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Post by npsbuilder on Mar 21, 2020 2:12:09 GMT -5
I think alot of the keys to this huge puzzle is hidden in numbers and gematria. This is not bigger than marrying the poem to a map, but important in confirmation. ”As I have gone alone in there” There = Three, I=F, F=6 3 x 6, 666 This hints heavily into Hermetic Kabbalism for those into that (rabbit hole?). Alone in there. Learned something new tonight. Gematria, for me will be fun to play with. If I did this correct, Secret has a value of 466. If we were to change 1 letter to another 1 a good place to start may be the 5th stanza. We have tired and now I'm weak. This works because I must go. I'm gonna have some fun tomorrow and see what comes letters to values and letters to other letters. THANKS...grapette
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Post by goldilocks on Mar 21, 2020 8:58:18 GMT -5
I have never heard of this but sounds similar to the substitution method used in The Gold Bug by Poe, only more complicated.
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Post by astree on Mar 21, 2020 9:30:55 GMT -5
I think alot of the keys to this huge puzzle is hidden in numbers and gematria. This is not bigger than marrying the poem to a map, but important in confirmation. ”As I have gone alone in there” There = Three, I=F, F=6 3 x 6, 666 This hints heavily into Hermetic Kabbalism for those into that (rabbit hole?). Alone in there. I think there are quite a few numeric connections that could be made in the poem and whether they are coincidental or just for fun or could be of assistance is for the searcher to determine. X = 24, X is missing from the poem and there are 24 lines in the poem AS is The first word of the poem, and it is the symbol for arsenic, which is element 33. 33 is a number of mystery. 11:11 is another set of numbers that some feel have special significance, and there are four “one” in the poem (one occurence is backwards). 4 ALL 2 SEEK... (theres a 42, another well known number, and reverse of the 24) 4(1,12,12) + 2(19,5,5,11) 180 in context, forrest goes and leaves, doing a 180
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Post by grapette79or80 on Mar 21, 2020 16:52:47 GMT -5
I think alot of the keys to this huge puzzle is hidden in numbers and gematria. This is not bigger than marrying the poem to a map, but important in confirmation. ”As I have gone alone in there” There = Three, I=F, F=6 3 x 6, 666 This hints heavily into Hermetic Kabbalism for those into that (rabbit hole?). Alone in there. I think there are quite a few numeric connections that could be made in the poem and whether they are coincidental or just for fun or could be of assistance is for the searcher to determine. X = 24, X is missing from the poem and there are 24 lines in the poem AS is The first word of the poem, and it is the symbol for arsenic, which is element 33. 33 is a number of mystery. 11:11 is another set of numbers that some feel have special significance, and there are four “one” in the poem (one occurence is backwards). 4 ALL 2 SEEK... (theres a 42, another well known number, and reverse of the 24) 4(1,12,12) + 2(19,5,5,11) 180 in context, forrest goes and leaves, doing a 180 That’s brilliant. The Three-L’s of the Chase. Triangle is 180 degrees.
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Post by npsbuilder on Mar 22, 2020 2:15:37 GMT -5
Missing intel is fitting for what I just figured out. With ff using the words he chose to use and says don't mess with it. I started thinking about what is missing in the poem and words that are or were misspelled and have been changed/corrected. In another thread discussing the nouns and how they are presented in the poem using THE, MY and YOUR. The way ff uses I've and I'm in the 5th stanza has been discussed in the past and WHY he chose to use them this way. The missing letters are - h a i - . I found it very interesting what hai means and it's etymology. The English etymology is - a purposeful misspelling The numeral is - 4 As used in other languages some of the meanings are - fire, yes, poker(high card), hi, and many more en.wiktionary.org/wiki/hai ff has asked what words are key and sometimes says what word is key...IMO currently and using this thinking - hai - is key to understanding 1 part of figuring out the riddle in the poem and how to use it to location
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Post by zaphod73491 on Mar 22, 2020 2:58:04 GMT -5
Four and death are very near homonyms (sounds like "sei") in Mandarin Chinese. Like the lack of a 13th floor in most American buildings, there is a similar missing floor 4 (and 14) in Shanghai buildings. I've noticed many would-be Chinese home-buyers on the west coast will not purchase a home with a street address of 4 (or 44), and as such some of the newer neighborhood developments skip that address (and 13). Silly, yes, but superstitions have to be taken into account in marketing.
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Post by astree on Mar 22, 2020 9:11:39 GMT -5
. “go” means 5 in japanese.
It is also a board game (chess on steroids?)
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