Thursday, June 20, 2013

Garde Gardom RIIP, Tou Gard A Garden (UPDATE)

Recently added to the Deaths in 2013 site under the June 18th list is: 
I generally visit the Deaths in 2012 site every day in order to stay on top of recent deaths of notable persons, and I usually check the previous days as well in case new persons had been added there.  Such is the case with Garde Gardom.  A "twin" name like that and the fact that he died while at the "twin" age of 88, are automatic flags indicating the likelihood of his inner twin having influenced his "timely" death.

This is nott the first time that the twin age of 88 has cropped up in the last 24 hours.   When following the leads cropping up around the death of Filip Topol, the subject of my previous post, I came across  the following from his wiki page http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Filip_Topol:
 The band was named after the warriors from Thomas Berger's novel Little Big Man.
This stood out for two reasons-- the etymology of the name Thomas Berger is "Twin Mountain", not to mention the recently occurring "Berg" pattern-cluster, note my May 30th post re: Berg RIIP, Burke RIIP, Burns RIIP, Birrell RIIP .  So, And then there was the mention of his novel "Little Big Man", which also falls into the very recent "Opposites" pattern-cluster.   This was enough to warrant further investigation and so off I go to Thomas Berger's wiki page where I note the following: 
 Thomas Louis Berger (born July 20, 1924) is an American novelist. Probably best known for his picaresque novel Little Big Man and the subsequent film by Arthur Penn
I immediately picked up on the surname "Penn" in the above excerpt because of a recently occurring "quill/reed/pen" pattern cluster, note my June 7th post entitled,
, where I even posted a photo of a pen.  Note the etymology:
First edition coverpen (n.1) Look up pen at Dictionary.com"writing implement," late 13c., from Old French pene "quill pen; feather" (12c.) and directly from Latin penna "a feather, plume," 
I then decided to check out the novels wiki page, where I immediately picked up on the novels cover... namely the "pen| at the upper corner that's obviously in the process of writing out the last "b" in "The recollections of Jack Crabb".  So what are the chances of "Pen" cropping up once again?!  And come to think of it, why the twin "bb" in the surname "Crabb"... or the "nn" in the surname "Penn" for that matter... everyone knows that the correct spelling is "pen" and "crab"?!  Ah yes... butt the inner twin's influence is mighty strong and they have an affinity for "twin things" including twin letters at the end of names and words... like "quill".  So note the following excerpt from the novels wiki page:
The novel is structured as a recorded narrative of the purported exploits of 111-year-old Jack Crabb, as he describes his wanderings across the nineteenth-century American West to Ralph Fielding Snell, a somewhat gullible "Man of Letters." 
So there's an addition to the ever burgeoning "111" pattern-cluster.  Now then, note the etymology of crab:
crab (n.1) Look up crab at Dictionary.com from PIE root *gerbh- "to scratch, carve" (see carve).
Isn't that what a pen or pencil does-- scratch out words?!

This was enough to warrant my venturing to Arthur Penn's wiki page, where I then noted the following:

Born
Arthur Hiller PennSeptember 27, 1922
Philadelphia, PennsylvaniaUnited States
Died
September 28, 2010 (aged 88)
New York City, New YorkUnited States
Son note the place of his birth -- Pennsyvania... and in particular, the "penn" prefix!!  Note as well, he was 88 years old at the time of his death!!  And there's even his middle name "Hiller", not quite a mountain, butt considering my previous post involving "mountain", this definitely fitts into the "Opposites" pattern-cluster given that a hill is short/little mound versus mountain being a tall/big mound.  When you come to think of it, Pennsylvania could be written out (tongue in cheek) as "Pencil Vania".  So note the etymology of pencil:
pencil (n.) Look up pencil at Dictionary.comfrom Latin penicillus "painter's brush, hair-pencil," literally "little tail," diminutive of peniculus "brush," itself a diminutive of penis "tail" (see penis).
I would have thought the word pencil to bee related to "pen/penna"... butt obviously it's nott.

What also stood out to me from Penn's wiki page was the following:
Penn's second film was The Miracle Worker (1962), the story of Anne Sullivan's struggle to teach the blind and deaf Helen Keller how to communicate.  In 1965 Penn directed Mickey One.
The Miracle Worker is an all time favorite movie of mine, and in fact I posted about the movie and Helen Keller in various posts in both my Toumai and Pronoiasecret blogs... note my June 25, 2012 post entitled,  Ann Sullivan Puts The Fire Out With W-A-T-E-R, and note this excerpt from the post:
 On perusing Patty Dukes wiki page, I discover that she played the part of Helen Keller in the old movie "Miracle Worker", my favorite of all the oldies.  So I was right to follow my in-stinct.  This in turn reminded me of one of my earlier posts in 2009 (Here), where I stated : 
The life and times of Helen Keller had a part to play in my ultimately being able to ‘hear’ and then ‘see’ the workings of this parallel world.
he title of the 2009 post mentioned above, is Synchronicity, A Connected Voice Part 4: Topsy-turvey..., audd when you consider the title of my previous post: Filip Topol RIIP, Tou Flip 'n Topple.  Nott really so audd tho when considering the hidden power of the inner twin world who with a unique penmanship scratch out a communication to us.

