Nostradamus C7 Q14: He who comes to expose the false topography.
Copyright: Allan Webber, December 2015, 2022
The
text of the second of the two verses (C7 Q14) containing anagrams for
channels has the deep sense of mystery that distinguishes C1 Q21. In
this instance the metaphor underpinning the text can be perceived as the
tale of the decoder of Nostradamus' enigmatic works. And its wording
suggests that this decoder brings to light the lack of story line in the
visible words and in so doing shows the way an ancient story will be
enlivened.
The process challenges 21st century readers by upsetting previous
methods and assumptions (about Nostradamus being limited by his 16th
century knowledge base) and providing evidence showing Nostradamus'
modernity.
In this verse The most poignant of the anagrams go straight to
the essence of Nostradamus' work and in so doing echo the implications
of the text. These anagrams can be grouped in ways that say
propagator' channels phoneticalise graph proves poetries quatreins
cluster expose ancestries secret demonesses. Note
the compelling nature of anagrams such as poetries,
quatreins / verses and cluster all of
which are critical elements of these trails I am currently outlining.
Anagrams in this verse include several names in
the line where an anagram for phoneticalise occurs. Now one of the best
means of embedding names in text where lettering is the prime mechanism
is to use a phonetic profile instead of relying on immaculate spelling.
So the profile 'Nstrdmus' would be sufficient to carry Nostradamus name.
Many variants are possible so an optimal choice can be made that suits
the need for a credible text yet isn't so devoid of structure that it is
easily noticed. Interestingly using this scheme the last line's anagrams
can then be re-ordered to give an adjacent sequence that says:
ALNUBR chosen poetries
our quaint Poets-verse
ur_blan ches_no ires_et_Po
our antiq es_vertes Po
black for white and
the new for the old
As with C1 Q51 the anagrams also enlighten the
wording in the text; the false topography exposed alludes to the
disclosure of the prophecies messages hidden in the lettering but it
also links this message to an ongoing story line about women's
ancient role in notable religious events. It swaps the meaning of fixed
events (such as the death of Christ) by turning what was once heresy
into orthodoxy.
DATA section
C7 Q14
He will come to expose the false
topography,
the urns of the tombs will be opened.
Sect and
holy philosophy to thrive,
black for white and the new for
the old.
Faux expoSer viendra topographie,
Seront les cruches des monumens ouuertes.
Palluler Secte Saincte philoSophie,
Pour blanches noires et pour antiques vertes.
Anagrams hidden in the French Text
-
<propagator driven uxe expoSe><invader topograph exposurex>
-
<norSe celts crushed uuomens true omens><Seers uurote ones he
summonsed> <she Sees uuomens true demons>
-
<philo ioSeph Pall rule Sect><loopS /Spool/ Pools
pantheic secrets><Sect rule phoneticaliSe
all ><ancestries>
-
<Poets verse><quatreins><quite runa poetries alnubr chosen><channels
our poetries><Poets chosen alnubr reputation
rise>
Extra Info:
There are only singular
occurrences of
both poetries and
channels and there are no anagrams other than those in this verse for
poets-verse or poetries-channels even as composite anagrams. There are no
occurrences where poets and verse appear as whole but separate anagrams in
the same line and only four other places where the jumbled lettering of
these two words is found in two parts.
There are no split anagrams
at all for 'poetries-channels'.
So
the fact that these two word pairs appear as adjacent anagrams in
different parts of the same line cannot easily be dismissed as the product
of chance.
The anagrams tell us that the person who unveils the prophecies will
gain his reputation by his publication of the cruellest verses with themes
reminiscent of the pantheism in the works of both
Philo and
Joseph.
There are many cruel verses that can validate these words as shown in my
papers titled
Mutations,
Floods,
Fire in
the Sky and
Nostradamus on War.
FREQUENCIES OF RAREST OCCURRENCE in
Centuries
- phoneticalise, propagator, summonsed, exposurex,
pantheic, channels, popeish, crushed, alnubr, proves, graph,
- Ioseph, reputation(s), churnable, consulter,
subpolar, summoned, uuomens, Polish, Sophie, hoops,
- overstrained, cruellest, reselects, poetries,
cluster, ouuners / uuorsen,
- quatreins, loops /spool/pools, eversion, inshore,
uteruses, tevets, Ophis,
- expose, ancestries, secrets, demoness, predation,
resistance,
- posturer, reselect, Philo
- cruelest / lectures, labour, chosen / Enochs, shone
/ hones,
- -
- inquest
- antiques, quatrein,
- heeds,
- poets,
- restores, Chesed,
- ordinate, respite, revise,
- -
- -
- demons, atop, menu,
- shed, pox,
- Celts, poet,
- uuoes / ouues, harp,
- derivant, souu, hip (2x),
- Argo,
- electrons.
Key Ideas:
poets verse, poetries channels, reputation, phoneticalise,
propagator, overstrained, reputations, summonsed, pantheic, subpolar,
consulter, cruellest, quatrein, predation, Philo, pantheism, proves,
Polish, womens, demons, secret cult, worsen, Joseph, inshore, antiques,
lectures.
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