© Gunnar Tómasson
18 March 2017
Jean Cocteau
(Internet)
”We are the servants of an unknown force that lives within us, and dictates this language to us.“ http://quintessentialpublications.com/twyman/?page_id=26
Comment
I understand Cocteau‘s “unknown force“ to be Our Ever-living Poet of Shakespeare‘s Sonnets, a.k.a. Cosmic Consciousness or God With Us (Matt. 1:23).
***
Overview
348509 = # 1 King‘s Prophesy at Successor‘s Baptism. Snorri Sturluson (d. 1241)
282389 = # 2 Shakespeare’s Sonnet No. XVII. (1609)
269204 = # 3 New attack on Snorri Sturluson. Steinn Steinarr (d. 1958)
900102
378620 = # 4 Dedication, Venus and Adonis. (1593)
-4000 = Dark Sword – Man-Beast
526846 = # 5 Francis Bacon’s Last Letter (1626)
5596 = Andlig Spekðin – Spiritual Wisdom
-6960 = Jarðlig Skilning – Earthly Understanding
900102
468222 = # 6 Abomination of Desolation. Contemporary History
900102 = # 1 – 5
1368324
-1 = Unknown Force – Sleeping Monad
1338633 = # 7 Lady Macbeth’s Sleep-Walking Scene
7000 = Microcosmos – Man in God’s Image
22692 = # 5 “This was the last letter that he ever wrote.” Francis Bacon’s Last Letter
1368324
The Seven Texts
# 1: 348509
26668 = „Þessi sveinn, Óláfr, er nú er nýskírðr ok einkanliga Guði gefinn,
15690 = sýnist mér sem vera muni mikillar
14512 = ok margfaldrar hamingju, ok þat hygg ek,
16370 = at hinn hæsti himnasmiðr hafi hann valit
20270 = ok skipat bæði konung ok kennara heilagrar trúar,
11968 = því at svá segir mér hugr,
27823 = at hann muni verða einvaldskonungr æðstr eftir mik yfir Nóregi.
13797 = Ok svá sem vit höfum eitt nafn,
23280 = svá munum vit hafa einn konungdóm yfir þessu ríki,
17192 = ok sú Guðs kristni, sem ek grundvalla
11627 = hér í Nóregi ok á þeim löndum,
16421 = sem þessum konungdómi heyrir til,
25498 = mun framganga ok fullgerast með valdi ok vilja almáttigs Guðs,
28310 = því at þessi hans þjónustumaðr ok hinn ágæti konungr, Óláfr,
29781 = mun þó miklar mótgörðir þola af sínum undirmönnum ok óvinum,
30543 = svá þó, at honum mun þat snúast til sigrs ok sæmdar þessa heims,
18759 = en annars heims til fagnaðar með almáttigum Guði.“
348509
This boy, Óláfr, who now is newly baptized and preeminently given to God, seems to me to be destined for great and manifold felicity, and I believe that the highest creator of the heavens has chosen him and appointed as both king and teacher of holy faith, because it is my belief that he will succeed me as the supreme sovereign king over Norway after me. And just as we have one name, so we will have one kingdom over this state, and the Christian faith which I found here in Norway and in those countries that belong to this kingdom, will materialize and be perfected through the power and will of Almighty God, because this his servant and distinguished king, Óláfr, will suffer many adversities at the hands of his subordinates and enemies in such manner, however, that victory and honor will be his in this world to the joy in the other world of Almighty God.
# 2: 282389
19409 = Who will beleeue my verse in time to come
21889 = If it were fild with your most high deserts?
20476 = Though yet heauen knowes it is but as a tombe
25229 = Which hides your life, and shewes not halfe your parts:
18035 = If I could write the beauty of your eyes,
18541 = And in fresh numbers number all your graces,
18412= The age to come would say this Poet lies,
21910 = Such heauenly touches nere toucht earthly faces.
21210 = So should my papers (yellowed with their age)
21737 = Be scorn’d,like old men of lesse truth then tongue,
18402 = And your true rights be termd a Poets rage,
16849 = And stretched miter of an Antique song.
20984 = But were some childe of yours aliue that time,
19306 = You should liue twise in it, and in my rime.
282389
# 3: 269204
11552 = Það dimmir enn af þínu banablóði,
14652 = og böðulshöndin reiðir öxi á loft.
16099 = Menn frömdu dauðasynd með sögu og ljóði,
16920 = þess sáust fjölmörg dæmi víða og oft.
18590 = Nú allt er kyrrt og allar tungur hljóðar,
19196 = og yfir mannlaus torg rís svipur þinn.
18295 = Hve undarlegt að valdsmenn vorrar þjóðar
14002 = vökvuðu skáldablóði feril sinn.
