In article
<314874f2-16fc-4f58-88de-8b31d2953635@v3g2000hsc.googlegroups.com>,
Art Neuendorffer
(aneuendorffer114200@comicass.nut) wrote:
[Lunatic logorrhea snipped]
> ______ *LVCRECE*
> ______ {anagram}
> ______ *VERE CCL*
INPNC score only 4/7 -- and it's complete nonsense in any case.
[...]
> __ BLESTE BE Ye MA_{N} Yt___ SPA[RE]S THES STONES,
> ___ AND CVRST BE H_{E} Yt___ MO[VE]S MY BONES.
BLESTE BE Ye MAN Yt
AND CVRST BE HE Yt
[Many screenfuls of lunatic logorrhea snipped]
> <
> found *ARETE*, the queen. And *ARETE* was sitting by her hearth,
> spinning golden & silver threads. Medea came to her, and fell upon
> her KNEES before her, and told her how she had fled from the house
> of her father, King Aeetes. She told *ARETE*, too, how she had
> helped Jason to win the Golden Fleece, and she told her how
> through her her brother had been led to his death. As she told
> this part of her story she wept and prayed at the KNEES of
> the queen. *ARETE* was greatly moved by Medea's tears & prayers.
> She went to Alcinous in his garden, and she begged of him to save
> the Argonauts from the great force of the Colchians that had come
> to cut them off. "The Golden Fleece," said *ARETE*, "has been won
> by the tasks that Jason performed. If the Colchians should take
> Medea, it would be to bring her back to Aea and to a bitter doom.
> And the maiden," said he queen, "has broken my heart by her prayers
> & tears." Medea, looking into the clear eyes of Queen *ARETE*,
> knew that she was the woman of whom Circe had prophesied,
> the woman who knew nothing of enchantments, but who had much
> human wisdom. She was to ask of her what she was to do in her life
> and what she was to leave undone. And what this woman told her
> Medea was t=F3 regard. *ARETE* told her that she was to forget
> all the witcheries and enchantments that she knew, and that she
> was never to practice against the life of any one. This she told
> Medea upon the shore, before Jason lifted her aboard the Argo.>>
But Art -- "arete" is Spanish for "earring," which in turn is an
anagram of "A ringer"!
[...]
> (Portugal & Britain were Knight's Templar strongholds
> . during the 16th century
> . and shared St. George as their Patron Saint.
> HiRAM also has overtones of the "Order of the Golden Fleece".)
Most lunatics generally get around to mentioning the Templars
sooner or later.
[Lunatic logorrhea snipped]
> . Excerpted from Gerard de Sede, Les templiers sont parmi nous,
> . ou l'enigme de Gisors, (The Templars Are Among Us, or the
> . Enigma of Gisors),
Now *there's* a reliable source!
> Julliard, Paris. 1962
> . http://www.memorymap.com/plantard_01.htm
> .
> <
> which opens every seventy years to contemplate the Universe
> [eye =3D ayin =3D 70], the ship Argo that transported the Golden
> Fleece, in Christianity the modest barque of Peter.
> It is the symbolic Ark where nothing profane can penetrate
> without incurring punishment: "To the sacriligious a fall,
> to the thief death within a year." Only those who are capable
> of working the cube of the wood of Mars - that magic "die"
> entrusted to the vigilance of two children: Castor and Pollux
> - to perfection, in every sense, can enter there.>>
Did you misspell "Castor and Bollocks," Art?
> -------------------------------------------------------------
> Art Neuendorffer