neufer
2010-08-05 13:42:35 UTC
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Upon the Lines and Life of the Famous
Scenicke Poet, Master W I L L I A M
S H A K E S P E A R E
Those hands, which you so clapt, go now, and wring
You Britaines brave; for done are Shakespeares dayes:
His dayes are done, that made the dainty Playes,
Which made the Globe of heav'n and earth to ring.
Dry'de is that veine, dry'd is the Thespian Spring,
Turn'd all to teares, and *PHOEBUS CLOUDS HIS RAYES*
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Loading Image...
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THE FIRST EDITION OF "DON QUIXOTE." 1605
<<We see a hooded falcon resting on the gloved hand
of a man hidden from view. Swirling shapes, possibly
mist, on one side only, stress the fact that
the falconer is hidden, just out of sight.
Around the arm and the bird is the inscription:
*POST TENEBRAS SPERO LUCEM*
after darkness I hope for light.>>
---------------------------------------------------------------------
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Post_tenebras_lux
<< *POST TENEBRAS LUX* is a Latin phrase
translated as Light After Darkness.
It is *POST TENEBRAS SPERO LUCEM*
("After darkness, I hope for light")
in the Vulgate version of Job 17:12.
*POST TENEBRAS LUX* in the Seal of the Canton of Geneva.
The phrase was adopted as the Calvinist motto, and was subsequently
adopted as the motto of the entire Protestant Reformation, and also
of John Calvin's adopted city of Geneva, Switzerland. As a mark
of its role in the Calvinist movement, the motto is engraved
on the Reformation Wall, in Geneva, and the *HUGUENOT*
Monument, in Franschhoek, South Africa.
*POST TENEBRAS LUX* was formerly the state motto of Chile.
It is also the motto of Externado de Colombia University.
It is also the ex-libris of the original Quixote editor,
Juan de la Cuesta.>>
-------------------------------------------------------------------
http://www.baconsocietyinc.org/baconiana/baconiana2/carr_review.htm
FRANCIS CARR, WHO WROTE DON QUlXOTE?
Michael Buhagiar www.thegreatpesher.com
<<The design on the title page of the first edition of 1605 shows a
hooded falcon resting on the gloved hand of a man who is hidden from
view. Around the arm and the bird is the inscription Post tenebras
spero lucem, 'After darkness I hope for light', a phrase from Job
which was adopted as the motto of Calvinism, and later of the
entire Protestant Reformation—an incongruous wording to have
on a work issuing from a supposedly Catholic country.>>
---------------------------------------------------------------------
http://www.sirbacon.org/whowrotedqwalkerreview.htm
<<As further evidence that the real [DQ] author is concealed Carr
points to the title page of the first Spanish edition of Don Quixote.
The title page shows a hooded falcon resting on the gloved hand of a
man who is hidden from view within a cloud. There is a lion in the
picture that ostensibly symbolizes England. But who is the hidden
falconer? On the border around the inner picture are the words, "Post
tenebras spero lucem", i.e., after darkness I hope for light.
Signaling yet again that something is hidden here. But how can we
solve this dark puzzle? Chapter 68 of the Second Part of Don Quixote
gives us a clue. Don Quixote tells Sancho Panza, "Post tenebras spero
lucem", and follows the Latin words with a translation, "after
darkness I expect light." It seems that the explanation has been added
to help the reader, but Sancho still does not understand. The clue
comes at this point. Sancho launches into a tribute to sleep, and this
tribute is virtually a paraphrase of the speech about sleep in Macbeth
(which appeared a few years before the publication of Don Quixote):
Sleep that knits up the ravelled sleave of care,
The death of each day's life, sore labour's bath,
Balm of hurt minds, great nature's second course,
Chief nourisher in life's feast.
(As an additional connection to the Shakespeare works it can
be noted that the "POST TENEBRAS LUX; after darkness light"
legend also appeared on the 1600 quarto edition of
A Midsummer Nights Dream, printed by James Roberts).>>
-------------------------------------
A Visit to Edinburgh and Lodge Canongate Kilwinning #2.
