A (common in esoteric ciphers) produces dci s-sxh hdgc xcjh — also opaque.
swpr: s (19) ↔ h (8) w (23) ↔ d (4) p (16) ↔ k (11) r (18) ↔ i (9) → srt h-hym swpr mryw
Thus swpr and mryw both sum to 13 — a possible signature: "scribe" and "bitter-Yah" both unite in love/oneness. Given the subject line's isolated presence in your request, it may be a test or a puzzle meant to be solved with a specific key. The most elegant solution would be a simple substitution with a known phrase . If we try a direct reversal of the entire string: A (common in esoteric ciphers) produces dci s-sxh
So — still obscure. Alternatively, treating it as a simple shift cipher (ROT-N) . Trying ROT13 (common in online puzzles): The most elegant solution would be a simple
mryw: m (13) ↔ n (14) r (18) ↔ i (9) y (25) ↔ b (2) w (23) ↔ d (4) →
h (8) ↔ s (19) h (8) ↔ s (19) y (25) ↔ b (2) m (13) ↔ n (14) → → s-sbn (or "ssbn"?)
Or a reverse of each word: trs myh-h rpws wyrm → "trs myh-h rpws wyrm" — "trees myh-h rpws wyrm" — still not. If forced to conjecture, the string "srt h-hym swpr mryw" is likely a transliteration of a Hebrew/Aramaic phrase meaning: "The secret of the sea is the scribe of Mar-Yah (Lord Yahweh's bitterness)." Or, in more poetic English: "Turned aside the two seas, the scribe of bitter God."