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 👇
11/11
Also, much like Loki, his children are directly linked to the death of the gods, with Loki involved in the deaths of Balder and Heimdall, Jormungandr killing Thor, Fenrir killing Odin and Hel directly involved with the death.
Perhaps, most interesting is a section from the Prose Edda, when a character is asked where the gods didn’t kill Fenrir since they knew the destruction that would follow him. The character responds by saying that the gods so greatly respected their holy places that they would rather have Odin die than have the wolf’s blood defile them.
Whether that says more about the gods or Fenrir, I’ll leave that for you to decide; but it’s clear that gods certainly did not care for the children of Loki.