Þriðjudagur 10.4.2018 - 17:08 - FB ummæli ()

Hamlet, Prince of Denmarke – Who‘s there?

© Gunnar Tómasson

10 April 2018

I. Nay answer me: Stand & vnfold your selfe

 (Hamlet, Act I, Sc. i. First Folio)

287668

19893 = Enter Barnardo and Francisco two Centinels.

Barnardo

6406 = Who’s there?

Francisco

17196 = Nay answer me:  Stand & vnfold your selfe.

Barnardo

7459 = Long liue the King.

Francisco

3358 = Barnardo?

Barnardo

604 = He.

Francisco

19922 = You come most carefully vpon your houre.

Barnardo

24520 = ‘Tis now strook twelve, get thee to bed, Francisco.

Francisco

20256 = For this releefe much thankes: ‘Tis bitter cold,

7771 = And I am sicke at heart.

Barnardo

10022 = Haue you had quiet Guard?

Francisco

10705 = Not a Mouse stirring.

Barnardo

7622 = Well, goodnight

15321 = If you do meet Horatio and Marcellus,

17221 = The Riuals of my Watch, bid them make hast.

12540 = Enter Horatio and Marcellus.        

Francisco

16707 = I thinke I heare them.  Stand: who’s there?

Horatio

11201 = Friends to this ground.

Marcellus

8121 = And Leige-men to the Dane.

Francisco

8449 = Giue you good night.

Marcellus

21976 = O farwel honest Soldier, who hath relieu’d you?

Francisco

20398 = Barnardo ha’s my place: giue you good night.       Exit Fran.

287668

II. Preordained Fall of the Mightiest Iulius

(Construction G. T.)

287668

Soothsayers

4946 = Socrates

1654 = ION

3412 = Platon

14209 = Quintus Horatius Flaccus

12337 = Publius Virgilius Maro

11999 = Sextus Propertius

11249 = Publius Ovidius Naso

11359 = Snorri Sturluson

9814 = Sturla Þórðarson

5385 = Francis Bacon

7936 = Edward Oxenford

Jacob

This place is terrible

13561 = Terribilis est locus iste.

Satan

-1000 = Darkness

Hamlet, Act I, Sc. i, 1611

Horatio

16320 = A moth it is to trouble the mindes eye:

16377 = In the most high and palmy state of Rome,

17116 = A little ere the mightiest Iulius fell

21038 = The graues stood tennantlesse, and the sheeted dead

17695 = Did squeake and gibber in the Romane streets

23629 = As starres with traines of fire, and dewes of bloud

20717 = Disasters in the Sunne; and the moist starre,

22679 = Vpon whose influence Neptunes Empier stands,

21236 = Was sick almost to doomesday with eclipse.

Doomesday

4000 = Flaming Sword – Cosmic Creative Power

287668

III. This boades some strange erruption to our State

(Hamlet, Act I, Sc. i – First Folio, cont.)

923913

Marcellus

5475 = Holla Barnardo.

Barnardo

12499 = Say, what is Horatio there?

Horatio

4177 = A peece of him.

Barnardo

19792 = Welcome Horatio, welcome, good Marcellus.

Marcellus

18533 = What,  ha’s this thing appear’d againe to night.

Barnardo

8047 = I haue seene nothing.

Marcellus

16590 = Horatio saies, ’tis but our Fantasie,

15548 = And will not let beleefe take hold of him

21128 = Touching this dreaded sight, twice seene of vs:

14510 = Therefore I haue intreated him along

23011 = With vs, to watch the minutes of this Night,

14532 = That if againe this Apparition come,

16303 = He may approue our eyes, and speake to it.

Horatio

15483 = Tush, tush, ’twill not appeare.

Barnardo

9328 = Sit downe a-while,

16162 = And let vs once againe assaile your eares,

18689 = That are so fortified against our Story,

16166 = What we two Nights haue seene.

Horatio

11084 = Well, sit we downe,

15573 = And let vs heare Barnardo speake of this.

Barnardo

7040 = Last night of all,

26514 = When yond same Starre that’s Westward from the Pole

19680 = Had made his course t’illume that part of Heauen

20546 = Where now it burnes, Marcellus and my selfe,

9091 = The Bell then beating one.

Marcellus

13752 = Peace, breake thee of:        Enter the Ghost.

11868 = Looke where it comes againe.

Barnardo

16136 = In the same figure, like the King that’s dead.

Marcellus

18434 = Thou art a Scholler, speak to it Horatio.

Barnardo

19197 = Lookes it not like the King?  Marke it Horatio.

Horatio

21948 = Most like:  It harrowes me with fear & wonder.

Barnardo

11087 = It would be spoke too.

Marcellus

10706 = Question it Horatio.

Horatio

24708 = What art thou that vsurp’st this time of night

20034 = Together with that Faire and Warlike forme

16401 = In which the Maiesty of buried Denmarke

18449 = Did sometimes march:  By Heauen I charge thee speake.

Marcellus

5374 = It is offended.

Barnardo

9138 = See, it stalkes away.

Horatio

14440 = Stay:  speake; speake:  I Charge thee, speake.

7301 = Exit the Ghost.

Marcellus

  14861 = ‘Tis gone, and will not answer.

Barnardo

19156 = How now Horatio? You tremble & look pale:

18856  = Is not this something more then Fantasie?

10426 = What thinke you on´t?

Horatio

14784 = Before my God, I might not this beleeue

18787 = Without the sensible and true auouch

7841 = Of mine owne eyes.

Marcellus

9722 = Is it not like the King?

Horatio

11142 = As thou art to thy selfe,

15860 = Such was the very Armour he had on,

18723 = When he th’Ambitious Norwey combatted:

17753 = So frown’d he once, when in an angry parle

14983 = He smot the sledded Pollax on the Ice.

6079 = ‘Tis strange.

Marcellus

20866 = Thus twice before, and iust at this dead houre,

21384 = With Martiall stalke, hath he gone by our Watch.

Horatio

26081 = In what particular thought to work, I know not:

18021 = But in the grosse and scope of my Opinion,

24114 = This boades some strange erruption to our State.

923913

I/II + III = 287668 + 923913 = 1211581

IV + V = 27410 + 1184171 = 1211581

IV. Unitary Settlement Myth

(Construction G. T.)

27410

A

Roman

       1 = Monad

5321 = Romulus

3634 = Remus

Saga

 -6960 = Jarðlig skilning – Earthly Understanding

5596 = Andlig spekðin – Spiritual Wisdom

Shakespeare

 9322 = William Shakespeare

10594 = Sir Francis Bacon, Knight

  100 = The End

27410

B

Prophecy

27410

  8525 = Gunnar Tómasson

12385 = Guðrún Ólafía Jónsdóttir

 

  6500 = They stab Cæsar. – (Julius Cæsar, Act III, Sc. i)

27410

C

Strange erruption

27410

Satan

 -1000 = Darkness

Erruption

7524 = The Second Coming

7187 = Stormy Daniels

Then fall Cæsar

 6599 = Donald J. Trump

New State of Man

  7000 = Microcosmos – Man in God´s Image

FINIS

    100 = The End

27410

V. The Workes of William Shakespeare

(Dedication, First Folio 1623)

1184171

14218 = TO THE MOST NOBLE AND INCOMPARABLE

7257 = PAIRE OF BRETHREN

10897 = WILLIAM Earle of Pembroke,

100 = [&] c. [c = 100 in “&c”]

23572 = Lord Chamberlaine to the Kings most Excellent Maiesty.

12457 = 11590 = AND PHILIP Earle of Montgomery,

100 = [&] c.

14413 = Gentleman of his Maiesties Bed-Chamber,

22026 = Both Knights of the most Noble Order of the Garter,

12835 = and our singular good LORDS.

 

7826 = Right Honourable,

25994 = Whilst we studie to be thankful in our particular,

22062 = for the many fauors we haue receiued from your L.L.

15163 = we are falne vpon the ill fortune,

23449 = to mingle two the most diuerse things that can bee,

7485 = feare, and rashnesse;

23489 = rashnesse in the enterprize, and feare of the successe.

23541 = For, when we valew the places your H.H. sustaine,

20442 = we cannot but know their dignity greater,

19953 = then to descend to the reading of these trifles:

13987 = and, while we name them trifles,

25700 = we haue depriu’d our selues of the defence of our Dedication.

14022 = But since your L.L. haue beene pleas’d

21688 = to thinke these trifles some-thing, heeretofore;

25557 = and haue prosequuted both them, and their Authour liuing,

17599 = with so much fauour: we hope, that

27770 = (they out-liuing him, and he not hauing the fate, common with some,

21390 = to be exequutor to his owne writings)

21711 = you will vse the like indulgence toward them,

14513 = you haue done vnto their parent.

10083 = There is a great difference,

23131 = whether any Booke choose his Patrones, or finde them:

8125 = This hath done both.

26340 = For, so much were your L.L. likings of the seuerall parts,

22932 = when they were acted, as before they were published,

12680 = the Volume ask’d to be yours.

21363 = We haue but collected them, and done an office to the dead,

16553 = to procure his Orphanes, Guardians;

22380 = without ambition either of selfe-profit, or fame:

20760 = onely to keepe the memory of so worthy a Friend, &

17475 = Fellow aliue, as was our SHAKESPEARE,

24877 = by humble offer of his playes, to your most noble patronage.

17511 = Wherein, as we haue justly obserued,

28933 = no man to come neere your L.L. but with a kind of religious addresse;

25208 = it hath bin the height of our care, who are the Presenters,

25744 = to make the present worthy of your H.H. by the perfection.

31596 = But, there we must also craue our abilities to be considerd, my Lords.

19548 = We cannot go beyond our owne powers.

29952 = Country hands reach foorth milke, creame, fruites, or what they haue:

20669 = and many Nations (we haue heard) that had not gummes &

22965 = incense, obtained their requests with a leauened Cake.

29471 = It was no fault to approch their Gods, by what meanes they could:

26494 = And the most, though meanest, of things are made more precious,

14733 = when they are dedicated to Temples.

27816 = In that name therefore, we most humbly consecrate to your H.H.

19643 = these remaines of your seruant Shakespeare;

29906 = that what delight is in them, may be euer your L.L. the reputation his, &

23734 = the faults ours, if any be committed, by a payre so carefull

26463 = to shew their gratitude both to the liuing, and the dead, as is

 

15589 = Your Lordshippes most bounden,

4723 = IOHN HEMINGE.

 5558 = HENRY CONDELL.

1184171

***

Calculator for converting letters to cipher values is at:

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

Flokkar: Óflokkað

Þriðjudagur 10.4.2018 - 00:06 - FB ummæli ()

Prince Hamlet Cast as Anti-Christ

© Gunnar Tómasson

9 April 2018

Prince Hamlet’s Assignment

(Hamlet, Act III, Sc. i. First Folio)

Oh all you host of heauen! Oh earth; what els?

