The legendary
Celtic magus Merlin Ambrosius supposedly brought the stones of
Stonehenge from Ireland to Salisbury Plain by magical
levitation, and counseled King Arthur. He has had over 100
pseudo-epigraphic Latin and vernacular texts attributed to him.
Most of those texts were produced in Italy. The best
representation of such writings is Les Prophecies de Merlin,
composed in Venice by an anti-imperialist Franciscan circa 1275.
The ascribed prophecies were proscribed by the Council of Trent.
The following excerpts pertain to the Grand Monarch:
"There will come a
German Anti-Pope. Italy and Germany will be sorely troubled. A
French King will restore the true Pope.
"After the
destruction of England by seven kings there shall come a
dreadful dead man, and with him a Royal Great Monarch of the
best blood in the world and he shall set England on the right
way and put out all heresies. He shall be the last King over
England.
"When the tail of
Virgo shall enter Leo, and Scorpio shall ascend the back of
Sagittarius, the northern kingdoms shall end in lust; and the
power of the Island Monarchies shall be harnessed.
"Cruel wars shall be
scattered by the wind -- whose beginnings were by a staff: their
growth and continuance by bastards -- and gulled by a revengeful
hail...
"Those on whom these
things shall come, for grief and sorrow pine away. A prince of
royal stock shall come forth, crowned from the northern parts
--- to his own people unexpected, but desired by foreigners ---
who, because he shall bear a "rampant lion" shall
therefore be called a lion. He shall advance his conquering
armies against his enemies and by woeful successes shall harness
the territories of neighbor Princes. He shall exceed Alexander
the Great in virtue and Cyrus in success. He shall cross the sea
and be saluted Emperor by many kings. A certain ancient city he
shall lay level with the ground.
"In the meanwhile a
powerful Prince out of the East shall provoke him to battle.
Against whom the Lion shall march with all his forces and
pitching his camp on the side of the Euphrates, shall await him.
If the prince shall come over the river the Lion shall be
overcome; but the Lion shall cross the river with his army and
give his enemy a bloody defeat and be master of all the East.
"Whilst these things
are happening, divers petty kings from India shall break into
Syria with mighty armies. provided for battle, they shall wait
for the Lion about the Valley of Jehosephat, where they shall,
by him, be all wholly cut off. Not long afterwards the Lion
himself will die in eminent piety, after having established the
Kingdom of the Fugitives...
"There will be a
Pope who will not dare so much as look at Rome. Similarly, one
thing the Romans must understand, among others, is that before
the death of the Pope, our Lord will make him suffer such
disgrace that there will be nothing to compare with it. It is
likewise necessary that the Romans know, among other things,
that from that time on will begin their destruction, step by
step, and that it will be because of their sins...
"Merlin saith that in England shall be seen strange things, as preaching of
traitors, great rain and wind, great hunger among the common people, great
oppression of blood, great imprisonment of many men and great battle; so
that there shall be few or no quiet place to abide in; the Prince shall forsake
men of the church, Lords shall forsake righteousness, counsel of the aged
shall not be set by; religious men and women shall be thrust out of their
houses; the common people for fear shall not know which way to turn;
parents shall be hated by their children, men of worship shall have no
reverence of others; adultery shall abound among all; with more ill than I
can tell of, from which God us defend."
"Luxury shall overspread the land, and fornication shall not cease to
debauch mankind. Famine shall then return, and the inhabitants shall grieve
for the destruction of their cities. In those days the oaks of the forests shall
burn, and acorns grow upon lime trees! The Severn sea shall discharge
itself through seven mouths, and the river Usk burn for seven months!
Fishes shall die in the heat thereof, and from them serpents will be born."
"The baths of Badon [hot springs of Bath] shall grow cold, and their
salubrious waters engender death! London shall mourn for the death of
twenty thousand, and the river Thames shall be turned to blood! The monks
in the cowls shall be forced to marry, and their cry shall be heard upon the
mountains of the Alps."
"The seas shall rise up in the twinkling of an eye, and the dust of the
ancients shall be restored."
"The cult of religion shall be destroyed completely, and the ruin of the
churches shall be clear for all to see. The race that is oppressed shall
prevail in the end, for it will resist the savagery of the invaders.
The Boar of Cornwall shall bring relief from these invaders, for it will
trample the necks beneath its feet. The islands of the Ocean shall be given
into the power of the Boar, and it shall lord it over the forests of Gaul.
