Miðvikudagur 27.12.2017 - 06:24 - FB ummæli ()

Victor Hugo – Les Misérables – History

© Gunnar Tómasson

26 December 2017

I. This we have to tell, for this is history.

(Les Misérables, Book Twelve, Ch. VI)

1137823

In these hours of waiting what did they do?  This we have to tell, for this is history. While the men were making cartridges and the women lint, while a large pot, full of melted pewter and lead destined for the bullet mold was smoking over a hot stove, while the lookouts were watching the barricades with weapons in hand, while Enjolras, whom nothing could distract, was watching the lookouts, Combeferre, Courfeyrac, Jean Prouvaire, Feuilly, Bossuet, Joly, Bahorel, a few others besides, sought each other out and got together, as in the most peaceful days of their student conversations, and in a corner of this bistro turned into a pillbox, within two steps of the redoubt they had thrown up, their carbines primed and loaded resting on the backs of their chairs, these gallant young men, so near their last hour, began to recite a love poem. What poem?  Here it is:¹

18536 = Vous rappelez-vous notre douce vie,

22067 = Lorsque nous étions si jeunes tous deux.

20060 = Et que nous n’avions au coeur d’autre envie

16389 = Que d’être bien mis et d’être amoureux.

 

16669 = Lorsqu’en ajoutant votre âge à mon âge,

19767 = Nous ne comptions pas à deux quarante ans,

17075 = Et que, dans notre humble et petit ménage,

19714 = Tout, même l’hiver, nous était printemps?

 

16004 = Beaux jours!  Manuel était fier et sage,

16565 = Paris s’asseyait à de saints banquets,

16315 = Foy lançait la foudre, et votre corsage

14404 = Avait une épingle où je me piquais.

 

21940 = Tout vous contemplait.  Avocat sans causes,

15178 = Quand je vous menais au Prado dîner,

19952 = Vous étiez jolie au point que les roses

14717 = Me faisaient l’effet de se retourner.

 

13207 = Je les entendais dire:  Est-elle belle!

18731 = Comme elle sent bon!  quels cheveux à flots!

15531 = Sous son mantelet elle cache une aile;

16006 = Son bonnet charmant est à peine éclos.

 

20463 = J’errais avec toi, pressant ton bras souple.

19195 = Les passants croyaient que l’amour charmé

17538 = Avait marié, dans notre heureux couple,

15508 = Le doux mois d’avril au beau mois de mai.

 

21687 = Nous vivions cachés, contents, porte close,

15454 = Dévorant l’amour, bon fruit défendu;

13985 = Ma bouche n’avait pas dit une chose

14735 = Que déja ton coeur avait répondu.

 

17073 = La Sorbonne était l’endroit bucolique

13888 = Où je t’adorais du soir au matin.

18853 = C’est ainsi qu’une âme amoureuse applique

12832 = La carte du Tendre au pays latin.

 

12374 = O place Maubert!  O place Dauphine!

17760 = Quand, dans le taudis frais et printanier,

15225 = Tu tirais ton bas sur ta jambe fine,

15892 = Je voyais un astre au fond du grenier.

 

17688 = J’ai fort lu Platon, mais rien ne m’en reste

16065 = Mieux que Malebranche et que Lamennais;

14533 = Tu me démontrais la bonté céleste

14238 = Avec une fleur que tu me donnais.

 

15746 = Je t’obéissais, tu m’étais soumise.

13243 = O grenier doré!  te lacer!  te voir!

13433 = Aller et venir dès l’aube en chemise,

20650 = Mirant ton front jeune à ton vieux miroir!

 

17582 = Et qui donc pourrait perdre la mémoire

15087 = De ces temps d’aurore et de firmament,

14466 = De rubans, de fleurs, de gaze et de moire,

14699 = Où l’amour bégaye un argot charmant?

 

16877 = Nos jardins étaient un pot de tulipe;

16922 = Tu masquais la vitre avec un jupon;

12306 = Je prenais le bol de terre de pipe,

13172 = Et je te donnais la tasse en japon.

 

21432 = Et ces grands malheurs qui nous faisaient rire!

13915 = Ton manchon brûlé, ton boa perdu!

17521 = Et ce cher portrait du divin Shakspeare

22530 = Qu’un soir pour souper nous avons vendu!

 

13671 = J’étais mendiant, et toi charitable;

17467 = Je baisais au vol tes bras frais et ronds.

15232 = Dante in-folio nous servait de table

17278 = Pour manger gaîment un cent de marrons.

 

17244 = Le première fois qu’en mon joyeux bouge

13613 = Je pris un baiser à ta lèvre en feu,

15375 = Quand tu t’en allas décoiffée et rouge,

17401 = Je restais tout pâle et je crus en Dieu!

 

19249 = Te rappeles-tu nos bonheurs sans nombre,

17190 = Et tous ces fichus changés en chiffons?

21244 = Oh!  que de soupirs, de nos coeurs pleins d’ombre,                      

19465 = Se sont envolés dans les cieux profonds!

1137823

I + IV = 1137823 + 50063 = 1187886

II + III = 727273 + 460613 = 1187886

II. Genius: The Infinite Existing in One Spirit

(Victor Hugo, William Shakespeare, Part I, Bk. I, Ch. II)

727273

12305 = There are men, oceans in reality.

24406 = These waves; this ebb and flow; this terrible go-and-come;

24078 = this noise of every gust; these lights and shadows;

17744 = these vegetations belonging to the gulf;

19067 = this democracy of clouds in full hurricane;

8986 = these eagles in the foam;

18305 = these wonderful gatherings of stars

27054 = reflected in one knows not what mysterious crowd

15106 = by millions of luminous specks,

16232 = heads confused with the innumerable;

24588 = those grand errant lightnings which seem to watch;

26421 = these huge sobs; these monsters glimpsed at; this roaring;

30393 = disturbing these nights of darkness; these furies; these frenzies;

23668 = these tempests; these rocks, these shipwrecks,

14659 = these fleets crushing each other;

24015 = these human thunders mixed with divine thunders,

9712 = this blood in the abyss;

23287 = then these graces, these sweetnesses, these fêtes;

18946 = these gay white veils, these fishing boats,

22914 = these songs in the uproar, these splendid ports,

25011 = this smoke of the earth, these towns in the horizon,

25175 = this deep blue of water and sky, this useful sharpness,

28541 = this bitterness which renders the universe wholesome,

27456 = this rough salt without which all would putrefy,

20594 = these angers and assuagings, this whole in one,

14943 = this unexpected in the immutable,

24179 = this vast marvel of monotony, inexhaustibly varied,

14548 = this level after that earthquake,

26387 = these hells and these paradises of immensity eternally agitated,

14387 = this infinite, this unfathomable –

14906 = all this can exist in one spirit;

16452 = and then this spirit is called genius,

22608 = and you have Æschylus, you have Isaiah, you have Juvenal,

22905 = you have Dante, you have Michael Angelo, you have Shakespeare;

27295 = and looking at these minds is the same thing as to look at the ocean.

727273

 

III. The Vast Dawn of Jesus Christ

(Ibid., Omega, Book III, I, Ch. v)

460613

14764 = While in the engulfing process

16973 = the flaming pleiad of the men of brutal force

15919 = descends deeper and deeper into the abyss

25085 = with the sinister pallor of approaching disappearance,

14338 = at the other extremity of space,

19166 = where the last cloud is about to fade away,

22942 = in the deep heaven of the future, henceforth to be azure,

22452 = rises in radiancy the sacred group of true stars –

21752 = Orpheus, Hermes, Job, Homer, Æschylus, Isaiah, Ezekiel,

27914 = Hippocrates, Phidias, Socrates, Sophocles, Plato, Aristotle,

31754 = Archimedes, Euclid, Pythagoras, Lucretius, Plautus, Juvenal, Tacitus,

28351 = Saint Paul, John of Patmos, Tertullian, Pelagius, Dante, Gutenberg,

30624 = Joan of Arc, Christopher Columbus, Luther, Michael, Angelo, Copernicus,

26702 = Galileo, Rabelais, Calderon, Cervantes, Shakespeare, Rembrandt, Kepler,

28664 = Milton, Moliѐre. Newton, Descartes, Kant, Piranesi, Beccaria, Diderot,

25406 = Voltaire, Beethoven, Fulton, Montgolfier, Washington.

31241 = And this marvellous constellation, at each instant more luminous,

29467 = dazzling as a glory of celestial diamonds, shines in the clear horizon,

27099 = and ascending mingles with the vast dawn of Jesus Christ.

460613

 

IV, The Vast Dawn of Jesus Christ

(Construction G. T.)

50063

A

Quest of the Holy Grail

      7 = Man of Seventh Day

1796 = Graal

Brutal Force

11587 = Character Assassination

5881 = Níðingsverk – Barbarity

7750 = Psychiatric Rape

6603 = Mannorðsmorð – Vicious Slander

16439 = Criminal Obstruction of Justice

50063

B

50063

Saviour

(Luke 2:11)

         1 = Monad

7627 = Christ the Lord

Persecution

  8525 = Gunnar Tómasson

12385 = Guðrún Ólafía Jónsdóttir

-1000 = Darkness

Strife

432 = Right Measure of Man

666 = Man-Beast

Course of Strife

Sacred Triangle of Pagan Iceland

7196 = Bergþórshváll

6067 = Miðeyjarhólmr

3027 = Helgafell

End of Strife

5137 = Judgement Day

50063

***

Calculator for converting letters to cipher values is at:

http://www.light-of-truth.com/ciphersaga.htm

¹The Love Poem

Do you remember our sweet life

When were so young, we two,

And had in our hearts no other desire

Than to be well dressed and be in love.

 

When by adding your age to mine,

We couldn’t reach forty years between us,

And, in our humble little home,

Everything, even in winter, seemed spring?

 

Beautiful days!  Manuel was proud and wise,

Paris sat down to incredible banquets,

Foy was waxing eloquent, and your blouse

Had a pin that pricked me.

 

Everyone gazed at you.  A lawyer without a case,

When I took you to The Prado for dinner,

You were so pretty that the roses

Seemed to turn away.

 

I heard them say: Isn’t she beautiful!

How lovely she smells!  What flowing hair!

Under her cape she’s hiding wings;

Her charming hat has scarcely bloomed.

 

I wandered with you, squeezing your lissome arm.

People passing thought that charmed love

Had married in us, the happy couple,

The sweet month of April with the handsome month of May.

 

We lived hidden away, happy, the door closed,

Devouring love, good forbidden fruit;

My mouth had not said one thing

When already your heart had answered.

 

The Sorbonne was the bucolic spot

Where I adored you from dusk to dawn.

That is how a loving soul applies

The map of Tenderness to the Quartier Latin.

 

O Place Maubert!  O Place Dauphine!

When, in the meager springlike room,

You drew your stocking up over your slim leg,

I saw a star in a garret nook.

 

I’ve read a lot of Plato, but remember nothing

Better than Malebranche and Lammenais;

You showed me celestial kindness

With the flower you gave me.

 

I obeyed you, you were in my power.

O gilded garret!  To lace you up!  To see you

Coming and going from daybreak in a chemise,

Gazing at your young forehead in your old mirror!

 

And who could ever lose the memory

Of those times of dawn and sky,

Of ribbons, of flowers, of muslin and watered silk,

When love stammers a charmed argot?

 

Our gardens were a pot of tulips;

You screened the window with your slip;

I would take the pipe clay bowl,

And I gave you the porcelain cup.

 

And those great calamities that made us laugh!

Your muff burnt, your boa lost!

And that beloved portrait of the divine Shakespeare

That we sold one evening for our supper!

 

I was a beggar, and you charitable;

I gave fleeting kisses to your cool round arms.

Dante in-folio was our table

For gaily consuming a hundred chestnuts.

 

The first time, in my joyful hovel,

I stole a kiss from your fiery lips,

When you went off disheveled and pink,

I stayed there pale and believed in God!

 

Do you remember our countless joys,

And all those shawls turned to rags?

Oh!  From our shadow-filled hearts what sighs

Flew off into the limitless skies!

 

Flokkar: Óflokkað

Þriðjudagur 26.12.2017 - 05:06 - FB ummæli ()

The Nativity – Good Tidings of Joy to all People

© Gunnar Tómasson

Christmas Day

25 Desember 2017

Prologue

The Seventh Day of Creation is a past, present and future period in the passage through life of every child born into the world.  The Nativity Story is that of every such child born of the union of Man and Woman with Consciousness – a spark of Divinity whose initial  manifestation myth likens to a first-born son placed in a manger.

The Christian version of Creation Myth was set forth by Snorri Sturluson in 13th century Iceland in EDDA, based on Pythagorean imagery.  Thus the number 666 is that of Man-Beast possessed of Earthly Understanding and 432 is that of Man-Beast transformed into Right Measure of Man  upon an instantaneous manifestation in Man‘s Soul of Andlig spekðin – Spiritual Understanding.

The numbers 666 and 432 are reflected in ratios present in the architecture of all medieval European cathedrals. In Chapter 8 of the Skáldskaparmál section of Edda, where Snorri Sturluson advises “young poets” on how to interpret the poetic imagery of Christian Myth , the central point made is that such myth should not be construed literally.

Below, Chapter 8 is placed in Section # I and erstwhile ”young poet” Sturla Þórðarson’s account of Snorri Sturluson’s ”murder” in Section # II. Their respective numerical values, as calculated by converting the text into numbers by the Saga Cipher, are 197020 and 872813.  The account of the Nativity of Christ in Luke Ch. 2 (Section # III) is then shown to incorporate these numbers.

The Argentine author Jorge Luis Borges was expertly versed in what Snorri Sturluson termed “hidden poetry” – i.e. the meaning of key texts being preserved in associated Cipher Values. In Section # V – and # VI -, his essay Pierre Menard, autor del Quijote is related to the two numbers. Finally, in Section # VII – and # VIII -, the same is shown to be true for a key passage from Don Quixote, Part Two.

***

I. Snorri Sturluson – Advice to Young Poets

(Skáldskaparmál, Ch. 8)

197920

16349 = En þetta er nú at segja ungum skáldum,

15868 = þeim er girnast at nema mál skáldskapar

16723 = ok heyja sér orðfjölða með fornum heitum

15251 = eða girnast þeir at kunna skilja þat,

8474 = er hulit er kveðit,

22969 = þá skili hann þessa bók til fróðleiks ok skemmtunar.

