The Tale of 2 Dragons

In my novels, there are two dragons who enter hosts through the Stone of Destiny. Both dragon spirits with pale skin and hosts who appear as the red haired Ishtar and a white haired Queen Lilith!

The Tale of 2 Dragons

There is a great STONE below the lake,”

Merlin said in a whisper.

“Two dragons sleep there – one red and one white.

One day they will come out from under the stone

and meet on the waters of the lake in a fearful battle.

In the white dragon is the SOUL of your strongest enemy –

In the red dragon you may see the reflection of yourself.”

 

King Arthur and His Knights , based on Sir Thomas Malor’s Morte d’Arthur, 1927, P. 6

King Arthur Crowns his Chieftains

In 460 AD after the center of power shifted,

Dunadd became Scotland’s new capital and King Arthur’s men performed a ceremony.

 

“… they created three, later four, sub-chiefdoms

and brought with them the Stone of Destiny,

and it was here that the future High Chiefs were crowned.”

 

On the Trail of King Arthur, Robin Crichon, 2013 P. 48

King of All the Isles

Legends say it’s the required works of a ruler of 5 Kingdom to bring about the return of the “Golden Age” of King Arthur.   King Arthur seems to have been born with a gift to master both the white and red dragons spoken of by Merlin.

His reward for taking the sword of the stone?   Arthur was named King over all the Isles and later went on to name all of his chieftains over the same stone  – the Stone of Destiny.

It’s makes one wonder – what did the people of this age know about magic that we deny is real? Who has the sword now and where did that stone go?

Merlin’s Grave

There is a old prophesy, “When Tweed and Powsail meet at Merlin’s grave, Scotland and England shall one monarch have.

In 1567, the very day that James VI of Scots (Son of Queen Mary of Scot and Henry Stuart Darnley) also became the first of England  (Shared throne of Scotland, England and Ireland), the River Tweed burst it’s banks at the mouth of the Powsail Burn, at Merlin’s Grave- something it never did before or since.” (A)

A) Excerpt from ‘On The Trail of King Arthur’ by Robin Crichton, p.134