And shall I couple hell? Oh fie: hold my heart;

And you my sinnewes, grow not instant old;

But beare me stiffely up:

***

Reference Cipher Value

Robin Hood and Little John – A Tale told by an Ideot

1451889

As in

I + II + III = 264265 + 468222 + 719402 = 1451889

***

I. Prince Hamlet Couples Hell

(Hamlet, Act III, Sc. ii. First Folio 1623)

264265

Hamlet

13641 = By and by, is easily said.  Leaue me, Friends:

20620 = Tis now the verie witching time of night,

24057 = When Churchyards yawne and Hell it selfe breaths out

25916 = Contagion to this World. Now could I drink hot blood,

16280 = And do such bitter businesse as the day

24009 = Would quake to looke on.  Soft now, to my Mother:

19877 = Oh Heart, loose not thy Nature; let not euer

18779 = The Soule of Nero enter this firme bosome:

14310 = Let me be cruell, not vnnaturall,

18301 = I will speake Daggers to her, but vse none:

18569 = My Tongue and Soule in this be Hypocrites.

18555 = How in my words someuer she be shent,

22291 = To giue them Seales, neuer my Soule, consent.

The Devil as Earth/Evil Personified

(Brennu-Njálssaga)

9060 = Mörðr Valgarðsson

264265

II. Abomination of Desolation¹

(Contemporary history)

468222

The Gates of Hell

13031 = International Monetary Fund

9948 = Harvard University

7146 = Seðlabanki Íslands – Central Bank of Iceland = 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. To be, or not to be; that is the question.

 (Act III, Sc. i, First Folio, 1623)

719402

5415 = Enter Hamlet.

Hamlet

18050 = To be, or not to be, that is the Question:

19549 = Whether ’tis Nobler in the minde to suffer

23467 = The Slings and Arrowes of outragious Fortune,

17893 = Or to take Armes against a Sea of troubles,

16211 = And by opposing end them: to dye, to sleepe

13853 = No more; and by a sleepe, to say we end

20133 = The Heart-ake, and the thousand Naturall shockes

19800 = That Flesh is heyre too?  ‘Tis a consummation

17421 = Deuoutly to be wish’d. To dye to sleepe,

19236 = To sleepe, perchance to Dreame; I, there’s the rub,

19794 = For in that sleepe of death, what dreames may come,

21218 = When we haue shufflel’d off this mortall coile,

20087 = Must giue vs pawse. There’s the respect

13898 = That makes Calamity of so long life:

24656 = For who would beare the Whips and Scornes of time,

24952 = The Oppressors wrong, the poore mans Contumely,

18734 = The pangs of dispriz’d Loue, the Lawes delay,

16768 = The insolence of Office, and the Spurnes

20720 = That patient merit of the vnworthy takes,

17879 = When he himselfe might his Quietus make

21696 = With a bare Bodkin? Who would these Fardles beare

17807 = To grunt and sweat vnder a weary life,

17426 = But that the dread of something after death,

21935 = The vndiscouered Countrey, from whose Borne

20927 = No Traueller returnes, Puzels the will,

19000 = And makes vs rather beare those illes we haue,

20119 = Then flye to others that we know not of.

20260 = Thus Conscience does make Cowards of vs all,

18787 = And thus the Natiue hew of Resolution

21086 = Is sicklied o’re, with the pale cast of Thought,

17836 = And enterprizes of great pith and moment,

22968 = With this regard their Currants turne away,

18723 = And loose the name of Action.  Soft you now,

16746 = The faire Ophelia? Nimph, in thy Orizons

9726 = Be all my sinnes remembred.

Ophelia

5047 = Good my Lord,

17675 = How does your Honor for this many a day?

Hamlet

17391 = I humbly thanke you: well, well, well.

Hamlet’s Sinnewes Bear Him Stiffely Vp

From

-2487 = Anus – The Devil’s “Bed” – Seat of Man’s Lower Emotions

To

A Consummation in a Virgin’s Well

On Mons Veneris – Creation Event

7000 = Microcosmos – Man in God’s Image

719402

***

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

Mánudagur 9.4.2018 - 22:30 - FB ummæli ()

Francis Bacon‘s Last Letter – Man, Know Thyself

© Gunnar Tómasson

9 April 2018

Reference Cipher Value

Robin Hood and Little John – A Tale told by an Ideot

1451889

As in

A + B + C = 526846 + 46179 + 878864 = 1451889

 ***

Background

(Alfred Dodd)

Every schoolboy knows the story told in their history books how Francis Bacon one snowy day on or about All Fools Day, 1 April 1626, drove with the King’s Physician, Sir John Wedderburn, to Highgate and that at the foot of the Hill he stopped, bought a fowl, and stuffed it with snow with his own hands in order to ascertain whether bodies could be preserved by cold.  During the procedure, we are told, he caught a chill, and instead of Dr. Wedderburn driving him back to Gray’s Inn (whence he had come) or taking him to some warm house, the worthy doctor took him to an empty summer mansion on Highgate Hill, Arundel House, where there was only a caretaker; and there Francis Bacon was put into a bed which was damp and had only been “warmed by a Panne” (a very strange thing for a doctor to do) with the result that within a few days he died of pneumonia.  Dr. Rawley, his chaplain, says that he died “in the early morning of the 9th April, a day on which was COMMEMORATED the Resurrection of Our Saviour”.

That is the story and this is Francis Bacon’s last letter [see # I. below]:

Here the letter ends abruptly.  Whatever else was written has been suppressed by Sir Tobie Matthew, one of the Rosicrosse, on which Spedding remarks, “It is a great pity the editor did not think fit to print the whole.”  For some mysterious reason the letter was not printed until 1669 in Matthew’s Collection, captioned “This was the last letter that he ever wrote.” (Francis Bacon’s Personal Life-Story, Rider&Co, London, 1986, pp. 539-540)

***

I. Francis Bacon‘s Last Letter

(Easter Morning, 9 April 1626)

526846

14285 = To the Earle of Arundel and Surrey.

7470 = My very good Lord:

27393 = I was likely to have had the fortune of Caius Plinius the Elder,

19392 = who lost his life by trying an experiment

21445 = about the burning of the mountain Vesuvius.

27312 = For I was also desirous to try an experiment or two,

23426 = touching the conservation and induration of bodies.

27127 = As for the experiment itself, it succeeded excellently well;

19881 = but in the journey between London and Highgate,

18137 = I was taken with such a fit of casting,

20866 = as I knew not whether it were the stone,

24599 = or some surfeit of cold, or indeed a touch of them all three.

19809 = But when I came to your Lordship’s house,

20992 = I was not able to go back, and therefore was forced

10541 = to take up my lodging here,

27187 = where your housekeeper is very careful and diligent about me;

10692 = which I assure myself

24956 = your Lordship will not only pardon towards him,

14898 = but think the better of him for it.

21030 = For indeed your Lordship’s house is happy to me;

18831 = and I kiss your noble hands for the welcome

15120 = which I am sure you give me to it.

30197 = I know how unfit it is for me to write to your lordship

15772 = with any other hand than mine own;

32508 = but in troth my fingers are so disjointed with this fit of sickness,

12980 = that I cannot steadily hold a pen…

526846

II. This was the last letter that he ever wrote

(Construction G. T.)

46179

Alpha

        1 = Monad

Cosmic Time Cycle

2682 = Aldebaran

4672 = Regulus

3583 = Antares

4385 = Fomalhaut

Omega

 902 = 9 April – 2nd month old-style

1626 = 1626 A.D.

Knowledge Advanced

-6960 = Jarðlig skilning – Earthly Understanding

5596 = Andlig spekðin – Spiritual Wisdom

New Man

7000 = Microcosmos – Man in God’s Image

Quest Concluded

13037 = This was the last letter

 9655 = that he ever wrote.

46179

III. Who‘s there? – Man Know Thyself

(Hamlet, Act III, Sc. i. First Folio)

878864

5415 = Enter Hamlet.

Hamlet

18050 = To be, or not to be, that is the Question:

19549 = Whether ’tis Nobler in the minde to suffer

23467 = The Slings and Arrowes of outragious Fortune,

17893 = Or to take Armes against a Sea of troubles,

16211 = And by opposing end them: to dye, to sleepe

13853 = No more; and by a sleepe, to say we end

20133 = The Heart-ake, and the thousand Naturall shockes

19800 = That Flesh is heyre too?  ‘Tis a consummation

17421 = Deuoutly to be wish’d. To dye to sleepe,

19236 = To sleepe, perchance to Dreame; I, there’s the rub,

19794 = For in that sleepe of death, what dreames may come,

21218 = When we haue shufflel’d off this mortall coile,

20087 = Must giue vs pawse. There’s the respect

13898 = That makes Calamity of so long life:

24656 = For who would beare the Whips and Scornes of time,

24952 = The Oppressors wrong, the poore mans Contumely,

18734 = The pangs of dispriz’d Loue, the Lawes delay,

16768 = The insolence of Office, and the Spurnes

20720 = That patient merit of the vnworthy takes,

17879 = When he himselfe might his Quietus make

21696 = With a bare Bodkin? Who would these Fardles beare

17807 = To grunt and sweat vnder a weary life,

17426 = But that the dread of something after death,

21935 = The vndiscouered Countrey, from whose Borne

20927 = No Traueller returnes, Puzels the will,

19000 = And makes vs rather beare those illes we haue,

20119 = Then flye to others that we know not of.

20260 = Thus Conscience does make Cowards of vs all,

18787 = And thus the Natiue hew of Resolution

21086 = Is sicklied o’re, with the pale cast of Thought,

17836 = And enterprizes of great pith and moment,

22968 = With this regard their Currants turne away,

18723 = And loose the name of Action.  Soft you now,

16746 = The faire Ophelia? Nimph, in thy Orizons

9726 = Be all my sinnes remembred.

Ophelia

5047 = Good my Lord,

17675 = How does your Honor for this many a day?

Hamlet

17391 = I humbly thanke you: well, well, well.

Ophelia

15437 = My Lord, I haue Remembrances of yours,

14927 = That I haue longed long to re-deliuer.

12985 = I pray you now, receiue them.

Hamlet

12520 = No, no, I neuer gaue you ought.

Ophelia

19402 = My honor’d Lord, I know right well you did,

24384 = And with them words of so sweet breath compos’d,

19172 = As made the things more rich, then perfume left:

14959 = Take these againe, for to the Noble minde

24436 = Rich gifts wax poore, when giuers proue vnkinde.

5753 = There my Lord.

878864 

***

Calculator for converting letters to cipher values is at:

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

 

Flokkar: Óflokkað

Mánudagur 9.4.2018 - 18:21 - FB ummæli ()

Robin Hood and Little John – A Tale told by an Ideot

© Gunnar Tómasson

9 April 2018

I. Alpha and Omega

(Bold Robin Hood)

283787

Alpha

34679 = When Robin Hood, was about twenty years old, he happened to meet little John,

30470 = A jolly brisk blase, right fit for his trade, for he was a lusty young man,

39742 = Though he was called little, but his limbs were great, and his statue was seven feet high,

33267 = Wherever he came, they quaked at his name, for soon we would make them to fly,

16348 = With a hiegh down, down and down.

Omega

34731 = Indeed I must acknowledge, thou art a good man, and with thee, I’ll no longer contend,

30859 = For indeed I must say, thou hast won the day, our battle must be at an end,

29673 = Then unto the bank, he did presently wade, and pulled himself out by a tree,

34018 = Which done at last, he blew a loud blast, on his fine bugle horn, three times three.

283787

II. My Village Home and Cosmic Instructor

(Construction G. T.)

