V
THE ALCHEMISTS
Again absorbed in thought, Charles
IX. made her no answer; he was idly flicking crumbs
of bread from his doublet and breeches.
“Your science cannot change
the heavens or make the sun to shine, messieurs,”
he said at last, pointing to the curtains which the
gray atmosphere of Paris darkened.
“Our science can make the skies
what we like, sire,” replied Lorenzo Ruggiero.
“The weather is always fine for those who work
in a laboratory by the light of a furnace.”
“That is true,” said the
king. “Well, father,” he added, using
an expression familiar to him when addressing old
men, “explain to us clearly the object of your
studies.”
“What will guarantee our safety?”
“The word of a king,”
replied Charles IX., whose curiosity was keenly excited
by the question.
Lorenzo Ruggiero seemed to hesitate,
and Charles IX. cried out: “What hinders
you? We are here alone.”
“But is the King of France here?” asked
Lorenzo.
Charles reflected an instant, and then answered, “No.”
The imposing old man then took a chair,
and seated himself. Cosmo, astonished at this
boldness, dared not imitate it.
Charles IX. remarked, with cutting
sarcasm: “The king is not here, monsieur,
but a lady is, whose permission it was your duty to
await.”
“He whom you see before you,
madame,” said the old man, “is as far
above kings as kings are above their subjects; you
will think me courteous when you know my powers.”
Hearing these audacious words, with
Italian emphasis, Charles and Marie looked at each
other, and also at Cosmo, who, with his eyes fixed
on his brother, seemed to be asking himself: “How
does he intend to get us out of the danger in which
we are?”
In fact, there was but one person
present who could understand the boldness and the
art of Lorenzo Ruggiero’s first step; and that
person was neither the king nor his young mistress,
on whom that great seer had already flung the spell
of his audacity,—it was Cosmo Ruggiero,
his wily brother. Though superior himself to the
ablest men at court, perhaps even to Catherine de’
Medici herself, the astrologer always recognized his
brother Lorenzo as his master.
Buried in studious solitude, the old
savant weighed and estimated sovereigns, most of whom
were worn out by the perpetual turmoil of politics,
the crises of which at this period came so suddenly
and were so keen, so intense, so unexpected.
He knew their ennui, their lassitude, their disgust
with things about them; he knew the ardor with which
they sought what seemed to them new or strange or
fantastic; above all, how they loved to enter some
unknown intellectual region to escape their endless
struggle with men and events. To those who have
exhausted statecraft, nothing remains but the realm
of pure thought. Charles the Fifth proved this
by his abdication. Charles IX., who wrote sonnets
and forged blades to escape the exhausting cares of
an age in which both throne and king were threatened,
to whom royalty had brought only cares and never pleasures,
was likely to be roused to a high pitch of interest
by the bold denial of his power thus uttered by Lorenzo.
Religious doubt was not surprising in an age when
Catholicism was so violently arraigned; but the upsetting
of all religion, given as the basis of a strange,
mysterious art, would surely strike the king’s
mind, and drag it from its present preoccupations.
The essential thing for the two brothers was to make
the king forget his suspicions by turning his mind
to new ideas.
The Ruggieri were well aware that
their stake in this game was their own life, and the
glances, so humble, and yet so proud, which they exchanged
with the searching, suspicious eyes of Marie and the
king, were a scene in themselves.
“Sire,” said Lorenzo Ruggiero,
“you have asked me for the truth; but, to show
the truth in all her nakedness, I must also show you
and make you sound the depths of the well from which
she comes. I appeal to the gentleman and the
poet to pardon words which the eldest son of the Church
might take for blasphemy,—I believe that
God does not concern himself with human affairs.”
Though determined to maintain a kingly
composure, Charles IX. could not repress a motion
of surprise.
