternation of
gerated its weight to 380 lb. Paracelsus, who knew that the whole universe was the outcome of one logical conception,
known minerals doubtless included in the whole. The inscription is still to be read and records in doggerel how the stone fell near the gate of
Ensisheim during a tremendous storm of thunder and lightning, and how it was brought to the church in a solemn procession with chanting " In his book of psalms. Concerning Meteors," which was not published till 1569, Paracelsus
describes this stone.
He went on to Rufach the same day, and was there the guest of Dr. Valentine Boltz, a man of sympathetic mind, a learned humanist, who " Six Comedies of Terence." in later years edited
152
NO ABIDING CITY
Hohenheim's
life,
[CHAP,
vm
he
They continued
of
and
died he dedicated a treatise against the Anabaptists and other anti-Christians to Valentine
Boltz.
Paracelsus did not tarry long at Rufach, however, but hastened to Colmar, the capital of Upper Alsace, where for a few days he stayed
with Dr. Lorenz Fries, a famous physician with whom he had already corresponded. He was
man
moderate. These friends were the best products of the German renascence, neither
cultured,
bigoted Catholics nor frenzied Protestants, men who desired the reformation of the Church
and the
volution.
universities,
re-
Such men had the progress of science at heart, and could appreciate the new system of research and exact record. They could console him with their comprehension and restore
his lacerated self-respect
Dr. Lorenz Fries, although of the Galenic School, welcomed the famous antagonist of
the Schools to Colmar.
From
this
house he
wrote the
" what he had sought after the storm, safety and bearable quiet days."
Dr. Fries had suffered for his
although these in no
teaching.
He
own
1528]
158 so
instead
that
medical instruction
might be open to those Just at the time when Paracelsus was his guest, he was writing his defence against accusations on this account. " Mirror of Four years later he published his in which he says Medicine,"
who knew no
Methinks German is not less worthy to express all things than are Greek, Hebrew, Latin, Italian, Spanish, French, into which languages we find every matter interpreted. Shall our language be of less importance ? No, rather of more, because it is an original language, not patched together of Greek and Latin like French."
"
sympathy and encouragement from Paracelsus, who had suffered for the same cause, and this community of conviction would keep other differences in
abeyance. When Paracelsus
left Basel, he took nothing with him, except perhaps his most precious drugs. But when he felt himself secure at Colmar, he
He would
receive
the
heartiest
sent for Oporinus and his luggage. When they arrived he hired a lodging with a cellar and set
his laboratory in the latter. great display of apparatus, only
up
needed no a fireplace, coals, bellows, tongs, hammer, crucible, and ashes of good beech wood." The retorts and would be in the Vasa Chymica brought phials
"
He
by
his secretary.
Dr. Fries
knew Hohenheim's
154
NO ABIDING CITY
[CHAP, vin
fame as a healer and was probably interested in the tinctures, essences, and mineral drugs which could in no way injure Galen's reputation.
number of sick persons sought his help and kept him longer in Colmar than he had intended to stay. He made some valuable friends there and amongst them were two Catholics who remained loyal to their
Church during those years of stormy controversy. This fact alters somewhat the aspect of the Basel persecution, which has been ascribed to
antagonism from the Catholic party there, but which was probably far more due to rancorous professional jealousy. Paracelsus, however much he sympathised with the reformers, never left the Catholic Church. Like Erasmus, he was for reform not for disruption. These two citizens were Hieronymus Boner and Konrad Wickram, to both of whom he dedicated books written at Colmar. Boner, like Dr. Fries, was a humanist, a deeply interested student of Greek and Latin literature, and a translator of Thucydides, Demosthenes, and Herodotus. Paracelsus speaks of both as men to whom he was warmly attached. It is pleasant to think of this quiet haven from insult and
bitter
man whom
labour,
privation, and suffering had prematurely aged. He was now barely thirty-five years of age,
1528]
IN
COLMAR
155
He took little rest or surrounded by sympathetic recreation, although He was busy with patients in Colmar, friends.
but looked nearer
fifty.
Oporinus was kept at secretarial as well as chemical work, for Paracelsus wrote an integral
part of his great surgical work as well as the two treatises already mentioned. That dedicated to
Boner deals with French Smallpox, Paralysis, Boils, Perforations, Agues and the like, and consists of material which was afterwards included in the
It
"
Little Surgery."
was presented to Boner on June 11, To the a dedication which begins famous Hieronymus Boner, Provost of the of Colmar, with greeting and all service
'
:
with
most town
from
Theophrastus." In the Introduction he praises the wisdom, goodness, and miraculous power of God in the realm of the spirit and the intellect, and above
all
medicine, and ends by associating his work with the " honour of God and the service
in
of
man." The other book was given to Konrad Wickram, Its city- magistrate in Colmar, on July 8.
love which undertakes
dedication exalts the love of our fellow-man, a all work with a single
eye to the common good, for which alone the author has desired to work, that he may serve
others and spread abroad the knowledge of true medicine.
156
NO ABIDING CITY
Yes,
[CHAP,
vm
"
justified
his
constrained to encounter every error, misconception, contradiction, and fallacy both in the
practice and theory of medicine, which might be injurious to the public well-being, and that he therefore only withstands those who ply
such weapons.
"
Visible Diseases
"
his
skill.
Even Oporinus admits that in Alsace he was admired by all as if he had been Esculapius
lingered in Colmar till well on in July, busied with researches on the French Malady and its cure.
himself."
He
had long suspected his but had borne with him for the sake of his intelligence, industry, and experience. But when he left Colmar he either dismissed him or Oporinus went away of his
own
accord, discouraged
by the prospect
"
of
restless
This and precarious wanderings. archknave that dogs my heels as a gaunt crow a gasping sheep," Browning makes Paracelsus describe him to Festus at Colmar, and the comparison may have some verisimilitude. But they parted in peace and Paracelsus gave
Oporinus a portion of his store of laudanum, which he found of great use in an illness shortly
afterwards.
He went back
1528]
OPORINUS
157
and lived for forty further years, becoming an excellent printer known for the correctness of his work and the purity of his Greek and Latin. He was four times married and struggled all his days with debt. That Paracelsus often laughed at him and even contrived
at Basel
if not practical jokes at his expense is probable " He did the same to studious Franz," certain.
master
all
the better.
On
his
death-bed Oporinus confessed to Toxites that he had never realised how great a man his
master was and that he bitterly rued two things having lost Hohenheim's books by lending them to other people, and having written a
scurrilous letter against him. tains the famous accusation
against Hohenover-much drinking and is the only evidence on the subject. It need not be credited and may have been inspired by resentment against Hohenheim's ridicule and exuberant laughter when he was stupid. But unfortunately the slander bore fruit in the works of a Swiss called Lieber, born at Baden in Switzerland in 1524, a man who never saw Paracelsus, but being a convinced scholiast collected all the calumnies and lampoons against the leader of the new scientific school and expressed under
heim
of
the
name
of
"
Erastus
"
who hated him without cause in four venomous books " Against the New Medicine of Philip
158
NO ABIDING CITY
[CHAP,
vm
Theophrastus." It is enough to add that Erastus believed in anything that was unpleasant, in witches, black magic, monsters, and the pranks
of the devil.
"
In vain
may we
writings for a single passage in which he celebrates the joys of wine on the contrary he
who
serves
his appetite will find pleasure neither in nor in his teaching. Theophrastus was
him no
drunkard, but we believe that he despised neither beer nor wine. He says expressly in Beer is more wholeone of his surgical books some than wine, that is to say it produces less sickness than wine.'
'
:
'
of
his
own
lack of understanding, a lack which atrophied all gratitude for the extraordinary advantage
How
and to
whom
sophy not alone in its magnitude, which they could not grasp, but in its details of practice and treatment of healing drug, ointment, plaster
and
tincture,
which
they
appropriated
is
and
boasted as their
revealed in
own
discovery,
many
of his books.
1528]
ESSLINGEN
"
159
Biicher Bertheonese," he tells us how few of his students accepted the teaching and counsel which he gave them. He had
duction to his
helped to educate hundreds of doctors, but of them all he could claim only two from Pannonia,
two from Saxony, one from one from Bohemia, one from Holland, Slavonia, none from Suabia, although he had a multitude In Switzerland none of students in every land.
three from Poland,
grew to be doctors, although some of them claimed to be so they were no better than the
;
a sect of lost physicians." Suabians, When he left Colmar it was for that barren
field.
"
of
their
old
One of these was a corner house possessions. on the meadow of St. Blaise, and it happened to be empty. Paracelsus made of it a temporary lodging.
It
cellars
under
one side of the doorway, a smaller leading out of the larger and ventilated by a shaft up to
the back yard. This cellar was about thirteen feet long and thirteen feet high with a breadth A small niche was in the wall, of ten feet.
which his furnace just filled. When the roof was seen in 1882, it was found to be covered with astrological signs and cabalistic characters too blackened to be accurately deciphered, and at the same time there was found on the floor a little double- sided hammer with a handle and a mortar with long iron pestle, both very old.
160
NO ABIDING CITY
fitted
[CHAP,
vm
He
up
this cellar
necessary for his laboratory, and worked at both alchemical and astrological experiments and
problems. A tradition still living in 1882 records that here he practised dark and mysterious rites by night, and when the proprietor of the
house restored it in that year and removed the cellars, he had a life-size portrait of Paracelsus
painted on the gable wall to propitiate the ghost " of the old magician." He is represented clad in doublet and furred cap with gold chain and
jewel,
and the picture is apparently founded a woodcut of the portrait now in the Louvre. upon " ParaIn all probability the work done in the " celsus cellar did partake of the marvellous and may have been his " Prognostications for Europe concerning the years 1530 to 1534," published at Nuremberg at the close of 1529
by Friderich Peypus, who printed it with great It had an extensive circulation and was care. reprinted no fewer than five times during this and the following year.
time that Paracelsus appears His midnight experiments were probably astrological and may have been necromantic, although he condemned necromancy. The title-page of the first edition gives us some ground for this surmise. Dr.
This
is
the
first
Sudhoff
tells
us that three-fourths of
it
are
occupied by a fine woodcut, in which a warrior appears above, surrounded by clouds, his head
1529]
TITLE-PAGE OF "PROGNOSTICATIONS"
161
shield
left
turned downwards, his feet in the clouds, a on his right arm, a drawn sword in his
hand,
body. Rays of light fall from his face upon the seven planets below, represented by typical
which stand on a layer of clouds. These figures are in full sunshine, but at one side rain falls from the clouds round the armed man. Directly under the clouds on which the planet spirits stand are a coffin of glass and a litter in the coffin lies a crowned man. Reversed torches fill the right and left corners below. A later edition showed a figure of the plague mowing people down with a scythe a dragon and a lion against which a crowned knight levels his lance a crowned emperor and a turbaned sultan apparently making peace, and another armoured knight. It ends with the
figures
; ; ;
doggerel
Who
Nor
does not die in hunger-need on field of battle dead, Who safely flees the deadly pest And from the jaws of savage beast Escapes, may well in comfort say Now comes there many a happy day.
falls
At Esslingen, attracted by rumours of his occult occupations, a heterogeneous collection of so-called disciples gathered round him whose
worthlessness he afterwards so tersely characterised. Some of these hangers-on were his
servants,
11
some
his secretaries,
some
his pupils.
162
NO ABIDING CITY
[CHAP,
vm
His habit of working by night was now confirmed. He slept very little, four hours at most, for his mental vitality so coerced that of his body that we cannot wonder at the premature aging of the latter. Unfortunately he had no wealthy patients at Esslingen to supply payment for his needs and those of his followers. Many of the latter were proved rogues and fell into the hangman's hands, and he was probably robbed. The result was practical pitilessly bankruptcy and he was obliged to give up his house. He took to the roads again, followed by some of his ragged dependents whom he gradually shook off. Paracelsus described the time spent at Esslin" " but it is believed that he gen as misery returned once again if not twice. His nature could not lose
;
Her first imprint must hoard and heap and class all truths, With one ulterior purpose I must know
;
It
still
He had
tried settled
life,
citi-
zenship could content his thirsting, eager soul, ever longing to discover more of the natural
and
of the supernatural
and finding
it
neither
smug
Apparently he went first to Switzerland, perhaps visited his friends Zwingli and Leo Judse at Zurich, and reached St. Gallen early in 1529. Here he had three friends, the two
1529]
AT
ST.
GALLEN
163
brothers
known
Schobinger and Joachim von Watt, His special friend was as Vadianus.
of
fine
in-
He
to stay with him for some time and help him to arrange and furnish a complete chemical
laboratory at Castle Horn, in which they worked " rich philotogether. He was known as the " and was honoured by the Emperor sopher Ferdinand, who granted him the right to bear
arms.
We do not know
exactly
how
long
Hohenheim
stayed at Castle Horn, but it was long enough to include the painting of his portrait for Bartholomew Schobinger. This picture is now in
the Historical Section of the
Museum
at St.
Gallen, but before it was placed there it belonged to Mr. August Nief. It is painted in oil on linen canvas and is about twenty-two
It
is
not in good condition, but the engraving kept in the Town Library, and taken when the original belonged to Mr. Nief, is clear and good.
shows Paracelsus at the age of thirty-six, when he wore a short dark beard the colour of his hair. His dress is careful. He wears a
It
white shirt finished by a collar of lace, a pale green doublet cut out at the neck to show the
collar
and damascened florally in dark green a black mantle hangs from his shoulders in
:
164
NO ABIDING CITY
[CHAP,
vm
His right hand, which is partly folds. concealed by these folds, rests on the crosshandle of his sword, his " trusty Azoth," and attached to a cord round his neck is the jewel
heavy
which disappears under his mantle. The background shows a dark red curtain drawn to one " Theoside, and level with this is the inscription
phrastus Paracelsus, 1529," in three lines. Whilst with the Schobingers, he met their famous contemporary and relation, Vadianus,
humanist and reformer, through whose efforts the Reformation was accomplished in St. Gallen. This man, whose memory lingers there in the name of street and library, was another of
those
influential
sons
of
the
renascence
so
Born eleven years before Paracelsus, the son of a wealthy merchant, he was sent to the University of Vienna when he was eighteen years old, just before Dr. Wilhelm von Hohenheim migrated from Einsiedeln to Villach. In Vienna he met Zwingli and came under the influence of the famous German teacher Conrad Celtes, who brought with him to Vienna the fine flower Joachim von Watt culture. of renascent its stimulus and became an eager humancaught was his favourite amongst the ist. Virgil classic poets, and the copy which he used, a
manuscript on old parchment, can still be seen at the Town Library of St. Gallen, under Professor Dierauer's appreciative care.
He made
1529]
VADIAN
165
studies
of a great many Greek and Roman wrote treatises on poetry and rhetoric, works, edited books both ancient and contemporary, and made himself acquainted wth the current
discoveries of Portugal and Spain in the interests of geography, for which he had a special gift. He spent sixteen years at Vienna and then
perhaps because his parents were aging, perhaps because the Reformation struggles required him. But for some years before his return he had been studying medicine and had even taken his degree. In this lay the key to his interest in Parareturned
to
St.
Gallen,
Such a mind as Vadian's, born with celsus. the renascence, attracted by all it had of new and vitalising, cultured by the sons of the
renascence,
must have
lost patience
with the
meaningless reiterations of ancient science and have gladly turned to the voice of the fore" runner who cried in the wilderness Prepare ye the way of the Truth." Vadian became
St.
Gallen,
his
humanism matured
his
into
great
humanity,
classicism
patriotism.
Switzerland, he made his way slowly northwards through the south and We do east of Wirtemberg into Franconia.
When
Paracelsus
travelled, but his aim was and he reached the famous city, Nuremberg after long loiterings on the way, on November 23,
not
know how he
166
NO ABIDING CITY
As he travelled, itinerant students and even
in
[CHAP,
vm
wayfaring.
by and halted
many
them, finding amongst them no God-given worth at all, only the usual curiosity, greed, and
him his " Prognostications " and his completed work on the " French Malady." It had been written very carefully.
" There
are
many
fessor Julius
Hartmann,
indications," "
writing over and over again, rejected its first form when on such revision new and better terms suggested themselves, and often modified its more violent epithets."
book he had given the greatest care. It was written in three parts, the first of which condemns the medicines then employed, because
this
To
they aggravated rather than allayed the disease. The second points out the true treatment and
and explains how and for what these are to be used. The third deals purpose with the disease itself and points out how other
medicines
result
from mis-
taken and false methods of medical treatment. In Nuremberg no book could be published
without passing the Censor. The reason for this lay in the number of lampoons and slanderous
fly-sheets
that
1529]
AT NUREMBERG
167
the Catholic and Protestant contending parties. Government had decreed the establishment of
a Censor's Court in 1523, so that no publication could take effect until the manuscript had been
examined
and
authorised.
Paracelsus
sub-
mitted his writings to the Court and received permission to print them. Along with the " " he entrusted his book to Prognostications Friderich Peypus, who brought it out in quarto
form, consisting of fifty-four sheets and a titlepage decorated with a border of small woodcuts with the shield and initials of the printer. " It bore the title By the most learned Master
:
Three Books." dedicated this, and another treatise on the contagious character of the French Malady, " The Honourable and Estimable to the Censor, Master Lazaro Spengler," in gratitude for his
French Malady.
He
prompt permission to publish it. He left the city while it was being printed and lived quietly at Beratzhausen, a village near Ratisbon, on a small tributary of the Danube. Here, in peace,
he busied himself with new writings, hoping that they would be speedily printed at Nuremberg and
An
his
given to the world. But this hope was shattered. order came from the city that no more of
to
books were to be published there. It proved be another vengeful stroke from " Galen
in Leipzig
in Hell."
had read
his
168
NO ABIDING CITY
[CHAP,
vm
book and had taken umbrage at his insistence on the ignorance and mischievous blundering So with all ceremony they adof their class.
dressed themselves to the Council of Nuremberg and requested that no further writings by
Theophrastus von Hohenheim should be printed " imthere. They did not like being called a title which Paracelsus freely bestowed postors," on all doctors of the old school in the first section of his book. Probably they felt he was right. We find amongst his surgical works a copy of an indignant letter written but not sent to the magistrates of Nuremberg, very ceremonious as to their titles, but with unmodified contempt
for their action
' :
It is not your business to judge or forbid without careful consideration and discussion as a matter of fact you are not able to judge of my work, you have not intelligence enough. If the University has any reason to complain of me, let it appoint a Disputation, not forbid public publication. Until I am vanquished in a Disputation such a prohibition is repression
:
Printing is for the bringing of truth to light. My writing concerns neither Government, princes, lords, nor magistrates, but occupies itself with the deceptions of medicine so that all men, rich and poor, may be set free
of the truth.
from abomination."
The letter which he sent was more guarded and more courteous. He spoke
PARACELSUS.
After the original painted in Nuremberg in 1529 or 1530, Gallery at Schleissheim, near Munich,
p. 168]
now
in the
Royal
1529]
LETTER TO MAGISTRATES
169
" of his great desire to write what would really benefit the sick, who were so grievously maltreated and allowed to perish. He trusted that a city like Nuremberg, which was celebrated
for its action in protecting the truth,
would also
protect the
those
and would grant them room and refuge. Let who doubted the truth of his statements him in an open Disputation, which, as meet formerly so now, he would willingly attend."
This
letter,
written on March
1,
ledgment. It is little wonder that in after writings he relieves his feelings in an occasional sarcasm against the city of shattered hopes and " lost illusions. They have forsworn physicians and God mercifully allows them four all
fools
Plain words these, and unpleasant, perhaps not altogether deserved, for it is evident that the
worthy
officials
their first opinion in face of the authoritative verdict of Basel and Leipzig. Hohenheim had
the volcanic temperament needed to destroy the old order* which he knew to be corrupting the
world, as he had the piercing insight which discerned the spirit of the new order amidst a welter of troubled and heaving stagnation.
had
170
NO ABIDING CITY
its
[CHAP,
vm
the degeneracy of
admit
knowledge.
Only here and there had the reformer of science a sympathetic listener, and that amongst the few who, able to master the literature of medicine in its earliest form, had realised how far its teaching had strayed from its first points of departure and direction. In his childhood he had acquired the simplicity of speech
which never left him. He had a message to give which needed directness, a reveille to a new day, a new discipline, a new point of departure, and he shouted his message abroad in language that all could understand, and he shouted abroad as well his titanic wrath at those who, hearing, closed their ears and sought to stifle his appeal. There was no time for mincing courtesies the world needed a new birth and had first to pass through the scathing fire of truth, the old earth and the old heaven had to be shrivelled up as a roll, and a new earth and heaven had to be discerned
simile,
and
illustration
in their stead.
and scared its blind and dingy guardians, who denounced him for sacrilege.
waste-heap
CHAPTER IX
"
I never fashioned
out a fancied good a service to be done ... a strength denied That might avail him.
Distinct from man's
;
PARACELSUS stayed at Beratzhausen for seven or eight months and worked there in the peace and beauty of the Laber valley. Although injured and wounded, his sensitive mind and
spirit
maintained
their
courage,
their
self-
their dignity. What memory have they left who hurled insult after insult at this their greatest contemporary ? They are gone
respect and
snows of yester-year," and even if the name of one or another survive it is because
like the
"
is
his infamy.
Hohenheim was engaged on the first book of " Paramirum " and progressed steadily. the " " Dr. Strunz tells us that the Paragranum was also written at Beratzhausen, and it is apparent that its Introduction was the fruit of a very
fresh recollection of
his
It
is
171
secution at Basel.
it
172
"VOLUMEN PARAMIRUM"
[CHAP, ix
found expression at Colmar or Esslingen, and " that he kept it till it was required for the Book which more than any other of Paragranum,"
his writings presents in complete form and condensed explanation his whole system of But at Beratzhausen theory and practice. he seems to have been absorbed with the " Volu-
Medicinae Paramirum Theophrasti." It was divided into two parts, together constituting " Paramirum Primum," and to these were gradually added two further parts, which form the " " Paramirum SecunOpus Paramirum," or three books known as third, fourth, dum," and and fifth books of the " Paramirum." We may
men
the
credit Beratzhausen as being the birthplace of " Volumen " and part of the " Opus Para-
mirum." In them he prosecuted the work to which he had now dedicated himself to make known by writing his new system of research and healing, which included diagnosis, treatment, medicine, and the use of powers which are now admitted
into rational practice safeguarded
bility.
