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2 | 1 |
Towards Aquitaine by the British Isles
|
By these themselves great incursions.
|
Rains, frosts will make the soil uneven,
|
Port Selyn will make mighty invasions
|
2 | 2 |
The blue head will inflict upon the white head
|
As much evil as France has done them good:
|
Dead at the sail-yard the great one hung on the branch.
|
When seized by his own the King will say how much.
|
2 | 3 |
Because of the solar heat on the sea
|
From Negrepont the fishes half cooked:
|
The inhabitants will come to cut them,
|
When food will fail in Rhodes and Genoa.
|
2 | 4 |
From Monaco to near Sicily
|
The entire coast will remain desolated:
|
There will remain there no suburb, city or town
|
Not pillaged and robbed by the Barbarians.
|
2 | 5 |
That which is enclosed in iron and letter in a fish,
|
Out will go one who will then make war,
|
He will have his fleet well rowed by sea,
|
Appearing near Latin land.
|
2 | 6 |
Near the gates and within two cities
|
There will be two scourges the like of which was never seen,
|
Famine within plague, people put out by steel,
|
Crying to the great immortal God for relief.
|
2 | 7 |
Amongst several transported to the isles,
|
One to be born with two teeth in his mouth
|
They will die of famine the trees stripped,
|
For them a new King issues a new edict.
|
2 | 8 |
Temples consecrated in the original Roman manner,
|
They will reject the excess foundations,
|
Taking their first and humane laws,
|
Chasing, though not entirely, the cult of saints.
|
2 | 9 |
Nine years the lean one will hold the realm in peace,
|
Then he will fall into a very bloody thirst:
|
Because of him a great people will die without faith and law
|
Killed by one far more good-natured.
|
2 | 10 |
Before long all will be set in order,
|
We will expect a very sinister century,
|
The state of the masked and solitary ones much changed,
|
Few will be found who want to be in their place.
|
2 | 11 |
The nearest son of the elder will attain
|
Very great height as far as the realm of the privileged:
|
Everyone will fear his fierce glory,
|
But his children will be thrown out of the realm.
|
2 | 12 |
Eyes closed, opened by antique fantasy,
|
The garb of the monks they will be put to naught:
|
The great monarch will chastise their frenzy,
|
Ravishing the treasure in front of the temples.
|
2 | 13 |
The body without soul no longer to be sacrificed:
|
Day of death put for birthday:
|
The divine spirit will make the soul happy,
|
Seeing the word in its eternity.
|
2 | 14 |
At Tours, Gien, guarded, eyes will be searching,
|
Discovering from afar her serene Highness:
|
She and her suite will enter the port,
|
Combat, thrust, sovereign power.
|
2 | 15 |
Shortly before the monarch is assassinated,
|
Castor and Pollux in the ship, bearded star:
|
The public treasure emptied by land and sea,
|
Pisa, Asti, Ferrara, Turin land under interdict.
|
2 | 16 |
Naples, Palermo, Sicily, Syracuse,
|
New tyrants, celestial lightning fires:
|
Force from London, Ghent, Brussels and Susa,
|
Great slaughter, triumph leads to festivities.
|
2 | 17 |
The field of the temple of the vestal virgin,
|
Not far from Elne and the Pyrenees mountains:
|
The great tube is hidden in the trunk.
|
To the north rivers overflown and vines battered.
|
2 | 18 |
New, impetuous and sudden rain
|
Will suddenly halt two armies.
|
Celestial stone, fires make the sea stony,
|
The death of seven by land and sea sudden.
|
2 | 19 |
Newcomers, place built without defense,
|
Place occupied then uninhabitable:
|
Meadows, houses, fields, towns to take at pleasure,
|
Famine, plague, war, extensive land arable.
|
2 | 20 |
Brothers and sisters captive in diverse places
|
Will find themselves passing near the monarch:
|
Contemplating them his branches attentive,
|
Displeasing to see the marks on chin, forehead and nose.
