Page 249

Alexandr Korol
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Page 249

Post by Alexandr Korol »

Chapter 18. Dreams and Highlights

I am now waiting for the next hints to be highlighted, to figure out what to unravel next. Probably, it will be about dreams. Probably, it will be about dreams. Well, let’s see. So, wake up.

Well, I believe it’s important to fix this. It turns out that the conversation I had with the Mystic-Old-Man about the pharaoh and with Big Alexander about the pharaoh, where he’s the pharaoh and I’m the heir to the pharaoh, this conversation took place on September 19. And on September 20, the system for some reason highlighted and made an emphasis on the sand clock several times. I don’t know what this means, I’ll just fix it in the book, and later I’ll decide whether to keep it or not. Because often the system works through me, and when I’m in the Spirit, I just speak about whatever catches my attention, not knowing why, and then later it turns out that it wasn’t random, because it all gets revealed at the end of the book. And maybe these sand clocks mean something, but I don’t know what for now. I opened Wikipedia. Wikipedia says that it’s “the simplest device for measuring time intervals, consisting of two transparent vessels connected by a narrow neck, one of which is partially filled with sand,” and that they were found in different times and are presented in museums. It says where they all came from. And here’s something curious. In the gallery – the Wikipedia section on sand clocks. An image, “A sarcophagus, dated around 350 AD, depicting the wedding of Peleus and Thetis (note the enlargement of the item that Morpheus holds in his hands).” See, Morpheus is holding sand clocks in his hands. Then there’s an image “Temperance holding sand clocks; a detail from ‘Allegory of Good Government’ by Lorenzetti, 1338.” And because this appears with Morpheus, and since the system is currently focusing a lot on the fact that everything I write is mythology, and that we are living in mythical times, it then highlighted everything about mythology again. And I think that, probably, I need to focus not on the sand clocks but on who Morpheus is. “Morpheus (“the form-giver”, “he who forms dreams”) is the god of good (prophetic or false) dreams in Greek mythology.