If
by
responsi-
him, they should in time read him and learn of him, not for the sake of polemical insistence, but for that great
men would
not
listen to
purpose to which he was dedicated, the good of those who needed healing and were at the mercy of 64 doctors who are no better than executioners." The prohibition to print in Nuremberg was a
1530]
TREATMENT AT AMBERG
173
and yet it could not check his energy. If not in Nuremberg then doubtless elsewhere, perhaps in St. Gallen, or in Zurich, and if not immediately then assuredly in the future.
it
And
after
first
was Basel which rejected him that all " Opus Paramirum," that printed his
"
first
came
During spring and summer he practised his profession and was often sent for to attend The poor he sought out himself. rich patients. His skill was everywhere admitted, his medicines worked marvels of healing, and his personal
influence helped his power. But another sordid tale of maltreatment
and
dishonesty has to be told, which recalls the sickroom of Prince Philip of Baden and the thievish
miserliness of
Canon
Liechtenfels.
lived at
certain
Bastian Castner
Amberg, some thirty miles from Beratzhausen, was suffering acute pain in the leg and had vainly consulted many physicians. He was advised to try Paracelsus, and sent for him, promising to pay the hire of a horse for the journey and to give him food and drink as well as his fee. At first Hohenheim refused to go so far, but he was over-persuaded and rode to Amberg, where, on demanding the money for his horse, he met
with a blunt refusal.
who
He
decided to leave at
once, but was induced by more promises to see the patient and undertake his cure. He was given a room and meals of the scantiest charac-
174
ter
[CHAP, ix
discovered the cause of disease and was proceeding successfully with its treatment, when his patient's brother, or brother-in-law, a Dr. Burtzli, broke
into his room, stole his medicines, and then dismissed him, to carry out the cure himself. All this Hohenheim has told us in the preface to "
Castner's
house.
He
soon
a treatise
"
is
dated
from
my
Amberg, at
my
was
lodging,
12 July 1530." He counsels all doctors to guard against those patients who invite them to take
It
his too
common
from the
experience to receive such treatment rich, although he gave them his many-
sided knowledge, his practised help, and his costly medicines. From the poor he neither exacted
nor desired professional reward, from the rich he claimed it. He expressed his views upon
this point in the Introduction to his three books " " " of the Bertheonse Concerning Wounds
and Sores," first published in 1563 by Adam von Bodenstein. He considers the doctor's fee to be due when the treatment is completed. But this fee is not mere ploughman's, shearer's,
the doctor brings help or shepherd's wages to the sick man, so he deserves more than straw
:
or wool
let
but
if
in
him make no loud outcry for it, but rather obedience to God let him render help to the
evil
man
It
1530]
RELIGIOUS STRIFE
175
hausen for a short time and then set out again on his travels. We do not know their first stages, but in the late autumn of 1530 he was at Esslingen for the second time, and by March, 1531, at St. Gallen, where he had his
headquarters during the rest of that year. In Esslingen he experienced once more a rich
" Prognostications," which ocPerhaps the cupied his mind and pen in the latter part of 1530, led him back to his cellar in Esslingen, since they are of an astrological character.
patient's ingratitude.
They seem
and Protestantism.
At St. Gallen, and indeed throughout SwitzerA land, this tension had reached its climax.
reformer called Kaiser had been burned as a heretic at Schwyz, and this excited the reformed
party to such a degree that Zwingli counselled armed coercion of the Forest Cantons. When Paracelsus arrived at St. Gallen, he found
himself
in
the
midst
of
religious
strife,
his
taking part with the reformers. Indeed, it was due to Vadian that St. Gallen became a Protestant canton.
We
Hohenheim
lived all
summer
and autumn
in the
Christian Studer, who was in bad health and had put himself under the new treatment. Studer was Bartholomew Schobinger's father-
176
in-law,
[CHAP, ix
celsus
and we learn from Schobinger that Parasix months with Studer. But
besides the care of his host, he attended the poor of the town without fee or reward. He
threw himself into the religious fray and helped to spread the knowledge and its message in St. Gallen. It was the evangelical not the and ecclesiastical side of the Reformation political
No
Protestant of them
all
knew
his
it from the which he spent with Trithemius and cited years it again and again as the revealed will of God. He was both doctor and evangelist at St. Gallen in the summer and autumn of 1531. He worked hard at his books too, continued the " " and dedicated its two Opus Paramirum parts as well as the third book to Dr. Joachim von Watt. An incident of that year was the appearance of a comet, perhaps Halley's. This was seen about the middle of August, and Paracelsus observed it from the Hochberg of St. Gallen. He sent a written account of it to Leo Judse at Zurich. Leo, who had just finished his translation of the Bible, put it at once into the hands of a printer at Zurich, and one of the two surviving copies is to be found at the City Library
there.
It
is
entitled
"
middle of August,
By
the
most
1485,
AND
1530]
BATTLE OF CAPPEL
master,
Paracelsus."
177
title-page
learned
The
shows a rough woodcut of a comet. The dedi" cation runs Theophrastus to Master Leo, preacher in Zurich, his greeting. Given on the Saturday after St. Bartholomew's." This fixes the date as August 26, for St. Bartholomew's day fell that year on a Thursday. In this booklet Paracelsus foretells from his observation of the comet trouble, bloodshed, and more parHis ticularly the death of illustrious men.
:
forecast
was speedily
fulfilled.
the
The Protestant cantons blockaded those of Forest, Uri, Schwyz, and Unterwalden, and these assembled eight thousand men and marched to the confines of Zurich between Zug and Cappel. Here, on October 9, a battle was fought in which the Protestant force was defeated. Zwingli had gone with the soldiers to minister to them, and while kneeling beside a wounded man a stone hurled him to the ground and he was then pierced with a lance. He died
where he fell, his body was quartered by his foes and burnt, its ashes scattered to the four
The Benedictine from Einsiedeln, who had joined him in Zurich when he began the Reformation there, was also killed, although he too was there to minister and was unarmed.
winds.
liberty of Switzerland,
freedom to preach in all its cantons, but were rash in bringing it to the test of the they
sword.
12
178
"
[CHAP, ix
chronicled the Rementions Paracelsus Gallen, " in his book Sabbata." A friend of Kessler's called Johann Rutiner kept a diary, written in choice dog-Latin, from 1529 to 1538, and did
Johannes
who
formation
in
not disdain to include gossip in its pages. To him we owe one of Hohenheim's experiences
while there.
He was
worker and it by a wave of his hand. He was asked to exercise this power on a boy called Caspar Tischmacher, whose hand had been seriously injured. Paracelsus operated upon it and took out a small bone. This caused considerable swelling and was not at all what the incensed father had expected, and he summoned Paracelsus before
the magistrates and the surgeons of the city.
Naturally Hohenheim paid no heed to this absurd summons, so Tischmacher cited him to
appear before the High Senate, whose court granted fourteen days in which to consummate the boy's recovery. But although progressing favourably the hand was not quite in order
when the
fortnight expired, and the father flew the magistrates, who refused to listen again to to him, and then to the people's tribune, a man
Paracelsus had carefully tended his patient and knew that the hand was now within three days of complete recovery, so,
called Miiller.
humouring the
with
great
father's
:
superstition,
he
said
"
solemnity
Bind
living
earth-
1531]
DR. JULIUS
HARTMANN
for
179
lo
!
days
it will
be well."
he adds that Paracelsus knew everything because he had travelled all over Europe and
for
Hohenheim
left St.
many
years.
Their
mann
Dr.
in
his
"
and arranged in the order of their the references to his life and travels happening which he was wont to make in explanation or
own
When we reflect subject. that these writings are most voluminous, that they are in old German, something infected by
illustration
of
his
old Swiss, that they are not in the first place autobiographical and are therefore not chronological,
we
some estimate
incurred
Hartmann
by
all
all
Paracelsian
this labour
students.
He
has
supplemented
dis-
puted or obscure points, and his book ranks with those of Dr. Sudhoff as indispensable to all
and less scientific biographers of Theophrastus von Hohenheim. The five books of the " Paramirum " were
less scholarly
completed at
St. Gallen.
The
first
edition of
"
180
[CHAP, ix
was edited by
Bodenstein. The second edition, which comprised all the books, appeared in 1575, edited by Toxites and printed
at
Strassburg
by Christian
Miiller.
third
Hohen-
heim's writings and is a quarto volume of 426 pages, with a portrait of Paracelsus, somewhat
roughly carried out, a half-length, the face turned slightly to the right, the coat open at
the neck and showing shirt and
frill,
a ribbon
round
his
his right
neck from which his jewel hangs, hand holding the round knob of his
is
left grasps its cross-bar. so that it represents him 1540, nine years after he left St. Gallen. There is a great difference between this and the oil painting
1529, when his hair was still dark and he wore a beard. In the woodcut he is very bald
of
with side-locks of grey hair. His the features are more prominent, choly eyes more sunken. Above " Alterius is his favourite motto:
"
face
is
thin,
non
sit
qui
:
Effigies Philippi Theophrasti ab Hohenheim : Omne donum perfectum a Deo suse setatis 47.
imperfectum a diabolo." This portrait is introduced by Huser into " Books each of the ten parts of Hohenheim's
and Writings." It was taken from an engraving by Augustin Hirschvogel, whose monogram AH is within the date 1540 below the last motto.
1589]
It
HUSER'S EDITION
181
has been reproduced again and again, often altered and provided with other mottoes, but
its
variants
vogel's engraving. Dr. Carl Aberle speaks of this particular woodcut as anonymous, copied from Hirschvogel's
engraving, but with only one of its four columns. Hirschvogel painted a portrait of Paracelsus in
1538, from
years later, is a coarse copy of the engraving. The five books of the " Paramirum " occupy 327 quarto pages in Huser's edition, which was
which he made his engraving two and the wood-cut used by Huser
published
by Peter Perna
at Basel in
1589.
Huser tells that us he searched through Upper and Lower Germany, partly in person, partly through other people, for the original manuscripts of Hohenheim's writings and collected a great number, some of which were already in
print, others not yet published.
Many
of
had been destroyed by ignorant people. gives a list of the scholars and doctors who helped him, and this list indicates a great reaction in favour of Hohenheim's teaching forty
Other editions either complete or partial belong to 1603, 1605, and
years
after
his
them Huser
death.
1616-18, the earlier in Latin, published at Frankfort and republished at Geneva in 1658. The " Opus " was frequently republished at Frankfort, Basel, and Cologne in the sixteenth
182
"
[CHAP, ix
edition of the
Dr. Franz Strunz has recently given us a new " Paramirum " with helpful notes,
published by Eugen Diederichs at Jena in 1904. This is based on Huser's, but has been compared with the earlier edition of Adam von
Bodenstein and
original
text,
is
literal
except abbreviations and occasional modernisation of " obsolete phrases. In considering the Para-
for
full
mirum," one of Hohenheim's most important works, I have availed myself of Dr Strunz's
edition.
let himself be transthat would destroy the unique and ancient timbre of his utterances. The original style, unless it is an obstacle to legibility or obscures the sense, has been left as much as possible unchanged, and this has made it difficult to arrange an accurately consistent spelling."
lated
After giving a list of the numerous editions Dr. Strunz introduces the work with these
words
" The Paramirum writings constitute one of the most celebrated and most characteristic If the Book Paraof Hohenheim's books. is a statement granum,' strongly polemical, of the new physical science and medicine, the Volumen and Opus Paramirum offer us almost everything of importance concerning re6
'
'
'
'
'
1531]
CONTENTS OF THE
"
PARAMIRUM "
183
medicine, and philosophy with which mind was continually occupied. These his thoughts are here expressed in words, some of
search,
them in full detail, some briefly indicated, some again in a comprehensive sketch which we find fully worked out in other writings. The two Paramirum books contain the most important constituents of Hohenheim's system. They exhibit lucidly his own method as student of nature, doctor, and philosopher, although his theological side remains somewhat All comes here to the in the background.
' ' .
. .
surface his natural philosophy concerning the macrocosm and the microcosm, born of the renascence spirit, his solemn sense of the unity and universality of God, the world and the
:
soul,
terest in
his lofty self-consciousness, his eager inmen and the new individual life, his
joy in the light of nature, his critical use of experiences and very specially his systematic and comparative research by experiment."
which arise from poison or foulness in meat and drink, an origin which he calls tartarus diseases arising from nature, some from the stellar microcosms, some from the foul elements, some from the natural humours, of which there are many hundred kinds (a palpable hit at Galen's four humours) diseases which are set
the stars
;
diseases
in action
184
"VOLUMEN PARAMIRUM"
;
[CHAP, ix
of evil disposition,
diseases
and submit through the secret purpose of God. " In the two books of the Opus Paramirum,"
the origins of diseases are treated in a more positive manner, as derived from the corruption of the quicksilver, salt, and sulphur in the micro-
cosm.
The
third
book
treats
in
detail
of
coming through
is
the fourth
specially
oc-
cupied with the special function and diseases and the fifth, in five subdivisions, of women
;
handles those diseases which are supernatural and come about by the misuse of the imagination,
in
of
which if they cure at all do so by the power of the devil. There is a prologue to each section.
In order to indicate his
and
meagrely
The
difficulty of selection is great. Until Hohenheim's works receive in England the scholarly interest
and appreciation which they have secured for the last thirty years in Germany and Austria, the exact position which this great man held
in the
development
of
be rightly recognised and our acquaintance with the history of medicine must remain
inadequate.
1531]
ENS ASTRALE
I
185
Part
celsus
of
explains in
calls
Paramirum " eleven short chapters what Parathe Ens Astrale. From the first
the
"
Volumen
to the fourth of these he contests the prevailing belief that the stars affect men from their birth
to their death.
The stars," he says in the fourth chapter, control nothing in us, suggest nothing, incline to nothing, own nothing they are free from
"
;
"
us and
for
we
warmth, and the consummation of what we eat and drink comes from them but
cold,
:
the
human
They
are so far
and so far do we need them as we need warmth and cold, food and drink and air but further they are not in us nor we in them. Thus has the Creator designed. Who knows what there is in the firmament which can serve us ? For neither the clarity of the Sun, nor the arts of Mercury, nor the beauty of Venus helps us but the sunshine helps us, for it makes the summer when the fruit ripens and those things that nourish us grow. But observe if a child, which has been born under the luckiest planets and stars, and under those richest in good gifts, has in its own character those qualities that run counter to those gifts, whose blame is it ? It is the fault of the blood, which comes by generation. Not the stars, but the
useful to us
:
We may
186
"
[CHAP, ix
logical experiments in Esslingen had convinced him of the futility of horoscopes. In the fifth chapter he continues his reason-
ing
One man excels another in knowledge, in wealth or in power. And you ascribe it to the stars but that we must banish from our minds
;
:
"
good fortune comes from ability, and ability comes from the spirit. Every man has a special spirit according to the character of which he has a special talent, and if he exercises that talent he has good fortune. Understand that this spirit is the Archeus and we will not treat of it further lest we wander from our point.
You say also concerning the varying stature of men that so long a time has passed since Adam that amongst so many men it is impossible
that one should resemble another, with the exception of twins, and that this is a great miracle. And you attribute this to the heavenly bodies and to their mysterious powers. You should know that God has decreed a special feminine entity and that till all types, colours, forms of mankind are fulfilled, and these are innumerable, people will be born who will be as the dead have been. When the last day comes, then will all the types and fashions of men be fulfor only then will the point be reached filled
:
when
men
all colours, forms, types, and fashions of are at an end and no new fashion can be
Nor imagine that you can make the world older, or any part of it. For when all the forms and fashions of mankind have been
created.
1531]
METEORON
187
fulfilled and no new type can be called into being, the age of the world is at an end."
and rightly, that if there were no air, things would perish. But the air is held in the firmament and if it were not in the firmament the firmament would melt away, and that we call the Meteoron. And observe
say,
all
You
heaven and earth and all the elements live it and by it. ... To explain what this Meteoron is, note first an illustration. A room shut up and locked has an odour which is not its own, but which comes from whomsoever has been inside. Therefore, whoever goes inside must be sensible of the odour, which is not generated by the air but comes from him who has been in the room. Now understand
in
we speak of the air in order that we may explain the Ens Astrale. You allege that the air comes from the movement of the firmament that we do not stand still, but that the wind proves itself to be meteoric. The air comes from the Most High and was before all created
that
:
things, the first of all : after which the others were created. The firmament exists by the air
therefore the air does not come from the firmament. For the firmament is maintained by the air, as man is and if the firmament stood still, there would still be the air. If the world were to dissolve when the firmament stood still, it would be because the firmament had no air and because
as well as all other created things
: ;
188
[CHAP, ix
the air had melted away, and then all mankind all the elements must pass away, for all are maintained by the air that is Meteoron This air may become poisoned and magnum. changed and men breathe it in, and since man's life dwells in it, so must his body, which seizes on what is in Meteoron magnum and taints itself therewith. Just like the air in the room, there is something which taints the Meteoron, remains in it and proceeds from it."
and
develops
from the foregoing his theory of the maladies which are due to the heavenly bodies.
"
The
stars,"
he
"
says,
have
their
own
:
nature and properties just as men have upon the earth. They change within themselves are sometimes better, sometimes worse, sometimes sweeter, sometimes sourer, and so on. When they are good in themselves no evil
comes from them but infection proceeds from them when they are evil. Now observe that the stars surround the whole world just as its shell does an egg the air comes through the Then shell and goes straight to the earth. observe that those stars which are poisonous taint the air with their poison, so that where
;
:
the poisoned air comes, at that place maladies break out according to the property of the star the whole air of the world is not poisoned, only a part of it according to the property of the star. It is the same with the beneficent properties that too is Ens Astrale the vapour, of the stars
:
:
1531]
189
exhalation, exudation of the stars mingle with the air. For thence come cold, warmth, drought, moisture, and such like according to their
Observe that the stars themselves properties. do not act they only infect through their exhalations that part of the Meteoron by which
:
we are poisoned and enfeebled. And in manner the Ens A sir ale alters our body
;
this
for
good or evil. A man whose blood is hostile to such exhalations becomes ill but one whose nature is not hostile is not hurt. He too who is finely fortified against such evils suffers nothing, because he overcomes the poison by the vitality of his blood, or by medicine which combats the evil vapours from above. Observe then that all created things are opposed to men, and men are opposed to them all may hurt men and men can do nothing to them." yet
:
more
"
is it
fully
is
fish-pond which has its right Meteoron but if the cold becomes too great full of fish freezes and the fish die, because the Meteoron opposed to the nature of water. But this
;
cold comes not from the Meteoron, but from the heavenly bodies whose property it is. The
heat of the sun makes the water too warm and the fish die on this account also. Certain heavenly bodies effect these two things and others make the Meteoron acid, bitter, sweet, sharp, arsenical and so on, a hundred various flavours. Every great change in the Meteoron
190
[CHAP, ix
changes the body, and so note how the stars contaminate the Meteoron, so that we
ill and die of natural exhalations. No doctor need wonder at this, for there is as much poison in the stars as on the earth. And he must remember that there is no disease without a poison. For poison is the beginning of every disease and through the poison all diseases, whether in the body or occasioned by wound, become disclosed. You will discover if you recognise this, that more than fifty diseases, and fifty more besides not one of which is like
fall
still more are another, are all due to arsenic due to salt, still more to mercury, still more to red arsenic and sulphur. We point this out to you to make you realise that you may seek in vain for the special cause of one particular illness, so long as one substance gives rise to so find out the substance and you will many then find out the special cause. And hold fast the rule that you must know the substance which has caused the malady rather than the
: :
will prove."
In the tenth and eleventh chapters Paracelsus continues to develop his theory of the Entia Astralia and their influences on the earth and
Astralia
arsenic
;
poisons
as salts
produce
1531]
SIMILE OF
THE ALCHEMIST
191
dropsy and tumours, as orpiment or flowers of some produce fevers, as the bitter poisons. That you may fully understand this we will show you how maladies are divided. Observe that those Entia which go into the body and there encounter the Liquorem Vitce produce maladies in the body others produce sores and wounds and are those which encounter Virtutem Expulsivam. All theory is contained in these two."
arsenic
;
:
of the
"
Volumen "
deals with
origins of diseases,
and par-
ticularly with the dangers from food and drink. He brings forward his famous simile of the al-
chemist placed by God in each of His creatures, whose business it is to separate the evil from
the good in their nourishment.
"
That alchemist
is
clever
and to leave alone the others, so the alchemist uses the good qualities of our food for our nourishment and expels those things that would harm us. The ox eats grass, man eats the ox. Every creature has its own food. The peacock eats snakes and lizards, animals complete in themselves, but not good for food except to the peacock. So each man needs his own food and his alchemist to separate the evil from the good. A pig will eat what men throw away and that proves that the alchemist in the pig needs to be far more careful than he needs to be in men.
and
how
192
[CHAP, ix
The alchemist takes the good and changes it into a tincture which he sends through the body
to nourish the flesh and all that is in the body. This alchemist dwells in the stomach, where
he works and cooks. The man eats a piece of flesh in which is both bad and good. When the flesh reaches the stomach there is the alchemist who divides it. What does not belong to health he casts away to its own place, but sends the good wherever it is needed. This is the Creator's decree thus is the body main:
tained that nothing poisonous shall affect it. " But there is an Essentia and a Venenum in the Essentia supeverything needed by man the Venenum is the origin of many ports him, illnesses. For sometimes the alchemist does his work imperfectly and does not divide the bad from the good thoroughly and so decay arises in the mixed good and bad and there is All maladies from the Ens Veneni indigestion.
:
arise
this proves
that the alchemist is not doing his work thoroughly. Therefore decay ensues, and that is the mother of all such maladies, for it poisons the body. Pure water can be tinged to any colour and the body is like that water and takes the colour of decay, and there is no colour of decay which has not its origin in poison. There is either local decay or decay of the organs of expulsion. For decay hurts what is good and generates disease. Each poison has its own way out of the body sulphur through the nose, arsenic through the ears, and every other poison is expelled through its own organ.