“Without that conviction I should
have no faith whatever in the miraculous work to which
my life is devoted. To do that work I must have
this belief; and if the finger of God guides all things,
then—I am a madman. Therefore, let
the king understand, once for all, that this work
means a victory to be won over the present course of
Nature. I am an alchemist, sire. But do
not think, as the common-minded do, that I seek to
make gold. The making of gold is not the object
but an incident of our researches; otherwise our toil
could not be called the GREAT WORK. The Great
Work is something far loftier than that. If,
therefore, I were forced to admit the presence of God
in matter, my voice must logically command the extinction
of furnaces kept burning throughout the ages.
But to deny the direct action of God in the world
is not to deny God; do not make that mistake.
We place the Creator of all things far higher than
the sphere to which religions have degraded Him.
Do not accuse of atheism those who look for immortality.
Like Lucifer, we are jealous of our God; and jealousy
means love. Though the doctrine of which I speak
is the basis of our work, all our disciples are not
imbued with it. Cosmo,” said the old man,
pointing to his brother, “Cosmo is devout; he
pays for masses for the repose of our father’s
soul, and he goes to hear them. Your mother’s
astrologer believes in the divinity of Christ, in
the Immaculate Conception, in Transubstantiation;
he believes also in the Pope’s indulgences and
in hell, and in a multitude of such things. His
hour has not yet come. I have drawn his horoscope;
he will live to be almost a centenarian; he will live
through two more reigns, and he will see two kings
of France assassinated.”
“Who are they?” asked the king.
“The last of the Valois and
the first of the Bourbons,” replied Lorenzo.
“But Cosmo shares my opinion. It is impossible
to be an alchemist and a Catholic, to have faith in
the despotism of man over matter, and also in the
sovereignty of the divine.”
“Cosmo to die a centenarian!”
exclaimed the king, with his terrible frown of the
eyebrows.
“Yes, sire,” replied Lorenzo,
with authority; “and he will die peaceably in
his bed.”
“If you have power to foresee
the moment of your death, why are you ignorant of
the outcome of your researches?” asked the king.
Charles IX. smiled as he said this,
looking triumphantly at Marie Touchet. The brothers
exchanged a rapid glance of satisfaction.
“He begins to be interested,”
thought they. “We are saved!”
“Our prognostics depend on the
immediate relations which exist at the time between
man and Nature; but our purpose itself is to change
those relations entirely,” replied Lorenzo.
The king was thoughtful.
“But, if you are certain of
dying you are certain of defeat,” he said, at
last.
“Like our predecessors,”
replied Lorenzo, raising his hand and letting it fall
again with an emphatic and solemn gesture, which presented
visibly the grandeur of his thought. “But
your mind has bounded to the confines of the matter,
sire; we must return upon our steps. If you do
not know the ground on which our edifice is built,
you may well think it doomed to crumble with our lives,
and so judge the Science cultivated from century to
century by the greatest among men, as the common herd
judge of it.”
The king made a sign of assent.
“I think,” continued Lorenzo,
“that this earth belongs to man; he is the master
of it, and he can appropriate to his use all forces
and all substances. Man is not a creation issuing
directly from the hand of God; but the development
of a principle sown broadcast into the infinite of
ether, from which millions of creatures are produced,
—differing beings in different worlds, because
the conditions surrounding life are varied. Yes,
sire, the subtle element which we call life
takes its rise beyond the visible worlds; creation
divides that principle according to the centres into
which it flows; and all beings, even the lowest, share
it, taking so much as they can take of it at their
own risk and peril. It is for them to protect
themselves from death,—the whole purpose
of alchemy lies there, sire. If man, the most
perfect animal on this globe, bore within himself a
portion of the divine, he would not die; but he does
die. To solve this difficulty, Socrates and his
school invented the Soul. I, the successor of
so many great and unknown kings, the rulers of this
science, I stand for the ancient theories, not the
new. I believe in the transformations of matter
which I see, and not in the possible eternity of a
soul which I do not see. I do not recognize that
world of the soul. If such a world existed, the
substances whose magnificent conjunction produced
your body, and are so dazzling in that of Madame,
would not resolve themselves after your death each
into its own element, water to water, fire to fire,
metal to metal, just as the elements of my coal, when
burned, return to their primitive molecules.
