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Created page with "Deseando por encima de todo liberar al pueblo de Dios, Saint Germain buscó y recibió la concesión de una dispensación de los Special:MyLanguage/Karmic Board|Señores del..."
(Created page with "{{Main|Wonderman of Europe|Hombre prodigioso de Europa}}")
(Created page with "Deseando por encima de todo liberar al pueblo de Dios, Saint Germain buscó y recibió la concesión de una dispensación de los Special:MyLanguage/Karmic Board|Señores del...")
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{{Main|Wonderman of Europe|Hombre prodigioso de Europa}}
{{Main|Wonderman of Europe|Hombre prodigioso de Europa}}


Desiring above all else to liberate God’s people, Saint Germain sought and was granted a dispensation from the Lords of Karma to return to earth in a physical body. He appeared as “le Comte de Saint Germain,a “miraculous” gentleman who dazzled the courts of eighteenth- and nineteenth-century Europe, where they called him “The Wonderman.
Deseando por encima de todo liberar al pueblo de Dios, Saint Germain buscó y recibió la concesión de una dispensación de los [[Special:MyLanguage/Karmic Board|Señores del Karma]] para regresar a la Tierra en un cuerpo físico. Apareció como «le Comte de Saint Germain», un «milagroso» caballero que deslumbró a las cortes de la Europa del siglo xviii y xix, donde lo llamaron el «hombre maravilla».


He was an alchemist, scholar, linguist, poet, musician, artist, raconteur and diplomat admired throughout the courts of Europe for his adeptship. He was known for such feats as removing the flaws in diamonds and other precious stones and composing simultaneously a letter with one hand and poetry with the other. Voltaire described him as the “man who never dies and who knows everything.”<ref>Voltaire, ''Œuvres'', Lettre cxviii, ed. Beuchot, lviii, p. 360, quoted in Isabel Cooper-Oakley, ''The Count of Saint Germain'' (Blauvelt, N.Y.: Rudolf Steiner Publications, 1970), p. 96.</ref> The count is mentioned in the letters of Frederick the Great, Voltaire, Horace Walpole and Casanova, and in newspapers of the day.
He was an alchemist, scholar, linguist, poet, musician, artist, raconteur and diplomat admired throughout the courts of Europe for his adeptship. He was known for such feats as removing the flaws in diamonds and other precious stones and composing simultaneously a letter with one hand and poetry with the other. Voltaire described him as the “man who never dies and who knows everything.”<ref>Voltaire, ''Œuvres'', Lettre cxviii, ed. Beuchot, lviii, p. 360, quoted in Isabel Cooper-Oakley, ''The Count of Saint Germain'' (Blauvelt, N.Y.: Rudolf Steiner Publications, 1970), p. 96.</ref> The count is mentioned in the letters of Frederick the Great, Voltaire, Horace Walpole and Casanova, and in newspapers of the day.