:
1531]
DE ENTE DEI
193
And if they are not expelled then they become the source of diseases. But the instruments of the alchemist may become diseased without his being able to hinder the change, through the air and through the mouth, for the air is full of poison, and this poison may enter the body and bring about disease, destroying the members and the instruments with which the alchemist works so that he is powerless."
The fifth part of the " Volumen Paramirum," De Ente Dei, consists of eight chapters especially addressed to those who believe in God and who realise that all maladies come from God, that though some originate in the conditions of nature, God is the Creator of nature and that
He
"
ment.
God gives health and sickness and He gives the medicine to heal our sickness. No doctor knows the end of our sickness, for God holds that in His hand. For every sickness is purit is gatorial, therefore no doctor can heal essential that God should end the chastisement and that the doctor should be one who works in the consciousness of predestined purgatorial chastisement."
:
sends the doctor, who is powerless without Him, and he appeals to doctors to be Christians and like to Christ.
points out that
He
God
"
God
13
will
If
He
194
"VOLUMEN PARAMIRUM"
[CHAP, ix
:
works a miracle, He does it through men this He does through the doctor. But since there are two kinds of doctors, those who heal miraculously and those who heal through medicine, understand before all things that he who believes works miracles. But because faith is not strong in all, and yet the hour of chastisement comes to an end, the physician accomplishes that which God would have done miraculously had there been faith in the sick man."
" Volumen ParaParacelsus concludes the " mirum with an earnest injunction to physicians to choose the true art of medicine and not
fantasy
"
is
reason, wisdom,
and
sense,
and
has
won
no ground to go upon only formulas that are past and done with, as you know well
enough."
CHAPTER X
"OPUS PARAMIRUM"
Tis in the advance of individual minds That the slow crowd should ground their expectation
Eventually to follow.
THE
"
consists of
two books,
which treat of the three primary substances, salt, sulphur, and mercury, as origin and cause of disease. Liber Primus has eight chapters, and is prefaced by an appeal to Dr. Joachim
von Watt to forsake the errors of the scholastic school of medicine and as a lover of truth to
adhere to the truth.
"
behold such a decision in thee," " and may not spend my time says Paracelsus, in St. Gallen in vain, I am constrained to arouse thy interest in all knowledge of nature and creation to accurate discernment, that we may both be remembered amongst the many who are in medicine. For since thou art a supporter of medicine and that by no means the least, thou wilt discover in accepting the truth and in furthering it many things which concern nor wilt thou the less become a the eternal of truth in matters concerning the body promoter wherein the eternal dwells."
I
That
may
105
196
"OPUS PARAMIRUM"
'
[CHAP,
Both books develop Hohenheim's theory of Three Principles," a theory which he carried into the intellectual and spiritual as
the
well as into every part of the material world of nature and of man, of the macrocosm and the
microcosm.
These three," he writes, " form man and are man and he is them, receiving from them and in them all that is good and all that is evil for the physical body. So that the physician must know these three and must understand their combinations, their maintenance, and their For in these three lie all health and analysis. all sickness, whether whole or partial. In them therefore will be discovered the measure of health and the measure of disease for the must not overlook the weight, number, physician and measure of disease. For according to these he can estimate the source whence it derives, and it is of great importance to understand this well before going further. Death also is due to these three, because if life be withdrawn from the primary substances in whose union life and man exist, man must die.
4
:
"
From
proceed
disease,
symptoms, development, and specific properties and all that is essential God has so fashioned for a doctor to know. He medicine that it is not consumed by fire
. .
.
has also so fashioned the physician that he For the physician is made is born from fire.
1531]
THE PHYSICIAN
;
197
therefore by medicine and not by himself all nature, and nature is the must he study world with all that it contains. Arid what nature teaches him that must he seek to understand. But let him seek nothing in his own knowledge, but in nature's light let him discover the teaching
locked up in her storehouse. When the doctor finds nature open and unconcealed before him, then will the origin of health and sickness be unobscured. For since he is a doctor by and from medicine and not without medicine, and since medicine is older than he, he is out of medicine and not medicine out of him. Let him search and learn from what has made him and not from himself."
Paracelsus points out that the finest mind comes into the world empty. It may be supremely fitted to hold the treasures of learning,
just as a well-made casket is fitted to hold the treasure which a man may win to fill it. So
the prceclarium ingenium is empty as the casket until the man who desires to be a physician fills it with the fruits of his research, with his
and with medical knowledge. What he has acquired and experienced he keeps therein and makes use of when it is required. He illustrates this from the crafts of glass-making, carpentering, and house-building.
skill
fine intelligence is the casket of medicine, but the treasure to be held in it comes out
"
The
198
"OPUS PARAMIRUM"
[CHAP,
the fire in which it is made. The test of the doctor is that he has learnt his knowledge and skill in the fire of experience."
He
symbolic
its
name of Vulcan, no god, but a workman, who brings what God has fashioned into
completion. Experimental science is the workshop of Vulcan, the forge at whose fire all such perfecting takes place.
There are two kinds of knowledge," he " that of experience and that of our own says,
cleverness.
:
"
The knowledge of experience is twofold one kind is the foundation and teacher the other is his misleading of the physician and error. He receives the first from the fire when he plies Vulcan's tools in transmuting, forging, reducing, solving, perfecting with all the processing pertaining to such work. And it is by such experimenting that the three substances are discovered, all that is contained
;
it may once prove right without experiment but not invariably, and it does not do to build upon such a foundation. Error is built upon For it, error glossed over with sophistries. we cannot be taught medicine by hearsay or by reading, but by learning. Nature in the fire We of experiment shall be our teacher. can no longer believe in the four humours existing in men, although it is a matter of faith medicine does not belong to faith, but to sight.
. . . . . .
:
1531]
199
of the soul belong to the conditions of the body are visible. because of these errors and this false faith
who
calls
Lord
Lord
is
chapters which follow, Paracelsus the three primary substances and the explains
In
the
diseases arising from each with frequent reference to Galen's theory of the Four Humours, whose fallacy he exposes as one kept in no
an earthly and unauthentic source. Out of his own theory he develops the homoeopathic
system of
"
like to like.
is
the taste other than a need in the anatomy to which nothing is important except to reach its own like ? It follows that
as this gustus is distributed to every member in the body, each desires its own like, the sweet desires the sweet, the bitter desires the bitter, each in its degree and measure, as those held by the plants sweet, sour, and bitter. Shall the liver seek medicine in manna, honey, sugar, or in the polypody fern ? No, for like seeks Nor in the order of anatomy shall its like. cold be a cure for heat, or heat for cold. It would be a wild disorder did we seek our cure in contraries. A child asks his father for bread and he does not give him a snake. God has created us and He gives us what we ask, not snakes so it would be bad doctoring to give
;
What
bitters
where sugar
is
required.
The
gall
must
200
"
it
OPUS PARAMIRUM
"
[CHAP,
asks, and the heart too, and the a fundamental pillar upon which the physician should rest to give to each part of the anatomy the special thing that accords with it. For the bread which the child eats has an anatomy similar to his own, and the
liver.
have what
It is
it were his own therefore body each sickness in the anatomy must have its own accordant medicine. He who does not understand the anatomy finds it difficult to act if he be honest and simple but it is worse with those whose honour is small and whom shame and crime do not trouble. They are the
child eats as
of the light of nature. What blind asks bread from God and receives poison ? If thou art experienced and grounded in anatomy thou wilt not give a stone for bread. For know that thou art the father rather than the doctor of thy patients therefore feed them as a father does his child, and as a father must
foes
man
support his child according to his need and must give him the food which becomes himself, so must the doctor care for his patients."
fifth
chapter with an
potions and drugs in against use and gives the warrant of Christ's
the
for the
employment
of oil
and wine
wounds.
"
Christ
is the Truth has given us no but one that is compatible and remedy arcane. For far be it from us to say that Christ knew not the simplicia of nature. Therefore
who
false
1581]
oil
is
THREE ANATOMIES
.
. .
201
and wine must be competent, else there Let it be no foundation in medicine. manifest to you that a grain of wheat yields no fruit unless it be cast into the ground and die thus the wound is the earth and the oil there and wine the grain."
:
to Paracelsus
criminals
thought
little of
who had been hanged, but he To their work and its results.
body revealed the
living
him only
the,- living
processes, the dead body was too rapidly transmuted to give authentic facts. But not until " " Paracelsus was dead did the term anatomy
receive its
modern
sected the
heim gives
"
who
There are three anatomies which should be in man first Localis, which tells us form, proportions, substance of a man and all that the second shows the living pertains to him
made
sulphur, the flowing mercury, the sharp salt and the third instructs us in each member how a new anatomy, that of death, comes in, Mortis Anatomia, and in what manner and For the light of nature shows likeness he comes.
;
202
"
OPUS PARAMIRUM
"
[CHAP,
that death comes in as many forms as there are so many kinds of species from the elements corruption so many kinds of death, and as each corruption gives birth to another, it requires
:
anatomy
after
it
comes
in
many forms
die
until one
another we
all
through corruption. tomies, there is also a uniform science in the anatomy of medicine, and beyond them all are firmament, earth, water, and air thither ana:
brought into new action and the firmaand all the stars appear in it. For Saturn
is
until these are discovered, the science of medicine is not fully revealed. For as the tree grows
all
that seems
it is
now
life, there, and grow must come to pass that it shall be visible. For the light of nature is a light to make men and it must see and it is neither dark nor dim come to pass that we shall use our eyes in that light to see those things that we require to see.
into
new
for
They will not be otherwise than they are now but we must be otherwise able to see them, and
;
then the light of nature will give vision to the very peasant."
My
"
tion
old friend
Lady Huggins
writes
The
Sir Isaac Newton's discovery of the decomposition of light by the prism, his experiments
'
'
Opticks
pre-
1815-62]
203
Royal Society in 1675. The dark lines which Newton failed to see in the solar spectrum were first described by Wollaston and about 1815 Fraunhofer made a in 1792 advance and mapped some six hundred great of them. Later on the way was prepared, more or less, by Foucault, Balfour, Stewart, and Angstrom and prophetic guesses were made by Stokes and Lord Kelvin. " But it was Kirchhof and Bunsen at Heidelsented
the
; ;
berg in 1859 who first proved beyond question that the dark lines in the solar spectrum are produced by the absorption of the vapours of the same substances, which when suitably heated give out corresponding bright lines ; and further that many of the solar absorbing vapours are those of substances found upon the earth. These epoch-making experiments mark the birth of the science of Spectrum Analysis.
"
stars
The extension of spectrum analysis to the and other heavenly bodies soon followed.
The
effective founders of stellar spectroscopy, 1862, being, in England, Sir William Huggins,
with
whom was
A.
Miller
;
associated
at
first
Professor
Italy Padre Secchi. The chief work of Secchi was a survey of some four thousand stars and their distribution into four classes or types a most useful work. " The work of Huggins and Miller was of a more searching and far-reaching character, and consisted of, first, an elaborate mapping in
W.
and
in
wave-lengths of the spectra of the chemical elements and second, of the mapping of a large
;
204
"
OPUS PARAMIRUM
and
"
[CHAP,
number
of stellar spectra,
their
comparison
birth
spectra of the planets were early inand later by Vogel. vestigated by Huggins
;
The
own the spectrum of Saturn has some special peculiarities, although also showing many of the Fraunhofer lines. In a later and novel astrophysical research, begun in 1876, into the ultra-violet region of the spectrum, possible only through photography, the eye being incompetent to see beyond certain wave-lengths, at each end of the spectrum, Sir William and Lady Huggins not only discovered further proofs of the presence in the stars of the chemical elements as we know them, or can modify them, but also discovered facts relating to hydrogen which were then
similar to our
;
'
unknown
to terrestrial chemistry.
Some
years
later these
new
tory by Cornu."
These
scientific
me
expressly to illustrate Hohenheim's marvellous " " inductive intuition. The Light of Nature
truly
made him
Paracelsus
celebrated chapter by condemning names given to diseases on the basis of a single symptom,
instead of from either their origin, substance, and course, or their treatment, and he closes
with
an
appeal to
members
of
the
medical
1531]
205
and theological professions to open their eyes and see the wonderful works of God in all that concerns the body and all that concerns the
soul.
For the two professions cannot be separated one from the other the body is the dwelling place of the soul, therefore the one depends upon the other and the one reveals the other."
:
"
The
final
marvellous
chapters of this book relate to the hidden powers by which the deall
is
velopment of
"
achieved
but only in the is the craftsman grow. who makes the invisible visible. All our nourishment becomes ourselves we eat ourselves into being, and so also in sickness, with this difference, that the medicine must be acseed contains
it
its
tree,
ground can
The earth
cording to the character of the sickness. All that is worn out in health is restored to each member by and in itself. Do not be astonished at this a tree which stands in the field would not be a tree had it no nourishment. What is nourishment ? It is not mere feeding or but it is restoration of the form. What stuffing, is hunger ? It is a reminder of future death in the waste of the members. For the form is carved God Himself in the mother's body. by This carving abides in the form of each type. But it wastes and dies without addition from without. He who does not eat does not grow,
:
206
"OPUS PARAMIRUM"
[CHAP,
he who does not eat does not last. Therefore he who grows grows by nourishment, and the shaper is with him to restore the form, and without it he cannot exist whence it follows that the nourishment of each carven type has the form within itself in which it makes to grow and restores. Rain has the tree in itself and so has the earth-sap rain is its drink, liquor terrce its food by which the tree grows. What is it that grows ? What the tree absorbs from rain and earth-sap becomes wood and bark the shaper is in the seed, wood and bark are in the liquor terrce and the rain the craftsman in the seed can make wood out of these two things. And it is the same with plants the seed has the beginning in which is the form and the craftsif it is to come man, the type and property
:
further, the rain, dew, and liquor terrce must develop the plant, for in these are the stalks,
leaves, flowers,
and so on. There must therefore be an outward form in all nourishment for growth and if we do not receive it we do not grow up, but die in
"
:
the
up,
neglected
form.
And
if
we
are
grown
:
we must preserve our form lest it waste away. For we have in us what resembles fire which consumes our form away. If we did
not supply and support the form of our body, it would die neglected. Therefore what we eat becomes ourselves, so that we do not die through in this way we eat consuming of the form our fingers, our body, blood, flesh, foot, brain, For every bite we take conheart, et cetera. tains in itself all our members, all that is in:
1531]
NOURISHMENT
all
207
of
which he
at
is
When summer is hand, the trees become hungry because they would
.
then put out leaves, flowers, and fruit. They have not got these within themselves else would trees that are cut down put forth leaves as well as those which stand in the ground. They stand in the earth whence they receive these things into their own form, where the craftsman shapes them according to the kind of each
:
Know therefore that is his contribution. in order to preserve their form and type that
.
. .
from being consumed, all living things become hungry and thirsty. . . . " There are two men, visible and invisible that which is visible is two-fold, the body and soul that which is invisible is single and of the body, as an image carved out of wood in which This is the no body was at first discerned. nourishment, which once in the body goes into it does not remain in one all its members for the great Artist but is richly used part, carves it, He who makes man, that is, He disNow we know that tributes to the members. we eat ourselves every tree and every creature that lives, and we must now learn further what We follows from this concerning medicine. do not eat bone, blood vessels, ligaments, and rarely brain, heart, and suet, therefore bone does not make bone, nor brain brain, but every If the bone is invisible bite contains all these. Bread is blood, but it is none the less there.
: ;
:
who
sees
it ?
it
is
also fat,
who
in
sees
it ?
...
is
the stomach
208
"OPUS PARAMIRUM"
:
[CHAP,
good. He can make iron out of sulphur, which he is there daily and shapes the man sulphur to his form. He can make diamonds according out of salt, and gold out of mercury but he is more anxious concerning men than concerning things, so he labours at him in all that is necesbring him the material, let him divide sary and shape it as it should be he knows the
is
: : ;
measure,
weight,
number,
proportion,
length
and
"
all.
Know then that every creature is two-fold, one out of the seed, the other out of the nourishhe has death within himself and must ent maintain himself against it."
:
out that although the body which a man receives at first is given him in justice, that with which
he
"
is
maintained
is
He receives his first nourishment from his mother through mother-love, and then he receives it by the mercy of God, to whom his Give us this day our daily petition rises Give us this daily bread,' which also means
'
:
It is for this that Christ ' The us to pray, just as if He had said taught received from your mother is not suffibody it might have died to-day, yesterday, cient or long ago.' Bread is now and henceforth you live no longer by the body of your body therefore but by the body of mercy justice,
pray
bread,
your
that
is,
Father
for
1531]
209
we eat ourselves daily the body of mercy but in mercy and prayer." not in justice
The eighth chapter expands
of
this conception
its
daily renewal
and counsels
involved in
that moderation
in eating
:
which
is
not more than we need "In this manner we are renewed. day by day. But as we use manure to grow our bread, disease may come from it, and if we eat too much, many diseases will ensue which would have not come had we observed Christ's commandment and
the daily petition
His petition.
is
For such maladies the physician provided, for God is merciful and forgives
our trespasses. The physician is provided to protect the body in which the soul dwells. Therefore the office of physician is a high one and not so easy as many imagine. For just as Go hence, Christ commissioned the apostles cleanse the lepers, make straight the crooked, give sight to the blind,' so the physician is as much concerned in these things as the He therefore who does not know apostles. how to cleanse leprosy does not understand he who cannot make the power of medicine straight the crooked is no doctor. For God has not appointed the doctor only for colds, headaches, abscesses, and toothache, but also for leprosy, epilepsy, and the like without exception. All healing substances are in the earth; they grow there, but the men are not there who should gather them were the right men there unperverted by lying sophistry, we should be
'
:
: :
210
"OPUS PARAMIRUM"
[CHAP,
to see. For the sophistical high fashion leaves the mysteries of nature unrevealed with all their hidden virtues. Such doctors justify their Such and such a disease ignorance by saying is incurable. which they do not only By
'
expose their folly, but also their mendacity. For God has permitted no disease to come whose cure He has not provided. Have ye forgotten
to us daily our day's body, not impart to us the means to " heal our diseases, each at its appointed hour ?
that
God imparts
and
shall
He
This chapter ends with the reminder that nature is mysterious, hidden, that she works in a mysterious way, that this way is not by
it
magic, sorcery, or by aid of the devil, but that is occult so that men may inquire into it,
many
we
knowledge,
For these things were not only concealed the apple forbidden to Adam, but were concealed also in many other things which it might have been better not to discover. For God has forbidden some things to make known their power. Poisons are on the earth and in them is death, and other things are on the earth in whom is life. There is that which makes sickness and there is also that which makes But there is little searching out of health. such things, little trouble taken to gain knowledge. The profession is ruined by symptom-seeking
in
:
1531]
211
that suffices to produce the fee and they desire only that. Since so little suffices, why should they exert themselves ? The penny is what they seek."
of the
"
Opus Paramirum
"
consists, like the first, of eight chapters, which treat in detail of the three primary substances.
Paracelsus shows that although a grain of corn seems to be one substance, it is in reality three, and in the same way the human
first,
In the
body
"
combined
as to form a unity.
The body," he
"
says,
is
developed from
sulphur, that is, the whole body is one sulphur, and that a subtle sulphur which burns and des-
troys invisibly. Blood is one sulphur, flesh is another, the parts of the head another, the marrow another, and so on and this sulphur is volatile. But the different bones are also
;
in scientific sulphur, only their sulphur is fixed each sulphur can be distinguished. analysis But the stiffening together of the body comes
:
from salt without the salt no part of the body could be grasped ; for from salt the diamond receives its hard texture, the lead its soft texAll ture, alabaster its soft texture, and so on.
:
stiffening or coagulation
is
from
salt.
There
is
therefore one salt in the bones, another in the blood, another in the flesh, another in the brain, and so on. For as many as there are sulphurs there are also salts. The third substance of
the body
is
mercury, which
is
fluid.
All parts
212
"OPUS PARAMIRUM"
their
flesh
:
[CHAP,
of the body have blood has one, the the marrow, each mercury. So that
has
mercury has as
as sulphur
and
salt.
its
various parts must coagulate and stiffen and must have fluid the three form and unite one body. It is one body but of three substances. " salt Sulphur burns, it is only a sulphur
a complete form,
an alkali, for it is fixed mercury is a vapour or smoke, for it does not burn, but dissolves in fire. Know then that all dissolution, corarises from these three." ruption,
is
;
Paracelsus then brings his system into the consideration of disease, its varieties, features,
conditions, complexion, development, and cure. The second chapter is given to medicines in
How
"
cosmic
is
his
view
:
may be
gathered from
The three substances are in the four elefor out of the ments, or mothers of all things elements proceed all things from earth come
;
:
plants, trees and all their varieties metals, stones, and all minerals ;
from
fire,
cosm
and hail. And broken up and destroyed, part becomes earth, and so wonderful that in brief time it bears the fruits whose seed has been sown therein, and this the doctor should know. Out of the
is
1531]
MAN
;
HIS
OWN DOCTOR
213
broken body, too, comes the other element of and as water is the mother of the water minerals, the alchemist can compound rubies out of it. And the dissolution too gives the third element, fire, from which hail can be drawn. And air too ascends with the rising of the breath, just as dew forms inside a closed There is another transmutation after glass. these, and it yields every kind of sulphur, salt,
and mercury.
to
make
visible the
contains
much
necessary is it therefore microcosmic world, for it that is for a man's health, his
How
water of life, his arcanum, his balsam, his golden drink and the like. All these things are in the as they are in the outer world, microcosm so are they in the inner world." just
;
He
all
uses the terms of ideal alchemy to signify healing powers resident in the body of man,
as they are resident in the body of nature. There follows a passage of great significance, one of which the medical practitioners of his time were in dire need and whose value it took
centuries to prove
for as Therefore man is his own doctor he helps nature she gives him what he needs, and gives him his herbal garden according to the requirements of his anatomy. If we consider and observe all things fundamentally we discover that in ourselves is our physician and in our own nature are all things that we need. what is needed for the Take our wounds of wounds ? Nothing except that the healing
;
:
"
214
"
OPUS PARAMIRUM
"
[CHAP,
flesh should grow from within outwards, not from the outside inwards. Therefore the treat-
ment
of
wounds
is
no contingency from without may hinder our nature in her working. In this way our nature heals itself and levels and fills up itself, as surgery teaches the experienced surgeon. For
the mumia is the man himself, the mumia is the balsam which heals the wound mastic, will not give a morsel of flesh ; gums, glaze but the physician's province is to protect the working of nature so as to assist it."
