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The St. Germain Code - Pt.2: St. Germain & the Dragon
The dragon of alchemy "devours, fertilizes, begets, slays,
and brings itself to life again."
In the Book of Hermes, Pymander appears to Hermes in the shape of
a Fiery Dragon of "Light, Fire, and Flame."
Pymander is the "Thought Divine" personified.
Secrets of the Dragon
The untold tale of St. Germain and the Dragon is hinted at in the first sentence of his Triangle Book: “The Holy Magic revealed to Moses discovered within an Egyptian monument and preciously preserved in Asia under the emblem of a winged dragon.”
This is the secret "hidden since before the Great Flood"…a dual secret of mythic immortality and divine lineage. At first this might seem like a strictly alchemical statement, but then we know there is no such thing for alchemy has many layers of meaning, and ciphers add more. Nothing is simply what it seems.
So, we must ask specifically, what did this winged dragon mean to St. Germain? What does it mean in the context of the Triangle Book? Where did the book come from? Was it an heirloom of his family, a treasure from the Medicis, or St. Germain's own artistic alchemical manifesto -- a virtuoso piece, uniting all his fantasies about his family, his heritage and his aspirations for life extension and magical illumination.
The Medicis who later fostered young St. Germain were the first to print the Corpus Hermeticum (1460). They thought it was ancient Egyptian though the writings are from 100-300 CE. Whatever their origin, the young Count could not have avoided reading them with great interest and embracing their philosophy.
Alchemy, magic, royal bloodlines, Dragon cult, Life Extension, Spies, Secret Societies, Vampires, more.
Iona
ionatopia.50megs.com
The dragon of alchemy "devours, fertilizes, begets, slays,
and brings itself to life again."
In the Book of Hermes, Pymander appears to Hermes in the shape of
a Fiery Dragon of "Light, Fire, and Flame."
Pymander is the "Thought Divine" personified.
Secrets of the Dragon
The untold tale of St. Germain and the Dragon is hinted at in the first sentence of his Triangle Book: “The Holy Magic revealed to Moses discovered within an Egyptian monument and preciously preserved in Asia under the emblem of a winged dragon.”
This is the secret "hidden since before the Great Flood"…a dual secret of mythic immortality and divine lineage. At first this might seem like a strictly alchemical statement, but then we know there is no such thing for alchemy has many layers of meaning, and ciphers add more. Nothing is simply what it seems.
So, we must ask specifically, what did this winged dragon mean to St. Germain? What does it mean in the context of the Triangle Book? Where did the book come from? Was it an heirloom of his family, a treasure from the Medicis, or St. Germain's own artistic alchemical manifesto -- a virtuoso piece, uniting all his fantasies about his family, his heritage and his aspirations for life extension and magical illumination.
The Medicis who later fostered young St. Germain were the first to print the Corpus Hermeticum (1460). They thought it was ancient Egyptian though the writings are from 100-300 CE. Whatever their origin, the young Count could not have avoided reading them with great interest and embracing their philosophy.
Alchemy, magic, royal bloodlines, Dragon cult, Life Extension, Spies, Secret Societies, Vampires, more.
Iona
ionatopia.50megs.com
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