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A.D. Scientist Rivalry: The Throne of Kepler Eagle [Jesus Gagate Pedines Jr] on leondumoulin.nl *FREE* shipping on qualifying offers. The coded formula.
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The coded formula was written in last page of his book. A book that only Tom can interpret. It will remain a secret until someone as intelligent as him comes along and has the ability to break that code. Only then can it be improved or innovated upon. Only then can there be found a new formula that develops Tom's formula beyond its current perfection.

This is where the The coded formula was written in last page of his book. This is where the story of Tom begins, in the year A. Part of the destruction of Tom's worldwas the loss of his wife. However, he was fortunate that his son, Gordon and his daughter, Mary survived the destruction. At the time of the blast, Gordon was two while Mary was only one year old.

Tom, desperate with the loss of his wife, and feeling the emotional weight of the billions of dead, decided that the only safe place remaining for himself and the kids was within the shelter of the planet. So, he began digging a hole to retreat to.

A.D. Scientist Rivalry: The Throne of Kepler Eagle by Jesus G. Pedines Jr.

Desperation was his first guide, then the project took on a more thoughtful turn, as it became a sophisticated underground shelter. From the nearby NASA facility where Tom worked, he began gathering and collecting metal scraps, nuts and bolts. This was the latest, most efficient and durable space ship ever. The technology for creating these metals was the best on the planet. The purity and strength of these materials would become the stuff of legends. Tom had thousands of errors and failures during the process of his invention, but he didn't stop pursuing his goal and purpose.

Instead, he persevered, thinking Tom had a pet eagle named "Eagle Eye" and a white rat named "Bobby Rat. Get A Copy. Paperback , pages. More Details Other Editions 1. Friend Reviews. To see what your friends thought of this book, please sign up. To ask other readers questions about A. Scientist Rivalry , please sign up. Be the first to ask a question about A. Scientist Rivalry.


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Lists with This Book. Before the day came on which the Imperialists had covenanted to release the Pope, he was allowed to escape, and he made his way to Orvieto, where the emissaries of Henry, bringing to his feet the humble but fervent prayer of their King, taught him that he possessed, as Bishop of Rome, resources more than sufficient to restore the lost sovereignty of Central Italy.

He was without the semblance of a Court. Few of the prelates, and not the best of them, had joined him in his flight. His chief adviser in this most arduous conjuncture of his stormy Pontificate was Lorenzo Pucci, Cardinal of Santi Quattro, a Florentine, and an adherent of his house, who, after the death of Edition: current; Page: [ 25 ] Leo, had attempted to raise him, by surprise and acclamation, to the vacant throne. To many sordid vices Pucci added the qualities of energy and intrepidity, which his master wanted.

At the storming of Rome he was the only Cardinal seen upon the walls. He was struck down whilst, with his voice and his example, he strove to rally the defenders, and climbed into the Castle through a window after the gates had been closed. He had been Minister under Julius, and, for his extortions under Leo, men said that no punishment was too bad for him.

Wolsey had given orders that money must not be spared; but Pucci, who was noted for cupidity, refused a present of two thousand crowns, and could never be made to swerve in his resistance to the English petitions.


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He drew up the Commission which Knight asked for, with alterations that made it of no effect; and he baffled the English envoys with such address that the winter passed away before Henry had obtained any concession that he could use, or that the Pope could reasonably regret. The dominant purpose was to gain time. The Emperor, on receiving the messages of Catharine and Mendoza, immediately insisted, through his Viceroy at Naples, that Wolsey should be forbidden to act in the matter, and this demand reached Clement whilst still surrounded by the soldiery that had sacked Rome before his face.

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He had now become free; but it was the freedom of an exile and a fugitive, without a refuge or a protector from an enemy who was supreme in the Peninsula. The instrument which the skill of Pucci had made innocuous and unavailing, appeared to him charged with dreadful consequences. He begged that it might be suppressed. He strove to exclude the cause from his own direct jurisdiction. Having consulted with Pucci, and with Simonetta, the ablest canonist in Rome, he exhorted Henry to obey the dictates of his own conscience, and to dismiss the Queen and take another wife, if he was convinced that he could lawfully do it.

Once married to Anne Boleyn, Henry had nothing to fear.

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But if he waited the slow process of law, and gave time for protests and appeals, the Emperor might compel them to give sentence in Rome. Clement deemed that it would be a less exorbitant strain of his prerogative, and less offensive to Charles V. Henry VIII. That he should, nevertheless, have rejected an expedient which was in the interest of those to whom he habitually listened, which was recommended by his own strong passions, and which the confidential counsel of the Pope invested with exceptional security, is the strangest incident in the history of the Divorce.

In March , the Pope was at Bologna, holding conference with the newly crowned and reconciled Emperor. Clement could not resist the demand, but he yielded reluctantly. He put forth a Bull in the terms which the Emperor required. These words were spoken in secret; and at Orvieto also Clement had desired that his advice should be attributed to the prelates who were about him. Henry may well have feared that, after taking an irrevocable step, he might be compelled to purchase indemnity by some exorbitant sacrifice; or he may have apprehended in what happened five years later, that the Pope, compelled by Edition: current; Page: [ 27 ] the Emperor, would excommunicate him for disobeying his injunctions.

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Having taken his stand, and resolved to seek his end on the safer ground of submission and authority, he refused to abandon it. All the auspices at first favoured Henry, and every prejudice told against the Emperor, whose crafty policy, while it enabled Lutheranism to establish itself in Germany, had inflicted irreparable injury on the See of Rome. The sympathies of the Roman Court were as decided on one side as they might be now in a dispute between the head of the House of Bourbon and the head of the House of Savoy. No monarch since Saint Lewis had stood so high in the confidence and the gratitude of the Church.

He had varied his alliances between Austria, France, and Spain; but during four warlike pontificates Rome had always found him at its side. He had welcomed a Legate in his kingdom, where none had been admitted even by the House of Lancaster. He was the only inexorable repressor of heresy among the potentates of Europe; and he permitted the man to whom the Pope had delegated his own authority to govern almost alone the councils of the State.

No testimony of admiration and good will by which Popes acknowledge the services of kings was wanting to his character as the chosen champion of religion. The hat, the sword, and the golden rose had repeatedly been sent to him. Julius, in depriving Lewis XII. Such was his reputation in Christendom that when he talked of putting away a wife who was stricken in years to marry a bride in the early bloom of her beauty, the world was prepared to admire his scruples rather than to doubt his sincerity.

Clement, though not without suspicions, suffered them to be allayed.

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He spoke of the case as one which was beyond his skill, but which no divine was more competent to decide than Henry himself. Cajetan wrote of him in , Cochlaeus in , with the full assurance that he had been deceived by others, and that his own religious knowledge was teaching him to discover and to repair the error of his advisers. After the final condemnation had been pronounced, a prelate engaged in the affair wrote to him in terms implying that in Rome it was understood that he had been led astray, not by passion but by designing men.

Even Paul III. The good faith of Henry was attested by an imposing array of supporters. The Nuncio came to Rome to plead his cause. Stafileo and Simonetta, the foremost judges of the Rota, admitted that it was just. Two French bishops who had visited England, and who afterwards became cardinals, Du Bellay and Grammont, persistently supported Edition: current; Page: [ 29 ] it.

Cardinal Salviati entreated Clement to satisfy the English demands. Lee, the adversary of Erasmus, who followed Wolsey at York, and Tunstall, the Bishop of London, who followed him at Durham, went against her. The most serious defection was that of Tunstall; for the school of Erasmus were known to oppose the Divorce, and of the friends of Erasmus among the English clergy, Cuthbert Tunstall was the most eminent.