|
2 | 21 |
The ambassador sent by biremes,
|
Halfway repelled by unknown ones:
|
Reinforced with salt four triremes will come,
|
In Euboea bound with ropes and chains.
|
2 | 22 |
The imprudent army of Europe will depart,
|
Collecting itself near the submerged isle:
|
The weak fleet will bend the phalanx,
|
At the navel of the world a greater voice substituted.
|
2 | 23 |
Palace birds, chased out by a bird,
|
Very soon after the prince has arrived:
|
Although the enemy is repelled beyond the river,
|
Outside seized the trick upheld by the bird.
|
2 | 24 |
Beasts ferocious from hunger will swim across rivers:
|
The greater part of the region will be against the Hister,
|
The great one will cause it to be dragged in an iron cage,
|
When the German child will observe nothing.
|
2 | 25 |
The foreign guard will betray the fortress,
|
Hope and shadow of a higher marriage:
|
Guard deceived, fort seized in the press,
|
Loire, Saone, Rhone, Garonne, mortal outrage.
|
2 | 26 |
Because of the favor that the city will show
|
To the great one who will soon lose the field of battle,
|
Fleeing the Po position, the Ticino will overflow
|
With blood, fires, deaths, drowned by the long-edged blow.
|
2 | 27 |
The divine word will be struck from the sky,
|
One who cannot proceed any further:
|
The secret closed up with the revelation,
|
Such that they will march over and ahead.
|
2 | 28 |
The penultimate of the surname of the Prophet
|
Will take Diana [Thursday] for his day and rest:
|
He will wander far because of a frantic head,
|
And delivering a great people from subjection.
|
2 | 29 |
The Easterner will leave his seat,
|
To pass the Apennine mountains to see Gaul:
|
He will transpire the sky, the waters and the snow,
|
And everyone will be struck with his rod.
|
2 | 30 |
One who the infernal gods of Hannibal
|
Will cause to be reborn, terror of mankind
|
Never more horror nor worse of days
|
In the past than will come to the Romans through Babel.
|
2 | 31 |
In Campania the Capuan [river] will do so much
|
That one will see only fields covered by waters:
|
Before and after the long rain
|
One will see nothing green except the trees.
|
2 | 32 |
Milk, frog's blood prepared in Dalmatia.
|
Conflict given, plague near Treglia:
|
A great cry will sound through all Slavonia,
|
Then a monster will be born near and within Ravenna.
|
2 | 33 |
Through the torrent which descends from Verona
|
Its entry will then be guided to the Po,
|
A great wreck, and no less in the Garonne,
|
When those of Genoa march against their country.
|
2 | 34 |
The senseless ire of the furious combat
|
Will cause steel to be flashed at the table by brothers:
|
To part them death, wound, and curiously,
|
The proud duel will come to harm France.
|
2 | 35 |
The fire by night will take hold in two lodgings,
|
Several within suffocated and roasted.
|
It will happen near two rivers as one:
|
Sun, Sagittarius and Capricorn all will be reduced.
|
2 | 36 |
The letters of the great Prophet will be seized,
|
They will come to fall into the hands of the tyrant:
|
His enterprise will be to deceive his King,
|
But his extortions will very soon trouble him.
|
2 | 37 |
Of that great number that one will send
|
To relieve those besieged in the fort,
|
Plague and famine will devour them all,
|
Except seventy who will be destroyed.
|
2 | 38 |
A great number will be condemned
|
When the monarchs will be reconciled:
|
But for one of them such a bad impediment will arise
|
That they will be joined together but loosely.
|
2 | 39 |
One year before the Italian conflict,
|
Germans, Gauls, Spaniards for the fort:
|
The republican schoolhouse will fall,
|
There, except for a few, they will be choked dead.
|
2 | 40 |
Shortly afterwards, without a very long interval,
|
By sea and land a great uproar will be raised:
|
Naval battle will be very much greater,
|
Fires, animals, those who will cause greater insult.
