| 1 | In the Great Age of the Ram, |
| 2 | Nine hundred and ninety six years, |
| 3 | Since the dawn of the Great Age (204 BCE), |
| 4 | The lands of the great Po valley, |
| 5 | Which had supported Hannibal, |
| 6 | Were finally brought to account, |
| 7 | As a new Province known as Gallia Citerior, |
| 8 | Later known as Gallia Cisalpine, |
| 9 | Commanded by Lucius Scribonius Libo. |
| 10 | With the wars against Hannibal and his brothers, |
| 11 | Finally coming to an end, |
| 12 | Rome faced the terrible cost, |
| 13 | And the demands of peace, |
| 14 | As mercenary soldiers of the Marsi and Samnites, |
| 15 | From Sparta to Ionia and Africa, |
| 16 | As well as Celts from Britanni and Germanica, |
| 17 | Sought compensation for their service. |
| 18 | The Samnites (Samaritans) did still control, |
| 19 | The minting of money through their city of Naples, |
| 20 | As they had done well before the wars with Hannibal, |
| 21 | And now dominated all trade and supplies. |
| 22 | Yet the Senate of Rome still commanded the law, |
| 23 | And by law only a Citizen of Rome could hold land. |
| 24 | The Roman Senate then did appoint Quintus Caecilius Metellus, |
| 25 | As Caesar (Dictator) with a commission of ten Senators, |
| 26 | To negotiate with King Mara of the Marmatines (Mamertines), |
| 27 | And King Pontius of Samnia and King Antonius of Syracuse. |
| 28 | Upon his appointment Caesar Quintus Caecilius Metellus, |
| 29 | Did consult with the Pontifex Maximus Elkaniah, |
| 30 | The Great Prophet of Yeb in Rome. |
| 31 | The Supreme Pontiff of the Divine Creator did warn Caesar, |
| 32 | That the law does not permit two types of Citizens, |
| 33 | That if even one man be above the law, |
| 34 | Then the Golden Rule be dishonored, |
| 35 | And there be no Rule of Law. |
| 36 | Thus Caesar Quintus Caecilius Metellus, |
| 37 | Failed to resolve the crisis. |
| 1 | In the Great Age of the Ram, |
| 2 | Nine hundred and ninety seven years, |
| 3 | Since the dawn of the Great Age (203 BCE), |
| 4 | As the threat of open rebellion grew, |
| 5 | Amongst the veterans of the great wars, |
| 6 | Who had settled in the Po and Arno valleys, |
| 7 | To the northern province, |
| 8 | And across Campania and Sicily, |
| 9 | To the southern provinces. |
| 10 | The Senate then appointed Publius Sulpicius Galba as Caesar. |
| 11 | Caesar Publius Sulpicius Galba then issued, |
| 12 | The historic proclamation making all veterans, |
| 13 | Of the wars against the Carthaginians as Plebian Citizens, |
| 14 | As second class Citizens but with the right of land, |
| 15 | On condition of their sacred pledge, |
| 16 | Of loyalty and allegiance to Rome. |
| 17 | As a symbol to the Marmatines (Mamertines), |
| 18 | Caesar Publius Sulpicius Galba appointed the son of King Mara, |
| 19 | Who was also known as Mara, |
| 20 | As his Magister Equitum (Master of the Horse). |
| 21 | Upon such illustrious appointment, |
| 22 | The son of King Mara did adopt a Roman Name, |
| 23 | Callling himself Gaius Marius Servilius, |
| 24 | As a loyal and obedient servant to the glory of Rome, |
| 25 | And pledged upon his ancestors and his blood, |
| 26 | That he and all his descendants be bound, |
| 27 | To protect the honor of Rome, |
| 28 | And the laws of Rome. |
| 29 | As a symbol to the Samnites (Samaritans), |
| 30 | Of Campania and Naples, |
| 31 | Caesar Publius Sulpicius Galba appointed the son of King Pontius, |
| 32 | Who was also known as Pompus, |
| 33 | As his Quastor (Master of mint and finance). |
| 34 | Upon such illustrious appointment, |
| 35 | The son of King Pontius did adopt a Roman Name, |
| 36 | Callling himself Gnaeus Pompeius Sterno. |
| 37 | As celebration King Pontius of the Samnites (Samaritans), |
| 38 | Ordered his mint at Naples forge a new coin, |
| 39 | Made of seven grams of gold, |
| 40 | Called the Aureus and equal to 25 denarii. |
| 41 | King Pontius then sent a thousand coins to each Senator, |
| 42 | As a sign of the good will of the Samnites (Samaritans). |
| 43 | As a symbol to the Graecians of Sicily and Syracuse, |
| 44 | Caesar Publius Sulpicius Galba appointed the son of King Antonius, |
| 45 | Who was also known as Sempronius, |
| 46 | As his Tribune of the Plebs (Supreme Justice). |
| 47 | The son of King Antonius did adopt a Roman Name, |
| 48 | Calling himself Tiberius Sempronius Gracchus. |
| 49 | Thus upon the first formation of the Plebian class, |
| 50 | In the history of Rome, |
| 51 | The connection was forged in the mind, |
| 52 | Of the pirates and mercenaries, |
| 53 | To honor the equis (horse), |
| 54 | As the laws of equity instead of equality, |
| 55 | As law had become the weapon, |
| 56 | For power and privilege at all cost. |
| 1 | In the Great Age of the Ram, |
| 2 | One thousand and three years, |
| 3 | Since the dawn of the Great Age (197 BCE), |
| 4 | The Great Temple known as the Vaticanus, |
| 5 | Atop Mount Vaticanus was completed, |
| 6 | As the new home for the Ark of the Covenant, |
| 7 | And the first Pontifex Maximus, |
| 8 | The Great Prophet Elkaniah of Yahu. |
| 9 | The catacombs did support a giant structure, |
| 10 | Above the virgin earth of more than two hundred feet in length, |
| 11 | Nor had such earth been desecrated as a place of burial, |
| 12 | Until the time of Gaius Marius who called himself Julius Caesar, |
| 13 | And the worship of Cybele and Mithra and sacrifice. |
| 14 | Upon the completion of the most sacred Temple of all Rome, |
| 15 | The Senate instituted two most sacred rituals, |
| 16 | United together as the representation, |
| 17 | Of death and resurrection, |
| 18 | With the first being ceremony of Quadragesima (Lent), |
| 19 | During the month of late February and March, |
| 20 | As forty days of fasting and austerity, prayer and charity, |
| 21 | Where Romans prayed to their ancestors and household gods, |
| 22 | Consuming only unleavened bread and unfermented wine, |
| 23 | Until the celebration of the new festival called Megalesia, |
| 24 | Led by the Pontifex Maximus Elkaniah, |
| 25 | At the beginning of April and celebrating rebirth and new life, |
| 26 | At which for fourteen days Romans could celebrate their providence, |
| 27 | And thanks to the one Divine Creator. |
| 28 | Thus was born the sacred liturgy of Essenoi, |
| 29 | Meaning those who seek to be enlightened through, |
| 30 | Purity of spirit and honesty of character. |
| 1 | Since the edict of Publius Sulpicius Galba, |
| 2 | In the creation of all Plebs as equal, |
| 3 | Land had been allocated to the former mercenaries, |
| 4 | And soldiers as free men, |
| 5 | For slavery remained a capital crime under Roman Law, |
| 6 | And no man be bound to serve except by their own consent, |
| 7 | As surety for their valid debts. |
| 8 | Yet Pirate King Mara (Magas) of Marmarica and Crete, |
| 9 | Did secretly dishonor these laws, |
| 10 | By importing slaves to Sicily and Calabria and Campania, |
| 11 | To work the larger estates owned by the more powerful. |
| 12 | Thus slowly the price of agriculture continued to remain low, |
| 13 | As larger farms with slave labor, |
| 14 | Could charge less than free men, |
| 15 | And more and more freemen became indebted and impoverished. |
| 16 | Rather than enforcing the strictness of the law, |
| 17 | Senators of Rome increasingly turned a blind eye, |
| 18 | As King Mara through his son Gaius Marius Servilius, |
| 19 | Gifted to key senators the most beautiful girls, |
| 20 | And young boys as personal slaves and attendants. |
| 21 | Nor did the Plebs themselves rise up, |
| 22 | As Gnaeus Pompeius Sterno of the Samnites, |
| 23 | Gradually built the largest network of brothels, |
| 24 | And drug dens and taverns full of enslaved girls and boys, |
| 25 | In the history of the known world. |
| 26 | Never before had such depravity been at so large a commercial scale, |
| 27 | As such vices were the stories of conquest and pillage. |
| 28 | Yet mercenaries and Plebs could afford to indulge themselves, |
| 29 | In opiates and sexual pleasures and alcohol cheaply. |
| 30 | In the Great Age of the Ram, |
| 31 | One thousand and eight years, |
| 32 | Since the dawn of the Great Age (192 BCE), |
| 33 | Holy Patros Antiochus the Great, |
| 34 | Did end his war with Ptolemy of Egypt, |
| 35 | For Syria and Sinai and his army attacked Pergamon, |
| 36 | Aided by King Philip of Illyria and Macedonia. |
| 37 | King Eumenes of Pergamon did appeal to Rome, |
| 38 | Who then sent Lucius Cornelius Scipio, |
| 39 | And a Samnite mercenary army to his aid. |
| 40 | In the Great Age of the Ram, |
| 41 | One thousand and ten years, |
| 42 | Since the dawn of the Great Age (190 BCE), |
| 43 | Holy Patros (Father) Antiochus the Great, |
| 44 | Was soundly defeated upon the plains of Lydia (Anatolia). |
| 45 | Lucius Cornelius Scipio then annexed Anatolia, |
| 46 | From the Empire of Eliada and renamed it Pontus, |
| 47 | Appointing Lucius Pompeius Pharnaces as governor, |
| 48 | With Amisos the capital of the new Roman province. |
| 49 | Lucius Cornelius Scipio then formed a peace treaty, |
| 50 | With King Prusias of Bithynia to the west, |
| 51 | And King Artaxis of the Armenians to the east. |
| 52 | In the Great Age of the Ram, |
| 53 | One thousand and thirteen years, |
| 54 | Since the dawn of the Great Age (187 BCE), |
| 55 | Holy Father (Patros) Antiochus the Great, |
| 56 | Did give up the ghost. |
| 57 | The position of holy father (Patros), |
| 58 | Did befall to his son named Epiphanes. |
| 59 | Upon the death of Antiochus the Great, |
| 60 | Lucius Pompeius Pharnaces extended the lands of Pontus, |
| 61 | By capturing the Crimea (Peninsula), |
| 62 | Establishing Pontius to the east, |
| 63 | And Taurica (Yalta) to the south, |
| 64 | And Heraclea (Sevastapol) to the south east. |
| 1 | In the Great Age of the Ram, |
| 2 | One thousand and eighteen years, |
| 3 | Since the dawn of the Great Age (182 BCE), |
| 4 | King Phriapites of Parthia, |
| 5 | Formerly known as Machiah, |
| 6 | Did give up the ghost. |
| 7 | His crown did then fall to his son, |
| 8 | Phrates who then changed his name to Mithradiah, |
| 9 | And proclaimed himself the true and only savior, |
| 10 | And high priest of Mithraism. |
| 11 | Mithradiah then proclaimed blood heritage, |
| 12 | Directly through to the Great Prophet Enochiah, |
| 13 | Through a mysterious and absurd genealogy, |
| 14 | Beginning with Methuseliah who he now claimed, |
| 15 | Did live for hundreds of years, |
| 16 | Then his claimed son Lameciah, |
| 17 | Who he also claimed lived for hundreds of years, |
| 18 | And then Noiah (Noah) who lived for hundreds of years, |
| 19 | Before Shem (Shemiah) then Menassiah then Machiah. |
| 20 | In the Great Age of the Ram, |
| 21 | One thousand and nineteen years, |
| 22 | Since the dawn of the Great Age (181 BCE), |
| 23 | Holly High King Meilge Molbthach mac Cobthach, |
| 24 | The Cuilliaéan king of all the Celts, |
| 25 | Did give up the ghost. |
| 26 | The throne of Amen-Ra did then befall to his son, |
| 27 | Whose name was Irereo Fathach mac Meilge. |
| 28 | Since the tin and silver and gold mines of the Holly High Kings, |
| 29 | They had become increasingly wealthy, |
| 30 | Along with the Constantine (Custenynn), |
| 31 | The stewards of the Drumnonii. |
| 32 | In the Great Age of the Ram, |
| 33 | One thousand and twenty one years, |
| 34 | Since the dawn of the Great Age (179 BCE), |
| 35 | King Philip of Illyria and Macedonia, |
| 36 | The Grandson of the Great Pyrrhus, |
| 37 | Did give up the ghost. |
| 38 | The crown then did befall to his son, |
| 39 | Whose name was Perseus. |
| 1 | In the Great Age of the Ram, |
| 2 | One thousand and thirty three years, |
| 3 | Since the dawn of the Great Age (167 BCE), |
| 4 | Roman Consul Lucius Aemilius Paullus, |
| 5 | Defeated the army of King Perseus of Illyria and Macedon, |
| 6 | At the battle for Pydna in Macedon. |
| 7 | King Perseus of Illyria, |
| 8 | The great grandson of the King Pyrrhus, |
| 9 | Was captured and killed, |
| 10 | Thus the bloodline of Pyrrhus ended in Illyria and Eliada. |
| 11 | The Province of Illyricum was then declared for Rome and the Senate. |
| 12 | Upon the death of King Perseus, |
| 13 | The Cypriots and Syrians and Palestinians revolted, |
| 14 | Under the leadership of Priest King Mattathiah of Tarsus, |
