Re: "This is the water, and this is the well..." poem (Spoilers)
Posted: Wed Jun 28, 2017 6:57 pm
It's what I'm here for.
a Twin Peaks and David Lynch Electrical Resource
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This is the water, and this is the well.
Drink full and descend.
The horse is the white of the eyes and dark within.
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Leland hits Teresa with this, he twists.
Dale C. lends drunk find.
Sarah the kind wife, host theory, he twists. End.
Re: "Gotta Light?" I'm slightly surprised that no-one has mentioned the danger involved in lighting a cigarette when coated in what may be highly combustible soot/ash/oil. Light that cigarette and woof, no more. To me a person looking like that and asking for a light seems like a personification of the death-drive. Either that or someone who cannot die in any conventional sense. Maybe that's just my morbid thinking though.Xavi wrote:My one penny poem interpretation.
This is the water. And this is the well.
Many call these shadow figures Woodsmen, whereas I would prefer to call them Radiation Men. To me they seem to form some sort of collective force, or maybe it’s better to say they represent an energy wave, spreading some hypnotic evil meme. That cigarette radiation man headed straight toward that radio broadcast station very determinedly. "Gotta light?" could be seen as the first sentence (smokers of course) people speak to make "contact."
The way these radiation men move, sometimes randomly jolted coincided with sound-disturbances as if they are vulnerable to interference with other waves and frequencies. They also seem to be able to “go” through objects similar to wave-particle phenomena.
Drink full and descend.
Listen carefully, resistance is futile.
The horse is the white of the eyes and dark within.
Close your eyes and let this force guide you.
Indeed you can and in many cases it's just fun messing about. But consider this well known line from the original series, for a moment:Jasper wrote:It might be fun, but to be honest, I don't put much stock in the anagram approach as far as it concerns creator intent. You can find almost anything using anagrams.
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The owls are not what they seem
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The letters show a name, yet who?
It's a great anagram. I enjoy it, I think it at least adds a little extra fun, and I don't think there's any harm in it, but even so, I do not accept this as slam-dunk proof that it was intentionally crafted by the creators of the show. I am not at all saying that it's outside the realm of possibility, I'm simply saying that anagrams can result in amazing results, simply owing to the nature of the process.KnewItsPa wrote:Anagram:Code: Select all
The owls are not what they seem
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The letters show a name, yet who?
Glad you enjoyed it, I particularly like the fact that "The letters show a name, yet who?" is self-referential to the process of anagramming itself -almost like a message left behind by the puzzle composer to acknowledge the solver has worked out the correct solution is about arranging letters, much like a cryptic crossword where the answer makes sense of the riddle. Then it ties in with Coopers Tibetan method, resolving who is the name shown by the letter in Lauras diary, as well as indicating that the fingernail-letters show a name. And then "who" at the end, just like a hoot of an owl! It's fun stuff.Jasper wrote:It's a great anagram. I enjoy it, I think it at least adds a little extra fun, and I don't think there's any harm in it, but even so, I do not accept this as slam-dunk proof that it was intentionally crafted by the creators of the show.KnewItsPa wrote:Anagram:Code: Select all
The owls are not what they seem
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The letters show a name, yet who?
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This is the water, and this is the well.
Drink full and descend.
The horse is the white of the eyes and dark within.
i really like that and never seen about it.KnewItsPa wrote: All of the other of the Giants original clues are also solvable as anagrams which give further clues that directly relate to the characters in question.
I'll put some S1 notes together in a different thread another time, but for now:claaa7 wrote:i really like that and never seen about it.KnewItsPa wrote: All of the other of the Giants original clues are also solvable as anagrams which give further clues that directly relate to the characters in question.
what are the other anagram re: The Giant
Make sense of it.
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there is a man inside a smiling bag
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gambling den is his main area site