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Louis Hamon is the first palmist in the world to whom this mysterious the craft brought great fame. The brilliant seer was enough one glance at the human palm to predict exactly the fate of his client, including the reason and time of his death. Jamon foresaw his own inglorious demise, but never managed to deceive fate.
In reality, his name was William John Warner. Born future great palmist November 1, 1866 in small irish a village near Dublin. William’s father was an Englishman, his mother – a Frenchwoman, in whose veins a lot of gypsy blood flowed. Mother first saw in the palm of a boy a special sign that promised him the owner of extraordinary abilities and rich in vivid events a life. Being terminally ill, the woman asked her son immediately after her deaths to go to London in order to find a teacher who will devote William to the foundations of palmistry, astrology and numerology. The young man fulfilled the last will of his mother exactly.
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Becoming a Great Palmist
Well-known astrologer mentor to William John Greg Dawson After studying with him for about two years, Warner realized that he surpassed the famous master in the field of occult sciences and is ready move on, and therefore went to India.
The new teacher of the young man was the Indian Brahmin, the owner of the Bombay bookstore. He was known as a manuscript expert and master of palmistry. Mentor introduced his student to a very ancient stunning a book dedicated to the art of divination by hand.
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After several years in India, Warner decided to return to Europe. In parting with it, the brahmin said that William will be a great predictor. The only thing he should not to do is take a lot of money for your craft, otherwise it a wonderful gift will be lost …
The beginning predictor changed his simple name and became Louis Hamon, appropriating at the same time the count’s title. Wide Count Fame brought Hamon in 1880. killing the rich a London businessman when a palmist pointed to his killer by only one bloodied fingerprint left by the criminal on the door. Since that time, the affairs of the young soothsayer went uphill, and on At the turn of the XIX – XX centuries, Louis Hamon achieved great fame. Palmist known with many prominent contemporaries, starting with the legendary Mats Hari and ending with the Prince of Wales himself. In this case, the graph absolutely accurately guessed the details of their life, “reading” the lines on hands.
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The public was frightened by the inevitability with which predictions came true Jamon about death. For example, the Italian king Umberto I died as and the palmist foretold, at the hands of a terrorist. Count predicted sad the death of Oscar Wilde, which will follow prison and poverty, the murder of Gregory Rasputin, the loss of life and the family of Nicholas II in 1918
Louis Hamon spoke of his vision of the Russian revolution, World War II and even the founding of the state of Israel. It is curious that in the autobiographical book “Confession. Memoirs modern seer “Count wrote that he considers himself rather psychic than just a palmist, and lines on the palms, like horoscopes – this is only an instrument of knowledge of the truth …
Even the great palmist cannot escape from fate
Knowing one’s own destiny burdened Hamon, and in the mid-1920s years, he decided to leave for the United States. New York reporters, who met the overseas prophet asked him demonstrate your amazing abilities. Count was offered handprints of different people – and he accurately guessed their fate, calling details that simply could not know.
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Having settled in Hollywood, Louis Hamon began to accept numerous customers eager to open the curtain of the coming any money. Prices of a popular palmist in a bohemian environment steadily grew. Unusual business brought considerable profit, and Hamon wanted to believe that he had outwitted fate. However, in 1929. the idyll ended at once when he came to the forecaster Henry Ford.
Like many, an American industrialist wanted to know that awaiting him on the path of life. Looking at the palm of a tycoon, Jamon felt that the earth was leaving under him: all the lines on his hand merged into one and “erased” the remaining signs … A brilliant gift, like was once predicted to have disappeared without a trace!
In 1936 Louis Hamon, the self-proclaimed count and former great prophet, died in a Red Cross hospital for the poor. Losing ability and having lost his fortune, he went into great debt. As follows from memories of a nurse, the heart of the great palmist stopped in one in the morning, and at this time the clock in the chamber instead of once struck thrice …
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