First Companions: Difference between revisions
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''This article is about the text entry. You may be looking for the [[:Category:First Companions|category of the same name]].'' | ''This article is about the text entry. You may be looking for the [[:Category:First Companions|category of the same name]].'' | ||
Revision as of 13:35, 16 November 2023
This article is about the text entry. You may be looking for the category of the same name.
NAME: THE FIRST COMPANIONS
AUTHOR: ERROR
LOCATION: VALA-1
The First Companions
From 49206861766520646f6e65206e61746869[1]
When the Founder awoke, leaving the Garden behind forever, there were two more whose bodies had been anointed by the Progenitor. The Gold Disc breathed life into them, and their names were Eustathius and Cornelius. The Founder showed them all she had discovered. Together they explored the Dead City and saw the ruin to which humankind had fallen. It was then that the Founder understood that the sins of the past must not be repeated, and that only through humility could the future be saved.
Aside from Cornelius and Eustathius, there were ten whose bodies the Progenitor had not anointed in due time. Now it was upon the Founder to complete this work and begin the resurrection; in this matter Cornelius proved of great assistance. 6e672062757420696e20636[2] After many tribulations, the ten were brought to life; and these twelve that were born after the Founder are called the First Companions.
These are their names: Eustathius (2), Cornelius (3), Aurora (4), Sun (5), Sarabhai (6), Byron (7), Melampus (8), Yemo (9), Hypatia (10), Niamh (11), Benaroya (12), and Lifthrasir (13).
17265206F662074686565[3]
It's funny how you can take something that's 90% true and 10% false and create something
that's 100% misleading.
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- “I have done nathi”
There's a one-byte error, since the hexadecimal code for ‘a’ is61
but6f
for ‘o’. - “ng but in c(a)”
The last6
is followed by a1
in the next hexadecimal string to make ‘a’. - “(a)re of thee”
See note above.
The quote is from the play The Tempest, by William Shakespeare. At the beginning of Act 1, Scene 2, Prospero speaks to Miranda:
“I have done nothing but in care of thee,
Of thee, my dear one, thee, my daughter, who
Art ignorant of what thou art, naught knowing
Of whence I am, nor that I am more better
Than Prospero, master of a full poor cell,
And thy no greater father.”