If you believe that a certain part of us survives,
we do not survive; for all that makes our actual
being perishes. Now, it is this actual being
that I am striving to continue beyond the limit assigned
to life; it is our present transformation to which
I wish to give a greater duration. Why! the trees
live for centuries, but man lives only years, though
the former are passive, the others active; the first
motionless and speechless, the others gifted with language
and motion. No created thing should be superior
in this world to man, either in power or in duration.
Already we are widening our perceptions, for we look
into the stars; therefore we ought to be able to lengthen
the duration of our lives. I place life before
power. What good is power if life escapes us?
A wise man should have no other purpose than to seek,
not whether he has some other life within him, but
the secret springs of his actual form, in order that
he may prolong its existence at his will. That
is the desire which has whitened my hair; but I walk
boldly in the darkness, marshalling to the search
all those great intellects that share my faith.
Life will some day be ours,—ours to control.”
“Ah! but how?” cried the king, rising
hastily.
“The first condition of our
faith being that the earth belongs to man, you must
grant me that point,” said Lorenzo.
“So be it!” said Charles
de Valois, already under the spell.
“Then, sire, if we take God
out of this world, what remains? Man. Let
us therefore examine our domain. The material
world is composed of elements; these elements are
themselves principles; these principles resolve themselves
into an ultimate principle, endowed with motion.
The number THREE is the formula of creation: Matter,
Motion, Product.”
“Stop!” cried the king, “what proof
is there of this?”
“Do you not see the effects?”
replied Lorenzo. “We have tried in our
crucibles the acorn which produces the oak, and the
embryo from which grows a man; from this tiny substance
results a single principle, to which some force, some
movement must be given. Since there is no overruling
creator, this principle must give to itself the outward
forms which constitute our world—for this
phenomenon of life is the same everywhere. Yes,
for metals as for human beings, for plants as for
men, life begins in an imperceptible embryo which develops
itself. A primitive principle exists; let us
seize it at the point where it begins to act upon
itself, where it is a unit, where it is a principle
before taking definite form, a cause before being an
effect; we must see it single, without form, susceptible
of clothing itself with all the outward forms we shall
see it take. When we are face to face with this
atomic particle, when we shall have caught its movement
at the very instant of motion, then we shall
know the law; thenceforth we are the masters of life,
masters who can impose upon that principle the form
we choose,—with gold to win the world, and
the power to make for ourselves centuries of life
in which to enjoy it! That is what my people
and I are seeking. All our strength, all our thoughts
are strained in that direction; nothing distracts
us from it. One hour wasted on any other passion
is a theft committed against our true grandeur.
Just as you have never found your hounds relinquishing
the hunted animal or failing to be in at the death,
so I have never seen one of my patient disciples diverted
from this great quest by the love of woman or a selfish
thought. If an adept seeks power and wealth, the
desire is instigated by our needs; he grasps treasure
as a thirsty dog laps water while he swims a stream,
because his crucibles are in need of a diamond to
melt or an ingot of gold to reduce to powder.
To each his own work. One seeks the secret of
vegetable nature; he watches the slow life of plants;
he notes the parity of motion among all the species,
and the parity of their nutrition; he finds everywhere
the need of sun and air and water, to fecundate and
nourish them. Another scrutinizes the blood of
animals. A third studies the laws of universal
motion and its connection with celestial revolutions.
Nearly all are eager to struggle with the intractable
nature of metal, for while we find many principles
in other things, we find all metals like unto themselves
in every particular. Hence a common error as to
our work. Behold these patient, indefatigable
athletes, ever vanquished, yet ever returning to the
combat! Humanity, sire, is behind us, as the
huntsman is behind your hounds. She cries to us:
’Make haste! neglect nothing! sacrifice all,
even a man, ye who sacrifice yourselves! Hasten!
hasten! Beat down the arms of DEATH, mine enemy!’