19899 = En ekki er at gleyma eða ósanna svá þessar frásagnir

17985 = at taka ór skáldskapinum fornar kenningar,

14787 = þær er höfuðskáld hafa sér líka látit.

19481 = En eigi skulu kristnir menn trúa á heiðin goð

17358 = ok eigi á sannyndi þessa sagna annan veg en svá

12776 = sem hér finnst í upphafi bókar.

197920

 

II. The Murder of Snorri Sturluson

(Saga of Icelanders, Ch. 151)

872813

24923 = Þeir Kolbeinn ungi ok Gizurr fundust í þann tíma á Kili

16169 = ok gerðu ráð sín, þau er síðan kómu fram.

17253 = Þetta sumar var veginn Kolr inn auðgi.

12973 = Árni, er beiskr var kallaðr, vá hann.

22206 = Síðan hljóp hann til Gizurar, ok tók hann við honum.

22202 = Þá er Gizurr kom af Kili, stefndi hann mönnum at sér.

18989 = Váru þar fyrir þeir bræðr, Klængr ok Ormr,

14052 = Loftr byskupsson, Árni óreiða.

11988 = Helt hann þá upp bréfum þeim,

16109 = er þeir Eyvindr ok Árni höfðu út haft.

20569 = Var þar á, að Gizurr skyldi Snorra láta utan fara,

17397 = hvárt er honum þætti ljúft eða leitt,

16385 = eða drepa hann at öðrum kosti fyrir þat,

15013 = er hann hafði farit út í banni konungs.

20247 = Kallaði Hákon konungr Snorra landráðamann við sik.

25991 = Sagði Gizurr, at hann vildi með engu móti brjóta bréf konungs,

23272 = en kvaðst vita, at Snorri myndi eigi ónauðigr utan fara.

21724 = Kveðst Gizurr þá vildu til fara ok taka Snorra.

15578 = Ormr vildi ekki vera í þessi ráðagerð,

11324 = ok reið hann heim á Breiðabólstað.

10444 = Gizurr dró þá lið saman

21132 = ok sendi þá bræðr vestr til Borgarfjarðar á njósn,

8421 = Árna beisk ok Svart.

18469 = En Gizurr reið frá liðinu með sjau tigi manna,

28447 = en Loft byskupsson lét hann vera fyrir því liðinu, er síðar fór.

20530 = Klængr reið á Kjalarnes eftir liði ok svá upp í herað.

 

29224 = Gizurr kom í Reykjaholt um nóttina eftir Mauritíusmessu.

20587 = Brutu þeir upp skemmuna, er Snorri svaf í.

23045 = En hann hljóp upp ok ór skemmunni í in litlu húsin,

9688 = er váru við skemmuna.

19023 = Fann hann þar Arnbjörn prest ok talaði við hann.

17663 = Réðu þeir þat, at Snorri gekk í kjallarann,

17668 = er var undir loftinu þar í húsunum.

21242 = Þeir Gizurr fóru at leita Snorra um húsin.

28547 = Þá fann Gizurr Arnbjörn prest ok spurði, hvar Snorri væri.

8875 = Hann kvaðst eigi vita.

22694 = Gizurr kvað þá eigi sættast mega, ef þeir fyndist eigi.

15638 = Prestr kvað vera mega, at hann fyndist,

12692 = ef honum væri griðum heitit.

22884 = Eftir þat urðu þeir varir við, hvar Snorri var.

25600 = Ok gengu þeir í kjallarann Markús Marðarson, Símon knútr,

26492 = Árni beiskr, Þorsteinn Guðinason, Þórarinn Ásgrímsson.

13048 = Símon knútr bað Árna höggva hann.

12169 = „Eigi skal höggva,” sagði Snorri.

8594 = „Högg þú,” sagði Símon.

12169 = „Eigi skal höggva,” sagði Snorri.

16079 = Eftir þat veitti Árni honum banasár,

17385 = ok báðir þeir Þorsteinn unnu á honum.

872813

I + III + IV = 197920 + 605272 + 69621 = 872813

I + V + VI = 197920 + 395547 + 279346 = 872813

I + VII + VIII = 197920 + 660636 + 14257 = 872813

III. The Nativity of Christ the Lord

(Luke, 2:1-14, KJB, 1611)

605272

2:1

13790 = And it came to passe in those dayes,

24008 = that there went out a decree from Cesar Augustus,

15432 = that all the world should be taxed.

2:2

14105 = (And this taxing was first made

18749 = whe Cyrenius was gouernor of Syria.) [‘whē’ in KJB]

2:3

24375 = And all went to bee taxed, euery one into his owne citie.

2:4

15002 = And Joseph also wet vp fro Galilee,            [‘wēt vp frō’ in KJB]

17033 = out of the citie of Nazareth, into Judea,

20269 = vnto the citie of Dauid, which is called Bethlehem,

17824 = (because he was of the house and linage of Dauid,)

2:5

19175 = To be taxed with Mary his espoused wife,

9634 = being great with child.

2:6

20067 = And so it was, that while they were there,

23641 = the dayes were accomplished that she should be deliuered.

2:7

20353 = And she brought foorth her first borne sonne,

16766 = and wrapped him in swadling clothes,

7062 = and laid him in a manger,

20669 = because there was no roome for them in the Inne.

2:8

15902 = And there were in the same countrey

10274 = shepheards abiding in ye field,

17791 = keeping watch ouer their flocke by night.

2:9

16389 = And, loe, the Angel of the Lord came vpon them,

20554 = and the glory of the Lord shone round about them,

10501 = and they were sore afraid.

2:10

10882 = And the Angel said vnto them,

22860 = Feare not: For behold, I bring you good tidings of great ioy,

11871 = which shall be to all people.

2:11

26618 = For vnto you is borne this day, in the citie of Dauid, a Sauiour,

12472 = which is Christ the Lord.

2:12

13835 = And this shall be a signe vnto you,

21354 = yee shall find the babe wrapped in swadling clothes,

5873 = lying in a manger.

2:13

17179 = And suddenly there was with the Angel

23655 = a multitude of the heauenly hoste praising God, and saying,

2:14

11598 = Glory to God in the highest,

17710 = and on earth peace, good wil towards men.

605272

 

 IV. Good tidings of great ioy, which shall be to all people.

(History – Prophecy – Myth)

69621

8525 = Gunnar Tómasson

12385 = Guðrún Ólafía Jónsdóttir

Alpha

804 = 8 June – 4th month old-style

1976 = 1976 A.D.

Omega

2510 = 25 December – 10th month

2017 = 2017 A.D.

Myth

1000 = Light of the World

Man-Beast

1723 = Jacob

Cosmic Time

25920 = Platonic Great Year

Coming of Christ

4000 = Flaming Sword

Transformation

-6960 = Jarðlig skilning – Earthly Understanding

5596 = Andlig spekðin – Spiritual Wisdom

True Man and True God

Jesús Kristr

10125 = Sannr Maðr ok Sannr Guð

69621

V. Pierre Menard, autor del Quijote

History as Mother of Truth*

(Jorge Luis Borges)

395547

28676 = Es una revelación cotejar el Don Quijote de Menard con el de Cervantes.

32185 = Éste, por ejemplo, escribió (Don Quijote, primera parte, noveno capítulo):

19897 =         … la verdad, cuya madre es la historia, émula del tiempo,

18982 = depósito de las acciones, testigo de lo pasado,

24627 = ejemplo y aviso de lo presente, advertencia de lo por venir.

27921 = Redactada en el siglo diecisiete, redactada por el “ingenio lego” Cervantes,

25021 = esa enumeración es un mero elogio retórico de la historia.

 

8683 = Menard, en cambio, escribe:

19897 =         … la verdad, cuya madre es la historia, émula del tiempo,

18982 = depósito de las acciones, testigo de lo pasado,

24627 = ejemplo y aviso de lo presente, advertencia de lo por venir.

18005 = La historia, madre de la verdad; la idea es asombrosa.

24875 = Menard, contemporáneo de William James, no define la historia

21033 = como una indagación de la realidad sino como su origen.

 

19824 = La verdad histórica, para él, no es lo que sucedió;

14978 = es lo que juzgamos que sucedió.

 

9746 = Las cláusulas finales —

24627 = ejemplo y aviso de lo presente, advertencia de lo por venir

12961 = son descaradamente pragmáticas.

395547

*It is a revelation to compare the Don Quixote of Menard with that of Cervantes.

The latter, for instance, wrote (Don Quixote, Part One, Chapter Nine):

…truth, whose mother is history, who is the rival of time, depository of deeds,

witness of the past, example and lesson to the present, and warning to the future.

Written in the seventeenth century, written by the „ingenious layman“ Cervantes,

this enumeration is a mere rhetorical eulogy of history. Menard, on the other hand,

wrote:

*It is a revelation to compare the Don Quixote of Menard with that of Cervantes.

The latter, for instance, wrote (Don Quixote, Part One, Chapter Nine):

…truth, whose mother is history, who is the rival of time, depository of deeds,

witness of the past, example and lesson to the present, and warning to the future.

History, Mother of truth; the idea is astounding. Menard, a contemporary of

William James, does not define history as an investigation of reality, but as its

origin. Historical truth, for him, is not what took place; it is what we think

took place. The final clause – example and lesson to the present, and warning

to the future – are shamelessly pragmatic.

VI. Truth as Child of History

(Construction G.T.)

279346

The Child of History

Alpha

666 = Man-Beast

Omega

432 = Right Measure of Man

A Child is Born

A New Breed of Men Sent Down from Heaven¹

(Virgil, Fourth Eclogue)

16609 = Ultima Cumaei venit iam carminis aetas;

20087 = Magnus ab integro saeclorum nascitur ordo.

18681 = Iam redit et Virgo, redeunt Saturnia regna,

18584 = Iam nova progenies caelo demittitur alto.

20229 = Tu modo nascenti puero, quo ferrea primum

18431 = Desinet ac toto surget gens aurea mundo,

17698 = Casta fave Lucina: tuus iam regnat Apollo.

18480 = Teque adeo decus hoc aevi te consule, inibit,

18919 = Pollio, et incipient magni procedere menses;

22004 = Te duce, si qua manent sceleris vestigia nostri,

20495 = Inrita perpetua solvent formidine terras.

18330 = Ille deum vitam accipiet divisque videbit

20448 = Permixtos heroas et ipse videbitur illis

22153 = Pacatumque reget patriis virtutibus orbem.

The Child

7000 = Microcosmos – Man in God‘s Image

FINIS

  100 = The End

279346

***

FOPPERY

Synonyms

(Merriam-Webster)

absurdity, asininity, bêtise, fatuity, foolery,

folly, idiocy, imbecility, inanity, insanity,

***

VII. The History of Don Quixote

A Machina of Fopperies

(Don Quixote, The Second Part)

660636

8525 = The History of the
27589 = Valorous & Witty Knight-Errant Don Quixote of the Mancha

22505 = By Miguel de Cervantes, Translated by Thomas Shelton

7054 = The Second Part

25647 = Chapter XXIV: Where there are recounted a Thousand Flim-flams, as

28767 = impertinent as necessary to the Understanding of this Famous

4526 = History.

 

28262 = THE translator of this famous history out of his original,

12761 = written by Cid Hamet Benengeli,

23253 = says that, when he came to the last chapter going before,

27338 = these words were written in the margin by the same Hamet:

25278 = ‘I cannot believe or be persuaded that all that is written

21138 = in the antecedent chapter happened so punctually

15049 = to the valorous Don Quixote;

6095 = the reason is,

25366 = because all adventures hitherto have been accidental and probable;

24998 = but this of the cave, I see no likelihood of the truth of it,

9874 = as being so unreasonable:

17721 = yet to think Don Quixote would lie,

26891 = being the worthiest gentleman and noblest knight of his time,

7881 = is not possible,

32357 = for he would not lie though he were shot to death with arrows.

7538 = On the other side,

29532 = I consider that he related it with all the aforesaid circumstances,

11579 = and that in so short a time

18596 = he could not frame such a machina of fopperies;

26724 = and, if this adventure seem to be apocrypha, the fault is not mine;

22080 = so that, leaving it indifferent, I here set it down.

 

15105 = Thou, O reader, as thou art wise,

20335 = judge as thou thinkest good, for I can do no more;

11516 = though one thing be certain,

15789 = that when he was upon his deathbed

12181 = he disclaimed this adventure,

13681 = and said that he had only invented it

14225 = because it suited with such

12880 = as he had read of in his histories.

660636

 

VIII. Brennu-Njálssaga – Synopsis

(Construction G.T.)

14257

Alpha

1000 = Light of the World

6257 = Mörðr hét maðr.

Omega

 7000 = Microcosmos – Man in God’s Image

14257

***

Calculator for converting letters to cipher values is at:

http://www.light-of-truth.com/ciphersaga.htm

¹A New Breed of Men Sent Down from Heaven

Now the last age by Cumae’s Sibyl sung has come and gone, and the majestic roll of circling centuries begins anew: justice returns, returns old Saturn’s reign, with a new breed of men send down from heaven.  Only do thou, at the boy’s birth in whom the iron shall cease, the golden race arise, befriend him, chaste Lucina; ‘tis thine own Apollo reigns.  And in thy consulate, this glorious age, O Pollio, shall begin, and the months enter on their mighty march.  Under thy guidance, whatso tracks remain of our old wickedness, once done away, shall free the earth from never-ceasing fear.  He shall receive the life of gods, and see heroes with gods commingling, and himself be seen of them, and with his father’s worth reign o’er a world of peace.

 

 

Flokkar: Óflokkað

Sunnudagur 24.12.2017 - 04:38 - FB ummæli ()

Unity of Myth: Macbeth – Revelation – Hamlet

 

© Gunnar Tómasson

23 December 2017

I. Turne, Hell-hound turne. – Macbeth slaine.

(Macbeth, Act V, Sc. vii)

1266209

 5476 = Enter Macbeth.

Macbeth 

15484 = They haue tied me to a stake, I cannot flye,

21429 = But Beare-like I must fight the course.  What’s he

18595 = That was not borne of Woman?  Such a one

7765 = Am I to feare, or none.

 

10263 = Enter young Seyward.

Young Seyward

7727 = What is thy name?

Macbeth

11523 = Thou’lt be affraid to heare it.

Young Seyward

19453 = No: though thou call’st thy selfe a hoter name

7090 = Then any is in hell.

Macbeth

5982 = My name’s Macbeth.