:
Hohenheim's use
of the
word mumia to
signify
the power of nature in the body, the healing force within, must not be confounded with the practice of that time to add a shred of dried mummy, or of mummy-cloth, to potions administered
in
the
sick,
in
his
poem,
And
Egyptian's fine worm-eaten shroud Which breaks to dust when once unrolled.
This splendid reform in surgery is further " Greater Surexplained in a later work, his
gery," written in 1536, but its discovery belongs to the years spent in the Dutch, Danish, and Ambroise Pare, who in 1531 Italian wars.
old,
was
1531]
215
treatment, and he acknowledged his debt to Paracelsus in the earliest, incomplete edition of his works, an acknowledgment endorsed by Dr. Maignan in 1840, when Fare's complete
his editorship.
celsus,
of medicine," continues Para"is to be understood in two ways, in the great world and in man. One way is prothe other curative. If we protect tective, nature she uses her own science, for without science she would not succeed. But when doctors require to use their science, then are they the healers."
The power
Next follows the form in which he apprehended the famous Renascence conception of the macrocosm and the microcosm, to which we owe the initial steps leading to the liberation of physics from metaphysics.
Since man derives from limbo and limbo the whole world, it follows that each several thing in one finds its like in the other. For were man not made out of the whole in every part of the whole, he could not be the microcosm, the little world, nor would he be capable of attracting to himself all that is in the great world. But as he is made out of the whole, all that he eats out of the great world is part for he must be maintained by that of himself of which he is made. For as a son is born from his father and no one helps the son so naturally
:
"
is
216
"
OPUS PARAMIRUM M
[CHAP,
as the father, in the same way the curative members of the outer world help the members of the inner world. For the great world has
all
as
human proportions, divisions, parts, members, man has and man receives these in food
;
and medicine. These parts are separated one from another for the sake of the whole and its
form.
In
science
their
general
body
is
the
Physicum Corpus. So man's body receives the body of the world, as a son his father's blood for these are one blood and one body separated only by the soul, but in science without separa;
then that in natural philosophy heaven and earth, air and water are a man and man is a world with heaven, earth, air, and water, just as in science. Saturn receives his Saturnian microcosm from the heavens and receives the Jovian microcosm from the Jupiter heavens balm receives its microcosm of balm from the earth the gilly-flower receives its
tion.
It
follows
from the earth ; and the minerals take each its microcosm from water ; and the dew and manna from the air ; and they are all in union therefore heaven, earth, air, and water are one substance, not four, nor two, nor three, but one where they are not in union, the substance has been destroyed or broken up. " We must understand therefore that when we administer medicine, we administer the whole world that is, all the virtue of heaven, Because if there is sickearth, air, and water. ness in the body, all the healthy members must For fight against it, not only one, but all. one sickness can be death to them all note
of gilly-flower
; : :
:
microcosm
1581]
217
struggles against sickness with all her power. Therefore your medicine must contain the whole firmament of both upper and lower spheres. Think with what energy nature strives against death when she takes heaven and earth with all their powers to help her. So too must the soul fight against the devil Nature has a horror of with all her might. death whom our eyes cannot cruel and bitter But nature sees see, nor our hands clutch. therefore she and knows and clutches him the powers of heaven and earth against employs the terrible one, for terrible he is and monstrous, hideous and harsh. So He who made him found him, Christ on the Mount of Olives, who sweated blood and prayed His Father to remove him from Him it is but reasonable therefore that nature should abhor him. For the better death is known, the greater is the value of medicine, a refuge which the wise seek.
. .
how nature
'
still
descants
;
upon death,
its
in the fourth
powers and
substances and the diseases originated by their corruption. He notes among the diseases at'"
tributable "*
"
to
i
mercury
i
gout,
mania,
"""
frenzy,
In the pustules, syphilis, leprosy and the like. fifth chapter, and its varieties, dealing^with^salt
he attributes to their corruption the different diseases of the skin,_as^^J^^^>J^chm^ marige eczema. The sixth chapter explains the action of sulphur in the four elements as the origin of
9
218
"
OPUS PARAMIRUM
"
[CHAP,
the elemental diseases, which he classifies as cold, hot, dry, and moist.
^ jay these__and otherjyeviouslv ^explained conditions. jjfuch_diseases, he says, are of two kinds, those which are dormant in
the seed and those which arise from_^pecific jnfluences "
;
There are influences which cause sweating, purgation, heat and the like and which must be reckoned with, for they are specific maladies they do not spring from visible causes, but are innate and of such a nature that one man has a tendency to sweat, another to purgation, another to this or that. For know that from the spermata far more births take place than are realised the camphor and other plants demonstrate that, and from the seed are born diseases of the bladder and of the kidneys. Such too is tartar (acidity), which forms stone. What is_ hereditary we cannot eradicate, for the seed must produce all that is dormant
:
: . .
.
within
it.
But
?
it is
;
him although
not
or
if
properly
developed.
If
man
has
six
fingers
they are not in their right places, nothing can be done for him, because the defect is in the substance of the body. But no experienced doctor can say that the blind man may not be helped, .for nature^ js^^great^ and wonderf u 1 and if sight is within him it may be produced,
,
1531]
,fpr
219
is an ether tjiat__|ias no body and it he guided to its own place, from which may Innate things are ,the injury has removed it. hardness of iron and the colour of chalk, like the
sight
and must be accepted as they happen. For we cannot hinder snow from falling, but we can prevent it from doing harm to men. Just
so
is the seed of man which is limbo and out of the four elements. These powers are best called
influences,
for
they
are
influences.
It
is
an
astronomical error when men say that an incomes from the stars. The heavens send no influences. We receive our form straight from the hand of God. Whatever we may be, God has made us and carved all our members.
fluence
Our
conditions,
properties,
habits,
we
receive
life
things are given to us. What to us out of the three substances, as already described, which have something to impress on us, as fire on wood or straw, or saffron on water. That is the influence which we cannot drive away from us, as we can drive away the maladies originating from outside us in limbo. it is nonsense. Men speak of an Inclinatio the man receives an Inclinatio from They say it is error Mars, Saturn, the moon, and so on
come
and deception. It would be more reasonable Mars counterfeits the man,' for man to say He is greater than Mars or the other planets. who knows the heavens and understands men
c
Man is so noble says nothing. He might say in God's eyes and so highly accounted that his image is in the heavens with all he does and
'
:
220
"
[CHAP,
it is
not Inclinatio. A man may become fat and not the fault of his food or he may become thin and his food does not help him. And the doctors set it down not to the specific influences, but declare with the ignorant astrologers that it is melancholia due to Saturn in the ascendant man owes nothing to the ascendant he owes it to limbo and he is made by the hand of God, not by the ascendant, nor by planets, nor by constellations and the like, as if these could compel him to be either lean or fat. We require to understand these maladies thoroughly so as to distinguish them from the other maladies already explained. They will be treated in
: : ;
their
own
chapter."
In the eighth and last chapter, Paracelsus goes beyond the visible body created by God
out of the elements to the invisible body which is in every man and which was breathed into
men by God.
can sin and
"
men
As we
in
find written
we must
rise
on the
last
our body and give account of our misday deeds. The body which is invisible has sinned and must rise again with us. For we shall not give an account of our sicknesses nor of our health
and the like, but of the things that proceed from the heart, for these concern man and these too are a body, not out of limbo but from the breath of God. But since we shall in our flesh see God our Saviour, it must be that the body
1531]
BITTER CRY
of limbo,
221
made out
shall
which
is
be there too.
Who
ignorant of those things revealed through the mouth of God ? We shall rise again in the flesh, in the body out of limbo, which has its own measure and uses, and what exceeds that measure comes from the invisible body which transcends the bounds of nature. ..."
address to Joachim von Watt, echoingJHohen-^ " ieimbitter cr Who hath believed
Strange, new, amazing, unheard of, they say are my physics, my meteorics, my theory, my practice. And how should I be otherwise
"
than strange to men who have never wandered in the sun ? I am not afraid of the Aristotelian crowd, nor of the Ptolemaic, nor of that of Avicenna but I fear the insults ever thrown
;
and the untimely judgment, custom, which they call jurisprudence. Unto order, whom the gift is given he receives it who is not called I need not call. But may God be with us our Defender and our Shield, to all eternity. "
in
my way
Vale."
CHAPTER XI
RENEWED WANDERING
This
life of
Must be
lived out
space in which to treat of the remaining books, of the " Paramirum," for the present biographer's aim is rather to
is
THERE
not
vindicate a great man's fame than to attempt the appraisal of what he did for the evolution
of
research.
When
his
by a writer scientifically fitted to with them, the pre-eminent part which Paracelsus played in the many-sided European renascence will be acknowledged and assessed
into English
deal
at
its
true value.
He knew
transcendent
mind on
and
matters
of
both
physical
be comprehended only by with the whole body of his writings, acquaintance and he repeatedly expressed his urgent desire
spiritual life could
with one treatise or one volume. The words " Reader " with which he prefaces the " third book of the Paramirum " are specific
to the
on
this point
222
1531]
PREFACE TO BOOK
III
223
are the winds which the arouses against its followers, and yet I have ever hoped that He who loves the soul of man loves also his body, that He who saves the soul saves also the body, and therein I have thought to work some little good. But by many it was reft from me and that was a rough wind to me. Therefore, reader, take heed not to judge from the first, the second, nor the third chapter, but observe it out to the end and test with thine own proving that which I touch upon in these pages. Do not be startled what I handle, but consider and estimate by
"
truth
without favour and friendship, fairly weighing for by God's predestination more books will follow built upon this foundation and
it it
: ;
these
will
more
fully
supply thee,
it."
therefore
"
ParaSt.
left
would seem, rested from writing some months. He gave himself up to evangelistic work and especially to the teaching and distribution of the Bible. He says " in the third book that he gave up medicine to ply other trades." He wandered through Appenzel and its mountains seeking out the poor and sick, and while healing the latter, telling the good tidings which had so long been withheld from them. This active medical missionary work amply accounts for the calumnies propagated and maintained by priests and friars
224
RENEWED WANDERING
[CHAP, xi
against him. Not alone were the academic bodies banded to oppose and undermine his teaching, but the Catholic Church took part in their despicable intrigues. Only those men who
were emancipated from the double bondage, the nobler sons of the Renascence, were Hohenheim's friends. Had he been the irreligious sot his enemies proclaimed him, they would not have feared him as they did. He was a
man
profound spiritual insight and unassailable faith in God, lofty as that of the prophets
of
and psalmists
of Israel.
and more particularly in Appenzel, but his footsteps are hard to trace and his allusions
to this time are vague.
It
is
surmised that he
of
was resident
in the
commune
Urnasch
for
a considerable time, changing his lodgings at In 1838 several houses retained the intervals.
tradition of having sheltered him. Probably he the greater part of three years between spent
Urnasch and Huntvil, and in addition to his evangelistic work returned to writing, and not " Paramirum " and the only completed the " " Greater Paragranum," but continued his Surgery." He left behind him when he quitted Urnasch a portfolio full of writings and this was in the possession of a man who died at Huntvil in 1760, whose heirs divided the manuscripts
who
Some
of these
1532-4]
RELIGIOUS TREATISES
225
were on sacred subjects and in Latin, one entitled Quod Sanguis et Caro Christi sit in Pane tc Lord's and another, also on the et Vino,
Supper," was addressed to those like-minded friends in Appenzel with whom he had sat down to the communion table at a hamlet called Rog-
genhalm, close to Biihler, a village near Gais. That he wandered from village to village is certain, and probably he covered far more ground than his allusions indicate. His work
"
by whom
in
was so urgently needed, and cared for the body which the immortal dwells.'
his help
'
'
It was this occupation with the spiritual as well as the corporeal needs of men that rekindled the fire of his persecution, this time by the priests,
and so
fierce
was
persecuted
even
the
clothes failed
it
is
began to
fall off,
cowed
226
RENEWED WANDERING
pfaffen "-fury,
It
is
[CHAP, xi
" by the
no wonder that he disand claimed rather Villach than Einsiedeln as his " home." Early in the spring of 1534 he fled, in poverty so utter that his garments were tattered, and made his way through the mountains and by the upper valley of the Inn to Innsbruck.
time in haste.
owned Switzerland
as a fatherland
He
returned to the profession as well as to the " the body in which practice of medicine, for " the immortal dwells lives by bread, and that
evangelistic work. He applied to the burgomaster for permission to practise at Innsbruck as physician, but it
in
in rags
Had
he presented him-
his degree
crimson robe with chain and ring of gold, would not have been disputed, but
clothes."
He was
after starvation,
persecution,
homelessness,
and wandering, he
for
his
appearance. "
Book
of the Plague," which was first published by Dr. Toxites at Strassburg in 1576, thirty-five years after Hohenheim's death.
"
Because
I did
of the doctors, I was despatched with contempt and was forced to clear out. The burgomaster
1584]
227
Innsbruck had been used to doctors clad in silken robes at the courts of princes, not in
of
shabby rags grilled by the sun." So he took to the road again and made his way by the Brenner Pass to Stertzing, where plague had just broken out in the hospital.
This gives us the date June, 1534. In July and August it was raging in the town. Paracelsus stayed some weeks at Stertzing and was appalled at the ignorance and helplessness of
the
local
doctors.
He had
encountered
the
its
treatment
He
own
experience
cated this
as to its
tions
and opinion into writing for the town to which he dedifamous treatise. He appended to
and recipes. The little book in four " chapters was presented to the Burgomaster and Magistrates of Stertzingen, by Theophrastus von Hohenheim, professor of the Holy Scriptures and doctor of both medicines." He received little thanks for his book from
it is probable that during he practised as one knowing the plague and made enough of money to provide himself with necessary clothing, food, and
He made two friends there, the brothers Poschinger, with one of whom he went to Meran
lodging.
228
RENEWED WANDERING
[CHAP, xi
and found there honour and hospitality. At Meran he finished his book and wrote its Introduction.
was while he was either at Stertzing or Meran that his father, Dr. Wilhelm von Hohenheim, died, but the news did not reach him for
It
four years. His travels were continuous during those years and the magistrates of Villach must have lost all trace of his whereabouts.
Toxites was a native of Stertzing and, as Dr. Sudhoff suggests, probably saw and copied the "
original
manuscript of Hohenheim's
Book
of
the Plague," which he was the first to publish. Huser's edition is thirteen years later than that
and is apparently founded upon the earlier, with some comparison of the printed book and a manuscript copy. From Meran Hohenheim made his way into the mountain districts near Stertzing and towards Salzburg, and explored them, crossing the Penser Pass to the Hohenthauern and
of Toxites
visiting the Krymlerthauern, the Felberthauern, the Fuschk, and the Raurischerthauern, and so recovered some of his lost time in the study
of
of
mountain
diseases.
He
and second books mountaineering " of his Greater Surgery," and describes the
in the first
symptoms
of frost-bite
in
these glacial regions, as well as their remedies. He turned westwards from the barren labyrinth of the Thauern mountains and made his way
1535]
PFAFFERS
229
and Upper Engadine, pausing at Veltlin, where he noted the freedom from gouty diseases amongst the natives, and spending some time at St. Moritz to analyse the acid water of its famous spring, an account of whose qualities and medicinal value he added to his
to the Tyrol
record of
"
Natural Waters."
for
In August, 1535, the abbot of Pfaffers sent him and invited him to stay at the monastery
great
and continuous healing power, which he described in a little book dedicated to his host, the Abbot Johann Jakob Russinger. This book was printed in the following year, apparently
at
the abbot's
instigation,
at
Zurich or St.
Gallen,
and it was mentioned in Stumpf's "Swiss Chronicle" for 1548. It bears the title
Concerning
the
Pfeffers
its
"
Bath situated
in
virtues, powers, and Upper Switzerland, effects, its source and derivation, its management and regulation by the most learned Doctor Theophrastus Paracelsus." There is no
;
clue to the printer nor to the place of printing. In 1571 the little book was published at Strass-
by Toxites and printed by Christian Miiller, and nineteen years later it was included in the seventh part of Huser's edition. As Huser no reference to his authority, it is probable gives
burg, edited
230
treatise
RENEWED WANDERING
was translated into Latin
in
[CHAP, xi
1570 and
were published in
by the Abbot of von der Hohen Sax. Paracelsus tells how he saw the sick persons lowered from a wooden house high over
the gorge
spring.
down
Early in September, 1535, he had left Pfaffers and had taken the mountain road towards Wirtemberg. He did much climbing, and in the chapter upon frost and its dangers he mentions the St. Gothard, the Spliigen, the Albula, the Bernina, and the Hacken Passes. The last
between Schwitz and Einsiedeln, and its occurrence in his book leads us to conjecture that he may have visited his birthplace as he fared westwards. Apparently he halted at Memmingen and certainly at Mindelheim, where he cured the town clerk, Adam Reyssner, of an Toxillness which had troubled him for years. " If ites heard of it from Reyssner himself. take the two medicines ordered," said you " Hohenheim, you will need to ask no doctor's advice for years to come." Reyssner took them and not only got well, but kept well till he was an old man. By the end of 1535 Paracelsus had finished " The Greater the most influential of his works, Surgery." He was anxious to publish it at Ulm and made his way thither early in 1536,
is
1586]
231
carrying his manuscript with him. He negotiated a contract with Hans Varnier and the
But when the proof-sheets printing began. reached him, they were a mass of errors. Varnier had not observed that part of the agreement which concerned the correction
and
they
of proofs
hopelessly disfigured. Parawith his manuscripts and took them to Augsburg, where he made an arrangement for their printing with Heinrich Steiner.
celsus left
were
Ulm
Varnier went on with the production in spite of the lamentable condition of his proof-sheets " and published " The Greater Surgery that year in most faulty form.
At Augsburg the authentic edition appeared, the first volume on July 28 and the second on August 22, 1536. Paracelsus had taken
great pains to make it perfect. He dictated the manuscript to an assistant, personally super-
intended
edition
the
press
correction,
and intimated
Augsburg was the only valid publication of his " Most Mighty book. It was dedicated to the and August Prince and Lord, Ferdinand, King of Rome and Archduke of Austria." The titles run
:
Concerning the Greater Surgery, the first volume, by the instructed and attested doctor in both medicines, Paracelsus Of all wounds by stabbing, shooting, burning, bite, bonebreaking, and all that surgery includes, with
:
"
282
RENEWED WANDERING
[CHAP, xi
understanding of all accidents or to come, pointed out without errors. present Concerning the discoveries of both the old and
science, nothing omitted." Concerning the Greater Surgery, the second volume, by the instructed and attested doctor of both medicines, Paracelsus: Of open sores and hurts, their cause and cure, according to proved experience without error and further experiment."
the
new
"
The dedication
to the
differently
of the second
To the Most Mighty, Most August Prince and Lord, Ferdinand, by God's Grace King of Rome, Hungary and Bohemia, Archduke of Austria, our most Gracious Lord."
The
first
"
volume was
illustrated
:
by a wood-
it represents a cut occupying half a page court with a vaulted gate before which plastered are two wounded knights. One lies near the
steps of the gateway with a wound in his head, his body thrust through by a short sword, the
the other point of which shows at the back wounded man sits on a log of wood with his
;
head bare, great wounds in his right shoulder and thigh, wounds from stabbing in his breast and with both his hands hewn off, blood pouring from the stumps, while on the ground before him lie the hands, a helmet with feathers, and
a long sword,
1536]
NUMEROUS EDITIONS
of the second
233
The wood-cut
sick
volume shows a
covered
man on
the right,
with ulcers, his leg stretched out on a foldingchair near which a doctor stands and rubs a
salve into the sores with a spatula
;
on the
left
plaster spread on his knee, evidently considering himself the chief person present.
On
celsus
the reverse side of the title-page, Paraaddresses the reader and explains to
him
his
mishap at
Ulm and
his
disavowal of
Varnier's edition, and asks him to use the Augsburg edition, which is corrected and amended
so often
of
Before
the
end
the
nineteen
editions
had ap-
peared, amongst them several Dutch versions, two Latin versions, and two French versions translated from the second Latin version. Many other editions succeeded these. It was possibly
from Gerard Dorn's Latin translation that the famous French surgeon Ambroise Pare learnt and assimilated Hohenheim's treatment of wounds received in battle. Pare was a man of like temperament, and one of his famous "I sayings might have been Hohenheim's dressed him and God healed him." In August, 1536, immediately after the com:
234
RENEWED WANDERING
"
[CHAP, xi
issued his
Prognostication concerning twentyfour years to come," dedicated to the Emperor Ferdinand and printed by Heinrich Steiner at
Augsburg.
was translated almost immediately into Latin by Marcus Tatius, teacher of poetry in the Hoch Schule at Ingolstadt and
It
translator of
many
classics,
who
just at
this
made Hohenheim's
acquaintance.
Second and third undated Latin editions followed. It was customary in those years, when newspapers did not exist, to publish almanacks at the beginning of the year with information from the past and predictions regarding the
future year, and these included within their scope the Empire, the Papacy, the monarchies
of
have already mentioned the predictions by Paracelsus published in Nuremberg by Peyhe returned from time to time to this pus kind of composition, moved partly by the knowledge acquired in his travels, and partly by his
:
We
extraordinary insight into the working out of causes towards events. As a scientist he had
abandoned
astrological superstition,
gifts
him
and
as a Bible student
he believed in the powers of men who like himself abode much in solitude and in communion with God. In all his greater books we find
the
careful
research
of
scientific
student
1536]
PROGNOSTICATIONS
allied
285
closely
a deep and inextinguishable sense of the spiritual, above all of God, the
to
omnipotent, the omniscient, the omnipresent. If with his eyes and his intelligence he patiently mastered the pages of nature's book, with his
spiritual
consciousness he learnt of
in
God and
His visible creation, but in the historic past, the roused and awakened present, and in flashes of revelation from behind the veil. Paracelsus was aware that
in
man's
self arise
August anticipations, symbols, typee Of a dim splendour ever on before In that eternal circle life pursues.
illustrated
by two wood-cuts,
one of a student sitting at a reading-desk, holding a sphere in his left hand and pointing
to the sky with his right.
eight
are visible,
probably
symbolising
the
eight
heavens.
