Page:Whole prophecies of Scotland, England, Ireland, France, and Denmark (2).pdf/14

                      (  14  ) And carf of the crowns that Chrift hath anointed. All this must deftiny drive to an end.

An eagle of the east, a ventrous beast. Shall be glad flowers to sang in the first season. And stir to the stepson, and strike them together. Bind bands brukle and hail to kegin : For he would garlands got of thes'e fair flowers, That in summer season spreads so fair. But soon shall fail the freit that the fool thinks, A fell northern flaw shall fade him for ever.

Hereafter on either side, sorrow shall rise. The barges of clear barrons down shall be sunken Seculars shall fa’ in spiritual feats, Occupying offices anointed as they were, The true title to purchase that the truth holds, They shall torment them with torments a new. Then barrens shall I busk on their best wife, Attour the fields, to fair with a fey fox bird ; Turn first to Christ with tods wyles. But soon tho tod shall be tint, and in time losed. They shall escape such a check eschew whoso may Then shall the noblest escape with the felles, Yet shall the one fox in the field escape. The falcon shall be loused in his wings, Whoso trusts not this tale, nor the tearm knows Let him no Merling mean, and his merry words As true Thomas toFd in his time after. At Standfoord shall he be seen, example of their deeds, Yet it must overthrow the tod in his busk, Busk thee now Berwick, with thy broad walls. Thou shalt incline to the king, that is thy kind lord, As sainet Beid of that burgla in his book says Thou shalt with the lyon lean, and lisson for ever, Though thou be subject to Saxons, sorrow thou not, Thou shalt be loosed at last believe thou in Christ, And every language shall hav.e his lordship to brook: It was not lost but lent for little time,