Yes, sire, we are inspired by a hope which involves
the happiness of all coming generations. We have
buried many men—and what men!—dying
of this Search. Setting foot in this career we
cannot work for ourselves; we may die without discovering
the Secret; and our death is that of those who do
not believe in another life; it is this life that we
have sought, and failed to perpetuate. We are
glorious martyrs; we have the welfare of the race
at heart; we have failed but we live again in our
successors. As we go through this existence we
discover secrets with which we endow the liberal and
the mechanical arts. From our furnaces gleam
lights which illumine industrial enterprises, and perfect
them. Gunpowder issued from our alembics; nay,
we have mastered the lightning. In our persistent
vigils lie political revolutions.”
“Can this be true?” cried
the king, springing once more from his chair.
“Why not?” said the grand-master
of the new Templars. “Tradidit mundum disputationibus!
God has given us the earth. Hear this once more:
man is master here below; matter is his; all forces,
all means are at his disposal. Who created us?
Motion. What power maintains life in us?
Motion. Why cannot science seize the secret of
that motion? Nothing is lost here below; nothing
escapes from our planet to go elsewhere,—otherwise
the stars would stumble over each other; the waters
of the deluge are still with us in their principle,
and not a drop is lost. Around us, above us,
beneath us, are to be found the elements from which
have come innumerable hosts of men who have crowded
the earth before and since the deluge. What is
the secret of our struggle? To discover the force
that disunites, and then, then we shall discover
that which binds. We are the product of a visible
manufacture. When the waters covered the globe
men issued from them who found the elements of their
life in the crust of the earth, in the air, and in
the nourishment derived from them. Earth and air
possess, therefore, the principle of human transformations;
those transformations take place under our eyes, by
means of that which is also under our eyes. We
are able, therefore, to discover that secret, —not
limiting the effort of the search to one man or to
one age, but devoting humanity in its duration to
it. We are engaged, hand to hand, in a struggle
with Matter, into whose secret, I, the grand-master
of our order, seek to penetrate. Christophe Columbus
gave a world to the King of Spain; I seek an ever-living
people for the King of France. Standing on the
confines which separate us from a knowledge of material
things, a patient observer of atoms, I destroy forms,
I dissolve the bonds of combinations; I imitate death
that I may learn how to imitate life. I strike
incessantly at the door of creation, and I shall continue
so to strike until the day of my death. When I
am dead the knocker will pass into other hands equally
persistent with those of the mighty men who handed
it to me. Fabulous and uncomprehended beings,
like Prometheus, Ixion, Adonis, Pan, and others, who
have entered into the religious beliefs of all countries
and all ages, prove to the world that the hopes we
now embody were born with the human races. Chaldea,
India, Persia, Egypt, Greece, the Moors, have transmitted
from one to another Magic, the highest of all the
occult sciences, which holds within it, as a precious
deposit the fruits of the studies of each generation.
In it lay the tie that bound the grand and majestic
institution of the Templars. Sire, when one of
your predecessors burned the Templars, he burned men
only,—their Secret lived. The reconstruction
of the Temple is a vow of an unknown nation, a race
of daring seekers, whose faces are turned to the Orient
of life,—all brothers, all inseparable,
all united by one idea, and stamped with the mark
of toil. I am the sovereign leader of that people,
sovereign by election, not by birth. I guide them
onward to a knowledge of the essence of life.
Grand-master, Red-Cross-bearers, companions, adepts,
we forever follow the imperceptible molecule which
still escapes our eyes. But soon we shall make
ourselves eyes more powerful than those which Nature
has given us; we shall attain to a sight of the primitive
atom, the corpuscular element so persistently sought
by the wise and learned of all ages who have preceded
us in the glorious search. Sire, when a man is
astride of that abyss, when he commands bold divers
like my disciples, all other human interests are as
nothing. Therefore we are not dangerous.