Young Seyward

21449 = The diuell himselfe could not pronounce a Title

10790 = More hatefull to mine eare.

Macbeth

9407 = No: nor more fearefull.

Young Seyward

22027 = Thou lyest abhorred Tyrant, with my Sword

14238 = Ile proue the lye thou speak’st.

 

13390 = Fight, and young Seyward slaine.

Macbeth

13779 = Thou was’t borne of woman;

23840 = But Swords I smile at, Weapons laugh to scorne,

18390 = Brandish’d by man that’s of a Woman borne.     Exit.

 

9663 = Alarums.  Enter Macduffe.

Macbeth

20208 = That way the noise is:  Tyrant shew thy face,

21181 = If thou beest slaine, and with no stroake of mine,

23482 = My Wife and Childrens Ghosts will haunt me still:

23363 = I cannot strike at wretched Kernes, whose armes

21372 = Are hyr’d to beare their Staues: either thou Macbeth,

19129 = Or else my Sword with an vnbattered edge

19124 = I sheath againe vndeeded.  There thou should’st be,

18651 = By this great clatter, one of greatest note

16640 = Seemes bruited.  Let me finde him Fortune,

13369 = And more I begge not.      Exit.     Alarums.

11704 = Enter Malcolme and Seyward.

Seyward

19780 = This way my Lord, the Castles gently rendred:

18336 = The Tyrants people, on both sides do fight,

17032 = The Noble Thanes do brauely in the Warre,

18681 = The day almost it selfe professes yours,

8163 = And little is to do.

Malcolme

11136 = We haue met with Foes

10000 = That strike beside vs.

Seyward

16388 = Enter Sir, the Castle.         Exeunt.            Alarum.

5476 = Enter Macbeth.

Macbeth

16693 = Why should I play the Roman Foole, and dye

24275 = On mine owne sword?  whiles I see liues, the gashes

9054 = Do better vpon them.

 

5805 = Enter Macduffe.

Macduffe

11371 = Turne, Hell-hound, turne.

Macbeth

11812 = Of all men else I haue auoyded thee:

18887 = But get thee backe, my soule is too much charg’d

11602 = With blood of thine already.

Macduffe

7780 = I haue no words,

21684 = My voice is in my Sword, thou bloodier Villaine

18408 = Then tearmes can giue thee out.              Fight: Alarum

Macbeth

10798 = Thou loosest labour;

17585 = As easie may’st thou the intrenchant Ayre

20599 = With thy keene Sword impresse, as make me bleed:

16274 = Let fall thy blade on vulnerable Crests,

16716 = I beare a charmed Life, which must not yeeld

10121 = To one of woman borne.

Macduffe

7989 = Dispaire thy Charme,

21275 = And let the Angell whom thou still hast seru’d

21484 = Tell thee, Macduffe was from his Mothers womb

7417 = Vntimely ript.

Macbeth

17783 = Accursed be that tongue that tels mee so;

16929 = For it hath Cow’d my better part of man:

15970 = And be these Iugling Fiends no more beleeu’d,

17113 = That palter with vs in a double sence,

19805 = That keepe the word of promise to our eare,

21110 = And breake it to our hope.  Ile not fight with thee.

Macduffe

9587 = Then yeeld thee Coward,

16489 = And liue to be the shew, and gaze o’ th’ time.

19059 = Wee’l haue thee, as our rarer Monsters are

15861 = Painted vpon a pole, and vnder-writ,

11568 = Heere may you see the Tyrant.

Macbeth

7518 = I will not yeeld

20881 = To kisse the ground before young Malcolmes feet,

16030 = And to be baited with the Rabbles curse,

18162 = Though Byrnane wood be come to Dunsinane,

17555 = And thou oppos’d, being of no woman borne,

16155 = Yet I will try the last.  Before my body,

18389 = I throw my warlike Shield:  Lay on Macduffe,

17524 = And damn’d be him, that first cries hold, enough.

11426 = Exeunt, fighting.  Alarums.

12691 = Enter Fighting, and Macbeth slaine.       

1266209

II + III = 1117947 + 148262 = 1266209

 

II. Goodnight sweet Prince and

Angels fly thee to thy rest

 (Hamlet, Act V, Sc. ii, First Folio)

1117947

15079 = March afarre off, and shout within.

Hamlet

14387 = What warlike noyse is this?

6697 = Enter Osricke.

Osricke

22993 = Yong Fortinbras, with conquest come fro Poland                 [FF text: frō]

24474 = To th’Ambassadors of England giues this warlike volly.

Hamlet

5901 = O I dye Horatio:

24502 = The potent poyson quite ore-crowes my spirit,

19230 = I cannot liue to heare the Newes from England,

17032 = But I do prophesie th’election lights

14414 = On Fortinbras, he ha’s my dying voyce,

22842 = So tell him with the occurrents more and lesse,

23314 = Which haue solicited.  The rest is silence.  O, o, o, o.  Dyes.

Horatio

10167 = Now cracke a Noble heart:

11836 = Goodnight sweet Prince,

18286 = And flights of Angels sing thee to thy rest,

14342 = Why do’s the Drumme come hither?

 

16923 = Enter Fortinbras and English Ambassador,

18137 = with Drumme, Colours, and Attendants.

Fortinbras

10437 = Where is this sight?

Horatio

12180 = What is it ye would see;

21128 = If ought of woe, or wonder, cease your search.

Fortinbras

18987 = His quarry cries on hauocke.  Oh proud death,

20646 = What feast is toward in thine eternall Cell.

17251 = That thou so many Princes, at a shoote,

11980 = So bloodily hast strooke.

Ambassador

8962 = The sight is dismall,

17034 = And our affaires from England come too late,

22958 = The eares are senselesse that should giue vs hearing,

17106 = To tell him his command’ment is fulfill’d

17885 = That Rosincrance and Guildensterne are dead:

16857 = Where should we haue our thankes?

Horatio

9607 = Not from his mouth,

15062 = Had it th’abilitie of life to thanke you:

16660 = He neuer gaue command’ment for their death.

22657 = But since so jumpe vpon this bloodie question,

20905 = You from the Polake warres, and you from England

18723 = Are heere arriued.  Giue order that these bodies

14365 = High on a stage be placed to the view,

20828 = And let me speake to th’yet vnknowing world,

20781 = How these things came about.  So shall you heare

16187 = Of carnall, bloudie, and vnnaturall acts,

20116 = Of accidentall iudgements, casuall slaughters

17748 = Of death’s put on by cunning, and forc’d cause,

19567 = And in this vpshot, purposes mistooke,

17470 = Falne on the Inuentors heads.  All this can I

7002 = Truly deliuer.

Fortinbras

10425 = Let vs hast to heare it,

14076 = And call the Noblest to the Audience.

20198 = For me, with sorrow, I embrace my Fortune,

18870 = I haue some Rites of memory in this Kingdome,

14639 = Which are ro claime my vantage doth             [FF text: ro]

4289 = Inuite me

Horatio

18476 = Of that I shall haue alwayes cause to speake,

8322 = And from his mouth

16597 = Whose voyce will draw on more:

17888 = But let this same be presently perform’d,

15823 = Even whiles mens mindes are wilde,

8809 = Lest more mischance

12621 = On plots, and errors happen.

Fortinbras

8917 = Let foure Captaines

15105 = Beare Hamlet like a Soldier to the Stage,

14203 = For he was likely, had he beene put on

12980 = To haue prou’d most royally:

7504 = And for his passage,

22923 = The Souldiours Musicke, and the rites of Warre

9882 = Speake lowdly for him.

15535 = Take vp the body; Such a sight as this

18956 = Becomes the Field, but heere shewes much amis.

12625 = Go, bid the Souldiers shoote.

 

17610 = Exeunt Marching: after the which, a Peale of

9029 = Ordenance are shot off.

1117947

IV + V = 1073687 + 44260 = 1117947

 

***

Background

Prince Hamlet personifies Cosmic Creative Power whose mission extends over a Platonic Great Year of 25920 calendar years. This is the period in which the equinoctial points complete one whole circle around the Twelve Houses of the Zodiac.

In creation myth, The Thirteenth House, Ophiuchus or Serpent Holder, plays a Guardian role to ensure that creative strife between the forces of Light and Darkness do not go out of hand so as to prevent the creative process from running its full course.

The entry of Cosmic Creative Power from above into the Darkness below (Hell) sets in motion a creative process marked by Strife between Light and Darkness, Spirit and Matter, Platonic Same and Platonic Other.  In the final scene, this is what Prince Hamlet describes to his friend Horatio as ‘a kind of fighting in his heart’ that would not let him sleep.

The Cosmic Creative Process begins with Hieros Gamos – Royal Intercourse – between King and Queen and, in Shakespeare’s play, ends with an off-stage ‘consummation devoutly to be wish’d’ between Prince Hamlet and Virgin Ophelia in Heaven as alluded to by the statement at play’s end after all players have exited – ”after the which a peal of Ordenance are shot off.”

***

III. Sweet Prince Hamlet – Cosmic Creative Power

(Construction G. T.)

148262

Markers on the Cosmic Clock

4956 = Aquarius

3577 = Pisces

2443 = Aries

4611 = Taurus

2514 = Gemini

2589 = Cancer

1392 = Leo

3180 = Virgo

1939 = Libra

4594 = Scorpio

6729 = Sagittarius

6795 = Capricornus

Prince Hamlet‘s Dual Roles

Light

10125 = Sannr Maðr ok Sannr Guð – True Man and True God – Icelandic term for Jesús Kristr

Darkness

 -4000 = Dark Sword – Man-Beast

Malachy’s Prophecy¹

FINIS

13831 = In persecutione extrema S.R.E.

12051 = sedebit Petrus Romanus,

22136 = qui pascet oues in multis tribulationibus:

26227 = quibus transactis ciuitas septicollis diruetur,

22573 = & Iudex tremêdus iudicabit populum suum.

 2600 = Finis.

148262

***

Background

At dawn of the Seventh Day of Creation in Hebrew Myth, the Holy Name of JHWH is held to split down the middle into Male and Female parts.  In this context, Prince Hamlet is mythical Man of Seventh Day whose mission is to unite the Male and Female parts to that the Holy Name of JHWH may be restored in Creation. That is said to be “the purpose of our world“.

In the final scene of Hamlet, the Prince exits Creation for a“consummation devoutly to be wish‘d“ with Virgin Ophelia in Heaven. Left on stage are the bodies of King Claudius, 4470, and Queen Gertrude, 4520. Yet, theirs is also a happy ending, for their “deaths“ represent farewell to the tempestuous and “rotten state of Denmarke“  and their joint transformation into Brave New World, 8990, as in 4470 + 4520 = 8990.

At the end of Snorri Sturluson‘s Gylfaginning , the confusing multiplicity of characters, times and places addressed in this note is explained (see Appendix). Here it remains to be seen how the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse fit into the number symbolic imagery outlined above in connection with both Macbeth and Hamlet.

***

IV. The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse

(Revelations, Ch. VI, King James Bible 1611)

1073687

6:1

19795 = And I sawe when the Lambe opened one of the seales,

17848 = and I heard as it were the noise of thunder,

16815 = one of the foure beasts, saying, Come and see.

6:2

14039 = And I saw, and behold, a white horse,

12335 = and hee that sate on him had a bowe,

15372 = and a crowne was given vnto him,

21931 = and hee went foorth conquering, and to conquere.

6:3

14520 = And when hee had opened the second seale,

14430 = I heard the second beast say, Come and see.

6:4

22660 = And there went out another horse that was red:

21666 = and power was giuen to him that sate thereon

11173 = to take peace from the earth,

15713 = and that they should kill one another:

20193 = and there was giuen vnto him a great sword.

6:5

14263 = And when hee had opened the third seale,

14173 = I heard the third beast say, Come and see.

10101 = And I beheld, and loe, a blacke horse:

19450 = and hee that sate on him had a paire of balances in his hand.

6:6

21500 = And I heard a voice in the midst of the foure beastes say,

12453 = A measure of wheate for a penie,

15160 = and three measures of barley for a penie,

19206 = and see thou hurt not the oyle and the wine.

6:7

15507 = And when hee had opened the fourth seale,

20600 = I heard the voice of the fourth beast say, Come and see.

6:8

11536 = And I looked, and behold, a pale horse:

14788 = & his name that sate on him was Death,

12408 = and hell followed with him:

15690 = and power was giuen vnto them,

15592 = ouer the fourth part of the earth

24791 = to kill with sword, & with hunger, and with death,

14269 = and with the beastes of the earth.

6:9

13411 = And when hee had opened the fift seale,

18679 = I saw vnder the altar, the soules of them

17217 = that were slaine for the word of God,

16560 = and for the testimony which they held.

6:10

17373 = And they cried with a lowd voice, saying,

13615 = How long, O Lord, holy and true,

17978 = doest thou not iudge and auenge our blood

14129 = on them that dwell on the earth?

6:11

23332 = And white robes were giuen vnto euery one of them,

11871 = and it was sayd vnto them,

20969 = that they should rest yet for a little season,

25936 = vntill their fellow seruants also, and their brethren

22543 = that should be killed as they were, should be fulfilled.

6:12

16629 = And I beheld when he had opened the sixt seale,

15035 = and loe, there was a great earthquake,

17904 = and the Sunne became blacke as sackecloth of haire,

9823 = and the Moone became as blood.

6:13

18990 = And the starres of heauen fell vnto the earth,

18593 = euen as a figge tree casteth her vntimely figs

15862 = when she is shaken of a mighty winde.

6:14

27887 = And the heauen departed as a scrowle when it is rolled together,

26877 = and euery mountaine and Island were moued out of their places.

6:15

21858 = And the kings of the earth, and the great men, and the rich men,

15453 = and the chiefe captaines, and the mighty men,

12536 = and euery bondman, and euery free man,

27229 = hid themselues in the dennes and in the rockes of the mountaines,

6:16

15800 = And said to the mountaines and rockes,

15564 = Fall on vs, and hide vs from the face of him

26050 = that sitteth on the throne, and from the wrath of the Lambe:

6:17

16319 = For the great day of his wrath is come;

11688 = and who shall be able to stand?

1073687

V. All the rest left to Lady Macbeth

(The Great Day of His Wrath is Come, # VII)

44260

Man-Beast

-4000 = Dark Sword – Man-Beast

The dunnest smoake of Hell

11587 = Character Assassination

5881 = Níðingsverk – Barbarity

7750 = Psychiatric Rape

6603 = Mannorðsmorð – Vicious Slander

16439 = Criminal Obstruction of Justice

44260

Again, IV + V = 1073687 + 44260 = 1117947, the Cipher Value of the final scene in Hamlet.

