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PeterDuffy (talk | contribs) (Created page with "== Предыдущие воплощения ==") |
PeterDuffy (talk | contribs) (Created page with "Гэйлорд и Лето воплощались вместе в цивилизации инков. В то время он был государ...") |
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== Предыдущие воплощения == | == Предыдущие воплощения == | ||
Гэйлорд и Лето воплощались вместе в цивилизации [[Special:MyLanguage/Inca|инков]]. В то время он был государственным служащим, а она – увлеченным свои делом ученым; оба были в высшей степени сонастроены с духовной иерархией. | |||
[[Godfré Ray King]]’s book ''The Magic Presence'' recounts how Alexander Gaylord, while yet in embodiment and working for the Brotherhood, went on missions with Leto, who had ascended more than three hundred years earlier.<ref>Godfré Ray King, ''The Magic Presence'', 5th ed. (Chicago: Saint Germain Press, 1982), pp. 187–214.</ref> Godfré relates a story Alexander Gaylord told him about Gaylord’s first meeting with an unnamed master. Gaylord was on an assignment for the [[Indian Council]] of the [[Great White Brotherhood]]. He was on board a ship going to France when he met “a most distinguished looking gentleman.” The man accompanied Gaylord to India and other places and taught him, in Gaylord’s words, “the most marvelous use of the ancient wisdom.” Gaylord says he was “a remarkable man. The only promise he exacted from me at any time was that I never reveal his name to anyone.” | [[Godfré Ray King]]’s book ''The Magic Presence'' recounts how Alexander Gaylord, while yet in embodiment and working for the Brotherhood, went on missions with Leto, who had ascended more than three hundred years earlier.<ref>Godfré Ray King, ''The Magic Presence'', 5th ed. (Chicago: Saint Germain Press, 1982), pp. 187–214.</ref> Godfré relates a story Alexander Gaylord told him about Gaylord’s first meeting with an unnamed master. Gaylord was on an assignment for the [[Indian Council]] of the [[Great White Brotherhood]]. He was on board a ship going to France when he met “a most distinguished looking gentleman.” The man accompanied Gaylord to India and other places and taught him, in Gaylord’s words, “the most marvelous use of the ancient wisdom.” Gaylord says he was “a remarkable man. The only promise he exacted from me at any time was that I never reveal his name to anyone.” |