Amalthea
This is the first session that applies the A-cipher framework developed in earlier episodes to identify a specific bound figure by name. The proposed figure is a small white dragon-form resting on the pinky-claw of the proposed Azazel hand at South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands. The session works by pairing the geographic name (Georgia) with the cipher and walking through Greek mythology to find a candidate true name beginning with A.
The Figure on the Claw
The South Georgia and South Sandwich Islands group, sitting just north of the Azazel-hand pinky claw mapped in earlier sessions, is read here as a small body with a recognizable creature shape: white in tone (snow and ice cover), with clear blue eye marks, a horn projection (unicorn-form), and a peaceful resting posture. The body is small relative to Azazel and is not bound to him aggressively — the framework reads it as a separate creature placed at the edge of his hand rather than as part of him.
The A-Cipher Method
The A-cipher framework treats the letter A on Azazel’s ring (Azazel Found, Azazel Gematria) as a key for decrypting the “false names” given to bound figures. The geographic name Georgia begins with G — the seventh letter. Shifting back six positions to A, and then searching for a Greek mythological figure whose name begins with A and whose attributes match a small, white, horned, nurturing creature, the session arrives at Amalthea.
Amalthea in Greek Myth
Amalthea is the goat (sometimes a goat-nymph) who nursed the infant Zeus in hiding on Mount Ida in Crete after his mother Rhea concealed him from his father Cronus, who was eating his own children. Her horn broke off and was transformed into the cornucopia — the horn of plenty, the symbol of eternal abundance. She was eventually placed in the heavens, identified in some traditions with the constellation Capella in Auriga, in others with elements of Capricorn. Her attributes — white, goat-form, horned, nurturing, gentle, life-giving — align cleanly with the proposed figure on the claw.
The session also notes a translation gloss the user mentions: Amalthea read in English-letter components as “God soul” or similar. The standard Greek etymology is Amaltheia from a root meaning “tender” or “to soothe”; the user’s English-overlay reading is offered alongside without claiming to displace the standard etymology.
The Loosing
The session ends with a brief discussion of whether physical proximity is required to “loose” a bound figure or whether spiritual authority transcends distance. The framework adopts the latter: prayer in Christ’s authority is treated as sufficient, with the centurion of Matthew 8:5-13 cited as precedent for action-at-a-distance through faith and authority. The user notes that no incantation is needed and that direct prayer to the Father through Christ accomplishes what the framework describes. The session closes here, with subsequent sessions taking up the loosing-and-binding pattern in detail (Anubis Found, Semjaza’s Cypher).
Documented vs. Speculative
Documented: the geography of South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands; the Greek myth of Amalthea, including her role in nursing the infant Zeus and the etymology of cornucopia; the constellation Capella in Auriga; the standard New Testament account of the centurion at Capernaum (Matthew 8:5-13). Speculative: the reading of South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands as a small bound creature, the application of the A-cipher to recover a “true name,” the identification with Amalthea, and the framework of authoritative prayer as a mechanism for “loosing” the figure.
Working draft. Sources include standard references on the Amalthea myth (Hesiod, Apollodorus, Ovid’s Fasti); standard astronomical references on the Capella star and the Auriga / Capricornus constellations; Matthew 8:5-13. The cipher framework is treated as exploratory; the geographic identification is one reader’s pattern reading.