THE SUN


The term grimoire commonly serves as an alternative name for a spell book or tome of magical knowledge in fantasy fiction and role-playing games. The most famous fictional grimoire is the Necronomicon, a creation of H. P. Lovecraft

The ancient Jewish people were often viewed as being knowledgeable in magic, which, according to legend, they had learned from Moses, who had learned it in Egypt.

 Among many ancient writers, Moses was seen as an Egyptian rather than a Jew. 

Two manuscripts likely dating to the 4th century, both of which purport to be the legendary eighth Book of Moses (the first five being the initial books in the Biblical Old Testament), present him as a polytheist who explained how to conjure gods and subdue demons.

grimoire (/ɡrɪmˈwɑːr/ grim-WAHR) (also known as a "book of spells", "magic book", or a "spellbook") is a textbook of magic, typically including instructions on how to create magical objects like talismans and amulets, how to perform magical spells, charms, and divination, and how to summon or invoke supernatural entities such as angelsspiritsdeities, and demons.[1] In many cases, the books themselves are believed to be imbued with magical powers, although in many cultures, other sacred texts that are not grimoires (such as the Bible) have been believed to have supernatural properties intrinsically. 


A person with macropsia may have no psychiatric conditions. Symptoms caused chemically by drugs such as cannabismagic mushrooms, or cocaine tend to dissipate after the chemical compound has been excreted from the body.



Ivan the Fool (RussianИван-дуракromanizedIvan-durak, diminutive: Иванушка-дурачок

or Ivan the Ninny is a lucky fool stock character who appears in Russian folklore, a very simple-minded, but, nevertheless, lucky young man. 

Ivan is described as a likeable, fair-haired and blue-eyed youth.


The approximate setting of Ivan the Fool's adventures is 15th- or 16th-century Russia.

Ivan the Fool usually appears in stories either as a peasant or as the son of a poor family. 

He is usually the youngest of three brothers; his older siblings appear much smarter than he, but are sometimes unkind to and envious of him.


Ivan Tsarevich (RussianИва́н Царе́вич or Иван-царевич) is one of the main heroes of Russian folklore, usually a protagonist, often engaged in a struggle with Koschei.

 Along with Ivan the Fool, Ivan Tsarevich is a placeholder name, meaning "Prince Ivan", rather than a definitive character. Tsarevich is a title given to the sons of tsars.

He is often, but not always, the youngest son of three. 

In the tale "The Three Tsardoms" he is a son of Nastasya the Golden Braid. 

Different legends describe Ivan with different wives, including Yelena the BeautifulVasilisa the Wise and Marya Morevna.[1]

Ivan is the main hero of multiple Russian folktales. 

He is almost always portrayed either as the third son of a peasant family or as the third son of a king. 

[MY NOTE; 'MULLET' means 'THIRD SON' in French HERALDRY]

In the latter stories, he is called Ivan Tsarevich, which means "tsar's son". 

("Ivan" is one of the most common Russian forenames.) 


The friends and foes of Ivan Tsarevich are often mythic figures, from magical animals to deathless beings. 


The most famous folktale featuring Ivan as the protagonist is "Tsarevitch Ivan, the Firebird and the Gray Wolf".

 In this story, a magical wolf aids Ivan as he captures the firebird and wins the hand of a beautiful tsarevna

The firebird inspired Igor Stravinsky's 1910 ballet of the same name.

[Ballet Shoes see MY INTRODUCTION POST]


In Russian folk tales, Baba Yaga can supply Ivan the Fool with a flying carpet 

or some other magical gifts 


(e.g. a ball that rolls in front of the hero showing him the way, or a towel that can turn into a bridge).

 

Such gifts help the hero to find his way "beyond thrice-nine lands, in the thrice-ten kingdom".


[9 or 10 pin Bowling perhaps?]


 Russian painter Viktor Vasnetsov illustrated the tales featuring a flying carpet on two occasions.

[PIC ABOVE]


In Mark Twain's "Captain Stormfield's Visit to Heaven", magic wishing carpets are used to instantaneously travel throughout Heaven.


