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Paracelsus, Alchemy, and Character Development: A Widget for Writers

This entry is part 5 of 6 in the series For Writers

The other day, I posted on the idea of “widgets” for writers. Here’s an example: a double-widget focused on character development.


Over the last few weeks, I’ve been taking a break and reading up on some of the subjects I need to know more about for the remainder of the book I’m working on. Namely, about The South Sea Bubble, early Georgian-era brewing and gin distilling equipment, theory, and practice, and the history of alchemy.

Whilst reading up on the last of those topics, I ran across something quite fascinating when it comes to the connections between alchemy and literature, which any lit scholar can tell you peaked during the Renaissance. I suspect, in fact, that this is the reason why Renaissance writers were the first Western writers to really profoundly dig into the idea of “character development.” It all goes back–like so many things–to Paracelsus, and to Sulphur (), Salt (  ), and Mercury ().   I ran across this very, very interesting passage in Bruce Moran’s book Distilling Knowledge: Alchemy, Chemistry, and the Scientific Revolution (see the passage, from pg 72-73, on Google Books, here):

The beginnings of all material things, Paracelsus asserted, were not the elements of Aristotle (earth, air, fire, and water) but the “three principles,” or tria prima, of Sulphur, Salt, and Mercury. These were as much symbolic categories as rudimentary components of matter. Salt represented an unburnable, nonvolatile ash or earth; Sulphur stood for combustible natures; and Mercury denoted the volatile and metallic constitutions of bodies. Creation of the physical world was itself a process of separation. “The mother and parent of all generation,” he proclaimed, “has always been, even from the very beginning, separation.” Separation was the first divine act (light separated from darkness), and as such was a miracle that could not be fathomed through human reasoning. Separation from the “great mystery,” the stuff of the divine, produced the three principles of Sulphur, Salt, and Mercury. From these were separated the elements and, thereafter, as from maternal wombs, came into being all the earthly, watery, airy, and fiery things of the world…

In other words, Paracelsus saw the world not in terms of the four elements and their elemental natures (dryness, coldness, heat, and wetness) but instead in terms of dynamic properties that were part of all matter, and which could be manipulated through alchemical processes, specifically these:

This is interesting because there was also an idea in Renaissance alchemy that an alchemist had to engage in alchemical work in order to achieve a self-transformation that imbued him or her with the capacity to actually perform the highest works of alchemy, including the creation of Philosopher’s Stone, which after all was not used to “turn lead into gold” but rather was (by many alchemists, at least) understood as a catalyst that facilitated and accelerated a natural process of purification that they believed all matter–including metal–was undergoing anyway.

What’s tantalizing about that is how central in Western fiction it is that a character must change, under pressure of the story. Stories are widely read as, and understood to be about, the process of transformation that a character or group of characters undergo in the course of a process usually involving increasing pressure and raised stakes–rather like the heating of metals in an alchemical ritual or experiment.

One can very easily reformulate Paracelsus’ tria prima into a schematic model of character development, too:

I can’t help but observe that characters seem to start consistently possessing this triune nature, dynamically affected by the power and pressures of plot, in Renaissance literature, which was the heyday of alchemy’s popularity in European cultures. Your average literature student reads Chaucer and finds characters flat and static, not changing much; but then proceeds to Renaissance literature (especially Shakespeare) and finds character development central.

There has of course been plenty of critical attention directed toward alchemy in specific texts where it is implicit or explicit–Shakespeare’s The Tempest, or Jonson’s The Alchemist–but I’m not sure this observation has been floated before. I am indeed very curious about whether this triune nature of all matter suggested by Paracelsus was one that gained popularity in the literary world, since the parallel seems so strong. And, really, there’s a kind of allure to the whole idea of author-as-alchemist, performing a kind of magical transformation of characters–and of the audience, too, subtly–through the act of a narrative process that parallels the alchemical process outlined in the magnum opus, that “great work” through which the Philosopher’s Stone was to be created.

Anyway, all of that aside, for a writer thinking about character development, that model could be a useful tool of sorts, because it moves the focus from the simpler idea that characters “undergo change” to the idea that character development involves different kinds of changes: that character development is a dynamic, multifaceted process of alteration imposed upon the fabric of the character. It’s important to realize not just what changes, but also what doesn’t change, or whether an apparent change represents the burning-away of something transient or extraneous to the character’s nature, or the refinement of something more fundamental and central to the character. For example, one could formulate this set of traits:

Obviously, that’s a very simple example, suited to a short story. Longer works would probably necessitate whole sets of traits–complexly interacting–in each category, and perhaps a more nuanced set of specific plot processes, perhaps drawing upon the classic list of alchemical processes necessary to complete the magnum opus . (Screenshot from Wikipedia below, as I’d rather not download all the symbols and upload them here.) The attentive reader will recall that for Paracelsus, “Separation” was the crucial process, but it’s only one kind of process, and each of these could easily be understood to represent a certain kind of transformative process, whether applied to a single character along his or her transformation, or applied to different characters in ways that contrast one another.

