Vulcan of the alchemists
- Alchemy is an art and Vulcan (the governor of fire) is the artist in it: he who is Vulcan has the power of the art…All things have been created in an unfinished state, nothing is finished, but Vulcan must bring all things to their completion. Everything is at first created in its prima materia, its original stuff; whereupon Vulcan comes, and develops it into its final substance….God created iron but not that which is to be made of it. He enjoined fire, and Vulcan, who is the lord of fire, to do the rest….From this it follows that iron must be cleansed of its dross before it can be forged. This process is alchemy; its founder is the smith Vulcan. What is accomplished by fire is alchemy-whether in the furnace or in the kitchen stove. And he who governs fire is Vulcan, even if he be a cook or a man who tends the stove.
- Nothing has been created as ultima materia -- in its final state. Everything is at first created in its prima materia, its original stuff; wherupon Vulcan comes, and by the art of alchemy develops it into its final substance.
- Alchemy is a necessary, indispensable art... It is an art, and Vulcan is its artist. He who is a Vulcan has mastered this art; he who is not a Vulcan can make no headway in it.
Abandoning Minerva and wisdom they play court to the sooty smith Vulcan and his pots and pans
However, Paracelsian alchemists such as Gerard Dorn, Jan Baptist van Helmont and Arthur Dee each acknowledged the Roman god of forge and furnace as symbolic of the art. Van Helmont specifically described alchemy as Vulcan's art,whilst Arthur Dee in his Arca Arcarnum wrote:
- though I am constrained to die and be buried nevertheless Vulcan carefully gives me birth.
- That Vulcan gave arows unto Apollo and Diana according to gentile theology in the work of the fourth day may pass for no blind apprehension of the creation of the Sun and Moon.
- As for that famous network of Vulcan, which inclosed Mars and Venus, and caused that inextinguishable laugh in heaven; since the gods themselves could not discern it, we shall not pry into it;
And finally at the very apotheosis of the literary-alchemical opus in which he delivers his three factors for determining truth, namely authority, reason and experience; Vulcan here representing the demi-urge or ‘higher man’ who, not unlike the Gnostics, ‘Man of Light’, uses his craftmanship and skills to aid, enlighten and liberate the Spiritual Man within.
- Flat and Flexible truths are beat out by every hammer, but Vulcan and his whole forge sweat to work out Achilles his armour.
- 'kindles the fiery wheel of the essence in the soul when it 'breaks off' from God; whence come desire and sin, which are the “wrath of God”. CW 12 215 .
The transforming power of Vulcan the ‘higher man’ and anthropos figure of the alchemists has today devolved into the negative aspects of a demi-urge figure; none other than modern technological man, who, divorced from God, forges his own destiny independent of Religion, Divine Love or theological considerations towards a brave new world or utopia.
Source Jolande Jacobi ed. Paracelsus Selected Writings, 1951, Princeton