:



----------------------------------------------------------------------------
        . 
     John Donne. Devotions upon Emergent Occasions, and Severall Steps
     in my Sickness
     Deaths Duel, or, a Consolation to the Soule, against the Dying Life,
     and Living Death of the Body
      .    .
            .
      ,   ,     
       
     ., Enigma, 2004
     OCR  ..
----------------------------------------------------------------------------

                   ,   
      :     ,      
   .        
    ,      ,    .  
                 
{Puttenham George. The arte of English poesie,  1589  (English  linguistics,
1500-1800: a collection of facsimile reprints; no. 110). Menston,  1968.  P.
254-255.}  .  ,       .  ,
        {. . f  "
VI"  "       ". . : Zimmer, Mary
E. "In whom love wrought new Alchimie": The Inversion of Christian Spiritual
Resurrection  in  John  Donne's  "A  nocturnall  upon  S.  Lucies  day"   //
Christianity and Literature. Summer 2002. Volume 51. Issue 4. P.  559-564.}.
          __  ,
               
   . .  ,   XVI  -  
XVII .    -    
     -  Ars Chemica,  Museum
Hermeticum, Rosarium Philosophorum  . .     :    
   ,     ,   ,
     -         
 ,      {. Yates F.  A.
Giordano Bruno and  the  Hermetic  Tradition,  Chicago,  1964.}.    
         I  
 30 ,       ,  -
,     .   
" "     ,        
      ,       
   .   ,  
    ,            ,
      XVI - XVII .,    
 .           
,          
       ,
                 
  , ,  ,      {
  5-7          ,     
     . ,  "  "
(., 1997), " " (., 1999), "    
 " (., 2000).         
        ,    "   
"  (.., 1996), ""      (.,  2002)  
.}.         
        ,        
.
        "  "     ,
  ,   .    1962 . 
      .          
         "  -"
{Rudgott M.A. Donne's imagery. A Study in Creative Sources. New York,  1962.
P. 61},            
.  ,         
                  
 ,   :  1917 . 
      "   
,  -"  {Ramsay  Mary  Parton.  Les  doctrines
medievales chez  Donne,  Le  Poete  Metaphysicien  de  L'Angletere.  Oxford,
1917.}.        ,  
           ,  ,    ,
     .
         "  "    70-  .
XX .           ,
      .    
.. ,      ,   
     ,    1970-  .    
,           
,           -  ,
,    ,    ,         
       .
     ,    70-  .        
"      ,          .
("  ",  "",  "    ")"  {Jemlich  Reimer.  Die
Bildichkeit in der Leibeslyrik Sir Philip Sydneys, Michael Draytons und John
Donnes.  ("Astrophcbrand  Stella",  "Idea",  "Song  and   Sonnets").   Kiel:
Christian - Albrechts - Universitat zu  Kiel,  1970.}.    
    :  "   ",   ,   ,
   ,        
  " ",    ,    
       ""
,          ,  -    
      {Ibid, P. 36-37,  183-185.}.
        "  
    " {Crashaw E. Hermetic Elements  in
Donne's Poetic Vision / John Donne. Essays  in  Celebration.  (Ed.  by  A.J.
Smith). London, 1972. P.  324-348.},        
  .            
,     . ,   
   ,          ,  
      XVII  -  
XVIII .     ,      
1630-1680 ., ,            -  ,
,    ,      
  .       
-        ,      
 . ,       -    
 -     -,  
 .         (,    
        {:  Pettet  E.C.  Of
Paradise and Light a  study  of  Vaugharis  Silex  scinitillans.  Cambridge,
1960.}),          -     
         ,  
     .        
   ,           -
,                ,   
          
 .
            ,  
               
"  ",    ""   {Freccero   John.   Donne's
"Valediction: forbidding mourning"/ Essential Articles to the Study of  John
Donne's Poetry. Ed. by J.R. Roberts. Hamden, 1975.  P.  279-304.}    
  "   "    .  "  
" {Hayes Thomas W. Alchemical Imagery in John Donne's "A Nocturnal upon
Sant Lucies' Day" // Ambix. The journal of the  Society  for  the  Study  of
Alchemy and Early Chemistry. Vol. 24, Part 1,  March  1977.  P.  55-62.}.  
    "        
  XVII       " {Sadler Lynn Veach. Relations
between alchemy and poetics in the Renaissance and seventeenth century, with
special glances at Donne and Milton // Ambix. The journal of the Society for
the Study of Alchemy and Early Chemistry. Vol 24,  Part  2,  July  1977.  P.
69-76.}   ,    
      XVI-XVII  .:  "  "
, "   "    -    
 ,     -      
. ..  ,         
:             
,    "-"    ,  
   - ,    
 .
                 