| 15 | Who proclaimed himself to be the one true high priest, |
| 16 | In opposition to Mithradiah of Parthia. |
| 17 | Holy Patros Epiphanes the Antiochus, |
| 18 | Did restore order to Cyprus, |
| 19 | Yet Priest King Mattathiah and his sons, |
| 20 | Did cripple and delay the superior forces, |
| 21 | Of Epiphanes the Antiochus. |
| 22 | In the Great Age of the Ram, |
| 23 | One thousand and thirty five years, |
| 24 | Since the dawn of the Great Age (165 BCE), |
| 25 | The city of Tarsus was destroyed by Epiphanes the Antiochus, |
| 26 | And Priest King Mattathiah and several of his sons, |
| 27 | Were killed in defending the city. |
| 28 | Iudiah the son of Mattathiah, |
| 29 | Did flee south to the lands of Rabelas, |
| 30 | The warlord of the Nabatean Arabic tribes, |
| 31 | Who agreed to enter a trade treaty, |
| 32 | To control the spice and incense trade, |
| 33 | Against the Seleucid traders. |
| 34 | The army of Epiphanes the Antiochus, |
| 35 | Was overwhelmed by the Arabic horsemen, |
| 36 | And upon the great victory, |
| 37 | Iudiah declared himself King of Asmonea (Hasmonea), |
| 38 | With Jerusalem as his capital. |
| 39 | In the Great Age of the Ram, |
| 40 | One thousand and thirty nine years, |
| 41 | Since the dawn of the Great Age (161 BCE), |
| 42 | King Iudiah of Asmonea (Hasmonea), |
| 43 | Was killed at the Battle of Elasa, |
| 44 | By General Bacchides who served, |
| 45 | King Demetrius the Antiochus. |
| 46 | The crown of Asmonea (Hasmonea) did then befall, |
| 47 | Yehoniah the youngest son of Mattathiah, |
| 48 | And brother of Iudiah. |
| 49 | In the same year, |
| 50 | Pirate King Mara (Magas) of Marmarica and Crete, |
| 51 | Did give up the ghost. |
| 52 | Control of the Marmatine Pirate Empire, |
| 53 | Of Libya and Calabria and Crete, |
| 54 | Did befall to his son, |
| 55 | Gaius Marius Servilius, |
| 56 | Who chose not to be named as a king, |
| 57 | But who still ruled as a king, |
| 58 | As Roman law forbid Romans claiming to be king. |
| 1 | By the time of the death, |
| 2 | Of Pirate King Mara (Magas) of Marmarica and Crete, |
| 3 | The fabric of Rome and the model of law, |
| 4 | Was itself under attack. |
| 5 | The explosion of cheap drugs and alcohol, |
| 6 | Of gambling and prostitution, |
| 7 | Promoted by the pirates and the Samnites, |
| 8 | Had kept the Plebs satisfied, |
| 9 | And the Senate distracted, |
| 10 | Even if the rate of wars had decreased, |
| 11 | And the price of agriculture continued to fall. |
| 12 | Yet the trust between men and woman, |
| 13 | And the institution of matrimony and household, |
| 14 | Were diminished by the changes in mind, |
| 15 | As women were turned to objects and property. |
| 16 | Neighbours no longer trusted neighbour, |
| 17 | Friends no longer trusted friends, |
| 18 | And merchants fought to cheat one another. |
| 19 | Thus as trust within communities diminished, |
| 20 | So the power of the moneylenders and the private mints, |
| 21 | Increased in power, |
| 22 | As people abandoned the capital of goodwill, |
| 23 | For the capital of money. |
| 24 | The dependency upon the mints of Naples and Rheggio, |
| 25 | Grew to the highest levels as money began to control, |
| 26 | All aspects of the lives of Romans, |
| 27 | Whereas a century earlier their ancestors had no need of such coin. |
| 28 | People had become addicted to pleasure, |
| 29 | And respect for moral values continued to decline. |
| 30 | Whereas Rome was once like Sparta, |
| 31 | It had become a place devoid of honor and Rule of Law. |
| 32 | In the Great Age of the Ram, |
| 33 | One thousand and forty one years, |
| 34 | Since the dawn of the Great Age (159 BCE), |
| 35 | King Eumenes of Pergamon, |
| 36 | Did give up the ghost. |
| 37 | The crown of Pergamon did then befall, |
| 38 | To his son named Euergertes the Attalus. |
| 39 | In the Great Age of the Ram, |
| 40 | One thousand and forty two years, |
| 41 | Since the dawn of the Great Age (158 BCE), |
| 42 | Elkaniah the twenty seventh great prophet of Yeb, |
| 43 | The son of Eleziah and the grandson of Oniah, |
| 44 | Did give up the ghost. |
| 45 | The position then befell, |
| 46 | To his son whose name was Zadokiah, |
| 47 | As the twenty eight Great Prophet of the Yahudi, |
| 48 | And Pontifex Maximus (Supreme Pontiff) of the Divine Creator. |
| 1 | In the Great Age of the Ram, |
| 2 | One thousand and forty three years, |
| 3 | Since the dawn of the Great Age (157 BCE), |
| 4 | Holly High King Irereo Fathach mac Meilge, |
| 5 | The living foundation stone of the Divine, |
| 6 | Of the most ancient Cuilliaéan, |
| 7 | And blood descendant of the priests of Ebla, |
| 8 | And blood descendant of the priests of Ur, |
| 9 | And blood descendant of the priest-kings of the Hyksos, |
| 10 | And blood descendant of the priests of Ugarit, |
| 11 | And the only true blood descendants of King Da’vid, |
| 12 | And the Messiah Kings of Yahuda. |
| 13 | Did give up the ghost. |
| 14 | The throne of Amen-Ra did then befall to his son, |
| 15 | Whose name was Connla Caem mac Irereo. |
| 16 | In the same year, |
| 17 | Pontifex Maximus Zadokiah, |
| 18 | The Great Prophet of the Divine Creator, |
| 19 | Did issue from the Vaticanus, |
| 20 | A terrible rebuke against the people of Rome, |
| 21 | For accepting the bribery and corruption of money, |
| 22 | For turning a blind eye to the return of slavery, |
| 23 | For removing the Rule of Law, |
| 24 | And allowing the destruction of trust. |
| 25 | The Senate did respond by closing the Vaticanus, |
| 26 | And refusing Pontifex Maximus Zadokiah, |
| 27 | From attending to the Ark of the Covenant, |
| 28 | To which the Great Prophet replied, |
| 29 | The Ark be only a symbol of no more spiritual power, |
| 30 | Than the smallest flower. |
| 31 | As both are born and both shall return to dust, |
| 32 | But those that live with the spirit of Divine, |
| 33 | Can never die. |
| 34 | The Senate relented in their protest, |
| 35 | And begged the Pontifex Maximus for forgiveness, |
| 36 | Saying that they were powerless against the forces of commerce, |
| 37 | And the wealth of the Samnites and Marmatines and Sicilians. |
| 38 | Pontifex Maximus Zadokiah did then prophecy, |
| 39 | The house shall be empty of spirit, |
| 40 | No taste shall satisfy nor drink shall quench thirst, |
| 41 | Nor wealth or conquest or power. |
| 42 | For the spirit of the Divine shall leave this city, |
| 43 | And the evil of ignorance and superstition, |
| 44 | Shall dwell as a false shadow in its place, |
| 45 | Until the return of one like the son of man, |
| 46 | Upon the dawn of a new Great Age. |
| 47 | The Senate was still greatly troubled, |
| 48 | And asked by what signs such events will come, |
| 49 | Whereupon Zadokiah added to the beliefs of Essenoi, |
| 50 | There shall be signs in all forms, |
| 51 | Of the coming destruction of the present world, |
| 52 | By the Divine Creator of all things. |
| 53 | The earth shall shake and the mountains roar; |
| 54 | The animals shall stop giving birth and the crops wither; |
| 55 | Men shall tear the flesh from other men, |
| 56 | And pray for death; |
| 57 | The city shall be destroyed three times; |
| 58 | Before the Kingdom of Heaven returns. |
| 59 | The Divine Creator shall call to judgment, |
| 60 | All who corrupted Divine Law and Rule of Law, |
| 61 | Upon the arrival of a great Messiah, |
| 62 | Who will cleanse the world of its transgressions, |
| 63 | And restore the Rule of Law and Justice, |
| 64 | And that those who choose to be of the world, |
| 65 | Shall be doomed by their own iniquity, |
| 66 | Yet those who repent and cleanse themselves, |
| 67 | Of the vices of this world, |
| 68 | Shall have eternal life. |
| 69 | In the Great Age of the Ram, |
| 70 | One thousand and forty four years, |
| 71 | Since the dawn of the Great Age (156 BCE), |
| 72 | Pontifex Maximus Zadokiah, |
| 73 | The twenty eight Great Prophet of the Yahudi, |
| 74 | Did depart Rome with all the Yahudi priests, |
| 75 | Leaving the Ark of the Covenant behind, |
| 76 | And the great Vaticanus empty of Holly Spirit, |
| 77 | To establish a new temple at Leontopolis (Cairo) in Egypt, |
| 78 | With the permission of Philometor the Ptolemy. |
| 79 | At the city of the lion (Leontopolis), |
| 80 | Pontifex Maximus Zadokiah dedicated the new temple, |
| 81 | Naming it Chi Rho (Cairo), |
| 82 | As the site of a Christ yet to come. |
| 1 | In the Great Age of the Ram, |
| 2 | One thousand and forty five years, |
| 3 | Since the dawn of the Great Age (155 BCE), |
| 4 | Upon the departure of the Great Prophet Zadokiah, |
| 5 | And the Holly Priests of Yeb from Rome, |
| 6 | The Senate called out to all citizens and colonies, |
| 7 | That the wisest and skilled priests or philosophers, |
| 8 | Come to Rome that a Supreme Pontiff, |
| 9 | Without the fire and controversy of Zadokiah, |
| 10 | Be selected as custodian over the Ark of the Covenant. |
| 11 | Soon all manner of mystic, false messiah and false prophet, |
| 12 | Did descend upon Rome until the Senate selected three, |
| 13 | The first being Carneades of Cyrene, |
| 14 | The second being Diogenes of Tarsus, |
| 15 | And the third being Critolaus of Pergamon. |
| 16 | The Roman Senate then interviewed each man, |
| 17 | Especially upon the prophecies of Zadokiah. |
| 18 | Carneades of Cyrene who perpetuated the philosophy of Nihilism, |
| 19 | And false skepticism of Pyrrhus, |
| 20 | Did declare that all dogma and law is subject to change, |
| 21 | For even justice must be considered relative and not absolute. |
| 22 | Carneades of Cyrene then challenged even the reason of the Senators, |
| 23 | For the law is whatever the Senate believes it to be, |
| 24 | That the might of the sword is right, |
| 25 | And the only truth can be measured by probability, |
| 26 | For no one can prove Divine law with certainty. |
| 27 | Upon such a speech the Senate was terrified, |
| 28 | And forbid the teachings of Carneades in Rome. |
| 29 | Thus Carneades became glorified by the pirates, |
| 30 | And the moneylenders who believed in nothing. |
| 31 | Next Critolaus of Pergamon, |
| 32 | Declared that none of what Zadokiah said could be proven, |
| 33 | Thus none of it could be true, |
| 34 | For only facts gathered through induction, |
| 35 | May be argued as true, |
| 36 | And all other sayings be mere conjecture. |
| 37 | Critolaus of Pergamon then showed the power of logic, |
| 38 | And the artful use of dialectics whereby the same subject, |
| 39 | May be proven as true or false, |
| 40 | Or that a man may be found innocent or guilty, |
| 41 | Through the skilled use of argument and mere words. |
| 42 | The Senate was indignant that truth be so technical, |
| 43 | As the art of word assembly without strength of rhetoric, |
| 44 | And forbid the teachings of Critolaus to be used in law. |
| 45 | Yet the skills of word play and dialectics soon became, |
| 46 | The secret art of orators and lawyers of the Republic. |
| 47 | Next Diogenes of Tarsus, |
| 48 | Refuted the prophecies of Zadokiah, |
| 49 | That the battle is not external, |
| 50 | But internal as men are prone to good or evil, |
| 51 | That the enemy is emotion and desire of pleasure. |
| 52 | To overcome a man must yield to absolute self control, |
| 53 | And perfect reason with nature and logic. |
| 54 | The Senators were disturbed by such challenge, |
| 55 | Yet permitted Diogenes to open a school, |
| 56 | As such self discipline remained a Spartan tradition, |
| 57 | Of the founding of Rome. |
| 58 | Upon the failure to find the wisest philosopher, |
| 59 | To replace the Great Prophet Zadokiah as Pontiff, |
| 60 | The Senate called for the most honorable and pious men. |
| 61 | Yet after four years of searching, |
| 62 | The Senate could find no more honorable or honest, |
| 63 | Or loyal or pious gens (house) than Cornelia. |
| 64 | In the Great Age of the Ram, |
| 65 | One thousand and fifty years, |
| 66 | Since the dawn of the Great Age (150 BCE), |
| 67 | The Senate appointed Publius Cornelius Scipio, |
| 68 | Pontifex Maximus (Supreme Pontiff), |
| 69 | And the first Nasci (Nazi) or Knight, |
| 70 | And Protector of the honor of Rome. |
| 71 | Thus for all its faults, |
| 72 | The Senate of Rome through an act of inspiration, |
