Seven decades after it crash-landed on a French
beach during the Battle of Britain, and 35 years after it reemerged from the
sand, the last Vickers Supermarine Spitfire Mk.1—GR-J/P9374 in private hands
will go to auction at Christie’s London on July 9, carrying a presale
estimate of roughly $2.3 million to $3.9 million. The single-seater aircraft,
delivered to the Royal Air Force (RAF) in March 1940, was shot down less than
three months later. The pilot Peter Cazenove belly flopped the stricken
Spitfire on the sands of Calais beach and became a POW; he later took
part in the Great Escape, as would another of the plane’s eight World War
II–era pilots. http://goo.gl/DwfgJ5
We will
see how the last lunar eclipse of April 4 explains the news story elegantly.
Notice that the eclipse fell very significantly on the meridian axis at
London. The eclipse luminaries highlight a slightly skewed Grand Cross
comprising Uranus-Pluto-Mercury-Kronos-Hades.
The Moon
[14li] is conjunct stars in the Virgin’s wing, the Crow’s wing and China’s
Great Red Bird so that this area has therefore been linked to aviation [1]. With
the Moon is the TNP Zeus which is linked to the military so that we are already
beginning to look at the possibility of a warplane. This is further confirmed
by two other factors.
The
descendant [6aq] is conjunct stars of Aquila the Eagle and Sagitta, the Arrow.
The constellation of the Eagle is
associated with the military in general but more specifically with the air
force and here it combines with Sagitta
(the missile?) to produce a perfect symbol for a military aircraft (see image).
The second
factor is the combination of the TNPs Kronos-Hades. Kronos is linked to
aircrafts while Hades is simply old or historical so that this combination can
refer to an old aircraft.
Finally,
on the Ascendant is the star cluster Praesepe, M44 Cancri in the constellation
of the Crab. The Crab is a watery crab but lives on the borderline of the sea
and land so that Diana Rosenberg links it to events connected to beaches or
riversides. The news mentions that this aircraft was found on Calais beach!
How do we
know that these images we have conjured
above are not imaginary but are linked to an event about to take place on July
9. Simple. Let us just progress the eclipse chart to July 9. When we do that
the eclipse with its Grand Cross aligns with the horizon axis – a perfect
confirmation that those images are indeed relevant to the proposed auction of
the Spitfire!
[1]
Secrets of the Ancient Skies; Diana K. Rosenberg (v.2, p.64-80)
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