Helios chant from Dion Fortune
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This chant is on page 266 of "The Demon Lover" by Dion Fortune: Helios, Helios, Quanto Rhopantanek! 
 Quanto Rhopantanek Helion!Google translate did not help me, I don't know what it means. 
 Anyone study Latin?Here is a lovely rendition of chant by two Brazilian singers: 
 www.youtube.com/watch?v=i9jcXn5hb4k
- 
This chant is on page 266 of "The Demon Lover" by Dion Fortune: Helios, Helios, Quanto Rhopantanek! 
 Quanto Rhopantanek Helion!Google translate did not help me, I don't know what it means. 
 Anyone study Latin?Here is a lovely rendition of chant by two Brazilian singers: 
 www.youtube.com/watch?v=i9jcXn5hb4k"Helios, Helios, Quanto Rhopantanek! 
 Quanto Rhopantanek Helion!"I don't have the book, so can't look it up for myself. 
 If it's written virtually like this, then it's a mixture of languages.
 The only clear Latin word above is Quanto; Helios is a Greek word; Rhopantanek sounds Greek (though I did not get any meaningful hint from Google translate for this).
- 
This chant is on page 266 of "The Demon Lover" by Dion Fortune: Helios, Helios, Quanto Rhopantanek! 
 Quanto Rhopantanek Helion!Google translate did not help me, I don't know what it means. 
 Anyone study Latin?Here is a lovely rendition of chant by two Brazilian singers: 
 www.youtube.com/watch?v=i9jcXn5hb4kQuanto means "by how much" 
- 
This chant is on page 266 of "The Demon Lover" by Dion Fortune: Helios, Helios, Quanto Rhopantanek! 
 Quanto Rhopantanek Helion!Google translate did not help me, I don't know what it means. 
 Anyone study Latin?Here is a lovely rendition of chant by two Brazilian singers: 
 www.youtube.com/watch?v=i9jcXn5hb4k
- 
This chant is on page 266 of "The Demon Lover" by Dion Fortune: Helios, Helios, Quanto Rhopantanek! 
 Quanto Rhopantanek Helion!Google translate did not help me, I don't know what it means. 
 Anyone study Latin?Here is a lovely rendition of chant by two Brazilian singers: 
 www.youtube.com/watch?v=i9jcXn5hb4k
- 
This chant is on page 266 of "The Demon Lover" by Dion Fortune: Helios, Helios, Quanto Rhopantanek! 
 Quanto Rhopantanek Helion!Google translate did not help me, I don't know what it means. 
 Anyone study Latin?Here is a lovely rendition of chant by two Brazilian singers: 
 www.youtube.com/watch?v=i9jcXn5hb4kRhopantanek may be divided into parts: Rho (ρω) - panta (παντα) - nek ρω = the short form of "I ask" 
 παντα = all/everything/continuity-nek isn't Greek (I've searched for suffixes, and this definitely isn't a Greek suffix, nor a word in Greek) Quanto is a clear Latin word, and I could not find any Greek word with the same root. 
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This chant is on page 266 of "The Demon Lover" by Dion Fortune: Helios, Helios, Quanto Rhopantanek! 
 Quanto Rhopantanek Helion!Google translate did not help me, I don't know what it means. 
 Anyone study Latin?Here is a lovely rendition of chant by two Brazilian singers: 
 www.youtube.com/watch?v=i9jcXn5hb4kIn context, it's meant to be an Atlantean invocation. Best guess is that Fortune created words that could feasibly have come down to Greek and Latin from a common "Atlantean" source. 
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This chant is on page 266 of "The Demon Lover" by Dion Fortune: Helios, Helios, Quanto Rhopantanek! 
 Quanto Rhopantanek Helion!Google translate did not help me, I don't know what it means. 
 Anyone study Latin?Here is a lovely rendition of chant by two Brazilian singers: 
 www.youtube.com/watch?v=i9jcXn5hb4k@danica said "Rhopantanek may be divided into parts: Rho (ρω) - panta (παντα) - nek ρω = the short form of "I ask" 
 παντα = all/everything/continuity-nek isn't Greek (I've searched for suffixes, and this definitely isn't a Greek suffix, nor a word in Greek) Quanto is a clear Latin word, and I could not find any Greek word with the same root." THANK YOU ! 
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This chant is on page 266 of "The Demon Lover" by Dion Fortune: Helios, Helios, Quanto Rhopantanek! 
 Quanto Rhopantanek Helion!Google translate did not help me, I don't know what it means. 
 Anyone study Latin?Here is a lovely rendition of chant by two Brazilian singers: 
 www.youtube.com/watch?v=i9jcXn5hb4kSo roughly, it's something like: Helios, Helios, How much I ask for everything! 
 How much I ask for everything, Helion! 
- 
This chant is on page 266 of "The Demon Lover" by Dion Fortune: Helios, Helios, Quanto Rhopantanek! 
 Quanto Rhopantanek Helion!Google translate did not help me, I don't know what it means. 
 Anyone study Latin?Here is a lovely rendition of chant by two Brazilian singers: 
 www.youtube.com/watch?v=i9jcXn5hb4kHere is a beautiful rendition of the chant, sung by two young men from Brazil: www.youtube.com/watch?v=i9jcXn5hb4k 