The House of Romulus shall dread the Boar's savagery, and the end of the
Boar will be shrouded in mystery. The Boar shall be extolled in the mouths
of its peoples, and its deeds will be as meat and drink to those who tell
tales.
Six of the Boar's descendants shall hold the sceptre after it, and next after
them will rise up the German Worm. The Sea-wolf shall exalt the Worm,
and the forests of Africa shall be committed to its care. Religion shall be
destroyed a second time and the sees of the primates will be moved to
other places. London's high dignity shall adorn Durobernia, and the
seventh pastor of York will be visited in the realm of Armorica. Menevia
shall be dressed in the pall of the City of the Legions, and the preacher
from Ireland shall be struck dumb by a child still growing in the womb.
A shower of blood shall fall, and a dire famine shall afflict mankind. The
Red One will grieve for what has happened, but after an immense effort it
will regain its strength. Calamity will next pursue the White One, and the
buildings in its little garden will be torn down. Seven who hold the sceptre
shall perish, one of them being canonised. The bellies of mothers shall be
cut open, and babies will be born prematurely. Men will suffer most
grievously, in order that those born in the country may regain power. He
who will achieve these things shall appear as the Man of Bronze, and for
long years he shall guard the gates of London upon a brazen horse.
Then the Red Dragon will revert to its true habits and struggle to tear itself
to pieces. Next will come the revenge of the Thunderer, and every one of
the farmer's fields will be a disappointment.
Death will lay hold of the people and destroy all the nations. Those who are
left alive will abandon their native soil and will sow their seeds in the fields
of others. A king who is blessed will fit out a navy and will be reckoned the
twelfth in the court among the saints. The realm shall be deserted in the
most pitiful way, and the harvest threshing floors will be overgrown once
more by forests rich in fruit.
Once again the White Dragon shall rise up and will invite over a daughter
of Germany. Our little garden will be stocked again with foreign seed, and
the Red Dragon will pine away at the far end of the pool. After that the
German Worm shall be crowned, and the Prince of brass will be buried.
A limit was set for him, beyond which he was powerless to pass. For a
hundred and fifty years he shall remain in anguish and subjection, and then
for three hundred more he shall sit enthroned. The North Wind will rise
against him, snatching away the flowers which the West Wind has caused
to bloom. There will be gilding in the temples, but the sword's cutting edge
will not cease its work.
The German Dragon will find it hard to escape to its cavernous lairs, for
vengeance for its treason will overtake it. In the end it will become strong
again just for a short time, but the decimation of Normandy will be a
sorry blow. There shall come people dressed in wood and in iron corselets
who will take vengeance on it for its wickedness. This people shall give
their dwelling back to the earlier inhabitants, and the destruction of
foreigners will be clear for all to see.
The seed of the White Dragon shall be rooted up from our little gardens
and what is left of its progeny shall be decimated. They shall bear the
yoke of perpetual slavery, and they will wound their own mother with their
spades and ploughshares. Two more Dragons shall follow, one of which
shall be killed by the sting of envy, but the second will return under the
cover of authority.
The Lion of Justice shall come next, and at its roar the towers of Gaul shall
shake and the island Dragons tremble. In the days of this Lion, gold shall
be squeezed from the lily-Bower and the nettle, and silver shall flow from
the hooves of lowing cattle.
They who have had their hair waved shall dress in woolen stuffs of many
colours, and the outer garment shall be an index of the thoughts within.
The feet of they that bark shall be cut. Wild animals shall enjoy peace, but
mankind will bewail the way in which it is being punished. The balance of
trade shall be tom in half; and the half that is left shall be rounded off.
Kites will lose their ravenous hunger, and the teeth of wolves will be
blunted. The Lion's cubs shall be transformed into salt-water fishes, and
the Eagle of Mount Aravia shall nest upon a summit.
Venedotia shall be red with the blood of mothers, and the house of
Corineus will slaughter six brothers. The island will lie sodden with the
tears of the night-time, and everyone will be encouraged to try to do
everything. Those who are born later shall strive to fly over even the
most lofty things, but the favour given to the newcomers will be loftier
even than that.
Piety will frown upon the man who has inherited goods from the impious;
that is, until he takes his style of dress from his own father. Girded around
with a wild boar's teeth, he shall climb over the mountain summits and
higher than the shadow of the Helmeted Man.
Albany will be angry: calling her near neighbours to her, she shall give
herself entirely to bloodshed. Between her jaws there will be found a bit
which was forged in the Bay of Armorica. The eagle of the Broken
Covenant shall paint it with gold and will rejoice in her third nesting.
