the Pythagorean Order of Death

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First let me show you the original idea I had following the examination of the (unattributed) "Vesica Pisces" configuration from "Secret and Suppressed." By aligning the two circles, one directly on top of or over the other, and reducing the transparency of both by fifty percent, we arrive at the following overlapping, the correspondences of which between the elements of the two pictures (front and back of the "Seal") becomes much clearer than the original Vesica PIsces configuration.

Here the alignments of the graphic elements in the twin pictures of the "front" and "back" of the "seal" are much more obvious. Here we see, from the bottom upwards, the dual elements both vertically and horizontally in each picture, and how they align between both.

To begin with we see the "Novus" and the "Seclorem" of the "motto" on the "standard" at the based of the "Great Seal" ("back" side, with the pyramid, symbol of financial authority) and the olive branch and the clutch of arrows in the tallons of the eagle ("front" side, symbol of governmental, military authority) overlap.

The "Novus" (meaning "new" in latin) overlaps with the olive branch (representing "peace" but connotative also of the covenant of the world-flood) and the arrows (of which there are thirteen, the "unlucky" number of the Knights Templar) overlap with the "Seclorem" (meaning "world" in latin, but having the connotation of "secular" as opposed to "religious," or "temporal"), respectively.

Also, the central array of the eagle's tail feathers overlaps with the latin word for "Order" (as in the latin saying "Ordo Ab Chao" used among the 32nd degree Scottish Rite Masons, meaning "order out of [or from] chaos"). I'll return to the symbolism of these feathers briefly in a moment.

Likewise, above the "standard" on the pyramid side and the tallons of the eagle on the "front" side, the (again in Roman numerals) year at the base of the pyramid and the "stars and stripes" shield (the primary component of a heradlic crest). I won't bother to explain these, as their symbolism should be obvious: the 15 stars and 13 stripes of the US flag occupy the shield and the year 1776, America's founding.

The "upper" standard (reflecting the "lower" standard beneath the pyramid) in the eagle's beak rises from either side at about the same scale as the "missing capstone" of the pyramid and reads "E PLuribus Unum" (latin, meaning "All for one," the saying of the Three Musketeers in the famus story by Victor Hugo).

Above the "missing capstone" (usually thought to be a Free Masonic symbol itself, although playing a heavier role in the York than the Scottish Rite), we see the "eye in the triangle" (usually believed to represent philosophical "Illuminism") aligns with the 13 stars arranged in a hexagram on the opposite side of the "seal." This may be taken to represent "God" (the eye being the "All-Seeing" aspect while the stars represent the 12 Apostles of Christ), however this is only a shallow interpretation, the "tip of the iceberg" so to speak. In point of fact, this might be thought to symbolise the ancient Egyptian belief in the transubstantiation of the soul of the Pharoah into the constellation of Orion via the Great Pyramid as their tomb.

Above the entire motif, and corresponding to a further horizontal reflection, is the final component, the phrase "ANNUIT COEPTIS," latin for "fortune favours," a shortened version of the old Greek saying "fortune favours the bold."

The following arrangements are just ones to bear generally in mind, and I will not make such extensive commentary on them. Also their symbolism should be remembered to be "adverse" or negatively oriented between the two figures because one is right-side up and one is upside down relative to one another.

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