Sunday, June 1, 2008

Contact 44

Billy
Miss Rufer asked whether you can impart information to me for her about these works and the authors?
Semjase
51. I am very sorry, but I know neither these books named here nor the authors.
52. Only this name here is known to me, this Saint Germain; a quite malicious person, who did many things deceitfully, supposedly in order also to fulfill dangerous things for the Freemasons, through which they in turn allegedly could seize control of the world, if not, as would be falsely asserted, order had been troubled for from the other side.
53. Everything is naturally not correct, rather it is based on a pure invention of Freemason-unfriendly elements.
Semjase
126. You should take more trouble for your health, yet now ask that which you cannot drop, therewith you (can) then still get some sleep.
Billy
Ah, so, yes: How is that essentially, do you know all the literature that has been written about UFOs or contact persons?
Semjase
127. No, we do not require it because we know the facts best.
128. Certainly I have studied various texts, especially any that I have received from you.
129. But I am very disappointed, how incorrect, falsified and without great truths these are rendered, not to mention any records that portray pure mendacious worthlessness.
Billy
That is sufficient for me. I don’t want to know more. Das genügt mir, mehr wollte ich nicht wissen.
Then you can go on now with your clarification about Saint Germain.
Semjase
130. So listen then – but are you really not too tired?
131. Your nerves vibrate much. That is not good.
Billy
Do you absolutely want to keep me from my work?
Semjase
132. You are simply un-teachable in this respect.
133. You drive (yourself to) bad exhaustion with your powers.
134. Yet, as you want:
135. Saint Germain’s real name is RAKOCZI, whereby he also assigned himself other names as, for example, Aymar or Marquis de Betmor, and so forth.
136. The name Saint Germain was only used by the adventurer in his self-appointed status as Count Saint Germain.
137. Born in the sign of Aries in the year 1711 in Collonia, you name it Cologne today, whereby however he attributed (to himself) a Portuguese origin.
138. He died in the year 1784 at the age of 73 years.
139. In his lifetime he was the greatest deceiver, charlatan, liar and spy, and indeed in the service and commission of a sect in Germany which was obsessed with world domination at that time.
140. He passed himself off as being a thousand years old, whereby however he was often confused in his own statements and so differences of up to 300 years age variation came about.
141. In and of himself he was quite stupid, which he, however, through his enormous cleverness, cunning, manual skill and alchemistic knowledge, and so forth, could again offset, and (he) even attained extraordinarily good results in slight of hand that (he) then passed off as magical powers.
142. He was subsequently named a wonder man and no-one suspected also only that he was the worst deceiver of his time.
143. Only a European Christian sect was oriented about this, because he was indeed a man who stood in their service and who also thereby troubled to take counts, princes and kings, as well as clergy and other dignitaries, into his power in order thereby to make them amenable to the sect, whose members sought, and thereby hoped, finally to realize their plans for world domination.
144. Therefore he troubled himself also primarily around the great people of France which, in keeping with the plans of the sect, was to be the next land annexed by Germany through which already the greatest part of Europe at that time was to stand under the sect control.
145. The initiates of the sect at the time quite consciously spun a fable-intertwined legend around Saint Germain in order to allow him to appear in the light of an immortal and a master, although he did not belong as a member of the sect at all, which did not hinder him, Saint Germain, from portraying himself as master of the sect and therewith as an initiate.
146. He knew very well to expand the legend spun about him by the sect and to provide enormous fame for himself.
147. It was only thereby astonishing that the sect had actually drawn him in with their plans, in this form, as an outsider.
148. A fact that we, from our side, also could not clarify.
149. He received quite personally, from King Frederick the Great, the awarded honorary title of an Immortal, after which Saint Germain implanted in him, (with) the power of his uncommonly high hypnotic capabilities, (the notion) that he, Saint Germain, was already 2004 years old.
150. Frederick the Great was himself not conscious of the employed hypnosis and was of the belief that he had obtained this knowledge about the age of Saint Germain through higher spirits, so also the knowledge thereby, that the "Magican" had an immortal-making elixer at his disposal that Saint Germain also manufactured after a corresponding discussion with Frederick the Great.
151. In truth however the mixture was an evil broth (made) out of various hallucinogenic poisons and drugs, that called-forth deep euphoria.
152. Through the far spread sect he was also initiated in European history from which he retained any 50 small details with his truly phenomenal memory, with which he astounded and quite terrified them that he was the best connoisseur of history and deluded them that he was, through this, all-knowing.
