GR translation: coffee mess

Paul Mackin mackin.paul at verizon.net
Mon May 7 07:15:44 CDT 2012


On 5/7/2012 1:18 AM, Prashant Kumar wrote:
> The soggy mass of grounds left after making coffee?


I thought of another possibility.  Maybe they're putting something in 
the coffee.  Saltpeter, for example, to control sexual urges.

Mess, in military parlance (American, don't know about British) means 
the place where meals are served, so, by extension, the coffee cart.

Just a possibility.

P






>
> On 7 May 2012 14:46, Mike Jing <gravitys.rainbow.cn at gmail.com
> <mailto:gravitys.rainbow.cn at gmail.com>> wrote:
>
>     P127.2-10   . . . oh yes a most superb possibility has found seedbed
>     in his brain, and here it is. What if they are all, all these Psi
>     Section freaks here, ganged up on him in secret? O.K.? Yes: suppose
>     they can see into your mind! a-and how about—what if it’s hypnotism?
>     Eh? Jesus: then a whole number of other occult things such as: astral
>     projection, brain control (nothing occult about that), secret curses
>     for impotence, boils, madness, yaaahhh—potions! (as he straightens at
>     last and back in his mind’s eyes to his office now glances, very
>     gingerly, at the coffee mess, oh God . . . ), ...
>
>     What is "the coffee mess"?  Specifically, what is the meaning of
>     "mess" here?  Does he make coffee in his office using the water boiled
>     in the Erlenmeyer flask mentioned earlier?  Does he make a mess of it?
>       Or is it something else?
>
>




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