| 73 | Deemed one good and humble and honorable man, |
| 74 | To be more deserving than the wisest philosopher. |
| 1 | In the Great Age of the Ram, |
| 2 | One thousand and forty eight years, |
| 3 | Since the dawn of the Great Age (152 BCE), |
| 4 | As more and more Plebians were losing land, |
| 5 | And turning to banditry, |
| 6 | Or being forced into becoming debt slaves, |
| 7 | Gaius Marius Aquillius, |
| 8 | Lord of Marmarica and Calabria, |
| 9 | Sought permission from the Roman Senate, |
| 10 | To confront the Carthaginians for compensation, |
| 11 | As a means of employing the rebellious mercenaries. |
| 12 | Yet the Senate remained unwilling to rekindle war with Carthage. |
| 13 | Instead Gaius Marius Aquillius commissioned, |
| 14 | Polybius the Liar and infamous creator of fiction, |
| 15 | To create a vile history of Carthage and its depravities, |
| 16 | That through such leaders as Marcus Porcius Cato, |
| 17 | The propaganda might sway the mind of the Senate. |
| 18 | In the Great Age of the Ram, |
| 19 | One thousand and fifty one years, |
| 20 | Since the dawn of the Great Age (149 BCE), |
| 21 | Before Marcus Porcius Cato gave up the ghost, |
| 22 | The fictions of Polybius the Liar, |
| 23 | Succeeded in fermenting war, |
| 24 | And Gaius Marius Aquillius was granted permission, |
| 25 | To confront Carthage with a sizeable mercenary army. |
| 26 | The Carthaginians led by the priests of Baal Hamon, |
| 27 | Agreed for payment in slaves and gold, |
| 28 | Yet Gaius Marius Aquillius demanded more. |
| 29 | So when the Carthaginians refused, |
| 30 | Gaius Marius Aquillius attacked and lay siege to the city, |
| 31 | Causing the death of tens of thousands, |
| 32 | Before the city surrendered within three years. |
| 33 | In the Great Age of the Ram, |
| 34 | One thousand and fifty four years, |
| 35 | Since the dawn of the Great Age (146 BCE), |
| 36 | Following defeat of Carthage, |
| 37 | Gaius Marius Aquillius took more than fifty thousand, |
| 38 | As slaves back to Marmarica, |
| 39 | Before selling tens of thousands as slaves, |
| 40 | To the Gracchi of Sicily, |
| 41 | And the Pompeii and Samnites of Campania, |
| 42 | Openly rebuking the laws of Rome, |
| 43 | Against direct slavery. |
| 44 | Gaius Marius Aquillius then declared, |
| 45 | The old lands of Carthage, |
| 46 | The Roman province of Africa. |
| 47 | The head priest of Baal Hamon, |
| 48 | Whose name was Sabaoth, |
| 49 | Did flee the destruction of Carthage with his family, |
| 50 | To the lands of the Nabatea, |
| 51 | Where King Rabelas granted him sanctuary, |
| 52 | And Sabaoth anointed him, |
| 53 | The blessed of Baal, |
| 54 | And rightful king. |
| 55 | In the same year, |
| 56 | Praetor Quintus Caecilius Metellus did defeat, |
| 57 | Rebel leader whose name was Andriscus of Macedon. |
| 58 | Rome then established the Province of Macedonia, |
| 59 | Including Epirus, Thessaly, Paeonia, Thrace and south of Illyria. |
| 1 | In the Great Age of the Ram, |
| 2 | One thousand and fifty nine years, |
| 3 | Since the dawn of the Great Age (141 BCE), |
| 4 | Pontifex Maximus Publius Cornelius Scipio Nasci, |
| 5 | The Knight and Protector of Rome did give up the ghost. |
| 6 | The Senate upon the influence of the moneylenders (bankers), |
| 7 | Led by the corrupt Fulvius Flaccus, |
| 8 | Did then elect a new Pontifex Maximus, |
| 9 | Of poor character and leadership, |
| 10 | Whose name was Pontifex Maximus Publius Mucius Scaevola. |
| 11 | Publius Mucius Scaevola had no interest in confronting the Gracchi, |
| 12 | Or Pompeia or Lord pirates of Marmarica, |
| 13 | And the influx of tens of thousands of Carthaginian slaves, |
| 14 | As some Senators themselves had come to accept the offer, |
| 15 | Of strong slaves for their own estates. |
| 16 | Yet the Plebian farmers continued to become indebted, |
| 17 | And financial slaves to the wealthy families, |
| 18 | And even the mercenaries had become endebted and slaves, |
| 19 | For the lack of wars and cost of vices. |
| 20 | In the Great Age of the Ram, |
| 21 | One thousand and sixty five years, |
| 22 | Since the dawn of the Great Age (135 BCE), |
| 23 | A group of Plebians who had become debt slaves, |
| 24 | To a wealthy merchant did rebel and kill the lord, |
| 25 | Seizing the Natural fortress city Enna, |
| 26 | At the center of Sicily. |
| 27 | News quickly spread of the uprising, |
| 28 | And within only a few weeks, |
| 29 | The Gracchi and the wealthy land barons, |
| 30 | Faced the loss of much of Sicily to rebellion. |
| 31 | The leader of the rebellion called Eunus, |
| 32 | Did declare himself a savior and that no man, |
| 33 | Has the right to enslave another through debt. |
| 34 | The tyrant Tiberius Sempronius Gracchus, |
| 35 | Appealed for assistance from pirate Lord Gaius Marius Aquillius, |
| 36 | Who declined on account of the rebellion spreading to Calabria. |
| 37 | Nor did the Samnites of Campania assist. |
| 38 | Tiberius Sempronius Gracchus in turn appealed to his brother, |
| 39 | Gaius Sempronius Gracchus in Sardinia, |
| 40 | Who advised him to urgently seek a settlement else, |
| 41 | All would be lost. |
| 42 | Thus tyrant Tiberius Sempronius Gracchus, |
| 43 | Did declare that all Plebians that pledge allegiance to him, |
| 44 | Would have their debts forgiven and lands restored, |
| 45 | Yet those who continued to rebel would be offered no quarter. |
| 46 | Upon news of the offer of Tiberius Sempronius Gracchus, |
| 47 | The rebel army of Eunus split apart. |
| 48 | A new army led by Publius Rupilius then declared loyalty to Gracchus. |
| 49 | After two bitter and gruesome years of fighting, |
| 50 | The rebel army of Eunus was defeated, |
| 51 | And so Publius Rupilius and the loyal mercenaries, |
| 52 | Gathered at Syracuse to have their reward confirmed. |
| 53 | Yet upon the end of the rebellion, |
| 54 | The tyrant Tiberius Sempronius Gracchus refused to honor his word, |
| 55 | Saying that a promise to an infant or an animal, |
| 56 | Has no importance if broken. |
| 57 | Upon such perfidy Publius Rupilius and his best soldiers, |
| 58 | Seized Tiberius Sempronius Gracchus and killed him, |
| 59 | Parading the body through Syracuse. |
| 60 | Upon news of the death of Gracchus, |
| 61 | Gaius Marius Aquillius did launch against Publius Rupilius, |
| 62 | Defeating him and his army, |
| 63 | Within two years. |
| 64 | Yet the pirate lord did not grant the Gracchi control, |
| 65 | Over Sicily on account of their failed custody, |
| 66 | And risk to all the plebian lords. |
| 67 | Instead he appointed Marcus Antonius Orationus, |
| 68 | As lord over Sicily, |
| 69 | While granting Gaius Sempronius Gracchus keep, |
| 70 | The personal estates in Sicily, |
| 71 | As well as control over Sardinia. |
| 72 | Gaius Sempronius Gracchus, |
| 73 | Then proclaimed fealty and service, |
| 74 | To the pirate lord and his successors. |
| 1 | In the Great Age of the Ram, |
| 2 | One thousand and sixty seven years, |
| 3 | Since the dawn of the Great Age (133 BCE), |
| 4 | King Euergertes the Attalus of Pergamon, |
| 5 | Did give up the ghost. |
| 6 | Pirate King Gaius Marius Aquillius, |
| 7 | Did then seize Pergamon and proclaim it a donation, |
| 8 | To himself and the province of Asia. |
| 9 | Yet Aristonicus the brother of Euergertes, |
| 10 | Revolted against the pirate lord, |
| 11 | And for five more years there was conflict, |
| 12 | Until no more men were left willing to stand against evil. |
| 13 | In the Great Age of the Ram, |
| 14 | One thousand and eighteen years, |
| 15 | Since the dawn of the Great Age (127 BCE), |
| 16 | King Mithradiah of Parthia, |
| 17 | Also known as Phraates, |
| 18 | Did give up the ghost. |
| 19 | His crown did then fall to his son, |
| 20 | Epiphanes who then changed his name to Mithradiah II. |
| 21 | Seizing upon the prophecies and condemnations of Zadokiah, |
| 22 | Epiphanes declared that men have a good spirit and bad spirit, |
| 23 | And that the wicked world will be destroyed, |
| 24 | And the only salvation be through blood, |
| 25 | And only those who purge themselves, |
| 26 | And believe in him, |
| 27 | Are free from a cycle of servitude and misery. |
| 28 | Upon the message of a wrathful and jealous god, |
| 29 | That demands blood sacrifice and atonement, |
| 30 | The revival of the religion of Mithra under Mithradiah, |
| 31 | Grew in followers and influence, |
| 32 | Even to the west. |
| 1 | Since the end of the rebellion in Sicily, |
| 2 | The condition of the poor and landless plebians, |
| 3 | Had only grown worse. |
| 4 | Second generation bandits in Sicily, |
| 5 | And Calabria and even northern Italy threatened travellers. |
| 6 | Rome itself had become so awash with unemployed plebians, |
| 7 | That even the most corrupt of Senators, |
| 8 | Prayed for a leader with sufficient strength and character, |
| 9 | Bemoaning that Rome had become the prisoner of a marauding mob, |
| 10 | And it is they (plebians) not the Senate, |
| 11 | That did control the destiny of Rome. |
| 12 | In the Great Age of the Ram, |
| 13 | One thousand and eighty six years, |
| 14 | Since the dawn of the Great Age (114 BCE), |
| 15 | Pontifex Maximus Publius Mucius Scaevola, |
| 16 | The Nasci (Knight) and Protector of Rome, |
| 17 | Did give up the ghost. |
| 18 | The Senate then did overwhelmingly agree, |
| 19 | To the appointment of Lucius Cornelius Sulla, |
| 20 | The son of Publius Cornelius Scipio Nasci, |
| 21 | As Pontifex Maximus and Nasci, |
| 22 | As the Protector of Rome. |
| 23 | Upon his appointment, |
| 24 | Pontifex Maximus Lucius Cornelius Sulla, |
| 25 | Implored the Senate to consider the root cause, |
| 26 | For a people that surrender their currency, |
| 27 | Surrender their energy, |
| 28 | And willingly accept being slaves of moneylenders (bankers). |
| 29 | That a nation divided where some citizens have all protection, |
| 30 | Yet none of the burdens of obligations, |
| 31 | Is a nation of law that cannot stand. |
| 32 | For Rome permitted a parasite to rest in its heart, |
| 33 | For the sake of survival of what was believed a dream, |
| 34 | A dream that died the day the Senate agreed, |
| 35 | To make mercenaries and moneylenders who have no loyalty, |
| 36 | Or honor to Rome as citizens. |
| 37 | Thus unless Rome cleanse its spirit of such corruption, |
| 38 | And belief in nothing but pleasure and greed, |
| 39 | Then not even the bravest of citizens can save the city. |
| 40 | Upon the speech of Pontifex Maximus Lucius Cornelius Sulla, |
| 41 | The Senate implored that he visit their traditional allies, |
| 42 | Such as the Celt tribes of Germanica, Gaul, Batavi and Britannia, |
| 43 | That they would support the Senate in what may become, |
| 44 | A Civil War for the soul of Rome. |
| 45 | Lucius Cornelius Sulla agreed and soon departed, |
| 46 | Even with such knowledge already in the hands, |
| 47 | Of the pirate lord and the moneylenders. |
| 48 | In the Great Age of the Ram, |
| 49 | One thousand and eighty six years, |
| 50 | Since the dawn of the Great Age (114 BCE), |
| 51 | King Rabelas the Great of the Nabateans, |
| 52 | Beloved of Baal Hamon, |
| 53 | Did give up the ghost. |
| 54 | The crown of the Nabatea did then befall to his son, |
| 55 | Whose name was Aretas. |
| 56 | In the Great Age of the Ram, |
| 57 | One thousand and eighty seven years, |
| 58 | Since the dawn of the Great Age (113 BCE), |
| 59 | Within a few months of the return, |
| 60 | Of Pontifex Maximus Lucius Cornelius Sulla to Rome, |
| 61 | A mass army of more than three hundred thousand, |
| 62 | Germanic, Batavi (Dutch) and Scandanavian Celts, |
| 63 | Did attack and defeat a pirate mercenary army, |
| 64 | Of pirate lord Gaius Marius Aquillius, |
| 65 | In the north of Illyricum, |
| 66 | Forcing the pirates, bandits and moneylenders to flee. |
| 67 | The mass army then moved westward and seized the Po River valley, |
| 68 | Again forcing the pirates and merchants, |
| 69 | To flee for their lives. |
| 70 | Pirate lord Gaius Marius Aquillius, |
| 71 | Protested to the Senate demanding such action cease, |
| 72 | As he claimed it a violation of ancient Senate laws, |
| 73 | And Rome risked its own annihilation. |
| 74 | The Senate replied to the pirate lord, |
| 75 | That no general had been given order to head this army, |