"
Prognostication a place in the tenth volume of his collection, there are thirty-two symbolic wood-cuts to illustrate the predictions, two of which, as Dr.
which finds
Aberle
tells
us,
were reproduced
1606.
in
a flying-
sheet issued
still
in
This flying-sheet
in Salzburg.
may
The
be seen
in the
in the
Museum
Carolina
Augusteum
two selected
illustrate
Hohenheim's prediction
236
RENEWED WANDERING
[CHAP, xi
concerning his own works. One gives the portrait of the scholastic doctor, adorned with
golden ring and other splendours, telling his beads, but one-eyed and so bound by the fetters of authority that he can look neither behind
him nor before and grows stiff with horror sight of Azoth, Hohenheim's sword, and
terrified
at so
by
his
upon
it
The
illustration
pictures
the
unhappy man
ringed round by interwoven cordage, holding his paternoster and staring with his one eye.
On
the other edge of the flying-sheet is the companion picture with its prophecy. A child's head rises from the ground on the left corner
and looks with lively interest at a heap of books, some of them inscribed with a capital R and one with the word Rosa, rolls of manuscript " What are amongst them. The child asks
: '
:
they
"
And
Some twenty
will
know what
am my
dead, both
knowledge
;
although at present it suffers discredit. all Truth will then bring to light its work false medicine will be destroyed and with it all other stupidity, and men will find that in my writings are to be found all the healing powers of both the earth and the heavens." This prediction was
publication
of
fulfilled
by the copious
works after
his
Hohenheim's
1536]
237
death.
the
their influence,
and
for
he was accused of borrowing his great concepmen who were either not yet born when he died or whose writings did not appear Isaac Holfor twenty years after that event.
tions from
landus
the
first
and Basilius Valentinus were two of The alleged forerunners of Hohenheim. belonged at the earliest to 1560, and the
"
the Philosopher's It is quite probable that both Stone in 1599. men drew their tenets from Hohenheim's books.
Paracelsus was the forerunner of
progress
all scientific
On
from the sixteenth to the nineteenth century. He needed no guidance from his contemporaries, above whom he towered. He refused to be blinded by the dust of ages which they held sacred. He dared to denounce it as a rubbish-heap and to look at God's creation
with vision
undimmed by
its
sophistries,
its
phantasms, and its mendacities. The man who to-day, from the vantage ground of modern
science, descries
new
horizon,
is
acclaimed,
justly, with world- wide homage, but this man, who cleared the way and who refused to be smothered or cowed by the dust and din
and
sport
for
the
gods
288
RENEWED WANDERING
kept his vision clear in
toil,
[CHAP, xi
He
privation,
and unresting pursuit of his aim. There was none to help him save God, to whom he clung and from whom he received his priceless powers
at the cost of
all
He
His books were altogether his own. From the Light of Nature " he kindled the lamp of Science, and in that light men in time began to know. Hohenheim proudly claimed his books as
or reward.
altogether his, and his defiance of the " totelian crowd ran
:
"
Aris-
soil
Der fur
sich bleyben
This
was
and
in
either
Latin or
portraits
German
it is
to be found
That
man no
other
own
Who
He expanded
Liberalitate
its
:
"
De
Felice
"
God has given gifts and wealth He to shall belong to no other man, but shall be lord of himself and of his own will and heart, so that those things which God has given him shall go
joyously forth from him."
Silver
"
whom
gifts
1536]
MYSTICAL INSIGHT
239
which God had given him went joyously forth from him to others. His books were amongst the greatest of these gifts to men and he claims for them that they were transferred from the pages of the book of nature. It is the doctor's business, he insists, to understand nature and not alone the earthly and mortal nature, but also that which is divine and immortal, for both the eyes of the body and the eyes of the spirit are needed for the full revelation of the works
of
God.
celsus includes the mystical as well as the inHis neo-platonism urged tellectual perception.
this
point of view. To the ordinary scientific student, the interference of mystical consciousness seems to be inimical to exact
dual
research, but Paracelsus was impelled towards research as much by his spiritual as by his
The mystical imagination intellectual powers. has ever advanced by prophetic insight the epoch-making discoveries of the student of
nature.
practically acquainted with " is said Professor Huxley, scientific work," aware that those who refuse to go beyond fact
is
"
and any one who has rarely get as far as fact studied the history of science knows that almost
;
made by
the
anticipation of nature.'
'
this
240
truth,
RENEWED WANDERING
[CHAP, xi
again in the field of science. The quality of insight is essential to the original mind in whatever
field it operates.
In order to understand Hohenheim's point of view we must remember that the revival of neo-platonism in the middle ages was due to Cornelius Agrippa of Nettesheim, who was born at Cologne in 1486, and was just seven years older than Paracelsus. Between the sixth and fifteenth centuries there was a complete suspense of the teaching founded by Ammonius Saccus in the third century, and established by the
teaching of his disciple Plotinus. The latter held that God is the foundation of all things, that He is immortal and omnipresent, pure
light,
while
matter
and form
are
illusions,
shadows
of
all
of the soul.
God
is
thought. product of mind's other actions, such as faith, aspiration, veneration, which rise towards God speculation, which occupy themselves reasoning, sophistry,
the
;
Mind
is one and the basis His image. Soul is action and produces
on a lower plane, and the still lower activities Matter is formed by the of mere physical life. soul within it, for every form has its soul whether
apparently living or not. In in the stars as on the earth.
:
all is
divine
is
life,
There
neither
it is the world of the time nor space in mind in which presides a supreme Over-Soul Spirit,
of
power to think
these
1536]
CORNELIUS AGRIPPA
241
souls tend to the higher or to the lower and Those that tend to the higher alter accordingly.
become purified and spiritualised. It is essential to know so that one may attain, and he whose mind is illumined sees the Highest, the Light which lightens the world. To him it is given to become united with the Supreme. Porphyry followed Plotinus and extended his
" the universal soul teaching by the tenet that being essentially one with the infinite supreme
Spirit
the power of the Supreme discover and produce everything. An individual soul purified and free from the body may do
may by
the same.
'
successors of these three amplified the powers accorded to the illumined soul by know-
The
ledge to distinguish between good and evil ; the gift of making wise healing of diseases
;
laws
and the
The
neo-platonic dogmas sixth century, but revived with the Renascence, when Cornelius Agrippa added to them his own
development
of
their
doctrine.
:
Man
is
the
microcosm, the image of nature the true image of God is the logos, the word, which is wisdom, The spiritual soul in union life, light, truth.
with
their image. invisible form in the soul
is
God
and gradually shines the body so that it becomes like throughout a star. There is a spiritual power residing in
man's
16
soul,
attract,
in-
242
fluence,
RENEWED WANDERING
[CHAP, xi
and change things, which radiates healing and can be divine, but if used for selfish ends can become diabolic. To these doctrines some great men in the mental upheaval of Renascence times became converts, amongst them the Abbot Trithemius and his pupil Theophrastus von Hohenheim.
Paracelsus
developed
Cornelius
Agrippa's
re-
cognition of man's spiritual power by his theory of the magnes, the concealed power which attracts
to itself those things in other bodies which influences.
it
has something magnetic Man," he says, him without which he cannot exist. But in this magnetism is there on account of man,
"
"
not
man on
is
By
this attractive
what
in the air
surrounding him
and the
Ennemoser says
"
great part of the system of Paracelsus In man there is a is based on magnetism. something sidereal which stands in connection with the stars from which it has been drawn and attracts their strength to it like a magnet. This life he calls the Magnes Microcosmi and
explains nature.
1586]
MAGNETISM
in all nature
248
and by which
its
Those secret influences have their positive office in the maintenance of the body. Upon this theory of magnetism
he bases the sympathetic cure of disease. In mumia or magnetic force, he says, all healing power resides, for it draws everything in the whole body to itself."
the
member draws
specific
undoubtedly the founder of the school of magnetism and this word originated with him. He says in the fourth book of his treatise
Concerning the origin of Invisible Diseases," which forms the fifth part of the " Paramirum," that however powerful the great world may be, the little world contains all its virtues, all its
powers.
" "
He was
For
in
man
if
is
the nature of
ores,
its
of the earth,
its
the heavenly bodies. What is there upon earth whose power is not in man ? All the powers of the plants and the trees, are
winds and
all
to be found in his spiritual body of its metals, its minerals, its precious stones. ... If you would have balm, you will find it there if antimony, you will find it there, and those
;
:
things work invisibly. For in man there are two forces, a working power which is visible and a working power which is invisible. All hurts which the visible body bears find their
healing in the invisible. Just as the power of the lily breaks forth in perfume which is in-
244
visible,
RENEWED WANDERING
so
[CHAP, xi
the invisible body sends forth its Just as in the visible body healing influence. are wonderful activities which the senses can perceive, so too lie powers in the invisible body
He found in this mumia, or magnetic body, the source of vitality, and he proved that its power could be used by one possessing it to arrest and heal the diseases of others. Many of
his
own
its
exercise
and he
used his tinctures only in special cases. Paracelsus recognised and practised another of the invisible powers of the mumia, that which
is
and
transfer his thoughts to persons at a distance even when he did not know where they were.
He may have
celsus,
but hardly to many of his pupils, for at that time such a gift would have appeared Trithemius diabolic to all but the illumined.
and
sibilities
of
nature.
practised by sorcerers and witches to convey the evil which they or their employers desired for their foes and victims, but these people practised it in the faith that evil spirits assisted
them, and
it was only such men as Trithemius and Paracelsus who treated it as part of the
microcosmic equipment.
Hohenheim
strongly
1536]
OCCULT PHILOSOPHY
245
denounced sorcery and necromancy, because he believed in their potency for evil, just as he denounced the use of hypnotism for evil purposes.
Dr. Franz
"
Hartmann
writes
The psychic power belonging to the soul and the magical power of the spirit are in the great majority of mankind still only little developed and known. They are often exercised
unconsciously so that the greatest sorcerer does not himself know by what means his feats are performed. The powers called into action are the will and the imagination. It is a known law of nature that like associates with like, and
if
an
evil
will
becomes
evil
itself
corresponding
invisible realm,
which
"
nefarious work."
In his treatise on
celsus
writes
of
capable of
for
all
much
use
and imagination
who
be,
"
man may
he accomplishes nothing by
spiritual
power comes
from God." Conjurations and consecrations " he condemns, because our power rests in our faith in God, and not in ceremonies and but the consecration of the sacraconjurations ments, especially of baptism, marriage, and
;
246
of the
RENEWED WANDERING
body and blood
shall all
of Christ
[CHAP, xi
altar,
upon the
day be made perfectly holy and clothed with a celestial body." He claimed this faith in God as a flawless armour against the intrusion of evil. Still, he held talismans in some measure of esteem, particularly the double interlaced triangle, and the pentagon inscribed at each corner with one of the syllables of the holy name of God. His trust in healing charms composed of metals and precious stones was based on their magnetic
when we
and electric power. The Paracelsian occultism was mainly that of neo-platonism and the Kabbala, as were also the doctrines of Cornelius Agrippa and in later years of Van Helmont and Jacob Boehme, who were his disciples. Ennemoser tells us
that
the primitive spiritual creation and the the origin of darkness and the creation of the world in six periods chaos the creation of material man and his fall; the restoration of the primitive harmony and the ultimate bringing back of all creatures to God."
: ; ;
God
1536]
MAGIC
247
worthy were inducted into the mysteries of magic, which included presentiments, the power
the power of comprehendall the forces and products of nature, as well as control over certain spirits. The evil side of magic is also present in the
of prognostication,
One
Everywhere the great dogmas external is the work of the internal everywhere the external reacts on the internal."
: :
"
Probably Chaldea was the source from which Abraham drew these dogmas and possibly in Chaldea they were the heritage bequeathed by races already of remote antiquity when Abraham was born at Urukh, a heritage
the seed of
shared by
all
They
in-
acknowledgment
the
:
of
the
Angelic
Orders
of celestial chieftains
and
belonging to
mystical
of
universe
intelligences of the
;
eight Heavens
minor
elemental
intelli-
earth, and water, not and needing control. Even necessarily good, the saintly Dominican doctor, Thomas Aquinas, had accepted the Kabbala long before Ho-
gences, spirits of
fire, air,
henheim's time.
Much
indeed of
its
doctrine
had
the
spontaneously,
conquest.
some
through
contact
and
Magic
is
"
practically
248
RENEWED WANDERING
"
the priests
:
[CHAP, xi
of oriental civilisations
there dispersed
CHAPTER
Man
XII
not
man
While only here and there a star dispels The darkness, here and there a towering mind
O'erlooks its prostrate fellows when the host Is out at once to the despair of night, When all mankind alike is perfected, Equal in full-blown powers then, not till then,
:
I say, begins
PARACELSUS was no
juggler,
assuming the garb, ritual, man. He left such practices to the baser natures of his own and later days. To understand him as he was we must divest his memory It was customary of many legendary attributes. after his death to ascribe to him the occult manufacture of gold, the possession of the philosopher's stone, dominion over elemental and evil spirits, the powers of alchemic creation and astrological prediction. He was for centuries after his death claimed as the founder
of
Rosicrucianism, one of the first traces of which ascription is to be seen in the illustration
mentioned in the
last chapter as
amongst the
thirty-two symbolic wood-cuts in Huser's edition " of the Prognostications," which was reproduced in the flying-sheet of 1606, and which
249
250
[CHAP,
xn
shows
letter
or with the
word Rosa.
these legends can be discredited. Oddly enough, the badge of the Rosicmcians was a development of Luther's emblem an
One by one
is
springs the Latin cross. The rose, heart, and cross are each and all ancient hierograms,
emblems
by
But not
symbol become
the arcane badge of a secret society apparently theosophical and Protestant, but not yet called Rosicrucian. It was in Nuremberg that Simon
years after Hohenheim's death, the first Rosicrucian Brotherhood and called it the Militia Crucifera Evanestablished,
fifty-seven
gelica,
Studion
was he who elaborated the mystic symbolism of the Rose-Cross. But the fraternity was not known as Rosicrucian till early A number of in the seventeenth century.
and
it
were then published purporting to establish a mythical origin for Rosicrucianism, but found to be inventions. The fame of Paracelsus was connected with Studion's Brotherhood because its members were students of nature and accepted his scientific teaching
treatises
of
elaborating
his
1614]
ROSICRUCIANISM
251
views upon evolution into an advanced theory. It was this connection which gave to his philosophical volumes the fame of being the sources
But Paracelsus died of Rosicrucian scholarship. more than half a century before the foundation
Evangelica and the inventions of Johann Valentin Andreae, a priest
of
the
Militia
Crucifera
later
at
Tubingen and
Abbot
of
Adelsberg
till
in Stuttgart, did
1614.
This
in the
man
compiled
pamphlets
hope that they might effect a reformation amongst the clergy. On his deathbed he conthat
fessed
fables,
they
were
title
intended
as
satirical
but their
into the
world, and Rosicrucian societies were formed at Nuremberg, Hamburg, Dantzic, and
German
The infection spread to Holland and to Italy, more particularly to Mantua and Venice. Their members wore a special costume at the meetings, black robe and blue ribbon embroidered with a golden wreath and rose, and they
Erfurt.
used the Buddhist tonsure indicating the oriental " influence which had developed the True Order of the Golden and Rosy Cross."
had to bear the cross of suffering before could become crowned with victory all they had to crucify their personal and selfish will and die in regard to those things that attract the soul to the sphere of earthly desires and illusions before they could have its spiritual faculties unfolded by the rays of the rising sun."
All
;
"
252
[CHAP,
xn
cannot but recognise Rosicrucianism as a specialised recrudescence of primeval mystical culture, christianised as had been the sacerdotalism and ceremonial of paganism, and containing the same immortal verities which had civilised the East millenniums before Christianity.
We
The maker
that Paracelsus was a goldit lasted for centuries after his death
tradition
:
was founded on the deathless faculty for chimerical conjecture which distinguishes the human from the animal mind. Paracelsus in " " gold-cooks speech and writing laughed the to scorn. For him chemistry meant the discovery by analysis and combination of medicines for healing.
None the
less his
very secre-
" this arch-knave that dogs my heels, Oporinus, as a gaunt crow a gasping sheep." He played with their childish and obstinate
superstition,
and hoped some day and to discover his That he was aware of this is certain. process. To it was due the hypocritical constancy of
jest
is
recorded
by the studious Franz," in a letter published by Michael Neander in 1586, from which we
"
may quote
"
One day he
said to
me me a
'
:
Franz, we have
gulden, bidding
me
go to the apothecary, get a pound's weight of I did this and mercury and bring it to him. it to him with the change, for mercury brought
1536]
GOLD-MAKING
253
Then he placed
on the hearth that the air below could hardly escape, and shook the mercury into a crucible, which he set upon the bricks, bidding me lay burning coals round about it and heap coals and coal-dust upon them. Then he went into the room with me and after a long time said Our volatile slave may fly away from us, we must see what he is doing.' As we came in, it was already See, smoking and flying away. He said take hold of the mass with the pincers and keep
'
:
'
it
soon melt.' This happened accordingly. Then he said Take out the pincers and cover the crucible,
it
will
the fire and let it stand.' We went back into the room and forgot what was in the crucible for half an hour, when he said
make up
'
We
must now
off
see
take
what God has given us This I did, but the fire was the crucible all was solid.
;
What
like
is it ?
'
said he.
'
I said
c
:
It looks
it will be Yes,' he said, yellow like gold.' I lifted it off, opened the crucible, as it gold.' was cold, and took out the lump. It was gold.
'
Then he
Take it and carry it to the over the apothecary's and ask him goldsmith to give me money for it.' This I did the
said
:
'
goldsmith weighed it, it came to an ounce less than a pound, then he went and fetched money in a flat purse made of cardboard which was full of Rhenish guldens and said Take this to your master and say that it is not quite enough, but I will send him the rest when I get it.'
'
:
254
[CHAP,
xn
There was a roll about the size of a big hazelnut done up with red sealing-wax, but what was inside I did not dare, being a young man, to ask, but I think that had I asked him, he would have told me, for he always showed me liking."
In this practical jest, apothecary and goldsmith cleverly played their parts. He says in his " Greater Surgery "
:
It has happened that in chemical research very wonderful medicinal discoveries have been But made which serve to prolong life.
. .
"
following these come the goldmaking tinctures Thus they assuming to transmute metals. have made a tincture which colours metal. And from such has arisen the opinion that a change can be made in metals and that one
substance can be transformed into another, so that a rough, coarse, and filthy substance can be transmuted into one that is pure, refined, and sound. Such discoveries I have attained in various kinds, always connected with at-
silver."
already what was his attitude towards astrology, a study which fascinated men
We know
day and even men of the Renascence, as Girolamo Cardano in northern Italy and Melancthon in Germany. Cardano busied himself with horoscopes all his life and believed in
of his
1536]
ASTROLOGY
life.
255
of
England, for
long
drawing up an ill-omened horoscope for and yet he was no coward but an exceptionally truthful man for an Italian of that date. That Melancthon held astrology to be worthy of serious credence helps us to estimate its attraction for even the most cultivated men of the sixteenth century There is little doubt that Hohenheim gave
fear of
a king,
it
a thorough
to
trial.
visits
Esslingen
gation, and these may have been renewed at It was St. Gallen with Schobinger's assistance.
shortly after these visits that his conclusions " found expression in the Paramirum," where
and
to ascribing character, tendencies, and destinies to the influence of the heavenly bodies.
He
repudiates
all
human
manifold combinations.
directly opto those of the astrological writers of posed his time and seeks to define in exact terms the
really are and how they are in relation to the earth, refusing to regard placed such a study as arrested in the hands of diviners
256
[CHAP,
xn
positive astronomy.
all
Necromancy and sorcery he abhorred with his might. He did not deny their claims
to credence, but ascribed their effects to the invocation and exercise of powers at least evil,
at worst infernal,
abjured. give these the credit of all the malignant diseases popularly claimed
Nor did he
argued forcibly against demoniacal possession and insisted that such maladies
for
them.
He
as St. Vitus' dance, St. Veltin's sickness, St. Anthony's fire and others, are not indications of
saintly
wrath inflicted, as penance, but proceed from some one or other of the natural origins of disease, and that each must be studied from
the standpoint of true medical diagnosis. He taught that corrupted imagination had extra-
ordinary power to bring about disease, but denied that the devil could create disease, al-
though he was able to induce in men the evil spiritual and mental conditions which were favourable to disease. A passage from the " last book of the Paramirum," that upon the " of Invisible Diseases," and from its Origins final chapter, may be translated as illustrating his attitude towards sorcery both outside and inside the Church
:
Satan sees to it that we do not use this means without introductory ceremonies. What
"
1536]
NECROMANTIC CEREMONIAL
:
257
are these ceremonies ? Hypocritical fasting and as the Pharisee made a show before praying
like pharisaic show be made the devil, with characters, numbers, and times and many abstinences, with blessing and consecrating, with holy water and the like. For the devil sees to it that if a man would
men, so must a
before
something from God, he must forget practice all these ceremonies for the devil himself, since it is he who will grant the man's request. For just as men live in the world, one opposed to the other and wandering
receive
God and
misleading of their theological guides, so too do these spirits. The lovers of ceremonies have converted the spirits to words and names, so that they may be garbed in these just as if it were not the spirits upon which men call. It is much as if men should lose the favour of
in the
to Peter, although
Peter and the spirits are servants and must do what they are bidden do. From which it follows that if Christ should bid Peter set at liberty, he must do it, and if He should bid him bind, he must do it. And when he does it, it holds
both in heaven and upon earth. All things must be sought for in God therefore what He bids His servants do, they obey, whoever they For the spirits are, whether angel or devil. too are bidden to teach and to help and so God
. .