Religious disputes and political struggles are far
away from us; we have passed beyond and above them.
No man takes others by the throat when his whole strength
is given to a struggle with Nature. Besides, in
our science results are perceivable; we can measure
effects and predict them; whereas all things are uncertain
and vacillating in the struggles of men and their
selfish interests. We decompose the diamond in
our crucibles, and we shall make diamonds, we shall
make gold! We shall impel vessels (as they have
at Barcelona) with fire and a little water! We
test the wind, and we shall make wind; we shall make
light; we shall renew the face of empires with new
industries! But we shall never debase ourselves
to mount a throne to be crucified by the peoples!”
In spite of his strong determination
not to be taken in by Italian wiles, the king, together
with his gentle mistress, was already caught and snared
by the ambiguous phrases and doublings of this pompous
and humbugging loquacity. The eyes of the two
lovers showed how their minds were dazzled by the
mysterious riches of power thus displayed; they saw,
as it were, a series of subterranean caverns filled
with gnomes at their toil. The impatience of
their curiosity put to flight all suspicion.
“But,” cried the king,
“if this be so, you are great statesmen who can
enlighten us.”
“No, sire,” said Lorenzo, naively.
“Why not?” asked the king.
“Sire, it is not given to any
man to foresee what will happen when thousands of
men are gathered together. We can tell what one
man will do, how long he will live, whether he will
be happy or unhappy; but we cannot tell what a collection
of wills may do; and to calculate the oscillations
of their selfish interests is more difficult still,
for interests are men plus things. We
can, in solitude, see the future as a whole, and that
is all. The Protestantism that now torments you
will be destroyed in turn by its material consequences,
which will turn to theories in due time. Europe
is at the present moment getting the better of religion;
to-morrow it will attack royalty.”
“Then the Saint-Bartholomew was a great conception?”
“Yes, sire; for if the people
triumph it will have a Saint-Bartholomew of its own.
When religion and royalty are destroyed the people
will attack the nobles; after the nobles, the rich.
When Europe has become a mere troop of men without
consistence or stability, because without leaders,
it will fall a prey to brutal conquerors. Twenty
times already has the world seen that sight, and Europe
is now preparing to renew it. Ideas consume the
ages as passions consume men. When man is cured,
humanity may possibly cure itself. Science is
the essence of humanity, and we are its pontiffs;
whoso concerns himself about the essence cares little
about the individual life.”
“To what have you attained, so far?” asked
the king.
“We advance slowly; but we lose nothing that
we have won.”
“Then you are the king of sorcerers?”
retorted the king, piqued at being of no account in
the presence of this man.
The majestic grand-master of the Rosicrucians
cast a look on Charles IX. which withered him.
“You are the king of men,”
he said; “I am the king of ideas. If we
were sorcerers, you would already have burned us.
We have had our martyrs.”
“But by what means are you able
to cast nativities?” persisted the king.
“How did you know that the man who came to your
window last night was King of France? What power
authorized one of you to tell my mother the fate of
her three sons? Can you, grand-master of an art
which claims to mould the world, can you tell me what
my mother is planning at this moment?”
“Yes, sire.”
This answer was given before Cosmo
could pull his brother’s robe to enjoin silence.
“Do you know why my brother,
the King of Poland, has returned?”
“Yes, sire.”
“Why?”
“To take your place.”
“Our most cruel enemies are
our nearest in blood!” exclaimed the king, violently,
rising and walking about the room with hasty steps.
“Kings have neither brothers, nor sons, nor
mothers. Coligny was right; my murderers are
not among the Huguenots, but in the Louvre. You
are either imposters or regicides!—Jacob,
call Solern.”
“Sire,” said Marie Touchet,
“the Ruggieri have your word as a gentleman.
