The Compleat Works of Nostradamus -=][ compiled and entered in PDF format by Arcanaeum: 2003 ][=- Table of Contents: Preface Century I Century II Century III Century IV Century V Century VI Century VII Century VIII Century IX Century X Epistle To King Henry II Pour les ans Courans en ce Siecle (roughly translated: for the years’ events in this century) Almanacs: 1555-1563 Note: Many of these are written in French with the English Translation directly beneath them. Preface by: M. Nostradamus to his Prophecies Greetings and happiness to César Nostradamus my son Your late arrival, César Nostredame, my son, has made me spend much time in constant nightly reflection so that I could communicate with you by letter and leave you this reminder, after my death, for the benefit of all men, of which the divine spirit has vouchsafed me to know by means of astronomy. And since it was the Almighty's will that you were not born here in this region [Provence] and I do not want to talk of years to come but of the months during which you will struggle to grasp and understand the work I shall be compelled to leave you after my death: assuming that it will not be possible for me to leave you such [clearer] writing as may be destroyed through the injustice of the age [1555]. The key to the hidden prediction which you will inherit will be locked inside my heart. Also bear in mind that the events here described have not yet come to pass, and that all is ruled and governed by the power of Almighty God, inspiring us not by bacchic frenzy nor by enchantments but by astronomical assurances: predictions have been made through the inspiration of divine will alone and the spirit of prophecy in particular. On numerous occasions and over a long period of time I have predicted specific events far in advance, attributing all to the workings of divine power and inspiration, together with other fortunate or unfortunate happenings, foreseen in their full unexpectedness, which have already come to pass in various regions of the earth. Yet I have wished to remain silent and abandon my work because of the injustice not only of the present time [the Inquisition] but also for most of the future. I will not commit to writing. Since governments, sects and countries will undergo such sweeping changes, diametrically opposed to what now obtains, that were I to relate events to come, those in power now - monarchs, leaders of sects and religions - would find these so different from their own imaginings that they would be led to condemn what later centuries will learn how to see and understand. Bear in mind also Our Saviour's words: Do not give anything holy to the dogs, nor throw pearls in front of the pigs lest they trample them with their feet and turn on you and tear you apart. For this reason I withdrew my pen from the paper, because I wished to amplify my statement touching the Vulgar Advent (1), by means of ambiguous and enigmatic comments about future causes, even those closest to us and those I have perceived, so that some human change which may come to pass shall not unduly scandalize delicate sensibilities. The whole work is thus written in a nebulous rather than plainly prophetic form. So much so that, You have hidden these things from the wise and the circumspect, that is from the mighty and the rulers, and you have purified those things for the small and the poor, and through Almighty God's will, revealed unto those prophets with the power to perceive what is distant and thereby to foretell things to come. For nothing can be accomplished without this faculty, whose power and goodness work so strongly in those to whom it is given that, while they contemplate within themselves, these powers are subject to other influences arising from the force of good. This warmth and strength of prophecy invests us with its influence as the sun's rays affect both animate and inanimate entities. We human beings cannot through our natural consciousness and intelligence know anything of God the Creator's hidden secrets, For it is not for us to know the times or the instants, etc. So much so that persons of future times may be seen in present ones, because God Almighty has wished to reveal them by means of images, together with various secrets of the future vouchsafed to orthodox astrology, as was the case in the past, so that a measure of power and divination passed through them, the flame of the spirit inspiring them to pronounce upon inspiration both human and divine. God may bring into being divine works, which are absolute; there is another level, that of angelic works; and a third way, that of the evildoers. But my son, I address you here a little too obscurely. As regards the occult prophecies one is vouchsafed through the subtle spirit of fire, which the understanding sometimes stirs through contemplation of the distant stars as if in vigil, likewise by means of pronouncements, one finds oneself surprised at producing writings without fear of being stricken for such impudent loquacity. The reason is that all this proceeds from the divine power of Almighty God from whom all bounty proceeds. And so once again, my son, if I have eschewed the word prophet, I do not wish to attribute to myself such lofty title at the present time, for whoever is called a prophet now was once called a seer; since a prophet, my son, is properly speaking one who sees distant things through a natural knowledge of all creatures. And it can happen that the prophet bringing about the perfect light of prophecy may make manifest things both human and divine, because this cannot be done otherwise, given that the effects of predicting the future extend far off into time. God's mysteries are incomprehensible and the power to influence events is bound up with the great expanse of natural knowledge, having its nearest most immediate origin in free will and describing future events which cannot be understood simply through being revealed. Neither can they be grasped through men's interpretations nor through another mode of cognizance or occult power under the firmament, neither in the present nor in the total eternity to come. But bringing about such an indivisible eternity through Herculean efforts (2), things are revealed by the planetary movements. I am not saying, my son - mark me well, here - that knowledge of such things cannot be implanted in your deficient mind, or that events in the distant future may not be within the understanding of any reasoning being. Nevertheless, if these things current or distant are brought to the awareness of this reasoning and intelligent being they will be neither too obscure nor too clearly revealed. Perfect knowledge of such things cannot be acquired without divine inspiration, given that all prophetic inspiration derives its initial origin from God Almighty, then from chance and nature. Since all these portents are produced impartially, prophecy comes to pass partly as predicted. For understanding created by the intellect cannot be acquired by means of the occult, only by the aid of the zodiac, bringing forth that small flame by whose light part of the future may be discerned. Also, my son, I beseech you not to exercise your mind upon such reveries and vanities as drain the body and incur the soul's perdition, and which trouble our feeble frames. Above all avoid the vanity of that most execrable magic formerly reproved by the Holy Scriptures - only excepting the use of official astrology. For by the latter, with the help of inspiration and divine revelation, and continual calculations, I have set down my prophecies in writing. Fearing lest this occult philosophy be condemned, I did not therefore wish to make known its dire import; also fearful that several books which had lain hidden for long centuries might be discovered, and of what might become of them, after reading them I presented them to Vulcan. [i.e. burned them]. And while he devoured them, the flame licking the air gave out such an unexpected light, clearer than that of an ordinary flame and resembling fire from some flashing cataclysm, and suddenly illumined the house as if it were caught in a furnace. Which is why I reduced them to ashes then, so that none might be tempted to use occult labours in searching for the perfect transmutation, whether lunar or solar, of incorruptible metals (3). But as to that discernment which can be achieved by the aid of planetary scrutiny, I should like to tell you this. Eschewing any fantastic imaginings, you may through good judgement have insight into the future if you keep to the specific names of places that accord with planetary configurations, and with inspiration places and aspects yield up hidden properties, namely that power in whose presence the three times [past, present, and future]are understood as Eternity whose unfolding contains them all: for all things are naked and open. That is why, my son, you can easily, despite your young brain, understand that events can be foretold naturally by the heavenly bodies and by the spirit of prophecy: I do not wish to ascribe to myself the title and role of prophet, but emphasize inspiration revealed to a mortal man whose perception is no further from heaven than the feet are from the earth. I cannot fail, err or be deceived, although I may be as great a sinner as anyone else upon this earth and subject to all human afflictions. But after being surprised sometimes by day while in a trance, and having long fallen into the habit of agreeable nocturnal studies, I have composed books of prophecies, each containing one hundred astronomical quatrains, which I want to condense somewhat obscurely. The work comprises prophecies from today to the year 3797. This may perturb some, when they see such a long time-span, and this will occur and be understood in all the fullness of the Republic (4); these things will be universally understood upon earth, my son. If you live the normal lifetime of man you will know upon your own soil, under your native sky, how future events are to turn out. For only Eternal God knows the eternity of His light which proceeds from Him, and I speak frankly to those to whom His immeasurable, immense and incomprehensible greatness has been disposed to grant revelations through long, melancholy inspiration, that with the aid of this hidden element manifested by God, there are two principal factors which make up the prophet's intelligence. The first is when the supernatural light fills and illuminates the person who predicts by astral science, while the second allows him to prophesy through inspired revelation, which is only a part of the divine eternity, whereby the prophet comes to assess what his divinatory power has given him through the grace of God and by a natural gift, namely, that what is foretold is true and ethereal in origin (5). And such a light and small flame is of great efficacy and scope, and nothing less than the clarity of nature itself. The light of human nature makes the philosophers so sure of themselves that with the principles of the first cause they reach the loftiest doctrines and the deepest abysses. But my son, lest I venture too far for your future perception, be aware that men of letters shall make grand and usually boastful claims about the way I interpreted the world, before the worldwide conflagration which is to bring so many catastrophes and such revolutions that scarcely any lands will not be covered by water (6), and this will last until all has perished save history and geography themselves. This is why, before and after these revolutions in various countries, the rains will be so diminished and such abundance of fire and fiery missiles shall fall from the heavens that nothing shall escape the holocaust. And this will occur before the last conflagration [1999]. For before war ends the [twentieth] century and in its final stages [1975-99] it will hold the century under its sway. Some countries will be in the grip of revolution (7) for several years, and others ruined for a still longer period. And now that we are in a republican era, with Almighty God's aid, and before completing its full cycle, the monarchy will return, then the Golden Age (8). For according to the celestial signs, the Golden Age shall return, and after all calculations, with the world near to an all-encompassing revolution - from the time of writing 177 years 3 months 11 days (9) - plague, long famine and wars, and still more floods from now until the stated time. Before and after these, humanity shall several times be so severely diminished that scarcely anyone shall be found who wishes to take over the fields, which shall become free where they had previously been tied. This will be after the visible judgement of heaven, before we reach the millennium which shall complete all. In the firmament of the eighth sphere, a dimension whereon Almighty God will complete the revolution, and where the constellations will resume their motion which will render the earth stable and firm, but only if He will remain unchanged for ever until His will be done. This is in spite of all the ambiguous opinions surpassing all natural reason, expressed by Mahomet; which is why God the Creator, through the ministry of his fiery agents with their flames, will come to propose to our perceptions as well as our eyes the reasons for future predictions. Signs of events to come must be manifested to whomever prophesies. For prophecy which stems from exterior illumination is part of that light and seeks to ally with it and bring it into being so that the part which seems to possess the faculty of understanding is not subject to a sickness of the mind. Reason is only too evident. Everything is predicted by divine afflatus (10) and thanks to an angelic spirit inspiring the one prophesying, consecrating his predictions through divine unction. It also divests him of all fantasies by means of various nocturnal apparitions, while with daily certainty he prophesies through the science of astronomy, with the aid of sacred prophecy, his only consideration being his courage in freedom. So come, my son, strive to understand what I have found out through my calculations which accord with revealed inspiration, because now the sword of death approaches us, with pestilence and war more horrible than there has ever been - because of three men's work - and famine. And this sword shall smite the earth and return to it often, for the stars confirm this upheaval and it is also written: I shall punish their injustices with iron rods, and shall strike them with blows. For God's mercy will be poured forth only for a certain time, my son, until the majority of my prophecies are fulfilled and this fulfillment (sic) is complete. Then several times in the course of the doleful tempests the Lord shall say: Therefore I shall crush and destroy and show no mercy; and many other circumstances shall result from floods and continual rain (11) of which I have written more fully in my other prophecies, composed at some length, not in a chronological sequence, in prose, limiting the places and times and exact dates so that future generations will see, while experiencing these inevitable events, how I have listed others in clearer language, so that despite their obscurities these things shall be understood: When the time comes for the removal of ignorance, the matter will be clearer still. So in conclusion, my son, take this gift from your father M. Nostradamus, who hopes you will understand each prophecy in every quatrain herein. May Immortal God grant you a long life of good and prosperous happiness. Salon, 1 March 1555 Notes [by original editor of this document]: 1.Le commun advènement, the Vulgar Advent, or the accession of the people to power, is generally taken by commentators to refer first to republicanism (via the French Revolution), then to its development towards and change into communism. (Tr.) 2.Nostradamus here compares his work, the twelve Centuries, to the Twelve Labours of Hercules, in order to stress their difficulty and importance. 3.Moon and Sun are constant symbols in Nostradamus of the republic and the monarchy respectively, hence the alchemic imagery also has a political aspect here. 4.Reference to toute la concavité de la lune. Cf. note 3 above. 5.Ether: originally personified as a deity of the upper atmosphere, and later confused with Zeus. (DL7V). 6.Water and flooding are often as a symbol of revolution in Nostradamus. 7.The French text refers to Aquarius, i.e. the water-bearer. Cf. note 6 above. 8.Golden Age: rule of Saturn, the happy, peaceful time, to commemorate which the Romans celebrated with Saturnalia. 9.1555 + 177 = 1732, the exact date when Rousseau arrived in Paris, Nostradamus considered Rousseau the father of revolutionary and atheistic ideas. 10.Breath or inspiration, oracular possession. 