Wor. James T. Watson, Jr. [From The Trowel,
Summer 1994, of the Grand Lodge of Massachusetts]
http://www.calodges.org/scrl/monthly/edinburg.htm
<<Edinburgh, the second largest city in Scotland, was named in honor
of Edwin of Northumbria, an Anglian king who built a fort there in the
600's. On the site of that fort now stands Edinburgh Castle on Castle
Rock. The "Royal Mile" leads from this castle to Holyrood Castle, home
of Mary, Queen of Scots, from 1561-1567. On this road are the Norman
Chapel of Saint Margaret, Saint Giles Cathedral and the homes of
dukes, earls and lords in ancient times. From this Canongate run St.
John's Close and St. John's Street. From both these entries, one gains
admittance to the Chapel of St. John, meeting place of Lodge Canongate
#2, Royal Arch Chapter #56 and the Preceptory and Priory of St. John
Canongate Kilwinning.
The traditions of Lodge Canongate Kilwinning #2 date to the building
of the Abbey of Holyrood, founded by King David I in 1128. Skilled
builders and craftsmen were brought from far and near to complete that
work, dedicated to the Holyrood (cross) brought to Scotland by David's
mother, the pious Margaret. While dating its early history to King
David's Charter, the Lodge identified itself with the general body of
Freemasons in Scotland in 1677 by accepting a warrant from the Lodge
at Kilwinning in Ayrshire, which was exercising the functions of a
Grand Lodge. The initiative in forming the Grand Lodge of Scotland
was taken by this Lodge.
........................................................
Upon the Lines and Life of the Famous
Scenicke Poet, Master W I L L I A M
S H A K E S P E A R E
Those hands, which you so clapt, go now, and wring
You Britaines brave; for done are Shakespeares dayes:
His dayes are done, that made the dainty Playes,
Which made the Globe of heav'n and earth to ring.
Dry'de is that veine, dry'd is the Thespian Spring,
Turn'd all to teares, and *Phoebus clouds his rayes* :
........................................................
One of its members, William St. Clair of Rosslyn
became first Grand Master. The Lodge motto,
"Post Nubile Phoebus" (After the clouds the sun),
refers to dawn and ancient sun worship.
This Lodge preserves the ancient Scottish arrangement of having the
Master and Wardens at the three angles of a triangle. The Master's
chair, dating from the early I8th century , forms the apex in the
center of the East, with a canopy over the Master's station and
the altar directly before it. The Senior and Junior Wardens'
chairs are at the two corners of the Lodge room in the West.
The Annual Festival is held on St. John the Baptist's Day, June 24th.
The present Lodge building was consecrated in December, 1736, and
is the oldest building in the world built for Masonic purposes. On
entering the Lodge room, one is instantly drawn drawn to what appear
to be four alcoves contining statues, two on the north wall and two
on the south. When approached, they are found to be cleverly
executed mural paintings of:
Lord Byron and *Sir Walter Scott* on the north wall and
Robert Burns and *William Shakespeare* on the south.
These works were completed by an unknown artist in 1833.
-----------------------------------------
in Hugh Holland's dedication in the FF:
------------------------------------------
Upon the Lines and Life of the Famous
Scenicke Poet, Master W I L L I A M
S H A K E S P E A R E
Those hands, which you so clapt, go now, and wring
You Britaines brave; for done are Shakespeares dayes:
........................................
_____ *MASTER MASONS*
........................................
U P o n t h e L i n e s a n d L i f e o f
T H e F a m o u s S c e n i c k e P o e t
[M A S T E R] W I L L I A M S H A K E S P E
[A] R E T h o s e h a n d s w h i c h y o u
[S] O c l a p t g o n o w a n d w r i n g Y
[O] u B r i t a i n e s b r a v e f o r d o
[N] e a r e S h a k e s p e a r e s d a y e
[S]
______ <= 3 X 7 =>
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Square_and_Compasses
With two "MASTER"s in the Dedications the
probability of a *MASTER MASONS* Square ~ 1/10,000
----------------------------------
# finds in skips from ±2 to ±1001
..................................
