Nostradamus C9 Q09: The terrible unfortunate fate involving IS late in this century.
Copyright: Allan Webber, December 2015
This verse is a morality tale linked to the visions
found in the preceding verses. It is obvious from the text that it holds
an allusion to ancient Greece and in the anagrams we find,
Spartans
(ſſant par)
and
Theos (=God)
lose
heroic
Hellas (=Greece
) (esTho-
loſe- cheoir - les hal) as well as terms that tie the Spartans to a land
based strength. There is also a reference in the text to the eternal lamp
which ties into
the previous verse where an anagram for protium is found and
this material is the form of hydrogen that helps the sun supply an eternal
light and other forms of energy.
But there is yet another twist to the anagrams. By
choosing Spartans as his allusion Nostradamus is highlighting the
qualities and the flaws in the IS cult. The Spartans were considered
superior warriors, committed totally to their state and cause but that was
not enough to ensure their dominance of Hellas for the narrowness of their
views and the draconian treatment they used to maintain their regime meant
their strength could only have a limited life span. And there are two
anagram that unites the destiny of the
Spartans and IS for it tells us that they are both
terrible and
unfortunate (ſſant par - r
trible E - nfant trouue)
.
The anagrams that frame the story of this current verse
include:
1. Equal land map prenamed Gibun unfeted feud in next exit
2. Seers staves uurote Tower eras amputee
tales
3. Feuu wrote unfortunate Spartans terrible
part fennetan inferable
4. My Theos
holier echo heroic Hellas
shall reaspire
C9 Q09
Original Verse in English and French (Benoit Ed.)
When lamp burning with inextinguishable fire Will be found in
the temple of the Vestals Child found in fire water passing
through sieve To perish in water Nimes, Toulouse markets
fall.
Quand lampe ardente de feu inextinguible Sera trouuee au temple
des Veſtales Enfant trouue feu eau paſſant par trible Perir eau
Nymes Tholoſe cheoir les halles.
Adjacent Anagrams plus Anagrams of highest
merit. ( ~ means full line used) Selection Order based on letter
rarity, word and sequence length plus line completion
L1: <in next fiue><eQual feted land prenamed><exiting-blue vien
parented feed><read land map>
L2: <~amputee uurote eraS
VeSseled tales~><leSser StaVes><~reaSsert taleS ouue amputee> rareSt
arreSt
L3: <unfortunate part tErrible fee><turnout SatanS
rEfinable part><Spartan pauSe><auue paSS>feuu uurote
L4: <she
close all Those my holier halls resPire><~naiver loSe Those my heroic
hellas rePelS~>
Table listing anagram occurrences (1-23) in
Nostradamus' Prophecies
1: unfortunate, vesseled, 2: inferable / refinable,
mytunes, hall, Hellas, 3: rose-uuaters, landmap, Spartans, staves,
4: deplumate, holier, delves, ethos / those / theos, 5:
amputee, presell, 6: dampener / prenamed, premade, unitex, loose,
vests, 7: turnout, terrible, Pamela, feted, 8: rose-uuater,
heroic, arrests, 9: - 10: Yuan, 11: - 12: parented, ,
13: exit, next, 14: Vesta / stave, host, Seth, 15:
reassert, 16: chose, Oslo / solo, 17: arriue, 18: Satans,
19: - 20: respire, 21: Pierre, 22: - 23: -
Key Ideas:
Hellas, unfortunate, heroic, Spartans, vesseled,
holier, Theos, my-tunes, inferable, solo, feted, prenamed, staves, delves,
chose, exit, premade, amputee, arrests, unites, Satans, land map, loose,
next, terrible, host, parented.
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