11.Upheavals and revolution. Cf. notes 6 and 7 above. Abbreviations: Cf. "confer", Latin, compare. DL7V "Dictionnaire Larousse", 7 vol. etc. et cetera, French, and others. i.e. "id est", Latin, that is. M. Michel or Monsieur. Tr. translator. vol. volumes. Notes Specific to This Reproduction This text is reproduced from Nostradamus, Countdown to Apocalypse written by Jean-Charles de Fontbrune, translated by Alexis Lykiard, prefaced by Liz Greene, and published by Henry Holt and Company, Inc., New York, 1983. This largely literal translation is reproduced, here, as accurately as possible. The "original" source is Les Prophéties de M. Michel Nostradamus, the edition of 1568 by Benoist Rigaud at Lyon; stored in 8. B.U. "Montepellier", no. 48340. De Fontbrune uses the second edition of 1605 by Benoist Rigaud at Lyon. This is a complete copy of the 1568 edition which is considered the most reliable. If we accept the 1568 edition as an accurate reproduction, which is reasonable, then this reproduction, here, has been copied once from the 1568 edition to the 1605, copied again by De Fontbrune, translated once from 16th- century French with a Proven&cced;al accent to modern English by Alexis Lykiard, and finally copied to the form you see here. The Latin (sic), meaning thus, has been inserted after words to indicate an exact reproduction of the original, including spelling mistakes and grammatical errors due to translation. Ray.Lampman@FullFeed.Com This is the first Centurie by Nostradamus, first printed on May 4, 1555 in Lyons by Macé Bonhomme. This first edition contained the Preface to his on César and 353 quatrains. A reprint was done by Bareste in 1840, unfortunately the original was lost. CENTURIE I I. ESTANT assis de nuict secret estude, Seul reposé sur la selle d'ærain: Flambe exigue sortant de solitude, Fait prosperer qui n'est à croire vain. Sitting alone at night in secret study; it is placed on the brass tripod. A slight flame comes out of the emptiness and makes successful that which should not be beleived in vain. II. La vierge en main mise au milieu de Branches De l'onde il moulle & le l'imbe & le pied: Vn peur & voix fremissent par les manches: Splendeur diuine. Le diuin pres s'assied. The wand in the hand is placed in the middle of the tripod's legs. With water he sprinkles both the hem of his garment and his foot. A voice, fear: he trembles in his robes. Divine splendour; the god sits nearby. III. Quand la lictiere du tourbillon versee, Et seront faces de leurs manteaux couuers, La republique par gens nouveaux vexee, Lors blancs & rouges iureront à l'enuers. When the litters are overturned by the whirlwind and faces are covered by cloaks, the new republic will be troubled by its people. At this time the reds and the whites will rule wrongly. IV. Par l'vnivers sera faict vn monarque, Qu'en paix & vie ne sera longuement: Lors se perdra la piscature barque, Sera regie en plus grand detriment. In the world there will be made a king who will have little peace and a short life. At this time the ship of the Papacy will be lost, governed to its greatest detriment. V. Chassez seront pour faire long combat, Par les pays seront plus fort greuez: Bourg & cité auront plus grand debat. Carcas. Narbonne auront coeur esprouuez. They will be driven away for a long drawn out fight. The countryside will be most grievously troubled. Town and country will have greater struggle. Carcassonne and Narbonne will have their hearts tried. VII. Tard arriué l'execution faicte, Le vent contraire lettres au chemin prinses: Les coniurez XIIIJ. d'vne secte, Par le Rousseau senez les entreprinses. Arrived too late, the act has been done. The wind was against them, letters intercepted on their way. The conspirators were fourteen of a party. By Rousseau shall these enterprises be undertaken. VIII. Combien de fois prinse cité solitaire Seras changeant ses loix barbares & vaines: Ton mal s'aproche. Plus seras tributaires Le grand Hardie recouurira tes veines. How often will you be captured, O city of the sun ? Changing laws that are barbaric and vain. Bad times approach you. No longer will you be enslaved. Great Hadrie will revive your veins. IX. De l'Orient viendra le coeur Punique Fascher Hadrie, & les hoires Romulides, Acompagne de la classe Libique, emples Melites & proches Isles vuides. From the Orient will come the African heart to trouble Hadrie and the heirs of Romulus. Accompanied by the Libyan fleet the temples of Malta and nearby islands shall be deserted. X. Serpens transmis en la cage de fer, Ou les enfans septains du Roy sont pris: Les vieux & peres sortirons bas de l'enfer, Ains mourir voir de fruict mort & cris. A coffin is put into the vault of iron, where seven children of the king are held. The ancestors and forebears will come forth from the depths of hell, lamenting to see thus dead the fruit of their line. XI. Le mouuement de sens, coeur pieds & mains, Seront d'accord. Naples, Lyon, Sicile. Glaiues, feux, eaux, puis aux nobles Romains, Plongez, tuez, morts par cerueau debile The motion of senses, heart, feet and hands will be in agreement between Naples, Lyon and Sicily. Swords fire, floods, then the noble Romans drowned, killed or dead because of a weak brain. XII. Dans peu dira fauce brute fragile De bas en haut esleué promptement: Puis en istant desloyale & labile, Qui de Veronne aura gouuernement. There will soon be talk of a treacherous man, who rules a short time, quickly raised from low to high estate. He will suddenly turn disloyal and volatile. This man will govern Verona. XIII. Les exilez par ire, haine intestine, Feront au Roy grand coniuration: Secret mettront ennemis par la mine, Et ses vieux siens contre eux sedition. Through anger and internal hatreds, the exiles will hatch a great plot against the king. Secretly they will place enemies as a threat, and his own old (adherents) will find sedition against them. XIV. De gent esclaue chansons, chants & requestes, Captifs par Princes & Seigneurs aux prisons: A l'aduenir par idiots sans testes, Seront receus par diuines oraisons. From the enslaved populace, songs, chants and demands, while Princes and Lords are held captive in prisons. These will in the future by headless idiots be received as divine prayers XV. Mars nous menasse par sa force bellique, Septante fois fera le sang espandre: Auge & ruyne de l'Ecclesiastique Et plus ceux qui d'eux rien voudront entendre. Mars threatens us with the force of war and will cause blood to be spilt seventy times. The clergy will be both exalted and reviled moreover, by those who wish to learn nothing of them. XVI. Faux à l'estang ioinct vers le Sagittaire, En son haut AVGE de l'exaltation, Peste, famine, mort de main militaire, Le siecle approche de renouation. A scythe joined with a pond in Sagittarius at its highest ascendant. Plague, famine, death from military hands; the century approaches its renewal. XVII. Par quarante ans l'Iris n'apparoistra, Par quarante ans tous les iours sera veu: La terre aride en siccité croistra, Et grands deloges quand sera apperceu. For forty years the rainbow will not be seen. For forty years it will be seen every day. The dry earth will grow more parched, and there will be great floods when it is seen. XVIII. Par la discorde Negligence Gauloise, Sera passage à Mahommet ouuert: De sang trempé la terre & mer Senoise, Le port Phocen de voilles & nerfs couuert. Because of French discord and negligence an opening shall be given to the Mohammedans. The land and sea of Siena will be soaked in blood, and the port of Marseilles covered with ships and sails. XIX. Lors que serpens viendront circuer l'arc, Le sang Troyen vexé par les Espaignes: Par eux grand nombre en sera faicte tarc, Chef fruict, caché aux marcs dans les saignes. When the snakes surround the altar, and the Trojan blood is troublerd by the Spanish. Because of them, a great number will be lessened. The leader flees, hidden in the swampy marshes. XX. Tours, Oriens, Blois, Angers, Reims & Nantes, Cités vexees par subit changement. Par langues estranges seront tenduës tentes, Fleuues, dards Renes terre & mer tremblement. The cities of Tours, Orleans, Blois, Angers, Reims and Nantes are troubled by sudden change. Tents will be pitched by (people) of foreign tongues; rivers, darts at Rennes, shaking of land and sea. XXI. Profonde argille blanche nourrit rocher, Qui d'vn abysme istra lacticineuse, En vain troublez ne l'oseront toucher, Ignorant estre au fond terre argilleuse. The rock holds in its depths white clay which will come out milk-white from a cleft Needlessly troubled people will not dare touch it, unaware that the foundation of the earth is of clay. XXII. Ce que viura & n'ayant aucun sens, Viendront leser à mort son artifice: Autun, Chalon, Langres, & les deux Sens, La gresle & glace fera grand malefice. A thing existing without any senses will cause its own end to happen through artifice. At Autun, Chalan, Langres and the two Sens there will be great damage from hail and ice. XXIII. Au mois troisiesme se leuant le Soleil, Sanglier, Leopart, au champ mars pour côbatre Leopart lassé au ciel estend son oeil, Vn Aigle autour du Soleil voyt s'esbatre. In the third month, at sunrise, the Boar and the Leopard meet on the battlefield. The fatigued Leopard looks up to heaven and sees an eagle playing around the sun. XXIV. A cité neuue pensif pour condamner, L'oisel de proye au ciel se vient offrir: Apres victoire à captif pardonner, Cremone & Mâtoue grâds maux aura souffert. At the New City he is thoughtfil to condemn; the bird of prey offers himself to the gods. After victory he pardons his captives. At Cremona and Mantua great hardships will be suffered. XXV. Perdu trouué caché de si long siecle, Sera pasteur demy Dieu honnore: Ains que la Lune acheue son grand siecle, Par autres vents sera deshonnoré. The lost thing is discovered, hidden for many centuries. Pasteur will be celebrated almost as a god-like figure. This is when the moon completes her great cycle, but by other rumours he shall be dishonoured. XXVI. Le grand du foudre tumbe d'heure diurne, Mal, & predict par porteur postulaire: Suiuant presage tumbe de l'heure nocturne, Conflict Reims, Londres, Ettrusque pestifere. The great man will be struck down in the day by a thunderbolt. An evil deed, foretold by the beare of a petition. According to the prediction another falls at night time. Conflict at Reims, London, and pestilence in Tuscany. XXVII. Dessouz le chaine Guien du ciel frappé, Non loing de là est caché le thresor: Qui par longs siecles auoit esté grappé, Trouué mourra, l'oeil creué de ressort. Beneath the oak tree of Gienne, struck by lightning, the treasure is hidden not far from there. That which for many centuries had been gathered, when found, a man will die, his eye pierced by a spring. XXVIII. La tour de Boucq craindra fuste Barbare, Vn temps, long temps apres barque hesperique: Bestail, gês, meubles, tous deux ferôt grâd tare, Taurus, & Libra, quelle mortelle picque? Tobruk will fear the barbarian fleet for a time, then much later the Western fleet. Cattle, people, possessions, all will be quite lost. What a deadly combat in Taurus and Libra. XXIX. Quand le poisson terrestre & aquatique Par forte vague au grauier sera mis, Sa forme estrange suaue & horrifique, Par mes aux meurs bien tost les ennemis. When the fish that travels over both land and sea is cast up on to the shore by a great wave, its shape foreign, smooth and frightful. From the sea the enemies soon reach the walls. XXX. La nef estrange par le tourment marin, Abordera pres de port incogneu: Nonobstant signes de rameau palmerin, Apres mort pille bon aduis tard venu. Because of the storm at sea the foreign ship will approach an unknown port. Notwithstanding the signs of the palm branches, afterwards there is death and pillage. Good advice comes too late. XXXI. Tant d'ans en Gaule les guerres dureront, Outre la course du Castulon monarque: Victoire incerte trois grands couronneront, Aigle, Coq, Lune, Lyon, Soleil en marque. The wars in France will last for so many years beyond the reign of the Castulon kings. An uncertain victory will crown three great ones, the Eagle, the Cock, the Moon, the Lion, the Sun in its house. XXXII. Le grand Empire sera tost translaté En lieu petit, qui bien tost viendra croistre, Lieu bien infime d'exigue comté, Où au milieu viendra poser son sceptre. The great Empire will soon be exchanged for a small place, which soon will begin to grow. A small place of tiny area in the middle of which he will come to lay down his sceptre. XXXIII. Pres d'vn grand pont de plaine spatieuse, Le grand Lyon par forces Cesarees, Fera abbatre hors cité rigoreuse, Par effroy portes luy seront reserrees. Near a great bridge near a spacious plain the great lion with the Imperial forces will cause a falling outside the austere city. Through fear the gates will be unlocked for him. XXXIV. L'oyseau de proye volant à la senestre, Auant conflict faict aux Fran&cced;ois pareure: L'vn bon prendra, l'vn ambique sinistre, La partie foible tiendra par son augure. The bird of prey flying to the left, before battle is joined with the French, he makes preparations. Some will regard him as good, others bad or uncertain. The weaker party will regard him as a good omen. XXXV. Le lyon ieune le vieux surmontera, En champ bellique par singulier duelle: Dans cage d'or les yeux luy creuera, Deux classes vne, puis mourir, mort cruelle. The young lion will overcome the older one, in a field of combat in single fight: He will pierce his eyes in their golden cage; two wounds in one, then he dies a cruel death. XXXVI. Tard le monarque se viendra repentir, De n'auoir mis à mort son aduersaire: Mais viendra bien à plus haut consentir, Que tout son sang par mort fera deffaire. Too late the king will repent that he did not put his adversary to death. But he will soon come to agree to far greater things which will cause all his line to die. XXXVII. Vn peu deuant que le Soleil s'absconde, Conflict donné, grand peuple dubiteux: Profligez, port marin ne faict response, Pont & sepulchre en deux estranges lieux Shortly before sun set, battle is engaged. A great nation is uncertain. Overcome, the sea port makes no answer, the bridge and the grave both in foreign places. XXXVIII. Le Sol & l'Aigle au victeur paroistront, Response vaine au vaincu l'on asseure: Par cor ne crys harnois n'arresteront, Vindicte paix par mors si acheue à l'heure. The Sun and the Eagle will appear to the victor. An empty answer assured to the defeated. Neither bugle nor shouts will stop the soldiers. Liberty and peace, if achieved in time through death. XXXIX. De nuict dans lict le supresme estranglé, Pour trop auoir seiourné blond esleu. Par trois l'Empire subrogé exanclé, A mort mettra carte, & pacquet ne leu. At night the last one will be strangled in his bed because he became too involved with the blond heir elect. The Empire is enslaved and three men substituted. He is put to death with neither letter nor packet read. XL. La trompe fausse dissimulant folie, Fera Bisance vn changement de loix, Histra d'Egypte, qui veut que l on deffie Edict changeant monnoyes & aloys. The false trumpet concealing maddness will cause Byzantium to change its laws. From Egypt there will go forth a man who wants the edict withdrawn, changing money and standards. XLI. Siege en cité est de nuict assallie, Peu eschappé, non loin de mer conflict: Femme de ioye, retours fils defaillie, Poison & lettres cachees dans le plic. The city is beseiged and assaulted by night; few have escaped; a battle not far from the sea. A woman faints with joy at the return of her son, poison in the folds of the hidden letters. XLII. Le dix Calendes d'Auril de faict Gotique, Resuscité encor par gens malins: Le feu estainct, assemblee diabolique, Cherchant les os du d'Amant & Pselin. The tenth day of the April Calends, calculated in Gothic fashion is revived again by wicked people. The fire is put out and the diabolic gathering seek the bones of the demon of Psellus. XLIII. Auant qu'aduienne le changement d'Empire, Il aduiendra vn cas bien merueilleux: Le camp mué, le pillier de porphire, Mis, transmué sus le rocher noilleux. Before the Empire changes a very wonderful event will take place. The field moved, the pillar of porphyry put in place, changed on the gnarled rock. XLIV. En bref seront de retour sacrifices, Contreuenans seront mis à martyre: Plus ne seront moines, abbes, ne nouices, Le miel sera beaucoup plus cher que cire. In a short time sacrifices will be resumed, those opposed will be put (to death) like martyrs. The will no longer be monks, abbots or novices. Honey shall be far more expensive than wax. XLV. Secteur de sectes grand peine au delateur, Beste en theatre dressé le ieu scenique, Du faict antique ennobly l'inuenteur, Par sectes monde confus & schismatiques. A founder of sects, much trouble for the accuser: A beast in the theatre prepares the scene and plot. The author ennobled by acts of older times; the world is confused by schismatic sects. XLVI. Tout apres d'Aux de Lestore & Mirande Grand feu du ciel en trois nuicts tombera: Cause aduiendra bien stupende & mirande, Bien peu apres la terre tremblera. Very near