***

Calculator for converting letters to cipher values is at:

http://www.light-of-truth.com/ciphersaga.htm

¹Translation

In extreme persecution, the seat of the Holy Roman Church

will be occupied by Peter the Roman,

who will feed the sheep through many tribulations;

when they are over, the city of seven hills will be destroyed,

and the terrible or fearsome Judge will judge his people. The End.

 

Appendix

Gylfaginning Ch. 54

Því næst heyrði Gangleri dyni mikla hvern veg frá sér ok leit út á hlið sér. Ok þá er hann sést meir um, þá stendr hann úti á sléttum velli, sér þá enga höll ok enga borg. Gengr hann þá leið sína braut ok kemr heim í ríki sitt ok segir þau tíðendi, er hann hefir sét ok heyrt, ok eftir honum sagði hverr maðr öðrum þessar sögur.

En æsir setjast þá á tal ok ráða ráðum sínum ok minnast á þessar frásagnir allar, er honum váru sagðar, ok gefa nöfn þessi in sömu, er áðr eru nefnd, mönnum ok stöðum þeim, er þar váru, til þess, at þá er langar stundir liði, at menn skyldu ekki ifast í, at allir væri einir þeir æsir, er nú var frá sagt, ok þessir, er þá váru þau sömu nöfn gefin.

Translation

(Internet)

Thereupon Gangleri heard great noises on every side of him; and then, when he had looked about him more, lo, he stood out of doors on a level plain, and saw no hall there and no castle. Then he went his way forth and came home into his kingdom, and told those tidings which he had seen and heard; and after him each man told these tales to the other.

But the Æsir sat them down to speak together, and took counsel and recalled all these tales which had been told to him. And they gave these same names that were named before to those men and places that were there, to the end that when long ages should have passed away, men should not doubt thereof, that those Æsir that were but now spoken of, and these to whom the same names were then given, were all one.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Flokkar: Óflokkað

Laugardagur 23.12.2017 - 21:38 - FB ummæli ()

 The Monstrous Visage of Conspiracie

© Gunnar Tómasson

23 December 2017

Isaiah 29:15

Woe unto them that seeke deepe

to hide their counsel from the LORD

***

I. The LORD: World Soul and Law of Moses

(Construction G. T.)

409918

105113 = Platonic World Soul

304805 = Torah – Number of Letters

409918

 

II. Conspiracie, Hide Thy Monstrous Visage

 in Smiles, and Affabilitie

(Julius Cæsar, Act II, Sc.i. First Folio)

480841

 6941 = Enter Lucius. – See VI.

Lucius

14985 = Sir, March is wasted fifteene dayes.

7420 = Knocke within         

Brutus            

16982 = ‘Tis good. Go to the Gate; somebody knocks:

21395 = Since Cassius first did whet me against Cæsar,

7437 = I have not slept.

16159 = Betweene the acting of a dreadfull thing,

17385 = And the first motion, all the Interim is

13317 = Like a Phantasma, or a hideous Dreame:

19081 = The Genius, and the mortall Instruments

16163 = Are then in councell; and the state of a man,

16648 = Like to a little Kingdome, suffers then

14412 = The nature of an Insurrection.

 

6941 = Enter Lucius.

Lucius

20887 = Sir, ’tis your Brother Cassius at the Doore,

12910 = Who doth desire to see you.

Brutus            

3959 = Is he alone?

Lucius

13464 = No, Sir, there are moe with him.

Brutus            

8792 = Doe you know them?

Lucius

21231 = No, Sir, their Hats are pluckt about their Eares,

16827 = And halfe their Faces buried in their Cloakes,

14788 = That by no meanes I may discouer them

8403 = By any marke of favour.

Brutus            

5194 = Let ’em enter.

14323 = They are the Faction. O Conspiracie,

24491 = Sham’st thou to shew thy dang‘rous Brow by Night,

16302 = When evills are most free? O then, by day

20234 = Where wilt thou finde a Cauerne darke enough

24812 = To maske thy monstrous Visage? Seek none Conspiracie,

11716 = Hide it in Smiles, and Affabilitie:

17164 = For if thou path thy native semblance on,

17123 = Not Erebus it selfe were dimme enough,

12955 = To hide thee from preuention.

480841

 

III. The Acting of a Dreadfull Thing

(History)

82218

4988 = The Vatican

2534 = Satan

6971 = Lyons whelpe – See VI.

1712 = 17 February – 12th month

1600 = 1600 A.D.

6873 = Giordano Bruno

King James Bible 1611

16777 = THIS IS IESVS THE KING OF THE IEWES – Matt. 27:37
9442 = THE KING OF THE IEWES – Mark 15:26
13383 = THIS IS THE KING OF THE IEWES – Luke 23:38
17938 = IESVS OF NAZARETH, THE KING OF THE IEWES – John 19:19

82218

***

Francis Bacon – Of Truth

Surely the Wickednesse of Falshood, and Breach of Faith, cannot possibly be so highly expressed,

as in that it shallbe the last Peale, to call the Iudgements of God,

vpon the Generations of Men, It being foretold, that when Christ commeth,

He shall not finde faith vpon the earth.

***

IV. At The Coming of Christ

Abomination of Desolation

(Contemporary history)

468222

The Gates of Hell

13031 = International Monetary Fund

9948 = Harvard University

7146 = Seðlabanki Íslands = 30125

Right Measure of Man

Persecuted

  8525 = Gunnar Tómasson

12385 = Guðrún Ólafía Jónsdóttir

Modes of Persecution

11587 = Character Assassination

5881 = Níðingsverk – Barbarity

7750 = Psychiatric Rape

6603 = Mannorðsmorð – Vicious Slander

16439 = Criminal Obstruction of Justice

Persecutors – Jesting Pilates

U.S. Government

12867 = William Jefferson Clinton – President

4496 = Janet Reno – Attorney General

International Monetary Fund

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 University

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 Government

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

468222

I + II + III + IV = 480841 + 82218 + 409918 + 468222 = 1441199

VI + VII = 1031151 + 410048 = 1441199

 

V. Great Cæsar – Hence: Wilt thou lift up Olympus!

(Julius Cæsar, Act III, Sc. i. First Folio 1623)

1441199

  4916 = Flourish.                                                                                       

24433 = Enter Cæsar, Brutus, Cassius, Caska, Decius, Metellus,

25886 = Trebonius, Cynna, Antony, Lepidus, Artimedorus, Publius,         

8352 =  and the Soothsayer.

Cæsar

9508 = The Ides of March are come.

Soothsayer

8887 = I Cæsar, but not gone.

Artimedorus

11592 = Haile Cæsar: Read this Scedule.

Decius

17267 = Trebonius doth desire you to ore-read

20518 = (At your best leysure) this his humble suite.

Artemidorus

17809 = O Cæsar, reade mine first: for mine’s a suite

19816 = That touches Cæsar neerer.  Read it great Cæsar,

Cæsar

22379 = What touches vs our selfe, shall be last seru’d.

Artemidorus

14149 = Delay not, Cæsar, read it instantly.

Cæsar

11037 = What, is the fellow mad?

Publius

6900 = Sirra, giue place.

Cassius

22754 = What, vrge you your Petitions in the street?

9210 = Come to the Capitoll.

Popillius

19963 = I wish your enterprize to day may thriue.

Cassius

15019 = What enterprize Popillius?

Popillius

6575 = Fare you well.

Brutus

11992 = What said Popillius Lena?

Cassius

22191 = He wisht to day our enterprize might thriue:

15837 = I feare our purpose is discouered.

Brutus

15806 = Looke how he makes to Cæsar: marke him.

Cassius

16942 = Caska be sodaine, for we feare preuention,

20350 = Brutus what shall be done?  If this be knowne,

18558 = Cassius or Cæsar neuer shall turne backe,

10528 = For I will slay my selfe.

Brutus

9990 = Cassius be constant:

21899 = Popillius Lena speakes not of our purposes,

18125 = For looke he smiles, and Cæsar doth not change.

Cassius

24829 = Trebonius knowes his time: for look you Brutus

17249 = He drawes Mark Antony out of the way.

Decius

16210 = Where is Metellus Cimber, let him go,

19500 = And presently preferre his suite to Cæsar.

Brutus

16379 = He is addrest: presse neere, and second him.

Cynna

19433 = Caska, you are the first that reares your hand.

Cæsar

16879 = Are we all ready?  What is now amisse,

17969 = That Cæsar and his Senate must redresse?

Metellus

21506 = Most high, most mighty, and most puisant Cæsar

19567 = Metellus Cymber throwes before thy Seate

5778 = An humble heart.

Cæsar

12472 = I must preuent thee Cymber:

21733 = These couchings, and these lowly courtesies

14345 = Might fire the blood of ordinary men,

16504 = And turne pre-Ordinance, and first Decree

14255 = Into the lane of Children.  Be not fond,

18986 = To thinke that Cæsar beares such Rebell blood

20290 = That will be thaw’d from the true quality

27136 = With that which melteth Fooles, I meane sweet words,

22347 = Low-crooked-curtsies, and base Spaniell fawning:

12618 = Thy Brother by decree is banished:

17586 = If thou doest bend, and pray, and fawne for him,

18113 = I spurne thee like a Curre out of my way:

25524 = Know, Cæsar doth not wrong, nor without cause

8655 = Will he be satisfied.

Metellus

21609 = Is there no voyce more worthy then my owne,

20385 = To sound more sweetly in great Cæsars eare,

15686 = For the repealing of my banish’d Brother?

Brutus

18142 = I kisse thy hand, but not in flattery, Cæsar:

16107 = Desiring thee, that Publius Cymber may

12806 = Haue an immediate freedome of repeale.

Cæsar

7924 = What, Brutus!

Cassius

11142 = Pardon, Cæsar; Cæsar, pardon:

19425 = As lowe as to thy foote doth Cassius fall,

19052 = To begge infranchisement for Publius Cymber.

Cæsar

16379 = I could be well mou’d if I were as you,

22538 = If I could pray to mooue, Prayers would mooue me:

19543 = But I am constant as the Northerne Starre,

19698 = Of whose true fixt, and resting quality

16134 = There is no fellow in the Firmament.

21305 = The Skies are painted with vnnumbred sparkes,

15567 = They are all Fire and every one doth shine:

18563 = But, there’s but one in all doth hold his place.

23070 = So, in the World; ‘Tis furnish’d well with Men,

15675 = And Men are Flesh and Blood, and apprehensiue;

15653 = Yet in the number I do know but One

15556 = That vnassayleable holds on his Ranke,

13067 = Vnshak’d of Motion: and that I am he,

16339 = Let me a little shew it, euen in this,

19864 = That I was constant Cymber should be banish’d,

15998 = And constant do remaine to keepe him so.

Cinna

3200 = O Cæsar, –

Cæsar

16936 = Hence:  Wilt thou lift up Olympus!

Decius

4910 = Great Cæsar, –

Cæsar

16307 = Doth not Brutus bootlesse kneele?

Casca

7232 = Speake, hands, for me!

6500 = They stab Cæsar.

Cæsar

13836 = Et Tu, Brute? _______ Then fall Cæsar.   Dyes   

1441199

VI. Immortal Lyons Whelpe

(First Folio, Omega Page)

1031151

[Posthumus]

16581 = Make no collection of it.  Let him shew

15289 = His skill in the construction.

Lucius

6498 = Philarmonus.

Soothsayer

6928 = Heere, my good lord.

Lucius

9000 = Read, and declare the meaning.

 

2471 = Reades.

24167 = When as a Lyons whelpe, shall to himselfe vnknown,

11006 = without seeking finde,

11809 = and bee embrac’d by a peece of tender Ayre:

21082 = And when from a stately Cedar shall be lopt branches,

18501 = which being dead many yeares shall after reuiue,

20237 = bee iyonted to the old Stocke, and freshly grow,

18503 = then shall Posthumus end his miseries,

22220 = Britaine be fortunate, and flourish in Peace and Plentie.

 

18025 = Thou Leonatus art the Lyons Whelpe,

18080 = The fit and apt Construction of thy name

16575 = Being Leonatus, doth import so much:

20848 = The peece of tender Ayre, thy vertuous Daughter,

17353 = Which we call Mollis Aer, and Mollis Aer

19924 = We terme it Mulier; which Mulier I diuine

22895 = Is this most constant Wife, who euen now

16165 = Answering the Letter of the Oracle,

24035 = Vnknowne to you vnsought, were clipt about

13804 = With this most tender Aire.

Cymbeline

9907 = This hath some seeming.

Soothsayer

12593 = The lofty Cedar, Royall Cymbeline

19881 = Personates thee: And thy lopt branches point

23355 = Thy two Sonnes forth: who by Belarius stolne

19175 = For many yeares thought dead, are now reuiu’d

19300 = To the Maiesticke Cedar ioyn’d; whose Issue

14591 = Promises Britaine, Peace and Plenty.

Cymbeline

3134 = Well,

17579 = My Peace we will begin:  And Caius Lucius,

20040 = Although the Victor, we submit to Cæsar,

15143 = And to the Romane Empire; promising

21441 = To pay our wonted Tribute, from the which

20009 = We were disswaded by our wicked Queene,

20001 = Whom heauens in Iustice both on her, and hers,

9168 = Haue laid most heauy hand.

Soothsayer

18314 = The fingers of the powres aboue, do tune

15670 = The harmony of this Peace;  the Vision

21926 = Which I made knowne to Lucius ere the stroke

21601 = Of yet this scarse-cold-Battaile, at this instant

16814 = Is full accomplish‘d. For the Romaine Eagle

22300 = From South to West, on wing soaring aloft

16956 = Lessen‘d her selfe, and in the Beames o‘th‘Sun

22102 = So vanish‘d: which foreshew‘d our Princely Eagle,

16441 = Th‘Imperiall Cæsar, should againe vnite

17178 = His Fauour, with the Radiant Cymbeline,

15261 = Which shines heere in the West.

Cymbeline

7510 = Laud we the Gods,

24502 = And let our crooked Smoakes climbe to their Nostrils

21051 = From our blest Altars.  Publish we this Peace

20587 = To all our Subiects.  Set we forward:  Let

14971 = A Roman, and a Brittish Ensigne waue

23065 = Friendly together: so through Luds-Towne march,

14265 = And in the Temple of great Iupiter

20329 = Our Peace wee‘l ratifie:  Seale it with Feasts.