16766 = Í rökkrið kalt og reimt mín augu stara:
19204 = Hér rennur blóð þess manns, sem dýrast kvað.
13325 = Og enn í kvöld ég sé með svikráð fara
17180 = sjö tugi þekktra manna í Reykholts hlað.
16865 = Og þó. Sú böðulshönd, sem höggið greiðir,
15824 = hún hæfir aldrei það, sem mest er vert.
23413 = Því hvert eitt skáld til sigurs líf sitt leiðir,
17321 = hve lengi og mjög sem á þess hlut er gert.
269204
Loose translation:
Your death blood still casts a shadow,
and the killer raises an axe to strike
Men committed mortal sin with saga and poem,
a great many times, widely and oft.
Now all is quiet and all tongues are silent,
and your apparition rises over empty squares
How strange it is that men in power in our land
watered their trail with a poet’s blood.
In the cold and haunted dusk my eyes stare:
Here flowed the blood of the supreme poet.
And again tonight I see seventy famous people
go with treachery in mind to your Reykholt home.
But yet. The executor’s hand, which strikes the blow,
it never hits that whose worth is greatest.
Because each and every poet is victorious in life,
however long and often it meets with injustice.
# 4: 378620
9987 = TO THE RIGHT HONORABLE
20084 = Henrie Vvriothesley, Earle of Southampton,
8814 = and Baron of Titchfield.
21943 = Right Honourable, I know not how I shall offend
23463 = in dedicating my vnpolisht lines to your Lordship,
25442 = nor how the worlde vvill censure mee for choosing
25266 = so strong a proppe to support so vveake a burthen,
17161 = onelye if your Honour seeme but pleased,
13387 = I account my selfe highly praised,
18634 = and vowe to take aduantage of all idle houres,
23217 = till I haue honoured you vvith some grauer labour.
23437 = But if the first heire of my inuention proue deformed,
15796 = I shall be sorie it had so noble a god-father:
12970 = and neuer after eare so barren a land,
16690 = for feare it yeeld me still so bad a haruest,
17496 = l leaue it to your Honourable suruey,
18884 = and your Honor to your hearts content,
27199 = vvhich I wish may alvvaies answere your ovvne vvish,
17766 = and the vvorlds hopefull expectation.
11662 = Your Honors in all dutie,
9322 = William Shakespeare
378620
# 5: 526846
Every schoolboy knows the story told in their history books how Francis Bacon one snowy day on or about All Fools Day, 1 April 1626, drove with the King’s Physician, Sir John Wedderburn, to Highgate and that at the foot of the Hill he stopped, bought a fowl, and stuffed it with snow with his own hands in order to ascertain whether bodies could be preserved by cold. During the procedure, we are told, he caught a chill, and instead of Dr. Wedderburn driving him back to Gray’s Inn (whence he had come) or taking him to some warm house, the worthy doctor took him to an empty summer mansion on Highgate Hill, Arundel House, where there was only a caretaker; and there Francis Bacon was put into a bed which was damp and had only been “warmed by a Panne” (a very strange thing for a doctor to do) with the result that within a few days he died of pneumonia. Dr. Rawley, his chaplain, says that he died “in the early morning of the 9th April, a day on which was COMMEMORATED the Resurrection of Our Saviour”.
That is the story and this is Francis Bacon’s last letter:
14285 = To the Earle of Arundel and Surrey.
7470 = My very good Lord:
27393 = I was likely to have had the fortune of Caius Plinius the Elder,
19392 = who lost his life by trying an experiment
21445 = about the burning of the mountain Vesuvius.
27312 = For I was also desirous to try an experiment or two,
23426 = touching the conservation and induration of bodies.
27127 = As for the experiment itself, it succeeded excellently well;
19881 = but in the journey between London and Highgate,
18137 = I was taken with such a fit of casting,
20866 = as I knew not whether it were the stone,
24599 = or some surfeit of cold, or indeed a touch of them all three.
19809 = But when I came to your Lordship’s house,
20992 = I was not able to go back, and therefore was forced
10541 = to take up my lodging here,
27187 = where your housekeeper is very careful and diligent about me;
10692 = which I assure myself
24956 = your Lordship will not only pardon towards him,
14898 = but think the better of him for it.
21030 = For indeed your Lordship’s house is happy to me;
18831 = and I kiss your noble hands for the welcome
15120 = which I am sure you give me to it.
