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alchemy |
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alchemySupposed technique of transmuting base metals, such as lead and mercury, into silver and gold by the philosopher's stone, a hypothetical substance, to which was also attributed the power to give eternal life. This aspect of alchemy constituted much of the chemistry of the Middle Ages. More broadly, however, alchemy was a system of philosophy that dealt both with the mystery of life and the formation of inanimate substances. Alchemy was a complex and indefinite conglomeration of chemistry, astrology, occultism, and magic, blended with obscure and abstruse ideas derived from various religious systems and other sources. It was practised in Europe from ancient times to the Middle Ages but later fell into disrepute when chemistry and physics developed.
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| ? Mentioned in | ? References in periodicals archive | |
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Abalone glints like the moon,
skull-shell that dreams of waves caught in a jar,
compressed and alchemized into knowledge. If, as a schoolteacher himself (beginning in 1856), Larison avoided
some of the pretensions of his own instructors, he retained a belief in
the necessity of disciplinary severity and acquired a habit of euphemism
for describing such practices - a whipping became a "counter
irritation to the fundamental part," a rod was alchemized as
"five feet of flexible sapling" (Weiss 29, 31). |
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