Auch, Lectoure and Mirande a great fire will fall from the sky for three nights. The cause will appear both stupefying and marvellous; shortly afterwards there will be an earthquake. XLVII. Du lac Leman les sermons fascheront, Des iours seront reduits par des sepmaines, Puis moys, puis an, puis tous failliront, Les Magistras danneront leur loix vaines. The speeches of Lake Leman will become angered, the days will drag out into weeks, then months, then years, then all will fail. The authorities will condemn their useless powers. XLVIII. Vingt ans du regne de la Lune passez, Sept mil ans autre tiendra sa monarchie: Quand le Soleil prendra ses iours lassez: Lors accomplir & mine ma prophetie. When twenty years of the Moon's reign have passed another will take up his reign for seven thousend years. When the exhausted Sun takes up his cycle then my prophecy and threats will be accomplished. XLIX. Baucoup auant telles menees, Ceux d'Orient par la vertu lunaire: L'an mil sept cens feront grands emmenees, Subiungant presques le coing Aquilonaire. Long before these happenings the people of the East, influenced by the Moon, in the year 1700 will cause many to be carried away, and will almost subdue the Northern area. L. De l'aquatique triplicité naistra, D'vn qui fera le Ieudy pour sa feste: Son bruit, loz, regne, sa puissance croistra, Par terre & mer aux Oriens tempeste. From the three water signs will be born a man who will celbrate Thursday as his holiday. His renown, praise, rule and power will grow on land and sea, bringing trouble to the East. LI. Chef d'Aries, Iupiter, & Saturne, Dieu eternel quelles mutations? Puis par long siecle son maling temps retourne Gaule & Italie, quelles esmotions? The head of Aries, Jupiter and Saturn. Eternal God, what changes ! Then the bad times will return again after a long century; what turmoil in France and Italy. LII. Les deux malins de Scorpion conioinct, Le grand Seigneur meurdry dedans sa salle: Peste à l'Eglise par le nouueau Roy ioinct, L'Europe basse & Septentrionale. Two evil influences in conjunction in Scopio. The great lord is murdered in his room. A newly appointed king persecutes the Church, the lower (parts of) Europe and in the North. LIII. Las! qu'on verra grand peuple tourmenté, Et la loy saincte en totale ruine, Par autres loix toute la Chrestienté, Quand d'or d'argent trouue nouuelle mine. Alas, how we will see a great nation sorely troubled and the holy law in utter ruin. Christianity (governed) throughout by other laws, when a new source of gold and silver is discovered. LIV. Deux reuolts faicts du maling falcigere, De regne & siecles faict permutation: Le mobil signe à son endroit si ingere, Aux deux esgaux & d'inclination. Two revolutions will be caused by the evil scythe bearer making a change of reign and centuries. The mobile sign thus moves into its house: Equal in favour to both sides. LV. Soubs l'opposite climat Babilonique, Grande sera de sang effusion, Que terre & mer, air, ciel sera inique, Sectes, faim, regnes pestes, confusion. I the land with a climate opposite to Babylon there will be great shedding of blood. Heaven will seem unjust both on land and sea and in the air. Sects, famine, kingdoms, plagues, confusion. LVI. Vous verrez tost & tard faire grand change, Horreurs extremes & vindications: Que si la Lune conduite par son ange, Le ciel s'approche des inclinations. Sooner and later you will see great changes made, dreadful horrors and vengeances. For as the moon is thus led by its angel the heaves draw near to the Balance. LVII. Par grand discord la terre tremblera, Accord rompu dressant la teste au ciel, Bouche sanglante dans le sang nagera, Au sol la face ointe de laict & miel. The trumpet shakes with great discord. An agreement broken: lifting the face to heaven: the bloody mouth will swim with blood; the face anointed with milk and honey lies on the ground. LVIII. Tranché le ventre naistra auec deux testes, Et quatre bras: quelques ans entiers viura Iour qui Alquiloye celebrera ses festes, Fossen, Turin, chef Ferrare suiura. Through a slit in the belly a creature will be born with two heads and four arms: it will survive for some few years. The day that Alquiloie celebrates his festivals Fossana, Turin and the ruler of Ferrara will follow. LIX. Les exilez deportez dans les isles, Au changement d'vn plus cruel monarque Seront meurtris, & mis deux des scintiles, Qui de parler ne seront estez parques. The exiles deported to the islands at the advent of an even more cruel king will be murdered. Two will be burnt who were not sparing in their speech. LX. Vn Empereur naistra pres d'Italie, Qui à l'Empire sera vendu bien cher: Diront auec quels gens il se ralie, Qu'on trouuera moins prince que boucher. An Emperor will be born near Italy, who will cost the Empire very dearly. They will say, when they see his allies, that he is less a prince than a butcher. LXI. La republique miserable infelice Sera vastee du nouueau magistrat: Leur grand amas de l'exil malefice Fera Sueue rauir leur grand contract. The wretched, unfortunate republic will again be ruined by a new authority. The great amount of ill will accumulated in exile will make the Swiss break their important agreement. LXII. La grande perte, las! que feront les lettres, Auant le ciel de Latona parfaict: Feu grand deluge plus par ignares sceptres, Que de long siecle ne se verra refaict. Alas! what a great loss there will be to learning before the cycle of the Moon is completed. Fire, great floods, by more ignorant rulers; how long the centuries until it is seen to be restored. LXIII. Les fleurs passees diminue le monde, Long temps la paix terres inhabitees: Seur marchera par ciel, terre, mer & onde, Puis de nouueau les guerres suscitees. Pestilences extinguished, the world becomes smaller, for a long time the lands will be inhabited peacefully. People will travel safely through the sky (over) land and seas: then wars will start up again. LXIV. De nuict Soleil penseront auois veu. Quand le pourceau demy homme on verra: Bruit chant, bataille au ciel batre apperceu, Et bestes brutes à parler lon orra. At night they will whink they have seen the sun, when the see the half pig man: Noise, screams, battles seen fought in the skies. The brute beasts will be heard to speak. LXV. Enfant sans mains iamais veu si grand foudre, L'enfant Royal au ieu d'oesteuf blessé: Au puy brises fulgures allant mouldre, Trois souz les chaines par le milieu troussés. A child without hands, never so great a thunderbolt seen, the royal child wounded at a game of tennis. At the well lightning strikes, joining together three trussed up in the middle under the oaks. LXVI. Celuy qui lors portera les nouuelles Apres vn peu il viendra respirer, Viuiers, Tournon, Montferrant & Pradelles, Gresle & tempestes le fera souspirer. He who then carries the news, after a short while will (stop) to breath: Viviers, Tournon, Montferrand and Praddelles; hail and storms will make them grieve. LXVII. La grand famine que ie sens approcher, Souuent tourner, puis estre vniuerselle, Si grande & longue qu'on viendra arracher Du bois racine, & l'enfant de mammelle. The great famine which I sense approaching will often turn (in various areas) then become world wide. It will be so vast and long lasting that (they) will grab roots from the trees and children from the breast. LXVIII. O quel horrible & malheureux teurment, Trois innocens qu'on viendra à liurer Poison suspecte, mal gardé tardiment. Mis en horreur par bourreaux enyurez. O to what a dreadful and wretched torment are three innocent people going to be delivered. Poison sugested, badly guarded, betrayal. Delivered up to horror by drunken executioners. LXIX. La grand montagne ronde de sept stades, Apres paix, guerre, faim, inodation, Roulera loin abismant grands contrades, Mesmes antiques, & grands fondation. The great mountain, seven stadia round, after peace, war, famine, flooding. It will spread far, drowning great countries, even antiquities and their might foundations. LXX. Pluye, faim, guerre en Perse non cessee, La foy trop grand trahira le monarque: Par la finie en Gaule commencee, Secret augure pour à vn estre parque. Rain, famine and war will not cease in Persia; too great a faith will betray the monarch. Those (actions) started in France will end there, a secret sign for on to be sparing. LXXI. La tour marine troys foys prise & reprise, Par Espagnols, Barbares, Ligurains: Marseille & Aix, Arles par ceux de Pise, Vast, feu, fer pillé Auignon des Thurins. The marine tower will be captured and retaken three times by Spaniards, barbarians and Ligurians. Marseilles and Aix, Ales by men of Pisa, devastation, fire, sword, pillage at Avignon by the Turinese. LXXII. Du tout Marseille des habitans changee, Course & poursuite iusqu'au pres de Lyon, Narbon, Tholouse par Bourdeaux outragee, Tuez captifs presque d'vn milion. The inhabitants of Marseilles completely changed, fleeing and pursued as far as Lyons. Narbonne, Toulouse angered by Bordeaux; the killed and captive are almost one million. LXXIII. France à cinq pars par neglect assaillie, Tunys, Argal esmeuz par Persiens: Leon, Seuille, Barcellonne faillie, N'aura la classe par les Venitiens. France shall be accused of neglect by her five partners. Tunis, Algiers stirred up by the Persians. Leon, Seville and Barcelona having failed, they will not have the fleet because of the Venetians. LXXIV. Apres seiourné vagueront en Epire, Le grand secours viendra vers Anthioche. Le noir poil crespe rendra fort à l'Empire, Barbe d'ærain se rostira en broche. After a rest they will travel to Epirus, great help coming from around Antioch. The curly haired king will strive greatly for the Empire, the brazen beard will be roasted on a spit. LXXV. Le tyran Sienne occupera Sauonne, Le fort gaigné tiendra classe marine: Les deux armees par la marque d'Anconne, Par effrayeur le chef s'en examine. The tyrant of Siena will occupy Savona, having won the fort he will restrain the marine fleet. Two armies under the standard of Ancona: the leader will examine them in fear. LXXVI. D'vn nom farouche tel proferé sera, Que les trois seurs auront fato le nom: Puis grand peuple par langue & faict dira Plus que nul autre aura bruit & renom. The man will be called by a barbaric name that three sisters will receive from destiny. He will speak then to a great people in words and deeds, more than any other man will have fame and renown. LXXVII. Entre deux mers dreslera promontoire, Que puis mourra par le mors du cheual: Le sien Neptune pliera voile noire, Par Calpre & classe aupres de Rocheual. A promontory stands between two seas: A man who will die later by the bit of a horse; Neptune unfurls a black sail for his man; the fleet near Gibraltar and Rocheval. LXXVIII. D'vn chef vieillard naistra sens hebeté, Degenerant par s&cced;avoir & par armes: Le chef de France par sa soeur redouté, Champs diuisez, concedez aux gendarmes. To an old leader will be born an idiot heir, weak both in knowledge and in war. The leader of France is feared by his sister, battlefields divided, conceded to the soldiers. LXXIX. Bazaz, Lestore, Condon, Ausch, Agine, Esmeurs par loix, querelle & monopole: Car Bourd. Tholouse, Bay mettra en ruine: Renouueller voulant leur tauropole. Bazas, Lectoure, Condom, Auch and Agen are troubled by laws, disputes and monopolies. Carcassone, Bordeaux, Toulouse and Bayonne will be ruined when they wish to renew the massacre. LXXX. De la sixiesme claire splendeur celeste, Viendra tonner si fort en la Bourgongne, Puis n'aystra monstre de tres hideuse beste: Mars, Auril, May, Iuin, grâd charpin & rongne. From the sixth bright celestial light it will come to thunder very strongly in Burgundy. Then a monster will be born of a very hideuos beast: In March, April, May and June great wounding and worrying. LXXXI. D'humain troupeau neuf seront mis à part, De iugement & conseil separez: Leur sort sera diuisé en depart, Kappa, Thita, Lambda mors bannis esgarez. Nine will be set apart from the human flock, separated from judgment and advise. Their fate is to be divided as they depart. K. Th. L. dead, banished and scattered. LXXXII. Quand les colonnes de bois grande tremblee, D'Auster conduite, couuerte de rubriche: Tant vuidera dehors grande assemblee, Trembler Vienne & le pays d'Austriche. When the great wooden columns tremble in the south wind, covered with blood. Such a great assembly then pours forth that Vienna and the land of Austria will tremble. LXXXIII. La gent estrange diuisera butins, Saturne en Mars son regard furieux: Horrible estrange aux Toscans & Latins, Grecs qui seront à frapper curieux. The alien nation will divide the spoils. Saturn in dreadful aspect in Mars. Dreadful and foreign to the Tuscans and Latins, Greeks who will wish to strike. LXXXIV. Lune obscurcie aux profondes tenebres, Son frere passe de couleur ferrugine: Le grand caché long temps sous les tenebres, Tiedera fer dans la playe sanguine. The moon is obscured in deep gloom, his brother becomes bright red in colour. The great one hidden for a long time in the shadows will hold the blade in the bloody wound. LXXXV. Par la response de dame Roy troublé, Ambassadeurs mespriseront leur vie: Le grand ses freres contrefera doublé, Par deux mourront ire, haine & enuie. The king is troubled by the queen's reply. Ambassadors will fear for their lives. The greater of his brothers will doubly disguise his action, two of them will die through anger, hatred and envy. LXXXVI. La grande Royne quand se verra vaincue, Fera excés de masculin courage, Sur cheual, fleuue passera toute nue, Suite par fer: à foy fera outrage. When the great queen sees herself conquered, she will show an excess of masculine courage. Naked, on horseback, she will pass over the river pursued by the sword: she will have outraged her faith LXXXVII. Ennosigee feu du centre de terre, Fera trembler autour de cité neuue Deux grâds rochers long têps feront la guerre, Puis Arethuse rougira nouueau fleuue. Earthshaking fire from the centre of the earth will cause tremors around the New City. Two great rocks will war for a long time, then Arethusa will redden a new river. LXXXVIII. Le diuin mal surprendra le grand Prince, Vn peu deuant aura femme espousee, Son appuy & credit à vn coup viendra mince, Conseil mourra pour la teste rasee. The divine wrath overtakes the great Prince, a short while before he will marry. Both supporters and credit will suddenly diminish. Counsel, he will die because of the shaven heads. LXXXIX. Touts ceux de Iler ne seront dans la Moselle, Mettant à mort tous ceux de Loire & Seine: Le cours marin viendra pres d'haute velle, Quand Espagnols ouurira toute veine. Those of Lerida will be in the Moselle, kill all those from the Loire and Seine. The seaside track will come near the high valley, when the Spanish open every route. XC. Bourdeaux, Poitiers au son de la campagne, A grande classe ira iusqu'à l'Angon, Contre Gaulois sera leur tramontane, Quand monstre hideux naistra pres de Orgô. Bordeaux and Poitiers at the sound of the bell will go with a great fleet as fas as Langon. A great rage will surge up against the French, when an hideous monster is born near Orgon. XCI. Les Dieux feront aux humains apparence, Ce qu'ils seront autheurs de grand conflict: Auant ciel veu serain espee & lance, Que vers main gauche se plus grand afflict. The gods will make it appear to mankind that they are the authors of a great war. Before the sky was seen to bee free of weapons and rockets: the greatest damage will be inflicted on the left. XCII. Souz vn la paix par tout sera clamee, Mais non long temps pille, & rebellion, Par refus ville, terre & mer entamee, Morts & captifs le tiers d'vn million. Under one man peace will be proclaimed everywhere, but not long after will be looting and rebellion. Because of a refusal, town, land and see will be broached. About a third of a million dead or captured. XCIII. Terre Italique pres monts tremblera, Lyon & Coq non trop confederez, En lieu de peur l'vn l'autre s'aidera, Seul Catulon & Celtes moderez. The Italian lands near the mountains will tremble. The Cock and the Lion not strongly united. In place of fear they will help each other. Freedom alone moderates the French. XCIV. Au port Selin le tyran mis à mort, La liberté non pourtant recouuree: Le nouueau Mars par vindicte & remort, Dame par force de frayeur honoree. The tyrant Selim will be put to death at the harbour but Liberty will not be regained, however. A new war arises from vengeance and remorse. A lady is honoured through force of terror. XCV. Deuant moustier trouué enfant besson, D'heroic sang de moine & vetustique: Son bruit par secte langue & puissance son, Qu'on dira fort esleué le vopisque. In front of a monastery will be found a twin infant from the illustrious and ancient line of a monk. His fame, renown and power through sects and speech is such that they will say the living twin is deservedly chosen. XCVI. Celuy qu'aura la charge de destruire Temples, & sectes, changez par fantasie: Plus au rochers qu'aux viuans viendra nuire, Par langue ornee d'oreilles rassasie. A man will be charged with the destruction of temples and sectes, altered by fantasy. He will harm the rocks rather than the living, ears filled with ornate speeches. XCVII. Ce que fer, flamme n'a s&cced;eu paracheuer, La douce langue au conseil viendra faire: Par repos, songe, le Roy fera resuer, Plus l'ennemy en feu, sang militaire. That which neither weapon nor flame could accomplish will be achieved by a sweet speaking tongue in council. Sleeping, in a dream, the king will see the enemy not in war or of military blood. XCVIII. Le chef qu'aura conduit peuple infiny Loing de son ciel, de moeurs & langue estrange, Cinq mil en Crete & Thessalie finy, Le chef fuyant sauué en marine grange. The leader who will conduct great numbers of people far from their skies, to foreign customs and language. Five thousand will die in Crete and Thessaly, the leader fleeing in a sea going supply ship. XCIX. Le grand monarque que fera compagnie Auec deux Roys vnis par amitié: O quel souspir fera la grand mesgnie, Enfants Narbon à l'entour quel pitié. The great king will join with two kings, united in friendship. How the great household will sigh: around Narbon what pity for the children. C. Long temps au ciel sera veu gris oyseau, Aupres de Dole & de Toscane terre: Tenant au bec vn verdoyant rameau, Mourra tost grand & finera la guerre. For a long time a grey bird will be seen in the sky near Dôle and the lands of Tuscany. He holds a flowering branch in his beak, but he dies too soon and the war ends. This is the 2nd Centurie by Nostramus. It was first published in 1555. CENTURIE II I. VERS Aquitaine par insuls Britanniques De par eux-mesmes grandes incursions Pluyes, gelees feront terroirs iniques, Port Selyn fortes fera inuasions. Towards Aquitaine by the British isles By these themselves great incursions. Rains, frosts will make the soil uneven, "Port Selyn" will make mighty invasions II. La teste bleue fera la teste blanche Autant de mal, que France a faict leur bien: Mort à l'anthene, grand pendu sus la branche, Quand prins des siens le Roy dira combien. 