283787

279434 = My Village Home – See entry, 8 April 2018

Village Idiot

 -4000 = Dark Sword – Man-Beast

Tri-Unite Cosmic Instructor

(Edda, Gylfaginning)

 2091 = Hárr – High

3443 = Jafnhárr – Equally High

 2819 = Þriði – Third

283787

III. Sweet Swan of Avon Puzzle

(Stratford Village Church)

148213

Puzzle

19949 = STAY PASSENGER WHY GOEST THOU BY SO FAST

22679 = READ IF THOU CANST WHOM ENVIOUS DEATH HATH PLAST

24267 = WITH IN THIS MONUMENT SHAKSPEARE: WITH WHOME

20503 = QUICK NATURE DIDE WHOSE NAME DOTH DECK YS TOMBE

20150 = FAR MORE THEN COST: SIEH ALL YT HE HATH WRITT

21760 = LEAVES LIVING ART BUT PAGE TO SERVE HIS WITT

Death’s Envy

Alpha

1000 = Light of the World

Omega

7000 = Microcosmos – Man in God‘s Image

A.K.A.

10805 = Sweet Swan of Avon

FINIS

   100 = The End

148213

I/II + III = 283787 + 148213 = 432000

As in

432000 = Kali Yuga – World Age of Degeneration

IV. A tale told by an Ideot, full of sound and fury

Signifying nothing.

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

998624

18403 = Enter Macbeth, Seyton, & Souldiers, with,

8343 = Drum and Colours.

Macbeth

21757 = Hang out our Banners on the outward walls,

23086 = The Cry is still, they come: our Castles strength

19926 = Will laugh a Siedge to scorne: Heere let them lye,

13600 = Till Famine and the Ague eate them vp:

25999 = Were they not forc’d with those that should be ours,

18203 = We might haue met them darefull, beard to beard,

20078 = And beate them backward home.  What is that noyse?

 

11226 = A Cry within of Women.

Seyton

15780 = It is the cry of women, my good Lord.

Macbeth

17369 = I haue almost forgot the taste of Feares:

18952 = The time ha’s beene, my sences would haue cool’d

15646 = To heare a Night-shrieke, and my Fell of haire

22673 = Would at a dismall Treatise rowze, and stirre

23924 = As life were in’t.  I haue supt full with horrors,

23242 = Direnesse familiar to my slaughterous thought

21957 = Cannot once start me.  Wherefore was that cry?

Seyton

9748 = The Queene (my Lord) is dead.

Macbeth

12050 = She should haue dy’de heereafter;

20111 = There would haue beene a time for such a word:

22689 = To morrow, and to morrow, and to morrow,

17099 = Creepes in this petty pace from day to day,

15476 = To the last Syllable of Recorded time:

17611 = And all our yesterdayes, haue lighted Fooles

19767 = The way to dusty death.  Out, out, breefe Candle,

18629 = Life’s but a walking Shadow, a poore Player,

23287 = That struts and frets his houre vpon the Stage,

13957 = And then is heard no more.  It is a Tale

15789 = Told by an Ideot, full of sound and fury

8516 = Signifying nothing.

 

7575 = Enter a Messenger.

24832 = Thou com’st to vse thy Tongue: thy Story quickly.

Messenger

7775 = Gracious my Lord,

19101 = I should report that which I say I saw,

14701 = But know not how to doo’t.

Macbeth

6670 = Well, say sir.

Messenger

15838 = As I did stand my watch vpon the Hill

18364 = I look’d toward Byrnane, and anon me thought

10243 = The Wood began to moue.

Macbeth

5340 = Lyar, and Slaue.

Messenger

18076 = Let me endure your wrath, if’t be not so:

20255 = Within this three Mile may you see it coming.

8345 = I say, a mouing Groue.

Macbeth

10055 = If thou speak’st fhlse,¹

18528 = Vpon the next Tree shall thou hang aliue

17658 = Till Famine cling thee: If thy speech be sooth,

16291 = I care not if thou dost for me as much.

13224 = I pull in Resolution, and begin

17039 = To doubt th’Equiuocation of the Fiend,

22333 = That lies like truth.  Feare not till Byrnane Wood

16360 = Do come to Dunsinane, and now a Wood

18605 = Comes toward Dunsinane.  Arme, arme, and out,

16608 = If this which he auouches, do’s appeare,

18415 = There is nor flying hence, nor tarrying here.

12872 = I ‘ginne to be a-weary of the Sun,

24373 = And wish th’estate o’ th’world were now vndon.

20301 = Ring the Alarum Bell, blow Winde, come wracke,

23954 = At least wee’l dye with Harnesse on our backe.    Exeunt.

998624

V. Cosmic Time Cycle – The Four Royal Stars

The Last Syllable of Recorded Time

 (See Appendix)

21265

A

Satan

-1000 = Darkness

Cosmic Time Cycle

2682 = Aldebaran

4672 = Regulus

3583 = Antares

4385 = Fomalhaut

Coming of Christ

4000 = Flaming Sword – Cosmic Creative Power

Death

-2646 = Hamlet

Rebirth

5589 = Fortinbras

21265

B

Day of Wrath – The Last Judgement

21265

3321 = Dies Irae

11099 = Il Giudizio Universale – Michelangelo

 

8486 = The White House

7615 = Get thee hence, Satan – Matt. 4:10

-9356 = Gaius Julius Cæsar

  100 = The End

21265 

C

Ignorance

21265

Satan

-1000 = Darkness

4119 = Ignorance

360 = Devil´s Circle

The Second Coming

4000 = Flaming Sword – Cosmic Creative Power

6599 = Donald J. Trump

7187 = Stormy Daniels

21265

I/II + III + IV + V = 283787 + 148213 + 998624 + 21265 = 1451889

VI. At last, he blew a loud blast, on his fine bugle horn,

three times three

(Bold Robin Hood)

1451889

34679 = When Robin Hood, was about twenty years old, he happened to meet little John,

30470 = A jolly brisk blase, right fit for his trade, for he was a lusty young man,

39742 = Though he was called little, but his limbs were great, and his statue was seven feet high,

33267 = Wherever he came, they quaked at his name, for soon we would make them to fly,

16348 = With a hiegh down, down and down.                                                                                   (154506)

 

34469 = How they came acquainted, I‘ll tell you in breif, if you will but listen awhile,

30862 = For this very guest, among all the rest, I think maay cause you to smile,

31136 = For Robin said, to his Jolly Bowmen, pray tarry you here, in this grove,

33442 = And see that you all, observe well my call, while through the forest I rove.         (129909)

 

36801 = We have had no sport, for these fourteen long days, therefore now abroad I will go,

31320 = Now, shall I be beat, and cannot retreat, my horn I will presently blow,

34136 = Then did shake hands, with his merry Bowmen all, and bid them for the present good-by,

29348 = Then as near the brook, his journey he took, a stranger, he chanced to spy.      (131605)

 

34873 = They happened to meet, on a long narrow bridge, and neither of them would give way,

36331 = Quoth bold Robin Hood, and sturdily stood, I‘ll show you right Nottingham play,

36219 = With that from his quiver, an arrow he drew, a dead-arrow, from a goose wing,

32924 = The stranger he cried, I‘ll liquor thy hide, if you offer to touch the string.             (140347)

 

33876 = Quoth bold Robin Hood, thou dost prate like an ass, for were I to bend my bow,

36295 = I could send a dart, quite through thy heart, before thou could strike me one blow,

42312 = Thou talkest like a coward, the stranger replied, well armed with a strong-bow you stand,

32688 = To shoot at my breast, while I protest, I have nought but a staff in my hand.     (145171)

 

32970 = The name of a coward, quoth Robin I scorn, therefore my long-bow I‘ll put by,

30081 = And for thy sake, a staff I will take, the strength of thy manhood to try,

33646 = Then Robin Hood, he stepped to a thicket of trees, and choses a staff of brown oak,

27567 = This being done, away he did run, to the stranger and merrily spoke.                    (124264)

 

33350 = Lo, see my staff is lusty and though, now, here on this bridge we will play,

24425 = Whoever falls in, the battle shall win, and we‘ll away,

32395 = With all my heart, the stranger replied, I scorn in the least to give out,

40417 = This said, they fell to it, without more dispute, and their staffs they flourished about. (130587)

 

31096 = At first Robin Hood, gave the stranger a bang, so hard, that he made his bones ring,

30627 = The stranger he said, this must be repaid, I‘ll give you as good, as you bring,

24186 = So long as I‘m able, to handle a staff, to die in your debt I scorn,

32844 = Then to it each goes, and followed their blows, as if they‘d been trashing corn.               (118753)

 

36548 = The stranger gave Robin, a crack on the crown which caused the blood for to flow,

32649 = Then Robin enraged, more fiercely engaged, and followed his blows more severly,

32274 = So thick and so fast, each blow was laid on, with passionate fury and ire,

22083 = At every stroke, he made him to smoke, as if he had been on fire.                         (123554)

 

25782 = Then into a fury, the stranger he flew, and gave a terrible look,

28725 = And with a blow, he laid him full low, and tumbled him into the brook,

35589 = I prithee, good fellow! where art thou now? the stranger in laughter he cried,

33816 = Quoth bold Robin Hood, I‘ve good faith in the flood, and floating along with the tide. (123912)

 

34731 = Indeed I must acknowledge, thou art a good man, and with thee, I’ll no longer contend,

30859 = For indeed I must say, thou hast won the day, our battle must be at an end,

29673 = Then unto the bank, he did presently wade, and pulled himself out by a tree,

34018 = Which done at last, he blew a loud blast, on his fine bugle horn, three times three. (129281)

1451889

***

Calculator for converting letters to cipher values is at:

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

 

¹ fhlse – First Folio text.

Appendix

http://ascensionglossary.com/index.php/Four_Royal_Stars

The Four Royal Stars also called Archangel Stars are; Aldebaran (Michael), Regulus (Raphael), Antares (Uriel), and Fomalhaut (Gabriel). They are the brightest stars in their constellations and are considered the four guardians of the heavens. They mark seasonal changes of the year at the equinoxes and solstices. Aldebaran watches the Eastern sky and is the dominant star in the Taurus constellation. Regulus watches the North and is the dominant star in the Leo constellation. Antares watches the West and is the alpha star in Scorpio. Fomalhaut watches the Southern sky as the brightest star in Piscis Austrinus.

Cosmic Time Cycle

The East-West Axis of Aldebaran (Taurus) and Antares (Scorpio) as a pair, form the demarcation points of East and West that make the circuit through the Precession of the Equinoxes. This point is measured through the alignments made between these two stars and the Sun’s path, at their axis of rotation made around the Galactic Center. When these two stars are paired in the rotational measurement of equal axis alignment, this event marks the opening of the cosmic time cycle. When The Golden Gate activated recently, this reversed the positional movement of the East –West axis as per directed in the Divine Infinite Calculus. This is saying that these stars have changed their positions in the Galaxy from their previous time cycle, from the perspective of Cosmic Time. These stars form the Four Cardinal Directions (N-S-E-W) measured in the Cosmic Time Cycle, which are being adjusted to the Cosmic Compass designed by Divine Infinite Calculus. The new celestial direction in the cosmic time cycle form the Crown of the Magi, which is a type of Cosmic Celestial Time Calendar that opens Infinity. This is why they are referred to as the Four Royal Stars. At the end of the Precession of Equinoxes, they adjust position and form the Crown of the Magi. Those that wear this Celestial Crown are able to contact infinity, however, they must be embodied Christ Consciousness.

