The Prophets and Our Times - Rev. R. Gerald Culleton by Rev. R. Gerald Culleton

The Prophets and Our Times - Rev. R. Gerald Culleton by Rev. R. Gerald Culleton

Author:Rev. R. Gerald Culleton [The Prophets and Our Times - Rev. R. Gerald Culleton]
Language: eng
Format: epub
Published: 2014-12-09T05:00:00+00:00


PROPHETS OF THE XVI AND XVII CENTURIES

120. One of the Founders of the Jesuits (1534)

"The time will come when the Jesuits will be driven out like dogs—And again, other times will come when they will return like nobles."

121. Blessed Catherine of Racconigi (1547)

"After three centuries, a descendant of Frances I of France will rule Europe like Charlemagne."

122a. Mother Shipton (d. 1551)

"The time will come when England shall tremble and quake for fear of a dead man that shall be heard to speak. ’Unhappy he that lives to see those days, but happy are the dead' Shipton's wife says." "Then will the Dragon give the Bull a great snap, and when the one is down they will go to London Towne.... Then will the ravens sit on the Cross and drink as much blood of the nobles as the commons then—woe is me—for London shall be destroyed forever after.... and then York shall be London and the Kingdom governed by three Lords appointed by a Royal Great monarch of the best blood in the world, who will set England aright and drive out heresy, and after this shall be a white harvest of corn gotten in by women."

122b.

"Carriages without horses shall go,

And accidents fill the world with woe.

Around the earth thoughts shall fly

In the twinkling of an eye;

The world upside down shall be,

And gold be found at the foot of a tree.

Through hills man shall ride,

And no horse be at his side.

Under water men shall walk,

Shall ride, shall sleep, shall talk.

In the air men shall be seen

In white, in black, in green;

Iron in the water shall float,

As easily as a wooden boat.

Gold shall be found and shown

In a land that's not now known,

Fire and water shall wonders do,

England shall at last admit a foe."

122c.

All England's sons that plow the land

Shall oft be seen with book in hand.

The poor shall then most learning know,

And water wind where corn doth grow;

Great houses stand in farflung vale,

All covered o'er with snow and hail.

Taxes for blood and war

Shall come to every door.

And state and state in fierce strife

Will seek after each other's life.

But when the North shall divide the South

An Eagle shall build in the Lion's mouth.

In London Primrose Hill shall be,

Its center hold a Bishop's See.

Three times shall lovely France

Be led to play a bloody dance;

Before the people shall be free,

Three tyrant rulers shall she see:

Three times the people's hope is gone,

Three rulers, in succession, be

Each sprung from diff- rent dynasty.

Then, when the fiercest fight is done,

England and France shall be as one.

The British olive next shall twine

In marriage with the German vine.

England shall at last admit a Jew.

The Jew that once was held in scorn

Shall of a Christian then be born,

A house of glass shall come to pass

In England but alas, alas!

A war will follow with the work

Where dwells the Pagan and the Turk."

122d.

"A great man shall come and go,

Men walk beneath and over streams.

123a. Nostradamus (d. 1566)

After Germany is prostrate "then a leader ( "fuehrer" in German) shall arise from the barren state.



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