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RE: Knight of the Cart
T
At 22:18 13/11/00 -0800, you wrote:
William,
Though I enjoyed your treatise
in general, I found the following particularly interesting:
William
Buehler wrote:
I will only take up your
time with a look at the Horse's function and inner meaning. First
understand that the Heel (Chief Head) Stone goes through a transformation
to become a gate system (Ps 118 again) that cosmetrically shows up in an L
shape. This gate system is not simply an innerdimensional gate, it is an
intratemporal or "time" gate and depends on a State of Being related to
the Christ in quality, of the operator(s) to safely and efficiently use
it. The Horse is used as a symbol for such a system, relating to the "L"
gate. Two examples: the Knight's Move in chess is the L, also in the
Hebrew alphabet the L is the letter gamel, #3, drawn as an L in the
protosiniatic version ("gamel" means camel, a horse substitute in the
Mideast).
It made me think of two things:
1. The emphasis in Freemasonry on perpendiculars and the
"angle of a square", etc.
2. The perpendicular is the
direction taken when moving from one dimension to a higher one -- from a
point to a line, a line to a plane, a plane to a solid. Within the
lower dimension, the perpendicular extension to the next dimension is seen
as a mere point -- exhibiting location perhaps, but no measureable
reality. In our 3-dimensional "physical" world, I picture each human
mind as such a point, extending in directions not measureable by wordly
gauges.
Loved the reference to the Knight's Move in chess. I'm
not familiar with the horse symbology, though it sounds very intriguing.
Regards,
Michael Petros
The French maintained
that Henry's 'coat-of-arms' showed the head of a camel which, on reading the
above, would seem
to fit in with his unique position as Head of the
Sinclair family which, as heir to the Templar knowledge, mystique and
power,
had a strategy which transcended national boundaries.
Six
hundred years later, we are beginning to understand the underlying motives,
the raison d'etre, for his voyage to the
New World and this will
have full discussion in Dr Tim Wallace Murphy's and Marilyn Hopkin's new book
on that historic
voyage. I have been privileged to have a pre-view of
some of the Chapters. It will lay to rest, once and for all, any
lingering
doubts which people may still have about the voyage. It is
a authorative tour de force by the authors of such masterly
works
as "Rosslyn" and "Rex Deus".
Niven Sinclair
Niven
Sinclair