Home Fruit trees Jean Dixon predictions of the future. The prophecy of the great fortuneteller Jane Dixon. Why did Jane Dixon become a household name?

Jean Dixon predictions of the future. The prophecy of the great fortuneteller Jane Dixon. Why did Jane Dixon become a household name?

Washington Pythia, so unusual name American media have been calling Jean Dixon, the most famous of all American clairvoyants of the 20th century, for more than 70 years. They talked and wrote a lot about her, but still, who is she?

At the Mayflower Hotel restaurant, the cream was collected on Fridays sorority Washington. These included three women who occupied one of the tables on November 22, 1963. These were the widow of Admiral Cope, her friend Mrs. Kaufman and the famous fortuneteller Jean Dixon. The three of them ordered lobster and eggs Florentine. But Mrs. Dixon never touched the delicacies. “I can’t bring myself to swallow a single piece,” she complained. And then she explained: “Today something terrible will happen to the president.” “Get it out of your head, dear,” Mrs. Kaufman advised. “You know that your premonitions do not always come true.” “Not this time,” Jean sighed sadly. “Yes, yes,” Mrs. Cope nodded, “Gene has been saying for a long time that a tragedy will happen to President Kennedy.” “You’re right,” Dixon agreed. – Man cannot change God’s will. At that moment, the orchestra suddenly fell silent, and the conductor announced into the microphone that an assassination attempt had been made on the president.

- He is dead! – Jean Dixon exclaimed in horror to the entire hall in the ensuing silence.

“No, no,” the conductor hastened to reassure the guests. “He may not have been hurt at all.”

“No, I know for sure: he was killed,” the fortuneteller insisted.


For her, the news of the assassination attempt was doubly tragic. Back in mid-October, she paid a visit to Kay Hall, who was on close terms with the Kennedy family, and spoke about the disturbing visions that had become more frequent in her life. Lately: Dark clouds are gathering over the White House. Now they have begun to sink lower and extend to the southwest. The President is going to go to Texas. This means that he will be killed there. Therefore, the fortuneteller begged Mrs. Hall to persuade Kennedy to abandon this trip.

Jean Dixon's prophetic gift manifested itself already in early childhood. The little girl, having barely learned to speak, began to surprise the Pinkert family by almost correctly “guessing what would soon happen.” By the way, she predicted to her schoolboy brother Ernie, when his parents forbade him to play football, that he would be a “famous football player” and they would be proud of him. The prediction came true: 10 years later, Ernie’s name was included in the American football book of honor.

At first, the Pinkert family did not attach any importance to little Jean’s “revelations.” For example, she could suddenly say that her father would bring a large black and white dog from Chicago, although this had never been discussed before. Or that the neighbors' rabbits will escape from their cage. And every time her premonitions came true. When the girl turned 8 years old, an event occurred that determined her fate. One day she and her mother ended up at the estate of Luther Burbank, where a gypsy fortune teller lived. After looking at the girl’s hand, the fortune teller said that she had a great future as a fortune teller, because “such lines on the palm occur once every 1,000 years.” The gypsy gave Jean a crystal ball, in which she believed she could “read the future.”

Before the war, Jean marries wealthy entrepreneur James Dixon, and the newlyweds move to Washington. Soon she had the opportunity to prove her prophetic gift to her skeptic husband. She literally, with tears, somehow persuaded Jim not to fly to Chicago. And the next morning they learned that the flight for which he had a ticket ended in tragedy: the plane crashed. Since then, Dixon has never questioned his wife’s “premonitions.” The same cannot be said about others. Around the same time, Jean warned actress Carole Lombard that she could not fly on an airplane for 6 weeks. However, she did not listen to the advice and died in a plane crash.

Gradually, Jean Dixon's reputation as a fortuneteller was recognized in Washington, even at the highest level. In any case, during the war, high-ranking officials and diplomats often turned to her to find out how events would develop. Especially often, Jean was invited to hospitals where servicemen crippled at the front were treated, to whom she suggested how to find themselves in the upcoming new life.

In November 1944, none other than President Roosevelt himself wanted to meet with Dixon. This man in a wheelchair so impressed Jean with his courageous frankness that she could not help but tell the truth when Roosevelt asked how much time he had left to finish what he started. She answered honestly: only six months or less.

Then the president asked an unexpected question: “How will America’s relationship with Russia develop?” She replied that they would eventually become allies in the face of the threat from Red China.

“Red China,” Roosevelt asked. “But China is not red at all!” We don't have any problems with him. But with Russia we definitely need a good relationship to maintain our position in the world.

Jean looked into the crystal ball and told the president that she could see for sure that China would become communist in five years. The second headache for America will be Africa. However, Roosevelt did not agree, saying that no serious difficulties were foreseen in Africa, the main thing was to remain an ally with the USSR.

This was also discussed during their second meeting in mid-January 1945. Dixon clarified that after the war the alliance of the two powers will disintegrate, but after many years it will be restored again. Therefore, she asked “not to give the Russians what does not belong to America.” She had a vision of Uncle Sam reaching into someone else's pocket, taking out something and handing it to a third country. Now we know that Roosevelt did not follow the advice of the fortuneteller, although he most likely turned to her because a meeting was coming up in Crimea. At the Yalta Conference in mid-February, he agreed to the division of Germany. Two months later, on April 12, 1945, Franklin D. Roosevelt died. 5 months have passed since their first meeting.

The US President was not the only one statesman, to whom the “Washington Pythia” gave the opportunity to look into the future. At one of the receptions in January 1945, she said Harry Truman y that “by the will of God he will become president,” and 4 years later she predicted his re-election to this post. But during his visit to Washington in the spring of the same year, Dixon warned Winston Churchill that he should not rush into elections, otherwise he would be defeated. The British leader only laughed at the naivety of the American, who was not inexperienced in politics, and... after the elections he had scheduled for June, he lost the post of prime minister.

It is difficult to list all of Jean Dixon's political predictions, many of which have been published in newspapers since 1947. And most of them came true. So, in the fall of 1946, she told one Indian diplomat that in a year his country would be divided. “What are you saying, Mrs. Dixon, this will never happen,” the Indian objected. “I can even name the date when this will happen: February 20, 1947,” Jean stated firmly. “If you turn out to be right, I’m ready to eat a dead crow,” the diplomat promised, laughing. After that, when they met at functions, he always reminded Dixon of her poor prognosis. The Indian did not fail to call her on February 20. Imagine his amazement when Jean calmly replied that it was not evening yet. The next morning, all the newspapers came out with huge headlines announcing the emergence of a new state - Pakistan.