| 76 | Nor did any Senate authorized General lead it now, |
| 77 | And that as for Rome then the fiercest army, |
| 78 | Of fifty thousand trained and decorated men, |
| 79 | Under the command of Lucius Cornelius Sulla, |
| 80 | Stood ready to defend the city to the last man. |
| 81 | Thus the pirates and moneylenders did not attack Rome, |
| 82 | As the Celts now through a second army, |
| 83 | Did then invade the pirate controlled lands of Pergamon, |
| 84 | Eliminating the mercenaries and declaring a new name, |
| 85 | Called Galatia. |
| 1 | In the Great Age of the Ram, |
| 2 | One thousand and ninety years, |
| 3 | Since the dawn of the Great Age (110 BCE), |
| 4 | The High Priest of Baal Hamon, |
| 5 | The Spirit of the Nabateans, |
| 6 | Whose name was Sabaoth, |
| 7 | Did give up the ghost. |
| 8 | The position of High Priest of Baal Hamon, |
| 9 | Did befall to his son whose name was Seth. |
| 10 | Upon becoming the new High Priest, |
| 11 | The young Seth declared his father, |
| 12 | To have been granted the position, |
| 13 | As Lord of the Underworld and Lakes of Fire, |
| 14 | And Lord of Hosts, |
| 15 | And that whom who shall sacrifice their first fruits, |
| 16 | Or worthy sacrifice to Sabaoth, |
| 17 | Shall in the same manner to Baal be saved. |
| 18 | Yet because all men are sinful, |
| 19 | Those who do not repent and seek salvation, |
| 20 | Shall be doomed to eternal torment, |
| 21 | In the lakes of Fire of the Underworld. |
| 22 | Thus was born the most perverse and insane, |
| 23 | Religious cult in the history of humanity. |
| 24 | In the Great Age of the Ram, |
| 25 | One thousand and ninety four years, |
| 26 | Since the dawn of the Great Age (106 BCE), |
| 27 | Holly High King Connla Caem mac Irereo, |
| 28 | Did give up the ghost. |
| 29 | The throne of Amen-Ra did then befall to his son, |
| 30 | Whose name was Ailill mac Connla. |
| 31 | In the Great Age of the Ram, |
| 32 | One thousand and ninety six years, |
| 33 | Since the dawn of the Great Age (106 BCE), |
| 34 | Zadokiah the twenty eighth great prophet of Yeb, |
| 35 | The son of Elkaniah and the grandson of Eleziah, |
| 36 | Did give up the ghost. |
| 37 | The position then befell, |
| 38 | To his son whose name was Barachiah, |
| 39 | As the twenty ninth Great Prophet of the Yahudi. |
| 40 | Thus upon the time that Zadokiah, |
| 41 | Did give up the ghost, |
| 42 | The ancient world was now dominated by three religions, |
| 43 | All claiming that the Divine Creator would destroy the world one day, |
| 44 | The first being Yahudism offering salvation through water, |
| 45 | The second being Mithraism offering salvation through blood, |
| 46 | The third being Baalism through offering salvation through fire (holocaust). |
| 1 | In the Great Age of the Ram, |
| 2 | One thousand and ninety five years, |
| 3 | Since the dawn of the Great Age (105 BCE), |
| 4 | Lord Pirate Gaius Marius Aquillius of the Marmatines, |
| 5 | Demanded the Senate approve him as consul, |
| 6 | That he may defeat the Celts in northern Italy, |
| 7 | And reclaim lands under his control. |
| 8 | Yet the Senate rejected his demand. |
| 9 | Gaius Marius Aquillius then demanded that all food, |
| 10 | From Sicily and Gaul be halted, |
| 11 | And all minerals from Spain and Sardinia be stopped. |
| 12 | The Senate then appointed Lucius Cornelius Sulla, |
| 13 | Caesar (Dictator) as well as Nasci (Knight), |
| 14 | And Pontifex Maximus (Supreme Pontiff). |
| 15 | The Gauls did then revolt against the pirates and money lenders, |
| 16 | And a mass army of Celts did form, |
| 17 | To move against Massalia (Marsailles), |
| 18 | Gaius Marius Aquillius did then take control, |
| 19 | Of his own mercenary army, |
| 20 | At the battle north of Massalia (Marsailles), |
| 21 | Yet his mercenaries were completely destroyed by the Gaul legions, |
| 22 | Killing more than one hundred and twenty thousand, |
| 23 | Near Arausio and the River Rhone. |
| 24 | As the lord pirate was distracted in Gaul, |
| 25 | Lucius Cornelius Sulla issued an edict, |
| 26 | Henceforth banning all currency struck and minted, |
| 27 | From any pirate city such as Naples or Rheggio, |
| 28 | And that Currency shall henceforth be minted only in Rome. |
| 29 | Furthermore that all valid currency was to be moulded, |
| 30 | And never again shall pirates be allowed under any form of law, |
| 31 | To claim control of the currency of any city, |
| 32 | Or people that honor Rule of Law and Justice. |
| 33 | Lucius Cornelius Sulla did issue a second edict, |
| 34 | Abolishing the notion of Plebian citizenship, |
| 35 | And that henceforth all moneylender and merchant families, |
| 36 | All pirate and bandit families were forbidden to be known as citizens, |
| 37 | Now and forever and to never hold any position of office, |
| 38 | Or role or influence in the affairs of Rome, |
| 39 | Nor hold any form of property according to Roman Law, |
| 40 | Reinforcing the prohibition of slavery. |
| 41 | Instead all cities and towns that declared allegiance to Rome, |
| 42 | Would be honored as citizens and as municeps, |
| 43 | Being citizens under the constitution of their city or community. |
| 44 | Thus all the Celt cities and tribes, |
| 45 | Were granted and recognized as municept citizens, |
| 46 | And the pirates and bandits were citizens no more. |
| 47 | Gnaeus Pompeius Strabo pledged himself and his family, |
| 48 | To the cause of Rome and ceased any hostility, |
| 49 | Whereas the pirate lord Gaius Marius Aquillius, |
| 50 | Fled back to his homeland of Marmarica, |
| 51 | Of Cyrene and the Pentopolis of pirate ports. |
| 52 | Caesar Lucius Cornelius Sulla then appointed, |
| 53 | Gaius Licinius Verres as Governor of Sicily, |
| 54 | And Quintus Mucius Scaevola as Governor of Sardinia, |
| 55 | And Decimus Junius Brutus Callaicus for Hispania Lusitania, |
| 56 | And Publius Licinius Crassus as Governor of Hispania Ulterior. |
| 57 | Whereupon, with the western provinces secured, |
| 58 | And Italy and Sicily secured, |
| 59 | Lucius Cornelius Sulla did resign his position as Caesar. |
| 60 | In the Great Age of the Ram, |
| 61 | One thousand and ninety seven years, |
| 62 | Since the dawn of the Great Age (103 BCE), |
| 63 | King Yehoniah of Asmonea (Hasmonea), |
| 64 | The youngest son of Mattathiah, |
| 65 | Did give up the ghost. |
| 66 | The crown did then befall to his son, |
| 67 | Whose name was Alexander, |
| 68 | And then took the false name of Yanniah, |
| 69 | In falsely claiming to be a Great Prophet. |
| 70 | In the same year, |
| 71 | Lucius Pompeius Philadelphus of Pontus, |
| 72 | Declared Pontus an independent Samnite kingdom, |
| 73 | And neutral towards Rome. |
| 1 | Within ten years of restoring the currency to the people, |
| 2 | And clearing all the lands except Campania of the pirates, |
| 3 | And bandits and moneylenders (bankers), |
| 4 | Prosperity had returned to the Roman Republic. |
| 5 | Yet Gnaeus Pompeius Strabo and the Samnite merchants, |
| 6 | Remained relentless liars and cowards and tricksters. |
| 7 | King Philadelphus (Lucius Pompeius) of Pontus, |
| 8 | Had since seized Cappodocia and Bithnyia into his kingdom, |
| 9 | Growing in strength year by year. |
| 10 | The Samnites in Campania had continued in secret treaty, |
| 11 | With their former colony of Pontus, |
| 12 | Now a major kingdom in its own right, |
| 13 | And had hatched a plan, |
| 14 | To secretly weaken and disrupt trade of Rome. |
| 15 | Gnaeus Pompeius Strabo then convinced Marcus Livius Drusus, |
| 16 | To attack the confidence and reliability of the new Roman molded coin, |
| 17 | By circulating deliberate fake and inconsistent coins, |
| 18 | Shipped to Campania from Pontus, |
| 19 | Thus reducing the confidence of eastern and western merchants. |
| 20 | Yet the plot of the Samnites was exposed, |
| 21 | And the Senate issued an edict forbidding trade or commerce, |
| 22 | With a Samnite or a Samaritans as none could be trusted, |
| 23 | To possess any honor, good character or quality wares. |
| 24 | In the Great Age of the Ram, |
| 25 | Eleven hundred and eleven years, |
| 26 | Since the dawn of the Great Age (89 BCE), |
| 27 | King Philadelphus (Lucius Pompeius) of Pontus, |
| 28 | Did invade the province of Asia, |
| 29 | And then prepared to invade Macedonia. |
| 30 | The Senate called upon Lucius Cornelius Sulla once more, |
| 31 | Faced with such a growing threat, |
| 32 | By appointing him Caesar for a second time. |
| 33 | Lucius Cornelius Sulla as Caesar wasted no time, |
| 34 | In amassing a great army and instead launched, |
| 35 | A siege against Pergamun in the hope, |
| 36 | That King Philadelphus (Lucius Pompeius) of Pontus, |
| 37 | Would be forced into changing his plans, |
| 38 | By which time a second army would arrive, |
| 39 | And crush the Samnites (Samaritans). |
| 40 | Yet as Lucius Valerius Flaccus was preparing to embark, |
| 41 | With the second Roman Army, |
| 42 | Gnaeus Pompeius Strabo of Campania, |
| 43 | And his Samnite mercenary army attacked Rome itself, |
| 44 | Killing the Praetorian Guard and overwhelming the city, |
| 45 | Murdering every Senator and noble they could find, |
| 46 | Then placing their heads on pikes, |
| 47 | Before burning down the ancient Senate buildings, |
| 48 | Known as the Curia Hospitala and Rostra, |
| 49 | And all the ancient records and scrolls of laws of Rome. |
| 50 | Yet the forces of Gnaeus Pompeius Strabo, |
| 51 | Failed to penetrate the massive walls of the Vaticanus. |
| 52 | Pirate Lord Gaius Marius Aquillius did also attack, |
| 53 | Sicily and Calabria seizing the cities in the south, |
| 54 | Seeking to regain what had been taken from him. |
| 55 | The population of Rome was in a panic and many did flee east, |
| 56 | To Anatolia in the hope of being saved by Sulla, |
| 57 | As the Senate granted Sulla the power of absolute Caesar, |
| 58 | And the greatest power ever conceived under Roman law. |
| 59 | Faced with Rome burning and in ruins by the Samnite bandits, |
| 60 | And the overwhelming forces of King Philadelphus (Lucius Pompeius) of Pontus, |
| 61 | Sulla ordered Lucius Valerius Flaccus to restore order to Rome, |
| 62 | At all cost and not to yet pursue Pompeius Strabo. |
| 1 | In the Great Age of the Ram, |
| 2 | Eleven hundred and twelve years, |
| 3 | Since the dawn of the Great Age (88 BCE), |
| 4 | As Lucius Valerius Flaccus now held Rome secure, |
| 5 | Caesar Lucius Cornelius Sulla positioned his army, |
| 6 | Of forty thousand at Pessimus (Pessinus), |
| 7 | On the upper reaches of the Sakarya River, |
| 8 | As King Philadelphus (Lucius Pompeius) of Pontus, |
| 9 | And King Mithradiah II of Parthia, |
| 10 | Approached with their mercenary army of two hundred thousand. |
| 11 | Yet the position and height of the city and its buildings, |
| 12 | And the discipline of the men of Sulla, |
| 13 | Overcame the forces of King Philadelphus, |
| 14 | And King Mithradiah of Parthia, |
| 15 | And by the end of a bloody battle, |
| 16 | More than one hundred and fifty thousand mercenaries were killed, |
| 17 | With few deaths to the men of Sulla. |
| 18 | Caesar Lucius Cornelius Sulla then executed both kings, |
| 19 | Abolishing Pontus and reconstituting the province of Asia, |
| 20 | But permitting the son of King Mithradiah II, |
| 21 | Whose name was Orodes and Mithradiah III, |
| 22 | To continue as monarch of Parthia and vassal of Rome. |
| 23 | Sulla and most of his army then departed and invaded Libya, |
| 24 | Where every one of the pirate port cities was utterly destroyed, |
| 25 | Especially the pirate capital of Cyrene. |
| 26 | In the Great Age of the Ram, |
| 27 | Eleven hundred and thirteen years, |
| 28 | Since the dawn of the Great Age (87 BCE), |
| 29 | Upon his return to Italy, |
| 30 | And with the fiercest army of Romans, |
| 31 | Ever conceived in history, |
| 32 | Every major city of the Samnites of Campania, |
| 33 | Was destroyed to its foundations, |
| 34 | Including the city of Naples. |
| 35 | Gnaeus Pompeius Strabo, |
| 36 | The leader of the Samnites, |
| 37 | Did give up the ghost. |
| 38 | The leadership of the Samnites, |
| 39 | Did befall to his son named Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus, |
| 40 | Also known as Pompey the Great, |
| 41 | Who escaped capture by fleeing to Spain. |