[TWAIN real name 'CLEMENS' was an ATHEIST]


Poul Anderson's Operation Chaos features a world making extensive use of magic in daily life, and among other things having flying carpets as a common, non-polluting means of transportation - in fierce competition with the also available flying brooms

Travelers need not sit on the bare carpet itself, as the carpet serves as the platform for a comfortable cabin.

Magic carpets have also been featured in modern literature, movies, and video games, and not always in a classic context.

In "traditional Chinese fantasy literature" from the late Qing dynasty and before, sentient flying carpets were thought to be "magical monsters" in the same category as lungqilin, or clouds for heroes to traverse distances with.[7]


In Taoism and Taoist art, flying carpets were used as poetic metaphors for the ability of flight xian had.[8]


In Tibetan Tantric Buddhism, a paper carpet were thought to be able to fly for "adept[s]".


[Wikipedia]


'Magic Carpet Ride' is a term used in Poker [see any Online Glossary]


.-[A Game like Monopoly seen in the Jeff Bridges Movie 'Tucker the Man and His Dream' opening Scenes-interesting this one- Cars again -yes -but also 1940's clothing etc like in 'Seabiscuit'-btw this Movie probably showcases old Mullets best Acting-which is based on another Movie 'ICON' Jimmy STEWART in yet another rip off of HITCHCOCK'S 'ROPE' or possibly 'TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD' with Old Gregory Peck


 An outstanding Court room Scene by Bridges counteracts the 'loveable dope' Screwball ripoff earlier Scenes blah blah

But 'HOLD THAT TIGER!' isn't that the LOUISIANA STATE UNIVERSITY Football Teams 'Anthem?- 

wtf? I covered something about AMERICAN FOOTBALLER in Post of 2016...

..Lloyd playing the Senator...nice piss take of HUAC- also A 'LESSER' KEY appears]


It is also a 'STEPPENWOLF' Chart Song.



FREUD used a metaphorical 'MAGIC CARPET' [See My 'THE RUG' Post]


In psychoanalysisphallic woman is a concept to describe a woman with the symbolic attributes of 

the phallus. More generally, it describes any woman possessing traditionally masculine characteristics.[1]

Phallic mother

Freud considered that at the phallic stage of early childhood development children of both sexes attribute possession of a penis to the mother—a belief the loss of which helps precipitate the castration complex.[2] 

Thereafter males may seek fetishistic substitutes in women for the lost penis in the form of high heels, earrings or long hair to alleviate the castrative threat[3]—terrifying phallic women such as witches (with their broomsticks) representing the failure of such substitutes to cover the underlying anxiety.[4] 

The female, whose love (in Freud's view) was originally "directed to her phallic mother",[5] may thereafter either turn to her father for love, or may return to an identification with the original phallic mother in a neurotic development.[6]

The phallic mother can be (though need not necessarily be) an actively castrative figure, stifling her children by pre-empting all room for autonomous action


In Slavic folkloreBaba Yaga is a supernatural being (or one of a trio of sisters of the same name) who appears as a deformed and/or ferocious-looking woman. 

In the folklore record, Baba Yaga usually flies around in a mortar, wields a pestle, and dwells deep in the forest in a hut usually described as standing on chicken legs. 

Baba Yaga may help or hinder those who encounter or seek her out and may play a maternal role. She also has associations with forest wildlife.

According to folklorist Vladimir Propp's folktale morphology, Baba Yaga commonly appears as either a donor or a villain, or may be altogether ambiguous.