 .   " :      
      " {Linden Stanton  J.  Darke
Hierogliphics:  alchemy  in  English  literature   from   Chaucer   to   the
Restoration.  Lexington,  1996.}.      "   "   
  ,      ,      
     ,   
. " , ,           
    .        
  ,         
    ...            
    :  -    ,  
     ,      , -    
    ...      
        -,
        ,        
" "       
" {Ibid, P. 24-26.}.   ,     
    .   (,      
                
 { .: Figurovski N.  A.  The  Alchemist  and  Physician
Arthur Dee (Artemii Ivanovich Dii). An Episode in the History  of  Chemistry
and Medicine in Russia // Ambix. The journal of the Society for the Study of
Alchemy and Early Chemistry. Vol. XIII, February 1965, # 1.  P.  35-51.})  
     "Fasciculus Chemicus"   
:  "      ,      
         ,
 , -        "  {Dee
Arthur. Fasciculus chemicus. Garland reference library  of  the  humanities.
English Renaissance hermeticism. Vol. 6. New York,  1997.  P.  17.},    
,   ,     XVII .,  
      ,      :
"          ...    
     ,      
   ,        
,   ,  -          
,   ." {Ibid, P. 2.}  ,  
,   , "     
  ,           
       ....  
       ,  
  ...         
,          ,
         :  
  "Nosce Teipsum",       -   
..." {Linden Stanton J. Darke Hierogliphics: alchemy in  English
literature from Chaucer to the Restoration. Lexington, 1996.  P.  154-155.}.
         ,         
   -    ,      
,    ,     
  ,          
   (              
    ,   
  ).
       ,        1967  .   "Theatrum   Chemicum
Britannicum" {Theatrum Chemicum Britannicum: containing  severall  poeticall
pices of our famous English philosophers, who have  written  the  hermetique
mysteries in their owne ancient language. The Sources of science; # 39.  New
York, London, 1967.},       XVII  .
       , 
 ,         ,  
       "  ,  1575-1700:    
  "  {Alchemical  Poetry,  1575-1700:  from
previously  unpublished  manuscripts.  Ed  by  Robert  M.  Schuler.  Garland
reference library of the humanities. English Renaissance  hermeticism.  Vol.
5. London, New York, 1995.},     .  
            ,   
    ",  "    XVI-XVII  .,
    "  "      .    
     ,  .  .
,    "  "" ,   
,          ,        ,
 ,            ()  
  ;        ,      "   ""
    ,            -    
    ,   " {
. .  ;    /  . .  
. ., 1997. . 120.}.      "",  
 - ""  ,            
  ,        
 ,            
  -     :

     The Burnt Ship

     Out of a fired ship, which, by no way
     But drawing, could be rescued from the flame,
     Some men leap'd forth, and ever as they came
     Neer the foes ships, did by their shot decay;
     So all were lost, which in the ship were found,
     They in the sea being burnt, they in the burnt ship drown'd.

     [   ,      /  ,
,    , /   ,     /
  ,    ; /    ,    
  /         .]
      ,  , ,     
.    .         
     -     {  .  
:     //  . 1994,    3-4.
. 26-32.}.        ,      
  ,    ,          
    ,     
            {Fulcanelli.  Les
Demeures philosophales et le symbolisme hermetique. Paris, 19.. III. XXVIII.
P. 34-43.}.        : " ,
   "      {Maier  Michael.  The  subtle
allegory concerning the secrets of alchemic  /  Concerning  the  Secrets  of
Alchemie and  Other  Tracts  from  "Hermetic  Museum".  Llanlerh,  1989.  P.
36-59.},                
 ,    "      "  
, , ,    XVI .    :

     All which tyme to Land we shall not passe,
     No although our Ship be made of Glasse,
     But all tempest of the Aire we must abide,
     And in dangerous roades many tymes to ride;
     Bread we shall have none, nor yet other foode,
     But only faire water descending from a Cloude:
     The Moone shall us burn so in processe of tyme,
     That we shall be as black as men of Inde:
     But shortly we shall passe into another Clymate,
     Where we shall receive a more purer estate;
     For this our Sinns we make our Purgatory,
     For the which we shall receive a Spirituall body:
     A body I say which if it should be sould,
     Truly I say it is worth his weight in Gold {*}.
     {* The Breviary of  Natural  Philosophy.  Compiled  by  the  unlettered
Scholar Thomas Charnock / Theatrum Chemicum Britannicum: containing several!
poeticall pieces of our famous English Philosophers, who  have  written  the
hermetique mysteries in their own ancient language. Reprint  of  the  London
edition 1652. New York, London, 1967. P. 292.}

