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A93156 Fourteene strange prophesies: besides Mother Shiptons, and Mr. Salmarsh, predicting wonderfull events to betide these yeares of calamity, in this climate, whereof divers are already come to passe, worthy of observation. 1. A prophesie of K. Richard the 3. 2. Mother Shiptons prophesie. 3. Mr. Truswels, recorder of Lincolne. 4. Sibyllaes prophesies. 5. Ignatius prophesie. 6. Merlins prophesie. 7. Orwel Bins prophesies. 8. Mr. Brightmans prophesies 6. [sic] Ancient prophesies in meeter. Whereto is added the predictions of Mr. John Saltmarch, to his Excellency, and the counsell of his army. And the manner of his death. Printed by an exact true copy, with new marginall notes on Mother Shiptons prophesies. 1648 (1648) Wing S3444; Thomason E527_7; ESTC R205665 11,395 10

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Then there will be a great battaile betweene England and Scotland and they will be pacified for a time and when they come to Brammamore they fight and are againe pacified for a time then there will be a great battell between England and Scotland at Stockmore Then will Ravens sit on the (n) It is to be noted and admited that this Crosse in the North in Mother Shiptons dayes was a tall stone Crosse which ever since hath been by degrees sinking into the ground and now is sunke so low that a Raven may sit upon the top of it and reach her bill to the ground Crosse and drink as much bloud of Nobles as of the Commons then woe is me for London shall bee destroyed for ever after There will come a woman with one eye and she shall tread in many mens bloud to the knee and a man leaning on a staffe by her she shall say to him what art thou and he shall say I am the King of Scots and she shall say goe with me to my house for there are three Knights and hee will goe with her and stay there three dayes and three nights then will England be lost and they will cry twice a day England is lost Then there will be three Knights in Peter-gate in York and the one shall not know of the other there shall be a childe borne in Pomfret with three thumbs and those three Knights will give him three horses (o) There is a childe not many yeares since borne at Pomfret with three thumbs to hold while they winne England and all Noble bloud shall be gone but one and they shall carry him to Sheriffe Huttons Castle sixe miles from York and he shall dye there and they shall chuse there an Earle in the Field and hanging their horses on a thorne and rue the time that ever they were borne to see so much bloud shed Then they will come to Yorke to besiege it and they shall keep them out three dayes and three nights and a penny loafe shall be within the Bar at halfe a Crowne and without the Bar at a penny and they will sweare if they will not yeild to blow up the Towne walls Then they will let them in and they will hang up the Major Sheriffes and Aldermen and they will goe into Crouch Church there will three Knights goe in and but one come out againe and he will cause Proclamation to be made that any man may take house towre or bower for 21. yeares and whilst the world endureth there shall never be warfare againe nor any more Kings or Queenes but the Kingdome shall bee governed by three Lords and then Yorke shall bee London And after this shall be a white harvest of Corne gotten in by women Then shall be in the North that one woman shall say unto another Mother I have seene a man to day and for one man there shall be a thousand women there shal bee a man sitting on St. Ia●es Church hill weeping his fill And after that a Ship came sailing up the Thames till it came against London and the Mr. of the Ship shall weepe and the Marriners shall aske him why he weepeth being he hath made so good a voyage and he shall say Ah what a goodly City this was none in the world comparable to it and now there is le●t scare any house that can let us have drinke for our money Vnhappy he that lives to see these dayes But happy are the dead Shiptons wife sayes In the worlds old age this woman did foretell Strange things should hap which in our times have fell Mr. Truswels Recorder of Lincolne THe Lilly shall remaine in a merty world and he shall be moved against the seed of the Lyon and he shall stand on one side amongst thrones of his Kingdome and Countrey and there shall come the Son of man beating three wild beasts in his Armes which Kingdome is the Land of the Moone which is to be dread throughout all the world with a company of people he shall passe many waters and he shall come to the Land of the Lyon looking for helpe with the beasts of his owne Countrey And in that yeere there shall come an Eagle out of the Bast and his wings spread with the beames of the Sonne of man And that yeere shall be destroyed Castles upon Thames and there shall be great feare over the whole world and in a part of the Land there shall be great battells amongst many Kingdomes That day shall be the bloody field and the Lilly shall lose his Crowne and therewith shall be crowned the Sonne of man And in the fourth yeere many battells shall be for the Faith and most of the world shall be stoopen but the Sonne of man with the Eagle shall be preferred and there shall be universall peace over the whole world Then shall the Son of man receive a marvellous token and there shall be great plenty of all manner of fruits and then shall he goe to the land of the crosse The Prophesie of old Sybilla VVHen Scotland hundred and ninth unconquered King The sixteenth hundred thirty and ninth yeere Into his age of thirty nine shall reigne Then shall the Papall overthrow appeare Which all the Arts of Europe shall admire For Scotland shall that blessed worke begin Then shall the whore of Babel we had here Be banisht quite which Bishops did bring in Then thou brave England which wast led so blinde By their perverse Episcopall pride And Irelands shamelesse superstitious sin Shall be supprest who cruelly have cried So that that Sacred Prophetesse Sybilla Shall shortly come to passe she tells Tom Milla. And Tom tell 's me and I must tell 't againe Through Scotland England Ireland France Spain Ignatius Prophesie If eighty eight be past then thrive Thou maiest till thirty foure or five After the ● is dead a Scot Shall governe there and if a plot Prevent him not then sure his sway Continue shall til many a day The ninth shall die yong and the first Perhaps shall reigne but oh accurst Shall be the time when thou shalt see To sixteen joyned twenty three For then the Eagle shall have help● By craft to catch the Lyons whelpe And hurt him sore except the same Be cured by the maidens name In July month of the same yeare Saturne conjoynes with Jupiter Perhaps false Prophets shall arise And Mahomet shall shew his prise And sure much alteration Shall happen in Religion Believe this truely if then you see A Spaniard a Protestant to be Merlins Prophesies ON Boreas wings then hither shall be borne Through Weeke ore Tweed a Princely Unicorne Who brought into the world his owne faire Crest A rampant Lyon figured on his breast And to his arms six Lyons more shall quarter With six French flowers inv●ron'd with the garter Joyning by fates unchangeable dispose The Northerne Thistle in the Southerne Rose He shall the true Apostolick Faith maintaine With pious zeale