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THE ORIGINAL PREDICTIONS
OF
ROBERT NIXON,
AS DELIVERED BY HIMSELF.

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When a raven shall build in a stone lion’s mouth,

On a church top beside the grey forest,

Then shall a king of England be drove from his crown,

And return no more.

When an eagle shall sit on the top of Vale-Royal house,

Then shall an heir be born, who shall live to see great troubles in England.

There shall be a miller nam’d Peter,

With two heels on one foot,

Who shall distinguish himself bravely,

And shall be knighted by the victor:

For foreign nations shall invade England;

But the invader shall be killed,

And laid across a horse’s back,

And led in triumph.

A boy shall be born with three thumbs on one hand,

Who shall hold three King’s horses,

Whilst England three times is won and lost in one day.

But after this shall be happy days,

A new set of people of virtuous manners shall live in peace.

But the wall of Vale-Royal near the pond shall be the token of its truth,

For it shall fall:

If it fall downwards,

Then shall the church be sunk for ever:

But if it fall upwards against a hill,

Then shall the church and honest men live still.

Under this wall shall be found the bones of a British King.

Peckforton-mill shall be removed to Ludington hill,

And three days blood shall turn Noginshire-mill.

But beware of a chance to the lord of Oulton,

Lest he should be hanged at his own door.

A crow shall sit on the top of Headless cross,

In the forest so grey,

And drink of the nobles’ gentle blood so free;

Twenty hundred horses shall want masters,

Till their girths shall rot under their bellies.

Thro’ our own money and our own men,

Shall a dreadful war begin;

Between the sickle and the suck,

All England shall have a pluck;

And be several times forsworn,

And put to their wits’ end,

That it shall not be known, whether to reap their corn,

Bury their dead, or go to the field to fight.

A great scarcity of bread corn.

Foreign nations shall invade England with snow on their helmets,

And shall bring plague, famine, and murder in the skirts of their garments.

A great tax will be granted but never gathered.

Between a rick and two trees,

A famous battle fought shall be.

London street shall run with blood

And at last shall sink,

So that it shall be fulfilled,

Lincoln was, London is, and York shall be

The finest city of the three.

There will be three gates to London of imprisoned men for cowsters.

Then if you have three cows, at the first gate fell one, and keep thee at home,

At the second gate fell the other two, and keep thee at home.

At the last gate all shall be done.

When summer in winter shall come,

And peace is made at every man’s home,

Then shall be danger of war;

For tho’ with peace at night the nation ring,

Men shall rise to war in the morning.

There will be a winter Council, a careful Christmas, and a bloody Lent.

In those days there shall be hatred and bloodshed,

The father against the son, and the son against his father,

That one may have a house for lifting the latch of the door.

Landlords shall stand, with hats in their hands,

To desire tenants to hold their lands.

Great wars and pressing of soldiers,

But at last clubs and clouted shoes shall carry the day.

It will be good in these days for a man to sell his goods, and keep close at home.

Then forty pounds in hand

Will be better than forty pounds a year in land.

The cock of the North shall be made to flee,

And his feathers be plucked for his pride;

That he shall almost curse the day that he was born.

One asked Nixon, where he might be safe in those days? he answered,

In God’s croft, between the rivers Mersey and Dee.

Scotland shall stand more or less,

Till it has brought England to a piteous case.

The Scots shall rule England one whole year.

Three years of great wars,

And in all countries great uproars.

The first is terrible, the second worse, but the third unbearable.

Three great battles;

One at Northumberland-bridge,

One at Cumberland-bridge,

And the other the south side of Trent.

Crows shall drink the blood of many nobles.

East shall rise against West, and North against South.

Then take this for good,

Noginshire-mill shall run with blood,

And many shall fly down Wanslow-lane.

A man shall come into England,

But the son of a king crown’d with thorns

Shall take from him the victory.

Many nobles shall fight,

But a bastard Duke shall win the day,

And so without delay,

Set England in a right way.

A wolf from the East shall right eagerly come,

On the South side of Sandford, on a grey Monday morn,

Where groves shall grow upon a green,

Beside green grey they shall flee

Into rocks, and many die.

They shall flee into Salt strand,

And twenty thousand, without sword, shall die each man.

The dark dragon over Sudsbrown,

Shall bring with him a royal band;

But their lives shall be forlorn,

His head shall be in Stafford town,

His tail in Ireland.

He boldly shall bring his men, thinking to win renown:

Beside a wall in forest fair he shall be beaten down.

On Hine’s heath they shall begin this bloody fight,

And with train’d steed shall hew each others’ helmet bright:

But who shall win that day no one can tell.

A Duke out of Denmark shall him dight,

On a day in England, and make many a lord full low to light,

And the ladies cry, ‘Well away,’

And the black fleet with main and might

Their enemies full boldly their assail.

In Britain’s land shall be a knight,

On them shall make a cruel fight,

A bitter boar with main and might

Shall bring a royal rout that day.

There shall die many a worthy knight,

And be driven into the fields green and grey,

They shall lose both field and fight.

The weary eagle shall to an island in the sea retire

Where leaves and herbs grow fresh and green.

There shall he meet a lady fair,

Who shall say, ‘Go help thy friend in battle slain:’

Then by the counsel of that fair,

He eagerly will make to flee

Twenty-six standard of the enemy,

A rampant lion in silver set, in armour fair,

Shall help the eagle in that tide,

When many a knight shall die.

The bear that hath been long tied to a stake shall shake his chains,

That every man shall hear, and shall cause much debate.

The bull and red rose shall stand in strife,

That shall turn England to much woe,

And cause many a man to lose his life.

In a forest stand oaks three,

Beside a headless cross.

A well of blood shall run and ree,

Its cover shall be brass,

Which shall ne’er appear,

Till horses’ feet have trod it bare;

Who wins it will declare,

The eagle shall so fight that day,

That ne’er a friend’s from him away.

A hound without delay shall run the chase far and near.

The dark dragon shall die in fight.

A lofty head the bear shall rear,

The wide wolf so shall light,

The bridled steed against his enemies will fiercely fight.

A fleet shall come out of the North,

Riding on a horse of trees,

A white hind beareth he,

And there wreaths so free,

That day the eagle shall him slay,

And on a hill set his banner straightway.

That lion who’s forsaken been and forced to flee,

Shall hear a woman shrilly say,

‘Thy friends are killed on yonder hill,’

Death to many a knight this day.

With that the lion bears his banner to a hill,

Within a forest that’s so plain,

Beside a headless cross of stone,

There shall the eagle die that day,

And the red lion get renown.

A great battle shall be fought by crowned Kings three;

One shall die and a bastard Duke will win the day.

In Sandyford there lies a stone,

A crowned King shall lose his head on.

In those dreadful days, five wicked priests’ heads shall be sold for a penny.

Slaughter shall rage to such a degree,

And infants left by those that are slain,

That damsels shall with fear and glee,

Cry, ‘Mother, mother, I’ve seen a man!’

Between seven, eight, and nine,

In England wonders shall be seen.

Between nine and thirteen

All sorrow shall be done.

Then rise up Richard, son of Richard,

And bless the happy reign,

Thrice happy he who sees this time to come

When England shall know rest and peace again.

End of the Original Prophecies.

Prophecies of Robert Nixon, Mother Shipton, and Martha, the Gypsy

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