     [        , /      
  , /       ,  /  
   ;/           
,   , /    ,    : / 
     , /   ,  : /   
  ,   , /     ;  /    
-      , /     
: / , ,   ,  /     ,  ,
  .]
           - ,    
" ".            
. ,  ,           (1552-1611),
     ,       
1611  .              
      "",      
 "  " :

     "The water to the fire is most Enemie;
     Therefore, kepe fier in water, and moisten that is drie..." {*}
     {* Forman Simon. Of the Division of  the  Chaos  /  Alchemical  poetry,
1575-1700: from previously unpublished manuscripts. New York, London,  1995.
P. 58.}

     [ -   ; /          
...]
         XVII ., ",     
",  : "       ,  
   , -              
 ,        .          
" ",   " {The Sophie Hydrolith; or,
Water Stone of the Wise / The Glory of the World and other Alchemical Tracts
from "The Hermetic Museum". Dyfed, Wales, 1987. P. 98.}.      
         ,             "
",            {      
,  ,      "-", 
   "-".},         
, " ,      "  {Dee  John.  The  Rosicrucian
Secrets: their excelent method of making  medicines  of  metals  also  their
lawes and mysteries. Wellingborough, 1985. P. 55.}.    
 ,  "Rosarium Philosophorum", : "  ,    
.             .  
  ,      .        
.      ,        -  ,    
".
                .
"  "  " "         
 .     ,  
  - ,    :  "  ,
   ,    ,  -  
 , -    ,     ".
               
 ,        :  
"The Dissolution", "A Valediction: forbidding mourning", "The Canonization",
"Loves Alchemic", "A Nocturnal upon S. Lucies day"    "    ",
"Elegie on the Lady Marcham", "An Anathomy  of  the  World"    "The  Second
Anniversarie"    .          
,  ,         ,
  "...",  "",  "    ...",     
               ,   
"...".                   ""     
-  "  ".          
           ,    
       " ".
     " "     " ", 
        .   
      .      
:

     Some that have deeper digg'd loves Myne then I...

     [     ...]
                 
: ",          ,  
  ,  ,    ,      "   {Basile
Valentine. Les ouze clefs de la philosophiie (Traductio, Introduction, Notes
et Explication des Images par Eugene Canseliet). Paris, 1956. P. 107.}.  
,  .

      I should not finde that hidden mysterie;
           Oh, 'tis imposture all:
      And as no chymique yet th'Elixar got,
           But glorifies his pregnant pot,
      If by the way to him befall
           Some odoriferous thing, or medicinall,
      So, lovers dreame a rich and long delight,
           But get a winter-seeming summers night.

     [     ; /    : / 
      , /     , /
 ,     /      ,  /
    <>     ,/  
 <>  ,   .]
              
    ,       .      
    ,    ,  
 "children of  Science"  -  "  ",  "sages"  -  ""  
"philosophers" - "",   -   ,  
 , -        "souflers"  -  "
",  "chemists" - "".     
 .         .      
      "",    (        )   "
".       :  "pot".    
  ,          
,   ,         
 "athanor" - "", "alembick" -  "",  "cucurbit"  -
" "   "vessel" - "".        
    .  ,         ,  
. " "         
    ,          
.     ,    ,      "
"   ""  -        
.      -            
   -     .
     "The Dissolution" -       
.   ,            
,    .          "Collectanea
Lacinii ex Arnoldo de Villa  Nova"        
     ,        
  ,    :
     "      -        ,
  .         
    .     ,   
-  .     :  ,  ,
  .  -    ;    -
  ;  -     ;  
            ,
 -  .             -
  .   :     ,  ,
 ,     , ,  ,  -
              
      "  {Lacini   Jovani.   Pretiosa   margarita
novella..., Venecie,  1546  [  ].}.      
,   ,        :    
 ,     ,   ,    
-: , ,   .          
  ,          ,
 ,   , Opus Magnum,        
,  ,  ,   ,    
    , -           -
.        ,  ""    
,              ,    
    . " ,     ,
          ;    
   ,     ,  -  
 . -     ,      ,  
.             "  {Basile
Valentine. Les ouze clefs de la philosophiie (Traductio, Introduction, Notes
et Explication des Images par Eugene Canscliet). Paris,  1956.  P.  131-132;
Basil Valentine. The Twelve Keys/ The Book  of  Lambspring  and  the  Golden
Tripod. Dyfed  (Wales),  1987.  P.  59.}.        
,   : "  ,       
,   ;   ,      "  (  12,
24).