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. III. Pour la chaleur solitaire sus la mer, De Negrepont les poissons demy cuits: Les habitans viendront entamer, Quand Rhod & Gennes leur faudra le biscuit. Because of the solar heat on the sea Of Euboea the fishes half cooked: The inhabitants will come to cut them, When the biscuit will fail Rhodes and Genoa. IV. Depuis Monach iusqu'aupres de Sicille, Toute la plage demourra desolee: Il n'y aura fauxbourgs, cité, ne ville, Que par Barbares pillee soit & vollee. 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. V. Qu'en dans poisson, fer & lettre enfermee, Hors sortira, qui puis fera la guerre, Aura par mer sa classe bien ramee, Apparoissant pres de Latine terre. 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. VI. Aupres des portes & dedans deux citez Seront deux fleaux, & onc n'apperceut vn tel, Faim, dedans peste, de fer hors gens boutez, Crier secours au grand Dieu immortel. 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. VII. Entre plusieurs aux isles deportez, L'vn estre nay à deux dents en la gorge Mourront de faim les arbres esbrotez, Pour eux neuf Roy, nouuel edict leur forge. 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. VIII. Temples sacrez prime fa&cced;on Romaine, Reietteront les gofres fondements, Prenant leurs loix premieres & humaines, Chassant non tout des saincts les cultements. 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. IX. Neuf ans le regne le maigre en paix tiendra, Puis il cherra en soif si sanguinaire, Pour luy peuple sans foy & loy mourra Tué vn beaucoup plus debonnaire. 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. X. Auant long temps le tout sera rangé, Nous esperons vn siecle bien senestre, L'estat des masques & des seuls bien changé. Peu trouueront qu'à son rang veuille estre. 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. XI. Le prochain fils de l'aisnier paruiendra Tant esleué iusqu'au regne des fors: Son aspre gloire vn chacun craindra, Mais ses enfans du regne gettez hors. 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. XII. Yeux clos ouuerts d'antique fantasie, L'habit des seuls seront mis à neant: Le grand monarque chastiera leur frenaisie, Ravir des temples le thresor par deuant. 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. XIII. Le corps sans ame plus n'estre en sacrifice, Iour de la mort mis en natiuité: L'esprit diuin fera l'ame felice, Voiant le verbe en son eternité. 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. XIV. A Tours, Gien, gardé seront yeux penetrans, Descouuriront de loing la grand sereine: Elle & sa suitte au port seront entrans, Combat, poussez, puissance souueraine. 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. XV. Vn peu deuant monarque trucidé? Castor Pollux en nef, astre crinite: L'erain public par terre & mer vuidé, Pise, Ast, Ferrare, Turin terre interdicte. 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. XVI. Naples, Palerme, Sicile, Syracuses, Nouueaux tyrans, fulgures feux celestes: Force de Londres, Gand, Bruxelles & Suses, Grand hecatombe, triomphe faire festes. Naples, Palermo, Sicily, Syracuse, New tyrants, celestial lightning fires: Force from London, Ghent, Brussels and Susa, Great slaughter, triumph leads to festivities. XVII. Le champ du temple de la vierge vestale, Non esloigné d'Ethne & monts Pyrenees: Le grand conduit est caché dans la male, North gettez fleuues & vignes mastinees. 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. XVIII. Nouelle & pluye subite, impetueuse, Empeschera subit deux exercites. Pierre ciel, feux faire la mer pierreuse, La mert de sept terre & marin subites. 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. XIX. Nouueaux venus lieu basty sans defence, Occuper la place par lors inhabitable: Prez, maisons, champs, villes, prêdre à plaisance, Faim peste, guerre, arpen long labourage. Newcomers, place built without defense, Place occupied then uninhabitable: Meadows, houses, fields, towns to take at pleasure, Famine, plague, war, extensive land arable. XX. Freres & soeurs en diuers lieux captifs, Se trouueront passer pres du monarque: Les comtempler ses rameaux ententifs. Desplaisant voir menton frôt, nez, les marques. 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. XXI. L'ambassadeur enuoyé par biremes, A my chemin d'incogneuz repoussez: De sel renfort viendront quatre triremes, Cordes & chaines en Negre pont troussez. The ambassador sent by biremes, Halfway repelled by unknown ones: Reinforced with salt four triremes will come, In Euboea bound with ropes and chains. XXII. Le camp Ascop d'Europe partira, S'adioignant proche de l'Isle submergee: D'Araon classe phalange pliera, Nombril du monde plus grand voix subrogee: 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. XXIII. Palais, oyseaux, par oyseau dechassé, Bien tost apres le prince paruenu: Combien qu'hors fleuue ennemy repoussé, Dehors saisir trait d'oyseau soustenu. 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. XXIV. Bestes farouches de faim fleuues tranner; Plus part du champ encontre Hister sera, En cage de fer le grand fera treisner, Quand rien enfant de Germain obseruera. 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. XXV. La garde estrange trahira forteresse, Espoir & vmbre de plus hault mariage: Garde de&cced;eu, fort prinse dans la presse, Loyre, Saone, Rosne, Gar, à mort oultrage. 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. XXVI. Pour sa faueur que la cité fera, Au grand qui tost perdra camp de bataille, Puis le rang Pau Thesin versera, De sang, feux morts yeux de coup de taille. 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. XXVII. Le diuin verbe sera du ciel frappé, Qui ne pourra proceder plus auant: Du reseruant le secret estoupé, Qu'on marchera par dessus & deuant. 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. XXVIII. Le penultiesme du surnom du Prophete, Prendra Diane pour son iour & repos: Loing vaguera par frenetique teste, En deliurant vn grand peuple d'impos. The penultimate of the surname of the Prophet Will take Diana for his day and rest: He will wander far because of a frantic head, And delivering a great people from subjection. XXIX. L'Oriental sorrira de son siege, Passer les monts Apennons voir la Gaule: Transpercera le ciel, les eaux & neige, Et vn chacun frappera de sa gaule. 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. XXX. Vn qui les dieux d'Annibal infernaux, Fera renaistre, effrayeur des humains. Oncq' plus d'horreur ne plus pire iournaux, Qu'auint viendra par Babel aux Romains. 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. XXXI. En Campanie le Cassilin fera tant, Qu'on ne verra d'aux les champs couuers: Deuant apres la pluye de long temps, Hors mis les arbres rien l'on verra de vert. 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. XXXII. Laict, sang grenoilles escoudre en Dalmatie. Conflict donné preste pres de Balennes: Cry sera grand par toute Esclauonie, Lors naistra monstre pres & dedans Rauenne. 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. XXXIII. Par le torrent qui descent de Veronne, Par lors qu'au Pau guindera son entree. Vn grand naufrage, & non moins en Garonne, Quand ceux de Gênes marcherôt leur contree 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. XXXIV. L'ire insensee du combat furieux, Fera à table par freres le fer luire: Les desparrit blessé, & curieux, Le fier duelle viendra en France nuire. 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. XXXV. Dans deux logis de nuict la feu prendra, Plusieurs dedans estoffez & rostis. Pres de deux fleuues pour seul il aduiendra: Sol, l'Arq, & Caper tous seront amortis. 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. XXXVI. Du grand Prophete les lettres seront prinses, Entre les mains du tyran deuiendront: Frauder son Roy seront ses entreprinses, Mais ses rapines bien tost le troubleront. 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. XXXVII. De ce grand nombre que l'on enuoyera, Pour secourir dans le fort assiegez, Peste & famine tous les deuorera, Hors mis septante qui seront profligez. 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. XXXVIII. Des condamnez sera fait vn grand nombre, Quand les monarques seront conciliez: Mais l'vn d'eux viendra si malencombre, Que guerre ensemble: ne seront raliez. 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. XXXIX. Vn deuant le conflict Italique, Germains, Gaulois, Espaignols pour le fort: Cherra l'escolle maison de republique, Où, hors mis peu, seront suffoqué morts. 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. XL. Vn peu apres non point longue interualle, Par mer & terre sera faict grand tumulte: Beaucoup plus grande sera pugne nauale, Feux, animaux, qui plus feront d'insulte. 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. XLI. La grand' estoille par sept iours bruslera, Nuee fera deux soleils apparoir: Le gros mastin toute nuit hurlera, Quand grand pontife changera de terroir. 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. Cock, dogs and cats will be satiated with blood And from the wound of the tyrant found dead, Par mort la France prendra voyage à faire, At the bed of another legs and arms broken, Classe par mer, marcher monts Pyrenees. He who was not afraid to die a cruel death. Espaigne en trouble, marcher gent militaire: Des plus grands Dames en France emmenees. Because of death France will take to making a journey, Fleet by sea, marching over the Pyrenees Mountains, XLIII. Spain in trouble, military people marching: Some of the greatest Ladies carried off to France. Durant l'estoille cheuelue apparente, Les trois grands princes seront faits ennemis: Frappez du ciel paix terre tremulente, Pau, Timbre vndans, serpent sur le bort mis. 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. XLIV. L'Aigle poussee en tout de pauillons, Par autres oyseaux d'entour sera chassee: Quand bruit des cymbres tube & sonnaillons Rendont le sens de la dame insensee. Will be chased from there by other birds: When the noise of cymbals, trumpets and bells Will restore the senses of the senseless lady. XLII. After having waited a very long time, City delivered up at the first sound of the horn. Coq, chiens & chats de sang seront repeus, Et de la playe du tyran trouué mort, Au lict d'vn autre iambes & bras rompus, Qui n'avoit peu mourir de cruelle mort. II. XLV. Trop du ciel pleure l'Androgin procree, Pres du ciel sang humain respandu: Par mort trop tard grand peuple recree, Tard & tost vient le secours attendu. Too much the heavens weep for the Hermaphrodite begotten, Near the heavens human blood shed: Because of death too late a great people re-created, Late and soon the awaited relief comes. XLVI. Apres grâd troche humain plus grâd s'appreste Le grand moteur les siecles renouuelle: Pluye sang, laict, famine, fer & peste, Au ciel veu feu, courant longue estincelle. 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. XLVII. L'ennemy grand vieil dueil meurt de poison, Les souuerains par infinis subiuguez: Pierres plouvoir, cachez soubs la toison, Par mort articles en vain sont alleguez. 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. XLVIII. La grand copie qui passera les monts. Saturne en l'Arq tournant du poisson Mars: Venins cachez soubs testes de saumons, Leurs chief pendu à fil de polemars. 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. XLIX. Les conseilliers du premier monopole. Les conquerants seduits pour la Melite, Rode, Bisance pour leurs exposant pole. Terre faudra les poursuiuans de fuite. The advisers of the first monopoly, The conquerers seduced for Malta: Rhodes, Byzantium for them exposing their pole: Land will fail the pursuers in flight. L. Quâd ceux d'Hainault, de Gâd & de Bruxelles, Verront à Langres le siege deuant mis: Derrier leurs flancs seront guerres cruelles La playe antique fera pis qu'ennemis. When those of Hainaut, 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. LI. Le sang du iuste à Londres fera faute, Bruslez par foudres de vingt trois les six: La dame antique cherra de place haute, De mesme secte plusieurs seront occis. 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. LII. Dans plusieurs nuits la terre tremblera: Sur le printemps deux effors suite: Corinthe, Ephese aux deux mers nagera, Guerre s'esmeut par deux vaillans de luite. 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. LIII. La grande peste de cité maritime, Ne cessera que mort ne soit vengee Du iuste sang par pris damné sans crime, De la grand dame par feincte n'outragee. 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 unwronged by pretense. LIV. Pour gent estrange, & Romains loingtaine, Leur grand cité apres eaue fort troublee: Fille sans trop different domaine, Prins chef, ferreure n'auoir esté riblee. 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. LV. Dans le conflict le grand qui peut valloit. A son dernier fera cas merueilleux. Pendant qu'Hadrie verra ce qu'il falloit, Dans le banquet pongnale l'orgueilleux. 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. LVI. Que peste & glaiue n'a sceu definer, Mort dans le puys sommet du ciel frappé: L'abbé mourra quand verra ruiner, Ceux du naufraige l'escueil voulant grapper. 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. LVII. Auant conflict le grand tumbera, Le grand à mort, mort, trop subite & plainte, Nay miparfaict la plus part nagera, Aupres du fleuue de sang la terre teinte. 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. LVIII. Sans pied ne main dend ayguë & forte, Par glob au fort de port & layné nay: Pres du portail desloyal transport, Silene luit, petit, grand emmené. 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. LIX. Classe Gauloyse par apuy de grand garde, Du grand Neptune, & ses tridens souldars. Rongee Prouence pour soustenir grand bande: Plus Mars Narbon, par iauelotz & dards. 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. LX. La foy Punicque en Orient rompue. Grand Iud, & Rosne Loyre & Tag changeront: Quand du mulet la faim sera repue, Classe espargie, sang & corps nageront. 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. LXI. Enge, Tamins, Gironde & la Rochele, O sang Troyen mort au port de la fleche Derrier le fleuue au fort mise l'échelle Pointes feu grand meurtre sus la bresche. 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. LXII. Mabus plustost alors mourra, viendra, De gens & bestes vn horrible defaite: Puis tout à coup la vengeance on verra, Cent, main, faim quand courra la comete. "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. LXIII. Gaulois, Ausone bien peu subiugera, Pau, Marne & Seine fera Perme l'vrie: Qui le grand mur contre eux dressera, Du moindre au mur le grand perdra la vie. 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. LXIV. Secher de faim, de soif, gent Geneuoise, Espoir prochain viendra au defaillir: Snr point tremblant sera loy Gebenoise, Classe au grand port ne se peut accueillir. 