The lost Indian, who really didn't want to eat a dead crow, invited the Dixons and some of their friends to dinner at a fashionable restaurant in Fort Myer, where a large horse fair was being held. At the hippodrome, where the guests came after dinner, among other prizes, a Lincoln was drawn in the lottery. Someone from their company began to tease Jean: why shouldn’t she get an expensive car if she can accurately guess the future? And the fortuneteller could not stand it. Closing her eyes, she placed her hand on the lottery tickets and then took one without hesitation. The main winnings - an expensive Lincoln - fell on Jean Dixon's ticket. This was the only time she used her gift for her own benefit.

India will appear in the soothsayer’s forecasts more than once again. In 1947, for example, Jean had a vision that Mahatma Gandhi would be the victim of a fanatical assassin. 6 months later, on January 3, 1948, what Dixon predicted actually happened. And at the end of 1956, her prediction appeared in the newspaper that in about 7 years, Jawaharlal Nehru’s successor would be a person whose last name began with the letter “sh”. Jean's crystal ball did not disappoint: and after Nehru's death on May 27, 1964, the Indian Parliament entrusted him with the post of Prime Minister to Lal Bahadur Shastri. And yet, apart from events in America itself, the USSR probably occupies the first place in Jean Dixon’s predictions. She didn’t single out Russia in particular, just a lot of people asked the soothsayer about it. And what’s most interesting is that her forecasts were usually perceived quite skeptically.

One of the most dramatic incidents took place in front of a huge audience. Dixon was invited to appear on an NBC program on May 14, 1953, which aired in live. She intended to tell viewers about her recent visions regarding Nepal. But as soon as the host introduced Jean, another participant former ambassador USA in the USSR Davis suddenly asked: how long will Malenkov be prime minister? Peering into the crystal ball, the soothsayer said that she saw “a man with an oval face, green eyes and a small beard,” who in two years, and maybe even earlier, would replace him as head of government.

The retired ambassador laughed and said that in Russia prime ministers do not resign: they either die or are shot. And in general, the soothsayer has the wrong idea of ​​a typical Russian leader. After Lenin, bearded people are not in fashion there. Touched to the quick, Jean objected that she was not inventing or imagining anything, but was only talking about what she saw in the crystal ball.

However, the controversy in front of television screens did not end there. Dixon again turned to the “magic ball” and began to say absolutely incredible things. According to her, “the bearded man will not rule for long. He will be replaced by a short, bald, fat man. Moreover, even earlier, a silver ball will rise into space, fly around the Earth and, like a dove, land on the head of the Russian leader.” After thinking a little, Jean added that this could only mean one thing: the Russians would be the first in the world to launch an artificial satellite, and this would give them enormous power.

Ambassador Davis could not tolerate such blasphemy. He grabbed Dixon by the hand holding the crystal ball and began to shake her with all his might, shouting that instead of playing with this stupid toy, she should read his book “Mission to Moscow” and then she would know what they were like, Russians, and Russia. However, Dixon got an idea of ​​“what Russians are like” even without Davis’ book.

The next day, the soothsayer was invited by the Soviet Ambassador Zarubin. After complimenting her on her “amazing gift,” he asked directly where Jean learned about the Soviet space program. “From God,” Dixon answered just as directly. Smiling, the ambassador noted that then she knew much more than they did. In any case, according to their information, the USSR is not going to launch any space satellites.

It makes no sense now to say that, two years later, anyone who saw Jean's funny exchange with an expert on Russia on television probably remembered her forecast made on May 14, 1953. By the way, 10 years later, in the New Year's horoscope for the New York Times, Dixon wrote that in next year Big changes await Russia: Khrushchev will be removed from power. It came true.

But the most curious thing: among those who witnessed Dixon's forecast regarding the launch of the Soviet satellite was Andrew Haley, an adviser to the International Astronautical Federation and the American Institute of Aeronautics. In 1963, he decided to use her visionary gift to try to find out the details of the Russian space program. Heylin convened a scientific council, which, in addition to space specialists, included prominent psychologists, including Dr. Rizenman. Jean spoke to them on August 14, 1963, but, to the great disappointment of the scientists, she was unable to tell them anything sensational. Nevertheless, Dr. Risenman asked her to try to specifically meditate on a given topic, and, as it turned out, it was not in vain.

“I saw the launch of a silver ball over Russia, which made a revolution around globe clockwise, and then changed the direction of flight to the exact opposite. When the satellite appeared over America, it was all brightly lit. And suddenly she plunged into darkness. I can only give one interpretation to this: the Russians have a secret satellite that could disrupt our communications and power supply systems, as well as air navigation.” Dixon made such a sensational “revelation” on television on October 6, 1963, of course, having previously told specialists led by Haley about her vision. The next morning, a Pentagon official showed up at Dixon's office. He stated that he did not intend to listen to “tales about some visions,” and demanded to reveal the true source of her information about the Russian secret weapons. And if she tries to hide it, it may have consequences for her.” serious consequences”.

“Although you don’t believe in my predictions, I know better than you what awaits me, and I don’t foresee any complications,” Jean put the uninvited guest in his place. “As for the source, it is available to everyone.” This is the Lord God. Contact him and he will confirm that I am telling the truth. This ended their conversation. But it was by no means a commotion in the Pentagon, which one of the congressmen confidentially told Dixon about. However, as it turned out, her performance on television unsettled not only the military. A day later, a CIA representative visited the soothsayer. He was interested in the same thing: where did Dixon get information about the Russian satellite? When she replied that it was from God, the “man with the badge” was sincerely indignant:

– But they are top secret! You don't have to know about this!

“As soon as the Lord God reveals them to me, he better judge whether I should know about it or not,” Jean snapped.

The last time Dixon’s forecast regarding the “secret satellite” was remembered was relatively recently. One of the American newspapers suggested that it was precisely this kind of satellite that Gorbachev had in mind when he said that the Soviet Union had an adequate and cheaper answer to American program– SOI.

The uniqueness of Jean Dixon's visionary gift lies in the fact that information about future events comes to her through several channels. Firstly, these are signs that arise when a fortuneteller comes into physical contact with a person. Physical contact, according to Dixon, helps “tune into a person’s wavelength,” “catch his vibration,” and then the whole life of that person appears before her. And it doesn’t matter at all whether they knew each other before or not.

The second source of information is the crystal ball. It serves both for retrospection and foresight, that is, by looking into it, the soothsayer can tell about both the past and the future. Knowing a person's date of birth helps a lot. The fact is that the ball represents, as it were, the whole world or an entire calendar year, depending on what information you need to obtain. Let's say a person was born in January or February. Then I don't need to examine the entire ball. Just look at its upper part. But June and July limit the search field to the middle part, November and December - to the bottom, - this is how Dixon explains the magic of the crystal ball.

