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B10026 A true coppy of Mother Shiptons last prophesies as they were taken from one Joane Waller in the year of our Lord 1625 who died in March last, 1641 being ninety foure yeares of age of whom Mother Shipton had prophesided that she should live to heare of wars within this kingdome but not to see them, also predicting other wonderfull events that should befall in the clymate in these times, with two other strange prophesies threunto annexed, all which were never published before. Shipton, Mother (Ursula) 1642 (1642) Wing S3454; ESTC R221459 5,700 13

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A True Coppy of MOTHER SHIPTONS LAST PROPHESIES As they were taken from one JOANE WALLER In the Year of our Lord 1625. Who Died in March last 1641. being ninety foure yeares of age Of whom Mother Shipton had Prophesied that she should live to heare of Wars within this Kingdome but not to see them Also predicting other wonderfull events that should befall in this Clymate and in these times With two other strange Prophesies thereunto Annexed All which were never Published before London Printed for T.V. 1642. A Prophecy found in the Alley of Saint Benedicts Abbey in Norfolk IF eighty eight be past then thrive Thou maist till forty foure or five After the Maid is dead a Scot Shall govern there and if a Plot Prevent him not sure then his sway Continue shall for many a day The Ninth shall dye but then the First Perhaps shall reigne but oh accurst Shall be the time when as you see To sixteen joyned thirty three For then the Eagle shall have helpe By craft to catch the Lyons whelpe And hurt him sore except the same Be cured by a Maidens name In July Moneth of the same Year Saturne shall joyne with Jupiter Perhaps False Prophets may arise And Mahomet shall play his prize But sure much alteration Shall happen in Religion Beleeve you this when as you see A Spaniard a Protestant to be Another Prophesie OVt of the North shal come an hoast Which shall invade the Brittish coast And it shall overspread the Land And drive the King unto a stand And from the King shall take his life Yet shall it not offend his Wife For after he shall live again And then the tyrant shall be slain Out of the East shall come a Knight Which shall Donzeldelphus height And he with good Rogero shield Shal beat the Tyrant out of the Field And chase him out of Brittany And drown the Tyrant in the Sea The Scots Prophesie ANglia te prodit tua Gens te qualibet odit Te circumfodeat Gens Scotia gallia ridit Wallia minatur hiberniaque insidiatur Pax imulata fluit graviorque paena paratur A Perfect Coppy of Mother Shiptons last Prophesies IN Henry the eighths time the King having made Cardinall Wolsey Bishop of York and he purposing to come and live in the North Mother Shipton hearing of it replyed and said he must see York but never come to it King Henry and the Cardinall heard tell of her saying and were very angry and sent three Lords down to see if shee would stand to her words viz. Lord Duke Lord Percy and Lord Darcy So they and their Men came down disguised from London to Dring Houses neer York And left there their Men and came to York themselves to one Master Beasleys House in Conistreet in York late at night and knocked at his dore and asked if Master Beasley was within who were answered he was and they requested to speake with him who forthwith came unto them and they whispering in his eare tould him he must go with them to Shipton Wives House which accordingly he did and knocking at her Doore she said come in Master Beasley and those three Honourable Lords with you upon which words Master Beasley would have put the Lords in first and shee said no Master Beasley come you in you know the House and they do not then said they one to another this is a strange thing that she should know us and never saw us So they came in and there was a faire fire prepared Master Beasley saying with your leave Mother Shipton well come quoth she so said all the Lords in order and she said welcome my Lord Duke welcome my Lord Percy and welcome my Lord Darcy sit you here my Lord Duke sit you here my Lord Percy and sit you here my Lord Darcy and you M. Beasley sit here for you are as one of the House and when they all were set down she bad her maid fetch some Ale and goe to the Crbbert and bring short Cakes for she had prepared them before hand and she did so and they all did eat and drink-thereof and were very merry then said my Lord Duke Mother Shipton if you knew what we were come about you would not make us thus welcome and she said my Lord Duke the Messenger must neither be headed nor hanged but Mother Shipton said the Duke my Lord Cardinall saies you must be burned for saying he might see York but never come into it and when he coms to York he purposeth to effect the same and she answered him she did say so and that he should see anon whether she might be burned or no then she took a kercher which she had on her head that had a yard of cloath in it and spread it on her knee and her head was as white as Wooll and cast it upon the fire and let it lye thereon a great while which not burning she took her staffe and turned it over and it would not burn then tooke shee it out of the fire and shaked it and put it on her head againe Then my Lord Duke asked her what she meant by that and she gave him answer and said