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'O elements of water which lead? the god of rock that chainmail/ some sort of mail (male) hunger if knighthood your sapphire the great side of the axis as dark as the moon'

2006-06-06 13:47:25 · 12 answers · asked by silverboy470 4 in Society & Culture Mythology & Folklore

viper you make a good point and it makes sense, but I think you left out a few parts like you say nothing about wather or the treasure. I'm not sure about the punctuation though I just put it up as it was .

2006-06-07 07:48:43 · update #1

Oh I forgot scratch that treasure thing, it was something I got out of the phrase. And it is real I don't care what some crack-pot old websites say, It is most likely an ancient druid or celtic spell.

2006-06-07 07:51:31 · update #2

12 answers

WHAT IS THAT!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

2006-06-06 13:52:12 · answer #1 · answered by Diva 2 · 0 0

It's an attempt at translating a 'fake' Welsh verse.
"A elfyntodd dwyr sinddyn duw
cerrig yr fferllurig nwyn;
os syriaeth ech saffaer tu
fewr echlyn mor, necrombor llun"
It's a poem about the grave of Myrddin / Merlin, either by Douglas Monroe - apparently a total fake - or a mangled old spell that has been corrupted into nonsense over centuries or millennia. So don't expect to ever get a logical translation of his nonsense!!

There's some debate as to it's origin, but we'll never know now.

2006-06-06 23:22:55 · answer #2 · answered by _ 6 · 0 0

I think it's a fragment. If you read it carefully, it's subject is the elements of water. These elements lead gods that do something. Then there's a condition... and then there's nothing. It's an imcomplete sentence.
It's basically saying "Hey, you who do this and that, if this happens." A very similar sentence (logical, however) would read "Hey, you who do this and that, if this happens, do this." Or at least "Hey, you who do this and that, this is happening"
I infer it's the opening sentence of a cheap spell or something. It's gramatically incorrect, however. Valid neither in modern English or any other sort.

2006-06-20 12:05:58 · answer #3 · answered by its just me!! 4 · 0 0

Be thee day, or be thee night, the darkness of the sapphire knows as the axis of the moon turns from darkness to light, and the god of rock waits, and smiles.

2006-06-06 22:44:26 · answer #4 · answered by viper 2 · 0 0

Some sort of punctuation might help...
Maybe if I heard it out loud. You you mean lead the verb or lead the metal? And is that question mark because you don't know, or is that the end of your sentance?

2006-06-06 23:34:54 · answer #5 · answered by kaplah 5 · 0 0

it is not a spell. i studied druid and Celtic culture in college for my degree in anthropology. i was also a high priestess in my coven.....it is not a spell unless you left many many many lines off.....

2006-06-20 18:29:30 · answer #6 · answered by wayladuley 3 · 0 0

Don't eat the werewolf chocolate, it holds a terrible curse.

2006-06-20 05:45:40 · answer #7 · answered by Cas 4 · 0 0

slte'l ese fi ouy anc erda wthta si rwtneit reeh. hatt yaw i lilw sdcivreo fi teh othery si rtgih.

:-)

2006-06-20 15:38:42 · answer #8 · answered by unknown u 3 · 0 0

too many drugs, too much liquor...not enough sleep. That is how I analyze this.

2006-06-07 00:01:12 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

some sort of wierd riddle, LMAO!

2006-06-06 21:57:24 · answer #10 · answered by Ella 2 · 0 0

waaaay over my head, i wish i could help you there.

2006-06-16 07:29:49 · answer #11 · answered by punchpringle 2 · 0 0

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