Analogies for What The Prophecies Really Are (2)
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The Quatrains Have to be Seen Like the Magic Eye

This is a picture that I took of an example of a Magic Eye that I have used in one of my
presentations on Nostradamus. If the photo was clearer, you would see that this first
appears to be a scattered presentation of different sumertime foods: hotdogs in buns;
pickles; cola bottles; jars of pickles; drink cups with straws; and somethings that look like
mayonaise jars. While there seems to be some repetitiveness in the pattern, nothing
immediately pops out as significant, and on the whole it looks like a senseless poster, serving
no point. I imagine that anyone seeing this picture, not knowing that it was a Magic Eye,
would either be attracted to the colorful artwork, or be turned off by its loud and distracting
use of colors. This example is used to show how people look at The Prophecies. Some people
say that the quatrains appear to be something clear, just like they would if they tried to
describe one of the repeated hotdogs in the picture above. Of course, this is not the point of
the Magic Eye, and it is not the point of The Prophecies. Returning to the previous example
of the puzzle, trying to describe the meaning of one hotdog in this picture is like trying to
describe the meaning of one piece of a 948-piece puzzle, without a guide to go by. Both serve
no purpose, as far as relating to the intended purpose of the whole they are trying to explain.
The intended purpose of the Magic Eye is to show a 3-D image, something called a
Stereogram, and to make this image appear, you have to look deeper than the surface
pictures, until it becomes out of focus and begins to appear to have depth of field. The
Prophecies work exactly the same way as the Magic Eye, because both incorporate a hidden
element that makes it all possible to see the purpose.

This is the "trick" that is used in the first picture above. Underlying all of the colorful
senselessness is this image, a black & white contrast, which shows area in the foreground,
background, and in-between. As poor as the first photo is, you can still get this image to pop
out, if you stare at the colors as instructed. Something like this was also incorporated into
The Prophecies, but since Nostradamus' work is not a work of pictures, instead being a work
of words, the black & white contrast that he used was embedded language. This does not
mean the silliness that some may promote, about some word pattern that brings a hidden
meaning to The Prophecies. That would be as useful as trying to determine that there was a
picture of a dog, sitting in a slat-back chair, holding a cool drink on a sunny day, by telling us
to only look at every other hotdog. The "trick" that Nostradamus used is simple, logical and
consistently used throughout The Prophecies. It follows all of the rules of language, separate
from grammar. This is his use of punctuation, capitalization, language symbols and
seemingly misspelled words. It is knowing what is embedded within The Prophecies that
makes the true purpose stand out. I call these the Systems of Nostradamus, and they are
fully explained in my book, Pearls Before Swine, Volume 1: Predicting the Past. If you go to
www.magiceye.com you can learn more about how their creations work, and learn more about
the embedded 3-D black & white contrast pictures. When you have instructions to go by, it
makes it all a simple task of reading them. Nostradamus also incorporated instruction, in his
Letter of Preface, such that when you know the Systems of Nostradamus you can understand
the instructions, as well as the true meaning of the colorful quatrains. With all that known,
The Prophecies really stand out.