By the way, predictions using physical contact and a “magic ball” require a lot of energy from the soothsayer. After such sessions, she experiences a loss of strength, and often she even experiences the mental and physical suffering of others. Therefore, Dixon is deprived of the opportunity to come to the aid of everyone who turns to her.

And finally, visions - the third, main source foresight. Dixon often feels them approaching two or three days in advance, but they can also arise completely spontaneously. Gene Dixon explains: “The vision is as different from what I see in the ball as day is from night. When it descends on me, everything, even the air, around me changes. I am filled with an indescribable feeling of love and peace. It’s as if I am separated from everything around me, and nothing earthly can touch me. I feel like I’m soaring in the heights, from where endless horizons open up that for some reason others don’t see. Moreover, the vision is always absolutely complete, down to the smallest detail. It does not need to be interpreted, it opens up immediately and completely and therefore does not require effort on my part. On the contrary, I feel an unprecedented surge of strength. It seems like you will never get tired again. And, of course, at such moments you experience immeasurable love for God. You think that you will never need anything else for yourself.”

The famous medieval philosopher and theologian Thomas Aquinas wrote that there are two types of revelations. Some are sent down by God, and therefore it is not given to man to change the course of events destined from above. Others depend on changing reality, which the soothsayer is not always able to foresee with his mind.

The list of Jean Dixon's predictions that have come true is quite impressive. So, she accurately predicted the results of everyone, with one exception, presidential elections in the USA, death of John Foster Dulles and suicide of Marilyn Monroe, resignation German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer and the 1964 Alaska earthquake and much, much more. How right Dixon is in her predictions can be judged by what events she predicted, made in 1964, will happen before the year 2000: the Berlin Wall will be demolished. The Russians will be the first to land on the moon. An assassination attempt will be made on Pope Paul VI...

As a child, Jean Dixon dreamed of becoming an actress or a nun. Instead, she became America's greatest prophetess. Jean was born in a Wisconsin village into a family of German immigrants, where, besides her, there were six more children. She grew up in the Californian town of Santa Rosa, where her father, who made a decent living in the timber trade, retired.

Jean's parapsychological talents emerged at an early age. She shocked her parents' friends by telling them all their secrets, and once embarrassed her mother by asking her about a "letter with a black border." Her words made sense two weeks later, when mailbox It turned out to be a black-edged envelope containing news of Jean's grandfather's death in Germany.

At the age of nine, Jean visited a gypsy fortune teller who lived in a covered wagon near Santa Rosa. She remembered this meeting for the rest of her life. The gypsy immediately noticed the pronounced crossing lines on Jean's palms and told her that she would be a great initiate.

After rummaging through her supplies, she presented Jean with a magic crystal with the words: “Take it. One day you will tell the others." Despite young age, from that moment Jean realized the obviousness of her calling. Subsequently, she used the magic crystal to concentrate while thinking about the future and is said to have even taken it with her to church.

Several of Jean's predictions, announced in advance either to interested parties or to a wider audience, caused waves of mistrust to sweep across the Western world when they were confirmed. Her most famous prediction concerned the assassination of President John F. Kennedy. She also foresaw the assassination of Senator Robert Kennedy, a black activist civil rights Martin Luther King and Mahatma Gandhi, the shooting of Alabama Governor George Wallace and the early death of Marilyn Monroe.

In December 1966, Jean told Jean Stout, the wife of the agency's chief of operations space flights USA: “I see a terrible fiery disaster. It will lead to the death of astronauts. I can feel their souls leaving the capsule in puffs of smoke.” On January 27, 1967, a massive fire consumed American astronauts Grissom, White, and Chaffee during Apollo tests at Cape Kennedy.

As early as 1949, Dixon told Ivy Becker Priest, former US Treasurer, that Richard Nixon would one day become president, and repeated the prediction in 1953. In mid-September 1961, she warned her friends against flying on the same plane with Secretary General UN by Dag Hammarskjöld. Fortunately for themselves, they listened to Dixon's words - on September 18, the ship with Hammarskjöld on board crashed in Northern Rhodesia (Zambia).

In 1946, Jean predicted the division of India to the day. The Indian diplomat in Washington only laughed at the forecast, considering such a development of events impossible. On the morning of February 20, 1947, when there was still no sign of a split, he called Dixon, teasing her about the unfulfilled prophecy. However, Jean remained unperturbed, calmly answering that the day was not over yet. The next day there were reports in the newspapers that India was being divided.

Back in 1944, she declared: “China will become communist and will be our greatest problem. Africa will be our next concern in foreign policy" In 1964, Jean predicted a terrible earthquake in Alaska a month in advance.

There are countless examples of Dixon's predictions about her friends and acquaintances that have come true. Marriages, illnesses, deaths, career breaks, accidents, race winnings, suicides, fires - Jean successfully anticipated all of this.

In November 1944, President Roosevelt summoned Jean to The White house. To his question: “How much time do I have left to finish the work entrusted to me?”, she answered quite sincerely: “Six months, if not less.” Her grim prediction turned out to be accurate. On April 12, 1945, President Roosevelt died in Georgia from a cerebral hemorrhage.

Later that year, Dixon told Winston Churchill that the British electorate would end his reign as prime minister, although he could later return to power. “England will never let me down,” Churchill replied sharply. And yet, Jean turned out to be right.

However, this did not always happen. She, for example, predicted that the Russians would be the first to land on the moon, that Fidel Castro would lose the reins of power in Cuba many years ago, that China would provoke world war in 1958, and the 1964 general election in Britain would be won by the sore losers. “My symbols never lie,” Jean explains his mistakes, “only sometimes I misinterpret them.”

The sources of Dixon's predictions can be roughly divided into two groups: revelations, which, according to Jean, are visions of inevitable events that shape the fate of the world, and sensations, which serve as omens of events that should not happen. Revelations happen much less frequently, but their significance and scope are infinitely more significant. "All my revelations concern international situations“,” said Jean, “and never revolve around an individual.”

Her prediction of JFK's death was undoubtedly a revelation. Eleven years before the tragedy, Jean had been haunted for several days by an overwhelming feeling of anticipation - one of those that always precedes her most dramatic revelations. The feeling was realized after Dixon went to Washington’s St. Matthew’s Cathedral on a gloomy, rainy morning and stood in front of the statue of the Virgin Mary. Suddenly, a flickering image of the White House appeared, over the roof of which the numbers 1-9-6-0 began to appear, soon obscured by a black cloud descending on the dome. Young John Kennedy stood in front of the main entrance. Jean watched him closely, and an inner voice told her that in 1960 the young man would become President of the United States, but would be assassinated before his term in power expired.