      The dissolution

      Shee'is dead; And all which die
      To their first Elements resolve;
      And wee were mutual Element to us,
           And made of one another.
           My body then doth hers involve
      And those things werefore I consist, hereby
      In me abudant grow and burdenous
           And nourish not but smother.
      My fire of Passion, sighes of ayre,
      Water of teares, and earthly sad despaire,
                Which my materialls bee,
      But neere worne out by loves securitie,
      She, to my losse, doth by her death repaire,
          And I might live long wretched so
      But that my fire doth with my fuel grow.
                Now as those Active Kings
          Whose foraine conquest treasure brings,
      Receive more, and spend more, and soonest breake:
      This (which I am amaz'd that I can speake)
          This death, hath with my store
                  My use encreas'd.
      And so my soule more earnestly releas'd,
      With outstrip hers; As bullets flowen before
      A latter bullet may o'rtake, the pouder being more.

     [ ;  ,  , /    ; /
       ,    . /   
  ,    ,    , /      
    /  ,      : /
  ,  , /       ,
   , /          ,  /  ,
  ,        ;          ,
. /   < >   <>,    
 , /  ,      ,  /    
   , /   ,     -  
  : /   (        ),  /    
<>, /    <>. /            
, /   <>:   ,    ,  /
   ,     .]
             ,                 
-.     ,  :  "  
:   -    ,  -      
 -      ,        
. ,   ,     ;      
       ,     -    "
{   .  1. .: , 1989. . 220. .
33 (31DK) (. .. ).}.       .
,           -  "Rosarium
Philosophorum" -  : "       .  
  ,          ,      
  ,          ,  
,  ,        ,    
,         ,            "
{    :  "De  Alchemia  Opuscula  complura  veterum
philosophorum...". Frankfurt, 1550 [ ].}.     
       ,            .
, ,       "
    ,    ...  
        ",  -    
.      ""  -  :  "     
     ,            ".
: "         ,          
   ,     ,   
  .    ,        
"  {Kelly  Edward  Angli  tractatus  duo   cgrcgii,   De   Lapide
Philosophorum, Una  cum  Theatre  astronomiae  terrcstri,  cum  Figuris,  in
gratiam filiorum Hermetis nunc primum in lucem editi, curante J.  L.  M.  C.
[Johanne  Lange  Medicin  Candidate].,  Hamburg,  1676  [   ].}.
    ,    :  ,    
""  ,  ,        
     -     "  "    
      .          
        .      
    - .       
 ""   .        
     -  ,      ,  
   .        ""  Opus  alchemicum
,    ,      ,
  .     
    .
           "Nocturnall upon
S. Lucies day, being the shortest day".        
  .  .  -     
  -    ,   .  .
,          ,  
 ,          .  
    :  ""  -    
    ,  ""    
 ,     {The Catholic Encyclopedia  /  ed.
Charles G. Heberman. New York, 1911. XI, 87.}.     ,  
 ,      {Miller  Clarence
H. Donne's "A Nocturnal upon S. Lucies Day" and the Nocturns  of  Matins  //
Essential Articles for the Study of John Donne's Poetry / ed. by Roberts  J.
R. Hamden: Archon Books,  1975.  P.  305-310;  Gardner  Helen.  Preface/John
Donne. The Divine Poems. Oxford Claredon Press,  1952.  P.  XXVIII;  Zimmer,
Mary E. "In whom love wrought new  Alchimie":  The  Inversion  of  Christian
Spiritual Resurrection in John Donne's "A nocturnall upon S.  Lucies  day"//
Christianity and Literature. Summer 2002. Volume 51. Issue 4. P.  553-570.},
       :

      This is the years midnight, and it is the dayes,
      Lucies, who scarce seaven houres herself unmakes,
      The sun is spent, and now his flasks
      Send forth light squibs, no constant rayes;
           The whorlds whole sap is sunke:
      The generall balme th'hydrotique earth hath drunk,
      Whither, as to beds-feet, life is shrunke,
      Dead and enterr'd; yet all these seeme to laugh,
      Compar'd with mee, who am their Epitath.

