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To: bagster; Cats Pajamas

#BlameItOnTheRabbis
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~

ROFL!

Exactly.... punchline from an old shaggy dog story:

“Silly rabbi, kicks are for Trids!”


1,088 posted on 02/09/2019 10:54:26 PM PST by TEXOKIE
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To: TEXOKIE; generally; bitt; Steven W.
Hang on a tick tock, incoming.....

In honor of "smart as a box of hair" Occasionally finds a-Cortex, I fell down another white rabbi hole this morning looking for GREEN New Deals.

In this Matrix of Red pill sleep walking, I now dream of Owls and Large White Rabbits thanks in part to Q, so I will begin with today's dig of Language of the Birds or The Green Language used by the "Illuminated" perhaps taught to the adepts by the Green Man.

https://www.ancientwisdomoftheancestors.com/language-of-the-birds

"The Language of the Birds, known as the Green Language or the Language of the Gods, embraces Kabbalah, Astrology, Alchemy and Tarot. Its grammar is symbolism, holographic symbolism, when properly understood. The language of the birds was considered a secret and perfect language and the key to perfect knowledge. It assists with the ascension of human consciousness in the alchemy of time Thoth, the Egyptian Bird Headed God, scripted the languages of our reality, to be viewed as symbolic messages through the ages, and finally brought to light at the end of the cycles of time."

Q tells us frequently symbolism will be their downfall.

You might recall in National Treasure Benjamin Franklin Gates procured an ocular device so as to be able to see the Map leading to the Treasure.

Owls have binocular vision, their large eyes are fixed in their sockets so they must turn their entire heads to change views. ... Their far vision, particularly in low light, is exceptionally good. Owls can rotate their heads and necks as much as 270° in either direction, and 90° up-and-down, without moving the rest of their bodies.

Rabbits (Conies) have an excellent sense of smell, hearing and vision. They have nearly 360° panoramic vision, allowing them to detect predators from all directions but it also leaves them with a blind spot right in front of them.

Before Francis began earning his Bacon Shaking the Speare there were others practicing their poiesis on we unsuspecting Conies (or if you rather-White Rabbits, WHO ARE ALWAYS LATE TO THE TEA PARTY IN WONDERLAND.)

Robert Greene (1558–1592) was an English dramatist, poet, pamphleteer, rake and debauchee. He appears as a minor character in both of Anthony Burgess' Elizabethan novels Nothing Like The Sun (about Shakespeare) and A Dead Man In Deptford (about Marlowe). A graduate of Clare Hall, Cambridge, he eloped with a wealthy woman whom he abandoned after having spent all her money. He then went to London, where he lived by writing, associated with whores, thieves, and low fellows of every kind, and spent money faster than he got it on drunkenness and debauchery. The "Groatsworth of Wit", also available on this site, is his best known work, and has the first reference in print to William Shakespeare as a playwright. In addition he wrote six plays, an amount of poetry and numerous pamphlets, mostly love stories and accounts of criminals and swindlers.

"Greene titillates readers with stories about “coney-catching” (a euphemistic metaphor for theft; a “coney” was an early-modern term for a rabbit), and cut-pursing, which involved literally cutting open someone’s bag without them noticing."

The unfortunate Greene turned to composing lurid accounts of Elizabethan "true crime," coining the term "cony-catching" for the conmen and conwomen who gulled their credulous victims, called conies or rabbits, which he recounted in a series of cheap pamphlets, A notable discouery of coosenage (1591), a two-part Conny-catching (1591Ð2), and A disputation between a hee conny-catcher and a shee conny-catcher (1592). The pamphlett shown here boasts this woodcut on its title page adorned with the Visiter, the Shifter and Rufflar, their Doxies, the Priggers, and the Losels all practicing their black arts upon their conies or rabbits.

https://www.exclassics.com/cony/conyconts.htm

"In the six pamphlets here collected you will learn about the tricks of cony-catchers (swindlers), nips (cutpurses), foists (pickpockets), cross-biters (men who extort money from a prostitute's clients by pretending to be her husband), lifts (shoplifters, and stealers of other unguarded goods), priggers (horse thieves), and courbers (thieves who drag goods out through the window with a long hooked pole). Based on close observation, and illustrated with stories of notable strokes, they give a great insight into the underside of queen Bess's and Shakespeare's London."

https://www.exclassics.com/cony/conyglos.htm#cate

Glossary of words they used in an obsolete sense.

An excellent collection for those interested.

I also dream lately of numbers. And as Q has posted 5:5 on occasion, I looked just on the off chance at Shakespeare's sonnet 55.

Not marble, nor the gilded monuments

Of princes, shall outlive this powerful rhyme;

But you shall shine more bright in these contents

Than unswept stone, besmeared with sluttish time.

When wasteful war shall statues overturn

And broils root out the work of masonry,

Not Mars his sword, nor war’s quick fire, shall burn

The living record of your memory:

’Gainst death, and all oblivious enmity,

Shall you pace forth; your praise shall still find room

Even in the eyes of all posterity

That wear this world out to the ending doom.

So, till the judgement that yourself arise,

You live in this, and dwell in lovers’ eyes.

—William Shakespeare

Well in Sonnet 55 there is mention of Marble monuments, sword, death, war, unswept stone, the God-Mars, Masonry, and arise (Shades of Masonic secrets)

the Dome-ancient structural representation of the womb of Isis

the Obelisk-ancient representation of the erect male phallus of Osiris

Q has asked where do roads lead?

https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uva.x002690915;view=1up;seq=25

(fascinating historical read for those so inclined, page 22 involving Francis Pope, owner of "Rome" on the Tyber-what we know today as Washington D.C., The District of Columbia)

http://wetheonepeople.com/did-you-know-that-washington-dc-was-once-called-rome/

http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/15558a.htm

..."Father Andrew White, S.J., "the Apostle of Maryland", was the first priest to visit this region: in 1639 he established a mission at Kittamaquund, a few miles below Washington, and, with solemn ceremony, baptized the tayac, or "Emperor of Piscataway". He also carried the Gospel still nearer to a Washington. The "Annual Letter" for 1641 mentions that the King of the Anacostans was a most promising candidate for baptism. The tribe from which the Anacostia River (eastern branch) is named, dwelt in the immediate neighbourhood, and on the site of the national capital: so that the history of Catholicism in the District is traced back to the earliest days of Lord Baltimore's Colony. As settlements advanced up the country from lower Maryland, a fair proportion of those who acquired land in what is now the District were Catholics. In 1669 "a parcell of land. . .called Rome. . .was layd out of Francis Pope. . .extending to the south of an inlet called Tiber"; this gentleman, "Pope of Rome on the Tiber", was sheriff of Charles County, and, in all probability, a Catholic. The well-known families of Carroll, Digges, Queen, and Young were the possessors of extensive landed estates before the American Revolution."

https://ghostsofdc.org/2014/02/11/washington-originally-called-rome/

..."America had its own Rome on the Tiber, and a Pope lived there."

The brothers and sisters of the OWL know our blind spot is right in front of us and that is where they put their symbolism. We are the treasure and they have the map. We never see it coming.

1,453 posted on 02/10/2019 5:53:55 PM PST by Cats Pajamas (Freedom or Liberty? Which would you choose?)
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