18177 = Set on there:  Neuer was a Warre did cease

20903 = (Ere bloodie hands were wash‘d) with such a Peace.

  3915 = Exeunt.

1031151

VII. William Shakespeare’s Inuention

(Construction G. T.)

410048

Alpha

Venus and Adonis 1593

Dedication

 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

Deformed

First Heire

         -1 = Sleeping Reason

Cosmic Time

  25920 = Platonic Great Year

Omega

Transformation

-6960 = Jarðlig skilning – Earthly Understanding

5596 = Andlig spekðin – Spiritual Wisdom

Perfect Heire

Lyons Whelpe

 6873 = Giordano Bruno

410048

***

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.

Flokkar: Óflokkað

Laugardagur 23.12.2017 - 04:24 - FB ummæli ()

Isaiah and Malachy‘s Last Pope Prophecy

© Gunnar Tómasson

22 December 2017

And thou shalt be brought downe.

I. And thy speach shall whisper out of the dust.

(Isaiah Ch. 29, KJB 1611)

1603819

29:1

23257 = Woe to Ariel, to Ariel the citie where Dauid dwelt:

17628 = adde yee yeere to yeere; let them kill sacrifices.

29:2

12921 = Yet I will distresse Ariel,

17127 = and there shalbe heauinesse and sorrow;

12031 = and it shall be vnto mee as Ariel.

29:3

17582 = And I will campe against thee round about,

19679 = and will lay siege against thee with a mount,

15690 = and I will raise forts against thee.

29:4

14869 = And thou shalt bee brought downe,

14749 = and shalt speake out of the ground,

19052 = and thy speach shall be low out of the dust,

7495 = and thy voyce shalbe

23361 = as of one that hath a familiar spirit, out of the ground,

20973 = and thy speach shall whisper out of the dust.

29:5

20325 = Moreouer the multitude of thy strangers

9311 = shalbe like small dust,

16953 = and the multitude of the terrible ones

13697 = shalbe as chaffe that passeth away;

14304 = yea it shalbe at an instant suddenly.

29:6

27642 = Thou shalt bee visited of the LORD of hostes with thunder,

15394 = and with earthquake, and great noise,

24863 = with storme and tempest, and the flame of deuouring fire.

29:7

25694 = And the multitude of all the nations that fight against Ariel,

19747 = euen all that fight against her and her munition,

23037 = and that distresse her, shalbe as a dreame of a night vision.

29:8

18197 = It shall euen be as when a hungry man dreameth,

23094 = and behold he eateth; but he awaketh, and his soule is emptie:

22807 = or as when a thirstie man dreameth, and behold he drinketh;

14016 = but hee awaketh, and behold he is faint,

11715 = and his soule hath appetite:

19344 = so shall the multitude of all the nations bee,

14304 = that fight against mount Zion.

29:9

21811 = Stay your selues and wonder, cry yee out, and cry:

17766 = they are drunken, but not with wine,

20216 = they stagger, but not with strong drinke.

29:10

30197 = For the LORD hath powred out vpon you the spirit of deepe sleepe,

10209 = and hath closed your eyes:

25474 = the Prophets and your rulers, the Seers hath hee couered.

29:11

16598 = And the vsion of all is become vnto you

16125 = as the wordes of a booke that is sealed,

17547 = which men deliuer to one that is learned,

11090 = saying, Reade this, I pray thee:

14649 = and hee saith, I cannot, for it is sealed:

29:12

21003 = And the booke is deliuered to him that is not learned,

11090 = saying, Reade this, I pray thee:

10004 = and he saith, I am not learned.

29:13

10901 = Wherefore the Lord said,

27560 = Forasmuch as this people draw neere mee with their mouth,

15688 = and with their lips doe honour me,

17767 = but haue remoued their heart farre from me,

25026 = and their feare towards mee is taught by the precept of men:

29:14

16197 = Therefore behold, I will proceed to do

19770 = a marueilous worke amongst this people,

17491 = euen a marueilous worke and a wonder:

22681 = for the wisedome of their wise men shall perish,

22369 = and the vnderstanding of their prudent men shall be hid.

29:15

13872 = Woe unto them that seeke deepe

16414 = to hide their counsell from the LORD,

18244 = and their workes are in the darke, and they say,

18179 = Who seeth vs? and who knoweth vs?

29:16

22704 = Surely your turning of things vpside downe

15276 = shall be esteemed as the potters clay:

18095 = for shall the worke say of him that made it,

4594 = He made me not?

19652 = or shall the thing framed, say of him that framed it,

9304 = He had no vnderstanding?

29:17

14908 = Is it not yet a very litle while,

19456 = and Lebanon shall be turned into a fruitful field

21577 = and the fruitfull field shall be esteemed as a forrest?

29:18

22136 = And in that day shall the deafe heare the words of the booke,

21556 = and the eyes of the blind shall see out of obscuritie,

8957 = and out of darkenesse.

29:19

20391 = The meeke also shall increase their ioy in the LORD,

24378 = and the poore among men shall reioice in the holy One of Israel.

29:20

20513 = For the terrrible one is brought to nought,

12677 = and the scorner is consumed,

19540 = and all that watch for iniquitie are cut off:

29:21

15611 = That make a man an offendour for a word,

19692 = and lay a snare for him that reproueth in the gate,

20128 = and turne aside the iust for a thing of nought.

29:22

21877 = Therefore thus saith the LORD who redeemed Abraham,

12368 = concerning the house of Iacob:

12112 = Iacob shall not now be ashamed,

16487 = neither shall his face now waxe pale.

29:23

13836 = But when hee seeth his children

18251 = the worke of mine hands in the midst of him,

10957 = they shall sanctifie my Name,

12757 = and sanctifie the Holy One of Iacob,

11484 = and shall feare the God of Israel.

29:24

26482 = They also that erred in spirit shall come to vnderstanding,

19267 = and they that murmured, shall learne doctrine.

1603819

II. Malachy’s Last Pope Prophecy¹

(Construction G. T.)

130612

13831 = In persecutione extrema S.R.E.

12051 = sedebit Petrus Romanus,

22136 = qui pascet oues in multis tribulationibus:

26227 = quibus transactis ciuitas septicollis diruetur,

19973 = & Iudex tremêdus iudicabit populum suum.

2600 = Finis.

Prophecy

-3781 = The Pope

Symbol of Perfected Creation

St. Peter’s Basilica

37575 = Inscription on its façade to mark its completion in 1612

130612

I + II = 1603819 + 130612 = 1734431

III + IV = 468222 + 1266209 = 1734431

 

III. Abomination of Desolation³

Extreme Persecution

(Contemporary history)

468222

The Gates of Hell

13031 = International Monetary Fund

9948 = Harvard University

7146 = Seðlabanki Íslands = 30125

Right Measure of Man

Persecuted

  8525 = Gunnar Tómasson

12385 = Guðrún Ólafía Jónsdóttir

Modes of Persecution

11587 = Character Assassination

5881 = Níðingsverk – Barbarity

7750 = Psychiatric Rape

6603 = Mannorðsmorð – Vicious Slander

16439 = Criminal Obstruction of Justice

Persecutors – Jesting Pilates

U.S. Government

12867 = William Jefferson Clinton – President

4496 = Janet Reno – Attorney General

International Monetary Fund

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 University

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 Government

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

468222

IV. Turne, Hell-hound turne. – Macbeth slaine.

(Macbeth, Act V, Sc. vii. First Folio)

1266209

  5476 = Enter Macbeth.

Macbeth

15484 = They haue tied me to a stake, I cannot flye,

21429 = But Beare-like I must fight the course.  What’s he

18595 = That was not borne of Woman?  Such a one

7765 = Am I to feare, or none.

 

10263 = Enter young Seyward.

Young Seyward

7727 = What is thy name?

Macbeth

11523 = Thou’lt be affraid to heare it.

Young Seyward

19453 = No: though thou call’st thy selfe a hoter name

7090 = Then any is in hell.

Macbeth

5982 = My name’s Macbeth.

Young Seyward

21449 = The diuell himselfe could not pronounce a Title

10790 = More hatefull to mine eare.

Macbeth

9407 = No: nor more fearefull.

Young Seyward

22027 = Thou lyest abhorred Tyrant, with my Sword

14238 = Ile proue the lye thou speak’st.

 

13390 = Fight, and young Seyward slaine.

Macbeth

13779 = Thou was’t borne of woman;

23840 = But Swords I smile at, Weapons laugh to scorne,

18390 = Brandish’d by man that’s of a Woman borne.     Exit.

 

9663 = Alarums.  Enter Macduffe.

Macbeth

20208 = That way the noise is:  Tyrant shew thy face,

21181 = If thou beest slaine, and with no stroake of mine,

23482 = My Wife and Childrens Ghosts will haunt me still:

23363 = I cannot strike at wretched Kernes, whose armes

21372 = Are hyr’d to beare their Staues: either thou Macbeth,

19129 = Or else my Sword with an vnbattered edge

19124 = I sheath againe vndeeded.  There thou should’st be,

18651 = By this great clatter, one of greatest note

16640 = Seemes bruited.  Let me finde him Fortune,

13369 = And more I begge not.      Exit.     Alarums.

11704 = Enter Malcolme and Seyward.

Seyward

19780 = This way my Lord, the Castles gently rendred:

18336 = The Tyrants people, on both sides do fight,

17032 = The Noble Thanes do brauely in the Warre,

18681 = The day almost it selfe professes yours,

8163 = And little is to do.

Malcolme

11136 = We haue met with Foes

10000 = That strike beside vs.

Seyward

16388 = Enter Sir, the Castle.         Exeunt.            Alarum.

5476 = Enter Macbeth.

Macbeth

16693 = Why should I play the Roman Foole, and dye

24275 = On mine owne sword?  whiles I see liues, the gashes

9054 = Do better vpon them.

 

5805 = Enter Macduffe.

Macduffe

11371 = Turne, Hell-hound, turne.

Macbeth

11812 = Of all men else I haue auoyded thee:

18887 = But get thee backe, my soule is too much charg’d

11602 = With blood of thine already.

Macduffe

7780 = I haue no words,

21684 = My voice is in my Sword, thou bloodier Villaine

18408 = Then tearmes can giue thee out.              Fight: Alarum

Macbeth

10798 = Thou loosest labour;

17585 = As easie may’st thou the intrenchant Ayre

20599 = With thy keene Sword impresse, as make me bleed:

16274 = Let fall thy blade on vulnerable Crests,

16716 = I beare a charmed Life, which must not yeeld

10121 = To one of woman borne.

Macduffe

7989 = Dispaire thy Charme,

21275 = And let the Angell whom thou still hast seru’d

21484 = Tell thee, Macduffe was from his Mothers womb

7417 = Vntimely ript.

Macbeth

17783 = Accursed be that tongue that tels mee so;

16929 = For it hath Cow’d my better part of man:

15970 = And be these Iugling Fiends no more beleeu’d,

17113 = That palter with vs in a double sence,

19805 = That keepe the word of promise to our eare,

21110 = And breake it to our hope.  Ile not fight with thee.

Macduffe

9587 = Then yeeld thee Coward,

16489 = And liue to be the shew, and gaze o’ th’ time.

19059 = Wee’l haue thee, as our rarer Monsters are

15861 = Painted vpon a pole, and vnder-writ,

11568 = Heere may you see the Tyrant.

Macbeth

7518 = I will not yeeld

20881 = To kisse the ground before young Malcolmes feet,

16030 = And to be baited with the Rabbles curse,

18162 = Though Byrnane wood be come to Dunsinane,

17555 = And thou oppos’d, being of no woman borne,

16155 = Yet I will try the last.  Before my body,

18389 = I throw my warlike Shield:  Lay on Macduffe,

17524 = And damn’d be him, that first cries hold, enough.

11426 = Exeunt, fighting.  Alarums.

12691 = Enter Fighting, and Macbeth slaine.       

1266209

***

Calculator for converting letters to cipher values is at:

http://www.light-of-truth.com/ciphersaga.htm

¹Translation

In extreme persecution, the seat of the Holy Roman Church

will be occupied by Peter the Roman,

who will feed the sheep through many tribulations;

when they are over, the city of seven hills will be destroyed,

and the terrible or fearsome Judge will judge his people. The End.

²Text and translation

23501 = IN HONOREM PRINCIPIS APOST PAVLVS V BVRGHESIVS
14074 = ROMANVS PONT. MAX. AN. MDCXII PONT. VII.
37575

Paul V Borghèse, pape, a fait ceci en l’an 1612,

en l’honneur du prince des apôtres.

³Abomination 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.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Flokkar: Óflokkað

Laugardagur 23.12.2017 - 02:10 - FB ummæli ()

Turne, Hell-hound turne – Macbeth slaine

© Gunnar Tómasson

22 December 2017

Murther most foule, as in the best it is.

I. But this most foule, strange, and unnaturall.

(Hamlet, Act I, Sc. v. First Folio, 1623)

1658168

 9462 = Enter Ghost and Hamlet.

Hamlet

22112 = Where wilt thou lead me?  speak; Ile go no further.

Ghost

2883 = Marke me.

Hamlet

3756 = I will.

Ghost

11748 = My hower is almost come,

22142 = When I to sulphurous and tormenting Flames

10942 = Must render up my selfe.

Hamlet

7778 = Alas poore Ghost.

Ghost

19231 = Pitty me not, but lend thy serious hearing

10823 = To what I shall unfold.

Hamlet

9425 = Speake, I am bound to heare.

Ghost

21689 = So art thou to revenge, when thou shalt heare.

Hamlet

3270 = What?

Ghost

10539 = I am thy Fathers Spirit,

19489 = Doom’d for a certaine terme to walke the night;

15474 = And for the day confin’d to fast in Fiers,

19868 = Till the foule crimes done in my dayes of Nature

10839 = Are burnt and purg’d away?

7855 = But that I am forbid

18785 = To tell the secrets of my Prison-House,

20467 = I could a Tale unfold, whose lightest word

25179 = Would harrow up thy soule, freeze thy young blood,

27383 = Make thy two eyes like Starres, start from their Spheres,

16795 = Thy knotty and combined locks to part,

15570 = And each particular haire to stand an end,

20558 = Like Quilles upon the fretfull Porpentine:

17082 = But this eternall blason must not be

19562 = To eares of flesh and bloud; list Hamlet, oh list,

16884 = If thou didst ever thy deare Father love.