     [ ,   / ,       ,  /
 ,     /       {  
 ,      -      .  .:  Heydon
Christopher, Sir. An Astrological Discourse. London, 1650  [first  published
1608]. P. 2.},    ; /         /
     , /      
  -  , / -       ,      
   /    ,   -  .]
            "  ".  
        "  ",    
        ,       
.                  
,    .            
  -    , -  
      ""   {
.          /  ,   ,
    .  ,  2003.  .   209-260.}.   
    .     .
       
  {Klibansky R., Panofsky E, Saxl  F.  Saturn  and  Melancholy.
London, 1964.},         nigredo  -  "
"  ,      .    
,    ,     
-       ,      ,
 ,    "",    
   "".  ,  ,  "" 
   -       ,
    .
                    
:
 
      Study me then, you, who shall lovers bee 
      At the next world, that is, at the next Spring: 
           For I am every dead thing, 
           In whom love wrought new alchemic. 
                For his art did expresse. 
      A quinessence even from nothingnesse, 
      From dull privations, and I am re-begot 
      Of absence, darknesse, death; things which are not. 
 
     [  -    , ,    / 
 ,    : /   -  /    
      ,  /      
. /  -  , / <>      
 , , < > /  , ,  ;    ,
   .]
           ,             
     -,     
 ,  ,  "    ,    
   " (. 21, 1).     
  -    -        
     .    ,
     , -       
  ,  -  .     -  
,    : "", "", ""
 "".    ""      ,
      :  ",  ,    
".
                   
:
 
      All others, from all things, draw all that's good, 
      Life, soule, forme, spirit, whence they being have; 
           I, by loves lembecke, am the grave 
           Of all, that's nothing. Oft a flood 
                Have we two wept, and so 
      Drownd the whole world, us two; oft did we grow 
      To be two Chaosses, when did we show 
      Care to ought else; and made us carcasses. 
 
     [  -     , /  ,  ,  ,
 -   ; /  ,  { .} , -
 / ,  - .          ,/
  ,    /  ,       
,      /       <>;    
    .]
         ,            
  ,               .   
            
.  "  ",      ,           
 ,        -    
          ,      
    ,        .  
 ,     -  Present  Perfect,  -
     ,            
 ,    "  "  
  . (,              
   - "",     ,
    .      ,        
  .)
 
      But I am by her death, (which word wrongs her) 
      Of the first nothing, the Elixer grown; 
           Where I a man, that I were one, 
           I needs must know; I should preferre, 
               If I was any beast, 
      Some ends, some means; Yea plants, yea stones detest, 
      And love; All, all some properties invest; 
      If I an ordinary nothing were, 
      As shadow, a light, and body must be here. 
 
     [    (      ) /    
-,   ; /   ,     /   
,    ;   , /    ,  /  
 ,      -  ;    ,
 ,       /    -;   
    ; /     ,      
 ,  -              ,  <  
>.]
         ,         
,       :  "  
  ,  , ,    .  .      
 ,  , , ,     ,
  " {. : Murray W. A. Donne and Paracelsus: An Essay in
Interpretation / Essential Articles for the Study of John Donne Poetry  (ed.
by J. R. Robert). Hamden, 1975. P. 125.}.      
   (        -    
     :      ,    "
""    <  >      "      
-),           ,        ,
  .       ,    
    .   - , 
    "", -     .    
             ,         -   
  -         
.         
-  :     -     ,  
      , -              -  
,  .  ,      
:
 
      But I am None; nor will my Sunne renew. 
      You lovers, for whose sake, the lesser Sunne 
           At this time to the Goat is runne 
           To fetch new lust, and give it you, 
                Enjoy your summer all; 
      Since she enjoyes her long night festivall, 
      Let mee prepare towards her, and let mee call 
      This houre her Vigill, and her Eve, since this 
      Both the yeares, and dayes deep midnight is. 
 
     [  - ;    .  /  ,  ,    
   /      ,  /    
     , /      ;  /    
    , /       ,
 <>  ,     /      
,  ,   /    ,  .]
      ,      -          
          (?)
.          
: "    :        
,   ,   " (. 9,  60).  ,
 -     -       
.  (,              
.           "   ",   
      ,   
 ,         
         
           {Fulcanelli:
Master Alchemist. Le Mystere des Cathedrales. Esoteric interpretation of the
Hermetic Symbols of the Great Work. London, 1971.  P.  56-62.}.    
     ,          
  ;       "    
 "   .)
                     "A
Valediction: forbidding mourning".    "..."  
           