 

Flokkar: Óflokkað

Sunnudagur 8.4.2018 - 22:44 - FB ummæli ()

Socrates: Man, Know Thyself

© Gunnar Tómasson

8 April 2018

He who knows others is wise;

he who knows himself is enlightened.
― Lao Tzu

***

I. My Village Home¹

(Anonymous)

279434

22226 = My village home, my village home, How dear are thou to me,

26343 = Though many years have passed away, Since last I quitted thee:

24853 = The hills and dales are green as then, The lark sings just as gay,

23312 = But those I lov’d are changed and gone, For ever passed away.

 

24850 = The village church, the village church, I see it ‘mid the trees,

20791 = Again I hear its merry bells, Upon the pasing breeze;

20633 = The valley green the silver brook, Are all belov’d by me;

22243 = But those I prized above them I never more shall see.

 

27007 = The lowly roof, the lowly roof, Among the clustered tree,

22174 = Where parent kind oft bid me pray, in sacred on my knees,

20968 = My schoolmates are all changed to men, Are all beloved by me,

24034 = And the teacher rests in silence, Beneath the spreading tree.

279434

II. My Schoolmates are all changed to Men

(Construction G. T.)

279434

Instructor

         1 = Monad/God at Level of Man

Instrument of Instruction

  11931 = Saga Cipher

Satan

   -1000 = Darkness

A New Breed of Men

Sent Down From Heaven²

(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 Teacher Rests in Silence*

-2646 = Hamlet

279434

* Cf. The rest is silence. (Hamlet‘s Dying Words)

INSERT

Christ

9487

       1 = Monad

3890 = Christ

5596 = Andlig spekðin – Spiritual Wisdom

9487

Satan and Jesus

9487

Darkness

2487 = Anus – Man’s Lower Emotions

Light

7000 = Microcosmos – Man in God’s Image

9487

END OF INSERT

 

III. Coming of the Son of Man

(Matt. 16:13-23, KJB 1611)

599430

Man

       1 = Monad

The Son of Man

5596 = Andlig spekðin – Spiritual Wisdom

Whom doe men say, that I,

the sonne of man, am?

16:13

23675 = When Iesus came into the coasts of Cesarea Philippi,

11616 = he asked his disciples, saying,

17235 = Whom doe men say, that I, the sonne of man, am?

16:14

22774 = And they said, Some say that thou art Iohn the Baptist,

23541 = some Elias, and others Ieremias, or one of  the Prophets.

16:15

19313 = He saith vnto them, But whom say ye that I am?

16:16

14266 = And Simon Peter answered, and said,

19943 = Thou art Christ the sonne of the liuing God.

16:17

16129 = And Iesus answered, and said vnto him,

13647 = Blessed art thou Simon Bar Iona:

20799 = for flesh and blood hath not reueiled it vnto thee,

13923 = but my Father which is in heauen.

16:18

19578 = And I say also vnto thee, that thou art Peter,

19317 = and vpon this rocke I will build my Church:

20444 = and the gates of hell shall not preuaile against it.

16:19

24422 = And I will giue vnto thee the keyes of the kingdome of heauen:

27217 = and whatsoeuer thou shalt bind on earth, shall be bound in heauen:

28617 = whatsoeuer thou shalt loose on earth, shall be loosed in heauen.

16:20

11853 = Then charged hee his disciples

26502 = that they should tel no man that he was Iesus the Christ.

16:21

29661 = From that time foorth began Iesus to shew vnto his disciples,

18499 = how that he must goe vnto Hierusalem,

26389 = and suffer many things of the Elders and chiefe Priests & Scribes,

14138 = and be killed, and be raised againe the third day.

16:22

19850 = Then Peter tooke him, and began to rebuke him, saying,

22014 = Be it farre from thee Lord: This shal not be vnto thee.

16:23

14777 = But he turned, and said vnto Peter,

20644 = Get thee behind mee, Satan, thou art an offence vnto me:

23056 = for thou sauourest not the things that be of God,

9994 = but those that be of men.

599430

I + III = 279434 + 599430 = 878864

IV. Man, Know Thyself

(Hamlet, Act III, Sc. i, First Folio)

878864

 5415 = Enter Hamlet.

Hamlet

18050 = To be, or not to be, that is the Question:

19549 = Whether ’tis Nobler in the minde to suffer

23467 = The Slings and Arrowes of outragious Fortune,

17893 = Or to take Armes against a Sea of troubles,

16211 = And by opposing end them: to dye, to sleepe

13853 = No more; and by a sleepe, to say we end

20133 = The Heart-ake, and the thousand Naturall shockes

19800 = That Flesh is heyre too?  ‘Tis a consummation

17421 = Deuoutly to be wish’d. To dye to sleepe,

19236 = To sleepe, perchance to Dreame; I, there’s the rub,

19794 = For in that sleepe of death, what dreames may come,

21218 = When we haue shufflel’d off this mortall coile,

20087 = Must giue vs pawse. There’s the respect

13898 = That makes Calamity of so long life:

24656 = For who would beare the Whips and Scornes of time,

24952 = The Oppressors wrong, the poore mans Contumely,

18734 = The pangs of dispriz’d Loue, the Lawes delay,

16768 = The insolence of Office, and the Spurnes

20720 = That patient merit of the vnworthy takes,

17879 = When he himselfe might his Quietus make

21696 = With a bare Bodkin? Who would these Fardles beare

17807 = To grunt and sweat vnder a weary life,

17426 = But that the dread of something after death,

21935 = The vndiscouered Countrey, from whose Borne

20927 = No Traueller returnes, Puzels the will,

19000 = And makes vs rather beare those illes we haue,

20119 = Then flye to others that we know not of.

20260 = Thus Conscience does make Cowards of vs all,

18787 = And thus the Natiue hew of Resolution

21086 = Is sicklied o’re, with the pale cast of Thought,

17836 = And enterprizes of great pith and moment,

22968 = With this regard their Currants turne away,

18723 = And loose the name of Action.  Soft you now,

16746 = The faire Ophelia? Nimph, in thy Orizons

9726 = Be all my sinnes remembred.

Ophelia

5047 = Good my Lord,

17675 = How does your Honor for this many a day?

Hamlet

17391 = I humbly thanke you: well, well, well.

Ophelia

15437 = My Lord, I haue Remembrances of yours,

14927 = That I haue longed long to re-deliuer.

12985 = I pray you now, receiue them.

Hamlet

12520 = No, no, I neuer gaue you ought.

Ophelia

19402 = My honor’d Lord, I know right well you did,

24384 = And with them words of so sweet breath compos’d,

19172 = As made the things more rich, then perfume left:

14959 = Take these againe, for to the Noble minde

24436 = Rich gifts wax poore, when giuers proue vnkinde.

5753 = There my Lord.

878864

***

Calculator for converting letters to cipher values is at:

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

 

¹ http://ballads.bodleian.ox.ac.uk/search/?query=my+village

² 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 sent 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

Laugardagur 7.4.2018 - 23:56 - FB ummæli ()

Dante’s Commedia and Shakespeare Plays

© Gunnar Tómasson

7 April 2018

I. Paradiso – Canto XXXII

(Omega – Lines 133-151)

281149

13622 = Di contr’a Pietro vedi sedere Anna,

14829 = tanto contenta di mirar sua figlia,

15957 = che non move occhio per cantare osanna;              135

 

13390 = e contro al maggior padre di famiglia

13295 = siede Lucia, che mosse la tua donna,

13836 = quando chinavi, a rovinar, le ciglia.                            138

 

14764 = Ma perché ‘l tempo fugge che t’assonna,

16472 = qui farem punto, come buon sartore

11456 = che com’elli ha del panno fa la gonna;                        141

 

15686 = e drizzeremo li occhi al primo amore,

15603 = sì che, guardando verso lui, penètri   [ì=i]

17290 = quant’è possibil per lo suo fulgore.                              144

 

15155 = Veramente, ne forse tu t’arretri

15994 = movendo l’ali tue, credendo oltrarti,

15239 = orando grazia conven che s’impetri                              147

 

15245 = grazia da quella che puote aiutarti;

13238 = e tu mi seguirai con l’affezione,

14768 = sì che dal dicer mio lo cor non parti.  [ì=i]

 

15310 = E cominciò questa santa orazione: *    [ò=o]                151

281149

* See Saint Anne, sitting opposite Peter, so content to look at her daughter, that she does not remove her gaze to sing Hosanna. And opposite Adam, the greatest father of our family, sits Lucy, who stirred your Lady, when you were bending your brow downwards to ruin.

But since the time of your vision flees, here let us stop, like the careful tailor who cuts the garment according to the cloth, and let us turn our eyes towards the Primal Love, so that gazing at Him, you might penetrate as far as possible into his brightness. Truly grace needs to be acquired by prayer (so that you do not by chance fall back as you beat your wings), grace from Her who has power to help you: and follow me with such affection that your heart is not separated from my words.’ And he began this sacred prayer.

 

II. First Heire of Shakespeare’s Inuention

(Venus and Adonis, Dedication, 1593)

378620

 9987 = TO THE RIGHT HONORABLE

20084 = Henrie Vvriothesley, Earle of Southampton,

8814 = and Baron of Titchfield.

21943 = Right Honourable, I know not how I shall offend

23463 = in dedicating my vnpolisht lines to your Lordship,

25442 = nor how the worlde vvill censure mee for choosing

25266 = so strong a proppe to support so vveake a burthen,

17161 = onelye if your Honour seeme but pleased,

13387 = I account my selfe highly praised,

18634 = and vowe to take aduantage of all idle houres,

23217 = till I haue honoured you vvith some grauer labour.

23437 = But if the first heire of my inuention proue deformed,

15796 = I shall be sorie it had so noble a god-father:

12970 = and neuer after eare so barren a land,

16690 = for feare it yeeld me still so bad a haruest,

17496 = l leaue it to your Honourable suruey,

18884 = and your Honor to your hearts content,

27199 = vvhich I wish may alvvaies answere your ovvne vvish,

17766 = and the vvorlds hopefull expectation.

 

11662 = Your Honors in all dutie,

9322 = William Shakespeare

378620

III. The Taming of the Shrew

(Act I, Sc. i. First Folio)

224832

18801 = Enter Begger and Hostes, Christophero Sly.                                  

Begger

9104 = Ile pheeze you infaith.

Hostes

12766 = A paire of stockes you rogue.

Begger

13791 = Y’are a baggage, the Slies are no Rogues.

27550 = Looke in the Chronicles, we came in with Richard Conqueror:

24345 = therefore Paucas pallabris, let the world slide:  Sessa.

Hostes

23174 = You will not pay for the glasses you haue burst?

Begger

6178 = No, not a deniere.

19856 = go by S. Ieronimie, goe to thy cold bed, and warme thee.

Hostes

20982 = I know my remedie, I must go fetch the Head-borough.

Begger

25800 = Third, or fourth, or fift borough, Ile answere him by Law.

17155 = Ile not budge an inch boy.  Let him come, and kindly.