The cubs shall roar as they keep watch; they will forsake the forest groves
and come hunting inside the walls of cities. They will cause great slaughter
among any who oppose them, and the tongues of bulls shall they slice off.
They shall load with chains the necks of the roaring ones and live again the
days of their forefathers. Thereafter, from the first to the fourth, from the
fourth to the third, from the third to the second shall the thumb be rolled
in oil.
The sixth shall throw down the walls of Ireland and transmute its forests into
a level plain. The sixth shall unite the different parts into one whole, and he
shall be crowned with the head of a lion. His beginning will yield to his own
unstable disposition, but his end shall soar up towards those on high. He
shall restore the dwellings of the saints throughout the lands and settle the
pastors in places which befit them. Two towns shall he cover with funeral
palls and to virgins he will present virgin gifts. By doing this he will earn
the favour of the Thunderer, and he will be placed among the blessed.
From him there will emerge a She-lynx, and this will nose its way into all
things and strive for the downfall of its own race. Because of the She-lynx
Normandy will lose both its isles and be deprived of its former dignity.
Then the island's inhabitants shall return to it, for a great dissension will
arise among the foreigners.
A hoary old man upon a mow-white horse shall divert the River Periron,
and above the stream he will measure out a mill with his white rod.
Cadwallader shall summon Conanus and shall make an alliance with
Albany. Then the foreigners shall be slaughtered, and the rivers will run
with blood.
The mountains of Armorica shall erupt, and Armorica itself shall be
crowned with Brutus' diadem. Kambria shall be filled with joy, and the
Cornish oaks shall flourish. The island shall be called by the name of
Brutus, and the title given to it by the foreigners shall be done away with.
From Conanus there shall descend a fierce Boar, which will try the
sharpness of its tusks in the forests of Gaul, for it will lop down all the
larger oak trees, taking care to protect the smaller ones.
The Arabs shall dread this Boar and so shall the Africans, for the impetus
of its onslaught will carry it into the remotest parts of Spain. Next after the
Boar shall come the Ram of the Castle of Venus, with golden horns and a
beard of silver. It will breathe such a fog from its nostrils that the entire
surface of the island will be overshadowed by it. In the days of the Ram
there shall be peace, and the harvests will be plentiful because of the
richness of the soil. Women shall become snake-like in their gait, and
every step they take will be full arrogance. The Castle of Venus will be
restored, and Cupid's arrows will continue to wound. The source of the
River Amne shall turn into blood, and two kings will fight each other at
the Ford of the Staff for the sake of a Lioness. All the soil will be fruitful
beyond man’s need; and human beings will fornicate unceasingly.
Three generations will witness all that I have mentioned, and then the kings
buried in the town of London will be disinterred. Famine will return, and
death, and citizens will grieve for their townships. The Boar of Commerce
shall come and call back the scattered flocks to the feeding ground which
they have forsaken. Its breast will be as food to the hungry, and its tongue
will assuage the thirst of those who are dry. From its mouth shall flow
forth rivers which will water the parched gullets of men.
Then a Tree shall spring up on the top of the Tower of London. It will be
content with only three branches, and yet it will overshadow the whole
length and breadth of the island with the spread of its leaves. The North
Wind will come as the Tree's enemy, and with its noxious breath it will
tear away the third of the branches. The two branches which are left will
occupy the place of the one ripped off: this until one of them destroys the
other by the very abundance of its leaves. This last branch will fill the
place of the other two, and it will offer a roosting place to birds come
from foreign parts. To birds native to the country it will seem harmful, for
through their dread of its shadow they will lose their power of free flight.
The Ass of Wickedness will come next, swift against the goldsmiths, but
slow against the wolves' ravenous appetites. In these days the oaks shall
burn in the forest glades, and acorns shall burgeon on the lime trees' boughs.
The Severn Sea shall flow forth through seven mouths, and the River Usk
shall be boiling hot for seven months. Its fish will die because of the heat,
and from them serpents will be born. The baths shall grow cold at Bath,
and its health-giving waters shall breed death. London shall mourn the
death of twenty thousand, and the Thames will be turned into blood.
Monks in their cowls shall be forced into marriage, and their lamentation
will be heard on the mountain peaks of the Alps.
Three springs shall burst forth in the town of Winchester, and the streams
which run from them will divide the island into three parts. Whoever will
drink from the first will enjoy long life and will never be afflicted by the
onslaught of illness. Whoever will drink from the second shall perish from
insatiable hunger: pallor and dread will be clear to see on his face.