    "  "    ,        
    {.,    :  Fressero   John.   Donne's
"Valediction: Forbidding Mourning" / Essential Articles  for  the  Study  of
John Donne Poetry.  (Ed.  by  J.  R.  Robert).  Hamden,  1975.  P.  279-304.
           
  "    .            -   ".
 "  "    .}.    
 ,            
        .    ,    
             "   ",
               "
", ,  "        
      ,            
 " {  .  .    .  .,
1999. . 405-406.},              
  .
          .
        ,    ,   
" ",    ""    ""  
  .             ""
,    ""   .   
      "to  melt"  -  "",  "",  
        ,           
" ",  ""    
   ,        {Freccero  John.  Donne's
"Valediction, forbidding mourning" / Essential Articles to the Study of John
Donne's Poetry. Ed by J.R. Roberts. Hamden, 1975. P. 279-304. . :  .
298-303.}.                
.
                 :
       (            
).           ,    
   . ,     
  ,        ,    
,            .      
  :   ,      .
       ,    ,
   {        .  Fludd,
Robert. Utriusque Cosmi Maioris scilicet et Minoris Metaphisica.  Oppenheim,
1617.             ,  
        .}.    ,      
" "         -  
,            
.
     ,   : "   ,  ,  
    ,   ,    
,    ,  -  ,        ,
      ".        
,  ,     
 .     -          
  conjunctio  oppositorum,    ""    ""
   . (,     ""  (183E-193D)
    -           
  .)
         ,      ,      
",  ".
     ,   "..."        
.     :  -  - 
-  ,            .    
               :
    "Atalanta  fugiens",      1618  .  {.
 : Maier Michael Atalanla Fugiens, hoc esl  Emblemata  nova
de Secretis Naturae Chymica. Oppenheim: J. Th.  de  Bry  (Reprint  Kassel  /
Basel, 1964). S. 79. Cp.    . 305.}         (
XXI)  ,         ,  
,   ,  ,    -    ,  
   .    : "      
  ,      -  ,        -  .  
    -      "  {Weigel  V.
Inroductio hominis in Philosophia Mystica. Neustadt, 1618.}.    
  "  "          ,
   -...      
,    ,   .       ,
  :          ;    
 ,   ,            -.  
  ,        
,     ,       
     , <...>     ,  
-    ".
                  "Rosarium
Philosophorum": "     ,    ,
   - ,     -      
".
        ,           
.                       
: "Thy firmnes make my circle just, / And makes me end, where I
begunne".          
-  . ,     XVII .  ,
 ,  ,     
, - .    .  "      
" (1618) {,     
    , .: Heninger S.  K.  Jr.  The  Cosmographical
Glass. Renaissance Diagrams of the Universe. San Marino, California,  1977.}
 .  "     ."  (1621)  {Fludd  R.
Utriusque Cosmi. Vol. II. Frankfurt 1621.}.  ,     
 :      -      ,
    .     
  .          
  .      ""   ,      
  ,   ,     
" "  .        
  .
         ,       "gold  to
ayery thinnesse beate": "   ".   
, .         
  "              "   
"  "  {  .         .
-       //    .  1998.
-. . 25.}.   ,         
  ,      -   
"         ".  ,      
 , . ,       "  ":
" , ""  "  "    
.  -",   ",   "    ,
 - "...          ,    
        -         ...
  " "         
 - ,      [  . -  .  .],  
,    "",  .     
      ,   
;      ,           
     ,      ,  
: , , , ,   .  ."  {Evola  Julius.
The Hermetic Tradition. Symbols and Teachings of the Royal  Art.  Rochester:
Inner  Tradition  International,  1994.  P.  86.}      
,        "  "  -
       ,  "    
",    "  [],      
  ,        [  ]".       
                    ""
,   ,       
          :  ",    ,
 ,  ".
                       ,
   "...":    1601  .      
"   "  .    
           -  
   ,   "Lahore et constantia" ("  
") { .   "  .   
  ",    "     "      
.}.     ,        :
  ,  ,  /      
     -        
 .
             
    ,        
""  ,    ,        
    .        "Resurrection"  -
"" -           
 ,  , ,   :
 
     [His body] For these three days become a mineral;
     He was all gold when he lay down, but rose
     All tincture and doth not alone dispose
     Leaden and iron wills to good, but is
     Of power to make even sinful flesh like his.
 