 

5330 = Falles asleepe.                                                                               

224832

III. Hostes – I know my remedy

(Construction G. T.)

-5737

-1000 = Darkness/Satan

The Head-Borough

10773 = Spiritus Sanctus

-10467 = Osiris-Isis-Horus

Remedy

4000 = Flaming Sword – Cosmic Creative Power

Deformed First Heire Vanishes

Without a Trace

-9143 = Christophero Sly

FINIS

  100 = The End

  -5737

I + II + III + IV = 281149 + 378620 + 224832 – 5737 = 878864

I + V + VI + VII = 281149 + 104561 + 476074 + 17080 = 878864

VIII = 878864

V. Begger awakened – Watches Play

And is heard no more

(Act I, Sc. i. First Folio)

104561

13299 = The Presenters aboue speakes.

1. Man

16937 = My Lord you nod, you do not minde the play.

Begger

17001 = Yes by Saint Anne do I, a good matter surely:

10962 = Comes there any more of it?

Lady

9596 = My Lord, ‘tis but begun.

Begger

19574 = ‘Tis a verie excellent peece of worke, Madame Ladie:

10016 = would ‘twere done.

7176 = They sit and marke.

104561

VI. Prince Hamlet Comes Before Virgin Ophelia

(Hamlet, Act II, Sc. i – 1611)

476074

5718 = Enter Ophelia

Polonius

22526 = Farwell:  How now Ophelia, whats the matter?

Ophelia

15956 = O my Lord, my Lord, I haue beene so affrighted.

Polonius

12183 = With what i’th name of God?

Ophelia

18728 = My Lord, as I was sowing in my closset,

18063 = Lord Hamlet with his doublet all vnbrac’d,

17876 = No hat vpon his head, his stockins fouled,

16508 = Vngartred, and downe gyred to his ankle,

19691 = Pale as his shirt, his knees knocking each other,

21037 = And with a looke so pittious in purport,

12588 = As if he had beene loosed out of hell,

16627 = To speake of horrors, he comes before me.

Polonius

6671 = Mad for thy loue?

Ophelia

10215 = My Lord I do not know,

10131 = But truly I doe feare it.

Polonius

5493 = What said he?

Ophelia

15790 = He tooke me by the wrist, and held me hard,

16231 = Then goes he to the length of all his arme,

20482 = And with his other hand thus ore his brow,

14724 = He falls to such perusall of my face

16403 = As a would draw it;  long stayd he so,

14458 = At last, a little shaking of mine arme,

20150 = And thrice his head thus wauing vp and downe,

18526 = He raised a sigh so pittious and profound,

16161 = As it did seeme to shatter all his bulke,

14136 = And end his being; that done, he lets me go,

20485 = And with his head ouer his shoulders turn’d

19531 = He seem’d to find his way without his eyes,

23697 = For out a doores he went without their helps

15289 = And to the last bended their light on me.

476074

VII. The Second Coming

(Construction G. T.)

17080

Coming of Christ

4000 = Flaming Sword – Cosmic Creative Power

Deformed First Heire

Old Earth and Old Heaven No More

-9143 = Christophero Sly

Creation Event

2801 = Penis

2414 = Vagina

6783 = Mons Veneris

New Earth and New Heaven

True Man and True God

Jesús Kristr

10125 = Sannr Maðr ok Sannr Guð – 13th century Icelandic

FINIS

  100 = The End

17080

VIII. To be, or not to be, that is the Quest, ION

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

878864

  5415 = Enter Hamlet.

Hamlet

18050 = To be, or not to be, that is the Question:

19549 = Whether ’tis Nobler in the minde to suffer

23467 = The Slings and Arrowes of outragious Fortune,

17893 = Or to take Armes against a Sea of troubles,

16211 = And by opposing end them: to dye, to sleepe

13853 = No more; and by a sleepe, to say we end

20133 = The Heart-ake, and the thousand Naturall shockes

19800 = That Flesh is heyre too?  ‘Tis a consummation

17421 = Deuoutly to be wish’d. To dye to sleepe,

19236 = To sleepe, perchance to Dreame; I, there’s the rub,

19794 = For in that sleepe of death, what dreames may come,

21218 = When we haue shufflel’d off this mortall coile,

20087 = Must giue vs pawse. There’s the respect

13898 = That makes Calamity of so long life:

24656 = For who would beare the Whips and Scornes of time,

24952 = The Oppressors wrong, the poore mans Contumely,

18734 = The pangs of dispriz’d Loue, the Lawes delay,

16768 = The insolence of Office, and the Spurnes

20720 = That patient merit of the vnworthy takes,

17879 = When he himselfe might his Quietus make

21696 = With a bare Bodkin? Who would these Fardles beare

17807 = To grunt and sweat vnder a weary life,

17426 = But that the dread of something after death,

21935 = The vndiscouered Countrey, from whose Borne

20927 = No Traueller returnes, Puzels the will,

19000 = And makes vs rather beare those illes we haue,

20119 = Then flye to others that we know not of.

20260 = Thus Conscience does make Cowards of vs all,

18787 = And thus the Natiue hew of Resolution

21086 = Is sicklied o’re, with the pale cast of Thought,

17836 = And enterprizes of great pith and moment,

22968 = With this regard their Currants turne away,

18723 = And loose the name of Action.  Soft you now,

16746 = The faire Ophelia? Nimph, in thy Orizons

9726 = Be all my sinnes remembred.

Ophelia

5047 = Good my Lord,

17675 = How does your Honor for this many a day?

Hamlet

17391 = I humbly thanke you: well, well, well.

Ophelia

15437 = My Lord, I haue Remembrances of yours,

14927 = That I haue longed long to re-deliuer.

12985 = I pray you now, receiue them.

Hamlet

12520 = No, no, I neuer gaue you ought.

Ophelia

19402 = My honor’d Lord, I know right well you did,

24384 = And with them words of so sweet breath compos’d,

19172 = As made the things more rich, then perfume left:

14959 = Take these againe, for to the Noble minde

24436 = Rich gifts wax poore, when giuers proue vnkinde.

5753 = There my Lord.

878864

***

Calculator for converting letters to cipher values is at:

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

Flokkar: Óflokkað

Laugardagur 7.4.2018 - 01:58 - FB ummæli ()

Dante’s Commedia and Christ’s Church

© Gunnar Tómasson

6 April 2018

I. The Prayer to the Virgin¹

(Paradiso, Canto XXXIII: 1-45)

644323

13584 = Vergine Madre, figlia del tuo figlio,

11896 = umile e alta più che creatura,

16388 = termine fisso d’etterno consiglio, 3

 

12433 = tu se’ colei che l’umana natura

15235 = nobilitasti sì, che ’l suo fattore  [ì=i for purposes of calculation]

14466 = non disdegnò di farsi sua fattura.  [ò=o]

 

14844 = Nel ventre tuo si raccese l’amore,

13129 = per lo cui caldo ne l’etterna pace

14069 = così è germinato questo fiore. 9 [ì=i]

 

9411 = Qui se’ a noi meridïana face

14807 = di caritate, e giuso, intra ’ mortali,

12436 = se’ di speranza fontana vivace. 12

 

13936 = Donna, se’ tanto grande e tanto vali,

16697 = che qual vuol grazia e a te non ricorre,

15401 = sua disïanza vuol volar sanz’ ali. 15

 

15410 = La tua benignità non pur soccorre

9096 = a chi domanda, ma molte fïate

12898 = liberamente al dimandar precorre. 18

 

13763 = In te misericordia, in te pietate,

12132 = in te magnificenza, in te s’aduna

16450 = quantunque in creatura è di bontate. 21

 

12463 = Or questi, che da l’infima lacuna

14822 = de l’universo infin qui ha vedute

12210 = le vite spiritali ad una ad una, 24

 

16297 = supplica a te, per grazia, di virtute

16271 = tanto, che possa con li occhi levarsi

15264 = più alto verso l’ultima salute. 27

 

13229 = E io, che mai per mio veder non arsi

18699 = più ch’i’ fo per lo suo, tutti miei prieghi

17056 = ti porgo, e priego che non sieno scarsi, 30

 

12634 = perché tu ogne nube li disleghi

14861 = di sua mortalità co’ prieghi tuoi,

15115 = sì che ’l sommo piacer li si dispieghi. 33 [ì=i]

 

13273 = Ancor ti priego, regina, che puoi

15959 = ciò che tu vuoli, che conservi sani, [ò=o]

14828 = dopo tanto veder, li affetti suoi. 36

 

15547 = Vinca tua guardia i movimenti umani:

12242 = vedi Beatrice con quanti beati

14906 = per li miei prieghi ti chiudon le mani!». 39

 

12993 = Li occhi da Dio diletti e venerati,

15029 = fissi ne l’orator, ne dimostraro

16486 = quanto i devoti prieghi le son grati; 42

 

15203 = indi a l’etterno lume s’addrizzaro,

14911 = nel qual non si dee creder che s’invii

15544 = per creatura l’occhio tanto chiaro. 45

644323

II + III = 147579 + 468222 + 28522 = 644323

II. Francis Bacon Prophetic Essay Of Truth

(1625)

147579

Alpha

16829 = What is Truth; said jesting Pilate;

16465 = and would not stay for an Answer.

Omega

22422 = Surely the Wickednesse of Falshood, and Breach of Faith,

17402 = cannot possibly be so highly expressed,

13942 = as in that it shall be the last Peale,

24494 = to call the Iudgements of God, vpon the Generations of Men,

20293 = It being foretold, that when Christ commeth,

15732 = He shall not finde faith vpon the earth.

147579

INSERT

The Four Royal Stars

(See Appendix)

15322

2682 = Aldebaran

4672 = Regulus

3583 = Antares

4385 = Fomalhaut

15322

Personal Epiphany

”Coming of Christ”

15322

804 = 8 June – 4th month old-style

1976 = 1976 A.D.

4000 = Flaming Sword

8542 = Consciousness

15322

END INSERT

 

III. Abomination of Desolation²

(Contemporary history)

468222

The Gates of Hell

13031 = International Monetary Fund

9948 = Harvard University

7146 = Seðlabanki Íslands – Central Bank of Iceland = 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. Hell Gates did not prevail against

Christ‘s Church

(Matt. 16:18)

28522

Cosmic Time

25920 = Platonic Great Year

Faithless Earth

  2131 = Jörð – Icelandic

”Christ’s Church”

Man in God’s Image

  7000 = Microcosmos

Hell Vanquished

 -6529 = The Gates of Hell

28522

***

Calculator for converting letters to cipher values is at:

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

¹The Prayer to the Virgin

Translation

(Internet)

‘Virgin mother, daughter of your Son, humbled, and exalted, more than any other creature, fixed goal of the Eternal Wisdom; you are She who made human nature so noble, that its own Maker did not scorn to become of its making. The Love, beneath whose warmth this flower has grown, in eternal peace, flamed again in your womb. Here you are the noonday torch of Love to us, and down there, among mortal beings, you are a living spring of hope.

Lady you are so great, and of such value, that if any who wishes for grace fails to resort to you, his longing tries to fly without wings. Your kindness not only helps those who ask it, it often freely anticipates the request. In you is tenderness: in you is pity: in you is generosity: in you whatever excellences exist in the creature, combined together.