Hamlet

3459 = Oh Heaven!

Ghost

22153 = Revenge his foule and most unnaturall Murther.

Hamlet

4660 = Murther?

Ghost

18629 = Murther most foule, as in the best it is;

20891 = But this most foule, strange, and unnaturall.

Hamlet

11813 = Hast, hast me to know it,

15426 = That with wings as swift

17684 = As  meditation, or the thoughts of Love,

11099 = May sweepe to my Revenge.

Ghost

5591 = I finde thee apt;

20490 = And duller should’st thou be then the fat weede

18672 = That rots it selfe in ease, on Lethe Wharfe,

18843 = Would’st thou not stirre in this.

  7499 = Now Hamlet heare:

19608 = It’s given out, that sleeping in mine Orchard,

21032 = A Serpent stung me: so the whole eare of Denmarke,

13077 = Is by a forged processe of my death

18982 = Rankly abus’d:  But know thou Noble youth,

18951 = The Serpent that did sting thy Fathers life,

13593 = Now weares his Crowne.

Hamlet

15252 = O my Propheticke soule: mine Uncle?

Ghost

19142 = I that incestuous, that adulterate Beast

29730 = With witchcraft of his wits, hath Traitorous guifts.

21415 = Oh wicked Wit, and Gifts, that have the power

22656 = So to seduce?  Won to to this shamefull Lust

22351 = The will of my most seeming vertuous Queene.

17021 = Oh Hamlet, what a falling oft was there,

18901 = From me, whose love was of that dignity,

21371 = That it went hand in hand, even with the Vow

13881 = I made to her in Marriage; and to decline

25184 = Upon a wretch, whose Naturall gifts were poore

24348 = To those of mine. But Vertue, as it never wil be moved,

21122 = Though Lewdnesse court it in a shape of Heaven:

17577 = So Lust, though to a radiant Angell link’d,

20657 = Will sate it selfe in a Celestiall bed & prey on Garbage.

20310 = But soft, me thinkes I sent the Mornings Ayre;

18535 = Briefe let me be:  Sleeping within mine Orchard,

17248 = My custome alwayes in the afternoone;

19016 = Upon my secure hower thy Uncle stole

17466 = With iuyce of cursed Hebenon in a Violl,

16672 = And in the Porches of mine eares did poure

18685 = The leaperous Distilment; whose effect

17290 = Holds such an enmity with bloud of Man,

25233 = That swift as Quick-silver, it courses through

15783 = The naturall Gates and Allies of the Body;

19585 = And with a sodaine vigour it doth posset

16801 = And curd, like aygre droppings into Milke,

18159 = The thin and wholsome blood: so did it mine;

15969 = And a most instant tetter bak’d about,

22687 = Most Lazar-like, with vile and loathsome crust,

7531 = All my smooth Body.

16992 = Thus was I, sleeping, by a Brothers hand,

19671 = Of Life, of Crowne, and Queene at once dispatcht;

18043 = Cut off even in the Blossomes of my Sinne,

16349 = Unhouzzled, disappointed, unnaneld,

18018 = No reckoning made, but sent to my account

15902 = With all my imperfections on my head;

16946 = Oh horrible, Oh horrible, most horrible;

17164 = If thou hast nature in thee beare it not;

13314 = Let not the Royall Bed of Denmarke be

15607 = A Couch for Luxury and damned Incest.

22022 = But howsoever thou pursuest this Act,

22240 = Taint not thy mind; nor let thy Soule contrive

19204 = Against thy Mother ought; leave her to heaven,

19764 = And to those Thornes that in her bosome lodge,

19266 = To pricke and sting her.  Fare thee well at once;

22305 = The Glow-worme showes the Matine to be neere,

15555 = And gins to pale his uneffectuall Fire:

12486 = Adue, adue, Hamlet; remember me.    Exit.

1658168

 

II. Lady Macbeth‘s Dunnest Smoake of Hell

(The Great Day of his Wrath is Come, # VII, A)

48260

11587 = Character Assassination

5881 = Níðingsverk – Barbarity

7750 = Psychiatric Rape

6603 = Mannorðsmorð – Vicious Slander

16439 = Criminal Obstruction of Justice

48260

III. Lady Macbeth: Leaue all the rest to me.

(Macbeth, Act I, Sc. v, First Folio)

28003

        1 = Monad

2082 = Faith

Cosmic Time

25920 = Platonic Great Year

28003

I + II + III = 1658168 + 48260 + 28003 = 1734431

IV + V = 468222 + 1266209 = 1734431

IV. Abomination of Desolation

(Contemporary history)

468222

The Gates of Hell

13031 = International Monetary Fund

9948 = Harvard University

7146 = Seðlabanki Íslands = 30125

Right Measure of Man

Persecuted

  8525 = Gunnar Tómasson

12385 = Guðrún Ólafía Jónsdóttir

Modes of Persecution

11587 = Character Assassination

5881 = Níðingsverk – Barbarity

7750 = Psychiatric Rape

6603 = Mannorðsmorð – Vicious Slander

16439 = Criminal Obstruction of Justice

Persecutors – Jesting Pilates

U.S. Government

12867 = William Jefferson Clinton – President

4496 = Janet Reno – Attorney General

International Monetary Fund

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 University

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 Government

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

468222

V. Turne, Hell-hound turne. – Macbeth slaine.

(Macbeth, Act V, Sc. vii. First Folio)

1266209

 5476 = Enter Macbeth.

Macbeth

15484 = They haue tied me to a stake, I cannot flye,

21429 = But Beare-like I must fight the course.  What’s he

18595 = That was not borne of Woman?  Such a one

7765 = Am I to feare, or none.

 

10263 = Enter young Seyward.

Young Seyward

7727 = What is thy name?

Macbeth

11523 = Thou’lt be affraid to heare it.

Young Seyward

19453 = No: though thou call’st thy selfe a hoter name

7090 = Then any is in hell.

Macbeth

5982 = My name’s Macbeth.

Young Seyward

21449 = The diuell himselfe could not pronounce a Title

10790 = More hatefull to mine eare.

Macbeth

9407 = No: nor more fearefull.

Young Seyward

22027 = Thou lyest abhorred Tyrant, with my Sword

14238 = Ile proue the lye thou speak’st.

 

13390 = Fight, and young Seyward slaine.

Macbeth

13779 = Thou was’t borne of woman;

23840 = But Swords I smile at, Weapons laugh to scorne,

18390 = Brandish’d by man that’s of a Woman borne.     Exit.

 

9663 = Alarums.  Enter Macduffe.

Macbeth

20208 = That way the noise is:  Tyrant shew thy face,

21181 = If thou beest slaine, and with no stroake of mine,

23482 = My Wife and Childrens Ghosts will haunt me still:

23363 = I cannot strike at wretched Kernes, whose armes

21372 = Are hyr’d to beare their Staues: either thou Macbeth,

19129 = Or else my Sword with an vnbattered edge

19124 = I sheath againe vndeeded.  There thou should’st be,

18651 = By this great clatter, one of greatest note

16640 = Seemes bruited.  Let me finde him Fortune,

13369 = And more I begge not.      Exit.     Alarums.

11704 = Enter Malcolme and Seyward.

Seyward

19780 = This way my Lord, the Castles gently rendred:

18336 = The Tyrants people, on both sides do fight,

17032 = The Noble Thanes do brauely in the Warre,

18681 = The day almost it selfe professes yours,

8163 = And little is to do.

Malcolme

11136 = We haue met with Foes

10000 = That strike beside vs.

Seyward

16388 = Enter Sir, the Castle.         Exeunt.            Alarum.

5476 = Enter Macbeth.

Macbeth

16693 = Why should I play the Roman Foole, and dye

24275 = On mine owne sword?  whiles I see liues, the gashes

9054 = Do better vpon them.

 

5805 = Enter Macduffe.

Macduffe

11371 = Turne, Hell-hound, turne.

Macbeth

11812 = Of all men else I haue auoyded thee:

18887 = But get thee backe, my soule is too much charg’d

11602 = With blood of thine already.

Macduffe

7780 = I haue no words,

21684 = My voice is in my Sword, thou bloodier Villaine

18408 = Then tearmes can giue thee out.              Fight: Alarum

Macbeth

10798 = Thou loosest labour;

17585 = As easie may’st thou the intrenchant Ayre

20599 = With thy keene Sword impresse, as make me bleed:

16274 = Let fall thy blade on vulnerable Crests,

16716 = I beare a charmed Life, which must not yeeld

10121 = To one of woman borne.

Macduffe

7989 = Dispaire thy Charme,

21275 = And let the Angell whom thou still hast seru’d

21484 = Tell thee, Macduffe was from his Mothers womb

7417 = Vntimely ript.

Macbeth

17783 = Accursed be that tongue that tels mee so;

16929 = For it hath Cow’d my better part of man:

15970 = And be these Iugling Fiends no more beleeu’d,

17113 = That palter with vs in a double sence,

19805 = That keepe the word of promise to our eare,

21110 = And breake it to our hope.  Ile not fight with thee.

Macduffe

9587 = Then yeeld thee Coward,

16489 = And liue to be the shew, and gaze o’ th’ time.

19059 = Wee’l haue thee, as our rarer Monsters are

15861 = Painted vpon a pole, and vnder-writ,

11568 = Heere may you see the Tyrant.

Macbeth

7518 = I will not yeeld

20881 = To kisse the ground before young Malcolmes feet,

16030 = And to be baited with the Rabbles curse,

18162 = Though Byrnane wood be come to Dunsinane,

17555 = And thou oppos’d, being of no woman borne,

16155 = Yet I will try the last.  Before my body,

18389 = I throw my warlike Shield:  Lay on Macduffe,

17524 = And damn’d be him, that first cries hold, enough.

11426 = Exeunt, fighting.  Alarums.

12691 = Enter Fighting, and Macbeth slaine.       

1266209

***

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.

 

 

Flokkar: Óflokkað

Föstudagur 22.12.2017 - 21:00 - FB ummæli ()

The Great Day of His Wrath is Come

© Gunnar Tómasson

22 December 2017

Island/Iceland in Saga-Shakespeare Prophecy

I. The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse

(Revelations, Ch. VI, King James Bible 1611)

1073687

6:1

19795 = And I sawe when the Lambe opened one of the seales,

17848 = and I heard as it were the noise of thunder,

16815 = one of the foure beasts, saying, Come and see.

6:2

14039 = And I saw, and behold, a white horse,

12335 = and hee that sate on him had a bowe,

15372 = and a crowne was given vnto him,

21931 = and hee went foorth conquering, and to conquere.

6:3

14520 = And when hee had opened the second seale,

14430 = I heard the second beast say, Come and see.

6:4

22660 = And there went out another horse that was red:

21666 = and power was giuen to him that sate thereon

11173 = to take peace from the earth,

15713 = and that they should kill one another:

20193 = and there was giuen vnto him a great sword.

6:5

14263 = And when hee had opened the third seale,

14173 = I heard the third beast say, Come and see.

10101 = And I beheld, and loe, a blacke horse:

19450 = and hee that sate on him had a paire of balances in his hand.

6:6

21500 = And I heard a voice in the midst of the foure beastes say,

12453 = A measure of wheate for a penie,

15160 = and three measures of barley for a penie,

19206 = and see thou hurt not the oyle and the wine.

6:7

15507 = And when hee had opened the fourth seale,

20600 = I heard the voice of the fourth beast say, Come and see.

6:8

11536 = And I looked, and behold, a pale horse:

14788 = & his name that sate on him was Death,

12408 = and hell followed with him:

15690 = and power was giuen vnto them,

15592 = ouer the fourth part of the earth

24791 = to kill with sword, & with hunger, and with death,

14269 = and with the beastes of the earth.

6:9

13411 = And when hee had opened the fift seale,

18679 = I saw vnder the altar, the soules of them

17217 = that were slaine for the word of God,

16560 = and for the testimony which they held.

6:10

17373 = And they cried with a lowd voice, saying,

13615 = How long, O Lord, holy and true,

17978 = doest thou not iudge and auenge our blood

14129 = on them that dwell on the earth?

6:11

23332 = And white robes were giuen vnto euery one of them,

11871 = and it was sayd vnto them,

20969 = that they should rest yet for a little season,

25936 = vntill their fellow seruants also, and their brethren

22543 = that should be killed as they were, should be fulfilled.

6:12

16629 = And I beheld when he had opened the sixt seale,

15035 = and loe, there was a great earthquake,

17904 = and the Sunne became blacke as sackecloth of haire,

9823 = and the Moone became as blood.

6:13

18990 = And the starres of heauen fell vnto the earth,

18593 = euen as a figge tree casteth her vntimely figs

15862 = when she is shaken of a mighty winde.

6:14

27887 = And the heauen departed as a scrowle when it is rolled together,

26877 = and euery mountaine and Island were moued out of their places.

6:15

21858 = And the kings of the earth, and the great men, and the rich men,

15453 = and the chiefe captaines, and the mighty men,

12536 = and euery bondman, and euery free man,

27229 = hid themselues in the dennes and in the rockes of the mountaines,

6:16

15800 = And said to the mountaines and rockes,

15564 = Fall on vs, and hide vs from the face of him

26050 = that sitteth on the throne, and from the wrath of the Lambe:

6:17

16319 = For the great day of his wrath is come;

11688 = and who shall be able to stand?

1073687

II + III + VII = 164696 + 855267 + 53724 = 1073687

IV + V + VI = 954839 + 54764 + 64084 = 1073687

II. Faire is foule, and foule is faire

(Macbeth, Act I, Sc. i – First Folio)

164696

19939 = Thunder and Lightning.  Enter three Witches.

First

13740 = When shall we three meet againe?

14117 = In Thunder, Lightning, or in Raine?

Second

13522 = When the Hurley-burley’s done,

16533 =  When the Battaile’s lost, and wonne.

Third

14977 = That will be ere the set of Sunne.

First

7015 = Where the place?

Second

6364 = Upon the Heath.

Third

12409 = There to meet with Macbeth.

First

6510 = I come, Gray-Malkin.

All 

19261 = Padock calls anon: faire is foule, and foule is faire,

20309 = Hover through the fogge and filthie ayre. Exeunt.

164696

III. Lady Macbeth: Leaue all the rest to me

And pall thee in the dunnest smoake of Hell

(Macbeth, Act I, Sc. v, First Folio)

855267

7502 = Enter Messenger.

11234 = What is your tidings?