You wanted to taste of the fruit of the tree of knowledge;
do not complain of its bitterness.”
The king smiled, with an expression
of bitter self-contempt; he thought his material royalty
petty in presence of the august intellectual royalty
of Lorenzo Ruggiero. Charles IX. knew that he
could scarcely govern France, but this grand-master
of Rosicrucians ruled a submissive and intelligent
world.
“Answer me truthfully; I pledge
my word as a gentleman that your answer, in case it
confesses dreadful crimes, shall be as if it were
never uttered,” resumed the king. “Do
you deal with poisons?”
“To discover that which gives
life, we must also have full knowledge of that which
kills.”
“Do you possess the secret of many poisons?”
“Yes, sire,—in theory,
but not in practice. We understand all poisons,
but do not use them.”
“Has my mother asked you for
any?” said the king, breathlessly.
“Sire,” replied Lorenzo,
“Queen Catherine is too able a woman to employ
such means. She knows that the sovereign who poisons
dies by poison. The Borgias, also Bianca Capello,
Grand Duchess of Tuscany, are noted examples of the
dangers of that miserable resource. All things
are known at courts; there can be no concealment.
It may be possible to kill a poor devil—and
what is the good of that?—but to aim at
great men cannot be done secretly. Who shot Coligny?
It could only be you, or the queen-mother, or the
Guises. Not a soul is doubtful of that.
Believe me, poison cannot be twice used with impunity
in statecraft. Princes have successors. As
for other men, if, like Luther, they are sovereigns
through the power of ideas, their doctrines are not
killed by killing them. The queen is from Florence;
she knows that poison should never be used except as
a weapon of personal revenge. My brother, who
has not been parted from her since her arrival in
France, knows the grief that Madame Diane caused your
mother. But she never thought of poisoning her,
though she might easily have done so. What could
your father have said? Never had a woman a better
right to do it; and she could have done it with impunity;
but Madame de Valentinois still lives.”
“But what of those waxen images?” asked
the king.
“Sire,” said Cosmo, “these
things are so absolutely harmless that we lend ourselves
to the practice to satisfy blind passions, just as
physicians give bread pills to imaginary invalids.
A disappointed woman fancies that by stabbing the
heart of a wax-figure she has brought misfortunes
upon the head of the man who has been unfaithful to
her. What harm in that? Besides, it is our
revenue.”
“The Pope sells indulgences,”
said Lorenzo Ruggiero, smiling.
“Has my mother practised these
spells with waxen images?”
“What good would such harmless
means be to one who has the actual power to do all
things?”
“Has Queen Catherine the power
to save you at this moment?” inquired the king,
in a threatening manner.
“Sire, we are not in any danger,”
replied Lorenzo, tranquilly. “I knew before
I came into this house that I should leave it safely,
just as I know that the king will be evilly disposed
to my brother Cosmo a few weeks hence. My brother
may run some danger then, but he will escape it.
If the king reigns by the sword, he also reigns by
justice,” added the old man, alluding to the
famous motto on a medal struck for Charles IX.
“You know all, and you know
that I shall die soon, which is very well,”
said the king, hiding his anger under nervous impatience;
“but how will my brother die,—he
whom you say is to be Henri III.?”
“By a violent death.”
“And the Duc d’Alencon?”
“He will not reign.”
“Then Henri de Bourbon will be king of France?”
“Yes, sire.”
“How will he die?”
“By a violent death.”
“When I am dead what will become
of madame?” asked the king, motioning to Marie
Touchet.
“Madame de Belleville will marry, sire.”
“You are imposters!” cried Marie Touchet.
“Send them away, sire.”
“Dearest, the Ruggieri have
my word as a gentleman,” replied the king, smiling.
“Will madame have children?” he continued.
“Yes, sire; and madame will live to be more
than eighty years old.”