The vision stayed with Jean ever since, and the results of the 1960 election only strengthened her confidence in its significance. As the fateful day approached, she tried in vain to warn the President of the danger threatening him. As the clock ticked down, Jean realized with horror that a fatal blow was imminent. She lost her appetite, paced back and forth in the office and muttered absent-minded remarks to her friends. Finally, at twelve thirty in the afternoon on November 22, 1963, the fatal shots were fired. Something happened that Jean Dixon, in the depths of her soul, considered inevitable. She subsequently said that more than one person was responsible for what happened and that it would become public knowledge.

“When I am asked to explain my gift of foreseeing the future,” Dixon said, “I answer that I can’t do it, just as I can’t define what love or electricity is. When I am asked to explain why my prophecies are exclusively related to death, I answer that they are not. Many of my predictions are complete happy events for people, but they just don't make the headlines." Fair enough. Yet most of Jean's prophecies for the next fifty years are not encouraging. Fortunately, many of them did not come true. Judge for yourself:

  • In the mid-1980s, a comet would hit the Earth, causing potentially devastating earthquakes and powerful tidal waves.
  • During the 1980s, many would "die like ants" as a result of the biological warfare unleashed on the Western world by Red China in alliance with Asian and African nations.
  • The flag over the White House will fly at half-staff in 1983.
  • The Antichrist, born, according to Dixon, on February 5, 1962 in the Middle East, will transform the world with deceptively seductive teachings. Backed by the United States, he would gain a reputation as a peacemaker but would ultimately plunge the West into war with China in the fourth decade of the next century.
  • Widespread geological displacement and geographic changes will begin by the end of the century. “Where there is water now, there will be earth, and where there is earth today, violent streams will rush there in whirlwinds, sweeping away everything in their path.”
  • The deceptive security inspired by so-called disarmament will be suddenly compromised by a world war in 1999.
  • Red China's war of conquest with Russia and its satellite states will last from 2020 to 2037.
  • More than a dozen African nations will take part in the great war on the Dark Continent in 1987. This war will become the African equivalent of World War II.
  • Stolen nuclear weapon will strike terror into an entire continent in 1981. The weapons will be returned to their place, warning us all of the impending disaster.
  • In 1985, the third war in Indochina would break out, which would be the most destructive armed conflict of the 20th century in this region.
  • In the 1980s, the United States would have its first female president.
  • Mexico, having discovered rich oil deposits, would plunge into the same social chaos and political confusion that struck Iran. This should happen in 1987.
  • By the end of the century, the problem of world hunger will be far from resolved.

Other prophecies from Dixon that sound optimistic:

  • The end of the world will not come for at least the next 3,000 years.
  • On the sister planet, “exactly on the other side of the Sun,” intelligence will be discovered. We will land devices on Jupiter that will allow us to conduct observations from a bird's eye view.
  • Animals and creatures long considered extinct will be discovered.
  • By the end of the century, Canada and Brazil, due to their food and energy resources, will become the most powerful nations in the world.
  • Beginning in 1985, icebergs will be towed from the poles for commercial use.

According to Jean Dixon, her dark vision of the coming of the Antichrist is another revelation of the inevitability of an event of world significance. In the vision she caught the image of a child of evil will, who is now a young man and living somewhere in the Middle East. He will imitate Christ's lifestyle and philosophy, expanding his influence through a band of devoted followers and deceiving the world with the careful disguise of his satanic mission.

The youth will take his side, and the propaganda machine of the United States will be used to exalt the glory of his name. In her book My Life and Prophecies, Jean describes the conquest of the world by a man whom she sees as "the last greatest of the idols that ever aroused the worship of men in the long history of religious error":

The Antichrist will become a phenomenon on a political scale. He is not just a religious “heretic” whom the world at large could ignore. No! He will concentrate earthly power in his hands and manipulate it as his instrument. All the tyrants known in history are mere children compared to him. First of all, this means that he will be a militant figure the world has never seen before. He will conquer the whole world and will keep it in perfect obedience with the help of the most perfect weapons.

And only, it seems, Divine intervention is able to save peoples from enslavement. “This is a revelation expressed to me,” she says. “But people are not ready for it yet.” And yet she said that right before the second coming of Christ, “we will all be eyewitnesses of the shadow of the cross, the shaking of the earth and three days of darkness.”

There is no consensus among people regarding Jean Dixon. Some believe in her predictions to her, others laugh, dismissing her past prophecies that have come true as superbly planned “hits.” Jane Dixon died of a heart attack on January 26, 1997, remaining a mystery to scientists.

Materials from the book “Great Prophets of Our Time” by N. Nepomnyashchy were used

Book of predictions. Prophecies that will come true Sklyarova Vera

THE PROPHECIES OF JANE DIXON

THE PROPHECIES OF JANE DIXON

PROPHECY FIRST

She predicted victory in the 1928 presidential election for Republican candidate Herbert Hoover. The popular Commerce Secretary actually won the election by a landslide.

PROPHECY SECOND AND THIRD

She predicted that Vice President Harry Truman would become president in 1948, at that time the favorite in the race was New York Governor Thomas Dewey, an uncompromising fighter against organized crime. Absolutely everyone abandoned Truman, even the leaders of his own party. The newspapers were so confident of Dewey’s victory that the next morning they came out with his portraits, but the race was won by Truman, who, flashing a white-toothed smile, waving a “tattered” newspaper, showed off in front of the television cameras.

In 1952, Dewey again attacked the White House, but again lost, and Louis Eisenhower won, as Jane prophesied. And this can be called her third prophecy, which was fulfilled exactly.

PROPHECY FOUR

Three years later, Dixon announced that Eisenhower would be re-elected, although the general, who had never recovered from a heart attack, which, by the way, was also prophesied by Jane, had not yet decided for himself whether he should fight for a second term.

Lyndon Johnson was then vice president when Jane published her prediction: "Being a victim of circumstances, he (Johnson) will withdraw from the presidential election." Johnson retired from the race in 1968.

One of the great reformers of America could not cope with the consequences of the Vietnam War, into which the military “drew” him.

PROPHECY FIFTH

In January 1942, American film star Carole Lombard, wife of the even more brilliant Clark Gable, went to Indianapolis on a campaign trip in favor of the war loan. Jean Dixon begged her to cancel this trip; According to her information, Lombard should avoid air travel for the next six weeks, but Lombard, who was German, considered this trip a patriotic act and did not believe in prophecies and astrology, and at the same time in palmistry. The only thing Jean persuaded her to do was to cast lots, toss a coin: to fly or not to fly? Dropped: fly.

She reached Indianapolis safely and only grinned, remembering Dixon's forecast; she was supposed to go back by train, but at the last minute she changed her mind, she wanted to see her husband, who was always on the move, and she bought a plane ticket.