.
good through friend and foe. Therefore at His bidding the spirits have revealed knowledge and have unveiled the Light of Nature. They have been bidden to do this to those who have sought earnestly to know.
gives us
is
what
17
258
[CHAP,
xn
who call upon these spirits did these things of their own will, they and thus they have been wrested from God's command and according to the hidden teaching have, by the Chaldeans, Persians, and Egyptians, been identified by name and raised to the position of gods. If we ask much from the saints
as
But there
and God's command is not present, they can do nothing for us, for they are only His servants. And yet their names too are preserved and men have played with their spirits and set up ceremonies, fasting, praying and the like, just like the Jew Solomon with his mirror, or Moses and thus ever with his book of consecration more and more, men have multiplied ceremonies in the hope of prevailing by such means. But receive only worthless weeds and foolishthey
:
whom God
to be obtained
Concerning charms against harm and diseases, by witchcraft from the devil,
:
he says
"
his
Do you
really
believe
own might can make a charm so that no one shall be able to wound or stab me ? That no one but God can do that. is impossible The devil can create nothing, not so much as
:
that an earthen pot cannot be broken, far less a human being. He cannot even extract the smallest tooth, far less heal a sickness. He cannot change a single plant from what it is.
He
men
together,
far
less
1536]
AGAINST CHARMS
friends or foes.
259
The reasons are, the charm against wounding first, concerning He who protected St. Lawrence or stabbing so that he was not burned upon the grating, who saved St. John from the boiling oil, who brought the three children unhurt out of the
:
make them
fiery
furnace,
He knows and
help.
will
help
them
whom He
wills to
And
as
happens to
men now, so will happen at the last day, when God will judge according to the faith and according to the superstition of men. Who heal sickness but God alone ? A man may upon the spirits, he may as well call upon It is God alone who can alter plants.
can
call
the the
are
. .
body
be steadfast to Him.
The
spirits
powerless unless God decrees or summons. And it is fantastic to suppose that written characters can make either friendship or enmity."
.
then reminds us that from the light and power of nature comes protection for the body, and that these can only be serviceable when
He
we have
faith
in
God.
we must hold fast to the glory of God and no way depart from our faith in Him, and so make ourselves strong in the faith. Avoid those therefore who call themselves
Apostles,
" Therefore
in sin.
And
those
Spirit,
who take
own
spirit for
whose desire is to destroy what may not be destroyed. For upon their self-righteous heads are those sects which seize upon a single
260
[CHAP,
xn
article
and simple by the all-important and comthe Baptists, the Bohemian Brothers
faith
left
clear
it
the voice of neither wizard nor charlatan, but of a devout believer in God, whose glory man's
life
must
From mystic Paracelsus certainly was. his early acquaintance with neo-platonism he
It was developed his spiritual philosophy. union with God, a union whence the spirit of man derived all power to overcome the spirits
of
evil,
to understand
mysteries,
to discover
the hidden arcana of nature, to know good and discern evil, to live within the fortresses
of the spirit, to see with illumined eyes through the mists and the dust-storms of sophistically
devised and arbitrarily imposed theological and ethical systems to the throne of God, where
wisdom, truth, and righteousness abide. He found the hand of God in all nature, in the recesses of the mountains where the metals await " He His will in the vault of heaven where " the river moves the sun and all the stars in with His bounty of food and drink for sped man in the green fields and the forests where spring a myriad ministering herbs and fruits in the springs that pour His healing gifts into
;
He saw
1903]
261
His
Professor
Strunz,
presents him
new age
His was a mind of mighty features whose rare maturity converted the stating of scientific problems into warm human terms, and we owe to him the realisation of a cultured
Christian and
and
faith,
which things
well regard as the bases of his teaching concerning both the actual and the spiritual.
we may
His restless life never robbed him of that witchery which ever and again flushed the immortal impulses of his soul like golden sunshine that vision which belongs to the great naturepoet. And yet few men of his time recognised, as he did, the incalculable result to be attained In the by the empiric-inductive method. Natural Philosophy of Comenius, a deep and gifted soul who in many ways reminds us of
:
charm and joy of nature-research, which tells men of the becoming and of the passing away, of working and resting, and reveals the precious
codex of nature in which we read concerning God and His Life Eternal. Not within himself
shall
man
seek
first
unity of all
itself,
human consciousness, but in nature where God guides, reason illumines, and
the senses witness. Is there anything in our discernment which sense did not first appre-
262
[CHAP,
xn
? The nearer our reason to the apprehension of sense, the stronger in realisation, the mightier in grasp will our reason be and the further our reason strays from the kernelpoint of sense perception, the greater are its errors and vain fantasies. Paracelsus felt like an artist and thought like a mathematician, just as he combined the laws of nature with the laws of the microcosm, that is of man with his consciousness, his feelings, and his
hend
desires.
It
was
this
delicate
artistic
sense
man
completed
And with this Paracelsus found his religion in Nature with all her unfathomclosest bond. able wealth and beauty, with her immortal types and her obedience to law, was for him the gate of medicine, just as love for all who laboured and were heavy laden, who rested within God's
great hospital upon earth, meant for him that divine guide who unlocked the treasure-house The world of Francis of of nature's arcana.
Assisi
and of Henry Seuse expanded about him the summer sunlight lay upon the earth, again again God within and deep love of nature became one with the intellectual inspiration of
:
1903]
MYSTICAL PIETY
268
a man in earnest. Not only St. Francis in tender love and holy poverty, that saint who brought about a glorious springtime of Catholicism without violence no, but that Francis too who sang the Canticle of the Sun, stands again before us. How should such a man as Paracelsus have escaped the touch of mysticism, when even A feeling for a Luther felt its influence ? like a wave issued from Paracelsus and nature reached to men of the future like Comenius and Van Helmont. And they too understood the consecration of research and the sweet, pure note of joy in discovering the laws of God. Paracelsus had just that piety which to-day we admire in the classic mystics. He stood against rationalism and all the fanciful He saw God in nature just as religiosities. he saw Him in the microcosm and was amazed at the reflection of the divine light. His conclusions form the ethics of a Christian humanism. The close brotherhood of God's children must spring from a well-ordered humanity, from human knowledge and from consciousness of the unspeakable value of the soul in each of its members. This world with its thousand forms and potentialities is in its unity and in its interdependence the revelation of the laws of God nature is the true helper and friend of the sick and infirm, whether rich or poor. Nature with her miracles in the field, where the sower entrusts his seed to the dear earth without so much as guessing how what he hopes for will occur above in the still mountains where the old trees die and the new come in
.
264
[CHAP,
xn
their place in the whispering grove and in the hedge, in the lake where the sun plays with the water as with precious pearls wherever the fierce battle between tares and wheat goes on in the billowy glory all, all is living nature. Paracelsus has enshrined it in pictures and
;
and parables. The lapse of every year, coming and its passing, springtime when the new rhythms sway to and fro, summer when young life reaches the harvest and the husk, and time hastens it to the fruiting, autumn when all is done and all is weary, and life languishes. How often he has likened his to autumn, his life to its full maturity, pilgrimage an abundance for the new world."
similes,
allegories
its
I have quoted at length from Dr. Strunz, because amongst the great German Paracelsian scholars he possesses perhaps the keenest in-
genius,
vision, with a spirit in touch with God. As a Christian he listened to the teaching of
Jesus
Christ.
Attempts
were
made by the
made by
him
as a Catholic.
To me
it
seems that while he abjured the fetters of the old historical ecclesiasticism, he dissented from
the
new
limitations
of
Protestantism.
He
1526-34]
LEANING TO PROTESTANTISM
fool,"
265
" he wrote, praises his own he who stands on the Pope stands on club he who stands on Zwingli stands a cushion he who stands on Luther on emptiness stands on a water-pipe."
"
Every
;
and Schubert are of opinion that at first, when he returned from his earlier travels full of the new science and the new medicine which he had to proclaim, he found
Professors Sudhoff
amongst the reformers a readier acceptance of his views than amongst the Catholics, and that their greater open-mindedness disposed him towards their doctrines and all the more because as a student of the Bible he was aware of the and ecclesiastical Catholic aberration both from Christ's teaching concerning the doctrinal Kingdom of God. These writers fix the period
of his leaning
doing evangelistic work in Switzerland for three years later and that this excited an outburst
from the priests. It is apparent, drew farther and farther however, aloof from both parties and found that pure religion and undefiled consists in the daily walk with God and in neither Pope, Priest, nor Presbytery. We know that he never formally disconnected himself from the Catholic Church, and that he was buried as a member of its communion. But that he reserved his right of judgment in matters spiritual cannot
of persecution
that he
266
[CHAP,
xn
be gainsaid.
His writings contain many apt criticisms of sacerdotalism in both parties and
many
developed far more than previously his theological views, for he was occupied with questions
of doctrine, faith,
forward.
No doubt
the dissensions
in the 'thirties
lians considerably modified his opinion of both, and led him to the conclusion that as such
dissensions
of God's
which some trivial variance of expression exIndeed he went so far as to call Lutherans cited. and Zwinglians " sects clad in gospel cloaks," and accused them of wresting Christ's words from His meaning and twisting them to the meaning which they desired. In one of his
later discourses,
"Sermo
in
Similitudinis,"
he
wrote " In
whether they be papists, Lutherans, baptists, Zwinglians, they are all of them ready
fine,
to glory in themselves as alone possessing the Holy Spirit and alone justified in their con-
1536]
SIN OF
of
THE PHARISEES
:
267
'
struction
/ and each cries, am right, right is with me, I speak the word of God, Christ and His words are what / tell
the Gospel
:
me all of you, it is / who bring you the Gospel.' And yet it was just that which was the sin of the Pharisees. ... It is a sin
you
after
the Pope, against the Holy Ghost to say Luther, Zwingli, etc., are the Word of God, or speak to us from Christ, or are they who
:
represent Christ, are His prophets, are His he who holds and esteems their apostles discourse as the Word of God sins against the Thou hearest not what Christ Holy Ghost.
: . .
Hebrew prophets
are
invectives against
gogues, and church assemblies, against the monastic orders, against superstitions, pilgrimages, ceremonials, all the hypocritical occultism of " so-called holiness. God requires from us our he says in his treatise on " Invisible heart,"
Diseases,"
faith in
"
we seek God we perishes." must go forth, for in the Church we find Him
not."
Him
takes firm footing on the life and the teaching of our Lord, for there is the only foundation for our creed
:
He
It is there, in the Eternal Life described the Evangel and in the Scriptures that we by
"
find
all
we need
no syllable
is
wanting
in
268
[CHAP,
xn
that." In Christ only is salvation, and as we in Him so through Him we are saved. believe No worship of the saints is needed for that, no
our imagination. Faith in God and in His only begotten Son Jesus Christ is enough for us. Our fasts, our masses, our vigils, and
idol of
the like effect nothing for us. What saves us the mercy of God who forgives us our sins. Love and faith are one, for love comes through faith and true Christianity is revealed in love and in the works of love."
is
Much
in
is
to be found
the theological and religious treatises discovered in 1899 and authenticated by Dr.
Sudhoff.
More
on
the Epistle of St. James does Paracelsus insist the practical works of Christianity, for " faith without works is dead." He contends
What Hohenheim wanted was reformation the human and acceptance of the divine conception of religion. He desired neither the domination of a human sacerdotal authority
of
in-
but the domination of God revealed by the Holy Spirit in the person, teaching, and
sacrifice
of
Jesus
Christ.
The Kingdom
of
1536 OR LATER]
269
was the pearl of great price, which Christ had shown to the world and had bidden men sell all that they had to secure. He believed that perfection in the spiritual life was God's design for all men, not for a few hermits, nor for a few monks and nuns, who had no warrant from God to assume the exclusive externalities of a holiness which but few of them attained. God had created men for His world, and in the world He claimed their faith and love both for Himself and for their fellows. If God were in very deed accepted as King of His own world, there would be an end of hypocrisy in the rays
righteousness. But the Kingdom of contains in closest relationship with our
of of
God
life
faith and love a multitude of mysteries which the searching soul may discover one by one. They are the mysteries of God's provithe mysdence which he who seeks shall find teries of union with God, the secret tabernacle at whose gate to him who knocks it shall be
:
opened. And the men who seek and knock are the prophets and the healers of His Kingdom, for to them are delivered its keys, the keys
And
"
these are the shepherds, the guides, the apostles of the world.
Medicine
is
it.
herself
founded upon nature, nature medicine, and in her only shall men
is
seek
And
nature
is
270
[CHAP,
xn
within men just as she is outside of men. So he is blessed who reads the books which God Himself has written and walks in the ways which He has made. Such men are true, perfect, and faithful members of their calling, for they walk
in the full daylight of knowledge and not in the dark abyss of error. For the mysteries of God in nature are great He works where He will, as He will and when He will. Therefore must we seek, knock, and ask. And the question arises, what sort of man shall he be who seeks, knocks, and asks ? How genuine must be such a seeker's sincerity, faith, purity,
. . . :
Let no chastity, truth, and mercifulness. doctor say this sickness is incurable. He denies God our Creator he denies nature with her abundance of hidden powers he depreciates the great arcana of nature and the mysteries It is just in the worst sicknesses of creation. that God is praised, not in the cure of trivial
. .
.
indispositions.
There
is
no disease so great
its
that
He
cure."
In touching upon the occultism ascribed to Paracelsus it is necessary to avoid many pitfalls into which the student of his doctrines may stumble by accepting too readily those mystical
traditions
which
in
the
seventeenth
and
eighteenth centuries gathered round his memory. His name became a credential for the books of necromancers and hermetists, who appealed in
those days of superstitious belief in wizardry and witchcraft to the terror which their squalid
1536]
ELEMENTALS
inspired.
271
of
records
He was
accused
their
own dark rites and malignant practices and his name was blackened by their own infamy.
unhesitatingly refuse to accept their usurpation of his authority. All that was base,
We may
malignant, and diabolical he rejected in no obscure terms. His practice of telepathic and
hypnotic powers, his exercise of healing magnetism, were sufficient to invest his name with
magical reputation quite apart from any genuine evidence. But there was a residue of halfquestioning faith in a number of unseen forces not all arcane and medicinal. There survived
in
him an admission
fire,
;
of
fareni
and of earth, water, melosince Besides these, imps, gnomes, and hobpigmaci. goblins had a place in his inheritance from the
teutonic realms of faerie.
in the astral
Dryads he knew as
in levitation, or
or nectromantia
in wraiths,
tasms.
It
is,
book ascribed to him, on these uncanny relics of paganism, published in 1566 by Marcus Ambrosius Nissensis and dedicated to Constantine Farber at Dantzic, under the title of
4
Ex
Libro
de
Salamandris et Gigantibus,"
272
[CHAP,
xn
been
his
given as an abstract of
is somewhat arand is prefaced by a dedicabitrarily arranged, tion which is not only full of errors, but suggests as well a very vague acquaintance with Hohen-
heim's books.
Much more
lets,
the mighty force of electricity. He combined metals to form healing amulets, one of the most
which he called the Electrum Magicum. It was compounded of seven metals His and was used for rings and mirrors. amulets took the place of gnostic gems and
effective of
of
talismans
ascribed
to
planetary
influence
celestial
characters.
One
that he used the mediaeval craving for magical healing and diverted it to the employment
of genuine
and
efficacious
means, disguised as
The charms in which these for healing. Each had its set were called Gamathei.
virtue.
were
own
One
of
his
what
of
in
is
called bezoar,
either
the
mountain stomach of
herbivorous
by
concentric
animals, or else
lime,
ammonia,
or
small
1536]
273
not be ejected. His views on precious stones were adopted by the Rosicrucians, who elaborated physical
spiritual interpretations of diamond, sapphire, powers
and
of
the
occult
amethyst, and
opal.
CHAPTER
XIII
LAST YEARS
As yet men cannot do without contempt "Tis for their good, and therefore fit awhile That they reject the weak and scorn the false Rather than praise the strong and true in me.
;
" Greater Surpublication of Hohenheim's " restored to him the fame depreciated gery academic and sacerdotal cabals. About by
THE
ten years had elapsed since these cabals began, and the children of that time were now men
with minds more open and desire for new knowledge more eager than when he lectured in
book appeared in rapid succession, and these detained him in Augsburg till early in 1537. After their issue " and that of several editions of his PrognosParacelsus left for Eferdingen, on tications," the Danube near Linz, to visit Dr. Johann von Brandt, a famous cleric and jurist, whose friendship he valued. During this visit he was busily
Basel.
editions of his
Two
Greater engaged with the third part of his Surgery," but was interrupted by a summons in spring to go to Kromau, where Johann von der Leipnik, Chief Hereditary Marshal of Bo274
"
1537]
AT KROMAU
professional care.
275
Success
very ill and required a and Hohenheim remained lengthy attendance, at Kromau long enough to finish the third volume of the " Greater Surgery," which he dedicated in the first instance to Dr. Johann to write the first book of his von Brandt Philosophise Sagax," to add further parts and begin a fourth, and to compose the German " Seven Defences," beedition of his famous
The Marshal
was
leaving. Probably he spent the larger The part of the summer of 1537 at Kromau. and phases of the Marshal's illness symptoms
fore
attention. At first was horrified by the condition to Paracelsus which his ignorant medical attendants had reduced him. His body was wasted and emaciated, and Hohenheim almost despaired of its restoration to even a measure of health. The physician who had sent him an account of the case had so misrepresented it that Paracelsus told him he would not have come had he
exacted
chance of recovery result of an irregular life aggravated by medical maltreatment. He took it in hand, however, but as he could not remain indefinitely, he wrote out
truth,
for the
It
known the
was the
276
his
LAST YEARS
[CHAP,
xm
diagnosis in detail, including symptoms of four internal and several external maladies,
with their causes and probable effects. To this he added a careful account of what means must be taken not only to mitigate their immediate
violence, but to restore
him and preserve him from future attacks. He utilised most of the observations made
during his attendance in the third part of his " Greater Surgery." As his circumstances now
permitted him to employ an amanuensis, the summer months of 1537 were notable for greater
literary
the books " already mentioned and probably the Labyrinthus Medicorum Errantium." Having done
activity.
He
dictated
all
Hereditary Marshal, he asked his permission to leave for Vienna, where he hoped to find a publisher for his " De" fensiones and for the " Labyrinthus." These
what he could
for
the
two manuscripts he took with him, leaving behind him a whole boxful of others, some of which he had brought from Augsburg and Eferdingen. He journeyed to Vienna on horseback by the valley of the March to Pressburg, where he rested. A note in the City Chamberlain's
account-book
fixes
On
mas, he was entertained at a banquet of honour by the City Recorder, Blasius Beham, and this took place at the end of September, 1537. The Archivarius Johann Batka entered the
1537]
IN VIENNA
of
rolls,
277
items
wine,
this
banquet
fish,
pastry,
roast,
butter,
groats, milk, eggs, vegetables, parsley, fruit and cheese. Even the cook's
is recorded, 24 pfennigs. His fame was men's mouths and he was received with honour. But in Vienna the doctors exhibited a pitiful jealousy, or it may be a pitiful cowardice, for " Greater Surthey avoided him. Probably his " confounded their professional practices, gery
wage
in
and as
it
renown, ignorance took refuge in flight from his presence. Some of the younger men sought him and he was hospitably received by the citizens, amongst whom he effected some
their
well-paid cures and spent the fees handsomely in entertainments to his friends. King Ferdin" Greater to whom he had dedicated the and, Surgery," sent for him twice and wished him
physicians, but Paracelsus explained to the King that it would be better to leave them alone, seeing they did not desire
to
his
meet
own
his
theirs.
his
manu-
one of publication. scripts them and the contents of both alarmed the publishers, who would have found themselves at odds with the whole medical profession had
title
The
of
they issued his invectives. None the less he enjoyed his lengthened stay in the imperial
capital.
278
LAST YEARS
of
[CHAP,
xm
not published till henheim's death, when it appeared at Nuremberg in a very imperfect condition, bound up
with Latin lines in praise of medicine and rather described than given as he wrote it. What gives this version interest is a fine wood-cut of
Paracelsus described by Dr. Sudhoff as follows
"
:
formidable countenance is turned towards the left shoulder the head, slightly almost quite bald, shows the finely moulded brow and the suture over the ears there are locks of curling hair. His simple dress scanty shows the shirt frill on the right side is a cord from which hangs a curved tassel his right
; ; ; ;
The
hand rests upon the cross-bar, his left upon the knob of his sword-handle. The background is an arched window overgrown with moss,
curve of which the date 1552 is engraved while above on a shield are the words Alter ius Nonsit qui sum esse Potest. It is doubtless
in the
;
drawn from
Hirschvogel's
original
include
the
"
and
in
down
little town and its neighwhich he had last visited on his way bourhood, from Venice to Wirtemberg eleven years earlier.
1538] It
is
AT VILLACH
279
just possible that he did not know his father was dead until he received the news at
Vienna, and
of his
'
it
fame and the success of his " Greater Surgery gave him an impulse to visit his father, and that he first heard of his death when he arrived at Villach. In either case the magistrates must have been relieved to fulfil
their obligations in the matter of his father's will. Whatever were the circumstances at-
may even
tending his homecoming, it must have been sad for him. The property bequeathed to
over,
for-
malities incurred delay, he accepted a temporary post under the Fugger administration as metal-
The managers were on the outlook for gold in addition to the lead and silver for which the Lavanthal was already celebrated. Paracelsus made a careful study of the mineral resources of Carinthia and particularly of the brooks and rivers with their spoil of metals
lurgist.
He
gold, good and pure which had been found by miners in the past and was to be found in the
His researches resulted in a book, which he wrote during August, 1538, and dedipresent."
cated to the States of the Archduchy of Carinthia, and in which he makes mention of the
numberless
its
medicines
to
be
found
amongst
the cure
waters, minerals,
and
plants, for
280
especially
of
LAST YEARS
gouty
diseases.
[CHAP,
xm
this
He
sent
Chronicle of Carinthia along with three other writings to the States, requesting them to procure their publication. One of the others was the treatise finished at Kromau, on diseases
"
"
produced by acidity, such as gout, stone, gravel, " The Tartaric Diseases " etc., which he called another was the " Labyrinth of Lost Physicians " and the third his famous " Defensiones " " against the calumnies of his ill-wishers."