Whoever will drink from the third shall die a sudden death. And it will not
be possible for his body to be buried. In their effort to avoid so voracious
a death, fit men will do their best to cover it over from layers of different
materials, but whatever structure is placed on top will immediately take
on the form of another substance. As soon as they are placed there,
earth will be turned to stones, stones to liquid, wood into ashes, ashes into
water.
However from a town in Canute’s forest, a girl shall be sent to remedy
these matters by her healing art. Once she has consulted all the oracles,
she shall dry up the noxious springs simply by breathing on them. Next,
when she has restored her own strength by some invigorating drink, she
shall carry the Forest of Caledon in her right hand, and in her left the
buttressed forts of the walls of London. Wherever she passes she shall
leave sulphurous footprints which will reek with a double flame. The
smoke from them will stir up the Ruteni and will provide food for the
creatures who live in the sea. Tears of compassion shall flow from her
eyes and will fill the island with her dreadful cries. He that will kill her
shall be a stag of ten tines, four of which will bear golden coronets; the
other six will be turned into the horns of oxen, and these horns will rouse
the three islands of Britain with their accursed bellowing.
The Daneian Forest shall be wakened from its sleep and, burst into
human speech, it shall shout, "Kambria, come here; bring Cornwall at
your side! Say to Winchester, 'The earth will swallow you up. Move the
see of your shepherd to where the ships come in to harbour. Then make
sure that the limbs which remain follow the head! The day approaches
when your citizens will perish for their crime of perjury. The whiteness
of your wool done you harm, and so too has the variety of their dye.
Woe to the perjured people, for their famous city shall come toppling
down because of them! The ships shall rejoice at such a great increase,
and each one of them will be constructed out of the material of two.’”
A Hedgehog loaded with apples shall rebuild the town and, attracted by
the smell of these apples, birds will flock there from many different forests.
The hedgehog shall build a huge palace and then wall it round with six
hundred towers. London will view this with envy and will increase her
own fortifications threefold. The River Thames will surround London on
all sides, and the report of that engineering feat will cross the Alps.
The Hedgehog will hide its apples inside Winchester and will construct
hidden passages under the earth. In that time the stones shall speak.
The sea over which men sail to Gaul shall be contracted into a narrow
channel. A man on any one of the two shores will be audible to a man on
the other, and the land mass of the island will grow greater. The secrets
of the creatures who live under the sea shall be revealed, and Gaul will
tremble for fear.
Next a Heron shall emerge from the Forest of Calaterium and fly around
the island for two whole years. By its cry in the night it will call all winged
creatures together and assemble in its company every genus of bird.
They will swoop down on to the fields which men have cultivated and
devour every kind of harvest. A famine will attack the people, and an
appalling death rate will follow the famine. As soon as this terrible calamity
has come to an end, the accursed Bird will transfer its attention to the
Calabes Valley and rise it up into a lofty mountain. On its highest peak the
heron will plant in an oak, and on the branches of the oak it shall build its
nest; three eggs shall be laid in the nest, and from them will emerge a Fox,
a Wolf, and a Bear. The Fox will devour its mother and then put on an
Ass's head. Once it has assumed this monstrous guise, it will terrify its
brothers and drive them away to Normandy. In that country they will in
their turn stir up the tusky Boar. Back they will come in a boat, and in that
way they will meet the Fox once more. As it begins the contest, the Fox
will pretend that it is dead and will move the Boar to pity. Soon the Boar
will go up to the Fox's corpse. and, standing over it, will breathe into its
eyes and face. The Fox, not unmindful of its ancient cunning, will bite the
Boar’s left hoof and sever it completely from the Boar’s body. Then the
Fox will leap at the Boar and tear off its right ear and its tail and slink
off to hide in the mountain caves. The deluded Boar will then ask the Wolf
and the Bear to restore to it the parts which it has lost.
Once they have agreed to support the Boar, they will promise it two feet,
two ears and one tail, from which they will manufacture a truly porcine
member. The Boar will agree to this and will stand waiting for the promised
return of its parts. Meanwhile the Fox will come down from the mountains
and will metamorphose itself into a Wolf. Under the pretense of holding a
conference with the Bear, it will approach that animal craftily and eat it up.
Then the Fox will change itself into a Boar and stand waiting for its
brothers, pretending that it, too, has lost some of its members. As soon as
they come, it will kill them with its tusk without a moment’s delay and then
have itself crowned with a Lion's head.