I’m fairly certain anyone interested enough could even come up with schematics that posit plot-point equivalences for each of these processes, if they wanted to, whether developing a taxonomy of a work being studied, or trying to figure out what kinds of plot processes are present in one’s own creative work in progress. Here’s a little graphic I’ve done up, which may be useful to you, if you’re interested in exploring this idea:

It’s rough (the colors are all wrong, for one thing), but it gets the idea across. The inner ring of elements is character traits–the component elements essential to a given character–and the outer ring are the twelve alchemical processes from the classic “magnum opus” through which the making of Philosopher’s Stone was achieved. Those processes (of transformation, naturally) are labeled with their related “zodiac” sign mostly just because it looks pretty.

But in terms of what you do with each type of transformations, you can read the term–distillation, separation, incineration, etc–literally, or you can look at what each process meant within alchemical practice, to get some ideas about plot processes that could act upon a character. Some of the terms can also be fruitfully understood in terms of other pertinent meanings those words have acquired in English since the days of Paracelsus, such as in psychoanalysis (sublimation and fixation come to mind).

Either way, it should help you develop a fruitful set of differing plot processes, either acting upon the same character or group of characters, or upon different individuals, as you prefer. While the Magnum Opus was a cumulative set of twelve steps–an alchemical “twelve-step program,” yes, and I’ve numbered the transformations accordingly on the chart–there’s no reason they have to occur in order, or all have to occur in a given story, though there is something exciting about the challenge of fitting in all twelve types of transformative processes.

The freedom here translates to a kind of flexibility, and to a greater degree of creativity than the formulaic and now very recognizable Hero’s Journey model that so many writers seem to use. This model also brings character development (transformation) to center stage, which can’t hurt any. I will suggest, however, that there’s little point in considering the character in terms of less than all three of the essential tria prima: what gets burnt away, what stays and cannot be destroyed, and what is transformed to a truer and more refined version of what it was at the beginning. This seems like an immensely useful formulation of character development, in contrast to the usual formulation I’ve seen elsewhere, mostly focused on a vague notion of necessary change that either occurs or is resisted.

By the way, it doesn’t necessarily have to be all that conscious. Thinking over my own book-in-progress, I can easily think of examples of most of these kinds of transformations, which different characters are undergoing, often in parallel to one another–one character fixating, while another sublimates, and a third undergoes a slow fermentative development. Maybe this is familiar ground that has been covered before by someone… I don’t know. But it seems new to me, and, well… an interesting alternative to the (now-tired) Hero’s Journey structure. I’d be curious to hear back if anyone tries working more with this notion, in any case. For my purposes, it’ll be more of a handy widget and a thinking tool than any sort of story cranking machine, but I’m sure others could find wonderful uses for it.

Additional Thoughts: (Added 7 Sept.) When I first posted this, I was a bit unclear as to how it could be used in practical terms. Some thoughts:

1. This is probably more pertinent to longer forms of narrative, than shorter ones. For short stories, this would serve more as a kind of taxonomy of transformative processes. For longer works, it’s more of a pool of possible transformative processes.

2. I think trying to fit all twelve of the forms of transformation from the Magnum Opus into one character’s arc even in a novel is probably,well… probably not a great idea. Maybe if one were writing a series of novels, it might work.

3. One thing I’m interested in is the structure of comparative transformations: multiple characters in comparable situations who end up undergoing different transformations, and obtain different results.

For example, one could argue the primary transformations of the leading young men in Hamlet are singular: Fortinbras is “sublimated” or “projected” into avenging heroism; Laertes’ rage is “distilled” into a more sordid and treacherous revenge that ends up spelling his own doom; and Hamlet’s, resisting transformation, is “fixated” at the level of doubt and unceasing inquiry for so long it destroys him.

Which is to say, probably one form of transformation is sufficient for a supporting character arc, and likely one form of transformation is going to dominate the arc of even main characters.

4. The tria prima probably is something more applicable to a your main characters, though to whatever degree it informs your supporting characters, their “flatness” will feel less “flat.”

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