There was one other thing that I had picked up on in regards to Filip Topol, butt failed to mention in my previous post, note the follwing excerpts from his wiki page:
  • Filip Topol (12 June 1965 – 19 June 2013) was a Czech singer, songwriter, and pianist.
  • grandchild of the writer Karel Schulz.[2]
First of all, June 12 is the day before my birthday which then falls into the "Off By One" pattern-cluster.    The second excerpt involves the surname Schulz... which happens to be my daughters married name ... and note the etymology:
Occupational surname derived from Middle High German schultheiße meaning "mayor, judge".
Which brings us back to "Garde Gardom"... not that he was a mayor or judge, butt because of his obviously related occupation of lawyer and politician.  I find it audd that judges were lawyers once ... as were many if not most politicians.  That's scarey... a lot of power in the hands of a  single group... so what happens to democracy if and when this group becomes power corrupt.
Note the following from Karel Schulz wiki page:
Karel Schulz (1899–1943) was a Czech writer and novelist whose most famous work is the historical novel Kámen a bolest (Stone and Pain)
In Garde Gardom`s wiki page there`s also another notable mention that stood out, note the following:
Originally a Liberal, he joined the Social Credit party in 1974 and was appointed to the cabinet of Premier Bill Bennett in 1975.
Of course the name Bill Bennett is meaningful... falling into both the `bill`and `Bennett`pattern-clusters. And from Bill Bennett`s wiki page, note the following excerpts:
 ...He is a son of the former Premier, W. A. C. Bennett. He was a 3rd cousin, twice removed, of R.B. Bennett, eleventh Prime Minister of Canada.
...One media term coined to describe the younger Bennett was "Mini-Wac,"
Okay, so mini-wac... as in `little nut` or `little whack`.  This is nott the first time that `mini`has cropped up, note my recent May post Grayson Minney RIIP , An Eternity of Heaven for a Grey Son ...

There's more to his name as well, given that is sounds like "guard", note the etymology:
 guard (n.) Look up guard at Dictionary.comearly 15c., "one who keeps watch," from Middle French garde "guardian, warden, keeper; watching, keeping, custody," from Old French garder "to keep, maintain, preserve, protect" (corresponding to Old North French warder, see gu-), from Frankish *wardon, from Proto-Germanic *wardo- "to guard" (see ward (v.)
My daughter in law`s maiden name is `Ward`.

It doesn`t matter who Garde Gardom was as the person we perceive him to be in our outer world, at this point and for the purpose of this blog and post, it`s important to see the sacrifice made by his inner twin that culminated in their conjoined deaths.  This is what we now have to guard ourselves against ... this is the new battle being waged and the only way to end it, is to begin by paving the way for the inner twin world to come out and communicate to us.

*********

UPDATE:

Oh yes, and Arthur Penn wasn`t just from Pennsylvania, butt from Philadelphia Pensylvania... so not my post title:  Will Wynn RIIP, A Kwiladelphia Eagle... yes that would bee aka ``Quiladelphia``... the orgins of Philadelphia... and by the way, note the etymology:
Philadelphia Look up Philadelphia at Dictionary.com city in Pennsylvania, U.S., from Greek, taken by William Penn to mean "brotherly love," from philos "loving" (see -phile) + adelphos "brother" (see Adelphia).
Adelphia Look up Adelphia at Dictionary.comdistrict of London, so called because it was laid out by four brothers of a family named Adam, from Greek adelphos "brother," literally "from the same womb," from copulative prefixa- "together with" + delphys "womb," perhaps related to dolphin.
dolphin (n.) Look up dolphin at Dictionary.commid-14c., from Old French daulphin, from Medieval Latin dolfinus, from Latin delphinus "dolphin," from Greek delphis (genitive delphinos) "dolphin," related to delphys "womb," perhaps via notion of the animal bearing live young, or from its shape, from PIE *gwelbh-.
Okaay, the PIE root of dolphin is *gwelbh (aka quelf)... soo, that makes the root origin of Philadelphia more like ``Quilaquelfia``... and before that ``Squilasquelfia!!  Sheesh, now you can begin to understand why words were modified... THAT`s quite a mouth full!!

So, how did they get delphia out of gwelbh you might ask, well, it goes back ... way back to the fact that even before the root of Squelfia came about, the letter `s` was often shortened from the longer `str`version... or `sdr`... with d and t being related in much the  same was as b and p... and just as b came first, d was likely first as well, and in case of the word `delphia`, the letter d was retained while the other letters were dropped...  it is more than likely that the word delphia had emerged from another dialect that chose to drop the other letters, only to eventually overcome *gwelbh and hence dolphin and delphia remain today.

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