Friday, January 13, 2006

 
In his last and probably greatest movie, "Eyes Wide Shut," Stanley Kubrik apparently describes the chance encounter a young, modern couple has with the powerful group, the Freemasons. I believe, that during the times of George Washington, some Freemasons were members of the congregation of Old South Church of Boston, where Benjamin Franklin was a member and where Phillis Wheatly, in the company of her owners, attended occasionally.

Vital statistics of some of their early, colonial members and congregation, I believe, were taken note of in The History of Chelmsford, Mass. by Rev. Wilson Waters. Therein it states about a Mrs. Fiske, who had recently passed away:
"She, by her incomparable expertness in the scripture, had rendered any concordance of the Bible in his [Mr. Fiske's] library useless. Some years before her death she lost her sight. Under this disaster she exhibited a most exemplary patience by her view of the things which are not seen and are eternal. After many admonitions to her friends to improve their sight well whilst they had it; on the 14th February, 1671, she had her eyes opened by their being closed, and was by death carried from faith to immediate and everlasting sight."

Although not a Freemason, having, in the past, taught math at the Ohio State University and Howard University (also, my master thesis' title having been mentioned in the movie, "A Beautiful Mind" about Nobel prize winner, John Nash) I might be trusted to have some authority in claiming that there is a type of code or encrypted message that can be read from the events that took place in the lives of colonial Freemasons and which also tells a different story than the usual one about the course of American history. The few aspects I have deciphered and their interpretation will be revealed later. It is on the basis of my personal interpretation of the "code" that I will justify many unorthodox views on the events and personalities of colonial American history.





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