Sequential quatrains about D-Day



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Topic: Science > Prophecies-Of-Nostradamus
User: "Claude Latremouille"
Date: 22 May 2004 12:54:29 PM
Object: Sequential quatrains about D-Day
A few interesting discoveries flowing from the decyphering of
Nostradamus' poetry highlight the intended juxtaposition by
Nostradamus of some quatrains. On the upcoming 60th anniversary
of D-Day (June 6, 1944), it is quite fitting to quote two
consecutive quatrains which produce eight consecutive lines of
decyphered prose. They are I-29 and I-30:
*
-------------- C E N T V R I E___P R E M I E R E. ------------
----------------------- (édition de 1555) --------------------
*
---- 29 - Quand le poisson terrestre & aquatique -------------
--------- Par forte vague au grauier sera mis, ---------------
--------- Sa forme estrange suaue & horrifique, --------------
--------- Par mer aux murs bien tost les ennemis. ------------
*
---- 30 - La nef estrange par le tourment marin --------------
--------- Abourdera pres de port incongneu, ------------------
--------- Nonobstant signes de rameau palmerin ---------------
--------- Apres mort,pille:bon auis tard venu. ---------------
*
These eight lines of poetry produce, in cryptic anagrams, the
following eight lines of prose:
*
1 ------- D'Angleterre, le très bon U S atacque tous ---------
2 ------- les Germains par forte vague, après ----------------
3 ------- un triste message fort magnifique pour -------------
4 ------- nostre très beau Six Iuin tant espéré : ------------
5 ------- Tous les marins d'Angleterre amènent ---------------
6 ------- une grande troupe en Normandie, car ----------------
7 ------- les Germains ne les attendent par une si -----------
8 ------- grosse mer, vn danger pour batailler. --------------
*
We find in the last four lines what was already hinted at in the
first two lines of I-29. A tale about the weather, luring the
occupant into thinking that such an agitated sea would never be
used by the Allies for a landing in France, as it represents an
obvious danger for their fighting forces. Nostradamus also points
out that all of England's sailors had been conscripted into
providing any kind of boats to the landing effort.
*
So, with the usual asterisks between words no longer used or
spelled thus, here is an approximate rendition into modern
English of these eight lines: 'From England, the very good U S
*attacks* all the *Germans* by a strong sea, after a most
magnificent sad message for *our* beautiful *June* Six much hoped
for: all of England's sailors bring large troops into Normandy,
as the *Germans* are not expecting them by such a strong sea, *a*
danger for battle.'
*
These consecutive lines of decyphered sequential text ought to
have triggered in my mind the idea that perhaps Nostradamus'
prose was also encyphered in the very same manner. Unfortunately,
they did not. I merely viewed these two consecutive poems as an
exception to Nostradamus' general practice of dealing with
different subjects in different poems.
*
Another trick used by Nostradamus in his encyphered texts: he
sometimes uses the very same four lines of poetry to produce
eight lines of decyphered prose! And these eight lines are also
sequential, as if they had come from two consecutive but distinct
quatrains. This is possible through the technique of polygraphy,
the art of hiding more than one text inside the very same
encyphered text.
*
Clever, eh, this Nostradamus?!
*
------------------- %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
Claude Latrémouille % -- "Claude! There ain't no stinkin' -- %
Le 22 mai 2004 ---- % cryptic anagrams in them dang verses,- %
APNCL#1422 -------- % ya hear?!" (A chorus of a.p.n. voices) %
------------------- %%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
*
===
===
=== CLAUDE LATRÉMOUILLE ===
===========================
--
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C L A U D E L A T R E M O U I L L E
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