Now he, who has seen the lives of souls, one by one, from the deepest pool of the universe, even to here, begs you, of your grace, for enough strength to lift his eyes, higher, towards the final bliss: and I, who was never so on fire for my own vision, as I am for his, offer you all my prayers, and pray they may not be wanting, asking that, for him, you might scatter every cloud of his mortality, with your prayers, so that supreme joy might be revealed to him.

And more I beg you, Queen, who can do the things you will: after he has seen so deeply, keep his affections sound. Let your protection overcome human weakness: see Beatrice, with so many saints, folding her hands to pray with me.’

Those eyes, loved by God, and venerated, fixed on the speaker, showed us how greatly devout prayers please her. Then they turned themselves towards the Eternal Light, into which, we must believe, no other creature’s eye finds its way so clearly.

 

²Abomination 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

http://ascensionglossary.com/index.php/Four_Royal_Stars

The Four Royal Stars also called Archangel Stars are; Aldebaran (Michael), Regulus (Raphael), Antares (Uriel), and Fomalhaut (Gabriel). They are the brightest stars in their constellations and are considered the four guardians of the heavens. They mark seasonal changes of the year at the equinoxes and solstices. Aldebaran watches the Eastern sky and is the dominant star in the Taurus constellation. Regulus watches the North and is the dominant star in the Leo constellation. Antares watches the West and is the alpha star in Scorpio. Fomalhaut watches the Southern sky as the brightest star in Piscis Austrinus.

Cosmic Time Cycle

The East-West Axis of Aldebaran (Taurus) and Antares (Scorpio) as a pair, form the demarcation points of East and West that make the circuit through the Precession of the Equinoxes. This point is measured through the alignments made between these two stars and the Sun’s path, at their axis of rotation made around the Galactic Center. When these two stars are paired in the rotational measurement of equal axis alignment, this event marks the opening of the cosmic time cycle. When The Golden Gate activated recently, this reversed the positional movement of the East –West axis as per directed in the Divine Infinite Calculus. This is saying that these stars have changed their positions in the Galaxy from their previous time cycle, from the perspective of Cosmic Time. These stars form the Four Cardinal Directions (N-S-E-W) measured in the Cosmic Time Cycle, which are being adjusted to the Cosmic Compass designed by Divine Infinite Calculus. The new celestial direction in the cosmic time cycle form the Crown of the Magi, which is a type of Cosmic Celestial Time Calendar that opens Infinity. This is why they are referred to as the Four Royal Stars. At the end of the Precession of Equinoxes, they adjust position and form the Crown of the Magi. Those that wear this Celestial Crown are able to contact infinity, however, they must be embodied Christ Consciousness.

Flokkar: Óflokkað

Fimmtudagur 5.4.2018 - 23:22 - FB ummæli ()

My Lord, I had forgott the Fart.

© Gunnar Tómasson

5 April 2018

I. This Earle of Oxford

(John Aubrey)

101792

9088 = This Earle of Oxford,

20025 = making of his low obeisance to Queen Elizabeth,

8478 = happened to let a Fart,

14814 = at which he was so abashed and ashamed

14780 = that he went to Travell, 7 yeares.

22105 = On his returne the Queen welcomed him home, and sayd

12502 = My Lord, I had forgott the Fart.

101792

As in:

Satan

-1000 = Darkness

Christ‘s Pens

4946 = Socrates

1654 = ION

3412 = Platon

14209 = Quintus Horatius Flaccus

12337 = Publius Virgilius Maro

11999 = Sextus Propertius

11249 = Publius Ovidius Naso

11359 = Snorri Sturluson

9814 = Sturla Þórðarson

5385 = Francis Bacon

7936 = Edward Oxenford

Forgotten  Fart

-2102 = Fart

My Lord’s Return

10594 = Sir Francis Bacon, Knight

101792

II. At the level of Man, God is Consciousness

(Matt. 16:13-19, King James Bible 1611)

509741

This Earle of Oxford

101792 = # I.

Satan

-1000 = Darkness

Man-Beast

-4000 = Dark Sword – Man-Beast

Blessed art thou Simon bar Iona

(Matt. 16:13-19 KJB 1611)

16:13

23675 = When Iesus came into the coasts of Cesarea Philippi,

11616 = he asked his disciples, saying,

17235 = Whom doe men say, that I, the sonne of man, am?

16:14

22774 = And they said, Some say that thou art Iohn the Baptist,

23541 = some Elias, and others Ieremias, or one of  the Prophets.

16:15

19313 = He saith vnto them, But whom say ye that I am?

16:16

14266 = And Simon Peter answered, and said,

19943 = Thou art Christ the sonne of the liuing God.

16:17

16129 = And Iesus answered, and said vnto him,

13647 = Blessed art thou Simon Bar Iona:

20799 = for flesh and blood hath not reueiled it vnto thee,

13923 = but my Father which is in heauen.

16:18

19578 = And I say also vnto thee, that thou art Peter,

19317 = and vpon this rocke I will build my Church:

20444 = and the gates of hell shall not preuaile against it.

16:19

24422 = And I will giue vnto thee the keyes of the kingdome of heauen:

27217 = and whatsoeuer thou shalt bind on earth, shall be bound in heauen:

28617 = whatsoeuer thou shalt loose on earth, shall be loosed in heauen.

Personal Epiphany

(August 1976)

7065 = At the level of Man,

11703 = God is Consciousness.

509741

 

III. Francis Bacon – Essayes

(Dedication, 1625)

509741

16411 = TO THE RIGHT HONORABLE MY VERY GOOD LO.

12189 = THE DVKE of Buckingham his Grace,

9271 = LO. High Admirall of England.                                         

5815 = EXCELLENT LO.

 

22090 = SALOMON saies; A good Name is as a precious oyntment;

8263 = And I assure my selfe,

22962 = such wil your Graces Name bee, with Posteritie.

21416 = For your Fortune, and Merit both, haue beene Eminent.

20248 = And you haue planted Things, that are like to last.

13223 = I doe now publish my Essayes;

25098 = Which, of all my other workes, haue beene most Currant:

9396 = For that, as it seemes,

19523 = they come home, to Mens Businesse, and Bosomes.

18429 = I haue enlarged them, both in Number, and Weight;

15649 = So that they are indeed a New Worke.

19918 = I thought it therefore agreeable, to my Affection,

25598 = and Obligation to your Grace, to prefix your Name before them,

10975 = both in English, and in Latine.

20651 = For I doe conceiue, that the Latine Volume of them,

13148 = (being in the Vniuersall Language)

12837 = may last, as long as Bookes last.

16577 = My Instauration, I dedicated to the King:

14781 = my Historie of HENRY the Seuenth

21369 = (which I haue now also translated into Latine)

23643 = and my Portions of Naturall History, to the Prince:

13053 = And these I dedicate to your Grace;

20322 = Being of the best Fruits, that by the good Encrease,

21295 = which God giues to my Pen and Labours, I could yeeld.

 

10530 = God leade your Grace by the Hand.

20801 = Your Graces most Obliged and faithfull Seruant,

4260 = FR. St. ALBAN

509741                       

IV + V = 468222 + 41519 = 509741

IV. Abomination of Desolation

(Contemporary history)

468222

The Gates of Hell

13031 = International Monetary Fund

9948 = Harvard University

7146 = Seðlabanki Íslands – Central Bank of Iceland = 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. Cosmic Consciousness²

(Construction G. T.)

41519

8542 = Consciousness

Cosmic Time

25920 = Platonic Great Year

Coming of Christ

4000 = Flaming Sword – Cosmic Creative Power

Saga Axe of Death

(Njála, Ch. 120)

5175 = Rimmugýgr

End of Time

-2118 = TIME

41519

***

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.

 

²Cosmic Consciousness

(Wikipedia)

Cosmic Consciousness: A Study in the Evolution of the Human Mind is a 1901 book by Richard Maurice Bucke, a Canadian psychiatrist. In this book, he explored the concept of cosmic consciousness, which he defined as „a higher form of consciousness than that possessed by the ordinary man“.

In Cosmic Consciousness, Bucke stated that he discerned three forms, or degrees, of consciousness:

Simple consciousness, possessed by both animals and mankind

Self-consciousness, possessed by mankind, encompassing thought, reason, and imagination

Cosmic consciousness, which is „a higher form of consciousness than that possessed by the ordinary man“

 

According to Bucke,

This consciousness shows the cosmos to consist not of dead matter governed by unconscious, rigid, and unintending law; it shows it on the contrary as entirely immaterial, entirely spiritual and entirely alive; it shows that death is an absurdity, that everyone and everything has eternal life; it shows that the universe is God and that God is the universe, and that no evil ever did or ever will enter into it; a great deal of this is, of course, from the point of view of self consciousness, absurd; it is nevertheless undoubtedly true.

 

 

 

 

Flokkar: Óflokkað

Fimmtudagur 5.4.2018 - 12:00 - FB ummæli ()

Force without wisdom falls by its own weight

© Gunnar Tómasson

5 April 2018

Prologue

57540

Crucified Light of the World

(KJB 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

57540

The Last Judgement

(Construction G. T.)

57540

11143 = Abomination of Desolation

Satan

 -1000 = Darkness

Cosmic Time

25920 = Platonic Great Year

Day of Wrath

  3321 = Dies Irae

Coming of Christ

  4000 = Flaming Sword

The Last Judgement

(Michelangelo, Sistine Chapel)

11099 = Il Giudizio Universale

Saga Axe of Death

  5175 = Rimmugýgr

End of Time

 -2118 = TIME

57540

***

I. Francis Bacon’s Essay ‘Of Truth’

(Essayes, 1625)

1927965

16829 = What is Truth; said jesting Pilate;

16465 = and would not stay for an Answer.

18074 = Certainly there be, that delight in Giddinesse

13235 = And count it a Bondage, to fix a Beleefe;

22340 = Affecting Free-will in Thinking as well as in Acting.

24810 = And though the Sects of Philosophers of that Kinde be gone,

21536 = yet there remaine certaine discoursing Wits,

12152 = which are of the same veines,

18070 = though there be not so much Bloud in them,

14517 = as was in those of the Ancients.

19835 = But it is not onely the Difficultie, and Labour

17822 = which Men take in finding out of Truth;

14466 = Nor againe, that when it is found,

16605 = it imposeth vpon mens Thoughts;

13519 = that doth bring Lies in fauour,

24851 = But a naturall, though corrupt Loue, of the Lie it selfe.

16509 = One of the later Schoole of the Grecians,

19915 = examineth the matter, and is at a stand, to thinke

21204 = what should be in it, that men should loue Lies;

24494 = Where neither they make for Pleasure, as with Poets;

26333 = Nor for Aduantage, as with the Merchant; but for the Lies sake.

7815 = But I cannot tell:

17572 = This same Truth, is a Naked, and Open day light,

21950 = that doth not shew, the Masques, and Mummeries,

20056 = and Triumphs of the world, halfe so Stately,

10902 = and daintily, as Candlelights.

19942 = Truth may perhaps come to the price of a Pearle,

10647 = that sheweth best by day:

26281 = But it will not rise, to the price of a Diamond or Carbuncle,

16547 = that sheweth best in varied lights.

16697 = A mixture of a Lie doth euer adde Pleasure.