     [" ]      ; /   ,  
[ ],   /  ,   /     
     (. . - . - .  .),  /  
     "].
           .   {Crashaw  E.
Hermetic  Elements  in  Donne's  Poetic  Vision  /  John  Donne.  Essays  in
Celebration (ed. by A. J. Smith). London, 1972. P. 347-348.}  .  
  {Linden  Stanton  J.  Daike  Hierigliphics:  alchemy  in  English
Literature from Chaucer  to  Restoration.  Lexington,  1996.  P.  189-190.},
               ,
  .
         :
 
     Sleep, sleep, old sun, you canst have not repassed
     As yet, the wound thou took'st on Friday last;
     Sleep then, and rest; the world may bear the stay,
     A better son rose before thee today,
     Who, not content to enlighten all that dwell
     On earth's face, as thou, enlightened hell,
     And made the dark fires languish in that vale,
     As, at the presence here, our fires grow pale.
 
     [,   ,            /    ,
  [] ; /     ;      
 : /      , / -  ,  
   ,   ,  /     ,  
,    /         [],
/    -  ,   - ].
           Sun  -  ""    Son  -
"",     .      
,     , " ,       
  " ( 23, 45).    ,  
 ,  ,      -   
 ,   ""   "  -  
" -      .
                
  " " -     -
  ,   , ...       
 .     ,          
,       .  
          , 
   : ,    ,    
 -      "  ".      -      
  -    XVI  .,  
   "Splendor Solis" -    
  .          .
          ,    ",
  "              .     
-  XV .  -  "
 " ,            
  "  ".   "" ,  
 ,   ,      ,
"  "        {
  "  "      XVI-XVII  .
.: Abraham Lyndy. Harriot's gift to Arthur Dec: literary  images  from  an
alchemic manuscript. Thomas Harriot Seminar. Occasional paper. # 10. Durham,
1993. P. 20-33; Abracham Lyndy.  Alchemical  imagery.  Cambridge,  1998.  P.
186.},                 "
".                  
,              
.        "   "      
" "  " " -     
               "Viridarium
Chimicum" (1624).
        "Splendor Solis"       ,
            .  
        -  lapis.         
             ,
    .       : "
        :    
 ,  ,     ,        
,         ,     -
    ".
         ,             
  ,    ,        
     .     
             
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      ,    ""  
  ,        ,      
,          
. ,              
     .   
       .    -
             
    "",            
,        ,      "  
",    .
        ""  :
 
      Elegie on the Lady Markham 
 
      Man is the World, and death th'Ocean, 
         To which God gives the lover parts of man. 
      This Sea invirons all, and though as yet 
         God hath set markes, and bounds, twixt us and it, 
      Yet doth it rore, and gnaw, and still pretend, 
         And breaks our banks, when ere it takes a friend. 
      Then our land waters (tears of passion) vent; 
         Our waters, then, above our firmament, 
      (Teares which our Soule doth for her sins let fall) 
         Take all a brackish last, and Funerall, 
      And even these teares, which should wash sin, are sin. 
         We, after Gods Noe, drowne our word againe. 
      Nothing but man of all invenom'd things 
         Doth work upon ftselfe, with inborne stings. 
      Teares are false Spectacles, we cannot see 
         Through passion mist, what wee are, or what shee. 
      In her this sea of death hath made no breach, 
         But as she tide doth wash the slimie beach, 
      And leaves embroder'd workes upon the sand, 
         So is her flesh refin'd by death cold hand. 
      As men of China, after an ages stay, 
         Do Take up Procelane, where they buried Clay; 
      So at this grave, her limbecke, which refines 
         The Diamonds, Rubies, Saphires, Pearls, and Mines, 
      Of which this flesh was, her soule shall inspire 
         Flesh of such stuffe, as God, when his last fire 
      Annuls this world, to recompence it, shall, 
         Make and name then, th'Elixar of this All. 
      They say, the sea, when it gaines, lothes too; 
         If carnall Death (the younger brother) doe 
      Usurpe the body, our soul, which subject is 
         To th'elder death, by sinne, is freed by this; 
      They perish both, when they attemt the just; 
         For, graves our trophies are, and both death just; 
      So, unobnoxious now, she'hath buried both; 
         For, none to death sinnes, that to sinne is loth, 
      Nor doe they die, which are not loth to die; 
         So hath she this, and that virginity. 
      Grace was in her extremely diligent, 
         That kept her from sinne, yet made her repent. 
      Of what small spots pure white complaines! Alas, 
         How little poyson cracks a christall glasse! 
      She sinn'd, but just enough to let us see 
         That God's word must be true, All, sinners be. 
      So much did zeale her concsience rarefie, 
         That, extreme truth lack'd little of a lye, 
      Making omissions, acts; laying the touch 
         Of sinne, on things that sometimes may be such. 
      As Moses Cherubines, whose natures doe 
         Surpasse all speed, by him are winged too: 
      So would her soule, already'in heaven, seeme then, 
         To clyme by teares, the common staires of men. 
      How fit she was for God, I am content 
         To speake, that Death his vaine hast may repent. 
      How fit for us, how even and how sweet, 
         How good in all her titles, and how meete, 
      To have reform'd this forward heresie, 
         That woman can no parts of frienship bee; 
      How Morall, how Divine shall not be told, 
         Lest they that heare her vertues, thinke her old: 
      And lest we take Deaths part, and make him glad 
         Of such a prey, and to his triumph add. 
 