|
2 | 41 |
The great star will burn for seven days,
|
The cloud will cause two suns to appear:
|
The big mastiff will howl all night
|
When the great pontiff will change country.
|
2 | 42 |
Cock, dogs and cats will be satiated with blood
|
And from the wound of the tyrant found dead,
|
At the bed of another legs and arms broken,
|
He who was not afraid to die a cruel death.
|
2 | 43 |
During the appearance of the bearded star.
|
The three great princes will be made enemies:
|
Struck from the sky, peace earth quaking,
|
Po, Tiber overflowing, serpent placed upon the shore.
|
2 | 44 |
The Eagle driven back around the tents
|
Will be chased from there by other birds:
|
When the noise of cymbals, trumpets and bells
|
Will restore the senses of the senseless lady.
|
2 | 45 |
Too much the heavens weep for the Androgyne begotten,
|
Near the heavens human blood shed:
|
Because of death too late a great people re-created,
|
Late and soon the awaited relief comes.
|
2 | 46 |
After great trouble for humanity, a greater one is prepared
|
The Great Mover renews the ages:
|
Rain, blood, milk, famine, steel and plague,
|
Is the heavens fire seen, a long spark running.
|
2 | 47 |
The great old enemy mourning dies of poison,
|
The sovereigns subjugated in infinite numbers:
|
Stones raining, hidden under the fleece,
|
Through death articles are cited in vain.
|
2 | 48 |
The great force which will pass the mountains.
|
Saturn in Sagittarius Mars turning from the fish:
|
Poison hidden under the heads of salmon,
|
Their war-chief hung with cord.
|
2 | 49 |
The advisers of the first monopoly,
|
The conquerors seduced for Malta:
|
Rhodes, Byzantium for them exposing their pole:
|
Land will fail the pursuers in flight.
|
2 | 50 |
When those of Hainault, of Ghent and of Brussels
|
Will see the siege laid before Langres:
|
Behind their flanks there will be cruel wars,
|
The ancient wound will do worse than enemies.
|
2 | 51 |
The blood of the just will commit a fault at London,
|
Burnt through lightning of twenty threes the six:
|
The ancient lady will fall from her high place,
|
Several of the same sect will be killed.
|
2 | 52 |
For several nights the earth will tremble:
|
In the spring two efforts in succession:
|
Corinth, Ephesus will swim in the two seas:
|
War stirred up by two valiant in combat.
|
2 | 53 |
The great plague of the maritime city
|
Will not cease until there be avenged the death
|
Of the just blood, condemned for a price without crime
|
Of the great lady outraged by pretense.
|
2 | 54 |
Because of people strange, and distant from the Romans
|
Their great city much troubled after water:
|
Daughter handless, domain too different,
|
Chief taken, lock not having been picked.
|
2 | 55 |
In the conflict the great one who was worth little
|
At his end will perform a marvelous deed:
|
While Adria will see what he was lacking,
|
During the banquet the proud one stabbed.
|
2 | 56 |
One whom neither plague nor steel knew how to finish,
|
Death on the summit of the hills struck from the sky:
|
The abbot will die when he will see ruined
|
Those of the wreck wishing to seize the rock.
|
2 | 57 |
Before the conflict the great wall will fall,
|
The great one to death, death too sudden and lamented,
|
Born imperfect: the greater part will swim:
|
Near the river the land stained with blood.
|
2 | 58 |
With neither foot nor hand because of sharp and strong tooth
|
Through the crowd to the fort of the pork and the elder born:
|
Near the portal treacherous proceeds,
|
Moon shining, little great one led off.
|
2 | 59 |
Gallic fleet through support of the great guard
|
Of the great Neptune, and his trident soldiers,
|
Provence reddened to sustain a great band:
|
More at Narbonne, because of javelins and darts.
|
2 | 60 |
The Punic faith broken in the East,
|
Ganges, Jordan, and Rhone, Loire, and Tagus will change:
|
When the hunger of the mule will be satiated,
|
Fleet sprinkles, blood and bodies will swim.