; ;
He was
little dis-
tance from Villach, when this took place, and " the date of his dedication of the Chronicle " of Carinthia to the States was August 19, 1538. A fortnight later he received a letter " of thanks from those of their members as-
sembled at Klagenfurt, to the noble and famous Aureolus Theophrastus von Hohenheim, Doctor of both medicines, our very good friend and
dear Master," in which he was assured that the Archduchy itself would see to the early printing
and publication
the
States
It
of his books.
But unfortunately
with
this
contented
themselves
was not till 1563, twenty-two promise. years after Hohenheim's death, that the treatise on " Tartaric Diseases " was published at Konigsberg by Johann Daubmann and at Basel by Adam von Bodenstein, while the first unsatisfactory edition of the as we have seen, printed at
was, Nuremberg in 1553. " " better edition of the Tartaric Diseases
"
"
Labyrinth
HEDPHRAST! AB HOHEM:
DONVM
PERFtCTV/A.
DEO
PARACELSUS.
After an engraving by Hirschvogel from a portrait taken at Laibach or Vienna, when he was forty-seven years old.
p. 280]
1538]
PORTRAIT BY HIRSCHVOGEL
281
The Archduchy, " TarLabyrinth of Lost Physicians," and the taric Diseases," were issued at Cologne by the
same publishers. Paracelsus was
Laibach in Carniola towards the end of 1538, and met there Augustin
at
Hirschvogel or Hirsvogel,
of
who made a
portrait
him and reproduced it as an engraving. This portrait was the original from which nearly all the later wood-cuts and engravings of ParaOne of these has already celsus were taken.
been noticed.
vogel wanted
sheet."
It has
it it
for reproduction in a
was certainly so appropriated, as in itself it was a fine and sympathetic but likeness, it became one of the most representative and characteristic of his portraits and was copied with or without additions and alterations for more than a century. Hirschvogel himself it in 1540, and of this form Dr. Aberle readapted
gives the following details
:
And
Hirschvogel's engraving differs from the copies in the presence of the pedestal of a pillar
rises behind Hohenheim's right arm, cornice on a level with his eyes. Behind the pillar a narrow wall rests against the pedesits
"
which
282
tal.
LAST YEARS
[CHAP,
xm
In touch with the upper part of the pillar and reaching along the breadth of the engraving is a transverse tablet bearing in decorative, double-lined lettering the inscription
:
QTTI SUITS
BSSE POTEST.
Beneath the portrait is a second tablet, of depth, on the upper edge of which Hohenheim's left arm rests, and on which we read the faulty title and the second of his favourite mottoes
greater
:
As we know, a very coarse and ungainly wood-cut adapted from this was used by Huser as frontispiece to each volume of his edition The features are strikof Hohenheim's works. and the contour of chin and cheek is delicate ing and refined. The mouth is small, firm, and The brow rises in a majestic closely shut. curve. The head is bald but for some curling locks at the sides. In the large and deep-set
eyes dwells a settled melancholy. He wears a plain coat over a gathered shirt finished at
the neck by a small ruffle of lace. His right hand grasps the knob, his left the cross-handle
of
his
sword,
about which so
many
legends
were woven, as that within its handle he kept a fiend in bondage to do his bidding, or hid
1538]
PROFESSIONAL JEALOUSY
his
283
there
treasured
labdanum,
or
that
the
sword leapt to do
his bidding.
Ah, trusty Azoth, leapest Beneath they master's grasp for the last time.
Whilst resident at St. Veit, Paracelsus practised medicine with great success. He was sent
to prescribe for many invalids whom the doctors had brought to their last gasp and then given
up.
ance and recklessness that the old professional jealousy broke out around him. One of his
patients was the
King
of Poland's physician,
Albert Basa, who travelled to St. Veit to consult him. Another whom the doctors had
abandoned sent for him. He prescribed and him to dinner for the next day. The medicine worked wonders and the invalid dined
invited
cheerfully
later.
with his doctor twenty-four hours So fiercely raged the spite of his profoes,
he had pilloried in his Chronicle of Carinthia," that on one occasion when he went to church at Villach they assembled from all parts of the country, from Styria
fessional "
whom
filled
the
courtyard of the church for the purpose of insulting and hustling him as he passed in and out.
It was a strange scene in the Tabor, as such a court was called, for every church in these
countries
had been
inside,
fortified
to shelter
and children
while old
284
LAST YEARS
[CHAP,
xm
the Tabor against their Turkish enemies. the one side barbaric cowardice, on the other the tranquillity of old acquaintance with the
manned
On
two years longer. We where he went and of what he did, but realise that he was visiting patients and writing his last books. He was in Augsburg and Munich, probably in 1539, then again in Villach, then at Gratz in Austrian Silesia, afterwards at Breslau, and for some time in Vienna, where Hirschvogel revised his portrait.
He wandered
for
know very
little of
He
to Salzburg till after this second and prolonged visit to Vienna. It was in 1541 when he started on horseback
his
did not
make
way
for Salzburg, via Ischl, but he took months on the journey, halting where he listed and probably no longer able for lengthened stages. One of his resting places was Schober, now called Strobl, on the northern shore of the
beautiful Fuschlsee.
1541,
with a friend,
Tollinger,
Jakob
who seems
very special friend, sympathetic both in character and in faith. He sent him medical advice and two special recipes and a letter which ended " with the very unusual message Give my
:
best greetings to your wife and daughter and may God's grace be with us all." These ladies
1541]
285
must have been May before he reached Salzburg, his last travelling stage. The theory that he was appointed special physician to the
It
Prince-Archbishop,
Ernst,
Duke
of
Bavaria
al-
the
months before
death amounts to very little. On August 5 he wrote a letter to Franz Boner This Polish gentleman had been in Cracow. advised to consult him, probably by Dr. Albert
He sent a special messenger to Salzto explain his malady ; to the house at burg the corner of the Platzl, on the right bank of
Basa.
the river Salzach.
wait
for
Paracelsus gave both, but indicated that the disease was of too long standing for
advice.
passed between them, but he warned the patient that in spite of the remedies suggested it was not possible for him
cure.
Several
letters
He blamed
Boner's
doctors for their foolish diagnosis. He was himself suffering from an insidious
disease,
restless life of pilgrimage
He
for
had, as
we know, compounded
to
his medicines
many
buted
contri-
tinctures,
286
LAST YEARS
[CHAP,
xm
amongst them antimony, mercury, opium, nightshade, monkshood, and other poisons. He worked with these dangerous substances and
conjectured that a slow poisoning process had long been at work, due to the fumes
it
is
and distillation. It is certain that his health had undergone a great deterioration. His cheeks were pale and hollow, his lips pinched and compressed, in his eyes was
of their decoction
the sadness of unintermitted suffering. Hirschvogel's engraving of 1540 shows every symp-
never taken rest, not even the which a day's labour or travelling demands. " Rest is better than restlessness," he had once written, " but restlessness is more It was the more proprofitable than rest." fitable that he sought, knowledge, truth, and wisdom, not gold, nor rank, nor comfort. He had sought them all his life, from the days when he ran beside his father over the meadows and
nightly rest
tom.
He had
by the river-banks
at the Sihl-bridge.
Now
his
Many
death
:
legends have been invented about his one that the doctors of Salzburg had
him
in the
dark and
to bludgeon him from behind, or to fling him down the rocks ; another that they had given him treacherous draughts of poisoned wine,
or
sifted
powdered
glass
into
his
beer.
But
disis
may
What
is
certain
1541]
287
that day by day the subtle disease progressed and that he braced himself to meet the invincible
master whom it heralded. For some weeks he studied, paid professional visits, or gave medical advice in his own house. He had furnished his workroom with a great fireplace on a flat stone hearth just opposite the door, with shelves and tables and all the requisites of a
laboratory,
vases,
bellows,
tongs,
pincers,
crucibles,
and alembics, with herbs and and had installed himself ready for minerals,
retorts,
consultations,
setting
for
chemical
results.
experiments,
for
down
their
He was
cerning the Holy Trinity, written at Salzburg in expectation of the Eve of our Dear Lady's
Nativity," and unfinished. It was published by Toxites in 1570. There were also a number
of passages selected out on loose sheets.
He was
by the rapid processes of culminating disease. Death was stealing in to take away his life. He had foreseen the secrecy of death for others and surely for himself. The fitting of his little
home, the turning to rest after restlessness, the haste to record his thoughts on the mysteries
of our faith, all point to foreboding of days which God had numbered and to a great longing to make the most of them.
288
LAST YEARS
[CHAP,
xm
"
By
"
thieves
seen.
at
its
So creeps in death when medicine is darkest, and steals away the life of man,
Now, he who had laboured in medicine as in a revelation of God's love, and had sought to " God's Lamp," was dispel its darkness with The hidden ways of God were at work dying.
and
sun
was being drawn from him as the drawn below the western horizon. He recognised the hand that drew and turned to it tranquil and aware. There was last work to be done. He had possessions, books, raiment, medicines. It was incumbent on him to see to their just distribution and it was imhis life
is
possible to
in
make
his laboratory
a room at the White Horse Inn in the Kaygasse, large enough to serve as both sick-room and
business-room.
St.
He was removed
to
it
before
21,
when the
public notary, Hans Kalbsohr, and six invited witnesses assembled to hear and put into writing his last wishes. Another man was present,
his servant Clauss
Frachmaier.
The
judge at Hallein, Andree Setznagel, Hans Miilberger, Ruprecht Strobl, Sebastian Gross, all of
Salzburg, and Steffan Waginger of Reichenthal.
1541]
HIS WILL
289
Paracelsus was in bed but in a sitting posture. The first article of his will after accurate dating
and designation
"
is
as follows
The most learned and honoured Master Theophrastus von Hohenheim, Doctor of Art and Medicine, weak in body and sitting in a camp-bed, but clear in mind and of upright heart
commits his life, death, and soul to the . . care and protection of Almighty God, in steadfast hope that the Eternal Merciful God will not allow the bitter sufferings, martyrdom, and
.
death of His only begotten Son, our Saviour Jesus Christ, to be fruitless and of no avail for him, a miserable man."
He
and makes special choice of St. Sebastian's Church beyond the bridge, to which his body is to be carried and where the first, seventh, and thirtieth Psalms are to be sung around it, and between the singing of each psalm a penny
is
of
to be given to every poor man who is in front the church. The choice of psalms was
his confession of faith that his
characteristic
life
tality
shall be like a tree planted by the waterthat will bring forth his fruit in due side and season. His leaf also shall not wither
:
"
He
look, whatsoever he doeth, it shall prosper." " who preserveth help cometh of God
My
19
290
LAST YEARS
are true of heart.
[CHAP,
xm
them that
ness
:
...
I will give
and I will praise the Name most High." " 1 will magnify thee, O Lord, for thou hast and not made my foes to triumph set me up Heaviness may endure for a over me. night, but joy cometh in the morning.
:
Lord, be thou my helper. Thou hast turned my heaviness into joy. ... O my God, I will give thanks unto thee for ever."
come the
legacies.
To
Master Andree Wendl, a citizen and doctor of Salzburg, he left all his medical books, implements, and medicines to be used by him while he lived. All his other goods and possessions, with the exception of some small money be" to his heirs, the poor, miserquests, he left able, needy people, those who have neither money nor provision, without favour or disfavour poverty and want are the only qualifi" cations his debts were to be paid first. He named his executors, who were Masters Georg Teyssenperger and Michael Setznagel, to each of whom he left twelve guldens in coin and to each of the witnesses he left twelve guldens. After due legal phraseology for con:
firming the will, the witnesses, including his servant Clauss, set their names to the document
and Master Hans Kalbsohr wound up appropriately with his declaration and signature.
1541]
HOHENHEIM'S DEATH
tells
291
This will
various places, as two boxes full of books and manuscripts at Augsburg, one at Kromau, and
other personal belongings at Leoben and various places in Carinthia, probably at Villach and
St. Veit.
He
in
labour was
the
accomplished. Probably he died Gasthaus zum Weissen Ross. It is certain that he was never in the Hospital of He had no fear of death. Death St. Sebastian. " was his day's work ended and God's harvesttime. Man's power over us ends at death, and only God deals with us then, and God is
love."
If I stoop Into a dark tremendous sea of cloud, I press God's lamp It is but for a time its splendour soon or late Close to my breast I shall emerge one day. Will pierce the gloom
; ; ;
The date of his death was September 24, 1541. It was St. Rupert's festival, a very popular
one in Salzburg, which
fell
on a Saturday
in
that year. A decree prevailed already as a custom, which was shortly afterwards made peremptory, that not more than twenty-four
hours might elapse between death and burial. Hohenheim's body was borne to St. Sebastian's
church at once and interred during the afternoon of the 24th, in its churchyard, in the middle The town was of which his grave was dug.
292
LAST YEARS
[CHAP,
xm
crowded with country people and visitors. The Prince Archbishop ordained that the funeral of the great physician and scientist should be celebrated with all solemnity. Paracelsus had chosen to be laid in the burial-place of the poor, and doubtless many oj the poor were there to bid their friend farewell and to receive what he had bequeathed to them. The Prince's mandate would suffice to secure honourable observance to his obsequies, but we should like
to
that the lauds he chose were sung around him in the church. His apostolic in-
know
dependence was not known at Salzburg, for his treatises were not printed till long after his death, and he was held for orthodox and buried as he desired in ground consecrated to
the poor.
"
"
Interpre-
tations, interrupted, and seven medical treatises composed his last writings. His wardrobe was
found to be very
of his
full.
Greater Surgery," he must have allowed himself ampler expenditure, more variety
of clothes, coats of velvet
"
and damask, mantles, riding-gear. His famous sword is not mentioned in the inventory and we do not know to whom it was bequeathed.
1541]
MEMORIAL INSCRIPTION
293
Fifty years later his grave was opened, his bones were taken out and put in a new resting-
place against the wall of St. Sebastian's Church. The middle of the churchyard was wanted as a
site for
cutor,
of red marble
on the grave with a memorial This tablet was transferred. Its inscription. inscription is in Latin, which roughly trans:
lated runs
PHILIP THEOPHRASTUS
THE FAMOUS DOCTOB OF MEDICINE WHO CUBED WOUNDS, LEPBOSY, GOUT, DBOPSY AND OTHEB INCUBABLE MALADIES OF THE BODY, WITH WONDEBFUL KNOWLEDGE AND GAVE HIS GOODS TO BE DIVIDED AND DISTBIBUTED TO THE POOB. IN THE YEAB 1541 ON THE 24TH DAY OF SEPTEMBEB HE EXCHANGED LIFE FOB DEATH.
Beneath this inscription is chiselled the coat of arms of the Bombasts von Hohenheim and below it are the words "to the living Peace,
:
and again,
even death brought no rest, for many a time The second time his bones were removed. was in 1752, more than two centuries after their first interment, when Archbishop Andreas von Dietrichstein erected a marble pyramid on a pedestal of marble, into which the old red tablet was inserted, and placed it in the church porch. On the pinnacle rests an urn, but his
294
LAST YEARS
[CHAP,
xm
bones were put in a niche of the obelisk and shut in by a little door of sheet-iron, on which
was desired to paint a portrait of Paracelsus, but by some blunder his father's portrait was
it
To
heim's
this
there.
Hohen-
blossomed in the dust " memory to sainthood, for the poor have canonised him.
"
When
cholera
threatened
the people
made
ment and prayed him to avert it from their homes. The dreaded scourge passed away from them and raged in Germany and the rest
of Austria.
this
time by Dr.
Thomas von Sommering, who got permission to examine the skull. He discovered the wound at its back on which the myth of his violent
assassination
was founded.
his
It
was
said that he
was
flung
down from a
rocks,
and that
it
skull shattered.
controverted
by
bones in 1878, 1881, 1884, and 1886, the results of which he has detailed in his valuable book " Grabdenkmal Schadel und Abbildungen des
(Salzburg, 1891). Theophrastus Paracelsus He points out that had Paracelsus died of a broken neck, he could not possibly have dictated
"
1878-86]
his will, as
EXAMINATIONS
295
seven witnesses.
he certainly did in the presence of Clear indications of rickets were discovered as one result of these examinations,
and to its action Dr. Aberle ascribes the curving and thickening of his skull and its consequent
deterioration in the grave.
APPENDIX A
Theologorum Patrono Eximio domino Erasmo Roterodamo vndicunque doctissimo suo optimo.
Que mihi sagax musa et Alstoos tribuit medica, candide apud me clamant Similium ludiciorum manifestus sum Auctor. Regio epatis pharmacijs non indiget, nee alie due
species indigent Laxatiuis, Medicamen est Magistrale Archanum potius ex re confortatiua, specifica et melleis
abstersiuis
id est
consolidatiuis,
In defectum epatis
essentia est, et que de pinguedine renum medicamina Scio corpusculum Mesuaijcas regalia sunt perite laudis.
tuum non
me Aptiorem
mea
corpusculo tuo valeant in vitam longam, quietam et sanam, non indiges vac[u]ationibus. Tertius morbus est vt apertius Loquar, que materia
seu vlcerata putrefactio seu natum flegma vel Accidentale colligatum, vel si fex vrinae, vel tartarum vasis vel
Mucillago de reliquijs e spermate, vel si humor nutriens viscosus vel bithuminosa pinguedo resoluta vel quicquid huiusmodi sit, quando de potentia salis (in quo coagulandi vis est) coagulabitur
berillo potius, similis est
quemadmodum
in silice, in
hec generatio, que non in te nata perspexi, sed quicquid ludicaui de minera frusticulata Marmorea existente in renibus ipsis iudicium feci
Vale
THEOPHRASTUS.
297
APPENDIX B
Eei medicae peritissimo Doctori Theophrasto Eremitae, Erasmus Roterodamus S[alutem].
absurdum, medico, per quern Deus nobis salutem corporis, animae perpetuam optare suppeditat salutem. Demiror, unde me tam penitus noris, semel dum taxat visum. Aenigmata tua non ex arte medica, quam nunquam didici, sed ex misero sensu verissima In regione hepatis iam olim sensi dolores, esse agnosco. nee divinare potui, quis esset mali fons. Renum pinguedines ante complures annos in lotio conspexi. Terest
Non
tium quid
sit,
non
id
satis intelligo,
tamen videtur
esse
probabile mini,
molestare ut dixi.
Hisce diebus
aliquot nee medicari vacat, nee aegrotare, nee mori, tot studiorum laboribus obruor. Si quid tamen est, quod
citra solutionem corporis mihi possit lenire malum, rogo ut communices. Quod si distraheris, paucissimis verbis
ea,
notasti,
fusius
explices,
dum
vacabit
queam
sumere.
Non possum
polliceri
praemium
polliceor.
arti
gratum animum
in
tuae Frobensi
ium ab
quoque
inferis revocasti,
me
restitueris,
utrumque
restitues.
Basileae remoretur.
Bene
ERASMUS ROTERODAMUS
suapte manu.
298
APPENDIX C
Manes
Galeni adversus Theophrastum, sed potius
Cacophrastum
Audi qui nostrae laedis praeconia famae, Et tibi sum rhetor, sum modo mentis inops, Et dicor nullas tenuisse Machaonis artes, Si tenui, expertas abstinuisse manus. Quis feret haec ? viles quod nunquam novimus herbas Allia nee cepas novimus helleborum. Helleborum cuius capiti male gramma sano
:
Quid tua
Quidve
Mitto, simul totas imprecor anticyras. sint fateor spagyrica sompnia, Vappa,
sit ares,
Nescio, quid
sit
quidve
Essatum
tulit
et
sacrum
Et mecum rabida
Si iuvat infestis
mecum
Cur Vendelino turpia terga dabas ? Dispeream si tu Hippocrati portare matellam Dignus es, aut porcos pascere, Vappa, meos. Quid te furtivis iactas cornicula pennis ? Sed tua habet falsas gloria parva moras, Quid legeres ? stupido deerant aliena palato Verba et furtivum destituebat opus.
et in cute notus
fuit,
300
APPENDIX C
Nondum
lamque novas
Plura vetant Stygiae me tecum dicere leges, Decoquat haec interim, lector amice vale
Ex
inferis.
INDEX
Aberle,
Skull,
Dr.
