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Spirits calling

But to arrive at this putrefaction we must have an agent, or Solvent, analogous to the body which is to be dissolved. The latter is the soluble body, called masculine germ the other is the dissolving spirit, called feminine germ. When they are united in the vase, Philosophers give them the name REBIS this is why Merlin has said ... [Pg.73]

The magic that some places hold, that special feeling that embraces landscape and history and our personal associations, but somehow goes beyond the sum of them. Energy. Spirit... call it what you like. It s just words to describe a real experience we can t explain when we get that shiver or the hairs stand up. (McCarthy, 2000 370)... [Pg.13]

In France, it is the custom before a meal to partake of an aperitif, usually an aniseed-flavoured spirit called pastis. Pastis (e.g. Ricard , Pernod ) when it comes out of the bottle is a clear, light brown coloured solution of volatile oils from the seeds of the anise plant (Pimpinella anisum), which impart the characteristic aniseed flavour to the drink, dissolved in approximately 40% v/v ethanol. When a pastis is drunk, it is mixed with water and ice, whereupon the liquid becomes cloudy. This happens because the anise oils are hydrophobic, non-polar liquids and not very water-soluble. They are only held in solution by the high alcohol content of the drink. When the alcohol is diluted with water, the oils come out of solution and form an emulsion of oil droplets in the aqueous phase. This is what gives the drink its cloudy appearance. Oral solutions of anise oils have been used pharmaceutically for their carminative action and as an aid to digestion for many years, although it seems to this author preferable to consume anise oils in the form of a pastis, rather than in the form of a bottle of medicine. [Pg.50]

Particle size and cooking condition for the grain slurry vary depending on the type of distilled spirit that is to be produced. In the case of com grain fermentations, distillers use small size, high temperature, and low beer gallonage (higher starch concentrations) for neutral spirits production at 120—170°C and 76—91 L/0.03 m. Bourbon distillates call for low temperatures (100—150°C) and thinner mash of 95—115 L/0.03 m (saccharified starch slurries) out of flavor considerations. (0.03 m is approximately a bushel). [Pg.84]

Methylated spirit contains, in addition to ethyl and methyl alcohols, water, fusel-oil, acetaldehyde, and acetone. It may be freed from aldehyde by boiling with a—3 per cent, solid caustic potash on the water-bath with an upright condenser for one hour, or if larger quantities are employed, a tin bottle is preferable, which is heated directly over a small flame (see Fig. 38). It is then distilled with the apparatus shown in Fig. 39. The bottle is here surmounted with a T-piece holding a thermometer. The distillation is stopped when most of the spirit has distilled and the thermometer indicates 80°. A further purification may be effected by adding a little powdered permanganate of potash and by a second distillation, but this is rarely necessary. The same method of purification may be applied to over-proof spirit, which will henceforth be called spirit as distinguished from the purified product or absolute alcohol. [Pg.49]

Of the instances of so-called solvent cracking of amorphous polymers known to the author, the liquid involved is not usually a true solvent of the polymer but instead has a solubility parameter on the borderline of the solubility range. Examples are polystyrene and white spirit, polycarbonate and methanol and ethyl acetate with polysulphone. The propensity to solvent stress cracking is however far from predictable and intending users of a polymer would have to check on this before use. [Pg.931]

Alize Passion, introduced in 1986, bombed when marketed to suburban women as a softer fruit spirit but bounced to life in a Tupac Shakur rap called Thug Passion, and the rest is history. [Pg.93]

In spite of the fact that the general statement of this principle has been shown to be false from all standpoints, it must be admitted that its enunciation was quite in harmony with the spirit of the times the great physicists Lord Kelvin (1851) and Helmholtz (1847) had previously formulated an identical principle in connection with galvanic cells. Thomsen and Berthelot went wrong, not in tlieir enunciation of the so-called theorem as a working hypothesis, but rather in their... [Pg.258]

Microcapsules of PCL and its copolymers may be prepared by aircoating (fluidized bed), mechanical, and, most commonly, solution methods. Typically, the solution method has involved emulsification of the polymer and drug in a two-phase solvent-nonsolvent mixture (e.g., CH2Cl2/water) in the presence of a surfactant such as polyvinyl alcohol. Residual solvent is removed from the tnicrocapsules by evaporation or by extraction (70). Alternatively, the solvent combination can be miscible provided one of the solvents is high-boiling (e.g., mineral spirits) phase separation is then achieved by evaporation of the volatile solvent (71). The products of solution methods should more accurately be called microspheres, for they... [Pg.87]

Some Paracelsian alchemists, especially Heinrich Khun rath (ca. 1560-1605) and Stefan Michelspacher (active ca. 1615-23), were objects of persecution on the part of hoth Lutheran and Catholic authorities. Khunrath was an alchemist from Saxony, the heartland of the Reformation, but his theological stance was characteristic of the second generation of Protestants who felt that Luther s work had been left incomplete and that another religious reform was essential. In Khunrath s ideas this would take the form of a Lutheranism that could accommodate an autonomous personal piety. To express their Lutheran piety intellectually the alchemists employed the terms of Paracelsian theosophy, while they found an emotive outlet in the mystical experience of the power and grace of the Holy Spirit. They felt themselves to be inspired (literally breathed ) by the Spirit, a force that they identified with alchemical pneuma. Khunrath called himself an enthusiast, hlled with the presence of the divine. [Pg.2]

This type of action is found in kanna, or Sceletium expansum and Sceletium tortuosum (Aizoaceae), which have been used by South African shamans from prehistoric times to enhance animal spirits, sparkle the eyes, and to stimulate gaiety. The active constituent of kanna is a serotonin-like alkaloid called mesembrine, which is a potent serotonin re-uptake inhibitor—hence, some potential for the treatment of anxiety and depression however, careful clinical trials must be performed. [Pg.74]

Methyl alcohol, CH2OH, also called wood alcohol or wood spirit, since it was formerly obtained from the destructive distillation of wood. It has also been synthesised from carbon monoxide and hydrogen or by fermentation of various sugar containing crops. Used as a part replacement for petrol in Gasohol to deliver a more environmentally friendly fuel, i.e., from renewable resources. [Pg.39]


See other pages where Spirits calling is mentioned: [Pg.33]    [Pg.229]    [Pg.233]    [Pg.86]    [Pg.481]    [Pg.25]    [Pg.92]    [Pg.107]    [Pg.119]    [Pg.148]    [Pg.66]    [Pg.33]    [Pg.229]    [Pg.233]    [Pg.86]    [Pg.481]    [Pg.25]    [Pg.92]    [Pg.107]    [Pg.119]    [Pg.148]    [Pg.66]    [Pg.437]    [Pg.335]    [Pg.339]    [Pg.368]    [Pg.94]    [Pg.109]    [Pg.171]    [Pg.641]    [Pg.38]    [Pg.38]    [Pg.78]    [Pg.129]    [Pg.144]    [Pg.175]    [Pg.451]    [Pg.91]    [Pg.105]    [Pg.88]    [Pg.37]    [Pg.95]    [Pg.388]    [Pg.539]    [Pg.587]    [Pg.618]    [Pg.709]    [Pg.713]    [Pg.275]    [Pg.3]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.32 , Pg.47 , Pg.209 , Pg.213 ]




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Calling

Spirit

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