     [ - ,   - ,  /        <>
 . /     ,    /    
       {.: "   ,   
   ,    :    
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" ( 8, 29-30).}, /  ,     <>      
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, / ( ,        ) /  
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 /  < >,  ,  ,   
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{.   . .       XVI-XVII  .  .,
1993. . 118. .       14    1612  .:
Gosse E. The Life and Letters of John Donne. Vol. 1. Gloucester,  MA,  1959.
P. 302.}.        ,     
  ,       -    "
".      - 
.
        "    ",    ,
         . 
    : "  ,   -
..."  (             "      ...")
                .
       :  "-  
    "    "      ,
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  "    "  (15,  44-51),      
 : "    ,        .    
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,   ;   ,   .     
  ,     .        ,
,         ,     
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 .      ,    
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   -   .       
     . ,      7    8  
    (tears of passion),   ,
 "   " - "above our  firmament".  ,  
  7-  1-   "  "      
 : "And God made the firmament, and  divided  the  waters  which
were under the firmament from the waters were  above  the  firmament"  -  "
  ,   ,   ,  ,  
". ,         
   " " {   
   .:  .      .    :
    //    .    5,  1997.  .  12-26;
, . 19-20  . 66  . 25.}.
         ",        
" -            ,  
                 .
 ,   ,     ,    
 ,     ,      
   ,      :
",     ,        Hebdomada  mortium,  
,  ,    ,   , 
 ;   .         ,  
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     ,    ,      
  ,    , :       
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..." {. . . . . " "   .}
, ,  " -  ,  < >  ,  
      ",          
 : "        ,  ,
    ;    ,   ,    
" (1 . 13, 12).      ,    ,
           :  "
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 ;   ,        ,    
.       ,    
  " (1 . 15, 51-53).  ,      
 , " ...  < > ,  ;
  ,  ,  , , ,   
,     ,  <>        
,  ,  ,       ,
           :        ".
   "",    ,      
    {     .    :
Crashaw E. Hermetic Elements in Donne's Poetic Vision / John  Donne.  Essays
in Celebration. (Ed. by  A.J.  Smith).  London,  1972.  P.  326;    
      ,        
.}.           .
        "  "
: "    :      
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,  ,      ,        
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, , ,  ,            ,  
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{Tischreden. Edition de Weimar,  I,  1149.    :    .    
 /  .  . ., 1998. . 268.}.     -
      -      ,
   "   "        
materia prima,   ""    :  "    
    ,  ,      ,    
 ;        .      
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        : "   (  )
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;    -  ,           ",  -
    : "       
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  . !   ? !     ?"  (1
 15, 54-55).  ,              
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-"      .      
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,          "--"    ",  
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,      .       
        ,    
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    ,        ,      
,    ,          ,  
.   "" ad hoc.
      ,  ,      
     ,    
  .
                   .   ,
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     ...       
      ,   
  .   1986 .  ,     
 :  "  -        
                 
 ,        ,    
  -  ,    -     ,   ,   .
        :   
 ,     <  >,      ,
    ,           
                "
{Sheppard Harry J. European Alchemy in the Context of a Universal Definition
// Die Alchemie in dcr  europaischcn  Kultur-  und  Wissenschaftsgeschichte.
Herausgegeben  von  Christoph  Meinel.  Weisbaden,  1986.  S.  16-17.}.   
            ,   
  ,     -      
,  ,   ,  .

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