| 42 | In the Great Age of the Ram, |
| 43 | Eleven hundred and fourteen years, |
| 44 | Since the dawn of the Great Age (86 BCE), |
| 45 | Pirate Lord Gaius Marius Aquillius, |
| 46 | Was finally cornered and defeated and killed. |
| 47 | The defacto King of the Marmatines, |
| 48 | Also known as the Marsi, |
| 49 | Also known as the Men from Mars, |
| 50 | Being the ancient Libyan pirates, |
| 51 | Did befall to his son named, |
| 52 | Gaius Marius Julius, |
| 53 | Also known by the fraudulent title Julius the Caesar, |
| 54 | Who ran away from capture, |
| 55 | Also to Spain. |
| 1 | In the Great Age of the Ram, |
| 2 | Eleven hundred and fifteen years, |
| 3 | Since the dawn of the Great Age (85 BCE), |
| 4 | Caesar Lucius Cornelius Sulla, |
| 5 | Began the rebuilding of Rome, |
| 6 | Destroyed by the Samnites and Pompeius Strabo, |
| 7 | With the creation of the Comitium as a new Place of Assembly. |
| 8 | The Pontifex Maximus Lucius Cornelius Sulla, |
| 9 | Also commissioned the finest scholars to commence, |
| 10 | A new Constitution for Rome, |
| 11 | Where the rights of all men were to be enshrined, |
| 12 | To never again permit the scourge of slavery, |
| 13 | Or the immorality of the Samnites, |
| 14 | Through their pornography and prostitution, |
| 15 | Of all music and culture. |
| 16 | From the Constitution the Caesar did order, |
| 17 | That all law be codified, |
| 18 | That the Senate may only pass laws that add to the body, |
| 19 | Not to annex or deprive the body for the favor of a few. |
| 20 | Thus all law was to enshrine the Rule of Law, |
| 21 | And Golden Rule that none are above the law, |
| 22 | Through Code and Statute. |
| 23 | The highest law of Rome was to be, |
| 24 | Known as Ius Divinum as the law of the Divine, |
| 25 | And the highest of all law. |
| 26 | The second highest law was to become, |
| 27 | Known as Ius Curia as the power and authority of the Senate, |
| 28 | To make laws under Divine Law. |
| 29 | The third highest law was to become, |
| 30 | Known as Ius Gentium as the law of all peoples, |
| 31 | To guide the manner in which all people did act. |
| 32 | The fourth highest law was to become, |
| 33 | Known as Ius Civile as the law of all citizens. |
| 34 | Thus under the Constitution of Rome, |
| 35 | No rights (Ius) could be claimed, |
| 36 | Unless such rights conformed to Law, |
| 37 | And the Rule of Law else they be false. |
| 38 | Pontifex Maximus Lucius Cornelius Sulla did also reform, |
| 39 | The administration of provinces in the creation of new titles, |
| 40 | Rector being the new governor of a province, |
| 41 | And Censor being an official visitor and overseer of the Senate. |
| 42 | In the same year, |
| 43 | Holly High King Ailill mac Connla, |
| 44 | The king of all priests and prophets, |
| 45 | The king of all the Celts, |
| 46 | Did give up the ghost. |
| 47 | The throne of Amen-Ra did then befall to his son, |
| 48 | Whose name was Labraid Lorc mac Ailill, |
| 49 | Also known as Eterscel Mor and Cú-Las, |
| 50 | Meaning the light of the Cuilliaéan. |
| 1 | In the Great Age of the Ram, |
| 2 | Eleven hundred and sixteen years, |
| 3 | Since the dawn of the Great Age (84 BCE), |
| 4 | Caesar Lucius Cornelius Sulla, |
| 5 | As Supreme Pontiff (Pontifex Maximus), |
| 6 | And Nasci (Knight) and Protector of Rome, |
| 7 | Did order his son Publius Cornelius Spartacus, |
| 8 | To take the Ark of the Covenant, |
| 9 | And return it to Leontopolis (Cairo) in Egypt, |
| 10 | And for a permanent company of Praetorian, |
| 11 | To thereafter guard the Great Prophet of Yeb, |
| 12 | As the one true and only Pontifex Maximus of Rome, |
| 13 | Whereupon Caesar Lucius Cornelius Sulla did decree, |
| 14 | That never again shall the Senate as a secular body, |
| 15 | Have the power to decree the will of heaven, |
| 16 | In the appointment of the Supreme Pontiff, |
| 17 | That such high office be the realm of the Great Prophet of Yeb, |
| 18 | And their true successors and no other. |
| 19 | Upon Barachiah receiving the great honor from Caesar, |
| 20 | And the return of the Ark of Akhenaten, |
| 21 | He did declare that the light of the Divine, |
| 22 | Had returned to Rome, |
| 23 | And that all who profess the beliefs of Essenoi (Essenes), |
| 24 | Must likewise respect that the Divine did speak through Caesar, |
| 25 | And all men and women must be considered equal under the law. |
| 26 | In the Great Age of the Ram, |
| 27 | Eleven hundred and twenty years, |
| 28 | Since the dawn of the Great Age (80 BCE), |
| 29 | Upon the dedication and opening of the Comitium, |
| 30 | As a place of Assembly for the Senate of Rome, |
| 31 | As a symbol of the equality of all men, |
| 32 | Caesar Lucius Cornelius Sulla did resign his post, |
| 33 | And did give the title of Nasci (Knight) and Protector of Rome, |
| 34 | To his son Publius Cornelius Spartacus. |
| 35 | Whereupon the greatest soldier and servant of Rome, |
| 36 | Did spend his last moments of life in peace. |
| 37 | In the Great Age of the Ram, |
| 38 | Eleven hundred and twenty one years, |
| 39 | Since the dawn of the Great Age (79 BCE), |
| 40 | Lucius Cornelius Sulla did give up the ghost. |
| 1 | Since the great purges of Sulla, |
| 2 | Marcus Licinius Crassus the son of Publius Licinius Crassus, |
| 3 | Had become the undisputed king of all Hispania (Spain), |
| 4 | Ruling as the worst of tyrants through a massive mercenary army. |
| 5 | Through the enslavement of the whole population, |
| 6 | And the ravaging of all the lands for profit, |
| 7 | Marcus Licinius Crassus had become one of the wealthiest men in the world, |
| 8 | Rivaled only by the Holly Kings of Ireland and Kings of the Celts, |
| 9 | Through their mines and trade. |
| 10 | Both Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus and Gaius Marius Julius (the Caesar), |
| 11 | Had received great patronage from Marcus Licinius Crassus, |
| 12 | And in turn both had started to restore their family fortunes, |
| 13 | With Gaius Marius Julius (the Caesar) rebuilding the pirate port of Cyrene, |
| 14 | And Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus securing trade into Anatolia, |
| 15 | And treaty with King Tigranes of the Armenian Empire. |
| 16 | In the Great Age of the Ram, |
| 17 | Eleven hundred and twenty seven years, |
| 18 | Since the dawn of the Great Age (73 BCE), |
| 19 | A mercenary army of thirty thousand, |
| 20 | Funded by Marcus Licinius Crassus, |
| 21 | And led by Gaius Claudius Glaber, |
| 22 | Did land and invade the territory of Capua in Campania. |
| 23 | The Senate did then hastily appoint Publius Cornelius Spartacus, |
| 24 | Both Caesar in addition to being Nasci (Knight), |
| 25 | And Protector of Rome. |
| 26 | Sensing further forces and invasion, Caesar Publius Cornelius Spartacus, |
| 27 | Dispatched a much smaller force, |
| 28 | Under his cousin Publius Cornelius Varinius, |
| 29 | To engage the mercenaries from Hispania. |
| 30 | While the Romans sought to engage the Spanish mercenaries, |
| 31 | A second invasion force of mercenaries then did land in Sicily, |
| 32 | Led by Gaius Lucinius Verro, |
| 33 | That quickly captured and conquered Sicily for the pirate merchants. |
| 34 | A third invasion force did then attack and conquer Calabria, |
| 35 | Under Quintus Marcius Rufus for the ancient Marmatines. |
| 36 | Upon such overwhelming attack, |
| 37 | Caesar Publius Cornelius Spartacus called to all Roman Citizens, |
| 38 | To come to the aid of Rome against the pirate merchants, |
| 39 | And corrupt moneylenders (bankers) funding such war. |
| 40 | In the same year, |
| 41 | A mercenary force of Marcus Licinius Lucullus, |
| 42 | Did attack and invade and conquer, |
| 43 | Crete and then the province of Macedonia for the pirate merchants. |
| 1 | In the Great Age of the Ram, |
| 2 | Eleven hundred and twenty eight years, |
| 3 | Since the dawn of the Great Age (72 BCE), |
| 4 | King Crixus of the Allobrogi of southern Gaul did land at Ostia, |
| 5 | And help reinforce the defense of Rome itself. |
| 6 | To the north King Oenomaus (Orgetorix) of the Helvetii, |
| 7 | Did cross the alps and into the Po River Valley, |
| 8 | As a further mercenary invasion force under Gaius Cassius Longinus, |
| 9 | Did land at the port city of Piso, |
| 10 | And engage the Roman legions of the Helvetii, |
| 11 | Killing King Oenomaus (Orgetorix) in battle. |
| 12 | The remaining Helvetii legions did then head south, |
| 13 | To help further reinforce the defense of Rome. |
| 14 | Facing the inevitable encirclement of Rome, |
| 15 | Caesar Publius Cornelius Spartacus ordered, |
| 16 | The evacuation of the Senate and records, |
| 17 | As well as young women and children, |
| 18 | To be transported to sanctuary and safety, |
| 19 | By the Allobrogi and Holly Celt ships, |
| 20 | To Alexandria under Philadelphos the Ptolemy. |
| 21 | In the Great Age of the Ram, |
| 22 | Eleven hundred and twenty nine years, |
| 23 | Since the dawn of the Great Age (71 BCE), |
| 24 | Marcus Licinius Crassus accompanied by Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus, |
| 25 | Did land with another force of mercenary pirates and bandits, |
| 26 | Near the port of Ostia to complete the siege of Rome, |
| 27 | And personally command its capture. |
| 28 | Gaius Marius Julius also falsely known as Caesar, |
| 29 | Did not accompany his allies, |
| 30 | But remained in command of Hispania, |
| 31 | As his true skill never existed in war, |
| 32 | But the administration of banking and slaves. |
| 33 | Caesar Publius Cornelius Spartacus, |
| 34 | And the remaining Praetorian Guard, |
| 35 | With the Allobrogi and Helvetii and surviving legions, |
| 36 | Had prepared their defenses as best they could, |
| 37 | As Marcus Licinius Crassus unleashed wave after wave, |
| 38 | Of African mercenaries to their death. |
| 39 | In the Great Age of the Ram, |
| 40 | Eleven hundred and thirty years, |
| 41 | Since the dawn of the Great Age (70 BCE), |
| 42 | After wave after wave, |
| 43 | Of mercenary bandits had fallen to their swords, |
| 44 | After the numbers of brave defenders of Rome, |
| 45 | Had fallen to less than twelve thousand, |
| 46 | Caesar Publius Cornelius Spartacus, |
| 47 | Called out one last time, |
| 48 | To the surviving Praetorian and Patrician, |
| 49 | To the bloodied Celt and Roman heroes, |
| 50 | That a fate worse than death be, |
| 51 | In the hands of the pirate merchants and moneylenders (bankers), |
| 52 | Who thrive upon the misery and enslavement of others. |
| 53 | Better then to die an honorable death, |
| 54 | For all good men be immortal, |
| 55 | And to live another life than to suffer the tortures, |
| 56 | Of deranged men who believe in nothing. |
| 57 | Thus upon the next wave of attack, |
| 58 | The defenders cut down as many of the enemy, |
| 59 | Before taking their own lives, |
| 60 | And depriving Marcus Licinius Crassus, |
| 61 | Of a single living prisoner, |
| 62 | And claiming any honor in victory. |
| 63 | Marcus Licinius Crassus then ordered, |
| 64 | The burning and destruction of the Comitium, |
| 65 | The burning of all records, |
| 66 | And the looting of all temples. |
| 67 | Before long Rome was in flames. |
| 68 | Pirate king Marcus Licinius Crassus then ordered, |
| 69 | His bandit army to hang the bodies of the defenders, |
| 70 | Upon crosses from Rome to Capua, |
| 71 | As a perverse and absurdly gruesome curse, |
| 72 | Against the courage and strength of the defenders. |
| 73 | Satisfied with his evil, |
| 74 | Marcus Licinius Crassus then returned to Hispania (Spain), |
| 75 | After placing Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus in command, |
| 76 | Of the ruins of Rome and its ghosts. |
| 1 | In the Great Age of the Ram, |
| 2 | Eleven hundred and thirty one years, |
| 3 | Since the dawn of the Great Age (69 BCE), |
| 4 | Marcus Licinius Crassus extended his empire, |
| 5 | Into Anatolia and northern Syria, |
| 6 | When King Tigranes of Armenia was defeated, |
| 7 | By a mercenary army led by Lucius Licinius Lucullus. |
| 8 | In the same year, |
| 9 | Gaius Marius Julius the false Caesar, |
| 10 | Failed to capture the south of Gaul, |
| 11 | With his mercenary army of bandits and thieves, |
| 12 | Against a superior army of Roman legions, |