|
2 | 61 |
Bravo, ye of Tamins, Gironde and La Rochelle:
|
O Trojan blood! Mars at the port of the arrow
|
Behind the river the ladder put to the fort,
|
Points to fire great murder on the breach.
|
2 | 62 |
Mabus then will soon die, there will come
|
Of people and beasts a horrible rout:
|
Then suddenly one will see vengeance,
|
Hundred, hand, thirst, hunger when the comet will run.
|
2 | 63 |
The Gauls Ausonia will subjugate very little,
|
Po, Marne and Seine Parma will make drunk:
|
He who will prepare the great wall against them,
|
He will lose his life from the least at the wall.
|
2 | 64 |
The people of Geneva drying up with hunger, with thirst,
|
Hope at hand will come to fail:
|
On the point of trembling will be the law of him of the Cevennes,
|
Fleet at the great port cannot be received.
|
2 | 65 |
The sloping park great calamity
|
To be done through Hesperia and Insubria:
|
The fire in the ship, plague and captivity,
|
Mercury in Sagittarius Saturn will fade.
|
2 | 66 |
Through great dangers the captive escaped:
|
In a short time great his fortune changed.
|
In the palace the people are trapped,
|
Through good omen the city besieged.
|
2 | 67 |
The blond one will come to compromise the fork-nosed one
|
Through the duel and will chase him out:
|
The exiles within he will have restored,
|
Committing the strongest to the marine places.
|
2 | 68 |
The efforts of Aquilon will be great:
|
The gate on the Ocean will be opened,
|
The kingdom on the Isle will be restored:
|
London will tremble discovered by sail.
|
2 | 69 |
The Gallic King through his Celtic right arm
|
Seeing the discord of the great Monarchy:
|
He will cause his scepter to flourish over the three parts,
|
Against the cope of the great Hierarchy.
|
2 | 70 |
The dart from the sky will make its extension,
|
Deaths speaking: great execution.
|
The stone in the tree, the proud nation restored,
|
Noise, human monster, purge expiation.
|
2 | 71 |
The exiles will come into Sicily
|
To deliver form hunger the strange nation:
|
At daybreak the Celts will fail them:
|
Life remains by reason: the King joins.
|
2 | 72 |
Celtic army vexed in Italy
|
On all sides conflict and great loss:
|
Romans fled, O Gaul repelled!
|
Near the Ticino, Rubicon uncertain battle.
|
2 | 73 |
The shore of Lake Garda to Lake Fucino,
|
Taken from the Lake of Geneva to the port of L'Orguion:
|
Born with three arms the predicted warlike image,
|
Through three crowns to the great Endymion.
|
2 | 74 |
From Sens, from Autun they will come as far as the Rhone
|
To pass beyond towards the Pyrenees mountains:
|
The nation to leave the March of Ancona:
|
By land and sea it will be followed by great suites.
|
2 | 75 |
The voice of the rare bird heard,
|
On the pipe of the air-vent floor:
|
So high will the bushel of wheat rise,
|
That man will be eating his fellow man.
|
2 | 76 |
Lightning in Burgundy will perform a portentous deed,
|
One which could never have been done by skill,
|
Sexton made lame by their senate
|
Will make the affair known to the enemies.
|
2 | 77 |
Hurled back through bows, fires, pitch and by fires:
|
Cries, howls heard at midnight:
|
Within they are place on the broken ramparts,
|
The traitors fled by the underground passages.
|
2 | 78 |
The great Neptune of the deep of the sea
|
With Punic race and Gallic blood mixed.
|
The Isles bled, because of the tardy rowing:
|
More harm will it do him than the ill-concealed secret.
|
2 | 79 |
The beard frizzled and black through skill
|
Will subjugate the cruel and proud people:
|
The great Chyren will remove from far away
|
All those captured by the banner of Selin
|
2 | 80 |
After the conflict by the eloquence of the wounded one
|
For a short time a soft rest is contrived:
|
The great ones are not to be allowed deliverance at all:
|
They are restored by the enemies at the proper time.