In the days of the Fox, a Snake shall be born, and this will bring death to
human beings. It will encircle London with its long tail and devour all there
who pass by. A Mountain Ox will put on a Wolf's head and grind its
teeth white in the Severn's workshop. The Ox will collect round itself the
flocks of Albany and those of Wales, and their company will drain the
Thames dry as it drinks.
An Ass shall call to itself a long-bearded Goat and then will change shapes
with it. As a result the Mountain Bull will lose its temper: it will summon
the Wolf and then transfix the Ass and the Goat with its horn. Once it has
indulged its savage rage upon them, it will eat up their flesh and their bones,
but the Ox itself will be burned up on the summit of Urianus. The ashes of
its funeral pyre shall be transmuted into swans, which will swim away upon
dry land as though in water. These Swans will eat up fish inside fish and they
will swallow men inside men. When they grow old they will take the shape
of sea-wolves and continue their treacherous behaviour beneath the sea.
They will sink ships and gather together quite a treasure house of silver.
Then the Thames shall begin to flow again. It will gather together its
tributaries and overflow the confines of its bed. It will submerge nearby
towns and overturn the mountains in its course. It will join to itself to the
Springs of Calabes, filled as they are to the very brim with wickedness and
deceit.
As a result, a number of mutinies will occur, and these will encourage the
Venedoti to make war. The oaks of the forest shall band together and
come into conflict with the rocks of the Gewissei. A Raven will fly down
with the Kites and eat up the bodies of the dead. An Owl will nest on the
walls of Gloucester, and in its nest will be hatched an Ass. The Snake of
Malvern will nurture this Ass and teach it many deceitful tricks. The Ass
will put on a crown and then clamber above all that is most lofty and terrify
the people with its hideous braying. In the days of the Ass the Pacaian
Mountains shall totter, and the country districts shall be deprived of their
forest lands, for there shall come a Worm which will puff forth fire, and this
Worm will burn up the trees with the breath which it exhales.
Out of the Worm shall come seven lions malformed with goats’ heads.
With the fetid breath from their nostrils, they will corrupt married women
and cause wives so far faithful to one husband to become common
prostitutes. The father shall not know his own son, for human beings will
copulate wantonly as cattle do. Then indeed shall come a very Giant of
wickedness who will terrify everyone with the piercing glance of his eyes.
Against him will arise the dragon of Worcester, which will do its best to
destroy him; but when they come to grips, the Dragon will be worsted and
overwhelmed by its conqueror's wickedness, which will terrify everyone.
The Giant will climb on the Dragon, throw off all his clothes, and then ride
upon it naked. The Dragon will rear the Giant up in the air and lash his
naked body with its erected tail, but the Giant will recover his strength and
cut the Dragon’s throat with his sword. Finally, the Dragon will become
entangled in its own tail and die of poison.
The boar of Totnes shall succeed the Giant and will oppress the people
with grievous tyranny. Gloucester shall send a lion which will harass the
raging Boar in a series of battles. This Lion will trample the Boar under
foot and terrify it with its open maw. Finally the Lion will be at odds with
all in the kingdom and climb up on the backs of the nobles.
A Bull will pursue the Lion through all the narrow byways of the kingdom,
but in the end it will break its horns against the walls of Oxford. The Fox
of Caerdubalum will wreak vengeance on the Lion and tear it up with its
teeth. Then the Adder of Lincoln will coil round the Fox and announce its
presence to the assembled Dragon with a terrifying hiss.
The Dragons will attack each other and tear each other to pieces.
A Dragon with wings will overwhelm the Dragon without wings, driving its
venomous claws into the other’s muzzle. Two more Dragons will join the
battle, and the one will kill the other. A fifth Dragon will replace the two
dead ones and will destroy the two left alive by various stratagems. It will
climb on the back of one, holding a sword in its claws, and hack its head
away from its body. Then it will cast its slough and climb on the second
one with its opponent's tail in its right and left claws. Naked, it will
overwhelm the other; when fully covered, it will achieve nothing. It will
torment other Dragons by climbing on their backs and will drive them
round the kingdom.
Then a roaring Lion will intervene, terrifying in its monstrous cruelty. This
Lion will reduce fifteen portions to a single entity, and by itself it will hold
the people in its power. A Giant, snow-white in colour and gleaming bright,
will beget a radiant people.
