Kenilworth - Page 233/408

So speaking, Varney arose, and taking the flask from the table, he left

the room.

"I tell thee, my son," said Alasco to Foster, as soon as Varney had

left them, "that whatever this bold and profligate railer may say of the

mighty science, in which, by Heaven's blessing, I have advanced so

far that I would not call the wisest of living artists my better or my

teacher--I say, howsoever yonder reprobate may scoff at things too holy

to be apprehended by men merely of carnal and evil thoughts, yet believe

that the city beheld by St. John, in that bright vision of the Christian

Apocalypse, that new Jerusalem, of which all Christian men hope to

partake, sets forth typically the discovery of the GRAND SECRET, whereby

the most precious and perfect of nature's works are elicited out of

her basest and most crude productions; just as the light and gaudy

butterfly, the most beautiful child of the summer's breeze, breaks forth

from the dungeon of a sordid chrysalis."

"Master Holdforth said nought of this exposition," said Foster

doubtfully; "and moreover, Doctor Alasco, the Holy Writ says that the

gold and precious stones of the Holy City are in no sort for those who

work abomination, or who frame lies."

"Well, my son," said the Doctor, "and what is your inference from

thence?"

"That those," said Foster, "who distil poisons, and administer them in

secrecy, can have no portion in those unspeakable riches."

"You are to distinguish, my son," replied the alchemist, "betwixt that

which is necessarily evil in its progress and in its end also, and that

which, being evil, is, nevertheless, capable of working forth good. If,

by the death of one person, the happy period shall be brought nearer

to us, in which all that is good shall be attained, by wishing its

presence--all that is evil escaped, by desiring its absence--in which

sickness, and pain, and sorrow shall be the obedient servants of human

wisdom, and made to fly at the slightest signal of a sage--in which that

which is now richest and rarest shall be within the compass of every one

who shall be obedient to the voice of wisdom--when the art of healing

shall be lost and absorbed in the one universal medicine when sages

shall become monarchs of the earth, and death itself retreat before

their frown,--if this blessed consummation of all things can be hastened

by the slight circumstance that a frail, earthly body, which must

needs partake corruption, shall be consigned to the grave a short space

earlier than in the course of nature, what is such a sacrifice to the

advancement of the holy Millennium?"