| 13 | Led by King Ariovistus of the Suebi, |
| 14 | United with Averni and Sequani. |
| 15 | So frustrated was Gaius Marius Julius, |
| 16 | At the lack of discipline of the bandits, |
| 17 | That he ordered all but one in ten, |
| 18 | To be spared from brutal execution, |
| 19 | To then form a new disciplined army. |
| 20 | In the Great Age of the Ram, |
| 21 | Eleven hundred and thirty two years, |
| 22 | Since the dawn of the Great Age (68 BCE), |
| 23 | At sixteen years of age, |
| 24 | Cú-Roi(n) the son of Holly King Labraid Lorc mac Ailill, |
| 25 | Did request the permission of his father, |
| 26 | To leave the sacred isle, |
| 27 | And to travel to Egypt and Alexandria. |
| 28 | King Holly King Labraid Lorc mac Ailill, |
| 29 | Also known as Cú-Las (Light of the Cuilliaéan), |
| 30 | Did declined his request, |
| 31 | For no King nor crown prince of the Holly, |
| 32 | Had left the sacred Isle, |
| 33 | For hundreds of years. |
| 34 | In the Great Age of the Ram, |
| 35 | Eleven hundred and thirty three years, |
| 36 | Since the dawn of the Great Age (67 BCE), |
| 37 | Cú-Roi(n) again requested the permission of his father, |
| 38 | To leave the sacred isle. |
| 39 | King Cú-Las initially declined again, |
| 40 | Saying his son had not yet married, |
| 41 | Nor did he have an heir, |
| 42 | But relented allowing the young prince, |
| 43 | To travel to the west territory, |
| 44 | Of the Dumnonii and Durotriges, |
| 45 | To see the mines and property of the Holly. |
| 46 | There Cú-Roi(n) did spend one year, |
| 47 | And then returned to the Old King. |
| 48 | In the same year, |
| 49 | Queen Salome of Asmonea (Hasmonea), |
| 50 | The last of the undisputed Hasmonean, |
| 51 | Did give up the ghost. |
| 52 | A supremely evil and wicked dynasty had they been, |
| 53 | For countless people sacrificed and burned, |
| 54 | In demonic rituals to ancient gods, |
| 55 | With orgies of wine and depravity. |
| 56 | At her death Civil War did erupt in Asmonea (Hasmonea), |
| 57 | As Hyrcanus sought support, |
| 58 | From Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus, |
| 59 | And his brother Aristobulus, |
| 60 | Sought the support of the Nabatea. |
| 61 | In the same year, |
| 62 | King Mithradiah III of Parthia, |
| 63 | Also known as Orodes, |
| 64 | Did give up the ghost. |
| 65 | His crown did then fall to his son, |
| 66 | Sanatruces who then changed his name to Mithradiah IV. |
| 1 | In the Great Age of the Ram, |
| 2 | Eleven hundred and thirty four years, |
| 3 | Since the dawn of the Great Age (66 BCE), |
| 4 | King Aretas of the Nabatea, |
| 5 | Beloved of Baal Hanan, |
| 6 | Did give up the ghost. |
| 7 | The crown of the Nabatea did then befall to his son, |
| 8 | Whose name was Herodas, |
| 9 | Also known as Herod the Great. |
| 10 | In the same year, |
| 11 | Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus witnessed the first fruits, |
| 12 | Of his commission to Marcus Tullius Cicero, |
| 13 | To present a new set of laws for Rome, |
| 14 | Through the completely fraudulent works, |
| 15 | Known as De Re Publica on the Republic, |
| 16 | And De Legibus on the law. |
| 17 | The the scribe of lies known as Cicero, |
| 18 | Paid so handsomely for his fraud, |
| 19 | That he became one of the wealthiest men, |
| 20 | Did weave even a new form of mythos, |
| 21 | As to the kingship of Rome, |
| 22 | That no longer the role of king, |
| 23 | Be an abomination to the laws of Rome, |
| 24 | But that Rex Romanum be the highest law. |
| 25 | Thus Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus declared himself, |
| 26 | Rex Romanum and King of Rome, |
| 27 | And all citizens be subject to his rule. |
| 28 | In the same year, |
| 29 | Holly High Prince and Priest, |
| 30 | Whose name was Cú-Roi(n), |
| 31 | Also known as Conaire Mor, |
| 32 | Did again request the permission of his father, |
| 33 | The Holly High King of Ireland and King of al Celts, |
| 34 | That he be granted leave to travel to Egypt, |
| 35 | And to the ancient lands of their bloodlines. |
| 36 | But the old King Cú-Las refused again. |
| 37 | Whereupon Cú-Roi(n) pledged, |
| 38 | That if he did marry and leave an heir, |
| 39 | He be permitted to travel as his heart so yearned. |
| 40 | Upon such pledge the King agreed, |
| 41 | And Cú-Roi(n) did soon marry, |
| 42 | And before the end of a year he did have an heir. |
| 43 | But before leaving on his journey, |
| 44 | The Holly High King Cú-Las, |
| 45 | Did call upon his son to swear a Sacred High Oath, |
| 46 | To return within four years to sacred soil, |
| 47 | And no more speak of travel. |
| 48 | Upon giving such sacred oath, |
| 49 | Cú-Roi(n) did then leave Ireland, |
| 50 | As Ha Rama Theo (High Divine Highness), |
| 51 | A Messiah prince of the House of Yahudah. |
| 52 | In Alexandria Cú-Roi(n) was introduced to the great wonders, |
| 53 | And the museum and library of Alexandria, |
| 54 | By the respected philosopher Eudorus, |
| 55 | The senior student of the head librarian, |
| 56 | Whose name was Andronicus the great. |
| 57 | Cú-Roi(n) spent many weeks at the library and the city, |
| 58 | Meeting travelers from around the world, |
| 59 | Including the exiled senators and leaders of Rome, |
| 60 | Who petitioned him to call upon his father, |
| 61 | To rally a mighty Celtic army and end the reign of evil. |
| 62 | Next Cú-Roi(n) travelled south unto Leontopolis (Cairo), |
| 63 | Where he was welcomed by Barachiah and the other priests, |
| 64 | Including the strong willed and opinionated Zachariah, |
| 65 | And where he saw for the first time, |
| 66 | The Ark of his blood ancestor Pharaoh Akhenaten. |
| 67 | Weeks turned into months as Cú-Roi(n) shared his knowledge, |
| 68 | And listened to the Great Prophet Barachiah, |
| 69 | Who himself was humbled by the extraordinary knowledge, |
| 70 | And skill possessed by Cú-Roi(n) and for which he was unaffected, |
| 71 | As priests such as Zachariah became more and more jealous, |
| 72 | Of the time that Barachiah bestowed to their visitor. |
| 73 | Within two years of coming to Leontopolis, |
| 74 | The Holly High King of Ireland sent word to his son, |
| 75 | That his grandson and the son of Cú-Roi(n) had died, |
| 76 | And that stricken with grief and woe, |
| 77 | His wife had ended her own life. |
| 78 | Yet Cú-Roi(n) did not leave Egypt and instead travelled south, |
| 79 | To the most ancient temples of Thebes and Karnak, |
| 80 | Where he was received and welcomed not only as a great prophet, |
| 81 | But a true pharaoh in blood and knowledge of hieroglyph. |
| 82 | Upon his return to Leontopolis (Cairo), |
| 83 | Cú-Roi(n) did wed the granddaughter of Zadokiah, |
| 84 | Whose name was Esa, |
| 85 | But honored as Luacháil, |
| 86 | Whereupon Barachiah did challenge Cú-Roi(n), |
| 87 | To consider his own prophetic abilities, |
| 88 | And what he consider to be his purpose, |
| 89 | For the ultimate destiny of the Cuilliaéan, |
| 90 | May rest less in blood than the actions, |
| 91 | Of one good priest who cares for the world, |
| 92 | And be willing to fulfil their intended Divine Commission. |
| 1 | Upon news of Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus, |
| 2 | Declaring himself Rex Romanum, |
| 3 | And king of all Romans |
| 4 | Marcus Licinius Crassus was enraged. |
| 5 | Yet under the fraudulent writings of Marcus Tullius Cicero, |
| 6 | And the reforms of merchant slavery, |
| 7 | Men had begun flocking to Italy, |
| 8 | On promises of free land and a new world order, |
| 9 | Of pleasure and liberty and an end to old morality, |
| 10 | Of a new age of free science and thought, |
| 11 | Where men could create their own history and own stories. |
| 12 | Thus Rome under Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus, |
| 13 | Had become the new Athens and a centre of new thought, |
| 14 | Which abandoned the old and sought to form its own truths, |
| 15 | Yet still based upon the philosophy of pirate merchants, |
| 16 | That everything has a price and the law is whatever is convenient. |
| 17 | Marcus Licinius Crassus was forced then to prepare carefully, |
| 18 | With his best legions from northern Spain, |
| 19 | On a course of action to confront Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus. |
| 20 | In the Great Age of the Ram, |
| 21 | Eleven hundred and thirty six years, |
| 22 | Since the dawn of the Great Age (64 BCE), |
| 23 | Before embarking with his legions, |
| 24 | Marcus Licinius Crassus made known across his empire, |
| 25 | That Gaius Marius Julius, |
| 26 | Also falsely known as Caesar Gaius Julius, |
| 27 | Was to be his sole lawful heir and successor. |
| 28 | Yet such an act did nothing to distract Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus. |
| 29 | Instead upon the news of the coming invasion of Marcus Licinius Crassus, |
| 30 | He sent word that all men who stand for liberty and equality, |
| 31 | All men who seek justice and happiness, |
| 32 | Shall be forgiven their debts and granted promised land, |
| 33 | If they rebel against the yoke of the tyrant Crassus. |
| 34 | Thus upon landing in Italy Crassus faced an immediate revolt, |
| 35 | Of his own generals and army and was seized and killed, |
| 36 | With his head presented to Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus. |
| 37 | True to his word the King of Rome, |
| 38 | Did forgive the debts and grant land, |
| 39 | On condition that the commanders seize control, |
| 40 | Of the former lands of Crassus to the east. |
| 41 | The powerful governor of Sicily, |
| 42 | Whose name was Gaius Lucinius Verro, |
| 43 | Was seized and arrested and brought to Rome, |
| 44 | Where Cicero chose to conduct the prosecution. |
| 45 | In the Great Age of the Ram, |
| 46 | Eleven hundred and thirty seven years, |
| 47 | Since the dawn of the Great Age (63 BCE), |
| 48 | The new legions of Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus, |
| 49 | Did seize Macedonia and Crete from Marcus Licinius Lucullus, |
| 50 | Before capturing Anatolia from Lucius Licinius Lucullus, |
| 51 | And renaming it again the province of Pontus, |
| 52 | With Macedonia and Crete and Pontus granted, |
| 53 | To the control of Gnaeus Pompeius Iunior, |
| 54 | The eldest son of the King of Rome. |
| 55 | The forces of Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus, |
| 56 | Then moved south and defeated Hyrcanus of Asmonea (Hasmonea), |
| 57 | As Aristobulos and his court, |
| 58 | Did then escape to the South of Arabia, |
| 59 | And conquer the key cities of the Sabeans, |
| 60 | Forming the Kingdom of the Himyarite. |
| 61 | Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus then did form a treaty, |
| 62 | With King Herodas of the Nabateans, |
| 63 | Also known as Herod the Great, |
| 64 | To control all the trade from east Africa and Arabia, |
| 65 | By granting him control of Palestine, |
| 66 | And the gulf of Aden, |
| 67 | While Syria and Lebanon was renamed, |
| 68 | The great province of Samaria, |
| 69 | Under the control of the youngest son of Pompey, |
| 70 | Whose name was Sextus Pompeius Magnus. |
| 1 | Upon news of Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus |
| 2 | Declaring himself Rex Romanum, |
| 3 | And the death of Marcus Licinius Crassus, |
| 4 | Gaius Marius Julius falsely known as Caesar, |
| 5 | Did face great rebellion in Hispania. |
| 6 | It was this moment more than any other, |
| 7 | That transformed the administrator into a leader, |
| 8 | As Gaius Marius Julius chose to execute his generals, |
| 9 | And permit the men to elect leaders they trusted, |
| 10 | And honor the legions with better pay, |
| 11 | Than the brutality that had existed under Crassus. |
| 12 | Thus the legions of Hispania came to pledge, |
| 13 | Absolute allegiance to Gaius Marius Julius, |
| 14 | And rule was restored. |
| 15 | In the Great Age of the Ram, |
| 16 | Eleven hundred and thirty nine years, |
| 17 | Since the dawn of the Great Age (61 BCE), |
| 18 | Pontifex Maximus Barachiah, |
| 19 | The Great Prophet of Yeb, |
| 20 | Did summons all the priests of Leontopolis, |
| 21 | Where he did call upon Prince Cú-Roi(n), |
| 22 | Also known as Conaire Mor, |
| 23 | The Ha Rama Theo (His Divine Highness) of the Holly, |
| 24 | To come forward. |
| 25 | There in Egypt the Great Prophet Barachiah, |
