bigscoop
Gold Member
- Jun 4, 2010
- 13,535
- 9,072
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- Older blue Excal with full mods, Equinox 800.
- Primary Interest:
- All Treasure Hunting
I realize that this might appear a simple question and answer to most, but is it?
If the narration is true and the ciphers are real then how did the author know that another vital "missing paper" was still required?
As we have seen over and over again throughout the years many hopeful Beale followers have concocted all manner of complicated solutions involving the narration's presented key, so with all of this in mind, how did the author of the narration know that another vital missing paper was still required? What made him so certain that the one key he already possessed wasn't the only required key if only he simply understood how to apply it? In his alleged letter to Morriss, Beale only references the key in singular form, as “key” and not “keys”, so how did the author know that multiple keys were required? How could he be so certain that there was still a single missing paper given that he had, by simple mistake, already discovered, “a working key?”
From this are we to assume that each cipher possibly has its own key, perhaps? Why only “one missing paper” for the remaining two ciphers? Why not possibly two missing papers? So how did the author know that only “a missing paper” was still required? Obviously, as the tale is presented, the presented key only worked for just one cipher, this being C2. But we still have two unsolved ciphers left, not just one, so how could the author be so certain that only singular, "a missing paper", was still required? Why not the offered option of two?
Seems the wily fox may be in the hen-house yet again.
If the narration is true and the ciphers are real then how did the author know that another vital "missing paper" was still required?
As we have seen over and over again throughout the years many hopeful Beale followers have concocted all manner of complicated solutions involving the narration's presented key, so with all of this in mind, how did the author of the narration know that another vital missing paper was still required? What made him so certain that the one key he already possessed wasn't the only required key if only he simply understood how to apply it? In his alleged letter to Morriss, Beale only references the key in singular form, as “key” and not “keys”, so how did the author know that multiple keys were required? How could he be so certain that there was still a single missing paper given that he had, by simple mistake, already discovered, “a working key?”
From this are we to assume that each cipher possibly has its own key, perhaps? Why only “one missing paper” for the remaining two ciphers? Why not possibly two missing papers? So how did the author know that only “a missing paper” was still required? Obviously, as the tale is presented, the presented key only worked for just one cipher, this being C2. But we still have two unsolved ciphers left, not just one, so how could the author be so certain that only singular, "a missing paper", was still required? Why not the offered option of two?
Seems the wily fox may be in the hen-house yet again.
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