30197 = I know how unfit it is for me to write to your lordship
15772 = with any other hand than mine own;
32508 = but in troth my fingers are so disjointed with this fit of sickness,
12980 = that I cannot steadily hold a pen…
526846
Here the letter ends abruptly. Whatever else was written has been suppressed by Sir Tobie Matthew, one of the Rosicrosse, on which Spedding remarks, “It is a great pity the editor did not think fit to print the whole.” For some mysterious reason the letter was not printed until 1669 in Matthew’s Collection, captioned “This was the last letter that he ever wrote.” (Alfred Dodd, Francis Bacon’s Personal Life-Story, Rider&Co, London, 1986, pp. 539-540.)
# 6: 468222
Observers
8525 = Gunnar Tómasson
12385 = Guðrún Ólafía Jónsdóttir
Non-violent Crimes
11587 = Character Assassination
5881 = Níðingsverk – Barbarity
7750 = Psychiatric Rape
6603 = Mannorðsmorð – Vicious Slander
16439 = Criminal Obstruction of Justice
Man-Beasts
U.S. Government
12867 = William Jefferson Clinton – President
4496 = Janet Reno – Attorney General
IMF
8899 = Jacques de Larosière – Managing Director
7678 = Michel Camdessus – Managing Director
5517 = William B. Dale – Deputy Managing Director
2713 = Dick Erb – Deputy Managing Director
6584 = Jacques J. Polak – Economic Counsellor
4734 = Tun Thin – Asian Department Director
9349 = W. John R. Woodley – Asian Department Deputy Director
3542 = Ken Clark – Director of Administration
3339 = Graeme Rea – Director of Administration
3227 = P. N. Kaul – Deputy Director of Administration
5446 = Nick Zumas – Grievance Committee Chairman
Harvard
3625 = Derek C. Bok – President
8175 = Henry Rosovsky – Dean, Graduate School of Arts and Sciences
8566 = James S. Duesenberry – Chairman, Department of Economics
11121 = Paul Anthony Samuelson – Ph. D., Nobel Laureate in Economics
8381 = Walter S. Salant – Ph. D., Brookings Institution Senior Fellow
Iceland
10244 = Vigdís Finnbogadóttir – President
11361 = Salóme Þorkelsdóttir – Althing President
6028 = Davíd Oddsson – Prime Minister
10295 = Þorsteinn Pálsson – Minister of Justice
8316 = Jón Sigurdsson – Minister of Commerce
5940 = Jónas H. Haralz – World Bank Executive Director
Other Iceland
6648 = Jóhannes Nordal – Central Bank Governor
8864 = Bjarni Bragi Jónsson – Central Bank Chief Economist
14314 = Benjamín Jón Hafsteinn Eiríksson – Harvard Ph. D.
9720 = Matthías Jóhannessen – Editor, Morgunblaðið
Other
10989 = Orenthal James Simpson
8015 = John & Patsy Ramsey
4953 = Osama bin Laden
Violent Crimes
3586 = Murder
6899 = Nicole Brown
4948 = Ron Goldman
6100 = Brentwood
1204 = 12 June (4th month old-style)
1994 = 1994 A.D.
3718 = Jonbenet
3503 = Boulder
2510 = 25 December (10th month old-style)
1996 = 1996 A.D.
5557 = The Pentagon
9596 = World Trade Center
1107 = 11 September (7th month old-style)
2001 = 2001 A.D.
Other
7920 = Excelsior Hotel
5060 = Paula Jones
803 = 8 May (3rd month old-style)
1991 = 1991 A.D.
4014 = Kiss it!
8486 = The White House
7334 = Kathleen Willey
2909 = 29 November (9th month old-style)
1993 = 1993 A.D.
22091 = I’ve wanted to do this ever since I laid eyes on you.
6045 = The Oval Office
8112 = Monica Lewinsky
1509 = 15 November (9th month old-style)
1995 = 1995 A.D.
438097¹
The Gates of Hell
13031 = International Monetary Fund
9948 = Harvard University
7146 = Seðlabanki Íslands – Central Bank of Iceland
468222
# 7: 1338633
23553 = Enter a Doctor of Physicke, and a Wayting Gentlewoman.
Doctor:
17408 = I haue too Nights watch’d with you,
20296 = but can perceiue no truth in your report.
14559 = When was it shee last walk’d?
Gentlewoman:
17165 = Since his Maiesty went into the Field,
12297 = I haue seene her rise from her bed,
17142 = throw her Night-Gown vppon her,
20925 = vnlocke her Closset, take foorth paper, folde it,
20294 = write vpon’t, read it, afterwards Seale it,
9251 = and againe returne to bed;
17740 = yet all this while in a most fast sleepe.
Doctor:
14191 = A great perturbation in Nature,
15598 = to receyue at once the benefit of sleep,
12556 = and do the effects of watching.
12263 = In this slumbry agitation,
22287 = besides her walking, and other actuall performances,
15653 = what (at any time) haue you heard her say?