On the way to Los Angeles, the plane made a stopover in Las Vegas. The airport administration asked her to give up her seat to an officer who had left his unit, but Lombard refused. 23 minutes after takeoff, the plane was caught in a fierce storm and crashed in the Nevada mountains. When Franklin Roosevelt was informed of the tragic death of the public's favorite, he declared her the first American woman to die in World War II, posthumously awarded her the Presidential Medal of Freedom and even named a ship after her. Perhaps it was then that he first learned about Jean Dixon and her prophetic gift.

PROPHECY SIX

One morning in November 1944, the phone rang in the house of a Washington socialite; she received a call from the White House and was told that President Roosevelt wanted to meet with her.

He received her in the oval office, wheeled his gurney out from behind his desk and shook her hand. He was friendly and radiated professional optimism, but it was obvious that last years he really failed. Contrary to forecasts and doctors' advice to change the climate and rest, he was just elected to a fourth term. The Americans were so used to him that they didn’t seem to think that they would ever have another president. For many years he misled everyone, even the world's intelligence services did not know what he was sick with; by the way, this is still shrouded in mystery.

It is believed (the standard version) that the paralysis of his legs was due to polio, which he contracted at the age of 7, but now this diagnosis is disputed. Doctors believe that he has progressed Guillain-Barré syndrome, a rare disease Russian name which is “acute post-infectious polyneuropathy”; Today, this syndrome is treatable and, according to experts, not only complete rehabilitation is possible, but also the patient’s participation in sports.

As for Roosevelt, he knew that his illness was incurable, and saw salvation in hydrotherapy. In this regard, he constantly visited the water resort of Warm Springs in Georgia, where he has existed ever since medical Center named after him, specializing in helping polio victims. After each visit to this resort, Roosevelt managed to convince journalists that everything was fine with him. With superhuman efforts, he took several steps, leaning on a cane, overcoming terrible pain. Before this, his legs were shackled in steel braces, but only those closest to him knew about this. Sometimes in newsreels and photographs he appeared on crutches and never on a gurney. At the most crucial moments, he stood, held by one of his sons or one of his assistants. It was not accepted then to require the publication of the president’s health card, so no one knew how seriously ill the president was.

A year before meeting Jean, his health began to rapidly deteriorate. He became thin, haggard, his complexion became sallow, his smile seemed glued on. More and more dark thoughts visited him. And there was a great deal to do, America was fighting two full-scale wars - in the Pacific and in Europe, it was time to think about the post-war order and the restoration of war-torn countries.

After exchanging greetings, Roosevelt asked Jean directly, “How much time do I have left for the things I have to complete?” The guest asked permission to place her hand on the president’s arm to feel the “vibrations.” The meaning of the hidden “vibrations” confused Jean, but the President repeated the question. She replied: “No more than six months.”

Roosevelt was shocked; he was silent for several minutes. Having coped with the stress, he started talking about Russia: what to do, what to do with this huge country ruled by an eastern tyrant? Dixon replied that Russia, unfortunately, would not be America's ally after the war, but in the more distant future these countries would become friends.

The President, who was worried about the shortness of his life, asked again: “How many years do I have left to finish the job?” But Dixon was adamant: “Mr. President, the period is not measured in years, a maximum of six months.” She visited the White House a second time in January 1945.

As soon as she looked at Roosevelt, she was convinced that death had not abandoned its victim. This time Roosevelt asked without preamble: “How long do I have left?” Dixon was relentless, she raised her hand and pointed with her thumb and forefinger: “That’s how much.” The distance between the fingers was no more than an inch.

Roosevelt nodded sadly, but, apparently, was not too upset: “A little,” he said. “Less than I would like!” - Dixon confirmed.

Roosevelt again started talking about post-war politics, and again about Russia, Dixon advised him “not to concede anything to Stalin that there is no need to concede.” Neither on her first nor on her second visit did the president ask how much time he had left, but they understood each other.

In February, the famous Yalta Conference took place, and on April 12, 1945, he died in Warm Springs, undergoing another course of hydrotherapy. Exactly six months have passed since their first meeting.

PROPHECY SEVEN

It concerns President Kennedy. Back in 1952, Dixon, in an interview she gave to Parade magazine, said that the presidential election would be won by a blond man with blue eyes, who would then either be killed or die of natural causes, but before the end of his term. The handsome blue-eyed John Kennedy was not even a senator at that time. This interview of hers was published only in May 1956.

According to another version, Dixon allegedly had a vision, she saw John Kennedy on the threshold of the White House, and above the roof of the building there were numbers: 1960, then suddenly the sky became cloudy, a downpour poured in and washed away the numbers. In 1960, Kennedy snatched victory from Nixon and was elected by a margin of 0.2 percent.

In early 1963, Dixon told her friends that she saw a coffin in the White House, that the disaster would happen in the South and that there was no way to avoid it. She even wanted to do it publicly, on a radio talk show, but the host persuaded her not to do it.

On November 22, she was having lunch with friends in Washington when the sad news of an assassination attempt on the president arrived from Dallas. Journalists reported that Kennedy was in critical condition, but Joan, hearing the news, turned pale and firmly said that Kennedy was dead.

PROPHECY EIGHTH. DEATH OF ROBERT KENNEDY

Dixon also predicted the death of the second Kennedy, Robert.

In early 1968, after Luther King's assassination, she said, "Robert Kennedy will be next." On May 28, she attended a conference at the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles and repeated this prophecy. A week later, in this same hotel, Bobby was murdered after winning the California primary.

PROPHECY NINE

In 1946, Jane predicted the division of India to the day. The Indian diplomat in Washington only laughed at the forecast, considering such a development of events impossible. On the morning of February 20, he called Dixon, teasing her about the unfulfilled prophecy.

However, she remained unperturbed. She calmly noted that the day was not over yet. The next day there were reports in the newspapers that India was being divided.

PROPHECY TENTH

In late 1956, she predicted that Indian Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru (1889–1964) would be succeeded in about seven years by a man whose last name began with the letter “Sh.”

In June 1964, after Nehru's death, Lal Bakhdur Shastri became Prime Minister of India.

PROPHECY ELEVENTH

She accurately predicted to Mohandas Gandhi when he would be assassinated.

PROPHECY TWELVE

She predicted Winston Churchill's defeat in the elections after the war.

PROPHECY THIRTEEN

She predicted the marriage of Jacqueline Kennedy and Aristotle Onassis.

PROPHECY FOURTEEN

She prophesied a revolution in China, because even during her meeting with Roosevelt she called China “red.” At the same time, when asked by the president why China is red, she looked into her crystal ball and said: “I see absolutely for sure: China will become communist!”

PROPHECY FIFTEEN

She accurately, to the year, day and hour, predicted the death of J. D. Dulles.

PROPHECY SIXTEEN

She accurately determined the death of America's sex symbol, actress Marilyn Monroe.

