Here is a real witch - MI6, trained by Ian Flemiong.......my old friend
- she sent me Christmas Cards and  sent her Halloween Cards.....she knew
Sir ArthurConan Doyle and lived in New Forest, when child she knew H.G.
Wells....for great minds travel in same circles.

Some witch - she died in October of 1981.....before she left all her
property involvng research, etc., and also my bible code/calendar ws
sent to Prime Minister for she was still in service.....some say she
hooked up to MKUltra, but she knew about the implants behind ears of
some Jonestown victims shortly after it happened, and told me that this
Mark Lane was CIA lawyer of worst possible type - but then, he had just
been involved with Larry Flynt when he was crippled for life - he was
new kid on block (heavey drug struff coming in then).

so she lived in New Forest and used to stay at Heathcliff House when she
went back for visit; when she got big windfall and big bucks, she always
sent portion to masonic burn units, for she remember many of the witches
and Knights burnt at stake?

she once sent me a brass rubbing from tomb of Knight Templar and said
note that dog at his feet.....no longer can you make these rubbings, but
this was some gift she sent from Ireland to me.....

So this was a good witch - this God Bu$ine$$ of today makes me long for
the Return of the Warlocks and Witches .....and one must remember it was
Endor the Witch who raised the body of Samuel was it?

On must be born a witch - this Hollywood stuff is disgusting for like
Crowley, Sybil Leek was intelligensia......a little onion planed at Coca
Beach and Melborne Beach Florida but good witch of the West?

So who invented witches?   The same guy who invented Adam and Eve......

For God was an Englishman and it took a German to publish hs words in
prnt....as it is writte in the bible The Lord Gave the Word and Great
was the Company that publshed it -------that CIA sre got around.

So when you think of psychics and witches, thin of othe little princess
of Wales and Reagan and Nancy Reagan, for Sybil was astrologer to Kings
and Queens and one President.

Saba

Nice to see Sybil remember this April 2001 - Holzer wanted her back and
wanted her to forget the assassnation crap........she was my friend for
12 years.


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 Tuesday, December 02, 1997
An Irishman's Diary
By John Connolly

It's not something of which everyone is aware, but the Renvyle House
Hotel in Co Galway has a resident ghost. In fact, depending on your
ability to suspend disbelief, it may have more than one ghost.

Renvyle, the former home of the Gogarty family, has a colourful history.
Burned down by Republican sympathisers in the early part of the century
and subsequently rebuilt, its guests have included W.B. Yeats, who
stayed there as a guest of Oliver St John Gogarty and conducted a number
of seances on the premises; at one time he believed himself to be in
contact with the ghost of a dead child.

Subsequently, guests complained of a presence in Room 27 of the Renvyle
House Hotel; one female guest testified that she was watched by the
spectral figure of a man while putting on her make-up. I know all this
because Hans Holzer said so and he should know. Holzer, a New Yorkbased
ghost-hunter, arrived in Ireland in 1965 to write a study of Irish
spectres, eventually published under the title

The Lively Ghosts of Ireland.
Oirish rope

The degree to which one can take Holzer seriously - this is a man who
once wrote a book called Ghosts I've Met - is roughly equivalent to the
amount of Oirish rope which one is willing to give him before he hangs
himself. "I had been told that the Irish are just naturally prone to the
supernatural, from leprechauns to ghosts, and I would have a field day
the moment I set foot on the Ould Sod," writes Holzer, in the tone of a
man just looking to be beaten up as he walks the streets of Limerick
looking for leprechauns, which he once did.

Holzer did not arrive in Ireland alone. He brought with him a lady
called Sybil Leek, a British psychic whose role was to sniff out the
spirits with her other-worldly nose. To those who believe in such
matters, Ms Leek was an individual of extraordinary psychic sensitivity,
a woman in touch with other worlds, other planes of existence. Anyway,
Holzer and Leek stayed in Renvyle and, in the course of his stay, Holzer
decided that the ghost in Room 27 might well be Yeats, on the grounds
that both Yeats and the spectre were tall men and Yeats, "being a man of
great inquisitiveness, was just the type to stay on even after death."
(One would have hoped, however, that he was not the type to skulk around
in lady's bedrooms watching them undress or apply their make-up. He
always looked a bit too dignified for that.)

Holzer and Leek also checked into the Shelbourne Hotel in Dublin and, lo
and behold, that turned out to be haunted as well, according to Ms Leek.
She was staying in Room 526 and experienced the sound of material moving
over the floor of her bathroom, sudden cold spells and the unexpected
billowing of her curtains. Instead of just closing the window more
tightly, she believed that there was a presence in her room.

This is her description of what took place:
"I called out quite gently and not in fear at all: `What´s the
matter?´

'I'm frightened,' said a child's voice. `Come to me then,´ I said. A
few seconds later, I felt the foot of the bed being touched and then
grasped as if some child were hauling itself onto the bed. Than a very
soft arm went around my neck.´ "

Scared yet? Didn't think so. Sybil then did what any right-minded person
would do with a spectral child's arm around her neck: she nodded off to
sleep. It takes a very special kind of person to do that. Holzer and Ms
Leek were nothing if not tenacious in their search for portals into the
next world. They even attended a performance of Holiday Hay- ride,
starring Jack Cruise, in the Olympia. Afterwards, they were regaled with
tales of the haunted dressing-room, number 9, which was presumably
haunted by people who had died on stage.

Ms Leek had a different view: "I have an opinion that this is something
in the year 1916, and something very unruly, something destructive. It
is a man. He doesn't belong here. He wishes to get away."
Shot accidentally

An Olympia stage-hand, Albert Barden, told Holzer that a civilian had
been shot accidentally in the theatre between 1916 and 1922, so it could
be true. Ms Leek certainly thought so, but then she appears to have been
otherwise engaged when God was dosing the people of this world with a
spoonful of healthy scepticism.
Holzer and Leek made a second visit to Dublin in 1966, when they were
the subject of considerable press interest and enjoyed the co-operation
of Paddy Byrne of the Evening Herald, who had been writing a regular
column on ghost lore for some years. Holzer and Leek duly investigated
the haunted fireplace of Dunsandle, which apparently played violin
music; a ghost in Number 118 Summerhill, which caused demolition to be
delayed when workmen refused to enter the house after dark; and the
haunted rectory of Carlingford, which was troubled by both a clergyman
and a young woman in a velvet dress - an interesting combination, if
nothing else.
Incidentally, they didn't stay in the Shelbourne on their second visit.
They stayed in the modern - and presumably spirit-free - Jurys. Even
ghosthunters need a break sometimes.




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