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. LXV. Le pare enclin grande calamité, Par l'Hesperie & Insubre fera: Le feu en nef peste & captiuité, Mercure en l'Arc Saturne fenera. 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. LXVI. Par grand dangiers le captif eschapé, Peu de temps grand a fortune changee: Dans le palais le peuple est attrapé, Par bon augure la cité assiegee. 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. LXVII. Le blonde au nez force viendra commettre, Par la duelle & chassera dehors: Les exilez dedans fera remettre, Aux lieux marins commettant les plus fors. 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. LXVIII. De l'Aquilon les efforts seront grands: Sus l'Ocean sera la porte ouuerte: Le regne en l'Isle sera reintegrand, Tremblera Londres par voille descouuerte. 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. LXIX. Le Roy Gaulois par la Celtique dextre, Voyant discorde de la grand Monarchie: Sur les trois parts fera florir son sceptre, Contre la chappe de la grand Hierarchie. The Gallic King through his Celtic right arm Seeing the discord of the great Monarchy: He will cause his sceptre to flourish over the three parts, Against the cope of the great Hierarchy. LXX. Le dard du ciel fera son estandue, Morts en parlant grande execution: La pierre en l'arbre la fiere gent rendue, Bruit humain monstre purge expiation. 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. LXXI. Les exilez en Sicile viendront, Pour deliure de faim la gent estrange: Au point du iour les Celtes luy faudront La vie demeure à raison: Roy se range. 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. LXXII. Armee Celtique en Italie vexee, De toutes pars conflict & grande perte: Romains fuis, ô Gaule repoussée, Pres du Thesin Rubicon pugne incerte. Celtic army vexed in Italy On all sides conflict and great loss: Romans fled, O Gaul repelled! Near the Ticino, Rubicon uncertain battle. LXXIII. Au lac Fucin de Benac le riuage, Prins de Leman au port de l'Orgion: Nay de trois bras predict bellique image, Par trois couronnes au grand Endymion. 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. LXXIV. De Sens, d'Autun viendront iusques au Rosne, Pour passer outre vers les monts Pyrenees: La gent sortit de la marque d'Anconne, Par terre & mer suyura à grands trainees. 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. LXXV. La voix ouye de l'insolit oyseau, Sur le canon du respiral estage: Si haut viendra du froment le boisteau Que l'homme d'homme sera Antropophage. 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. LXXVI. Foudre en Bourgongne fera cas portenteux. Que par engin oncques ne pourroit faire, De leur senar sacrist fait boiteux, Fera s&cced;avoir aux ennemis l'affaire. 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. LXXVII. Par arcs, feux, poix & par feux repoussez, Cris hurlements sur la minuit ouys: Dedans sont mis par les rampars cassez, Par cunicules les traditeurs fuys. 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. LXXVIII. Le grand Neptune du profond de la mer, De gent punique & sang Gaulois meslé: Les Isles à sang pour le tardif ramer, Puis luy nuira que l'occult mal celé. 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. LXXIX. La barbe crespe & noire par engin, Subiuguera la gent cruelle & fiere: Le grand Chiren ostera du longin. Tous les captifs par Seline banniere. 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". + LXXX. Apres conflict du lesé l'eloquence, Par peu de temps se trame faint repos. Point l'on n'admet les grands à deliurance, Des ennemis sont remis à propos. 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. LXXXI. Par feu du ciel la cité presque aduste, L'vne menace encor Deucalion, Vexee Sardaigne par la Punique fuste, Apres que Libra lairra son Phaëton. 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. LXXXII. Par faim la proye fera loup prisonner, L'assaillant lors en extreme detresse. Le nay ayant au deuant le dernier, Le grand n'eschappe au milieu de la presse. 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. LXXXIII. Le gros traffic d'vn grand Lyon changé, La plus part tourne en pristine ruine, Proye aux soldats par pille vendangé: Par Iura mont & Sueue bruine. The large trade of a great Lyons changed, The greater part turns to pristine ruin Prey to the soldiers swept away by pillage: Through the Jura mountain and "Suevia" drizzle. LXXXIV. Entre Campaigne, Sienne, Flora, Tustie, Six mois neuf iours ne pleuura vne goutte: L'estrange langue en terre Dalmatie, Couurira sus, vastant la terre toute. 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. LXXXV. Le vieux plein barbe soubs le statut seuere, A Lion faict dessus l'Aigle Celtique, Le petit grand trop outre perseuere, Bruist d'arme au ciel: mer rouge Ligustique. 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. LXXXVI. Naufrage à classe pres d'onde Hadriatique, La terre tremble esmeuë sus l'air en terre mis: Egypte tremble augment Mahometique, L'Herault sov rendre à crier est commis. 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. LXXXVII. Apres viendra des extremes contrees, Prince Germain, dessus le throsne doré: La seruitude & eaux rencontrees, La dame serue, son temps plus n'adoré. 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. LXXXVIII. Le circuit du grand faict ruineux, Le nom septiesme du cinquiesme sera: D'vn tiers plus grand l'estrange belliqueur: Mouton, Lutece, Aix ne garantira. 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. LXXXIX. Vn iour seront demis les deux grands maistres, Leur grand pouuoir se verra augmenté: La terre neuue sera en ses hauts estres, Au sanguinaire le nombre racompté. 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. XC. Par vie & mort changé regne d'Ongrie, La loy sera plus aspre que seruice: Leur grand cité d'hurlemens plaincts & crie, Castor & Pollux ennemis dans la lice. 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. XCI. Soleil leuant vn grand feu l'on verra, Bruit & clarté vers Aquilon tendants: Dedans le rond mort & cris l'on orra, Par glaiue, feu faim, mort les attendants. 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. XCII. Feu couleur d'or du ciel en terre veu, Frappé du haut nay, faict cas merueilleux. Grand meurtre humain: prinse du grand le neueu, Morts d'espactacles eschappé l'orgueilleux. Fire colour 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. XCIII. Biens pres du Tymbre presse la Lybitine, Vn peu deuant grand inondation: Le chef du nef prins, mis à la sentine, Chasteau, palais en conflagration. Very near the Tiber presses Death: Shortly before great inundation: The chief of the ship taken, thrown into the bilge: Castle, palace in conflagration. XCIV. Grand Paud, grand mal pour Gaulois receura, Vaine terreur au maritin Lyon: Peuple infiny par la mer passera, Sans eschapper vn quart d'vn million: 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. XCV. Les lieux peuplez seront inhabitables: Pour champs auoir grande diuision: Regnes liurez à prudens incapables, Lors les grands freres mort & dissention. 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. XCVI. Flambeau ardant au ciel soir sera veu, Pres de la fin & principe du Rosne, Famine, glaiue: tardue secours pourueu, La Perse tourne enuahir Macedoine. 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. XCVII. Romain Pontife garde de t'approcher, De la cité qui deux fleuues arrouse, Ton sang viendra aupres de la cracher Toy & les tiens quand fleurira la rose. 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. XCVIII. Celuy de sang reperse le visage, De la victime proche sacrifiee, Tonant en Leo, augure par presage, Mis estre à mort lors pour la fiancee. 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. XCIX. Terroir Romain qu'interpretoit augure, Par gent Gauloise par trop sera vexee: Mais nation Celtique craindra l'heure, Boreas, classe trop loing l'auoit poussee. 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. C. Dedans les isles si horrible tumulte, Bien on n'orra qu'vne bellique brigue, Tant grand sera de predateurs l'insulte, Qu'on te viendra ranger à la grand ligue. 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. Here is the third Century by Nostradamus. It was first published in 1555. CENTURIE III I. APRES combat & bataille nauale, Le grand Neptune à son plus haut befroy: Rouge aduersaire de peur viêdra pasle, Mettant le grand Occean en effroy. After combat and naval battle, The great Neptune in his highest belfry: Red adversary will become pale with fear, Putting the great Ocean in dread. II. Le diuin Verbe donra à la substance, Côpris ciel, terre, or occult au laict mystique: Corps, ame esprit ayant toute puissance, Tant soubs ses pieds comme au siege Celique. The divine word will give to the substenance, Including heavenm earth, gold hidden in the mystic milk: Body, soul, spirit having all power, As much under its feet as the Heavenly see. III. Mars & Mercure, & l'argent ioint ensemble, Vers le midy extreme siccité: Au fond d'Asie on dira terre tremble, Corinthe, Ephese lors en perplexité. Mars and Mercury, and the silver joined together, Towards the south extreme drought: In the depths of Asia one will say the earth trembles, Corinth, Ephesus then in perplexity. IV. Quand seront proches le defaut des lunaires, De l'vn à l'autre ne distant grandement, Froid, siccité, danger vers les frontieres, Mesme où l'oracle a prins commencement. When they will be close the lunar ones will fail, From one another not greatly distant, Cold, dryness, danger towards the frontiers, Even where the oracle has had its beginning. V. Pres loing defaut de deux grands luminaires. Qui suruiendra entre l'Auril & Mars: O quel cherré! mais deux grands debonnaires Par terre & mer secourront toutes pars. Near, far the failure of the two great luminaries Which will occur between April and March. Oh, what a loss! but two great good-natured ones By land and sea will relieve all parts. VI. Dans temple clos le foudre y entrera, Les citadins dedans leur fort greuez. Cheuaux, boeufs, hômes, l'onde mur touchera, Par faim, soif, soubs les plus foibles armez. Within the closed temple the lightning will enter, The citizens within their fort injured: Horses, cattle, men, the wave will touch the wall, Through famine, drought, under the weakest armed. VII. Les fugitifs, feu du ciel sus les picques, Conflict prochain des corbeaux, s'esbatans De terre on crie, ayde, secours celiques, Quand pres des murs seront les combatans. The fugitives, fire from the sky on the pikes: Conflict near the ravens frolicking, From land they cry for aid and heavenly relief, When the combatants will be near the walls. VIII. Les Cimbres ioints auecques leurs voisins De populer viendront presque l'Espagne: Gens amassez Guienne & Limosins Seront en ligue, & leur feront compagne. The Cimbri joined with their neighbors Will come to ravage almost Spain: Peoples gathered in Guienne and Limousin Will be in league, and will bear them company. IX. Bourdeaux Roüan, & la Rochelle ioints, Tiendront autour la grand mer Occeane, Anglois, Bretons, & les Flamans conioints Les chasseront iusqu'aupres de Roüane. Bordeaux, Rouen and La Rochelle joined Will hold around the great Ocean sea, English, Bretons and the Flemings allied Will chase them as far as Roanne. X. De sang & faim plus grand calamité, Sept fois s'appreste à la marine plage: Monech de faim, lieu pris, captiuité, Le grand, mené croc en ferree cage. Greater calamity of blood and famine, Seven times it approaches the marine shore: Monaco from hunger, place captured, captivity, The great one led crunching in a metaled cage. XI. Les armes batre au ciel longue saison L'arbre au milieu de la cité tombé: Verbine rogne, glaiue, en face tison, Lors le monarque d'Hadrie succombé. The arms to fight in the sky a long time, The tree in the middle of the city fallen: Sacred bough clipped, steel, in the face of the firebrand, Thenm the monarch of "Adria" fallen. XII. Par la tumeur de Heb, Po, Timbre, & Rome Et par l'estang Leman & Aretin. Les deux grands chefs & citez de Garonne, Prins, mortz noyez: Partir humain butin. Because of the swelling of the Ebro, Po, Tagus, Tiber and Rhône And because of the pond of Geneva and Arezzo, The two great chiefs and cities of the Garonne, Taken, dead, drowned: human booty divided. XIII. Par foudre en l'arche or & argent fondu, De deux captifs l'vn l'autre mangera De la cité le plus grand estendu, Quand submergee la classe nagera. Through lightning in the arch gold and silver melted, Of two captives one will eat the other: The greatest one of the city stretched out, When submerged the fleet will swim. XIV. Par le rameau du vaillant personnage, De France infime, par le pere infelice: Honneurs, richesses: trauail en son viel aage, Pour auoir creu le conseil d'homme nice. Through the branch of the valiant personage Of lowest France: because of the unhappy father Honors, riches, travail in his old age, For having believed the advice of a simple man. XV. Coeur, vigueur, gloire le regne changera. De tous points contre ayant son aduersaire: Lors France enfance par mort subiugera, Vn grand Regent sera lors plus contraire. The realm, will change in heart, vigor and glory, In all points having its adversary opposed: Then through death France an infancy will subjugate, A great Regent will then be more contrary. XVI. Vn prince Anglois Mars à son coeur de ciel, Voudra poursuyure la fortune prospere Des deux duelles l'vn percera le fiel, Hay de luy bien aymee de sa mere. An English prince Marc in his heavenly heart Will want to pursue his prosperous fortune, Of the two duels one will pierce his gall: Hated by him well loved by his mother. XVII. Mont Auentine brusler nuict sera veu, Le ciel obscur tout à vn coup en Flandres Quand le monarque chassera son neueu, Leurs gens d'Eglise commettrô les esclandres. Mount Aventine will be seen to burn at night: The sky very suddenly dark in Flanders: When the monarch will chase his nephew, Then Chirch people will commit scandals. XVIII. Apres la pluye laict asses longuette, En plusieurs lieux de Reims le ciel touché: O quel conflict de sang pres d'eux s'apprester, Peres & fils Roys n'oseront approcher. After the rather long rain milk, In several places in Reims the sky touched: Alas, what a bloody murder is prepared near them, Fathers and sons Kings will not dare approach. XIX. En Luques sang & laict viendra plouuoir, Vn peu deuant changement de preteur: Grand peste & guerre, faim & soif fera voir Loin où mourra leur prince & recteur. In Lucca it will come to rain blood and milk, Shortly before a change of praetor: Great plague and war, famine and drought will be m,ade visible Far away where their prince and rector will die. XX. Par les contrees du grand fleuue Bethique, Loin d'Ibere au Royaume de Grenade Croix repoussees par gens Mahometiques Vn Cordubete ahira le contrade. Through the regions of the great river Guadalquivir Deep in Iberia to the Kingdom of Grenada Crosses beaten back by the Mahometan peoples One of Cordova will betray his country XXI. Au Crustamin par mer Hadriatique, Apparoistra vn horrible poisson, De face humaine, & la fin aquatique, Qui se prendra dehors de l'ame&cced;on. In the Conca by the Adriatic Sea There will appear a horrible fish, With face human and its end aquatic, Which will be taken without the hook. XXII. Six iours l'assaut deuant cité donné: Liuree sera forte & aspre bataille: Trois la rendront, & à eux pardonné, Le reste à feu & à sang tranche taille. Six days the attack made before the city: Battle will be given strong and harsh: Three will surrender it, and to them pardon: The rest to fire and to bloody slicing and cutting. XXIII. Si France passe outre mert lygustique, Tu te verras en isles & mers enclos. Mahommet contraire, plus mer Hadriatique Cheuaux & d'Asnes ty rongeras les os. If, France, you pass beyond the Ligurian Sea, You will see yourself shut up in islands and seas: Mahomet contrary, more so the Adriatic Sea: You will gnaw the bones of horses and asses. XXIV. De l'entreprinse grande confusion, Perte de gens thresor innumerable: Tu n'y dois faire encore tension. France à mon dire fais que sois recordable. Great confusion in the enterprise, Loss of people, countless treasure: You ought not to extend further there. France, let what I say be remembered. XXV. Qui au royaume Nauarrois paruiendra, Quand le Sicile & Naples seront ioints: Bigore & Lances par Foyx loron tiendra D'vn qui d'Espagne sera par trop conioint. He who will attain to the kingdom of Navarre When Sicily and Naples will be joined: He will hold Bigorre and Landes through Foix and Oloron From one who will be too closely allied with Spain. XXVI. Des Roys & Princes dresseront simulacres, Augures, creuz esleuez aruspices: Corne, victume d'oree, & d'azur, d'acre, Inrerpretez seront les extipices. They will prepare idols of Kings and Princes, Soothsayers