The Hveitsvar Manuscript

The manuscript that contains the following text has been found in Hveitsvar in 1754. It was sold to the Nieuw-Gamoor University whre it was studied it over the years, but nobody could make anything sensible out of it. The manuscript was sold to the Ildritz University Library, where it was studied once more without result.
Apparently, the scroll containing the words was found in one of the oversanded buildings in southern Hveitsvar. The houses there date back to the 15th century. The manuscript seems to be much older - but how old exactly stays a mystery. As to who has written it, it is just another mystery.
The language it is written in is unknown, but it might be a translation, because it is written in the old script of Daleth - except for some strange figures in the margin of the text, that might have a magical meaning.

Hallunatics claim once and again to have a solution to the enigma that the manuscript is. However, they never could prove it in a scientific way. That did not keep groups of hallunatic from using the document as a holy revelation, a guideline for living, or a view into the future.

This is the text from the manuscript:

jenesh darit samanca varsit
ut habraken damwu sowas
torrawim parami dalow meneri
capalu vetensi sa sawitarus
denki pavtyminim ercates laibaci
ercutim plusmanu swetsci in
zibaret maculi gichola danset
tesay wiks haparu macerista
zoltsanim aglev alquitsu perkali
basibab nopolsi kisim steghi
pratsov ja zivetim sugelibu
garatsi butsami dinperi maxil
trutsim minkal ortsimul prismelu
va incorpa watsi quets
makari hudeti zimal laverni
parxi nivos kirlim macari utsin
vitsi aksentur li asberima
atsimel hustil pritsi ulwani
wibiri magatsim ucanuri wigima
latoni trimsola huki carapa
dudi mailstro utsi ziprova
geranto mizalo denki sowas
varsit darit steghi minkal
swetsi aglev danset bosni
dinperi tesay in zibaret pavtyminim
laibaci trutsim ja zimal krilim
damwu parami perkali makari
incorpa maxil hudeti huki
torrawim meneri minkal maculi
gichola basibab sugelibu utsin


Ilow Bernison hired the stafsferja for two whole days and worked night and day to find even a clue. In the end, Master Dagmare and Master Elaud, who own the stafsferja, had to stop Ilow from smashing the machine as no results would come out the reader. Ilow said the two engineers had set up an Eisarngasts to sabotage the project, and that they were paid by an underground organisation whose only goal was to keep the insights of the Old Culture from the common people. Eventually, Ilow ended up in the Asylum for the Mental Insane, where he committed suicide in 1842.

Master Zuchstaba, the famous linguist, thought it was just a joke, made by the children who played in the ruins of southern Hveitsvar. He was laughed at in the salons, and was not invited anymore to explain the backgrounds of the manuscript.


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