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On Friday, November 22, 1963, three women who belonged to the cream of society were sitting in the restaurant of Washington's Mayflower Hotel: the widow of Admiral Cope, the millionaire philanthropist Kaufman and the famous fortuneteller Jane Dixon. They were served lobster and eggs Florentine, and then the clairvoyant suddenly announced: “I’m so upset that I can’t bring myself to swallow a single piece.” Something terrible will happen to our president today...


"HE IS DEAD!"

At this moment the orchestra suddenly fell silent. The restaurant administrator appeared next to the conductor and announced that an assassination attempt had been made on President Kennedy.


“He’s dead!” the fortuneteller exclaimed loudly in horror and began to sob.
For her, this news of the assassination attempt was doubly tragic. Back in mid-October, she met with Kay Hall. who was friends with the Kennedy family, and spoke about the disturbing visions that beset her: black clouds were gathering over the White House, falling lower and lower, they stretched to the southwest, to Texas, where President Kennedy was going to go. This vision predicted that death would await him there. Therefore, the clairvoyant begged Mrs. Hall to persuade John Kennedy to abandon his trip to Texas. But Kay Hall decided it was stupid to make such a request to the president. He will only laugh at her and the “witchcraft devilry”...

And Jane Dixon could not find a place for herself. She knew what Long story she has a premonition. Back in 1952, in St. Matthew's Cathedral, she had a strange vision: the number 1960 shone above the White House in Washington, and the figure of a tall, youthful, blue-eyed man with thick reddish hair appeared in front of the residence of the US President. Then a black cloud appeared above him, and an inner voice told Jane that a Democrat would win the presidential election in 1960, but would then die a violent death.


Four years later, she conveyed this grim prediction to a reporter from Parade magazine, but no one took her warning of Kennedy's impending disaster seriously...


When Jane's father gave his daughter a car on her 16th birthday, he heard a prophecy that made him laugh. “In seven years, when Evelyn turns sixteen,” Jane said, nodding toward her sister, “you’ll have to buy her a plane.” And this prediction came true. Later youngest daughter she actually requested - and received - a plane as a gift, later becoming a famous pilot.


BALL WITH PICTURES

First clairvoyant lady America,” as newspapermen called Jane Dixon forty-five years later, was born on January 3, 1918 in Medward, Wisconsin. Soon her father, a wealthy timber merchant Pinkert. moved with his family to Calio>ernia, where Jane spent her childhood. Her visionary gift was revealed very early. The baby had just begun to speak when one day she asked her mother for a “letter with black edges” to play with. The surprised Mrs. Pinkert could not understand what her daughter was talking about until a week later she received a mourning message informing her of her father’s death.

Later, Jane stood up for her schoolboy brother Ernie when his parents forbade him to play football. She said he would become a great football player." The prophecy came true: ten years later, Ernie’s name was included in the American Football Book of Honor.

At first, the Pinkert family did not attach any importance to little Jane’s “revelations.” For example, she could suddenly guess that her father would bring a large black and white dog from Chicago. Or that the neighbors' rabbits will escape from their cages. And every time her premonition was justified.
When the girl was eight years old, Mrs. Pinkert went to the estate of Luther Burbank, where the gypsy fortune teller lived, to show her her daughter. Looking at the girl’s palm, the fortune teller said that she would have a great future as a famous fortune teller, since “lines on the palm like hers occur once every thousand years.” The gypsy gave Jane a crystal ball. in which, she says, she will be able to “read the future.”


One afternoon, Jane Dixon and a group of friends found themselves at the hippodrome, where a Lincoln car was being played in a lottery. Someone from the company began to tease Jane, saying, why shouldn’t she, with her talent for insight, get an expensive car? And the fortuneteller could not stand it. Closing her eyes, she placed her hand on the pile of lottery tickets on offer and then, without hesitation, took one of them. “I don’t advise you to throw money away,” said Jane, when the people standing nearby also wanted to buy lottery ticket. “The car is already mine.” Nobody listened to her. The following Saturday, a lottery table was published in the local newspaper. It turned out that the main prize - a Lincoln car - fell on Dixon's ticket. And this was the only time in her life when she used her gift for her own benefit.


Jane really liked the new “toy” that showed “all sorts of interesting pictures” and only she saw them. At first the girl didn’t pay attention. But her believing mother saw God’s providence in this. “Since the Lord has awarded you a prophetic gift, you should use it only for the benefit of people, and not for personal gain.” - she inspired her daughter. And looking ahead, it must be said that Jane Dixon always remembered this.

From the age of nine, Jane began to predict the fate of her acquaintances, and then strangers, who, having heard about the girl-soothsayer, came to the Pinkerts’ house.


FORECAST FOR A SKEPTIC

In 1939, Jane married wealthy entrepreneur James Dixon, and the newlyweds moved to Washington. Soon she had the opportunity to prove to her skeptic husband the reality of her prophetic gift. She literally, with tears in her eyes, begged James not to fly to Chicago. He reluctantly agreed. And the next morning he heard a radio message that the flight for which he had a ticket ended in tragedy: the plane crashed and all passengers died. Since then, the husband has never questioned his wife's premonitions.


ACHIEVEMENT LIST

Over the years, Jane Dixon's reputation as a fortune teller was recognized even at the highest levels in Washington.

In November 1944, President Roosevelt himself wanted to meet with Dixon. This man in a wheelchair so impressed Jane with his courageous frankness that she could not help but tell him the truth. When the seriously ill president asked how much time he had left to finish what he started, she replied: “Six months or even less.”
And during his visit to Washington in the spring of that year, Dixon warned Winston Churchill that he should not rush into elections, otherwise he would be defeated. The British leader only laughed at the American woman’s naive forecast. -England will never let me down-. - he proudly declared and... after the elections he had scheduled for June, he lost the post of prime minister.


Jane Dixon's track record of fulfilled prophecies is quite impressive. Thus, she accurately predicted the results of all, with one exception, presidential elections in the States, the death of John Foster Dulles and the suicide of Marilyn Monroe, the resignation of German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer and the 1964 earthquake in Alaska, the demolition of the Berlin Wall and much, much more.


It is difficult to list all of Jane Dixon's political predictions, many of which have been published in newspapers since 1947. And most of them came true.


STRANGE TALES"

So on May 14, 1953, Dixon was invited to take part in an NBC program that was broadcast live. She intended to tell viewers about her recent visions regarding Nepal. But as soon as the presenter introduced Jane, another participant, former US Ambassador to the USSR Davis, suddenly asked: how long? One of Jane Dixon’s predictions sounded like this: the Russians would be the first in the world to launch an artificial satellite, and this would give them a huge advantage.