Soft living will enervate the leaders, and those under their command will be
changed into beasts. In their number will arise a Lion, fat with human blood.
A Man with a Sickle will act as the Lion's helper in the harvest, but when
the man is perplexed in his mind, the Lion will destroy him.
The Charioteer of York will soothe the people. He will throw his master
out and climb up into the chariot which he is driving. He will draw his sword
and threaten the East, and he will fill with blood the ruts made by his wheels.
Next he will turn himself into a Sea-fish and mate with a Snake which has
attracted him by its hissing. As a result, there shall be born three Bulls,
which will glitter like lightning. They will eat up their pasture lands and then
be turned into trees. The first Bull will carry a whip made of vipers, and it
will turn its back on the one born second. The second Bull will struggle to
snatch the whip from the first, but the whip will be seized by the third.
They will avert their gaze from each other until they have thrown away the
poison cup.
A Farmer from Albany shall take their place, and down his back a Snake
shall hang. He will spend his time ploughing the earth, so that the harvests
of his homeland may grow white, but the Snake will busy itself in scattering
poison to prevent the green corn from ever coming to harvest.
The population shall decrease through some deadly calamity, and the walls
of the towns will come tumbling down. The City of Claudius will be
proposed as a source of remedy, and this city will put forward the
Foster-daughter of the Scourger. She shall come bearing a saucer of
medicine, and in next to no time the island will be restored.
Two men shall hold the sceptre, one after the other, and a Horned Dragon
will serve them both. The first man will come clad in iron and riding upon
a flying Serpent. He will sit astride its back, with his body naked, and he
will grasp its tail in his right hand. The seas will be made turbulent by his
cry, and he will strike terror into the second man. As a result, the second
man will make an alliance with a Lion, but a quarrel will ensue, and they
will fight. Each of the two will suffer greatly from the other's blows, but the
animal's ferocity will enable it to win.
A man shall come with a drum and a lute, and he will soothe the Lion’s
savageness. The various peoples in the kingdom will be pacified as a result,
and they will encourage the Lion to take the saucer of medicine. As it sits
in the dwelling allocated to it, it will examine the dose, but it will stretch out
its hand toward Albany. The regions of the north will be saddened by this,
and they will throw open the gates of their temples.
A Wolf will act as standard bearer, and it will coil its tail round Cornwall.
A soldier in a chariot will resist the Wolf and transform the Cornish people
into a Boar. As a result the Boar will devastate the provinces, but it will
hide its head in the depths of the Severn.
A man shall wrestle with a drunken Lion, and the gleam of gold will blind
the eyes of the onlookers. Silver will shine white in the open space, causing
trouble to a number of wine presses. Men will become drunk with the
wine which is offered to them; they will turn their backs on Heaven and fix
their eyes on the earth. The stars will avert their gaze from these men and
alter their accustomed course. The harvests will dry up through the star’s
anger, and all moisture from the sky will cease. Roots and branches shall
change their places, and the oddness of this will pass for a miracle.
Before the amber glow of Mercury the bright light of the Sun shall grow
dim, and this will strike horror into those who witness it. The planet
Mercury, born in Arcady, shall change its shield, and the Helmet of Mars
shall call to Venus. The Helmet of Mars shall cast a shadow, and in rage
Mercury shall overrun its orbit. Iron Orion shall bare its sword. The
watery Sun shall torment the clouds. Jupiter shall abandon its preordained
paths, and Venus desert its appointed circuits. The malice of the planet
Saturn will pour down like rain, killing mortal men as though with a curved
sickle. The twelve mansions of the stars will weep to see their inmates
transgress so. The Gemini will cease their wanton embraces and will
dispatch Aquarius to the fountains. The scales of Libra will hang awry
until Aries props them up with its curving horns. The tail of Scorpio shall
generate lightning, and Cancer will fight with the Sun. Virgo shall climb on
back of Sagittarius and so let droop its maiden blossoms. The Moon’s
chariot shall run amok in the Zodiac; the Pleiades will burst into tears.
None of these will return to the duty expected of it. Ariadne will shut its
door and be hidden within its enclosing cloud banks.
In the twinkling of an eye the seas shall rise up, and the arena of the winds
shall be opened once again. The winds shall do battle together with a blast
of ill-omen, making their din reverberate from one constellation to another.
- From "Sunday Prophecies of Merlin, Becket, and Others", Author Unknown
published in London in 1652.- "The History of the Kings of Britain, The Prophecies of
Merlin" by Geoffrey of Monmouth, and other sources -