18306 = Doth any man doubt, that if there were taken

15728 = out of Mens Mindes, Vaine Opinions,

15926 = Flattering Hopes, False valuations,

16567 = Imaginations as one would, and the like;

13966 = but it would leaue the Mindes,

17950 = of a Number of Men, poore shrunken Things;

16165 = full of Melancholy, and Indisposition,

13441 = and vnpleasing to themselues?

15790 = One of the Fathers, in great Seuerity,

12325 = called Poesie, Vinum Dæmonum;

14068 = because it filleth the Imagination,

18552 = and yet it is, but with the shadow of a Lie.

23809 = But it is not the Lie, that passeth through the Minde,

19114 = but the Lie that sinketh in, and setleth in it,

20452 = that doth the hurt, such as we spake of before.

19135 = But howsoeuer these things are thus,

17631 = in mens depraued Iudgements, and Affections,

19303 = yet Truth, which onely doth iudge it selfe,

16947 = teacheth, that the Inquirie of Truth,

19407 = which is the Loue-making, or Wooing of it;

24317 = The Knowledge of Truth, which is the Presence of it;

21439 = and the Beleefe of Truth, which is the Enioying of it;

17137 = is the Soueraigne Good of humane Nature.

23316 = The first Creature of God, in the workes of the Dayes,

12236 = was the Light of the Sense;

15062 = The last, was the Light of Reason;

13986 = And his Sabbath Worke, euer since,

16231 = is the Illumination of his Spirit.

24837 = First he breathed Light, vpon the Face, of the Matter or Chaos;

15511 = Then he breathed Light, into the Face of Man;

15000 = and still he breatheth and inspireth

13512 = Light, into the Face of his Chosen.

14216 = The Poet, that beautified the Sect,

22778 = that was otherwise inferiour to the rest,

12983 = saith yet excellently well:

18762 = It is a pleasure to stand vpon the shore

16065 = and to see ships tost vpon the Sea;

21011 = A pleasure to stand in the window of a Castle,

22322 = and to see a Battaile, and the Aduentures thereof, below:

14652 = But no pleasure is comparable, to

21546 = the standing, vpon the vantage ground of Truth

9474 = (A hill not to be commanded,

19050 = and where the Ayre is alwaies cleare and serene;)

17193 = And to see the Errours and Wandrings,

18416 = and Mists, and Tempests, in the vale below:

23256 = So alwaies, that this prospect, be with Pitty,

15853 = and not with Swelling, or Pride.

14791 = Certainly, it is Heauen vpon Earth,

14444 = to haue a Mans Minde moue in Charitie,

9099 = Rest in Prouidence,

16653 = and Turne vpon the Poles of Truth.

 

24147 = To pass from Theologicall and Philosophicall Truth,

16506 = to the Truth of ciuill Businesse;

26945 = It will be acknowledged, euen by those, that practize it not,

24509 = that cleare and Round dealing, is the Honour of Mans Nature;

12692 = And that Mixture of Falshood,

15180 = is like Allay in Coyne of Gold and Siluer,

18979 = which may make the Metall worke the better,

8066 = but it embaseth it.

18111 = For these winding, and crooked courses,

12669 = are the Goings of the Serpent;

23514 = which goeth basely vpon the belly, and not vpon the Feet.

23313 = There is no Vice, that doth so couer a Man with Shame,

14034 = as to be found false, and perfidious.

18522 = And therefore Mountaigny saith prettily,

24123 = when he enquired the reason, why the word of the Lie,

20405 = should be such a Disgrace, and such an Odious Charge?

12538 = Saith he, If it be well weighed,

16568 = To say that a man lieth, is as much to say,

25983 = as that he is braue towards God, and a Coward towards men.

15156 = For a Lie faces God, and shrinkes from Man.

19395 = Surely the Wickednesse of Falshood, and Breach

20429 = of Faith, cannot possibly be so highly expressed,

18582 = as in that it shall be the last Peale, to call the

19854 = Iudgements of God, vpon the Generations of Men,

20293 = It being foretold, that when Christ commeth,

15732 = He shall not finde faith vpon the earth.

1927965

II + III + IV + V =1234460 + 468222 + 197920 + 27363 = 1927965

II. Force without wisdom falls by its own weight

(Gabriel Harvey, September 1593)

1234460

14786 = GORGON, or the wonderfull yeare.

 

3276 = Sonet        

19406 = St Fame dispos’d to cunnycatch the world,

16892 = Uproar’d a wonderment of Eighty Eight:

16495 = The Earth addreading to be overwhurld,

22381 = What now availes, quoth She, my ballance weight?

16310 = The Circle smyl’d to see the Center feare:

20016 = The wonder was, no wonder fell that yeare.

 

22473 = Wonders enhaunse their powre in numbers odd:

16316 = The fatall yeare of yeares is Ninety Three:

17270 = Parma hath kist: De-Maine entreates the rodd:

22246 = Warre wondreth, Peace in Spaine and Fraunce to see.

16323 = Brave Eckenberg, the dowty Bassa shames:

21855 = The Christian Neptune, Turkish Vulcane tames.

 

23504 = Navarre wooes Roome: Charlmaine gives Guise the Phy:

22680 = Weepe Powles, thy Tamberlaine voutsafes to dye.

 

3335 = L’envoy

14215 = The hugest miracle remaines behinde,

18005 = The second Shakerley Rash-Swash to binde.

 

8599 = A Stanza declarative:

16072 = to the Lovers of admirable Workes.

 

14468 = Pleased it hath, a Gentlewoman rare,

17902 = With Phenix quill in diamant hand of Art,

15675 = To muzzle the redoubtable Bull-bare,

15946 = And play the galiard Championesses part.

19416 = Though miracles surcease, yet Wonder see

16292 = The mightiest miracle of Ninety Three.

 

17467 = Vis consilii expers, mole ruit sua.*

 

22204 = The Writers Postscript: or a frendly Caveat

15951 = to the Second Shakerley of Powles.

 

 3276 = Sonet

12467 = Slumbring I lay in melancholy bed,

16780 = Before the dawning of the sanguin light:

19714 = When Echo shrill, or some Familiar Spright

12112 = Buzzed an Epitaph into my hed.

 

16409 = Magnifique Mindes, bred of Gargantuas race,

19616 = In grisly weedes His Obsequies waiment.

27826 = Whose Corps on Powles, whose mind triumph’d on Kent,

16231 = Scorning to bate Sir Rodomont an ace.

 

16241 = I mus’d awhile: and having mus’d awhile,

16337 = Jesu, (quoth I) is that Gargantua minde

14804 = Conquer’d, and left no Scanderbeg behinde?

17313 = Vow’d he not to Powles A Second bile?

 

21454 = What bile, or kibe? (quoth that same early Spright?)

18382 = Have you forgot the Scanderbegging wight?      

 

3509 = Glosse       

14726 = Is it a Dreame?  Or is the Highest minde

20829 = That ever haunted Powles, or hunted winde,

19588 = Bereaft of that same sky-surmounting breath,

21476 = That breath, that taught the Timpany to swell?

 

14297 = He, and the Plague contended for the game:

21808 = The hawty man extolled his hideous thoughtes,

22472 = And gloriously insultes upon poore soules,

26489 = That plague themselves: for faint harts plague themselves.

18315 = The tyrant Sicknesse of base-minded slaves

16178 = Oh how it dominers in Coward Lane?

18095 = So Surquidry rang-out his larum bell,

15505 = When he had girn’d at many a dolefull knell.

18928 = The graund Dissease disdain’d his toade Conceit.

16725 = And smiling at his tamberlaine contempt,

22405 = Sternely struck home the peremptory stroke.

14701 = He that nor feared God, nor dreaded Div’ll,

20326 = Nor ought admired, but his wondrous selfe,

20986 = Like Junos gawdy Bird, that prowdly stares

18475 = On glittring fan of his triumphant taile:

16680 = Or like the ugly Bugg, that scorn’d to dy,

22266 = And mountes of Glory rear’d in towring witt:

18142 = Alas: but Babell Pride must kisse the pitt.

 

3335 = L’envoy

20142 = Powles steeple, and a hugyer thing is downe:

18340 = Beware the next Bull-beggar of the towne.

 

10384 = Fata immatura vagantur.**

2600 = FINIS

1234460

*Force without wisdom falls by its own weight.

** Premature deaths roam abroad

III. Abomination of Desolation

(Contemporary history)

468222

The Gates of Hell

13031 = International Monetary Fund

9948 = Harvard University

7146 = Seðlabanki Íslands – Central Bank of Iceland = 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. Snorri Sturluson – Advice to Young Poets²

(Edda, 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

V. The Building of Christ’s Church

(Construction G. T.)

27363

4119 = Ignorance

Sacred Triangle of Pagan Iceland

7196 = Bergþórshváll

6067 = Miðeyjarhólmr

3027 = Helgafell – Holy Mountain

Divine Revelation

(Matt. 16:16-18)

 -5975 = Simon Peter

5829 = Simon bar Iona

Christ’s Church

Man in God’s Image

7000 = Microcosmos

FINIS

  100 = The End

27363

***

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.

²Translation

Snorri Sturluson‘s Advice to Young Poets

But now one thing must be said to young skalds, to such as yearn to attain to the craft of poesy and to increase their store of figures with traditional metaphors; or to those who crave to acquire the faculty of discerning what is said in hidden phrase: let such an one, then, interpret this book to his instruction and pleasure. Yet one is not so to forget or discredit these traditions as to remove from poesy those ancient metaphors with which it has pleased Chief Skalds to be content; nor, on the other hand, ought Christian men to believe in heathen gods, nor in the truth of these tales otherwise than precisely as one may find here in the beginning of the book.

Flokkar: Óflokkað

Miðvikudagur 4.4.2018 - 14:34 - FB ummæli ()

What is Truth? – Virgin Mother, Daughter of your Son.

© Gunnar Tómasson

4 April 2018

I. Jesting Pilate: What is Truth?

(Francis Bacon and Dante)

45878

Question

16829 = What is Truth; said jesting Pilate;

16465 = and would not stay for an Answer.

Time Out of Joint

 -1000 = Darkness

Answer

13584 = Vergine Madre, figlia del tuo figlio.

45878

See VII = 45878

 

II. Snorri Sturluson – Advice to Young Poets¹

(Edda, 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

 

III. Dante – Commedia²

(1308-1320 A.D.)

197920

Alpha

Inferno Canto I.

15438 = Nel mezzo del cammin di nostra vita

15885 = mi ritrovai per una selva oscura

12588 = ché la diritta via era smarrita.

Lost Path

 -7128 = Yeshua ben Joseph

Found Within

 7000 = Microcosmos – Man in God’s Image

Malachy’s Prophecy – The Last Pope³

(12th century)

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.

Omega

Purgatorio Canto XXXIII.

13922 = Io ritornai da la santissima onda

13853 = rifatto si come piante novelle

13223 = rinnovellate di novella fronda,

16321 = puro e disposto a salire alle stelle.

197920

As in:

14233 = Commedia, Number of Lines

183687 = IV. The Vpstart Crow

197920

IV. The Vpstart Crow

(Stratfordian Myth)

183687

Greene‘s Groatsworth of Wit

(1592)

10282 = Yes trust them not:

29160 = for there is an vp-start Crow, beautified with our feathers,

23774 = that with his Tygers hart wrapt in a Players hyde,

25415 = supposes he is as well able to bombast out a blanke verse

7638 = as the best of you:

16349 = and beeing an absolute Iohannes fac totum,

25466 = is in his owne conceit the onely Shake-scene in a countrey.