Malenkov will be prime minister? Peering into the crystal ball, the soothsayer said that she saw “a man with an oval face, green eyes and a small beard,” who in two years, and maybe earlier, would replace Malenkov as head of government.

The retired ambassador burst out laughing and said that in Russia prime ministers do not resign: they either die or are shot. And in general, the soothsayer has the wrong idea of ​​a typical Russian leader. After Lenin, bearded people are not in fashion there. Touched to the quick, Jane harshly objected that she was not inventing anything, but was only talking about what she saw in the crystal ball.

But the controversy in front of the television cameras did not end there; Dixon again turned to her magic ball and... Continuing the story about the future of Russia, she said that “the bearded man will not rule in Moscow for long. He will be replaced by a short, bald, fat man. And a silver ball will rise into space and fly around the Earth. like a dove, it will sit on the shoulder of the Russian leader." After thinking a little, Jane added that this could only mean one thing: the Russians would be the first in the world to launch an artificial satellite, and this would give them a huge advantage.

The next day, the soothsayer was invited by the Soviet Ambassador Zarubin. After complimenting her -amazing gift-, he directly asked where Jane learned about the Soviet space program from. “From God,” Dixon answered just as directly. Smiling, the ambassador noted that then she knew much more than he did. At least, according to his information. The Soviet Union is not going to launch any space satellites.

When two years later the events predicted by Dixon began and the bearded Bulganin became Chairman of the Council of Ministers of the USSR. who was replaced by the little bald Khrushchev, everyone who saw Jane's funny exchange with an expert on Russia on television remembered her forecast, which she made on May 14, 1953. By the way, ten years later, in the New Year's horoscope for newspapers, Dixon wrote that next year Russia big changes await: Khrushchev will be removed
from the authorities. The prediction came true.

Meanwhile, the soothsayer’s vision regarding the launch of the Soviet satellite received an unexpected continuation. After her sensational performance on television

An official from the Pentagon came to see Dixon. He stated that he did not intend to listen to “tales of some visions” and demanded that Dixon reveal to him the true source of her information about the Russian secret weapons. If she tried to hide it, the intruder said threateningly, it could have “serious consequences” for her.
“Although you don’t believe in my visions,” said Dixon, “I know better than you what awaits me, and I don’t foresee any complications in my fate. As for the source of information, it is available to everyone. This is the Lord God. Turn to him and he will confirm that I am telling the truth.” This ended their conversation.


A source of information

Jane Dixon made no secret of her gift. She said that information about future events comes to her through several channels. Firstly, these are signs that arise when a fortuneteller comes into physical contact with a person. This contact, according to Dixon, helps her - tune in to a person’s wave, catch his vibrations - and then his whole life appears before her - both in the past and in the future.

The second source of insanity is her crystal ball.

And finally, the third, main source of her foresight is visions. Sometimes the clairvoyant felt them approaching two or three days in advance, but sometimes they arose completely unexpectedly.
“When a vision descends on me, everything around me, even the air, changes,” said Jane Dick.
dream. “I am filled with an indescribable feeling of love and peace. I feel like I’m soaring in the heights, from where endless horizons open up that for some reason everyone else doesn’t see. Moreover, the vision is always absolutely complete, down to the smallest detail. It doesn’t need to be interpreted, it reveals itself immediately and completely... And of course, at such moments you experience immeasurable love for God...”
Jane Dixon died on January 25, 1997, remaining a mystery to scientists.


In the fall of 1946, Jane Dixon told an Indian diplomat that his country would be partitioned within a year.
- What are you saying, Mrs. Dixon, this will never happen! - the Indian objected.
- Will. - Jane stated firmly. - I can even name the date when this will happen: February 20, 1947
“If you turn out to be right, I’m ready to eat a dead crow,” the diplomat promised, laughing. After that, when he met Dixon at receptions, he always reminded her of the unfortunate prognosis.
And then came February 20th. The Indian did not fail to call the clairvoyant to once again remind her of her mistake. Jane calmly replied that it was not evening yet. The next morning, all the newspapers came out with huge headlines announcing the emergence of the new state of Pakistan.


Sergey DEMKIN

Biography

Early years

According to Dixon’s own stories, when she was still a teenager, she met a gypsy woman who predicted that she would become a famous seer, and the most prominent people in the country would resort to her services. In addition to this, she gave Dixon a magic ball, which she did not part with throughout her entire life.

Predictions

She gained popularity among the masses for allegedly predicting the assassination of President Kennedy. May 13, 1956 in the next issue of the magazine "Parade" She published a prophecy in which she claimed that the 1960 elections would bring a Democratic president to power who would then be assassinated in office. Later, she admitted that she was confident that Richard Nixon would win the election and that Kennedy would fail.

Jean Dixon was credited with predicting the assassination of Senator Robert Kennedy, black rights activist Martin Luther King, the early death of Marilyn Monroe, the launch of the first artificial Earth satellite and the death of Apollo 1. There are also stories that in 1942, Dixon met actress Carole Lombard in a hairdresser, whom she tried to dissuade from a planned flight, but in the end the actress did not listen to her words and soon died in a plane crash.

Jean Dixon's advice was also listened to by Richard Nixon, who later became President, who carefully prepared for the terrorist attack against him, which Dixon predicted for him. During the presidency of Ronald Reagan, Dixon was considered one of his personal astrologers, and his wife Nancy also often resorted to her advice. Dixon herself, being a devout Catholic, called God her enlightener.

Jean Dixon is the author of seven books, including an autobiography, as well as a dog horoscope and an astrology cookbook. She was a private guest on various television shows and series, including the popular 1980s sitcom The Golden Girls, where Dixon played herself in 1985.

The Jean Dixon effect

Despite such recognition in the highest circles of society, many of Dixon's predictions turned out to be false. Such falsehoods included her claims that the dispute over the islands of Mazu and Kinmendao would trigger World War III in 1958, that American labor leader Walter Reuther would run for president of the United States in 1964, and that the Russians would be the first to land on the moon. These mistakes led to the coining of the term “Jean Dixon effect,” which was coined by Temple University mathematics professor John Allen Poluz. Its meaning is that because of several coincidental predictions, their predictor immediately begins to be praised, while ignoring a whole series of false predictions, which often outnumber the correct ones.

