Page:Whole prophecies of Scotland, England, Ireland, France, and Denmark (2).pdf/15

                     (  15  ) Bold Barwick be blyth with thy broad walls, Thou shalt to the lyon stoop as Lord of his own, Let never the libbert lipen longer a day, In bold Britain to brook a foot broad of earth, Whose doubts on this deed, or denies heron, Ido them well to know the date is devised; Take the foremost of middle-earth,and mark by thyself, With fodr crosents, closed together. Then of the lyon, the longesdt see thou choose ; Loose not the Lyonesse let her ly still. If thou cast through case course of the heaven, Take Saint Andrew’s crosse thrise; Keep well these teachments as clarks have told, Thus begins date, deem as thou likes. Thou fhalt not cease in they seat, assumed in the text, Or the hight of the heat nearest the winter, No tail of the tearm will I the tell, But chastity the chieftain of their chief wrongs. Or in the height of the harvest, heard of thy self, Shall wicked weird undo, and to right And this ere I wilt, l awakened anon, Though I write as it was, wist I it not.

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The PROPHECY of MERLING.

IT is to fall when they it find. That fell on face is plain to see ; That commedores of lordlings friend Wiving through the work of wind.;. The bear this mussel shall upbind, slnd never after bound shall he, Away the other shall wave wind, And as they come so shall they flee. Syce shall up, and sinks shall under ;