Ok I was going over all of the words outlined in a box found in the pages shared by agent pincoushin1 in the Essex...
Ok I was going over all of the words outlined in a box found in the pages shared by agent pincoushin1 in the Essex telegram channel and I think I found something interesting.
I came up with this paragraph of words:
"free the philosopher’s stone gates of a temple oracles across the earth roar again man of the shadows the lesser gods of the earth enshrine chiron deep dream within the hour flashing fa in e lo d s reap the sign the green face night will be red the mighty deep to sleep their own ship berserk the force a wolf at bay god of battle, lonely watcher they rushed out into the street rose a poet the savage sage the spectre red field horror thunder death a shade surges ancient phantoms beneath a thunder-tree the night-sounds called to me tall masts grey fiends wave evermore a tall ship where splendors are two ancient foes have met at last the sightless blind hands lock roared the mighty phantom"
Now what really got me puzzled was the "fa in e lo d s" but thinking upon it further I was thinking it could be fain lodes or "pleased/with pleasure" and "a vein of metal ore in the earth". Now that makes sense if you look at the words and break it down into lines (one line per page):
"Free the philosopher’s stone, gates of a temple
Oracles across the earth roar again
Man of the Shadows, the lesser gods of the earth.
Enshrine Chiron
Deep
Dream
Within the hour
Flashing fain lodes reap the Sign the green face
Night will be red the mighty deep; to sleep.
Their own ship berserk the force of a wolf at bay god of battle
Lonely watcher they rushed out into the street
Rose a poet the savage sage
The spectre
Red field horror thunder death a shade surges
Ancient phantoms
Beneath a thunder-tree. The night-sounds called to me.
Tall masts grey fiends wave evermore.
A tall ship where splendors are.
Two ancient foes have met at last. The sightless blind hands lock.
Roared the mighty phantom"
Now I'm not saying I know what this means all together but this line: Flashing fain lodes reap the Sign the green face, well I have an idea on that part and working on how it all fits together. My idea is regarding ancient copper mining. Copper turns green and copper can run in veins through the earth. Michigan's upper peninsula is also known as Michigan's Copper Country for a reason.
In this PDF https://www.michigan.gov/documents/deq/CMG92_301731_7.pdf on page 6 there is a sentence in the next to last paragraph in the left column of text; "Then came coarse appearing lumps with tell-tale signs of green that proved to be copper slag." So it's possible that this line could be talking about copper veins that can be reflective depending on how much copper is exposed but also will have the tell tale signs of green (the green face reference?).
What do you think?
Link to the post by Luís Romudas with the PDF of the images from the artifact retrieved from Cross Plains, TX:
https://plus.google.com/u/0/+Lu%C3%ADsRomudas/posts/MRgngFwC6gK
Link to the drive with the original images:
https://drive.google.com/open?id=1IDKVH3_uMkLL-elGQdXv6Eq6X-ybAuAt
Edgar Allan Wright flint dille H. Richard Loeb Hank Johnson John Hanke Ingress
I came up with this paragraph of words:
"free the philosopher’s stone gates of a temple oracles across the earth roar again man of the shadows the lesser gods of the earth enshrine chiron deep dream within the hour flashing fa in e lo d s reap the sign the green face night will be red the mighty deep to sleep their own ship berserk the force a wolf at bay god of battle, lonely watcher they rushed out into the street rose a poet the savage sage the spectre red field horror thunder death a shade surges ancient phantoms beneath a thunder-tree the night-sounds called to me tall masts grey fiends wave evermore a tall ship where splendors are two ancient foes have met at last the sightless blind hands lock roared the mighty phantom"
Now what really got me puzzled was the "fa in e lo d s" but thinking upon it further I was thinking it could be fain lodes or "pleased/with pleasure" and "a vein of metal ore in the earth". Now that makes sense if you look at the words and break it down into lines (one line per page):
"Free the philosopher’s stone, gates of a temple
Oracles across the earth roar again
Man of the Shadows, the lesser gods of the earth.
Enshrine Chiron
Deep
Dream
Within the hour
Flashing fain lodes reap the Sign the green face
Night will be red the mighty deep; to sleep.
Their own ship berserk the force of a wolf at bay god of battle
Lonely watcher they rushed out into the street
Rose a poet the savage sage
The spectre
Red field horror thunder death a shade surges
Ancient phantoms
Beneath a thunder-tree. The night-sounds called to me.
Tall masts grey fiends wave evermore.
A tall ship where splendors are.
Two ancient foes have met at last. The sightless blind hands lock.
Roared the mighty phantom"
Now I'm not saying I know what this means all together but this line: Flashing fain lodes reap the Sign the green face, well I have an idea on that part and working on how it all fits together. My idea is regarding ancient copper mining. Copper turns green and copper can run in veins through the earth. Michigan's upper peninsula is also known as Michigan's Copper Country for a reason.
In this PDF https://www.michigan.gov/documents/deq/CMG92_301731_7.pdf on page 6 there is a sentence in the next to last paragraph in the left column of text; "Then came coarse appearing lumps with tell-tale signs of green that proved to be copper slag." So it's possible that this line could be talking about copper veins that can be reflective depending on how much copper is exposed but also will have the tell tale signs of green (the green face reference?).
What do you think?
Link to the post by Luís Romudas with the PDF of the images from the artifact retrieved from Cross Plains, TX:
https://plus.google.com/u/0/+Lu%C3%ADsRomudas/posts/MRgngFwC6gK
Link to the drive with the original images:
https://drive.google.com/open?id=1IDKVH3_uMkLL-elGQdXv6Eq6X-ybAuAt
Edgar Allan Wright flint dille H. Richard Loeb Hank Johnson John Hanke Ingress
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