COUNT SAINT-GERMAIN

COUNT SAINT-GERMAIN. Their eyes were wide open in disbelief! The gift diamonds were scattered all over the floor! He could hammer glass and turn it into diamonds! He knew how to cast lead and make gold!..

APOCALYPSE BOOK

Master M.H. Ulug Kizilkecili

1/20/20263 min oku

COUNT SAINT-GERMAIN

Suddenly, an extraordinary figure appeared in Europe.¹
Kings were astonished, almost driven to madness.

He revealed the war plans of them all, as if declaring:
“The true Owner of sovereignty has arrived. Descend.”

Their eyes were opened wide in shock;
diamonds prepared as gifts were scattered upon the ground.

He was said to strike glass and turn it into diamond,²
to melt lead and transform it into gold.³

He acquired lands and received the title Count of Saint-Germain;
the Pope who granted this title filled his coffers with gold.⁴

He spoke every language as though it were his native tongue.
He mastered both physics and metaphysics, their depths seemingly without limit.

He played every musical instrument masterfully.
Whatever scholars asked of him, he answered without error.

Then he began to ask the questions.
They fell silent, for there was no substance behind their inner understanding.

With both hands at once, he could write two letters simultaneously.
His vision pierced like X-rays, seeing front and back alike.⁵

Whomever one asked him about from history, he described with precision, as if he had witnessed their lives himself.
All who listened were amazed.

He perceived the future with the same clarity as the past.
Once, while the young Marie Antoinette laughed, he said to her:

“While you laugh, the people are weeping.
This very year, on this very day, the guillotine shall take your head.”⁶

He was rarely seen eating or drinking.
He appeared perpetually awake, whether approached early or late.

He was strikingly handsome and showed little sign of aging.
Some attributed this to magic, others to sorcery.

He had neither wife nor children, yet every woman admired him.
“The seed remained within himself,” they said; he did not break his vow.⁷

No one knew who he truly was or from where he had come.
That he possessed “the knowledge of the Book” was, however, evident.⁸

At times he vanished entirely for “three days.”
No one knew where he went, nor for what purpose.⁹

Every king offered him employment as a spy.
Thus the mission of the Holy Count came to an end.

Those who could not attain the throne did not support him.
Like a saint of the unseen, he disappeared once again.¹⁰

A square in Paris and a football club were named Saint-Germain.¹¹
Thus, the Presence attained public renown.

Helena P. Blavatsky writes:
“The West could not recognize him.
Their hearts are harder than stone.”¹²

“When he returns again, perhaps they will know him.
When the people gave their lives! Who knows how many millions!"

Master M.H. Ulug Kizilkecili

Türkiye/Ankara - 12.04.1999

Footnotes

1. Refers to the historical figure known as Comte de Saint-Germain, active in 18th-century European courts, often described as enigmatic and immortal in esoteric literature.

2. Alchemical symbolism: glass → diamond signifies transformation of the base into the perfected.

3. Lead → gold is a classic metaphor for alchemy, often interpreted spiritually rather than literally.

4. While Saint-Germain held noble titles, his exact origins and legitimization remain historically unclear.

5. Symbolic expression of heightened perception or omniscience, common in esoteric hagiography.

6. A legend frequently attributed to Saint-Germain, said to have warned Marie Antoinette before the French Revolution.

7. Esoteric traditions often associate celibacy with the conservation of spiritual or creative energy.

8. “Knowledge of the Book” echoes Qur’anic and esoteric terminology referring to divine or hidden knowledge.

9. The motif of disappearing for three days appears in mystical traditions, symbolizing withdrawal into higher states of being.

10. “Saint of the unseen” parallels Islamic and Sufi concepts of rijāl al-ghayb (men of the unseen).

11. Saint-Germain-des-Prés (Paris) and Paris Saint-Germain (PSG) are modern bearers of the name.

12. Helena Petrovna Blavatsky (1831–1891), founder of Theosophy, frequently referenced Saint-Germain as a Master or Adept.

IMPORTANT NOTE :The original text is poetic, and the author cannot be held responsible for any errors in the English translation! To read the original Turkish text, click HERE! The following section is not the author's work, and the author cannot be held responsible for any errors made! It includes universally! understood explanations of certain words!