Gentlewoman:
21760 = That Sir, which I will not report after her.
Doctor:
19124 = You may to me, and ’tis most meet you should.
Gentlewoman:
11761 = Neither to you, nor any one,
19398 = hauing no witnesse to confirme my speech.
10419 = Enter Lady with a Taper.
19966 = Lo you, heere she comes: This is her very guise,
11154 = and vpon my life fast asleepe:
10746 = obserue her, stand close.
Doctor:
11115 = How came she by that light?
Gentlewoman:
9377 = Why it stood by her:
20143 = she ha’s light by her continually, ’tis her command.
Doctor:
9850 = You see her eyes are open.
Gentlewoman:
12269 = I but their sense are shut.
Doctor:
12347 = What is it she do’s now?
13625 = Looke how she rubbes her hands.
Gentlewoman:
16623 = It is an accustom’d action with her,
14975 = to seeme thus washing her hands:
25514 = I haue knowne her continue in this a quarter of an houre.
Lady Macbeth:
7588 = Yet heere’s a spot.
Doctor:
6672 = Heark, she speaks,
19161 = I will set downe what comes from her,
20219 = to satisfie my remembrance the more strongly.
Lady Macbeth:
11907 = Out damned spot: out I say.
18146 = One: Two: Why then ’tis time to doo’t:
6119 = Hell is murky.
12691 = Fye, my Lord, fie, a Souldier, and affear’d?
17263 = what need we feare? who knowes it,
19800 = when none can call our powre to accompt:
14904 = yet who would haue thought
16585 = the olde man to haue had so much blood in him.
Doctor:
7327 = Do you marke that?
Lady Macbeth:
18946 = The Thane of Fife, had a wife: where is she now?
15632 = What will these hands ne’re be cleane?
16047 = No more o’that my Lord, no more o’that:
16797 = you marre all with this starting.
Doctor:
25555 = Go too, go too: You haue knowne what you should not.
Gentlewoman:
23695 = She ha’s spoke what shee should not, I am sure of that:
17611 = Heauen knowes what she ha’s knowne.
Lady Macbeth:
14867 = Heere’s the smell of the blood still:
27589 = all the perfumes of Arabia will not sweeten this little hand.
3108 = Oh, oh, oh.
Doctor:
20106 = What a sigh is there? The hart is sorely charg’d.
Gentlewoman:
18666 = I would not haue such a heart in my bosome,
14174 = for the dignity of the whole body.
Doctor:
9402 = Well, well, well.
Gentlewoman:
7046 = Pray God it be sir.
Doctor:
14600 = This disease is beyond my practise:
26386 = yet I haue knowne those which haue walkt in their sleep,
13789 = who haue dyed holily in their beds.
Lady Macbeth:
28871 = Wash your hands, put on your Night-Gowne, looke not so pale:
14684 = I tell you yet againe Banquo’s buried;
12779 = he cannot come out on’s graue.
Doctor:
3530 = Euen so?
Lady Macbeth:
15743 = To bed, to bed: there’s knocking at the gate:
14311 = Come, come, come, come, giue me your hand:
12635 = What’s done, cannot be vndone.
10277 = To bed, to bed, to bed. Exit Lady.
Doctor:
11095 = Will she go now to bed?
Gentlewoman:
4000 = Directly.
Doctor:
20766 = Foule whisp’rings are abroad: vnnaturall deeds
19751 = Do breed vnnaturall troubles: infected mindes
25556 = To their deafe pillowes will discharge their Secrets:
18663 = More needs she the Diuine, then the Physitian:
15295 = God, God forgiue vs all. Looke after her,
16865 = Remoue from her the meanes of all annoyance,
18042 = And still keepe eyes vpon her: So goodnight,
14578 = My minde she ha’s mated, and amaz’d my sight.
11439 = I thinke, but dare not speake.
Gentlewoman:
14011 = Good night good Doctor. Exeunt.
1338633
***
Calculator for converting letters to cipher values is at:
http://www.light-of-truth.com/ciphersaga.htm
¹Abomination of Desolation
Message posted to friends on 26 February 2014:
While in Iceland last August, I met with Pétur Halldórsson at the Cafe Milano in Reykjavík. We discussed matters of mutual interest, including what my Saga Cipher work might “mean“.
I took a napkin and, for emphasis, wrote down the number 438097. This is the Cipher Sum of some three dozen names of persons, institutions, dates and events during the reference period, including two famous murder cases, a sex scandal in high places, and presumptive lies told in connection therewith.
I told Pétur (what I had long surmised) that I believed that this number was associated with a watershed event in human history whose final phase was upon our world.
An earth-shaking culmination of human and spiritual evolution.