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Know_files/FINGERPRINTS OF THE GODS.pdf - D Ank Unlimited

Know_files/FINGERPRINTS OF THE GODS.pdf - D Ank Unlimited

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Chapter 34<br />

Mansion of Eternity<br />

Graham Hancock – <strong>FINGERPRINTS</strong> <strong>OF</strong> <strong>THE</strong> <strong>GODS</strong><br />

Have you ever climbed a pyramid, at night, fearful of arrest, with your<br />

nerves in shreds?<br />

It’s a surprisingly difficult thing to do, especially where the Great<br />

Pyramid is concerned. Even though its top 31 feet are no longer intact, its<br />

presently exposed summit platform still stands more than 450 feet above<br />

ground level. 1 It consists, moreover, of 203 separate courses of masonry,<br />

with the average course height being about two and a quarter feet. 2<br />

Averages do not tell you everything, as I discovered soon after we<br />

began the climb. The courses turned out to be of unequal depth, some<br />

barely reaching knee level while others came up almost to my chest and<br />

created formidable obstacles. At the same time the horizontal ledges<br />

between each of the steps were very narrow, often only a little wider than<br />

my foot, and many of the big limestone blocks, which had looked so solid<br />

from below, proved to be crumbling and broken.<br />

Somewhere around 30 courses up Santha and I began to appreciate<br />

what we had let ourselves in for. Our muscles were aching and our knees<br />

and fingers stiff and bruised—yet we were barely one-seventh of the way<br />

to the summit and there were still more than 170 courses to climb.<br />

Another worry was the vertiginous drop steadily opening beneath us.<br />

Looking down along the ruptured contours that marked the line of the<br />

southwestern corner, I was taken aback to see how far we had already<br />

climbed and experienced a momentary, giddying presentiment of how<br />

easy it would be for us to fall, head over heels like Jack and Jill, bouncing<br />

and jolting over the huge layers of stone, breaking our crowns at the<br />

bottom.<br />

Ali had permitted a pause of a few moments for us to catch our<br />

breaths, but now he signalled that we should press on and began to<br />

climb again. Still using the corner as a guideline, he rapidly disappeared<br />

into the darkness above.<br />

Somewhat less confidently, Santha and I followed.<br />

Time and motion<br />

The 35th course of masonry was a hard one to clamber over, being made<br />

of particularly massive blocks, much larger than any of the others we had<br />

1<br />

The Pyramids of Egypt, p. 8.<br />

2<br />

Peter Lemesurier, The Great Pyramid: Your Personal Guide, Element Books,<br />

Shaftesbury, 1987, p. 225.<br />

274

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