and empty prophets elevated: Horn, victime of gold, and azure, dazzling, The soothsayers will be interpreted. XXVII. Prince libinique puissant en Occident. Fran&cced;ois d'Arabe viendra tant enflammer. S&cced;auant aux lettres fera condescendent La langue Arabe en Fran&cced;ois translater. Libyan Prince powerful in the West Will come to inflame very much French with Arabian. Learned in letters condescending he will Translate the Arabian language into French. XXVIII. De terre foible & pauure parentelle, Par bout & paix paruiendra dans l'empire. Long temps regner vne ieune femelle, Qu'oncques en regne n'en suruint vn si pire. Of land weak and parentage poor, Through piece and peace he will attain to the empire. For a long time a young female to reign, Never has one so bad come upon the kingdom. XXIX. Les deux neueux en diuers lieux nourris. Nauale pugne, terre peres tombez Viendront si haut esleuez enguerris Venger l'iniure, ennemis succombez. The two nephews brought up in diverse places: Naval battle, land, fathers fallen: They will come to be elevated very high in making war To avenge the injury, enemies succumbed. XXX. Celuy qu'en luitte & fer au faict bellique Aura porté plus grand que luy le pris: De nuict au lict six luy feront la pique Nud sans harnois subit sera surprins. He who during the struggle with steel in the deed of war Will have carried off the prize from on greater than he: By night six will carry the grudge to his bed, Without armor he will surprised suddenly. XXXI. Aux champs de Mede, d'Arabe, & d'Armenie Deux grands copies trois fois s'assembleront: Pres du riuage d'Araxes la mesgnie, Du grand Soliman en terre tomberont. On the field of Media, of Arabia and of Armenia Two great armies will assemble thrice: The host near the bank of the Araxes, They will fall in the land of the great Suleiman. XXXII. Le grand sepulchre du peuple Aquitanique S'approchera aupres de la Toscane. Quand Mars sera pres du coing Germanique Et au terroir de la gent Mantuane. The great tomb of the people of Aquitaine Will approach near to Tuscany, When Mars will be in the corner of Germany And in the land of the Mantuan people. XXXIII. En la cité où le loup entrera, Bien pres de là les ennemis seront: Copie estrange grand pays gastera Aux murs & Alpes les amis passeront. In the city where the wolf will enter, Very near there will the enemies be: Foreign army will spoil a great country. The friends will pass at the wall and Alps. XXXIV. Quand le deffaut du Soleil lors sera Sur le plein iour le monstre sera veu: Tout autrement on l'interpretera, Cherté n'a garde nul n'y aura pourueu. When the eclipse of the Sun will then be, The monster will be seen in full day: Quite otherwise will one interpret it, High price unguarded: none will have foreseen it. XXXV. Du plus profond de l'Occident d'Europe, De pauures gens vn ieune enfant naistra, Qui par sa langue seduira grande troupe, Sont bruit au regne d'Orient plus croistra. From the very depths of the West of Europe, A young child will be born of poor people, He who by his tongue will seduce a great troop: His fame will increase towards the realm of the East. XXXVI. Enseuely non mort apopletique, Sera trouué auoir les mains mangees: Quand la cité damnera l'heretique, Qu'auoit leurs loix, ce leur sembloit changees, Buried apoplectic not dead, He will be found to have his hands eaten: When the city will condemn the heretic, He who it seemed to them had changed their laws. XXXVII Auant l'assaut l'oraison prononcee, Milan prins d'Aigle par embusches deceus Muraille antique par canons enfoncee, Par feu & sang à mercy peu receus. The speech delivered before the attack, Milan taken by the Eagle through deceptive ambushes: Ancient wall driven in by cannons, Through fire and blood few given quarter. XXXVIII La gens Gauloise & nation estrange, Outre les motns, morts, prins & profugez: Au moins contraire & proche de vendange, Paules Seigneurs en accord redigez. The Gallic people and a foreign nation Beyond the mountains, dead, captured and killed: In the contrary month and near vintage time, Through the Lords drawn up in accord. XXXIX Les sept en trois moins en concorde, Pour subiuguer des Alpes Apennines: Mais la tempeste & Ligure coüarde, Les profligent en subites ruines. The seven in three months in agreement To subjugate the Apennine Alps: But the tempest and cowardly Ligurian, Destroys them in sudden ruins. XL Le grand theatre se viendra redresser, Les dez iettez & les rets ja tendus: Trop le premier en glaz viendra lasser, Pars arcs prostrais de long temps ja fendus. The great theater will come to be set up again: The dice cast and the snares already laid. Too much the first one will come to tire in the death knell, Prostrated by arches already a long time split. XLI Bossu sera esleu par le conseil. Plus hideux monstre en terre n'apperceu, Le coup voulant creuera l'oeil, Le traistre au Roy pour fidelle receu. Hunchback will be elected by the council, A more hideous monster not seen on earth, The willing blow will put out his eye: The traitor to the King received as faithful. XLII L'enfant naistra à deux dents en la gorge, Pierres en Tuscie par pluye tomberont: Peu d'ans apres ne sera bled ny orge, Pour saouler ceux qui de faim failliront. The child will be born with two teeth in his mouth, Stones will fall during the rain in Tuscany: A few years after there will be neither wheat nor barley, To satiate those who will faint from hunger. XLIII. Gens d'alentour de Tain Loth, & Garonne Grandez les monts Apenines passer: Vostre tombeau pres de Rome & d'Anconne, Le noir poil crespe fera trophe dresser: People from around the Tarn, Lot and Garonne Beware of passing the Apennine mountains: Your tomb near Rome and Ancona, The black frizzled beard will have a trophy set up. XLIV. Quand l'animal à l'homme domestique, Apres grands peines & sauts viendra parler, Le foudre à vierge sera si malefique, De terre prinse & suspendue en l'air. When the animal domesticated by man After great pains and leaps will come to speak: The lightning to the virgin will be very harmful, Taken from earth and suspended in the air. XLV. Les cinq estranges entrez dedans le temple. Leur sang viendra la terre prophaner. Aux Tholosains sera bien dur exemple, D'vn qui viendra ses lois exterminer. The five strangers entered in the temple, Their blood will come to pollute the land: To the Toulousans it will be a very hard example Of one who will come to exterminate their laws. XLVI. Le ciel (de Plencus la cité) nous presage, Par clers insignes & par estoilles fixes, Que de son change subit s'approche l'aage, Ne pour son bien, ne pour ses malefices. The sky ( of Plancus' city ) forebodes to us Through clear signs and fixed stars, That the time of its sudden change is approaching, Neither for its good, nor for its evils. XLVII. Le vieux monarque dechassé de son regne Aux Oriens son secours ira querre: Pour peut des croix ployera son enseigne, En Mytilene ira par port & par terre. The old monarch chased out of his realm Will go to the East asking for its help: For fear of the crosses he will fold his banner: To Mitylene he will go through port and by land. XLVIII. Sept cens captifs attachez rudement, Pour la moitié meurtrir, donné le sort: Le proche espoir vindra si promptement Mais non si tost qu'vne quinziesme mort. Seven hundred captives bound roughly. Lots drawn for the half to be murdered: The hope at hand will come very promptly But not as soon as the fifteenth death. XLIX. Regne Gaulois tu seras bien changé, En lieu estrange est translaté l'empire: En autres moeurs & loix seras rangé, Rouan, & Chartres te feront bien du pire. Gallic realm, you will be much changed: To a foreign place is the empire transferred: You will be set up amidst other customs and laws: Rouen and Chartres will do much of the worst to you. L. La republique de la grande cité, A grand rigueur ne voudra consentir: Roy sortir hors par trompette cité, L'eschelle au mur la cité repentir. The republic of the great city Will not want to consent to the great severity: King summoned by trumpet to go out, The ladder at the wall, the city will repent. LI. Paris coniure vn grand meurtre commetre Blois le fera sortir en plain effect: Ceux d'Orleans voudront leur chef remettre Angers, Troye, Langres leur feront vn meffait. Paris conspires to commit a great murder Blois will cause it to be fully carried out: Those of Orléans will want to replace their chief, Angers, Troyes, Langres will commit a misdeed against them. LII. En la champagne sera si longue pluye, Et en la Poüille si grande siccité Coq verra l'Aigle, l'aisse mal accomplie, Par Lyon mise sera en extremité. In Campania there will be a very long rain, In Apulia very great drought. The Cock will see the Eagle, its wing poorly finished, By the Lion will it be put into extremity. LIII. Quand le plus grand emportera le pris De Nuremberg d'Augbourg, & ceuz de Basle, Par Agippine chef Frankfort repris Trauerseront par Flamant iusques en Gale. When the greatest one will carry off the prize Of Nuremberg, of Augsburg, and those of Bâle Through Cologne the chief Frankfort retaken They will cross through Flanders right into Gaul. LIV. L'vn des grands fuira aux Espagnes Qu'en longue playe apres viendra saigner: Passant copies par les hautes montaines, Deuastant tout, & puis en paix regner. One of the greatest ones will flee to Spain Which will thereafter come to bleed in a long wound: Armies passing over the high mountains, Devastating all, and then to reign in peace. LV. En l'an qu'vn oeil en France regnera, La court sera en vn bien fascheux trouble: Le grand de Blois sont amy tuera Le regne mis en mal & doute double. In the year that one eye will reign in France, The court will be in very unpleasant trouble: The great one of Blois will kill his friend: The realm placed in harm and double doubt. LVI. Montaubant, Nismes, Auignon & Besier, Peste, tonnerre, & gresle à fin de Mars: De Paris Pont, Lyon mur, Montpellier, Depuis six cens & sept vingts trois pars. Montauban, Nîmes, Avignon and Béziers, Plague, thunder and hail in the wake of Mars: Of Paris bridge, Lyons wall, Montpellier, After six hundreds and seven score three pairs. LVII. Sept fois changer verrez gent Britanique, Taints en sang en deux cens nonante an Franche non point par appuy Germanique Aries doubte son pole Bastarnan. Seven times will you see the British nation change, Steeped in blood in 290 years: Free not at all its support Germanic. Aries doubt his "Bastarnian" pole. LVIII. Aupres du Rhin des montaignes Noriques Naistra vn grand de gens trop trard venu, Qui defendra Saurome & Pannoniques, Qu'on ne s&cced;aura qu'il sera deuenu. Near the Rhine from the Noric mountains Will be born a great one of people come too late, One who will defend Sarmatia and the Pannonians, One will not know what will have become of him. LIX. Barbare empire par le tiers vsurpé, La plus grand part de son sang mettra à mort: Par mort senile par luy le quart frappé, Pour peur que sang par le sang ne soit mort. Barbarian empire usurped by the third, The greater part of his blood he will put to death: Through senile death the fourth struck by him, For fear that the blood through the blood be not dead. LX. Par toute Asie grande proscription, Mesme en Mysie, Lysie, & Pamphilie. Sang versera par absolution, D'vn ieune noir remply de felonnie. Throughout all Asia (Minor) great proscription, Even in Mysia, Lycia and Pamphilia. Blood will be shed because of the absolution Of a young black one filled with felony. LXI. La grande bande & secte crucigere, Se dressera en Mesopotamie: Du proche fleuue compagnie legere, Que telle loy tiendra pour ennemie. The great band and sect of crusaders Will be arrayed in Mesopotamia: Light company of the nearby river, That such law will hold for an enemy. LXII. Proche del duero par mer Cyrrene close, Viendra perser les grands monts Pyrenees La main plus courte & sa perce glose, A Carcassonne conduira les menees. Near the Douro by the closed Tyrian sea, He will come to pierce the great Pyrenees mountains. One hand shorter his opening glosses, He will lead his traces to Carcassone. LXIII. Romain pouuoir sera du tout à bas: Son grand voisin imiter les vestiges: Occultes haines ciuiles & debats, Retarderont au bouffons leurs folies. The Roman power will be thoroughly abased, Following in the footsteps of its great neighbour: Hidden civil hatreds and debates Will delay their follies for the buffoons. LXIV. Le chef de Perse remplira grande Olchade, Classe Triteme contre gens Mahometiques: De Parthe, & Mede, & piller les Cyclades. Repos long temps au grand port Ionique. The chief of Persia will occupy great "Olchades," The trireme fleet against the Mahometan people From Parthia, and Media: and the Cyclades pillaged: Long rest at the great Ionian port. LXV. Quand le sepulchre du grand Romain trouué Le iour apres sera esleu Pontife: Du Senat gueres il ne sera prouué Empoisonne, son sang au sacré scyphe. When the sepulchre of the great Roman is found, The day after a Pontiff will be elected: Scarcely will he be approved by the Senate Poisoned, his blood in the sacred chalice. LXVI. Le grand Balif d'Orleans mis à mort Sera par vn de sang vindicatif: De mort merite ne montra ne par sort Des pieds & mains mal le faisoit captif. The great Bailiff of Orléans put to death Will be by one of blood revengeful: Of death deserved he will not die, nor by chance: He made captive poorly by his feet and hands. LXVII. Vne nouuelle secte de Philosophes, Mesprisant mort, or, honneurs & richesses: Des monts Germanins ne seront limitrophes, A les ensuyure auront appuy & presses. A new sect of Philosophers Despising death, gold, honors and riches Will not be bordering upon the German mountains: To follow them they will have power and crowds. LXVIII. Peuple sans chef d'Espaigne d'Italie, Mors, profliges dedans le Cherronesse Leur dict trahy par legere folie, Le sang nager par tout à la traverse. Leaderless people of Spain and Italy Dead, overcome within the Peninsula: Their dictator betrayed by irresponsible folly, Swimming in blood everywhere in the latitude. LXIX. Grand exercise conduit par iouuenceau, Se viendra rendre aux mains des ennemis Mais le vieillard nay au demy pourceau, Fera Chalon & Mascon estre amis. The great army led by a young man, It will come to surrender itself into the hands of the enemies: But the old one born to the half-pig, He will cause Châlon and Mâcon to be friends. LXX. La grand Bretaigne comprinse d'Angletterre, Viendra par eaux si haut à inonder La Ligue neuue d'ausonne fera guerre, Que contre eux ils se viendront bander. The great Britain including England Will come to be flooded very high by waters The new League of Ausonia will make war, So that they will come to strive against them. LXXI. Ceux dans les isles de long temps assiegez, Prendront vigueur force contre ennemis: Ceux par dehors morts de faim profligez, En plus grand faim que iamais seront mis. Those in the isles long besieged Will take vigor and force against their enemies: Those outside dead overcome by hunger, They will be put in greater hunger than ever before. LXXII. Le bon vieillard tout vif enseuely, Pres du grand fleuue par fausse soup&cced;on: Le nouueau vieux de richesse ennobly, Prins à chemin tout l'or de la ran&cced;on. The good old man buried quite alive, Near the great river through false suspicion: The new old man ennobled by riches, Captured on the road all his gold for ransom. LXXIII. Quand dans le regne paruiendra le boiteux, Competiteur aura proche bastard: Luy & le regne viendront si fort roigneux, Qu'ains qu'il guerisse son faict sera bien tard. When the cripple will attain to the realm, For his competitor he will have a near bastard: He and the realm will become so very mangy That before he recovers, it will be too late. LXXIV. Naples, Florence, Fauence, & Imole, Seront en termes de telle facherie, Que pour complaire aux malheureux de Nolle Plainct d'auoir faict à son chef moquerie. Naples, Florence, Faenza and Imola, They will be on terms of such disagreement As to delight in the wretches of Nola Complaining of having mocked its chief. LXXV. Pau, Verone, Vicenne Sarragousse, De glaiues loings, terroirs de sang humides Peste si grande viendra à la grand gousse, Proche secours, & bien loing les remedes. Pau, Verona, Vicenza, Saragossa, From distant swords lands wet with blood: Very great plague will come with the great shell, Relief near, and the remedies very far. LXXVI. En Germanie naistront diuerses sectes, S'approchant fort de l'heureux paganisme, Le coeur captif & petites receptes, Feront retour à payer le vray disme. In Germany will be born diverse sects, Coming very near happy paganism, The heart captive and returns small, They will return to paying the true tithe. LXXVII. Le tiers climat sous Aries comprins L'an mil sept cens vingt & sept en Octobre, Le Roy de Perse par d'Egypte prins Conflit mort, perte: à la croix grand opprobre. The third climate included under Aries The year 1727 in October, The King of