Messenger

11924 = The King comes here to Night.

Lady

9817 = Thou’rt mad to say it.

22005 = Is not thy Master with him? Who, wer’t so,

17114 = Would haue inform’d for preparation.

Messenger

21224 = So please you, it is true: our Thane is comming:

15321 = One of my fellowes had the speed of him;

18356 = Who almost dead for breath; had scarcely more

14141 = Then would make vp his Message.

Lady

6534 = Giue him tending,

17272 = He brings great newes.                   Exit Messenger.

 

12026 = The Rauen himselfe is hoarse

17399 = That croakes the fatall entrance of Duncan

18666 = Vnder my Battlements.  Come you Spirits,

21007 = That tend on mortall thoughts, vnsex me here,

21244 = And fill me from the Crowne to the Toe, top-full

16036 = Of direst Crueltie: make thick my blood,

19132 = Stop vp th’accesse and passage to Remorse,

22019 = That no compunctious visitings of Nature

19375 = Shake my fell purpose, nor keepe peace betweene

19235 = Th’effect and hit.  Come to my Womans Brests,

22337 = And take my Milke for Gall, you murth’ring Ministers,

21318 = Where-euer, in your sightlesse substances,

22014 = You wait on Natures Mischiefe.  Come thick Night,

16671 = And pall thee in the dunnest smoake of Hell,

19788 = That my keene Knife see not the Wound it makes,

19610 = Nor Heaven peepe through the Blanket of the darke,

6808 = To cry hold, hold.

 

5476 = Enter Macbeth.

14364 = Great Glamys, worthy Cawdor,

16328 = Greater then both, by the all-haile hereafter,

17688 = Thy Letters have transported me beyond

17225 = This ignorant present, and I feele now

12581 = The future in the instant.

Macbeth

6702 = My dearest Loue,

11463 = Duncan comes here to Night.

Lady

7897 = And when goes hence?

Macbeth

14374 = To morrow, as he purposes.

Lady

3455 = O neuer,

14613 = Shall Sunne that Morrow see,

16392 =Your Face, my Thane, is as a Booke, where men

18832 = May reade strange matters, so beguile the time.

19046 = Looke like the time, beare welcome to your Eye,

24801 = Your Hand, your Tongue: looke like th’innocent flower,

19229 = But be the Serpent vnder’t. He that’s comming,

17445 = Must be prouided for; and you shall put

21301 = This Nights great Businesse into my dispatch,

20661 = Which shall to all our Nights, and Dayes to come,

19615 = Giue solely soueraigne sway, and Masterdome.

Macbeth

12417 = We will speake further.

Lady

8822 = Onely looke vp cleare:

13685 = To alter fauor, euer is to feare:

13726 = Leaue all the rest to me.                Exeunt.

855267

 

IV. Pish for thee, ISLAND dogge: thou prickeard cur of ISLAND.

(Henry V, Act II, Sc. i – First Folio)

954839

18650 = Enter Corporall Nym, and Lieutenant Bardolfe.

Bardolfe

11538 = Well met Corporall Nym.

Nym

15575 = Good morrow Lieutenant Bardolfe.

Bardolfe

20149 = What, are Ancient Pistoll and you friends yet?

Nym

14707 = For my part, I care not: I say little:

21416 = but when time shall serue, there shall be smiles,

10337 = but that shall be as it may.

25202 = I dare not fight, but I will winke and holde out mine yron:

16344 = it is a simple one, but what though?

21118 = It will toste Cheese, and it will endure cold,

20533 = as another mans sword will: and there‘s an end.

Bardolfe

21000 = I will bestow a breakfast to make you friendes,

21875 = and wee‘l bee all three sworne brothers to France:

13059 = Let‘t be so good Corporall Nym.

Nym

24719 = Faith, I will liue so long as I may, that‘s the certaine of it:

21189 = and when I cannot liue any longer, I will doe as I may:

20412 = That is my rest, that is the rendeuous of it.

Bardolfe

26274 = It is certaine, Corporall, that he is marryed, to Nell Quickly,

13966 = and certainly she did you wrong,

16922 = for you were troth-plight to her.

Nym

22102 = I cannot tell. Things must be as they may: men may sleepe,

23129 = and they may haue their throats about them at that time,

11631 = and some say, kniues haue edges:

19997 = It must be as it may, though patience be a tyred name,

22416 = yet shee will plodde, there must be Conclusions,

8961 = well, I cannot tell.

 

11335 = Enter Pistoll, & Quickly.

Bardolfe

17887 = Heere comes Ancient Pistoll and his wife:

13094 = good Corporall be patient heere.

15576 = How now mine Hoaste Pistoll?

Pistoll

13172 = Base Tyke, cal‘st thou mee Hoste,

20417 = now by this hand I sweare I scorne the terme:

11918 = nor shall my Nel keep Lodgers.

Hostess

10650 = No by my troth, not long:

21060 = For we cannot lodge and board a dozen or fourteene

27375 = Gentlewomen that liue honestly by the pricke of their Needles,

26394 = but it will bee thought we keepe a Bawdy-house straight.

16405 = O welliday Lady, if he be not hewne now,

24988 = we shall see wilful adultery and murther committed.

Bardolfe

21809 = Good Lieutenant, good Corporal offer nothing heere.

Nym

2380 = Pish.

Pistoll

23294 = Pish for thee, Island dogge: thou prickeard cur of Island.

Hostess

29119 = Good Corporall Nym shew thy valor, and put vp your sword.

Nym

21631 = Will you shogge off?  I would haue you solus.

Pistoll

15844 = Solus, egregious dog?  O Viper vile;

18253 = The solus in thy most meruailous face,

18417 = the solus in thy teeth, and in thy throate,

19009 = and in thy hatefull Lungs, yea in thy Maw perdy;

23119 = and which is worse, within thy nastie mouth.

23093 = I do retort the solus in thy bowels, for I can take,

24963 = and Pistols cocke is vp, and flashing fire will follow.

954839

 

V. Euery Mountaine and ISLAND were moued out of their places.

(Revelations, Ch. 6:14)

54764

27887 = And the heauen departed as a scrowle when it is rolled together,

26877 = and euery mountaine and Island were moued out of their places.

54764

 

VI. Völuspá – ÍSLAND – Snorri Sturluson

(Construction G. T.)

64084

Sybil’s Prophecy

4714 = Völuspá

Iceland

2692 = ISLAND

Saga Prophet

11359 = Snorri Sturluson

Snorri Sturluson – End of Poem

(Háttatal, v. 102)

5521 = Njóti aldrs

3902 = ok auðsala

7274 = konungr ok jarl,

7826 = þat er kvæðis lok.

4143 = Falli fyrr

3150 = fold í ægi,

6684 = steini studd,

6819 = en stillis lof.

64984

 

VII. All the rest left to Lady Macbeth

(Construction G. T.)

53724

A

The dunnest smoake of Hell

11587 = Character Assassination

5881 = Níðingsverk – Barbarity

7750 = Psychiatric Rape

6603 = Mannorðsmorð – Vicious Slander

16439 = Criminal Obstruction of Justice

Book of Icelanders

(Ari fróði/Wise – Father of Saga Literature)

5464 = Íslendingabók

53724

B

Book of Icelanders

53724

Epigraph

9953 = Schedae Araprestsfroda

Strife

666 = Man-Beast

432 = Right Measure of Man

Flashing Fire Prophecy

(IV. above – Omega)

4000 = Flaming Sword

Ari fróði:

Whatever is now said in these matters,

that which proves truer must be accepted.

(Letter-perfect text)

16998 = En hvatki es nusagt es i froþo þesom

21675 = þa er scyllt at hava þat helldur er sann ara reynisc.

53724

C

William Shakespeare

53724

The Author

1 = Monad

7000 = Microcosmos – Man in God’s Image

In Memoriam

19365 = IUDICIO PYLIUM, GENIO SOCRATEM, ARTE MARONEM

20204 = TERRA TEGIT, POPULUS MÆRET, OLYMPUS HABET

Askr Yggdrasils – 7154 – Saga World Tree

Earl of Oxford‘s Tree of the Sun

By Francis Bacon

7154 = Francisco Bacono

53724

***

Calculator for converting letters to cipher values is at:

http://www.light-of-truth.com/ciphersaga.htm

Flokkar: Óflokkað

Föstudagur 22.12.2017 - 00:38 - FB ummæli ()

Let One Spirit of Caine Reigne in All Bosomes

© Gunnar Tómasson

21 December 2017

INDUCTION

I. Ghost of Hamlet’s Father

(Act I, Sc. v. First Folio)

231470

9462 = Enter Ghost and Hamlet.

Hamlet

22112 = Where wilt thou lead me?  speak; Ile go no further.

Ghost

2883 = Marke me.

Hamlet

3756 = I will.

Ghost

11748 = My hower is almost come,

22142 = When I to sulphurous and tormenting Flames

10942 = Must render vp my selfe.

Hamlet

7778 = Alas poore Ghost.

Ghost

19231 = Pitty me not, but lend thy serious hearing

10823 = To what I shall vnfold.

Hamlet

9425 = Speake, I am bound to heare.

Ghost

21689 = So art thou to reuenge, when thou shalt heare.

Hamlet

3270 = What?

Ghost

10539 = I am thy Fathers Spirit,

19489 = Doom’d for a certaine terme to walke the night;

15474 = And for the day confin’d to fast in Fiers,

19868 = Till the foule crimes done in my dayes of Nature

10839 = Are burnt and purg’d away?

231470

II. The Stage is set for the Play

(Construction G. T.)

231470

70536 = Hamlet’s Transformation – Appendix A

 

70536 = New Inward Man – Appendix B

11931 = Saga Cipher – One Spirit

 

70536 = New Exterior Man – Appendix C

-4000 = Dark Sword

11931 = Saga Cipher – One Spirit

231470

THE PLAY

III. That Darknesse may be the Burier of the Dead

(Henry IV, Part 2, Act I, Sc. i. First Folio)

138098

  Northumberland

22029 = Let heauen kisse Earth: now let not Natures hand
17427 = Keepe the wilde flood confin’d. Let Order dye
15355 = And let the world no longer be a stage
15227 = To feede Contention in a ling’ring Act;
19233 = But let one spirit of the First-borne Caine
18221 = Reigne in all bosomes, that each heart being set
16900 = On bloody Courses, the rude Scene may end,
13706 = And darknesse be the burier of the dead!

138098

IV. And it came to passe that Cain rose vp

against Abel his brother and slew him.

(Gen. 4:1-15, King James Bible, 1611)

755545

4:1

10862 = And Adam knew Eue his wife,

10398 = and shee conceiued, and bare Cain,

15467 = and said, I haue gotten a man from the LORD.

4:2

11861 = And she againe bare his brother Abel,

10721 = and Abel was a keeper of sheep,

15870 = but Cain was a tiller of the ground.

4:3

16784 = And in processe of time it came to passe,

20105 = that Cain brought of the fruite of the ground,

11078 = an offering vnto the LORD.

4:4

22453 = And Abel, he also brought of the firstlings of his flocke,

8141 = and of the fat thereof:

21273 = and the LORD had respect vnto Abel and to his offering.

4:5

21780 = But vnto Cain, and to his offring he had not respect:

22102 = and Cain was very wroth, and his countenance fell.

4:6

22942 = And the LORD said vnto Cain, Why art thou wroth?

14440 = And why is thy countenance fallen?

4:7

19299 = If thou doe well, shalt thou not be accepted?

22963 = and if thou doest not well, sinne lieth at the doore.

12940 = And vnto thee shall be his desire,

13050 = and thou shalt rule ouer him.

4:8

14970 = And Cain talked with Abel his brother:

20252 = and it came to passe when they were in the field,

23631 = that Cain rose vp against Abel his brother, and slew him.

4:9

22302 = And the LORD said vnto Cain, Where is Abel thy brother?

12803 = And hee said, I know not: Am I my brothers keeper?

4:10

13218 = And he said, What hast thou done:

13913 = the voyce of thy brothers blood

14477 = cryeth vnto me, from the ground.

4:11

18543 = And now art thou cursed from the earth,

12740 = which hath opened her mouth

18916 = to receiue thy brothers blood from thy hand.

4:12

15458 = When thou tillest the ground,

23720 = it shall not henceforth yeeld vnto thee her strength:

19478 = A fugitiue and a vagabond shalt thou be in the earth.

4:13

10840 = And Cain said vnto the LORD,

16945 = My punishment is greater, then I can beare.

4:14

17147 = Behold, thou hast driuen me out this day

9763 = from the face of the earth,

10082 = and from thy face shall I be hid,

17443 = and I shall be a fugitiue, and a vagabond in the earth:

23305 = and it shall come to passe, that euery one that findeth me,

5021 = shall slay me.

4:15

10667 = And the LORD said vnto him,

16227 = Therefore whosoeuer slayeth Cain,

15169 = vengeance shalbe taken on him seuen fold.

13214 = And the LORD set a marke vpon Cain,

14619 = lest any finding him, should kill him.

755545

V. Abomination of Desolation

(Contemporary history)

468222

The Gates of Hell

13031 = International Monetary Fund

9948 = Harvard University

7146 = Seðlabanki Íslands = 30125

Right Measure of Man

Persecuted

  8525 = Gunnar Tómasson

12385 = Guðrún Ólafía Jónsdóttir

Modes of Persecution

11587 = Character Assassination

5881 = Níðingsverk – Barbarity

7750 = Psychiatric Rape

6603 = Mannorðsmorð – Vicious Slander

16439 = Criminal Obstruction of Justice

Persecutors – Jesting Pilates

U.S. Government

12867 = William Jefferson Clinton – President

4496 = Janet Reno – Attorney General

International Monetary Fund

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 University

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 Government

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

468222

III + IV + V = 138098 + 755545 + 468222 = 1361865

VI + VII = 1338633 + 23232 = 1361865

VI. One: Two: Why then ’tis time to doo’t:

 (Macbeth, Act V, Sc. I – First Folio)

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

 

VII. Foreuer, O LORD, thy Word is setled in heauen.

(Psalm 119:89, King James Bible 1611)

23232

A

19932 = Foreuer, O LORD, thy Word is setled in Heauen.

Snorri Sturluson

”I will out”

4427 = ”Út vil ek.”