153. Through his uncommon shrewdness and cunning he reached also into the most intimate secrets of the various kings' families and of many other people, that he then revealed again as "secret knowledge" which often shifted the people into angst and terror, or allowed them to presume he had supernatural powers and capabilities.
154. Many times he obtained such intimate secrets through secret dealings with female servants, who he paid off with material things of value and with bodily love, which was not a burden for him because, on one hand he had at his disposal very enormous material wealth, and on the other hand he was very sexually potent.
155. A favorite means of obtaining secrets was, however, his hypnotic capabilities that he especially brought into engagement with highly-positioned personalities, especially females, and thereby unlocked the ultimate and most intimate secrets that he then, at a later point in time, revealed to them again, after he had taken the memory of the hypnosis from them.
156. Thereby he appeared as a giant among all the magicians of the time.
157. So it was no wonder that he was raised to the position of a real master.
158. He occupied himself yet however, with many kinds of other things, so, for example, also with diamonds and with other kinds of precious stones and minerals, etc.
159. He could also produce fake gold, a chemical covering of metal that then behaved like gold.
160. And the deceived people believed, in their delusion and ignorance, that he could manufacture gold.
161. Also he knew how to purify "contaminated" precious stones through his magic.
162. These, however, he regularly retained for a longer time because he was not able to work on them himself.
163. So he always brought them to a cousin in Holland who then "purified" these precious stones for him, in that he ground off the cloudiness which existed in this material.
164. He asserted or did yet many other quite secretive things, so for example, also that he simply transmuted himself into invisibility, (which) was again, however, based on nothing other than his hypnotic powers, through which he let his observers live in the delusion that he had transmuted himself into invisibility.
165. Also he claimed to have often been in China. 165. Auch behauptete er, öfters in China gewesen zu sein.
166. Yet also that did not correspond to the truth, because he never left the European area.
167. When he explained again that he must now travel to China, then, in his journey, he went only to Berlin where he had to give an account of his deeds and works in the stronghold of the sects and where he then also received new orders.
168. Very astonishingly, the sect alchemists instructed him also, in these times, in alchemistic matters whereby they rejuvenated him many times, also through their best means and through small and fine facial operations, whereby he also always awoke the impression that he did not age, but rather was constantly about 40 years old.
169. This was brought about in Berlin in the stronghold of the sects of that time, but which no longer belonged to the actual mother sect, rather it was a splinter group that had established its seat there.
170. The high seat of the real mother sect was namely in Vienna, and Saint Germain also worked for that.
171. So he worked for four different masters at the same time, namely for France, for Friedrich the Great in Germany who was his best and most benevolent defender, for the splinter sect stronghold in Berlin, and for the actual mother sect stronghold in Vienna.
172. As Saint Germain died at the age of 73 his alleged immortality could only thereby be saved by the Berlin sect always again and again seeking suitable men who resembled the appearance of Saint Germain.
173. They performed fine face-alteration operations on them so that they were even more like the deceiver.
174. These (men) stepped into appearance then after his death, to appear personally as Saint Germain, after which they were instructed over long years by the sect members in all kinds of knowledge and abilities.
174. Out of these splinter sectarians then developed, in the course of time, a fanatical-religious sect that yet today secretly drives its mischief and has also founded sister societies, and so forth.
176. But the founding sect has not, up to today, left off seeking out suitable men which they make compliant with horrendous amounts of money, and whose appearance resembles Saint Germain's, and that they then changed and made into "initiates" through engagement of operations on the facial characteristics and through alchemistic and magical teachings, who are, however, in truth, only better conjurers, who they then allow to present themselves as Saint Germain, and indeed until the current time.
Billy
Actually a long story. I find it all quite vile, however.
Semjase
177. The Earth human has never yet known scruples, if he wants to obtain a goal.

* Stevens' version of line 52, below.

48. Only this name here is known to me, this St Germain, ...who performed many things, to fulfill for the Community of Rose's Cross dangerous things, by which they could have been able to seize the world's command to themselves, had not the other side seen to regulate this.

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