Death

Bibliography

  • Dixon, Jeane, co-authored with Noorbergen, Rene, Jeane Dixon: My Life and Prophecies, William Morrow and Company, August 1969, ISBN 0-688-02142-5.
  • Dixon, Jeanne, Reincarnation and Prayers to Live By, W. Morrow, 1970, ISBN 0-688-15003-9.
  • Dixon, Jeanne, The Call to Glory, Bantam Books, 1973, ISBN 0-553-07512-8.
  • Dixon, Jeanne, Jeane Dixon's Astrological cookbook, Morrow, 1976, ISBN 0-688-03091-2.
  • Dixon, Jeanne, Horoscopes for Dogs, Houghton Mifflin, 1979, ISBN 0-395-27453-2.
  • Dixon, Jeanne, Yesterday, Today, and Forever, Andrews Mcmeel Publishing, 1987, ISBN 0-8362-7941-7.
  • Dixon, Jeanne, A Gift of Prayer Words of Comfort and Inspiration From the Beloved Prophet and Seer, Viking Studio Books, 1995, ISBN 978-0-670-86010-4.
  • Dixon, Jeanne, Do Cats Have Esp?, Running Press Book Publishers, 1998, ISBN 978-0-9665202-0-0.

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Notes

Links

  • Gene Dixon (English) on the Internet Movie Database
  • on LiveInternet
  • on the website Top Secret
  • in the series “The Golden Girls” (1985)

Excerpt describing Jean Dixon

On his return from Italy, he finds the government in Paris in that process of decay in which the people who fall into this government are inevitably erased and destroyed. And for him there is a way out of this dangerous situation, consisting of a meaningless, causeless expedition to Africa. Again the same so-called accidents accompany him. Impregnable Malta surrenders without a shot; the most careless orders are crowned with success. The enemy fleet, which does not let a single boat through, lets through an entire army. In Africa, a whole series of atrocities are committed against almost unarmed inhabitants. And the people who commit these atrocities, and especially their leader, convince themselves that this is wonderful, that this is glory, that this is similar to Caesar and Alexander the Great, and that this is good.
That ideal of glory and greatness, which consists in not only not considering anything bad for oneself, but being proud of every crime, attributing to it an incomprehensible supernatural significance - this ideal, which should guide this person and the people associated with him, is being developed in the open air in Africa. Whatever he does, he succeeds. The plague does not bother him. The cruelty of killing prisoners is not blamed on him. His childishly careless, causeless and ignoble departure from Africa, from his comrades in trouble, is given credit to him, and again the enemy fleet misses him twice. While he, already completely intoxicated by the happy crimes he had committed, ready for his role, comes to Paris without any purpose, the decay of the republican government, which could have destroyed him a year ago, has now reached its extreme, and the presence of him, fresh from a person's parties, now only can elevate him.
He doesn't have any plan; he is afraid of everything; but the parties seize on him and demand his participation.
He alone, with his ideal of glory and greatness developed in Italy and Egypt, with his madness of self-adoration, with his audacity of crimes, with his sincerity of lies - he alone can justify what is about to happen.
He is needed for the place that awaits him, and therefore, almost independently of his will and despite his indecision, despite the lack of a plan, despite all the mistakes he makes, he is drawn into a conspiracy aimed at seizing power, and the conspiracy is crowned with success .
He is pushed into the meeting of the rulers. Frightened, he wants to run away, considering himself dead; pretends to faint; says meaningless things that should destroy him. But the rulers of France, previously smart and proud, now, feeling that their role has been played, are even more embarrassed than he is, and say the wrong words that they should have said in order to retain power and destroy him.
Chance, millions of coincidences give him power, and all people, as if by agreement, contribute to the establishment of this power. Accidents make the characters of the then rulers of France subservient to him; accidents make the character of Paul I recognizing his power; chance conspires against him, not only not harming him, but asserting his power. An accident sends Enghien into his hands and inadvertently forces him to kill, thereby, stronger than all other means, convincing the crowd that he has the right, since he has the power. What makes it an accident is that he strains all his strength on an expedition to England, which, obviously, would destroy him, and never fulfills this intention, but accidentally attacks Mack with the Austrians, who surrender without a battle. Chance and genius give him victory at Austerlitz, and by chance all people, not only the French, but all of Europe, with the exception of England, which will not take part in the events that are about to take place, all people, despite the previous horror and disgust for his crimes, now they recognize his power, the name he gave himself, and his ideal of greatness and glory, which seems to everyone to be something beautiful and reasonable.
As if trying on and preparing for the upcoming movement, the forces of the West several times in the years 1805, 6, 7, 9 rush to the east, growing stronger and stronger. In 1811, the group of people that had formed in France merged into one huge group with the middle peoples. Together with an increasing group of people, the power of justification of the person at the head of the movement further develops. In the ten-year preparatory period preceding the great movement, this man is brought together with all the crowned heads of Europe. The exposed rulers of the world cannot oppose the Napoleonic ideal of glory and greatness, which has no meaning, with any reasonable ideal. One in front of the other, they strive to show him their insignificance. The King of Prussia sends his wife to curry favor with the great man; the Emperor of Austria considers it a mercy that this man accepts the daughter of the Caesars into his bed; the pope, guardian of the sacred things of the people, serves with his religion the exaltation of a great man. It is not so much that Napoleon himself prepares himself to fulfill his role, but rather that everything around him prepares him to take upon himself the full responsibility of what is happening and is about to happen. There is no act, no crime or petty deception that he has committed that is not immediately reflected in the mouths of those around him in the form of a great deed. The best holiday that the Germans can come up with for him is the celebration of Jena and Auerstätt. Not only is he great, but his ancestors, his brothers, his stepsons, his sons-in-law are great. Everything is done in order to deprive him last resort mind and prepare for its terrible role. And when he is ready, so are the forces.
The invasion is heading east, reaching ultimate goal- Moscow. The capital is taken; Russian army more destroyed than enemy troops were ever destroyed in previous wars from Austerlitz to Wagram. But suddenly, instead of those accidents and genius that had so consistently led him so far in an unbroken series of successes towards his intended goal, there appears a countless number of reverse accidents, from a runny nose in Borodino to frost and the spark that lit Moscow; and instead of genius there are stupidity and meanness, which have no examples.
The invasion runs, comes back, runs again, and all the coincidences are now no longer for, but against it.
There is a counter-movement from east to west with remarkable similarity to the previous movement from west to east. The same attempts at movement from east to west in 1805 - 1807 - 1809 precede the great movement; the same clutch and group of huge sizes; the same pestering of the middle peoples to the movement; the same hesitation in the middle of the path and the same speed as you approach the goal.
Paris - the ultimate goal has been achieved. Napoleonic government and troops are destroyed. Napoleon himself no longer makes sense; all his actions are obviously pathetic and disgusting; but again an inexplicable accident occurs: the allies hate Napoleon, in whom they see the cause of their disasters; deprived of strength and power, convicted of villainy and deceit, he would have to appear to them as he appeared to them ten years ago and a year after - an outlaw robber. But by some strange chance no one sees this. His role is not over yet. A man who ten years ago and a year after was considered an outlaw robber is sent on a two-day journey from France to an island given to him in possession with guards and millions who pay him for something.

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