| 26 | Did officially adopt Cú-Roi(n) as his only son, |
| 27 | And heir and successor as Pontifex Maximus, |
| 28 | And the next Great Prophet of Yeb, |
| 29 | Naming him Adoniah meaning the Lord and Savior, |
| 30 | And the Messiah of all the World. |
| 31 | There was great celebration except for Zachariah, |
| 32 | Who protested that he and not Cú-Roi(n), |
| 33 | Deserved to be named the next Great Prophet. |
| 34 | In the Great Age of the Ram, |
| 35 | Eleven hundred and forty one years, |
| 36 | Since the dawn of the Great Age (59 BCE), |
| 37 | Barachiah the twenty ninth great prophet of Yeb, |
| 38 | The son of Zadokiah and the grandson of Elkaniah, |
| 39 | Did give up the ghost. |
| 40 | The position then befell, |
| 41 | To his adopted son whose name was Adoniah, |
| 42 | Also known as Cú-Roi(n), |
| 43 | And the Holly crown priest-prince of Ireland, |
| 44 | As the thirtieth Great Prophet of the Yahudi. |
| 45 | Enraged at Adoniah becoming the new Great Prophet, |
| 46 | Zachariah did leave for Jerusalem, |
| 47 | And seek an audience with Seth, |
| 48 | The High Priest of Baal Hamon and then to Herodas at Aqaba, |
| 49 | Where he promised to deliver the Ark of the Covenant to Jerusalem, |
| 50 | If both the priests of Baal Hamon, |
| 51 | And the Nabateans recognize him alone, |
| 52 | As the true Great Prophet of Yeb. |
| 53 | The priests of Baal and the Nabateans agreed, |
| 54 | And soon after Zachariah and his rebel priests, |
| 55 | Departed Leontopolis with the Ark of the Covenant, |
| 56 | To be greeted by a force of Nabateans, |
| 57 | Who then escorted the Ark back to Jerusalem. |
| 58 | Adoniah declined the request for his elite Praetorian, |
| 59 | To recover the Ark and punish Zachariah, |
| 60 | Saying that the Divine Creator has chosen its return, |
| 61 | To its ancient resting place after more than a thousand years, |
| 62 | For some greater purpose yet to be revealed. |
| 63 | At Jerusalem Herodas then declared he would build, |
| 64 | The Greatest Temple in all the World, |
| 65 | To the greater glory of Baal Hamon as Moloch, |
| 66 | And to honor the presence of the Ark. |
| 67 | Herodas envisioned a mighty temple more than 110 ft high, |
| 68 | And 1600 ft wide and 900 ft wide. |
| 69 | Yet it was not to be. |
| 70 | After 46 years the project was finished, |
| 71 | Just eight years before his death (12 BCE). |
| 72 | For Zachariah a new community and settlement was constructed, |
| 73 | At a site called Qumran near the Dead Sea, |
| 74 | Protected by Nabatean guard, |
| 75 | Yet close enough to walk to Jerusalem. |
| 1 | Upon news of the Ark of the Covenant returning to Jerusalem, |
| 2 | The younger son of the King of Rome, |
| 3 | Whose name was Sextus Pompeius did demand that Herodas, |
| 4 | Bring the Ark to him at Damascus for his pleasure. |
| 5 | Yet the Nabateans and priests of Baal refused, |
| 6 | Reminding the son of Pompey, |
| 7 | That it had been bestowed to Jerusalem as its home. |
| 8 | Sextus Pompeius Magnus then ordered his legions, |
| 9 | To seize the Ark and bring it to Damascus, |
| 10 | And for all the priests of Baal to be executed, |
| 11 | And their temples destroyed. |
| 12 | Immediately there was revolt throughout Syria, |
| 13 | Upon the desecration of the ancient temples, |
| 14 | As more than two hundred thousand Nabatean warriors, |
| 15 | Faced against the legions of Sextus Pompeius, |
| 16 | Until Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus called for truce, |
| 17 | And an uneasy peace was restored to Samaria (Syria). |
| 18 | Gaius Marius Julius falsely known as Caesar, |
| 19 | Did hear of the desecration of the most ancient temples, |
| 20 | And the murdering of priests, |
| 21 | And so did send a secret emissary to Palestine, |
| 22 | Where he did pledge allegiance to the priests of Baal, |
| 23 | If they would aid him in times to come, |
| 24 | Against the nihilism of the Samnite moneylenders (bankers). |
| 25 | Gaius Marius Julius did then reconstitute the pledges, |
| 26 | Of his legions to Baal and Mithra, |
| 27 | Replacing their standards with the standard of the bull, |
| 28 | That no longer was his army an army of mercenaries, |
| 29 | But a religious army embarking upon a crusade, |
| 30 | To rid the world of the immorality and false worship. |
| 31 | In the Great Age of the Ram, |
| 32 | Eleven hundred and forty two years, |
| 33 | Since the dawn of the Great Age (58 BCE), |
| 34 | Gaius Marius Julius, |
| 35 | Also falsely known as Caesar Gaius Julius, |
| 36 | And his armies marching for Baal and Mithra, |
| 37 | Did defeat the Allobrogi of southern Gaul, |
| 38 | Before defeating a mass army, |
| 39 | Of the Suebi near the Rhine. |
| 40 | Yet instead of permitting the killing of prisoners, |
| 41 | Or the looting of lands or raping of women, |
| 42 | Gaius Marius Julius offered to appoint the senior officers, |
| 43 | Of the former enemy to the ranks of his generals, |
| 44 | If they pledge allegiance and discipline, |
| 45 | In the religious war. |
| 46 | Thus tens of thousands of Celts did join with Gaius Marius Julius, |
| 47 | And soon Gaul was almost within his control. |
| 48 | In the same year, |
| 49 | Pontifex Maximus Adoniah, |
| 50 | Also known as Cú-Roi(n), |
| 51 | The Ha Rama Theo (Divine Highness) of Ireland, |
| 52 | Did return to the sacred isles with his elite Praetorian Guard, |
| 53 | To the land of the Dumnonii, |
| 54 | Where the Constantine (Custenin), |
| 55 | As Chief Steward over the lands for the Holly, |
| 56 | Did agree to help build him a new fortress, |
| 57 | And sacred temple at Glastonbury, |
| 58 | As the Praetorian prepared the Holly legions, |
| 59 | For defense against the pirates and moneylenders. |
| 60 | There the Great Prophet did reside, |
| 61 | For upon breaking his word to the Holly High King, |
| 62 | He could not yet return to Tara. |
| 1 | In the Great Age of the Ram, |
| 2 | Eleven hundred and forty four years, |
| 3 | Since the dawn of the Great Age (56 BCE), |
| 4 | Holly High King Labraid Lorc mac Ailill, |
| 5 | Also known as Cú-Las (Light of the Cuilliaéan), |
| 6 | The king of all priests and prophets, |
| 7 | And blood descendant of the priests of Ebla, |
| 8 | And blood descendant of the priests of Ur, |
| 9 | And blood descendant of the priest-kings of the Hyksos, |
| 10 | And blood descendant of the priests of Ugarit, |
| 11 | And the founding bloodlines of the prophets of Yeb, |
| 12 | And the only true blood descendant of King Da’vid, |
| 13 | Did give up the ghost. |
| 14 | The throne of Amen-Ra did then befall to his son, |
| 15 | Whose name was Eterscel Mor, |
| 16 | Also known as Cú-Roi(n), |
| 17 | Also known as Adoniah the Pontifex Maximus, |
| 18 | And the Thirtieth Great Prophet of Yeb. |
| 19 | Cú-Roi(n) did then finally return to Tara, |
| 20 | With his company of elite Praetorian, |
| 21 | To be crowned the Holly High King, |
| 22 | And King of kings of all the Celts. |
| 23 | In the same year, |
| 24 | Upon Gaius Marius Julius completing his conquest, |
| 25 | And alliances of the whole of Gaul, |
| 26 | Gaius Marius Julius did come to Tara, |
| 27 | In the winter months, |
| 28 | Under the flag of hospita and truce, |
| 29 | To meet the great Druid High King, |
| 30 | And Great Prophet and Pontifex Maximus Adoniah. |
| 31 | Into the Great Hall of Tara, |
| 32 | Gaius Marius Julius (later the Caesar) did go, |
| 33 | Unto Cú-Roi(n) seated upon the most ancient throne, |
| 34 | Of Amen-Ra and the Hyksos kings. |
| 35 | Cú-Roi(n) as Adoniah did speak first as was custom, |
| 36 | To ask of the purpose of such a strange visit, |
| 37 | Gaius Marius Julius did reply that as Adoniah had become, |
| 38 | The most famous of all priests and kings in the world, |
| 39 | As not only the Holly High King but the Great Prophet of Yeb, |
| 40 | He did come to seek counsel and seek amicable terms, |
| 41 | To prevent any further war between the Men from Mars, |
| 42 | And the honorable tribes of the Celts. |
| 43 | Adoniah replied that history did teach, |
| 44 | No house founded on evil did last beyond five generations, |
| 45 | Before becoming consumed by its own madness. |
| 46 | Thus all men must be afforded the presumption of virtue and character, |
| 47 | Even the descendants of Pyrrhus, |
| 48 | And so he did grant the general a prophetic reading. |
| 49 | Gaius Marius Julius did declare, |
| 50 | That it be his solemn and sacred mission, |
| 51 | To end the nihilism of the Pompey, |
| 52 | And those that discard the lessons of history, |
| 53 | To indulge themselves in their own pleasures and intellect. |
| 54 | Gaius Marius Julius did then implore, |
| 55 | To gain the trust of all Roman citizens, |
| 56 | He must be seen as more than a general, |
| 57 | And a priest of good character. |
| 58 | Adoniah then replied that it was not for himself to grant, |
| 59 | Gaius Marius Julius the title of Pontifex Maximus, |
| 60 | But the surviving senate residing in exile in Alexandria. |
| 61 | Gaius Marius Julius did then warn the Holly High King, |
| 62 | To consider carefully his choices for if Britannia was taken, |
| 63 | Such titles may also fall with Tara, |
| 64 | To which Adoniah did bid Gaius Marius Julius safe journey, |
| 65 | And that if he travel to the sacred valley of the Boyne, |
| 66 | There he shall receive the greatest of all revelations, |
| 67 | From the most revered seer of the Holly, |
| 68 | Her name being Bandraoi, |
| 69 | Which simply means the witch. |
| 70 | Gaius Marius Julius and his guard, |
| 71 | Did then travel to the sacred valley of the Boyne, |
| 72 | Where he did meet the Bandraoi, |
| 73 | Who did then speak as was custom in prophetic riddle, |
| 74 | That unto you (Gaius Marius Julius) a treasure come, |
| 75 | Flesh and sword Unite. Glory be your destiny, |
| 76 | Not King but God, Upon the mide of Mars. |
| 77 | Gaius Marius Julius then departed the sacred Isle, |
| 78 | Unto Gaul where he cursed the stubbornness of the the Cuilliaéan, |
| 79 | Where he ordered Marcus Antonius to make haste to Alexandria, |
| 80 | And seek if terms be made with the Senate, |
| 81 | While invasion plans be prepared first for Britannia (Britain). |
| 82 | In the Great Age of the Ram, |
| 83 | Eleven hundred and forty six years, |
| 84 | Since the dawn of the Great Age (54 BCE), |
| 85 | The first invasion of Gaius Marius Julius (later the Caesar), |
| 86 | Into Britanni was a terrible failure, |
| 87 | With high cost and little gained. |
| 88 | An attempt for the second year was equally as pyrrhic, |
| 89 | Even with five legions of Gaius Marius Julius seeking to hold, |
| 90 | Just south and east Britain. |
| 91 | In the same year, |
| 92 | After much costs and pain, |
| 93 | Gaius Marius Julius (later the Caesar), |
| 94 | Did withdraw every last Roman Soldier, |
| 95 | From Britain to Gaul. |
| 96 | In the Great Age of the Ram, |
| 97 | Eleven hundred and forty eight years, |
| 98 | Since the dawn of the Great Age (52 BCE), |
| 99 | The High Priest of Baal Hamon, |
| 100 | And his Lord of Hosts named Sabaoth, |
| 101 | The Spirit of the Nabateans, |
| 102 | Whose name was Seth, |
| 103 | Did give up the ghost. |
| 104 | The position of High Priest of Baal Hamon, |
| 105 | Did befall to his son whose name was Anath, |
| 106 | Later written as Annas the elder, |
| 107 | And even Ananias. |
| 1 | In the Great Age of the Ram, |
| 2 | Eleven hundred and fifty years, |
| 3 | Since the dawn of the Great Age (50 BCE), |
| 4 | Gaius Marius Julius summonsed Marcus Antonius, |
| 5 | To return from Alexandria and give word, |
| 6 | If the Senate had agreed to his demands, |
| 7 | To be made both Caesar and Pontifex Maximus, |
| 8 | Before his invasion of Italy. |
| 9 | Marcus Antonius protested that had used all his skill, |
| 10 | To force the Roman senate in exile to grant such demands, |
| 11 | Yet had fallen under the spell of Queen Cleopatra. |
| 12 | In the Great Age of the Ram, |
| 13 | Eleven hundred and fifty one years, |
| 14 | Since the dawn of the Great Age (49 BCE), |
| 15 | Gaius Marius Julius chose to proclaim himself Caesar, |
| 16 | And proceeded to invade Italy from the north, |
| 17 | Warning in advance that any soldier who did not pledge allegiance, |
| 18 | To the greater glory of Rome under Mithra, |
| 19 | Would be brutally executed including their family. |