Scholar Andreas Johns identifies Baba Yaga as "one of the most memorable and distinctive figures in eastern European folklore", and observes that she is "enigmatic" and often exhibits "striking ambiguity".[1] 

Johns summarizes Baba Yaga as "a many-faceted figure, capable of inspiring researchers to see her as a Cloud, Moon, Death, Winter, Snake, Bird, Pelican or Earth Goddess, totemic matriarchal ancestress, female initiator, phallic mother, or archetypal image"


for more Eastern European 'FOLKLORE' see;https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Death_of_Koschei_the_Deathless


for some Judaic STORIES involving 'MAGIC CARPETS' 


see; https://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/articles/13842-solomon#2945


SOL-OM-ON [in above Site ] has a 'KEY' or 'CLAVICULAE SALAMONIS' 


HE [SOL]LIKED HORSE RACING..OWNED  A 'HIPPODROME'..[SEABISCUIT]


A MAGIC CARPET...HAD TO GO 'DOOR TO DOOR' FOR 'PENANCE' ETC


WORKED AS A COOK..


LIKED MECHANICAL ITEMS..[TUCKER ETC SEE MY 'SOL-OM-ON AND HIS ROBOTS' POST]


AND ALTHOUGH POLYGAMOUS HAD A RATHER FREE SPIRITED WIFE..LOL!


ABOVE SITE IS FULL OF DETAILS ABOUT THE 'DEMON' CALLED 'ASMODEUS' ETC

HIS INVOLVEMENT AS A 'WORKMAN' IN BUILDING TEMPLES ..BLAH BLAH...


AND 'NAAMAH' -A FISH- AND A GOLD RING-MAKE AN APPEARANCE


 [SEE MY 'DRUGS ARE TALKING' POST] SOL-OM-ON A MYTHIC /FICTION CHARACTER 

BASED 


ON 'SOL' -THE SUN. [STAR]


THE 'KEY OF SOLOMON' 'GRIMOIRES' ETC ARE ALL 'ESOTERICA'

.FILM NOIR? OR GRIMOIRE? DUDE.

 GRIMOIRE IS A 'BOOK OF SPELLS' BUT THATS KINDA IRONIC AS 'SPELLING MISTAKES' MADE BY DYSLEXICS ARE NOT EXACTLY UNKNOWN...


You can't beat a good Story.-even with a bunch of 'Demons' acting out a Script  ...

its still amusing if a little 'Childish'..You see once a 'Demon' is known it no longer has any 'Power'

'Djinns' belong in Spirit Bottles Dude...[THEY ALWAYS DESTROY THEIR 'CREATORS' FIRST.]


Sobchak=Jewish 'Gibbor'/SATAN, 

Kerebatsos = Greek 'Pan'/SATAN, 

TBL The Big Lebowski =Tubal [Cain]SATAN SENIOR

'Maud'=Mercurius Duplex

Jeffrey Lebowski= SATAN JUNIOR/ THE SCAPEGOAT- THE FOOL


Harrington as a name derives from 'Black Goat' in England and a Black Goat shows up in NewYork City in

Herman Melville's 'Redburn'

And once I saw a black goat with a long beard, and crumpled horns, standing with his forefeet lifted high up on the topmost parapet, and looking to sea, as if he were watching for a ship that was bringing over his cousin. I can see him even now, and though I have changed since then, the black goat looks just the same as ever; and so I suppose he would, if I live to be as old as Methusaleh, and have as great a memory as he must have had. 

https://americanliterature.com/author/herman-melville/book/redburn-his-first-voyage/chapter-vii


[THERE ARE SUPPOSEDLY 72 'DEMONS' IN THE 'GOETIA'-IF YOU CARE TO ASSIGN A CHARACTER TO EACH-ITS THE SAME AS THE FALSE 'TAROT' DECK WITH 72 CARDS-LOAD OF NONSENSE-JUST BURN THEM I DID- AND I WILL HAPPILY BURN YOURS TOO]


The Goat and The Sun are often 'interchangeable' in Mythology/Storytelling. 'Odin' etc


Acting the Goetia ? IN A GOATS WOOL CASHMERE Pendleton?


A young Goat =A Kid 


'GOTAMA' [get it?] =Buddha [slang for Cannabis Cigar]

or Acting the Fool/Clown on Stage? as the HALF AND HALF [MAN/GOAT]NATURE 'GOD' PAN- same thing different Terminology.

The Sun is often symbolized as a Penis.






              








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