Carl,
"Monument,
of
and Portraiture
Paracelsus,"
Theo17,
phrastus
viii,
21, 38, 63, 71, 181, 281, 286, Acthnici or spirits of fire, 271
294
Adalbert, Archduke, 8 Adam, Melchior, 45 Adriatic, the, 71 Adrop, meaning of the word, 49 Agrippa, Cornelius, of Nettesheim, 240 ; character of his teaching, 241 Albula Pass, 230 Alchemist, simile of the, 191-3 Alchemy, the use of, 43, 46 Alcol or animal soul, 54
262
of,
254
Augsburg, 231, 284 Augsburg, Bishop of, at the consecration of Einsiedeln Church,
11
96
Altendorf 4 Altmatt, 1 Aluech or pure spiritual body, 54 Amberg, 173 Ambrose, St., of Milan, his view of occultism, 36 Amerbach, Basil, 91, 149 Amerbach, Boniface, 149 ; Professor of Law at Basel, 149 ; letters from Paracelsus, 149, 152 Amerbach, Johann, 149 Amulets, 272 Anatomy, meaning of the word, 201 Andrese, Johann Valentin, Abbot of Adelsberg, 251 ; result of his fictitious pamphlets, 251 " Antimedicus," publication of, 105
,
Azoth,
meaning
of the
word, 49
Bacon, Roger, treatment " of his 52 ; 30, Opus writings, Magus," 30, 36, 39 ; imprisonment, 52, 78 ; fame, 66 Baden, Philip, Margrave of, hia
illness
ment
78
Apothecaries,
and
physician to the Poland, 283 Basel, 37, 89 ; establishment of the Reformation, 83 ; divisions on Church questions, 85 Batka, Archivarius Johann, 276 Baumgartner, Bishop Erhart or Eberhart, 33, 37, 53 Bavaria, Prince- Archbishop, Ernest, Duke of, 285
Albert,
of
King
301
302
Beham,
Blasius, 276
INDEX
work on medical treatment, 38 Celtes, Conrad, 164 Charles V., Emperor, 71, 76 Charms against diseases, 258 Chemists, their occult creeds and methods, 44 Cherio, meaning of the word, 49 Chloride, discovery of, 54
Celsus, the physician, his
Christian II., King of Denmark, 67 ; acknowledged King of Sweden, 67 " Chronicle of Carinthia," 279, 280
Colmar, 149, 152 Cologne, 63, 281 Comenius, the Natural Philosophy
of, 261,263 Comet, appearance of a, 176 Comrie, Dr. John, his lectures on the History of Medicine, x " Concerning the Holy Trinity,"
280
of,
etc., 287 Concerning Mercury," treatise on, 174 " Meteors," 151 " Concerning Concerning the Pfaffers Bath," etc., publication of, 229 " Concerning Wounds and Sores," publication of, 174 Constance, Bishop Conrad of, wit-
"
lines
Parafrom,
Constantinople, 72, 76 Copernicus, 30 Cornwall, tin mines of, 66 Croatia, 68 Cumberland, lead mines of, 66 Curie, Madame, her discovery of polonium, 53
Bruno, Giordano, 78, 262 Biihler, 225 Burtzli, Dr., 174 Byrckmann, Arnold, 281
Calmel, 54 Cappel, battle of, 177 Cardano, Girolamo, date of his at Milan, 66 ; his birth, 30 belief in horoscopes, 254 Carinthia, 31, 278; climate, 34; mineral resources, 279 ; " Chronicles of," 279 Carniola, 34, 68, 70, 281 Castle Horn, laboratory at, 163 Castner, Bastian, his treatment of Paracelsus, 173
;
Dalmatia, 68
Danube,
the, 274
;
Denmark, minerals
Diederiehs, Eugen, publishes the " Paramirum," 182 Dierauer, Professor, 164 Dietrichstein, Archbishop Andreas von, 293 " Diseases of Miners," 68 Diseases, origins of, 183, 191, 217 ; names of, 204 ; hereditary and
specific
influences,
21820
INDEX
3, Origins of Invisible," 243, 256, 267 Disentis, Abbot of, 14 Doberatsch, slope of the, 33 Doctors, qualifications of, 106-14 Dorn, Gerard, his Latin transla" Greater Surgery," 233 tion of Dur dales or dryads, 271
303
Franconia, 105 " Franz, the studious," 100, 157, 252 Freiburg-im-Breisgau, 77 Freiherrenberg heights, 8 "
Diirer, Albrecht, 64
"
Eberhard, Abbot
10
;
of
Eferdingen, 274
Einsiedeln, church and monastery, 10; angelic consecration, 11; pilgrimages to, 12, 15 ; pictures, 12,31 lines on, 13; burnt down, 14, 31 ; disasters, 14 ; restoration, 15 ; aristocratic character, 15 ; abbots, 16 Einsiedeln valley, 1 ; hermitage
;
and
Sigmund, 44
Engandine, Upper, 229 Ennemoser, on the system of Paracelsus based on magnetism, 242 ; on the Kabbala, 246 Ensisheim, the fall of a meteoric
stone at, 151 Epilepsy, or vitriol-disease, 59 Erasmus, diagnosis of his illness, 84 ; his letter to Paracelsus, 84 ; friendship for Boniface Amerbach, 149 Erlebald, 2 ; abbot of Reichenau
Galen, Claudius, his treatises on philosophy, 35 ; result of his 36 " system, Galen, The Shade of, against Theophrastus," lampoon on, 133 Galileo, his imprisonment, 78 Gallon, St., 162, 175; religious strife at, 175 ; portrait of Paracelsus in the museum, 163 Gamathei, 272 Gander, Father Martin, his catalogue of the flora of Einsiedeln,
24, 26
monastery, 3
Esslingen, 159, 175
Etzel,
1,
Glarus, valley of, 1 Gold, manufacture of, 252-4 Goppingen, mineral spring at, 78 Gothard, St., Pass, 230
4, 21,
26
Eventrum, the astral body, 271 Experience, the knowledge of, 97,
198
Fees,
Greater Surgery,
Book
232
of the,"
66, 68, 214, 224, 228, 230 ; publication, 231, 275 ; titles, 231 ;
dedication,
231,
wood-
payment
of,
174
cuts,
Felberthauern, 228
Felice Liberalitate, De," 238 Ferdinand, Emperor, books dedicated to, 231, 232, 234 Ferrara, 66 Fiume, 68 " Five Qualifications of a Doctor," 87 Flagce or familiar spirits, 271 Food, moderation in, 209 Frachmaier, Clauss, 288 France, Anatole, 105 Francis I., King of France, 76
"
number
of editions,
his list of
See
304
INDEX
I., Abbot, his restoration of Einsiedeln monastery, 15 Johnson, William, 49 Judae, Leo, 83, 162 ; his translation of the Bible, 83, 176
Herbst, Johannes, 101. See Oporinus High Etzel, 4, 5 Hildegard, Abbess, 6 " Hippocrates, the Father of Medicine," 34 Hirschvogel, Augustin, his engraving of Paracelsus, 180, 281, 286 Hohenheira, Count Bombast von,
18
John
290
Katzenstein, Castle
of,
70
Hohenheim, Theophrastus Bombast von, 23. See Paracelsus Hohenheim, Dr. Wilhelm Bombast von, his summons to Einsiedeln, 17, 19 ; ancestry, 17-19; marriage, 19 ; portrait, 19 ; appearance, 20 ; characteristics, 20 ; position of his house, 21 ; birth of his son, 23 ; appointed physician at Villach, 31 ; record of his life, 31 ; proficiency in chemistry, 33 ; laboratory, 33 ; his death, 228, 279 Hohenheim Castle, 18
Kromau, 274
Krymlerthauern, 228
Labdanum, tincture of, 101 Laber Valley, 171 " Labyrinthus Medicorum Errantium," 276, 280 ; publication, 278, 281 Laibach, 281 Landshut, expedition to, 18 Laudanum, use of, 100 Lavantall, 33, 37, 279 Lead mines at Bleiberg, 32 Leffas, the astral bodies of plants, 271 Leipnik, Johann von der, Chief
Hohenrechberg, Conrad of, Abbot of Einsiedeln monastery, 16, 19 Hohenthauern, 228 Holbein, Hans, 149 Hollandus, Isaac, 237
Huggins, Lady, on the fulfilment of Paracelsus's prediction, 202 Huggins, Sir William, his work on the stellar spectroscopy, 203 Huntvil, 224 Huser, his editions of the works
of Paracelsus, 103, 105, 124, 180, 181, 228, 229, 235, 249, 278, 282
Hxitenberg, minerals
of,
32
ot
Huxley, Professor, on the study science, 239 Hypnotism, use of, 245
Ilech
of,
Primum, meaning
81
of,
Hereditary Marshal of Bohemia, 274; his illness, 275; treatment, 275 Leo VIII., Pope, 12 Leprosy, or gold-disease, 59 Liebenzell, mineral springs at, 78 " Lieber, Against the New Medicine of Philip Theophrastus," 157 Liechtenfels, Canon, his attack of illness, 136 ; treatment of Paracelsus, 136, 173 Linz, 274 Lisbon, 66 Lithuania, 68, 77 " Little Surgery," 155 Louvre Gallery, portrait of Paracelsus in the, 63 Luther, Martin, date of his birth, 30 his enemies, 88, 146 ; burns the Papal Bull and Statutes, 96 ; emblem, 250
;
Ingolstadt, 234 Inn, valley of the, 226 Innspriich, 44, 226 Ireland, missionaries of, 2
Magic, meaning of the word, 49 Magnetism, experiments in, 73 theory of, 242, 247
Maignan,
284 Italy, 66
Ischl,
Malgaigne, M.
65
INDEX
Biblioteca Chymica Curiosa," 49 or levitation, 271 Mangonaria March, valley of the, 276
305
evil of, 41, 73, 245,
Mangels, J. F.,
"
Necromancy,
Medicine, the proper use of, 55, 57; the bases of, 144 ; power of,
256 Nectromantia or clairvoyance, 271 Nenufareni or spirits of air, 271 Neo-platonism, revival of, 240
Netzhammer, Archbishop,
; ;
Life
his child-
fondness
for study, 3 ; enters the Order of St. Benedict, 3 ; sent to Bollingen, 3 : his yearning for
solitude, 4; hermitage at Eteel, 5 ; at Einsiedeln, 6 ; mode of life, 7 ; murdered, 8 ; burial, 8 Melancthon, 254 ; his belief in
Newton, "
on
Marcus Ambrosius, 271 refusal of the Nuremberg, 165 Censor to publish the books of
Nissensis,
;
Paracelsus, 167
Occult, study of the, 34, 40, 73 "
Memmingen, 230 Meran, 227, 228 Mercury, use of, 54, 57, 58 ; forms of, 212 ; diseases originated by corruption, 217 ; metallic, 59 ; sulphate of, 54
Meteoric stone, fall 01, at Ensisheim, 151 Meteoron, meaning of the term, 187, 189 Metz, 9 Milan, 66 Militia Critcifera Evangetica, foundation of the, 250 Miller, Professor W. A., 203 Mindelheim, 230 Mineral springs, 78 ; popularity of, 79 Mirandola, Pico della, 30 Moorish system Montpellier, 65 of medical training at, 65 68 Moravia, Morgarten, battle of, 14 Moritz, St., 229 Moscow, 72
;
Occult Philosophy," treatise on, 245 Ochsner, Rudi, 19 (Ecolampadius, Professor of Theology in the University of Basel, 83, 89; influence on the Re85 ; his death, 177 " formation, Open and Visible Diseases," 156 Oporinus, his treatment of Paracelsus, 101 ; at Colmar, 153 ; secretarial work, 155 ; returns to Basel, 156 ; number of marriages,
against
" "
Herbst
See
Mossl, Herr Josef, 21 Miilberger, Hans, 288 Muller, Christian, 105, 180, 229 Mitmia or magnetic force, 214, 243, 244
von Hohenheim),
30;
1,
new
sys-
tem, 50-2 Neander, Michael, on Paracelsus's practical joke of making gold, 252-4 Neckar, valley of the, 2
views, 27, 56, 224, 263-70; early influences, 27-9, 33 ; at Villach, 32, 77, 278; on the minerals of Bleiberg, 32 ; at the Bergschule, 33 ; at St. Andrew's Monastery, 33 ; his study of the occult, 34, 40, 73 ; at Basel, 37,
89
adoption of the
name Para-
20
306
evils of
INDEX
45, 146-8
;
;
necromancy, 41, 73, 245, at Schwatz, 43 ; his chemical researches, 45, 53 ; opinion of alchemical experiments, 46 ; " of a
256
Amerbach,
heim, 151 mar, 152
"
; ;
researches
on the
166
;
Archidoxa," 46-8 ; use glossary, 48, 49 ; his new system of Natural Philosophy, 50-2 discovery of zinc, analyses, 53 53 ; theory of the three basic substances, 53, 196, 211, 217; other discoveries, 54 ; on the proper use of medicines, 55, 57, 215-7 ; style of writing, 55-7 " Book of the Three Principles," 56-60 diseases called by their cures, 59 ; his travels, 61-73, 162, 165, 175, 179, 225, 227-30, views on the training of 284 doctors, 62,106-14; appearance, 34, 180, 282, 286 surgeon to " Diseases the Dutch army, 67 ; of Miners," 68 ; mode of travelcures, 69, 76, 79, 178, ling, 69 230 ; patients, 70, 173, 283 ; army surgeon to the Venetians, on the value of travel, 71, 76 75; renown as a healer, 76;
; ; ; ; ; ; ; ;
French Malady,"
156,
ingratitude of his students, 158 ; his cellar at Esslingen^ 159, 175; habit of working at night, 160, 162; at St. Gallon, 162, 175; Castle Horn, 163 ; Nuremberg, 165 ; refusal of the Censor to publish his works, 167, 172 ; at Beretzhausen, 167, 171 ; simplicity of speech, 170 ; ingratitude of his patients, 173, 175; views on the payment of fees, 174 ; takes part in the religious strife at St. Gallen, 176; his account of a comet, 176 ; the
ite
instructions to students, 77, 97-101 ; at Freiburg-im-Breisgau, 77 ; hostility of doctors, 77, 93, 129-34, 277, 283 ; visits mineral springs, 78, 229 ; at his surgical Strassburg, 79 ; treatment of Froben, 84 ; diagnosis of the illness of Erasmus, 84 ; on the character of doctors, 87, 114; result of his lectures
in
the origins of diseases, 183, 217 the the use of the stars, 185 Meteoron, 187, 189 ; maladies due to the stars, 188-91 ; simile De of the alchemist, 191-3 Ente Dei, 193 ; appeal td Dr. J. von Watt, 195 ; on the value of experience, 198 ; the system of like to like, 199 ; three anatomies, 201 ; on the development
; ;
according to type, 205-9 ; moderation in eating, 209 ; mystery of nature, 210 ; healing of wounds, 213 ; use of the word
mumia, 214
specific
German, 90-2
; appeal to the magistrates, 93-5, 134, 168 ; makes his own medicines, 94 ; programme of
282
his
lectures,
95,
104
burns
Avicenna's Canon of Medicine, 96 ; practical demonstrations, 97 ; his use of laudanum, 101 ; treatise on diseases of the skin, 115-20 the properties of salt, 115-18, 120-2; the father of on the homoeopathy, 123 ; causes and treatment of paralyhis system of resis, 124-6 form, 127-9, 172; persecutions against, 129-37, 225, 237 ; at Zurich, 130 lampoon, 133 ; ordered to be imprisoned, 137 mode of rehis flight, 138 ; venge, 138" defence of his prinParagranum," 139ciples in
; ; ; ; ;
218 - 20 ; medical missionary work, 223 ; at Appenzel, 224; Urnasch, 224 religious treatises, 225, at 266, 268 ; poverty, 226 treatise on the Stertzing, 227 plague, 227 ; death of his father 228, 279; publication of his " Greater Surgery," 231-3, 272, " 275 ; Prognostications," 234, 272 ; mystical insight, 234, 239, 260 ; deep sense of the spiritual, 234 prediction concerning his works, 236 ; his system based on magnetism, 242 ; use of telepathy, 244, 271 ; his faith in God, 245, 257, 263 ; legendary attributes, 249 ; gold-making, 252-4; views on astrology, 255;
influences,
; ; ; ;
on hereditary and
charms against
characteristics, in elemental
261-4;
belief
INDEX
; healing amulets, precious stones, 272 ; at Kronau, 275 ; Pressburg, 276 ; Vienna, 277 ; study of the mineral resources of Carinthia, 279 ; at Salzburg, 285 ; illness,
307
beings, 271
;
272
Ramus,
sufferings, 286 ; last wishes, 288-91 ; directions for his burial, 289 ; legacies, 290 death, 291 ; interment, 291 ; memorial inscription, 293 removal of his bones, 293 examination of his skull, 294 " Paragranum," 96, 171, 224 extracts from, 139-45, 146-8 Paralysis, causes and treatment of, 124-6 " Paramirum," 151, 171, 172, 176 ; various completion, 179, 224 editions, 179-82 subjects, 183 extracts from, 185-94, 196-221, 243, 256-60 Pare, Ambroise, date of his birth, " Father of Modern 30, 65 ; the Surgery," 65 ; indebtedness to 65 his adoption of Paracelsus, the reform in surgery, 214, 233 Paris, 63 Paternion, St., minerals of, 32 Penser Pass, 228 Perna, Peter, publishes works of
;
; ; ; ;
;
285-91
Raurischerthauern, 228 Reformation, English, causes of the Swiss, 83 the, 16 Reichenau, Island of, 2 Reuchlin, Johann, 79 Reyssner, Adam, cured of his illness, 230 Rhodes, Island of, defence of, 71
;
Archidoxa," 47 Ringholz, Father Odilo, on the murder of Meinrad, 8 Roggenhalm hamlet, 225 Rosicrucianism, 249 badge, 250 ; the first Brotherhood, 250; costume of the societies, 251 members, 251 primeval mystical culture, 252 Rottenburg, 2 Rottenminster, Abbess of, 79 Rufach, 151 " Lexicon AlRuland, Martin, chemicum," 48 Russia, 72 Russinger, Abbot Johann Jakob, 229 book dedicated to, 229 Riitiner, Johann, his diary, 178
; ; ; ;
of, in
1642, 24
Philosophise Sagax," 275 spirits of earth, 271 Plague, Book of the," 226, 228 Plague, outbreaks of, 82, 227, 294 Planets, the spectra of the, 204 Plotinus, character of his teaching,
Saccus, Ammonius, 240 Salerno, 66 Salt, properties of, 54, 57, 115-8, 120-2,211; diseases originated by corruption, 217 Salzach River, 285 Salzburg, 228, 285 ; Museum Carolina
Augusteum,
191, 235
St.
240 Poland, 68, 77 Polonium, discovery of, 53 Porphyry, character of his teaching, 241 Pressburg, 276 " Principles, Book of the Three," 196 " 56, 104,
Sebastian's Church, 289, 291 ; threatened with cholera, 294 Save, valley of the, 70 Sax, Michael von der Hohen,
Abbot
of Pfaffers, 230
of,
See Strobl
for Prognostications Europe concerning the years 1530 to 1534," 160, 166, 234; title-page, 160 ; wood-cuts, 235, 249 ;
Scholringer, Bartholomew, 163 Schubert, Professor, on the theological views of Paracelsus, 265 See Toxites Schiitz, Michael, 103. Schwatz, 61 ; the silver-mines and
laboratories, 43
;
miners, 44
chemists, 44
Christi ait in
Schwyz,
quarrels
with
the
monks
of Einsiedeln, 14
308
239
INDEX
Sudhoff, Dr.,
of,
study
Scorel,his portrait of Paracelsus, 63 Sebastian's, St., Church, Salzburg, 289, 291 Secchi, Padre, his work on the
stars, 203 Seligmann, Professor, 294 Sense, Henry, 262 " Sermo in
"
Suleiman
the Magnificent, 71 Sulphur, properties of, 54, 57, 58, 211; diseases originated by cor217 " ruption, Surgery, Greater, Book of the,"
66, 68, 214, 224, 228, 230 ; publication, 231, 275 ; titles, 231 ;
Similitudinis,"
dis-
course on, 266 Setznagel, Andree, 288 Setznagel, Michael, 290, 293 " Seven Defences," 275, 280
Sihl river, 4, 21, 25, 286 Skin, diseases of the, treatise on,
115-20 Sommering, Dr. Thomas von, examination of the skull Paracelsus, 294
his of
Sorcery, evil of, 245, 256 Spach, Melchior, 288 Spain, 66 Spectrum Analysis, science of, 203 Spengler, Lazaro, book dedicated to, 167 Spliigen Pass, 230
wood231, 232 number of editions, 232 233, 274 extract from, 254 " Surgery, Little," 155 Surgery, reform in the treatment of wounds, 214 " Surgical Books and Writings," 62 Sweden, mines of, 68 Switzerland, cantons nationalised, 27 ; establishment of the Reformation, 83
dedication,
cuts,
; ; ;
Sponheim, 39 Stanz, Convention of, 28 Stars, nature and properties, 185, maladies due to the, 188-91
;
Tartaric Diseases," treatise on, 280 ; publication, 281 Tartarus, meaning of the term, 183 Taste, the use of, 199 Tatius, Marcus, his translation of " " into Latin, Prognostication
"
188
Steiner, Heinrich, 231, 234 Stertzing, outbreak of plague at,
227 Stockholm, 67
Stones, precious, value in healing,
234 Telepathy, experiments in, 73 use of, 244, 245 Teufels-Briicke, 22 Teyssenperger, Georg, 290 Thauern mountains, 228 Theosophists, use of a cipher, 49
Tintoretto, 23, 71
272
Strassburg, 79, 89
Strobl, 284 Strobl, Ruprecht, 288 Strunz, Professor Carl, ix
Strunz, Professor Franz, his lec" tures on Paracelsus, ix ; Life and Personality of Paracelsus," 17, 28, 29, 128, 171, 261-4; his preface to the new edition of " the Paramirum," 182 Studer, Christian, his illness, 175 Studion, Simon, establishes the first Rosicrucian Brotherhood,
Tischmacher, Caspar, injury to his hand, 178; cured by Paracelsus, 178 Tollinger, Jacob, letter from Paracelsus, 284
Toxites, Dr., publishes the works of Paracelsus, 103, 105, 123, 180, 226, 228, 229, 287
250 " Swiss Chronicle," Stumpf, his 229 Duchess Reginlinde of, 10 Suabia,
Suabia,
10
Transylvania, 68 Treitenheim, 39 Trier, 39 Trithemius, Abbot, 242; his occult researches, 39 ; mystical experiments, 40 his gift of telepathy,
;
Duke Hermann
of,
his
244 Tubingen, 77 Type, development according 205-9 Tyrol, 44, 229 Tyrtamos, Theophrastus, 23
to,
INDEX
Ulm, 230
Unterwalden,
Uri,
1 1
309
195,
of Paracelsus,
221.
See
Urnasch, 224
Vadianus, 163
;
Vadianus Wendl, Andree, legacy to, 290 book Wickram, Konrad, 154
;
dedicated
to,
155
humanist and
re-
former, 164. See Watt. Valentinus, Basilius, his treatise " On the Philosopher's Stone,"
of,
237
Van Helmont,
246, 263
Wounds, method
Wiirzburg, 39
Zeugg,71
Zinc, discovery of, 53
;
ointment,
55
Zollern, Count, 2
Villach,
31,
70,
77,
278,
284;
of, 32 " Bergschule Volumen Medicinse Paramirum " Theophrasti,' '172. See Para"
Lake
of,
1,
religious
mirum
houses on the shores of, 6 Zwingli, 162 ; his attack on the system of indulgences at Einat Zurich, 82 ; siedeln, 81 ; appointed Canon of the Gross82 miinster, publishes his " his influConclusions," 82 ence on the Swiss Reformation, 83; killed at the battle of Cappel, 177
; ;
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