360 = Devils Circle

Light of the World’s Escape

from Seat of Lower Emotions

 -2487 = Anus

  1000 = Light of the World

23232

B

23232

Strife

 10773 = Spiritus Sanctus

-10467 = Osiris-Isis-Horus

Sacred Triangle of

Pagan Iceland

7196 = Bergþórshváll

6067 = Miðeyjarhólmr

3027 = Helgafell – Holy Mountain

Transformation

-6960 = Jarðlig skilning – Earthly Understanding

5596 = Andlig spekðin – Spiritual Wisdom

Man in God’s Image

 7000 = Microcosmos

 23232

C

23232

The Last Judgement

4714 = Völuspá – Sybil’s Prophecy

Strife

666 = Man-Beast

432 = Right Measure of Man

-1000 = Darkness

Day of Wrath

3321 = Dies Irae

4000 = Flaming Sword – Cosmic Creative Power – Coming of Christ

11099 = Il Giudizio Universale – Michelangelo, Sistine Chapel

23232

***

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.

Appendix A

Transformation

70536

King – Act II, Sc. ii.

10327 = Something haue you heard

17586 = Of Hamlets transformation; so I call it,

19812 = Since nor th’exterior, nor the inward man

19769 = Resembles that it was.

67494

-3635 = Emmanuel

  6677 = God With Us

70536

Appendix B

New Inward Man

70536

       1 = Monad

1000 = Light of the World

8525 = Gunnar Tómasson

12385 = Guðrún Ólafía Jónsdóttir

Crimes in Spirit’s Dayes

of Nature

11587 = Character Assassination

5881 = Níðingsverk – Barbarity

7750 = Psychiatric Rape

6603 = Mannorðsmorð – Vicious Slander

16439 = Criminal Obstruction of Justice

Time

   365 = YEAR

70536

Appendix C

New Exterior Man

Gen.  4:8

14970 = And Cain talked with Abel his brother:

20252 = and it came to passe when they were in the field,

23631 = that Cain rose vp against Abel his brother, and slew him.

Jesting Pilate

  8583 = What is Truth?

-1000 = Darkness

The Globe Set on Fire

4000 = Flaming Sword

FINIS

  100 = The End

70536

 

Flokkar: Óflokkað

Fimmtudagur 21.12.2017 - 03:08 - FB ummæli ()

Boris Pasternak and Doctor Zhivago

© Gunnar Tómasson

20 December 2017

Background

(Wikipedia)

I.

The plot of Doctor Zhivago is long and intricate. It can be difficult to follow for two main reasons: first, Pasternak employs many characters, who interact with each other throughout the book in unpredictable ways, and second, he frequently introduces a character by one of his/her three names, then subsequently refers to that character by another of the three names or a nickname, without expressly stating that he is referring to the same character. To avoid this confusion, the summary below uses a character’s full name when the character is first introduced.

Only Part I of 15 plus Epilogue

I. An autobiographical novel

Doctor Zhivago

7640

7633 = Boris Pasternak

      7 = Hebrew Man of Seventh Day

7640

Background

(Wikipedia)

II.

Imperial Russia, 1903. The novel opens during a Russian Orthodox funeral liturgy, or panikhida, for Yuri’s mother, Marya Nikolaevna Zhivago. Having long ago been abandoned by his father, Yuri is taken in by his maternal uncle, Nikolai Nikolaevich Vedenyapin, a philosopher and former Orthodox priest who now works for the publisher of a progressive newspaper in a provincial capital on the Volga River. Yuri’s father, Andrei Zhivago, was once a wealthy member of Moscow’s merchant gentry, but has squandered the family’s fortune in Siberia through debauchery and carousing.

 

II. Man as Saga World Tree

Askr Yggdrasils

14155

7633 = Boris Pasternak

6522 = Yuri Zhivago

14155

 

1 = Monad

7154 = Askr Yggdrasils

7000 = Microcosmos – Man in God’s Image

14155

Maternal Uncle

Philosopher and former Priest

19108

12586 = Nikolai Nikolaevich Vedenyapin

  6522 = Yuri Zhivago

19108

Murder of Snorri Sturluson

Advent of Pope Don Quixote

19108

4823 = Árni beiskr – Killer of Snorri Sturluson

5753 = Hrímþurs – Rime Giant

4884 = Reykjaholt

2307 = 23 September

1241 = 1241 A.D.

 100 = The End

19108

 

1 = Monad

1000 = FIRE

11850 = Höskuldr Hvítanessgoði – Saga Christ

-11359 = Snorri Sturluson

17616 = EL INGENIOSO HIDALGO DON QVIXOTE DE LA MANCHA (Original Title)

19108 

Background

(Wikipedia)

III.

That summer, Yuri (who is 11 years old) and Nikolai Nikolaevich travel to Duplyanka, the estate of Lavrenty Mikhailovich Kologrivov, a wealthy silk merchant. They are there not to visit Kologrivov, who is abroad with his wife, but to visit a mutual friend, Ivan Ivanovich Voskoboinikov, an intellectual who lives in the steward’s cottage. Kologrivov’s daughters, Nadya (who is 15 years old) and Lipa (who is younger), are also living at the estate with a governess and servants. Innokenty (Nika) Dudorov, a 13-year-old boy who is the son of a convicted terrorist has been placed with Ivan Ivanovich by his mother and lives with him in the cottage. As Nikolai Nikolaevich and Ivan Ivanovich are strolling in the garden and discussing philosophy, they notice that a train passing in the distance has come to a stop in an unexpected place, indicating that something is wrong. On the train, an 11-year-old boy named Misha Grigorievich Gordon is traveling with his father. They have been on the train for three days. During that time, a kind man had given Misha small gifts and had talked for hours with his father, Grigory Osipovich Gordon. However, encouraged by his attorney, who was traveling with him, the man had become drunk. Eventually, the man had rushed to the vestibule of the moving train car, pushed aside the boy’s father, opened the door and thrown himself out, killing himself. Misha’s father had then pulled the emergency brake, bringing the train to a halt. The passengers disembark and view the corpse while the police are called. The deceased’s lawyer stands near the body and blames the suicide on alcoholism.

 

III. Intellectual – Garden Stroll – Train Passengers

54247

Intellectual

14758 = Ivan Ivanovich Voskoboinikov

Garden Stroll

8212 = Nikolai Nikolaevich

6891 = Ivan Ivanovich

Father-Son on Train

12585 = Grigory Osipovich Gordon

11801 = Misha Grigorievich Gordon

54247

 

Train Jorney

345 = Soul’s Foundation

666 = Man-Beast

216 = Soul’s Resurrection

432 = Right Measure of Man

Around Zodiac

45319 = Twelve Houses¹

Suicide on Train

-6960 = Jarðlig skilning – Earthly Understanding

FIRE from Above

 1000 = FIRE

Boris Pasternak Acquires

Cosmic Consciousnes

7633 = Boris Pasternak

5596 = Andlig spekðin – Spiritual Wisdom

54247

Background

(Wikipedia)

Epilogue

During World War II, Zhivago’s old friends Nika Dudorov and Misha Gordon meet up. One of their discussions revolves around a local laundress named Tanya, a bezprizornaya, or war orphan, and her resemblance to both Yuri and Lara. Tanya tells both men of the difficult childhood she has had due to her mother abandoning her in order to marry Komarovsky. Much later, the two men meet over the first edition of Yuri Zhivago’s poems.

A

Askr Yggdrasils

7154

1000 = Light Eternal

2620 = Yuri

1471 = Lara

2063 = Tanya

7154

B

Much Later

Yuri Zhivago‘s Poems

6522 = Yuri Zhivago

6005 = Nika Dudorov

5572 = Misha Gordon

18099

C

Boris Pasternak

Vale

7000 = Microcosmos – Man in God‘s Image

Last Judgement

11099 = Il Giudizio UniversaleMichelangelo

18099 

***

Calculator for converting letters to cipher values is at:

http://www.light-of-truth.com/ciphersaga.htm

¹Twelve Houses of the Zodiac

45319

4956 = Aquarius

3577 = Pisces

2443 = Aries

4611 = Taurus

2514 = Gemini

2589 = Cancer

1392 = Leo

3180 = Virgo

1939 = Libra

4594 = Scorpio

6729 = Sagittarius

6795 = Capricornus

45319

 

Flokkar: Óflokkað

Miðvikudagur 20.12.2017 - 23:59 - FB ummæli ()

Fyodor Dostoyevsky and Saga-Shakespeare Myth

© Gunnar Tómasson

20 December 2017

Foreword

I just checked out Dostoyevsky’s Crime and Punishment for possible tell-tale signs of his use of the imagery of Saga-Shakespeare Myth and associated Cipher Symbolism.  I read Dostoyevsky’s book in the 1970s before I discovered the Saga Cipher Key in the oldest extant Icelandic skin manuscript and began to explore its use by authors in the Saga-Shakespeare literary tradition.

Background

(Wikipedia)

I.

Crime and Punishment focuses on the mental anguish and moral dilemmas of Rodion Raskolnikov, an impoverished ex-student in Saint Petersburg who formulates and executes a plan to kill an unscrupulous pawnbroker for her cash. Raskolnikov, in an attempt to defend his actions, argues that with the pawnbroker’s money he can perform good deeds to counterbalance the crime, while ridding the world of a vermin. He also commits the murder to test a theory of his that dictates some people are naturally capable of such actions, and even have the right to perform them. Several times throughout the novel, Raskolnikov compares himself with Napoleon Bonaparte and shares his belief that murder is permissible in pursuit of a higher purpose. (See III. below)

Saga Myth

I.

Kolr Þorsteinsson

In Brennu-Njálssaga Kolr Þorsteinsson is the greatest loud-mouth at the burning of Njáll and he is also the last arsonist to be killed in revenge for the burning.  Kolr is decapitated and – this is the high-point of his story –  “the head spoke ten as it flew off the body”.  Ten is the number of Father (Penis) through whose “head” the seed of a New Creation flies off at “decapitation”.

New Creation

17907

  9815 = Rodion Raskolnikov

  8092 = Napoleon Bonaparte

17907

Alpha

         7 = Man-Beast of Seventh Day

10900 = Kolr Þorsteinsson

Omega

  7000 = Microcosmos – Man in God’s Image

17907

Background

(Wikipedia)

II.

Raskolnikov, a conflicted former student, lives in a tiny, rented room in Saint Petersburg. He refuses all help, even from his friend Razumikhin, and devises a plan to murder and rob an elderly pawn-broker and money-lender, Alyona Ivanovna. His motivation comes from the overwhelming sense that he is predetermined [insert – this is of the essence in Saga-Shakespeare myth] to kill the old woman by some power outside of himself.

New Creation – Union of Man-Woman:

Gaukr Trandilsson

9178

6455 = Raskolnikov

1000 = Light of the World – Help

5723 = Razumikhin – as in Jacob, 1723 + 4000 = Flaming Sword – Cosmic Creative Power

13178

Light of the World become Flaming Sword

 4000 = Flaming Sword

  9178 = Gaukr Trandilsson

13178

Background

(Wikipedia)

III.

After much deliberation, Raskolnikov sneaks into Alyona Ivanovna’s apartment, where he murders her with an axe. He also kills her half-sister, Lizaveta, who happens to stumble upon the scene of the crime. Shaken by his actions, Raskolnikov manages to steal only a handful of items and a small purse, leaving much of the pawn-broker’s wealth untouched. Raskolnikov then flees and, due to a series of coincidences, manages to leave unseen and undetected.

Man’s Two-Stage Evolution

Young Stratfordian Will Shakspere was a “deer-slayer”. In myth, this imagery stands for sexual union between Hart and Doe – the first stage of the Stratfordian’s evolution to full adulthood.

A

The Deer-Slayer

8759

6455 = Raskolnikov

2304 = Alyona

8759

Alpha

345 = Soul‘s Foundation

666 = Man-Beast

Omega

216 = Soul‘s Resurrection

432 = Right Measure of Man

Man in God‘s Image

(A higher purpose)

7000 = Microcosmos

  100 = The End

8759

B

Sweet Swan of Avon

10805

6455 = Raskolnikov

4269 = Lizaveta

10724

7000 = Microcosmos

17724

Satan Bound

4385 = Hagia Sophia – Divine Wisdom

2534 = Satan

10805 = Sweet Swan of Avon

17724

Background

(Wikipedia)

IV.

The epilogue tells of how Raskolnikov is sentenced to eight years of penal servitude in Siberia, where Sonya follows him. Dunya and Razumikhin marry and are left in a happy position by the end of the novel, while Pulkheria, Raskolnikov’s mother, falls ill and dies, unable to cope with her son’s situation. Raskolnikov himself struggles in Siberia. It is only after some time in prison that his redemption and moral regeneration begin under Sonya’s loving influence

A

Gaukr Trandilsson, 9178,

and Eight Years of Exile

9186

6455 = Raskolnikov

2623 = Sonya

  100 = The End

9178

       8 = Eight Years of Exile

9186

B

Man‘s Perfection

9186

Let there be light.

 1000 = Light of the World

-6960 = Jarðlig skilning – Earthly Understanding

5596 = Andlig spekðin – Spiritual Wisdom

 9550 = THE COMPLEAT GENTLEMAN – Shakespeare Concept

 9186

***

Calculator for converting letters to cipher values is at:

http://www.light-of-truth.com/ciphersaga.htm

 

Flokkar: Óflokkað

Höfundur

Gunnar Tómasson
Ég er fæddur (1940) og uppalinn á Melunum í Reykjavík. Stúdent úr Verzlunarskóla Íslands 1960 og með hagfræðigráður frá Manchester University (1963) og Harvard University (1965). Starfaði sem hagfræðingur við Alþjóðagjaldeyrissjóðinn frá 1966 til 1989. Var m.a. aðstoðar-landstjóri AGS í Indónesíu 1968-1969, og landstjóri í Kambódíu (1971-1972) og Suður Víet-Nam (1973-1975). Hef starfað sjálfstætt að rannsóknarverkefnum á ýmsum sviðum frá 1989, þ.m.t. peningahagfræði. Var einn af þremur stofnendum hagfræðingahóps (Gang8) 1989. Frá upphafi var markmið okkar að hafa hugsað málin í gegn þegar - ekki ef - allt færi á annan endann í alþjóðapeningakerfinu. Í október 2008 kom sú staða upp í íslenzka peninga- og fjármálakerfinu. Alla tíð síðan hef ég látið peninga- og efnahagsmál á Íslandi meira til mín taka en áður. Ég ákvað að gerast bloggari á pressan.is til að geta komið skoðunum mínum í þeim efnum á framfæri.
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