The ring had been bought, the moment had been
picked and the crane had been hired. But one man’s slightly misguided marriage
proposal turned into more of a disaster than anyone could have imagined. The
hopeful groom-to-be had hoped to woo his love when he popped the question by
romantically dangling outside her bedroom window on the end of some heavy
industrial equipment. But before he could start serenading her, let alone
present the ring, the unsecured crane came crashing down – right through the
roof of the next door neighbour’s house. Efforts to right the crane only made
things worse – with it toppling again – causing further to the house in the
Dutch town of IJsselstein .
Six apartments were evacuated in the surrounding area and the town's mayor is
believed to have declared the building unsafe. But despite all that the
blushing bride said yes, and it is believed the pair are now celebrating in Paris . Mirror; Dec. 13 http://bit.ly/1qRZHIe
Shown here
is the chart for the Last Quarter Moon of December 14 at IJsselstein. Notice
that a Grand Cross straddles in the meridian axis. The asteroid Eos is conjunct
the Venus-Pluto leg of the Cross on the MC. A keyphrase for Eos provided by
Martha Wescott is “misdirected energy”.
Among the
several keywords and phrases used by
Ebertin to describe possible manifestation of Uranus-Pluto energies, one of them is simply “accidents”.
Other elements of the Cross are
delineated as below:
Venus-Pluto:
passionate or obsessive lover.
Eos-Zeus: “collateral
damage” (Eos) while using a machine (Zeus).
Hades-Zeus:
mistakes (Hades) occur in connection
with machines (Zeus).
On the MC
is the star Facies, M22 Sagittarius about which Dr. Eric Morse writes:
Much blamed for accidents and broken limbs and so
on. The Latin name is from the verb Facere, to make or do something, and it is often said to portend accidents
due to the victim's own careless actions. Naturally, there is a
positive side to Facies, it symbolizes well that kind of Sagittarian who goes
out to climb mountains, race cars, enter the ski-jump team or the Grand
National steeplechase, making it right to the top and no doubt breaking a few
bones along the way. On the more philosophical side it will mark those who must
see their outlook and beliefs carried into practical effect somewhere, so that
they go out on missions, set up their own churches and centers engage in good
works of famine or refugee relief and so on. Inevitably they get hurt at times,
but perhaps find compensation in the value of their works. [The Living Stars,
Dr. Eric Morse, p.94-95.].
References for TNPs
and asteroids
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