| 20 | Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus remained supremely confident, |
| 21 | That with more than twenty legions of mercenaries, |
| 22 | He could defend against any attack from Gaius Marius Julius. |
| 23 | Yet upon word of the claim that Gaius Marius Julius, |
| 24 | Had been made Caesar and the ferocity of his troops, |
| 25 | Many of the mercenaries were unwilling to fight, |
| 26 | So that the defense of Italy quickly crumbled, |
| 27 | And within just twenty eight days, |
| 28 | Gaius Marius Julius was upon the outskirts of Rome. |
| 29 | In panic Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus and his court escaped, |
| 30 | To Macedonia and the court of his eldest son, |
| 31 | Whose name was Gnaeus Pompeius Iunior. |
| 32 | Upon entering Rome Gaius Marius Julius ordered, |
| 33 | That the lives of Catallus and Cicero and his students be spared. |
| 34 | He then summonsed the greatest writers and flatterers, |
| 35 | From the previous court of the Pompey, |
| 36 | And presented them a new commission, |
| 37 | That their lives be spared if they re-write the history of Rome, |
| 38 | That the Men of Mars be of noble Patrician blood, |
| 39 | And that Cicero make Gaius Marius Julius, |
| 40 | The greatest of heroes and messiahs. |
| 41 | Cicero and the scribes set about building the mythos, |
| 42 | Of Gaius Marius Julius the false Caesar, |
| 43 | Declaring the day of his birth on December 25th, |
| 44 | The Christmas as a sacred celebration of the savior, |
| 45 | And liberator of Rome. |
| 46 | Cicero declared in his work known as Evangelium Marci, |
| 47 | Known as the Gospel of Mark, |
| 48 | That Gaius Marius Julius was born of the virgin goddess Venus, |
| 49 | And that the gods granted him the power to forgive transgressions, |
| 50 | And that a great comet heralded his birth. |
| 51 | In the Great Age of the Ram, |
| 52 | Eleven hundred and fifty two years, |
| 53 | Since the dawn of the Great Age (48 BCE), |
| 54 | Having secured Rome and Italy, |
| 55 | And having granted permission for Marcus Antonius, |
| 56 | To return to Alexandria and call upon the Senate to return to Rome, |
| 57 | Gaius Marius Julius invaded Macedonia, |
| 58 | To confront the mercenary forces of Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus. |
| 59 | At Pharsalos in southern Thessaly the two armies met, |
| 60 | With the forces of Gaius Marius Julius less than twenty thousand, |
| 61 | And the mercenary forces of the Pompey more than eighty thousand. |
| 62 | Yet despite the numerical superiority it was Gaius Marius Julius, |
| 63 | Who was victorious and the army of Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus, |
| 64 | Was utterly destroyed with tens of thousands killed. |
| 65 | Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus once again deserted his men, |
| 66 | And did travel to Alexandria to the court of Queen Cleopatra, |
| 67 | Unbeknownst of the relation between Cleopatra and Mark Antony, |
| 68 | To seek sanctuary and offer his vast fortune, |
| 69 | Against Gaius Marius Julius. |
| 70 | Cleopatra called upon Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus to bring the treasure, |
| 71 | To Alexandria to be held safely at the great temples for safe keeping, |
| 72 | Which Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus agreed. |
| 73 | Yet once the treasure had arrived, |
| 74 | Queen Cleopatra handed Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus, |
| 75 | To her lover and new husband Mark Antony, |
| 76 | Who then executed Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus, |
| 77 | And sent the head of his former enemy, |
| 78 | And a small part of the fortune to Gaius Marius Julius. |
| 79 | In the Great Age of the Ram, |
| 80 | Eleven hundred and fifty three years, |
| 81 | Since the dawn of the Great Age (47 BCE), |
| 82 | The legions of Gaius Marius Julius, |
| 83 | Led by Marcus Junius Brutus and Gaius Cassius Longinus, |
| 84 | Did defeat Gnaeus Pompeius Iunior of Pontus, |
| 85 | Thus reclaiming Anatolia as the Province of Asia. |
| 86 | Upon news of the death of his brother, |
| 87 | Sextus Pompeius Magnus escaped from Samaria, |
| 88 | With his army and took Syracuse and central Sicily. |
| 89 | Gaius Marius Julius then did go to Baalbek, |
| 90 | And the most ancient Temple of Solomon, |
| 91 | Where the High Priest of Baal Hamon, |
| 92 | Whose name was Anath, |
| 93 | Also known as Ananias did proclaim him Rex Sacrorum, |
| 94 | And the living personification of Mithra, |
| 95 | As Savior for the world. |
| 96 | In Palestine Gaius Marius Julius did renew his treaty, |
| 97 | With Herodas and the Nabatean warriors. |
| 98 | Gaius Marius Julius who falsely claimed himself as Caesar, |
| 99 | Then demanded that Marcus Antonius execute the Senate in exile, |
| 100 | For their refusal to pledge allegiance. |
| 1 | In the Great Age of the Ram, |
| 2 | Eleven hundred and fifty three years, |
| 3 | Since the dawn of the Great Age (47 BCE), |
| 4 | The Senate in exile led by Lucius Cornelius Balbus did declare, |
| 5 | Marcus Antonius as the true Caesar and Nasci (Knight). |
| 6 | Enraged at the slight Gaius Marius Julius did attack Alexandria, |
| 7 | As Herodas did attack from the west and south. |
| 8 | Yet the city held and the fleet of Gaius Marius Julius was destroyed. |
| 9 | In retribution Gaius Marius Julius ordered a fire attack, |
| 10 | Against the city and to destroy it completely, |
| 11 | As the most barbaric act of piracy yet seen against Alexandria. |
| 12 | Part of the Great Library was lost to the madmen of Mars. |
| 13 | Yet Gaius Marius Julius was forced to abandon his siege, |
| 14 | Upon growing illness and poor health, |
| 15 | And did return to Rome, |
| 16 | Where he proclaimed the old Senate invalid, |
| 17 | And proceeded to appoint his most loyal generals and followers, |
| 18 | As a new Senate to meet at the Vulcanal Temple to Vulcan, |
| 19 | Led by Marcus Junius Brutus and Gaius Cassius Longinus, |
| 20 | And Marcus Aemilius Lepidus from Leptis Major of Africa. |
| 21 | In the Great Age of the Ram, |
| 22 | Eleven hundred and fifty six years, |
| 23 | Since the dawn of the Great Age (44 BCE), |
| 24 | As Gaius Marius Julius was now gravely ill, |
| 25 | He summonsed his two consuls, |
| 26 | Being Marcus Junius Brutus and Gaius Cassius Longinus, |
| 27 | And demanded that they swear no one claim themselves Caesar, |
| 28 | And to hunt down and kill Marcus Antonius, |
| 29 | For never again shall anyone be permitted to proclaim themselves, |
| 30 | King or Caesar of Rome after his death. |
| 31 | Gaius Marius Julius then demanded his most loyal generals, |
| 32 | Prepare a symbolic sacrifice upon the Ides of March (Mars), |
| 33 | And the Day of Blood as the birthday of Mithra, |
| 34 | Whereby Gaius Marius Julius would sacrifice his blood to Rome, |
| 35 | To become its Holy Ghost and perpetual protector as a god, |
| 36 | To watch over the Senate and the people of Rome. |
| 37 | Thus upon March the 14th and the Ides of March, |
| 38 | Gaius Marius Julius was given a strong sedative, |
| 39 | Before his loyal and devoted followers as the false Senate, |
| 40 | Did stab Gaius Marius Julius to death, |
| 41 | Except Marcus Junius Brutus who could not bring himself, |
| 42 | To strike at the false Caesar even as he implored him. |
| 43 | Thus was born the mythos of the Messiah of Rome, |
| 44 | And the fraud of Gaius Marius Julius the Caesar. |
| 1 | Following the elaborate suicide of Gaius Marius Julius, |
| 2 | Marcus Antonius and the true Senate, |
| 3 | Sought a truce and alliance with the warlord of Leptis Magna, |
| 4 | Named Marcus Aemilius Lepidus, |
| 5 | And Marcus Junius Brutus and Gaius Cassius Longinus. |
| 6 | Yet no sooner had the funeral ceremony of Gaius Marius Julius, |
| 7 | Finished when Marcus Tullius Cicero declare himself, |
| 8 | Executor of the testament and wishes of Julius the false Caesar, |
| 9 | And falsely proclaimed the warlord of Calabria whose name was Octavius, |
| 10 | To have been adopted by Julius before his death, |
| 11 | And thus possessed the Imperator of Julius Caesar, |
| 12 | And the persona of Emperor. |
| 13 | Marcus Junius Brutus and Gaius Cassius Longinus did then seize, |
| 14 | Marcus Tullius Cicero and have him brutally executed, |
| 15 | As an enemy of the state before securing a solemn oath from Octavius, |
| 16 | That he repudiate the claims of the dead Cicero. |
| 17 | Marcus Junius Brutus then moved to Macedonia and Asia, |
| 18 | To confront Marcus Antonius. |
| 19 | In the Great Age of the Ram, |
| 20 | Eleven hundred and fifty seven years, |
| 21 | Since the dawn of the Great Age (43 BCE), |
| 22 | As Gaius Cassius Longinus was engaged with Marcus Aemilius Lepidus, |
| 23 | Against Sextus Pompeius Magnus in Sicily, |
| 24 | Assassins for Gaius Marius Octavius did kill Gaius Cassius Longinus, |
| 25 | Before Marcus Aemilius Lepidus pledged loyalty to Octavius. |
| 26 | Sextus Pompeius Magnus did then escape to Ionia, |
| 27 | Where he was killed by the forces of Marcus Junius Brutus. |
| 28 | In the Great Age of the Ram, |
| 29 | Eleven hundred and fifty eight years, |
| 30 | Since the dawn of the Great Age (42 BCE), |
| 31 | Gaius Marius Octavius and Marcus Aemilius Lepidus, |
| 32 | Did face against Marcus Junius Brutus, |
| 33 | Who was defeated and committed suicide. |
| 34 | As the forces of the deceased Gaius Marcus Julius, |
| 35 | Continued to fight themselves, |
| 36 | Marcus Antonius successfully invaded Palestine and Syria, |
| 37 | Forcing Herodas to briefly retreat to Arabia. |
| 38 | The disciples of the dead Cicero, |
| 39 | Supported by Quintus Horatius Flaccus and Publius Vergilius Maro, |
| 40 | Did petition Octavius and the ancient pirate families, |
| 41 | That a new world order be formed known as the Ordo sacrorum arcana, |
| 42 | Into which the powerful and wealthy be invited, |
| 43 | As well as the most intelligent and talented of society, |
| 44 | To break the endless cycle of blood and war, |
| 45 | Where merchant families and moneylenders (bankers) are destroyed. |
| 46 | For history did reveal that men would fight to the death, |
| 47 | To free themselves from the bonds of slavery, |
| 48 | Yet given the right for personal wealth, |
| 49 | Even the oldest of races would sign themselves into servitude. |
| 50 | Thus Octavius and the merchant elite agreed to form a new world, |
| 51 | Where men would be given the appearance of freedom, |
| 52 | Where money would become the new god and religion, |
| 53 | And ancient ties of trust and good faith be broken, |
| 54 | For the worship of power and fame and wealth, |
| 55 | Yet forever guided by the illusion of liberty, |
| 56 | In the hands of the best and brightest, |
| 57 | To forever protect the interests of the merchants, |
| 58 | As a new class as the men of the horse (equestrians). |
| 59 | At the same time Marcus Antonius, |
| 60 | Chose a fateful and failed attempt to invade Parthia, |
| 61 | That he did lose much of the land he had captured. |
| 62 | In the Great Age of the Ram, |
| 63 | Eleven hundred and sixty nine years, |
| 64 | Since the dawn of the Great Age (31 BCE), |
| 65 | The forces of Gaius Marius Octavius did invade Egypt, |
| 66 | And overwhelmed its defenses whereupon Antonius committed suicide. |
| 67 | Cleopatra also committed suicide some time later, |
| 68 | Before she could be taken back to Rome to Octavius. |
| 69 | Gaius Marius Octavius then declared himself Imperator (Emperor), |
| 70 | And possessed by the Holy Spirit (Julius the false Caesar). |
| 71 | Octavius then reformed the Senate, |
| 72 | And began to restrict the minting of coin, |
| 73 | And the exchange of coin (banking), |
| 74 | While declaring that men who pledge themselves to Rome, |
| 75 | And be a loyal citizen may own their own land. |
| 76 | In the Great Age of the Ram, |
| 77 | Eleven hundred and seventy three years, |
| 78 | Since the dawn of the Great Age (27 BCE), |
| 79 | At Baalbek Gaius Marius Octavius was crowned, |
| 80 | Rex Sacrorum and Divine Son of God, |
| 81 | By Anath also known as Annias. |
| 82 | The age of the Roman Empire, |
| 83 | Under the absolute power of merchants and moneylenders, |
| 84 | And the worship of money as god had begun. |