String NT OT Moby Dick
------------------------------
MASONS 60 174 85
DEVERE 81 259 65
VERUS 175 473 220
ASONS 2253 7611 3464
------------------------------------------------------
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Drummond_of_Hawthornden
<<William Drummond (13 Dec. 1585 – 4 Dec. 1649), called
"of Hawthornden" was a Scottish poet who was born to one of
King James VI's ushers at *Hawthornden Castle* about a mile
downstream from *Rosslyn Chapel* on the North Esk River.
In 1616, the year of Shakespeare's death, appeared Poems: Amorous,
Funerall, Divine, Pastorall: in Sonnets, Songs, Sextains, Madrigals,
being substantially the story of his love for Mary Cunningham of
Barns, who was about to become his wife when she died in 1615. The
poems bear marks of a close study of Sidney, and of the Italian poets.
In 1618 Drummond began a correspondence with Michael Drayton. The
two poets continued to write at intervals for 13 years, the last
letter being dated in the year of Drayton's death. The latter had
almost been persuaded by his "dear Drummond" to print the later books
of Poly-Olbion at Hart's Edinburgh press. In the winter of 1618-1619,
Drummond had included Ben Jonson in his circle of literary friends,
and at Christmas 1618 was honoured with a visit of a fortnight or more
from the dramatist. The account of their conversations, long supposed
to be lost, was discovered in the Advocates' Library, Edinburgh, by
David Laing, and was edited for the Shakespeare Society in 1842 and
printed by Gifford & Cunningham. The conversations are full of
literary gossip, and embody Jonson's opinion of himself and of his
host, whom he frankly told that "his verses were too much of the
schooles, and were not after the fancie of the time," and again
that he "was too good & simple, and that oft a man's modestie made
a fool of his witt." But the publication of what was obviously
intended merely for a private journal has given Jonson an
undeserved reputation for harsh judgments, and has cast
blame on Drummond for blackening his guest's memory. >>
------------------------------------------------
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lasswade
<<Lasswade is a parish and village on the River North Esk; Melville
Castle lies to the north east. The old parish church was built in the
13th century; the 17th century Scottish poet, William Drummond of
Hawthornden was buried within it. Sir John Lauder, 1st Baronet of
Fountainhall was born at Melville Mill, Lasswade, in 1595, and the
present 18th-century Barony House was known as Lasswade Cottage
when Sir Walter Scott rented it (1798-1804). He was visited
here by the writer James Hogg and the Wordsworths.>>
http://shakespearebyanothername.blogspot.com/
------------------------------------------------
55° 57′ 09″ N, 3° 10′ 21″ W : *Holyrood Palace*
55° 51′ 19″ N, 3° 09′ 29″ W : *Rosslyn Chapel*
55° 51′ 19″ N, 3° 09′ 29″ W : *Rosslyn Castle*
55° 51′ 40″ N, 3° 08′ 27″ W : *Hawthornden Castle*
55° 53′ 00″ N, 3° 07′ 00″ W : *Lasswade Cottage*
55° 53′ 28″ N, 3° 06′ 15″ W : *Melville Castle*
<<There are a number of man-made caves in the cliffs beneath
the Hawthornden Castle. One cave serves as a doocot, with 370
compartments. There is a tradition that King Robert the Bruce
and Sir Alexander Ramsay of Dalhousie once found shelter
in the caves underneath it. Another cave nearby is
known as Wallace's Cave, after William Wallace.>>
--------------------------------
Art Neuendorffer
Upon the Lines and Life of the Famous
Scenicke Poet, Master W I L L I A M
S H A K E S P E A R E
Those hands, which you so clapt, go now, and wring
You Britaines brave; for done are Shakespeares dayes:
His dayes are done, that made the dainty Playes,
Which made the Globe of heav'n and earth to ring.
Dry'de is that veine, dry'd is the Thespian Spring,
Turn'd all to teares, and *PHOEBUS CLOUDS HIS RAYES*
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Loading Image...
---------------------------------------------------------------------
THE FIRST EDITION OF "DON QUIXOTE." 1605
<<We see a hooded falcon resting on the gloved hand
of a man hidden from view. Swirling shapes, possibly
mist, on one side only, stress the fact that
the falconer is hidden, just out of sight.
Around the arm and the bird is the inscription:
*POST TENEBRAS SPERO LUCEM*
after darkness I hope for light.>>
---------------------------------------------------------------------
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Post_tenebras_lux
<< *POST TENEBRAS LUX* is a Latin phrase
translated as Light After Darkness.
It is *POST TENEBRAS SPERO LUCEM*
("After darkness, I hope for light")
in the Vulgate version of Job 17:12.
*POST TENEBRAS LUX* in the Seal of the Canton of Geneva.
The phrase was adopted as the Calvinist motto, and was subsequently
adopted as the motto of the entire Protestant Reformation, and also
of John Calvin's adopted city of Geneva, Switzerland. As a mark
of its role in the Calvinist movement, the motto is engraved
on the Reformation Wall, in Geneva, and the *HUGUENOT*
Monument, in Franschhoek, South Africa.
*POST TENEBRAS LUX* was formerly the state motto of Chile.
It is also the motto of Externado de Colombia University.
It is also the ex-libris of the original Quixote editor,
Juan de la Cuesta.>>
-------------------------------------------------------------------
http://www.baconsocietyinc.org/baconiana/baconiana2/carr_review.htm
FRANCIS CARR, WHO WROTE DON QUlXOTE?
Michael Buhagiar www.thegreatpesher.com
<<The design on the title page of the first edition of 1605 shows a
hooded falcon resting on the gloved hand of a man who is hidden from
view. Around the arm and the bird is the inscription Post tenebras
spero lucem, 'After darkness I hope for light', a phrase from Job
which was adopted as the motto of Calvinism, and later of the
entire Protestant Reformation—an incongruous wording to have
on a work issuing from a supposedly Catholic country.>>
---------------------------------------------------------------------
http://www.sirbacon.org/whowrotedqwalkerreview.htm
<<As further evidence that the real [DQ] author is concealed Carr
points to the title page of the first Spanish edition of Don Quixote.
The title page shows a hooded falcon resting on the gloved hand of a
man who is hidden from view within a cloud. There is a lion in the
picture that ostensibly symbolizes England. But who is the hidden
falconer? On the border around the inner picture are the words, "Post
tenebras spero lucem", i.e., after darkness I hope for light.
Signaling yet again that something is hidden here. But how can we
solve this dark puzzle? Chapter 68 of the Second Part of Don Quixote
gives us a clue. Don Quixote tells Sancho Panza, "Post tenebras spero
lucem", and follows the Latin words with a translation, "after
darkness I expect light." It seems that the explanation has been added
to help the reader, but Sancho still does not understand. The clue
comes at this point. Sancho launches into a tribute to sleep, and this
tribute is virtually a paraphrase of the speech about sleep in Macbeth
(which appeared a few years before the publication of Don Quixote):
Sleep that knits up the ravelled sleave of care,
The death of each day's life, sore labour's bath,
Balm of hurt minds, great nature's second course,
Chief nourisher in life's feast.
(As an additional connection to the Shakespeare works it can
be noted that the "POST TENEBRAS LUX; after darkness light"
legend also appeared on the 1600 quarto edition of
A Midsummer Nights Dream, printed by James Roberts).>>
-------------------------------------
A Visit to Edinburgh and Lodge Canongate Kilwinning #2.
Wor. James T. Watson, Jr. [From The Trowel,
Summer 1994, of the Grand Lodge of Massachusetts]
http://www.calodges.org/scrl/monthly/edinburg.htm
<<Edinburgh, the second largest city in Scotland, was named in honor
of Edwin of Northumbria, an Anglian king who built a fort there in the
600's. On the site of that fort now stands Edinburgh Castle on Castle
Rock. The "Royal Mile" leads from this castle to Holyrood Castle, home
of Mary, Queen of Scots, from 1561-1567. On this road are the Norman
Chapel of Saint Margaret, Saint Giles Cathedral and the homes of
dukes, earls and lords in ancient times. From this Canongate run St.
John's Close and St. John's Street. From both these entries, one gains
admittance to the Chapel of St. John, meeting place of Lodge Canongate
#2, Royal Arch Chapter #56 and the Preceptory and Priory of St. John
Canongate Kilwinning.
The traditions of Lodge Canongate Kilwinning #2 date to the building
of the Abbey of Holyrood, founded by King David I in 1128. Skilled
builders and craftsmen were brought from far and near to complete that
work, dedicated to the Holyrood (cross) brought to Scotland by David's
mother, the pious Margaret. While dating its early history to King
David's Charter, the Lodge identified itself with the general body of
Freemasons in Scotland in 1677 by accepting a warrant from the Lodge
at Kilwinning in Ayrshire, which was exercising the functions of a
Grand Lodge. The initiative in forming the Grand Lodge of Scotland
was taken by this Lodge.
........................................................
Upon the Lines and Life of the Famous
Scenicke Poet, Master W I L L I A M
S H A K E S P E A R E
Those hands, which you so clapt, go now, and wring
You Britaines brave; for done are Shakespeares dayes:
His dayes are done, that made the dainty Playes,
Which made the Globe of heav'n and earth to ring.
Dry'de is that veine, dry'd is the Thespian Spring,
Turn'd all to teares, and *Phoebus clouds his rayes* :
........................................................
One of its members, William St. Clair of Rosslyn
became first Grand Master. The Lodge motto,
"Post Nubile Phoebus" (After the clouds the sun),
refers to dawn and ancient sun worship.
This Lodge preserves the ancient Scottish arrangement of having the
Master and Wardens at the three angles of a triangle. The Master's
chair, dating from the early I8th century , forms the apex in the
center of the East, with a canopy over the Master's station and
the altar directly before it. The Senior and Junior Wardens'
chairs are at the two corners of the Lodge room in the West.
The Annual Festival is held on St. John the Baptist's Day, June 24th.
The present Lodge building was consecrated in December, 1736, and
is the oldest building in the world built for Masonic purposes. On
entering the Lodge room, one is instantly drawn drawn to what appear
to be four alcoves contining statues, two on the north wall and two
on the south. When approached, they are found to be cleverly
executed mural paintings of:
Lord Byron and *Sir Walter Scott* on the north wall and
Robert Burns and *William Shakespeare* on the south.
These works were completed by an unknown artist in 1833.
-----------------------------------------
Grand Lodge refers to the Blue Lodge, Art, not to the
Scottish Rite, which...is an appendant organization,
independent of Grand Lodge, but open only to
Master Masons (those who have received
the three degrees of the Blue Lodge).
*MASTER MASONS* ! Like those referred toScottish Rite, which...is an appendant organization,
independent of Grand Lodge, but open only to
Master Masons (those who have received
the three degrees of the Blue Lodge).
in Hugh Holland's dedication in the FF:
------------------------------------------
Upon the Lines and Life of the Famous
Scenicke Poet, Master W I L L I A M
S H A K E S P E A R E
Those hands, which you so clapt, go now, and wring
You Britaines brave; for done are Shakespeares dayes:
........................................
_____ *MASTER MASONS*
........................................
