Kenilworth - Page 196/408

"Now, bravo! bravo! my good father," said Varney, with the usual

sardonic expression of ridicule on his countenance; "yet all this

approximation to the philosopher's stone wringeth not one single crown

out of my Lord Leicester's pouch, and far less out of Richard Varney's.

WE must have earthly and substantial services, man, and care not whom

else thou canst delude with thy philosophical charlatanry."

"My son Varney," said the alchemist, "the unbelief, gathered around thee

like a frost-fog, hath dimmed thine acute perception to that which is a

stumbling-block to the wise, and which yet, to him who seeketh knowledge

with humility, extends a lesson so clear that he who runs may read.

Hath not Art, thinkest thou, the means of completing Nature's imperfect

concoctions in her attempts to form the precious metals, even as by

art we can perfect those other operations of incubation, distillation,

fermentation, and similar processes of an ordinary description, by

which we extract life itself out of a senseless egg, summon purity and

vitality out of muddy dregs, or call into vivacity the inert substance

of a sluggish liquid?"

"I have heard all this before," said Varney, "and my heart is proof

against such cant ever since I sent twenty good gold pieces (marry,

it was in the nonage of my wit) to advance the grand magisterium, all

which, God help the while, vanished IN FUMO. Since that moment, when I

paid for my freedom, I defy chemistry, astrology, palmistry, and every

other occult art, were it as secret as hell itself, to unloose the

stricture of my purse-strings. Marry, I neither defy the manna of Saint

Nicholas, nor can I dispense with it. The first task must be to prepare

some when thou gett'st down to my little sequestered retreat yonder, and

then make as much gold as thou wilt."

"I will make no more of that dose," said the alchemist, resolutely.

"Then," said the master of the horse, "thou shalt be hanged for what

thou hast made already, and so were the great secret for ever lost to

mankind. Do not humanity this injustice, good father, but e'en bend

to thy destiny, and make us an ounce or two of this same stuff; which

cannot prejudice above one or two individuals, in order to gain lifetime

to discover the universal medicine, which shall clear away all mortal

diseases at once. But cheer up, thou grave, learned, and most melancholy

jackanape! Hast thou not told me that a moderate portion of thy drug

hath mild effects, no ways ultimately dangerous to the human frame, but

which produces depression of spirits, nausea, headache, an unwillingness

to change of place--even such a state of temper as would keep a bird

from flying out of a cage were the door left open?"