Persia captured by those of Egypt: Conflict, death, loss: to the cross great shame. LXXVIII. Le chef d'Escosse, auec six d'Allemagne Par gens de mer Orient aux captif: Trauerseront le Calpre & Espagne, Present en Perse au nouueau Roy craintif. The chief of Scotland, with six of Germany Captive of the Eastern seamen: They will pass Gibraltar and Spain, Present in Persia for the fearful new King. LXXIX. L'ordre fatal sempiternel par chaisne, Viendra tourner par orpte consequent: Du port Phocen sera rompue la chaisne, La cité prinse, l'ennemy quant & quant. The fatal everlasting order through the chain Will come to turn through consistent order: The chain of Marseilles will be broken: The city taken, the enemy at the same time. LXXX. Du regne Anglois le digne dechassé, Le conseiller par ire mis à feu Ses adherans iront si bas tracer, Que le bastard sera demy receu. The worthy one chased out of the English realm, The adviser through angur put to the fire: His adherents will go so low to efface themselves That the bastard will be half received. LXXXI. Le grand criard sans honte audacieux, Sera esleu gouuerneur de l'armee: La hardiesse de son contenteur Le pont rompu, cité de pur pasmee. The great shameless, audacious bawler, He will be elected governor of the army: The boldness of his contention, The bridge broken, the city faint from fear. LXXXII. Ereins, Antibor, villes autour de Nice, Seront gastees fort par mer & par terre: Les sauterelles terre & mer vent propice, Prins morts trousses, pilles sans loy de guerre: Fréjus, Antibes, towns around Nice, They will be thoroughly devastated by sea and by land: The locusts by land and by sea the wind propitious, Captured, dead, bound, pillaged without law of war. LXXXIII. Les longs cheueux de la Gaule Celtique, Accompagnes d'estranges nations, Mettront captif la gent aquitanique, Pour succomber à leurs intentions. The long hairs of Celtic Gaul Accompanied by foreign nations, They will make captive the people of Aquitaine, For succumbing to their designs. LXXXIV. La grande cité sera bien desolee, Des habitans vn seul n'y demeurera Mur, sexe, temple & vierge violee, Par fer, feu, peste canon peuple mourra. The great city will be thoroughly desolated, Of the inhabitants not a single one will remain there: Wall, sex, temple and virgin violated, Through sword, fire, plague, cannon people will die. LXXXV. La cité prinse par tromperie & fraude, Par le moyen d'vn beau ieune attrapé. Assaut donné Raubine pres de LAVDE, Luy & touts morts pour auoir bien trompé. The city taken through deceit and guile, Taken in by means of a handsome youth: Assault given by the Robine near the Aude, He and all dead for having thoroughly deceived. LXXXVI. Vn chef d'Ausonne aux Espaignes ira Par mer fera arrest dedans Marseille: Auant sa mort vn long temps languira Apres sa mort on verra grand merueille. A chief of Ausonia will go to Spain By sea, he will make a stop in Marseilles: Before his death he will linger a long time: After his death one will see a great marvel. LXXXVII. Classe Gauloisse n'approche de Corsegue, Moins de Sardaigne, tu t'en repentiras: Trestous mourrez frustrez de l'aide grogne. Sang nagera captif ne me croiras. Gallic fleet, do not approach Corsica, Less Sardinia, you will rue it: Every one of you will die frustrated of the help of the cape: You will swim in blood, captive you will not believe me. LXXXVIII. De Barselonne par mer si grand' armee, Toute Marseille de frayeur tremblera. Isles saisies de mer ayde fermee, Ton traditeur en terre nagera. From Barcelona a very great army by sea, All Marseilles will tremble with terror: Isles seized help shut off by sea, Your traitor will swim on land. LXXXIX. En ce temps la sera frustree Cypres. De son secours de ceux de mer Egee: Vieux trucidez, mais par mesles & lyphres Seduict leur Roy, Royne, plus outragee. At that time Cyprus will be frustrated Of its relief by those of the Aegean Sea: Old ones slaughtered: but by speeches and supplications Their King seduced, Queen outraged more. XC. Le grand Satyre & Tigre d'Hyrcanie. Dont presenté à ceux de l'Occean: Vn chef classe istra de Carmanie, Qui prendra texte au Tyrren Phocean. The great Satyr and Tiger of Hyrcania, Gift presented to those of the Ocean: A fleet's chief will set out from Carmania, One who will take land at the "Tyrren Phocaean." XCI. L'arbre qu'estoit par long temps mort seché, Dans vne nuict viendra à reuerdir: Coron Roy malade, Prince pied estaché, Criant d'ennemis fera voile bondir. The tree which had long been dead and withered, In one night it will come to grow green again: The Cronian King sick, Prince with club foot, Feared by his enemies he will make his sail bound. XCII. Le monde proche du dernier periode Saturne encor tard sera de retour: Tanslat empire deuers nation Brodde, L'oeil arraché à Narbon par Autour. The world near the last period, Saturn will come back again late: Empire transferred towards the Dusky nation, The eye plucked out by the Goshawk at Narbonne. XCIII. Dans Auignon tout le chef de l'empire Fera arrest pour Paris desolé: Tricast tiendra l'Annibalique ire, Lyon par change sera mal consolé. In Avignon the chief of the whole empire Will make a stop on the way to desolated Paris: "Tricast" will hold the anger of Hannibal: Lyons will be poorly consoled for the change. XCIV. De cinq cens ans plus compte lon tiendra, Celuy qu'estoit l'ornement de son temps: Puis à vn coup grande clarté donra, Qui par ce siecle les rendra trescontens. For five hundred years more one will keep count of him Who was the ornament of his time: Then suddenly great light will he give, He who for this century will render them very satisfied. XCV. La loy Moricque on verra deffaillir. Apres vne autre beaucoup plus seductiue: Boristhenes premier viendra faillir. Par dons & langue vne plus attractiue. The law of More will be seen to decline: After another much more seductive: Dnieper first will come to give way: Through gifts and tongue another more attractive. XCVI. Chef de Fossan aura gorge couppee, Par le ducteur du limier & leurier: Le faict par ceux du mont Tarpee, Saturne en Leo 13. de Feurier. The Chief of Fossano will have his throat cut By the leader of the bloodhound and greyhound: The deed executed by those of the Tarpeian Rock, Saturn in Leo February 13. XCVII. Nouuelle loy terre neuue occuper, Vers la Syrie, Iudée & Palestine: Le grand empire barbare corruer, Auant que Phebés son siecle determine. New law to occupy the new land Towards Syria, Judea and Palestine: The great barbarian empire to decay, Before the Moon completes it cycle. XCVIII. Deux royals freres si fort guerroyeront Qu'entre eux sera la guerre si mortelle: Qu'vn chacun places fortes occuperons, De regne & vie sera leur grand querelle. Two royal brothers will wage war so fierely That between them the war will be so mortal That both will occupy the strong places: Their great quarrel will fill realm and life. XCIX. Aux champs herbeux d'Alein & du Varneigne, Du mont Lebron proche de la Durance, Camps de deux parts conflict sera si aigre, Mesopotasie defaillira en la France. In the grassy fields of Alleins and Vernègues Of the Lubéron range near the Durance, The conflict will be very sharp for both armies, Mesopotamia will fail in France. C. Entre Gaulois le dernier honnoré, D'homme ennemy sera victorieux: Force & terroir en nomment exploré, D'vn coup de traict quand moura l'enuieux. The last one honored amongst the Gauls, Over the enemy man will he be victorious: Force and land in a moment explored, When the envious one will die from an arrow shot. This is the fourth century by Nostradamus. The first 53 quatrains were first published in 1555. The complete century appeared for the first time in 1557. CENTURIE IV I. CELA du reste de sang non espandu, Venise quiert secours estre donné. Apres auoir bien loing têps attendu, Cité liuree au premier cornet sonné. That of the remainder of blood unshed: Venice demands that relief be given: III. D'Arras & Bourges, de Brodes grans enseignes, Vn plus grand nombre de Gascons battre à pied, Ceux long du Rosne saigneront les Espaignes: Proche du mont où Sagonte s'assied. From Arras and Bourges many banners of Dusky Ones, A greater number of Gascons to fight on foot, Near the mountain where Sagunto sits. IV. L'impotent prince faché plaincts & querelles, De rapts & pillé, par coqz & par Libiques: Grands est par terre par mer infinies voilles, Seule Italie sera chassant Celtiques. The impotent Prince angry, complaints and quarrels, Rape and pillage, by cocks and Africans: Great it is by land, by sea infinite sails, Italy alone will be chasing Celts. V. Croix, paix, soubs vn accomply diuin verbe, L'Espaigne & Gaule seront vnis ensemble: Grand clade proche, & combat tres accerbe, Coeur si hardy ne sera qui ne tremble. Cross, peace, under one the divine word accomplished, Spain and Gaul will be united together: Great disaster near, and combat very bitter: No heart will be so hardy as not to tremble. VI. D'habits nouueaux apres faicte la treuue, Malice tramme & machination: Premier mourra qui en fera la preuue, Couleur venise insidiation. By the new clothes after the find is made, Malicious plot and machination: First will die he who will prove it, Color Venetian trap. VII. Le mineur fils du grand & hay Prince, De lepre aura à vingt ans grande tache, De dueil sa mere mourra bien triste & mince, Et il mourra là où tombe cher lache. The minor son of the great and hated Prince, He will have a great touch of leprosy at the age of twenty: Of grief his mother will die very sad and emaciated, And he will die where the loose flesh falls. VIII. La grand cité d'assaut prompt & repentin, Surprins de nuict, gardes interrompus: Les excubies & veilles sainct Quintin, Trucidez gardes & les portails rompus. The great city by prompt and sudden assault Surprised at night, guards interrupted: The guards and watches of Saint-Quentin Slaughtered, guards and the portals broken. IX. Le chef du camp au milieu de la presse: D'vn coup de fleche sera blessé aux cuisses, Lors que Geneue en larmes & detresse, Sera trahie par Lauzan, & Souysses. The chief of the army in the middle of the crowd Will be wounded by an arrow shot in the thighs, When Geneva in tears and distress Will be betrayed by Lausanne and the Swiss. X. Le ieune Prince accusé faussement, Mettra en trouble le camp & en querelles: Meurtry le chef pour le soustenement, Sceptre appaiser: puis guerir escroüelles. The young Prince falsely accused Will plunge the army into trouble and quarrels: The chief murdered for his support, Sceptre to pacify: then to cure scrofula. XI. Celuy qu'aura gouuert de la grand cappe, Sera induict à quelques cas patrer: Les douze rouges viendront soüiller la nappa, Soubz meurtre, meurtre se viendra perpetrer. He who will have the government of the great cope Will be prevailed upon to perform several deeds: The twelve red one who will come to soil the cloth, Under murder, murder will come to be perpetrated. XII. Le champ plus grand de route mis en fuite, Guaires plus outre ne sera pourchassé: Ost recampé & legion reduicte, Puis hors des Gaules du tout sera chassé The greater army put to flight in disorder, Scarcely further will it be pursued: Army reassembled and the legion reduced, Then it will be chased out completely from the Gauls. XIII. De plus grand perte nouuelles rapportees, Le raport le camp s'estournera. Ban les vnies encontre reuoltees, Double phalange quand abandonnera. News of the greater loss reported, The report will astonish the army: Troops united against the revolted: The double phalanx will abandon the great one. XIV. La mort subite du premier personnage Aura changé & mis vn autre au regne: Tost, tard venu à si haut & bas aage, Que terre & mer faudra que on le craigne. The sudden death of the first personage Will have caused a change and put another in the sovereignty: Soon, late come so high and of low age, Such by land and sea that it will be necessary to fear him. XV. D'où pensera faire venir famine, De là viendra se rassasiement: L'oeil de la mer par auare canine Pour de l'vn l'autre donra huyle, froment. From where they will think to make famine come, From there will come the surfeit: The eye of the sea through canine greed For the one the other will give oil and wheat. XVI. La cité franche de liberté fait serue. Des profligez & resueurs faict asyle. Le Roy changé à eux non si proterue: De cent seront deuenus plus de mille. The city of liberty made servile: Made the asylum of profligates and dreamers. The King changed to them not so violent: From one hundred become more than a thousand. XVII. Changer à Banne, Nuy, Chalons, & Dijon, Le duc voulant amander la Barree Marchât pres fleuue, poisson, bec de plongeon Verra la queüe: porte sera serree. To change at Beaune, Nuits, Châlon and Dijon, The duke wishing to improve the Carmelite [nun] Marching near the river, fish, diver's beak Will see the tail: the gate will be locked. XVIII. Des plus lettrez dessus les faits celestes Seront par princes ignorans reprouuez: Punis d'Edit, chassez, comme scelestes, Et mis à mort là où seront trouuez. Some of those most lettered in the celestial facts Will be condemned by illiterate princes: Punished by Edict, hunted, like criminals, And put to death wherever they will be found. XIX. Deuant Roüan d'Insubres mis le siege, Par terre & mer enfermez les passages: D'haynaut, & Flâdres de Gâd & ceux de Liege, Par dons laenees rauiront les riuages. Before Rouen the siege laid by the Insubrians, By land and sea the passages shut up: By Hainaut and Flanders, by Ghent and those of Liége Through cloaked gifts they will ravage the shores. XX. Paix vberté long temps lieu loüera: Par tout son regne de sert la fleur de lys: Corps morts d'eau, terre là l'on aportera, Sperans vain heur d'estre là enseuelis. Peace and plenty for a long time the place will praise: Throughout his realm the fleur-de-lys deserted: Bodies dead by water, land one will bring there, Vainly awaiting the good fortune to be buried there. XXI. Le changement sera fort difficile, Cité, prouince au change gain fera: Coeur haut, prudent mis, chassé luy habile, Mer, terre, peuple son estat changera. The change will be very difficult: City and province will gain by the change: Heart high, prudent established, chased out one cunning, Sea, land, people will change their state. XXII. La grand copie qui sera deschassee, Dans vn moment fera besoing au Roy. La foy promise de loing sera faussee, Nud se verra en piteux desarroy. The great army will be chased out, In one moment it will be needed by the King: The faith promised from afar will be broken, He will be seen naked in pitiful disorder. XXIII. La legion dans la marine classe, Calcine, Magnes soulphre, & poix bruslera: Le long repos de l'asseuree place, Port Selyn, Hercle feu les consumera. The legion in the marine fleet Will burn lime, loadstone sulfur and pitch: The long rest in the secure place: "Port Selyn" and Monaco, fire will consume them. XXIV. Ouy soubs terre saincte Dame voix fainte, Humaine flamme pour diuine voir luire: Fera des seuls de leur sang terre tainte, Et les saincts temples pour les impurs destruire. Beneath the holy earth of a soul the faint voice heard, Human flame seen to shine as divine: It will cause the earth to be stained with the blood of the monks, And to destroy the holy temples for the impure ones. XXV. Corps sublimes sans fin à l'oeil visibles, Ob nubiler viendront par ces raisons: Corps, front comprins, sens chefs & inuisibles, Diminuant les sacrees oraisons. Lofty bodies endlessly visible to the eye, Through these reasons they will come to obscure: Body, forehead included, sense and head invisible, Diminishing the sacred prayers. XXVI. Lou grand eyssame se leuera d'abelhos, Que non salutan don te siegen venguddos. Denuech l'êbousq, lou gach dessous les treilhos Ceiutad trahido per cinq lengos non nudos. The great swarm of bees will arise, Such that one will not know whence they have come; By night the ambush, the sentinel under the vines City delivered by five babblers not naked. XXVII. Salon, Mansol, Tarascon de SEX, l'are, Où est debout encor la piramide: Viendront liurer le Prince Dannemarc, Rachat honny au temple d'Artemide. Salon, Tarascon, "Mausol", the arch of "SEX.", Where the pyramid is still standing: They will come to deliver the Prince of "Annemark," Redemption reviled in the temple of Artemis. XXVIII. Lors que Venus du Sol sera couuert, Soubs l'esplendeur sera forme occulte: Mercure au feu les aura descouuert, Par bruit bellique sera mis à l'insulte. When Venus will be covered by the Sun, Under the splendor will be a hidden form: Mercury will have exposed them to the fire, Through warlike noise it will be insulted. XXIX. Le Sol caché eclipse par Mercure, Ne sera mis que pour le ciel second: De Vulcan Hermes sera faicte pasture, Sol sera veu peur, rutiland & blond. The Sun hidden eclipsed by Mercury Will be placed only second in the sky: Of Vulcan Hermes will be made into food, The Sun will be seen pure, glowing red