Cosmic Time

25920 = Platonic Great Year

The End

19683 = V. Stratfordian Don Quixote de la Mancha

183687

V. Stratfordian Don Quixote de la Mancha

(Construction G. T.)

19683

Alpha

  9539 = Don Quixote de la Mancha

-4000 = Dark Sword – Man-Beast

Omega

Burial Name and Date

10026 = Will Shakspere gent.

2502 = 25 April – 2nd month old-style

1616 = 1616 A.D.

19683

VI. Ben Jonson – Shakespeare Eulogy

(First Folio 1623)

1529523

11150 = To the memory of my beloved,

5329 = The AVTHOR

10685 = Mr. William Shakespeare

867 = AND

9407 = what he hath left us.

 

17316 = To draw no envy (Shakespeare) on thy name,

13629 = Am I thus ample to thy Booke, and Fame:

20670 = While I confesse thy writings to be such,

19164 = As neither Man, nor Muse, can praise too much.

21369 = ‘Tis true, and all mens suffrage. But these wayes

20516 = Were not the paths I meant unto thy praise;

17686 = For seeliest Ignorance on these may light,

23213 = Which, when it sounds at best, but eccho’s right;

17565 = Or blinde Affection, which doth ne’re advance

19375 = The truth, but gropes, and urgeth all by chance;

18692 = Or crafty Malice, might pretend this praise,

19456 = And thinke to ruine, where it seem’d to raise.

18294 = These are, as some infamous Baud, or Whore,

23199 = Should praise a Matron: – What could hurt her more?

18170 = But thou art proofe against them, and indeed

16465 = Above th’ill fortune of them, or the need.

16324 = I, therefore, will begin. Soule of the Age!

20370 = The applause! Delight! The wonder of our Stage!

18434 = My Shakespeare, rise! I will not lodge thee by

16611 = Chaucer or Spenser, or bid Beaumont lye

15597 = A little further, to make thee a roome:

17952 = Thou art a Moniment, without a tombe,

19673 = And art alive still, while thy Booke doth live,

19194 = And we have wits to read, and praise to give.

18259 = That I not mixe thee so, my braine excuses, –

22232 = I meane with great, but disproportion’d Muses;

19760 = For if I thought my judgement were of yeeres,

21584 = I should commit thee surely with thy peeres,

23104 = And tell, how farre thou didst our Lily out-shine,

19727 = Or sporting Kid, or Marlowes mighty line.

21016 = And though thou hadst small Latine, and lesse Greeke,

21296 = From thence to honour thee, I would not seeke

20635 = For names; but call forth thund’ring Æschilus,

14527 = Euripides, and Sophocles to us,

15939 = Paccuvius, Accius, him of Cordova dead,

15425 = To life againe, to heare thy Buskin tread

19665 = And shake a Stage: Or, when thy Sockes were on,

14842 = Leave thee alone for the comparison

18781 = Of all that insolent Greece or haughtie Rome

20033 = Sent forth, or since did from their ashes come.

21540 = Triumph, my Britaine, thou hast one to showe

18910 = To whom all Scenes of Europe homage owe.

14789 = He was not of an age, but for all time!

19879 = And all the Muses still were in their prime,

17867 = When, like Apollo, he came forth to warme

16143 = Our eares, or like a Mercury to charme!

19768 = Nature her selfe was proud of his designes,

18609 = And joy’d to weare the dressing of his lines!

22712 = Which were so richly spun, and woven so fit,

20715 = As, since, she will vouchsafe no other Wit.

16006 = The merry Greeke, tart Aristophanes,

22701 = Neat Terence, witty Plautus, now not please;

12944 = But antiquated, and deserted lye,

15906 = As they were not of Natures family.

17575 = Yet must I not give Nature all; Thy Art,

16885 = My gentle Shakespeare, must enjoy a part:

17709 = For though the Poets matter, Nature be,

16202 = His Art doth give the fashion. And, that he,

24373 = Who casts to write a living line, must sweat

18045 = (such as thine are) and strike the second heat

17403 = Upon the Muses anvile: turne the same,

19618 = (And himselfe with it) that he thinkes to frame;

16266 = Or, for the lawrell, he may gaine a scorne,

15633 = For a good Poet’s made, as well as borne.

21914 = And such wert thou. Looke how the fathers face

15715 = Lives in his issue, even so, the race

20651 = Of Shakespeares minde and manners brightly shines

17328 = In his well torned and true-filed lines:

15712 = In each of which, he seemes to shake a Lance,

14757 = As brandish’t at the eyes of Ignorance.

21616 = Sweet Swan of Avon! What a sight it were

17318 = To see thee in our waters yet appeare,

19678 = And make those flights upon the bankes of Thames,

14184 = That so did take Eliza and our James!

15161 = But stay, I see thee in the Hemisphere

14530 = Advanc’d, and made a Constellation there!

22500 = Shine forth, thou Starre of Poets, and with rage

19541 = Or influence, chide or cheere the drooping Stage;

24007 = Which, since thy flight frō hence, hath mourn’d like night,

18824 = And despaires day, but for thy Volumes light.

 4692 = BEN: IONSON

1529523

VII. Sweet Swan of Avon

(Construction G. T.)

45878

Alpha

1000 = Light of the World

345 = Fallen Soul

2604 = Páfinn – The Pope, Icelandic

4988 = The Vatican

Cosmic Time

25920 = Platonic Great Year

Omega

    216 = Resurrected Soul – 3³+4³+5³=27+64+125=216

10805 = Sweet Swan of Avon

45878

IV + VI + VII = 183687 + 1529523 + 45878 = 1759088

 

VIII. Don Quixote Makes His Will And Dies

(Don Quixote, Vol, II.)

1759088

27611 = With this he closed his will, and a faintness coming over him

20949 = he stretched himself out at full length on the bed.

20696 = All were in a flutter and made haste to relieve him,

17463 = and during the three days he lived after that

22342 = on which he made his will he fainted away very often.

15040 = The house was all in confusion;

20167 = but still the niece ate and the housekeeper drank

12398 = and Sancho Panza enjoyed himself;

32419 = for inheriting property wipes out or softens down in the heir

24346 = the feeling of grief the dead man might be expected to leave behind him.

28268 = At last Don Quixote´s end came, after he had received all the sacraments,

34228 = and had in full and forcible terms expressed his detestation of books of chivalry.

29542 = The notary was there at the time, and he said that in no book of chivalry

22647 = had he ever read of any knight-errant dying in his bed so calmly

16455 = and so like a Christian as Don Quixote,

32055 = who amid the tears and lamentations of all present yielded up his spirit,

7696 = that is to say died.

27750 = On perceiving it the curate begged the notary to bear witness

29391 = that Alonso Quixano the Good, commonly called Don Quixote de la Mancha,

22750 = had passed away from his present life, and died naturally;

30091 = and said he desired his testimony in order to remove the possibility

26809 = of any other author save Cid Hamet Benengeli bringing him to life again

27497 = falsely and making interminable stories out of his achievements.

 

23169 = Such was the end of the Ingenious Gentleman of La Mancha,

24671 = whose village Cid Hamet would not indicate precisely,

23243 = in order to leave all the towns and villages of La Mancha

24798 = to contend among themselves for the right to adopt him

27775 = and claim him as a son, as the seven cities of Greece contended for Homer.

28591 = The lamentation of Sancho and the niece and housekeeper are omitted here,

17685 = as well as the epitaphs upon his tomb;

22950 = Samson Carrasco, however, put the following:

 

11623 = A doughty gentleman lies here;

11939 = A stranger all his life to fear;

14963 = Not in his death could Death prevail,

16017 = In that lost hour, to make him quail.

 

15296 = He for the world but little cared;

17159 = And at his feats the world was scared;

10863 = A crazy man his life he passed,

12887 = But in his senses died at last.

 

15030 = And said most sage Cid Hamet to his pen:

25477 = “Rest here, hung up by this brass wire, upon this shelf,

27926 = O my pen, whether of skilful make or clumsy cut I know not;

15421 = here shalt thou remain long ages hence,

26534 = unless presumptuous or malignant story-tellers

13437 = take thee down to profane thee.

16626 = But ere they touch thee warn them, and,

13996 = as best thou canst, say to them:

 

15774 = Hold off! Ye weaklings; hold your hands!

9994 = Adventure it let none,

14681 = For this emprise, my lord the king,

9772 = Was meant for me alone.

 

20431 = For me alone was Don Quixote born, and I for him;

31410 = it was his to act; mine to write; we two together make but one,

35538 = notwithstanding and in spite of that pretended Tordesillesque writer

30371 = who has ventured or would venture with his great, coarse,

34627 = ill-trimmed ostrich quill to write the achievements of my valiant knight;

29557 = no burden for his shoulders, nor subject for his frozen wit:

24780 = whom, if perchance thou shouldst come to know him,

23130 = thou shalt warn to leave at rest where they lie

20061 = the weary mouldering bones of Don  Quixote,

15642 = and not to attempt to carry him off,

26493 = in opposition to all the privileges of death, to Old Castile,

27957 = making him rise from his grave where in reality and truth he lies

36720 = stretched at full length, powerless to make any third expedition or new sally;

14435 = for the two that he has already made,

16864 = so much to the enjoyment and approval

20027 = of everybody to whom they have become known,

18913 = in this as well as in foreign countries,

30193 = are quite sufficient for the purpose of turning into ridicule

27940 = the whole of those made by the whole set of the knights-errant;

23655 = and so doing shalt thou discharge thy Christian calling,

24714 = giving good counsel to one that bears ill-will to thee.

24111 = And I shall remain satisfied, and proud to have been the first

34507 = who has ever enjoined the fruit of his writings as fully as he could desire;

19183 = for my desire has been no other than to deliver

15638 = over to the detestation of mankind

21030 = the false and foolish tales of the books of chivalry,

21948 = which, thanks to that of my true Don Quixote,

27765 = are even now tottering, and doubtless doomed to fall forever.

  4541 = Farewell.

1759088

 

***

Calculator for converting letters to cipher values is at:

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

¹Translation

Snorri Sturluson‘s Advice to Young Poets

But now one thing must be said to young skalds, to such as yearn to attain to the craft of poesy and to increase their store of figures with traditional metaphors; or to those who crave to acquire the faculty of discerning what is said in hidden phrase: let such an one, then, interpret this book to his instruction and pleasure. Yet one is not so to forget or discredit these traditions as to remove from poesy those ancient metaphors with which it has pleased Chief Skalds to be content; nor, on the other hand, ought Christian men to believe in heathen gods, nor in the truth of these tales otherwise than precisely as one may find here in the beginning of the book.

²Commedia

Alpha

 Halfway through the journey we are living

I found myself deep in a darkened forest,

For I had lost all trace of the straight path.

Omega

Here powers failed my high imagination:

But by now my desire and will were turned,

Like a balanced wheel rotated evenly,

By the Love that moves the sun and the other stars.

³Malachy’s Prophecy – The Last Pope

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.

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.
RSS straumur: RSS straumur

Tenglar