1) What?!!? Do you live in a cave?!!?
2) Fret not, what follows should hold the same amount of deep meaning for you as it does for Losties...which is to say, little to none.
2) Fret not, what follows should hold the same amount of deep meaning for you as it does for Losties...which is to say, little to none.
A game that some folks enamored with the series have played is to use these omenesque numbers in conjunction with the different books that were referenced on the show. Being at a loss for anything else to post in this space, I thought it might be fun to give it a try.
Being unable to find my copy of Watership Down, I decided to use another touchstone of popular culture, Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone.
So...the idea is to discover a meaningful message in the first word on each of the pages: 4, 8, 15, 16, 23, and 42. Here we go:
Past with no gingerly on shake
Okay, that didn't work out so well. Maybe it should be the 4th word on page 4, the 8th word on page 8...Daylight it out the what missed
Ummmm...the last word on each page? It Dumbledore Hagrid gone the room
That's a little closer to something. How about inverting things and taking the 42nd word of page 4, the 23rd word of page 8...Morning he all to you shake
I know...I must have just chosen the wrong touchstone of popular culture. Let's try the final book in the series, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows.
1st words: Be your daily remembered exclusively Dudley
4/4, 8/8, etc.: The I upsurge charity a the
Last words: Though table he more remarks son (Hmmm...this may be secretly hinting that Harry's father is actually a piece of furniture, but I doubt it.)
Inversion: We as of of inside himself
Okay, okay...maybe the book choice was weak. Let's go with the best-selling book of all time, the Bible. There is a multitude of translations/versions/editions, but I'll go with the copy I've got closest...yes, I'm just that lazy.
1st words: Then but Shechem between but I
4/4, 8/8, etc.: Of of and is the we
Last words: Taken ground strife country day them (Hmmm, Part Two...some foreshadowing of strife in the Middle East, perhaps?)
Inversion: The righteous the brothers his God
Look up the word awesome. I think the last phrase is in the definition.
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