and golden. XXX. Plus unze fois Luna Sol ne vouldra, Tous augmenté & baissez de degrez: Et si bas mis que peu or on coudra, Qu'apres faim peste, descouuert le secret. Eleven more times the Moon the Sun will not want, All raised and lowered by degree: And put so low that one will stitch little gold: Such that after famine plague, the secret uncovered. XXXI. La Lune au plain de nuict sur le haut mont, Le nouueau sophe d'vn seul cerueau la veu: Par ses disciples estre immortel semond, Yeux au mydi, en seins mains corps au feu. The Moon in the full of night over the high mountain, The new sage with a lone brain sees it: By his disciples invited to be immortal, Eyes to the south. Hands in bosoms, bodies in the fire. XXXII. Es lieux & temps chair ou poisson donra lieu, La loy commune sera faicte au contraire: Vieux tiendra fort puis osté du milieu, Le Panta chiona philon mis fort arriere. In the places and times of flesh giving way to fish, The communal law will be made in opposition: It will hold strongly the old ones, then removed from the midst, Loving of Everything in Common put far behind. XXXIII. Iupiter ioinct plus Venus qu'à la Lune, Apparoissant de plenitude blanche: Venus cachee sous la blancheur Neptune De Mars frappee & par la grauee blanche. Jupiter joined more to Venus than to the Moon Appearing with white fulness: Venus hidden under the whiteness of Neptune Struck by Mars through the white stew. XXXIV. Le grand mené captif d'estrange terre, D'or enchainé au Roy Chyren offert: Qui dans Ausone, Milan perdra la guerre, Et tout son ost mis à feu & à fer. The great one of the foreign land led captive, Chained in gold offered to King "Chyren": He who in Ausonia, Milan will lose the war, And all his army put to fire and sword. XXXV. Le feu esteint les vierges trahiront La plus grand part de la bande nouuelle: Foudre à fer, lance les sels Roy garderont Etrusque & Corse, de nuict gorge allumelle. The fire put out the virgins will betray The greater part of the new band: Lightning in sword and lance the lone Kings will guard Etruria and Corsica, by night throat cut. XXXVI. Les ieux nouueaux en Gaule redressez, Apres victoire de l'Insubre champaigne: Monts d'Esperie, les grands liez, troussez: De peur trembler la Romaigne & l'Espaigne. The new sports set up again in Gaul, After victory in the Insubrian campaign: Mountains of Hesperia, the great ones tied and trussed up: "Romania" and Spain to tremble with fear. XXXVII. Gaulois par sauts, monts viendra penetrer: Occupera le grand lieu de l'Insubre: Au plus profond son ost fera entrer, Gennes, Monech pousseront classe rubre. The Gaul will come to penetrate the mountains by leaps: He will occupy the great place of Insubria: His army to enter to the greatest depth, Genoa and Monaco will drive back the red fleet. XXXVIII. Pendant que Duc, Roy, Royne occupera, Chef Bizant du captif en Samothrace: Auant l'assauit l'un l'autre mangera, Rebours ferré suyura du sang la trace. While he will engross the Duke, King and Queen With the captive Byzantine chief in Samothrace: Before the assault one will eath the order: Reverse side metaled will follow the trail of the blood. XXXIX. Les Rhodiens demanderont secours, Par le neglet de ses hoirs delaissee. L'empire Arabe reuelera son cours, Par Hesperies la cause redressee. The Rhodians will demand relief, Through the neglect of its heirs abandoned. The Arab empire will reveal its course, The cause set right again by Hesperia. XL. Les forteresses des assiegez serrez, Par poudre à feu profondez en abysmes Les proditeurs seront tous vifs serrez, Onc aux sacristes n'aduint si piteux scisme. The fortresses of the besieged shut up, Through gunpowder sunk into the abyss: The traitors will all be stowed away alive, Never did such a pitiful schism happen to the sextons. XLI. Gymnique sexe captiue par hostage, Viendra de nuit custodes deceuoir: Le chef du camp de&cced;eu par son langage, Lairra à la gente, fera piteux à voir. Female sex captive as a hostage Will come by night to deceive the guards: The chief of the army deceived by her language Will abandon her to the people, it will be pitiful to see. XLII. Geneue & Lâgres par ceux de Chartres & Dole, Et par Grenoble captif au Montlimard: Seysset, Lausanne, par fraudulente dole, Les trahiront par or soixante marc. Geneva and Langres through those of Chartres and Dôle And through Grenoble captive at Montélimar Seyssel, Lausanne, through fraudulent deceit, They will betray them for sixty marks of gold. XLIII. Seront ouye au ciel armes battre, Celuy au mesme les diuins ennemis: Voudront loix sainctes iniustement debatre: Par foudre & guerre bien croyans à mort mis. Arms will be heard clashing in the sky: That very same year the divine ones enemies: They will want unjustly to discuss the holy laws: Through lightning and war the complacent one put to death. XLIV. Deux gros de Mende, de Roudés & Milhau. Cahours, Lymoges, Castres malo sepmano De nuech l'intrado, de Bourdeaux vn cailhau, Par Perigort au toc de la campano. Two large ones of Mende, of Rodez and Milhau Cahors, Limoges, Castres bad week By night the entry, from Bordeaux an insult Through Périgord at the peal of the bell. XLV. Par conflict Roy, regne abandonnera, Le plus grand chef faillira au besoing, Mors profligez peu en reschapera, Tous destranchés, vn en sera tesmoing. Through conflict a King will abandon his realm: The greatest chief will fail in time of need: Dead, ruined few will escape it, All cut up, one will be a witness to it. XLVI. Bien deffendu le faict par excellence, Garde toy Tours de ta proche ruine: Londres & Nantes par Reims fera deffense Ne passe outre au temps de la bruine. The fact well defended by excellence, Guard yourself Tours from your near ruin: London and Nantes will make a defense through Reims Not passing further in the time of the drizzle. XLVII. Le noir farouche quand aura essayé Sa main sanguine par teu, fer arcs tendus, Trestous le peuple sera tant effrayé, Voir les plus grans par col & pieds pendus. The savage black one when he will have tried His bloody hand at fire, sword and drawn bows: All of his people will be terribly frightened, Seeing the greatest ones hung by neck and feet. XLVIII. Planure Ausonne fertile, spacieuse, Produira taons si tant de sauterelles: Clarté solaire deuiendra nubileuse, Ronger le tout, grand peste venir d'elles. The fertile, spacious Ausonian plain Will produce so many gadflies and locusts, The solar brightness will become clouded, All devoured, great plague to come from them. XLIX. Deuant le peuple sang sera respandu, Que du haut ciel viendra esloigner. Mais d'vn long temps ne sera entendu, L'esprit d'vn seul le viendra tesmoigner. Before the people blood will be shed, Only from the high heavens will it come far: But for a long time of one nothing will be heard, The spirit of a lone one will come to bear witness against it. L. Libra verra regner les Hesperies, De ciel & tenir la monarchie: D'Asie forces nul ne verra peries, Que sept ne tiennent par rang la hierarchie. Libra will see the Hesperias govern, Holding the monarchy of heaven and earth: No one will see the forces of Asia perished, Only seven hold the hierarchy in order. LI. Vn Duc cupide son ennemy ensuyure, Dans entrera empeschant la phalange, Hastez à pied si pres viendront poursuyure, Que la iournee conflite pres de Gange. A Duke eager to follow his enemy Will enter within impeding the phalanx: Hurried on foot they will come to pursue so closely That the day will see a conflict near Ganges. LII. En cité obsesse aux murs hommes & femmes. Ennemis hors le chef prest à soy rendre: Vent sera fort encore les gendarmes. Chassez seront par chaux, poussiere, & cendre. In the besieged city men and woman to the walls, Enemies outside the chief ready to surrender: The wind will be strongly against the troops, They will be driven away through lime, dust and ashes. LIII. Les fugitifs & bannis reuoquez, Peres & fils grand garnissant les hauts puis Le cruel pere & les siens souffoquez, Son fils pire submergé dans le puits. The fugitives and exiles recalled: Fathers and sons great garnishing of the deep wells: The cruel father and his people choked: His far worse son submerged in the well. LIV. Du nom qui onque ne fut au Roy Gaulois Iamais ne fut vn foudre si craintif. Tremblant l'Italie, l'Espagne & les Anglois, De femme estrangiers grandement attentif. Of the name which no Gallic King ever had Never was there so fearful a thunderbolt, Italy, Spain and the English trembling, Very attentive to a woman and foreigners. LV. Quand la corneille sur tout de brique ioincte, Durant sept heures ne fera que crier: Mort presagee de sang statue taincte, Tyran meurtri, aux Dieux peuple prier. When the crow on the tower made of brick For seven hours will continue to scream: Death foretold, the statue stained with blood, Tyrant murdered, people praying to their Gods. LVI. Apres victoire de rabieuse langue, L'esprit tempré en tranquil & repos: Victeur sanguin par conflict faict harangue, Roustir la langue & la chair & les os. After the victory of the raving tongue, The spirit tempered in tranquility and repose: Throughout the conflict the bloody victor makes orations, Roasting the tongue and the flesh and the bones. LVII. Ignare enuie au grand Roy supportee, Tiendras propos deffendre les escripts. Sa femme non femme par vn autre tentee, Plus double deux ne fort ne criz. Ignorant envy upheld before the great King, He will propose forbidding the writings: His wife not his wife tempted by another, Twice two more neither skill nor cries. LVIII. Soloeil ardent dans le grosier coller, De sang humain arrouser terre Etrusque: Chef seille d'eau, mener son fils filer, Captiue dame conduicte terre Turque. To swallow the burning Sun in the throat, The Etruscan land washed by human blood: The chief pail of water, to lead his son away, Captive lady conducted into Turkish land. LIX. Deux assiegez en ardente ferueur: Ce soif estaincts pour deux plaines tasses Le fort limé, & vn vieillart resueur, Aux Genevois de Nira monstra trasse. Two beset in burning fervor: By thirst for two full cups extinguished, The fort filed, and an old dreamer, To the Genevans he will show the track from "Nira." LX. Les sept enfans en hostaine laissez, Le tiers viendra son enfant trucider: Deux par son fils seront d'estoc percez. Genues, Florence, les viendra enconder. The seven children left in hostage, The third will come to slaughter his child: Because of his son two will be pierced by the point, Genoa, Florence, he will come to confuse them. LXI. Le vieux mocqué priué de sa place, Par l'estranger qui le subornera: Mains de son fils mangees deuant sa face, Le frere à Chartres, Orl Roüan trahira. The old one mocked and deprived of his place, By the foreigner who will suborn him: Hands of his son eaten before his face, His brother to Chartres, Orléans Rouen will betray. LXII. Vn coronel machine ambition, Se saisira de la grande armee, Contre son Prince fainte inuention, Et descouuert sera soubs sa ramee. A colonel with ambition plots, He will seize the greatest army, Against his Prince false invention, And he will be discovered under his arbor. LXIII. L'armee Celtique contre les montaignars, Qui seront s&cced;euz & prins à la pipee: Paysans frez pouseront rost faugnars, Precipitez tous au fils de l'espee. The Celtic army against the mountaineers, Those who will be learned and able in bird-calling: Peasants will soon work fresh presses, All hurled on the sword's edge. LXIV. Le deffaillant en habit de bourgeois, Viendra le Roy tenter de son offense: Quinze soldats la pluspart Vstagois, Vie derniere & chef de sa cheuance. The transgressor in bourgeois garb, He will come to try the King with his offense: Fifteen soldiers for the most part bandits, Last of life and chief of his fortune. LXV. Au deserteur de la grande fortresse, Apres qu'aura son lieu abandonné, Son aduersaire fera grand proüesse, L'empereur tost mort sera condamné. Towards the deserter of the great fortress, After he will have abandoned his place, His adversary will exhibit very great prowess, The Emperor soon dead will be condemned. LXVI. Sous couleur fainte de sept testes rasces, Seront semez diuers explorateurs: Puys & fontaines de poisons arrousees, Au fort de Gennes humains deuorateurs. Under the feigned color of seven shaven heads Diverse spies will be scattered: Wells and fountains sprinkled with poisons, At the fort of Genoa devourers of men. LXVII. Lors que Saturne & Mars esgaux combust, L'air fort seiché longue traiection: Par feux secrets, d'ardeur grand lieu adust, Peu pluye, vent chaut, guerres, incursions. The year that Saturn and Mars are equal fiery, The air very dry parched long meteor: Through secret fires a great place blazing from burning heat, Little rain, warm wind, wars, incursions. LXVIII. En lieu bien proche non esloigné de Venus. Les deux plus grands de l'Asie & d'Aphrique, Du Ryn & Hister qu'on dira sont venus, Cris pleurs à Malte & costé Ligustique. In the place very near not far from Venus, The two greatest ones of Asia and of Africa, From the Rhine and Lower Danube they will be said to have come, Cries, tears at Malta and the Ligurian side. LXIX. La cité grande les exilez tiendront, Les citadins morts, meurtris & chassez: Ceux d'Aquilee à Parme promettront, Monstrer l'entree par les lieux non trassez. The exiles will hold the great city, The citizens dead, murdered and driven out: Those of Aquileia will promise Parma To show them the entry through the untracked places. LXX. Bien contigue des grands monts Pyrenees, Vn contre l'Aigle grand copie addresser: Ouuertes veines, forces exterminees, Que iusqu'à Paulle chef viendra chasser. Quite contiguous to the great Pyrenees mountains, One to direct a great army against the Eagle: Veins opened, forces exterminated, As far as Pau will he come to chase the chief. LXXI. En lieu d'espouse les filles trucidees, Meurtre à grand faute ne fera superstile: Dedans se puys vestu les inondees, L'espouse estainte par haute d'Aconile. In place of the bride the daughters slaughtered, Murder with great error no survivor to be: Within the well vestals inundated, The bride extinguished by a drink of Aconite. LXXII. Les Attomiques par Agen & l'Estore, A sainct Felix feront leur parlement: Ceux de Basas viendront à la mal' heure, Saisir Condon & Marsan promptement. Those of Nîmes through Agen and Lectoure At Saint-Félix will hold their parliament: Those of Bazas will come at the unhappy hour To seize Condom and Marsan promptly. LXXIII. Le nepueu grand par force prouuera Le pache fait du coeur pusillanime: Ferrare & Ast le Duc esprouuera, Par lors qu'au soir sera le pantomime The great nephew by force will test The treaty made by the pusillanimous heart: The Duke will try Ferrara and Asti, When the pantomine will take place in the evening. LXXIV. Du lac Leman & ceux de Brannonices: Tous assemblez contre ceux d'Aquitaine: Germains beaucoup encore plus Souisses, Seront desfaicts auec ceux d'Humaine. Those of lake Geneva and of Mâcon: All assembled against those of Aquitaine: Many Germans many more Swiss, They will be routed along with those of "Humane." LXXV. Prest à combattre fera defection, Chef aduersaire obtiendra la victoire: L'arriere garde fera defension. Les defaillans mort au blanc territoire. Ready to fight one will desert, The chief adversary will obtain the victory: The rear guard will make a defense, The faltering ones dead in the white territory. LXXVI. Les Nibobriges par eeux de Perigort, Seront vexez, tenant iusques au Rosne: L'associé de Gascons & Begorne, Trahir le temple, le prestre estant au prosne: The people of Agen by those of Périgord Will be vexed, holding as far as the Rhône: The union of Gascons and Bigorre To betray the temple, the priest giving his sermon. LXXVII. Selin monarque l'Italie pacifique, Regnes vnis par Roy Chrestien du monde: Mourant voudra coucher en terre blesique, Apres pyrates auoir chassé de l'onde. "Selin" monarch Italy peaceful, Realms united by the Christian King of the World: Dying he will want to lie in Blois soil, After having chased the pirates from the sea. LXXVIII. La grand' armee de la pugne ciuile, Pour de nuict Parme à l'estrange trouuee, Septante neuf meurtris dedans la ville, Les estrangers passez tout à l'espee. The great army of the civil struggle, By night Parma to the foreign one discovered, Seventy-nine murdered in the town, The foreigners all put to the sword. LXXIX. Sang Royal fuis, Monhuit, Mas, Esguillon, Remplis seront de Bourdelois les Landes, Nauuarre, Bygorre poinctes & eguillons, Profonds de faim vorer de Liege glandes. Blood Royal flee, Monheurt, Mas, Aiguillon, The Landes will be filled by Bordelais, Navarre, Bigorre points and spurs, Deep in hunger to devour acorns of the cork oak. LXXX. Pres du grand fleuue grand fosse terre egeste, En quinze pars sera l'eau diuisee: La cité prinse, feu, sang cris conflict mettre. Et la pluspart concerne au collisee. Near the great river, great ditch, earth drawn out, In fifteen parts will the water be divided: