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Questurnight
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The world of terror (9th Dec 22 at 6:12am UTC)
"It doesn't matter," he said. I think he saw that I wasn't the gypsy's friend. I'll call his grandson. He'll come and take him home. I called Urquhart from the nearest phone booth. His housekeeper said he was asleep. I wanted her to wake him up, but I gave up the idea and went back to the hotel, hoping to talk to someone. I want to straighten out my thinking and find out what Czekno means. Why would Urquhart make such a mistake if he didn't deny the existence of Loeg? But I drank too much and felt very tired. I fell asleep in the middle of the night, but I didn't sleep very well and I kept having nightmares. I woke up at 2am with a terrible feeling that the evil Raueg had really appeared, but these were mixed up with the Marquis de Sade and Jack the Disintegrator that I had dreamed about in my bad dreams. This strong sense of danger forced me to turn on the light. But it only heightened my feelings. I think I'd better write down all the conversations I had with Czeknor and show them to Urquhart, so he might be able to add something. I wrote down the details of the conversation. I felt my hands freeze and went back to sleep, but I was awakened by a slight tremor in the room that reminded me of an earthquake I had experienced in Mexico. Then I fell asleep and slept until morning. I went to the front desk to check my email before going to breakfast. There was a letter from Laurdale of Brown University, and I ate a kipper and watched his reply. Most of the letter is about literature-a discussion of Lovecraft and his state of mind. But there were a few pages that intrigued me even more. "Based on the evidence in the letter, I am personally inclined to believe that one of Lovecraft's most important early experiences was a visit to Cohasset, a run-down fishing village between Conojontog and Vicarpogue in southern Rhode Island," Laurdale wrote. Like Lovecraft's Innsmouth,ceramic igniter electrodes, the fishing village has since disappeared from the map. I've been there, and in many ways it matches Lovecraft's description of Innsmouth, which he placed in Massachusetts: 'more empty houses than people,' a decaying look that smells of rotten fish. When Lovecraft went there in 1915, there was indeed a man called Captain Marsh who lived there for a time in the South Pacific. He may have told young Lovecraft stories about the evil Polynesian temple and its undersea inhabitants. The main content of these legends, as mentioned by Jung and Spence, 7g Ozone Generator ,steatite c221, is that the extraterrestrial gods who were once the masters of the earth lost their power when they practiced evil witchcraft, but one day they will return to rule the earth again. According to the version quoted by Jung, it is said that human beings were created by these gods from human-like demons. It seems to me that Lovecraft's other 'myths' come from Matson, and perhaps from Poe, who occasionally alludes to such things. For example, 'manuscript in a bottle'. I have found no evidence that any of the inauspicious rumors are related to the'Evil House 'on Benifit Street or any of the houses in Providence. I'm interested in what you have to say about Matson's material. I think it's likely that Matson heard the story of the mysterious manuscript from the source you mentioned, and I have found no evidence that Lovecraft had direct access to such a book. I am convinced that if there is a connection between his Book of the Dead and the Voynich manuscript, it is, as you say, a mere coincidence. The roots of my hair stood up when I read in the letter that the gods would "one day return to rule the earth again" and the Polynesian legends. Because, as Churchward once wrote, "Easter Island, Tahiti, Samoa.." The islands of Hawaii and the Marquesas are the poor fingers of that great land, which now stand like sentinels guarding a silent tomb. Polynesia is a relic of Mu.
This is no more than I already knew or guessed. But my encounter with Czekno raised a very real question: How close is Urquhart to being in danger? He may have been right that Raueg himself was not yet powerful, or very little; but Czekno and his family were another matter. For some reason, they hate Urquhart. The front desk clerk tugged at my sleeve. "Telephone, sir." It's Urquhart. I said, "Thank God you called.". I need to talk to you. "You've heard, then?" "What did you hear?" The explosion? Czekno is dead. "What!"! Are you sure Of course I'm sure. But they couldn't find all his bones. "I'll be right there." That was the first time I heard of the Landelveen explosion. I have a book on my desk called Beyond Logic by the late Frank Edwards. This book compiles a number of mysterious events and miracles. In one chapter, entitled "The Landelveen Explosion," he wrote that the explosion was a burst of atomic energy and was probably caused by the engine failure of a "UFO."; He quotes rocket expert Willie Ray as saying that a crater in Siberia in 1908 may have been an explosion of antimatter,10g Ozone Generator, and as linking the Landelveen explosion to what happened in Tunguska. This statement makes me feel ridiculous. I went to the scene of the explosion, and it did not reach the harm caused by the atomic bomb explosion, not even the power of a small atomic bomb. global-ceramics.com
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