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Magic Monday

The image? That's the thirtieth card in The Sacred Geometry Oracle. Card 31, the Sphere, when upright tells you that the possibilities before you are much bigger than you realize; when reversed, it tells you that you're completely missing what's going on. The sun in the upper left corner of the image tells you that this card belongs to the final third of the oracle, which corresponds to Nwyfre, the principle of spirit and meaning. We've completed our passage through the first two of the basic root functions of sacred geometry -- √3, the principle of the vesica piscis and the equilateral triangle, and √2, the principle of the square and its diagonal -- and now we're working with the √5, the seed from which the Golden Section unfolds and resolves all back into unity.
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***This Magic Monday is now closed. See you next week!***
Re: Eagle's Mead and Prayer Resources
Alternatively, this site on contemporary alliterative poetry includes section on Old English and Norse technique: http://alliteration.net/index.htm
For what I can remember, and simplifying things, the basics are as follow:
Forget about rhyme and think of alliteration instead. Your basic line has got two parts, each part has got strong (stressed) and weak (unstressed) syllables.
You only alliterate the strong syllables, and you must alliterate the first strong in the second part with the strongest of the first part. You can also extend the alliteration to the second strong syllable in the first part, but you must not alliterate the last strong syllable in the second part. Example from Tolkien:
"they BORE aBOARD, / in her BOSOM piling" (alliterates 1a, 1b and 2a)
"TIME passed away / on the TIDE floated" (alliterates 1a and 2a)
Have fun!
Manuel
Re: Eagle's Mead and Prayer Resources