“Shall I order them to be hanged?”
said the king to his mistress. “But about
my son, the Comte d’Auvergne?” he continued,
going into the next room to fetch the child.
“Why did you tell him I should
marry?” said Marie to the two brothers, the
moment they were alone.
“Madame,” replied Lorenzo,
with dignity, “the king bound us to tell the
truth, and we have told it.”
“Is that true?” she exclaimed.
“As true as it is that the governor
of the city of Orleans is madly in love with you.”
“But I do not love him,” she cried.
“That is true, madame,”
replied Lorenzo; “but your horoscope declares
that you will marry the man who is in love with you
at the present time.”
“Can you not lie a little for
my sake?” she said smiling; “for if the
king believes your predictions—”
“Is it not also necessary that
he should believe our innocence?” interrupted
Cosmo, with a wily glance at the young favorite.
“The precautions taken against us by the king
have made us think during the time we have spent in
your charming jail that the occult sciences have been
traduced to him.”
“Do not feel uneasy,”
replied Marie. “I know him; his suspicions
are at an end.”
“We are innocent,” said
the grand-master of the Rosicrucians, proudly.
“So much the better for you,”
said Marie, “for your laboratory, and your retorts
and phials are now being searched by order of the king.”
The brothers looked at each other
smiling. Marie Touchet took that smile for one
of innocence, though it really signified: “Poor
fools! can they suppose that if we brew poisons, we
do not hide them?”
“Where are the king’s searchers?”
“In Rene’s laboratory,” replied
Marie.
Again the brothers glanced at each
other with a look which said: “The hotel
de Soissons is inviolable.”
The king had so completely forgotten
his suspicions that when, as he took his boy in his
arms, Jacob gave him a note from Chapelain, he opened
it with the certainty of finding in his physician’s
report that nothing had been discovered in the laboratory
but what related exclusively to alchemy.
“Will he live a happy man?”
asked the king, presenting his son to the two alchemists.
“That is a question which concerns
Cosmo,” replied Lorenzo, signing his brother.
Cosmo took the tiny hand of the child,
and examined it carefully.
“Monsieur,” said Charles
IX. to the old man, “if you find it necessary
to deny the existence of the soul in order to believe
in the possibility of your enterprise, will you explain
to my why you should doubt what your power does?
Thought, which you seek to nullify, is the certainty,
the torch which lights your researches. Ha! ha!
is not that the motion of a spirit within you, while
you deny such motion?” cried the king, pleased
with his argument, and looking triumphantly at his
mistress.
“Thought,” replied Lorenzo
Ruggiero, “is the exercise of an inward sense;
just as the faculty of seeing several objects and noticing
their size and color is an effect of sight. It
has no connection with what people choose to call
another life. Thought is a faculty which ceases,
with the forces which produced it, when we cease to
breathe.”
“You are logical,” said
the king, surprised. “But alchemy must
therefore be an atheistical science.’
“A materialist science, sire,
which is a very different thing. Materialism
is the outcome of Indian doctrines, transmitted through
the mysteries of Isis to Chaldea and Egypt, and brought
to Greece by Pythagoras, one of the demigods of humanity.
His doctrine of re-incarnation is the mathematics
of materialism, the vital law of its phases.
To each of the different creations which form the terrestrial
creation belongs the power of retarding the movement
which sweeps on the rest.”
“Alchemy is the science of sciences!”
cried Charles IX., enthusiastically. “I
want to see you at work.”
“Whenever it pleases you, sire;
you cannot be more interested than Madame the Queen-mother.”
“Ah! so this is why she cares
for you?” exclaimed the king.
“The house of Medici has secretly
protected our Search for more than a century.”
“Sire,” said Cosmo, “this
child will live nearly a hundred years; he will have
trials; nevertheless, he will be happy and honored,
because he has in his veins the blood of the Valois.”
“I will go and see you in your
laboratory, messieurs,” said the king, his good-humor
quite restored. “You may now go.”