|
2 | 81 |
Through fire from the sky the city almost burned:
|
The Urn threatens Deucalion again:
|
Sardinia vexed by the Punic foist,
|
After Libra will leave her Phaethon.
|
2 | 82 |
Through hunger the prey will make the wolf prisoner,
|
The aggressor then in extreme distress.
|
The heir having the last one before him,
|
The great one does not escape in the middle of the crowd.
|
2 | 83 |
The large trade of a great Lyons changed,
|
The greater part turns to pristine min
|
Prey to the soldiers swept away by pillage:
|
Through the Jura mountain and Suevia drizzle.
|
2 | 84 |
Between Campania, Siena, Florence, Tuscany,
|
Six months nine days without a drop of rain:
|
The strange tongue in the Dalmatian land,
|
It will overrun, devastating the entire land.
|
2 | 85 |
The old full beard under the severe statute
|
Made at Lyon over the Celtic Eagle:
|
The little great one perseveres too far:
|
Noise of arms in the sky: Ligurian sea red.
|
2 | 86 |
Wreck for the fleet near the Adriatic Sea:
|
The land trembles stirred up upon the air placed on land:
|
Egypt trembles Mahometan increase,
|
The Herald surrendering himself is appointed to cry out.
|
2 | 87 |
After there will come from the outermost countries
|
A German Prince, upon the golden throne:
|
The servitude and waters met,
|
The lady serves, her time no longer adored.
|
2 | 88 |
The circuit of the great ruinous deed,
|
The seventh name of the fifth will be:
|
Of a third greater the stranger warlike:
|
Sheep, Paris, Aix will not guarantee.
|
2 | 89 |
One day the two great masters will be friends,
|
Their great power will be seen increased:
|
The new land will be at its high peak,
|
To the bloody one the number recounted.
|
2 | 90 |
Though life and death the realm of Hungary changed:
|
The law will be more harsh than service:
|
Their great city cries out with howls and laments,
|
Castor and Pollux enemies in the arena.
|
2 | 91 |
At sunrise one will see a great fire,
|
Noise and light extending towards Aquilon:
|
Within the circle death and one will hear cries,
|
Through steel, fire, famine, death awaiting them.
|
2 | 92 |
Fire color of gold from the sky seen on earth:
|
Heir struck from on high, marvelous deed done:
|
Great human murder: the nephew of the great one taken,
|
Deaths spectacular the proud one escaped.
|
2 | 93 |
Very near the Tiber presses Death:
|
Shortly before great inundation:
|
The chief of the ship taken, thrown into the bilge:
|
Castle, palace in conflagration.
|
2 | 94 |
Great Po, great evil will be received through Gauls,
|
Vain terror to the maritime Lion:
|
People will pass by the sea in infinite numbers,
|
Without a quarter of a million escaping.
|
2 | 95 |
The populous places will be uninhabitable:
|
Great discord to obtain fields:
|
Realms delivered to prudent incapable ones:
|
Then for the great brothers dissension and death.
|
2 | 96 |
Burning torch will be seen in the sky at night
|
Near the end and beginning of the Rhone:
|
Famine, steel: the relief provided late,
|
Persia turns to invade Macedonia.
|
2 | 97 |
Roman Pontiff beware of approaching
|
The city that two rivers flow through,
|
Near there your blood will come to spurt,
|
You and yours when the rose will flourish.
|
2 | 98 |
The one whose face is splattered with the blood
|
Of the victim nearly sacrificed:
|
Jupiter in Leon, omen through presage:
|
To be put to death then for the bride.
|
2 | 99 |
Roman land as the omen interpreted
|
Will be vexed too much by the Gallic people:
|
But the Celtic nation will fear the hour,
|
The fleet has been pushed too far by the north wind.
|
2 | 100 |
Within the isles a very horrible uproar,
|
One will hear only a party of war,
|
So great will be the insult of the plunderers
|
That they will come to be joined in the great league.
|
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