U P o n t h e L i n e s a n d L i f e o f
T H e F a m o u s S c e n i c k e P o e t
[M A S T E R] W I L L I A M S H A K E S P E
[A] R E T h o s e h a n d s w h i c h y o u
[S] O c l a p t g o n o w a n d w r i n g Y
[O] u B r i t a i n e s b r a v e f o r d o
[N] e a r e S h a k e s p e a r e s d a y e
[S]
______ <= 3 X 7 =>
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Square_and_Compasses
With two "MASTER"s in the Dedications the
probability of a *MASTER MASONS* Square ~ 1/10,000
----------------------------------
# finds in skips from ±2 to ±1001
..................................
String NT OT Moby Dick
------------------------------
MASONS 60 174 85
DEVERE 81 259 65
VERUS 175 473 220
ASONS 2253 7611 3464
------------------------------------------------------
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Drummond_of_Hawthornden
<<William Drummond (13 Dec. 1585 – 4 Dec. 1649), called
"of Hawthornden" was a Scottish poet who was born to one of
King James VI's ushers at *Hawthornden Castle* about a mile
downstream from *Rosslyn Chapel* on the North Esk River.
In 1616, the year of Shakespeare's death, appeared Poems: Amorous,
Funerall, Divine, Pastorall: in Sonnets, Songs, Sextains, Madrigals,
being substantially the story of his love for Mary Cunningham of
Barns, who was about to become his wife when she died in 1615. The
poems bear marks of a close study of Sidney, and of the Italian poets.
In 1618 Drummond began a correspondence with Michael Drayton. The
two poets continued to write at intervals for 13 years, the last
letter being dated in the year of Drayton's death. The latter had
almost been persuaded by his "dear Drummond" to print the later books
of Poly-Olbion at Hart's Edinburgh press. In the winter of 1618-1619,
Drummond had included Ben Jonson in his circle of literary friends,
and at Christmas 1618 was honoured with a visit of a fortnight or more
from the dramatist. The account of their conversations, long supposed
to be lost, was discovered in the Advocates' Library, Edinburgh, by
David Laing, and was edited for the Shakespeare Society in 1842 and
printed by Gifford & Cunningham. The conversations are full of
literary gossip, and embody Jonson's opinion of himself and of his
host, whom he frankly told that "his verses were too much of the
schooles, and were not after the fancie of the time," and again
that he "was too good & simple, and that oft a man's modestie made
a fool of his witt." But the publication of what was obviously
intended merely for a private journal has given Jonson an
undeserved reputation for harsh judgments, and has cast
blame on Drummond for blackening his guest's memory. >>
------------------------------------------------
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lasswade
<<Lasswade is a parish and village on the River North Esk; Melville
Castle lies to the north east. The old parish church was built in the
13th century; the 17th century Scottish poet, William Drummond of
Hawthornden was buried within it. Sir John Lauder, 1st Baronet of
Fountainhall was born at Melville Mill, Lasswade, in 1595, and the
present 18th-century Barony House was known as Lasswade Cottage
when Sir Walter Scott rented it (1798-1804). He was visited
here by the writer James Hogg and the Wordsworths.>>
http://shakespearebyanothername.blogspot.com/
------------------------------------------------
55° 57′ 09″ N, 3° 10′ 21″ W : *Holyrood Palace*
55° 51′ 19″ N, 3° 09′ 29″ W : *Rosslyn Chapel*
55° 51′ 19″ N, 3° 09′ 29″ W : *Rosslyn Castle*
55° 51′ 40″ N, 3° 08′ 27″ W : *Hawthornden Castle*
55° 53′ 00″ N, 3° 07′ 00″ W : *Lasswade Cottage*
55° 53′ 28″ N, 3° 06′ 15″ W : *Melville Castle*
<<There are a number of man-made caves in the cliffs beneath
the Hawthornden Castle. One cave serves as a doocot, with 370
compartments. There is a tradition that King Robert the Bruce
and Sir Alexander Ramsay of Dalhousie once found shelter
in the caves underneath it. Another cave nearby is
known as Wallace's Cave, after William Wallace.>>
--------------------------------
Art Neuendorffer