The brothers bowed to Marie and to
the king and then withdrew. They went down the
steps of the portico gravely, without looking or speaking
to each other; neither did they turn their faces to
the windows as they crossed the courtyard, feeling
sure that the king’s eye watched them.
But as they passed sideways out of the gate into the
street they looked back and saw Charles IX. gazing
after them from a window. When the alchemist
and the astrologer were safely in the rue de l’Autruche,
they cast their eyes before and behind them, to see
if they were followed or overheard; then they continued
their way to the moat of the Louvre without uttering
a word. Once there, however, feeling themselves
securely alone, Lorenzo said to Cosmo, in the Tuscan
Italian of that day:—
“Affe d’Iddio! how we have fooled him!”
“Much good may it do him; let
him make what he can of it!” said Cosmo.
“We have given him a helping hand,—whether
the queen pays it back to us or not.”
Some days after this scene, which
struck the king’s mistress as forcibly as it
did the king, Marie suddenly exclaimed, in one of those
moments when the soul seems, as it were, disengaged
from the body in the plenitude of happiness:—
“Charles, I understand Lorenzo
Ruggiero; but did you observe that Cosmo said nothing?”
“True,” said the king,
struck by that sudden light. “After all,
there was as much falsehood as truth in what they
said. Those Italians are as supple as the silk
they weave.”
This suspicion explains the rancor
which the king showed against Cosmo when the trial
of La Mole and Coconnas took place a few weeks later.
Finding him one of the agents of that conspiracy, he
thought the Italians had tricked him; for it was proved
that his mother’s astrologer was not exclusively
concerned with stars, the powder of projection, and
the primitive atom. Lorenzo had by that time left
the kingdom.
In spite of the incredulity which
most persons show in these matters, the events which
followed the scene we have narrated confirmed the
predictions of the Ruggieri.
The king died within three months.
Charles de Gondi followed Charles
IX. to the grave, as had been foretold to him jestingly
by his brother the Marechal de Retz, a friend of the
Ruggieri, who believed in their predictions.
Marie Touchet married Charles de Balzac,
Marquis d’Entragues, the governor of Orleans,
by whom she had two daughters. The most celebrated
of these daughters, the half-sister of the Comte d’Auvergne,
was the mistress of Henri IV., and it was she who
endeavored, at the time of Biron’s conspiracy,
to put her brother on the throne of France by driving
out the Bourbons.
The Comte d’Auvergne, who became
the Duc d’Angouleme, lived into the reign of
Louis XIV. He coined money on his estates and
altered the inscriptions; but Louis XIV. let him do
as he pleased, out of respect for the blood of the
Valois.
Cosmo Ruggiero lived till the middle
of the reign of Louis XIII.; he witnessed the fall
of the house of the Medici in France, also that of
the Concini. History has taken pains to record
that he died an atheist, that is, a materialist.
The Marquise d’Entragues was over eighty when
she died.
The famous Comte de Saint-Germain,
who made so much noise under Louis XIV., was a pupil
of Lorenzo and Cosmo Ruggiero. This celebrated
alchemist lived to be one hundred and thirty years
old,—an age which some biographers give
to Marion de Lorme. He must have heard from the
Ruggieri the various incidents of the Saint-Bartholomew
and of the reigns of the Valois kings, which he afterwards
recounted in the first person singular, as though
he had played a part in them. The Comte de Saint-Germain
was the last of the alchemists who knew how to clearly
explain their science; but he left no writings.
The cabalistic doctrine presented in this Study is
that taught by this mysterious personage.
And here, behold a strange thing!
Three lives, that of the old man from whom I have
obtained these facts, that of the Comte de Saint-Germain,
and that of Cosmo Ruggiero, suffice to cover the whole
of European history from Francois I. to Napoleon!
Only fifty such lives are needed to reach back to
the first known period of the world. “What
are fifty generations for the study of the mysteries
of life?” said the Comte de Saint-Germain.