It's still me, following my heart 🙂❤️ and something else 👉 https://anonup.com/thread/13230439 💥
Now the most important question.
Who owns a writing pen for Libris Fabula?
Q is one way to get a writing pen right?...
It's high time to get the "story pen" back.
this is no accident. 👇
https://anonup.com/thread/12304117
watch the symbols
https://anonup.com/thread/12297565
https://anonup.com/thread/12289627
It's still me, following my heart 🙂❤️ and something else 👉 https://anonup.com/thread/13230439 💥
1/11
What if the poetic EDDA actually describes the power struggle and conditions between two "their" basic opposing clans representing vampires and werewolves and maybe other genetically modified genetic bloodlines X against humanity and therefore against the gods/builders/creators...
This would mean that, among other things, genetic experiments via Cain's bloodline are also described in the book. Think in metaphors as you read, it's really all there. It must have been encoded somehow for humanity, because "they" don't have the intuition for ability to understand metaphors as a pure human being - that takes empathy.
"At the end of time "they" must tell humanity the truth."
link to read and download the book https://sacred-texts.com/neu/poe/poe.pdf
The really author of the work is unknown and the specific period when the work was written is also in the mist.
The Edda lists the ! wolf ! Fenrir as being Loki's child with Angrbotha.
continue in comments 👇
9/11
Once again, they brought it to the wolf, saying they wanted him to test it, and he, of course, agreed; snapping it was slightly more effort.
The gods became worried that they would not be able to bind Fenrir, and so they went to the realm of the dwarves, the most skilled craftsmen in the nine realms, and asked them to create a magical binding that had no equal.
The binding they created was forged from six things, the sound of a cat’s footsteps, the beard of a woman; the roots of mountains; the breath of a fish; the tendons of a bear; and the spittle of a bird.
This magical robe was brought to Fenrir, who suspected trickery based on how light and soft the binding looked, so he refused to be bound with it unless one of the gods would lay their hand in his mouth as a pledge of good faith.