if this had burned I might have bin burnt but because it doth not I must not Then said my Lord Duke Mother Shipton I understand you are a Woman of knowledge and judgement tell me what shall be the event of me she answered him my Lord the time shall come when you will be in as low an estate and case as I am in and in as mean an office and that is both a mean one and a low one Then required Lord Percy of her what should become of him my Lord said she shooe your horse in the quick and you will do well enough but if you do not your body will be buried in Cruse-Church after you be beheaded on the Pavement in York and your head will be stolne into France and they laught and said that will be a great hop betwixt the head and the body Then said my Lord Darcy Mother Shipton what must I do who answered him you my Lord who is going for warfare God speed you well you have made a great Gun shoot it off in time for it will come to passe that you wil pyne many but kill few so they dranke and gave her mony and thanks and returned to M. Beaslyes house and the next morning posted to the Court and declared their conference with her which severall passages came to be incident to the severall parties Presently afterwards the Lord Cardinall came to Cawood Castle neer York and resided there three dayes and three nights upon the third day the Crosse upon the top of the Castle fell downe and sore hurt the Steward upon his head Lord Cardinall being told thereof replyed I fear and doubt a ●reater crosse than this will follow In the afternoon the Car●inall went up to the top of the Castle and many Knights with him and when he
was at the top upon the Leads wal●ing he demanded of them where York stood and they shewed it to him and he demanded how many miles it was thither ●nd they told him seven miles then said he that will be soone ●idden not past two houres work I will go thither because yonder Witch said I might see York but never come thither and vowed he would burne not onely her but also three Priests which were at Table with her if when he came there they lacked their vestments The Priests hearing tell thereof were sore affrighted but she encouraged them saying content your selves for if need require you shall have twenty vestments but his purpose will be altered The night following after supper the Lord Cardinall fearing some evill towards him to approach charged his house-hould and all his Officers that no manner of person should that night more be suffered to come in but immediately after the charge was passed came Lord Percy and knocked at the Gates importuning the Porter to let him in who answered him none could that night come in for the Cardinall had charged him to suffer none to come in more then was in the house Then Lord Percy changed his voice pretending to be a neer kinsman and favourite to the Cardinall and must needs speak with him so that the Porter let him in and when the Cardinall saw Lord Percy he cryed out mercy Lord Percy I am no Traytor if not said Lord Percy yet must you with speed go with me to London but before he came thither for all the haste by the way he ended his life and against Mother Shipton his threats were past Then Mother Shipton after the Cardinall had poysoned himselfe by the way sent to M. Beasley and said to him M. Beasley the Cardinall builded a goodly closet in the Minster for him to sit in with pillers of Silver and Gold with Pearles and rich stones enamelled go and pull down one or two of them and present them to King Henry which accordingly he did and was made in recompence thereof an officer to the King and the rest the King caused to be taken down Shortly after Mistris Beasley in her Husbands absence and when he was at the Court being desirous to hear the event of future times seeing her former presages came to passe and what good successe her hu●band had in following her councel asked her saying Mother Shipton tell me something that is yet to come then she said Mistris Beasly it shall come to passe that Ouzebridge and Trinity Church shall meet for the Bridge shall fall and they shall build it againe on the day and it shall fall on the night untill the highest stone of Trinity Church be made the lowest stone of Ouzebridge After this you shall have a yeare of pennury and hunger death without any dread and dearth without any need In processe of time shall be seen A noble King and vertuous Queen Out of Scotland they shall come And shall enjoy this Crown alone The first comming of the King into York shall be at Bowdon Bar which shall be privately the next time when he comes to be knowne he will come through Holgate Towne and not through Holgate Lane and when his head shall be at London Bridge his taile shall be at Edenbrough And it will come to passe that water will run over Ouzebridge and laughing said every Cuckold will have an Oke tree at his ●●re and that there should be a Winde-Mill upon one of the Towers in York and that day men and women will weare great Bands and Hats like scuttles and after that rayles And when there is a Lord Mayor on the back side of the Minster in York let him take heed of a stab with a knife Also there will be two Knights that will fall out in the Castle yard at York which never will be kind again while they live Two Judges shall go twice in and out at Walme-gate-bar And when Coulton-Hag hath born seven years Corn You shall not know of w●refare at night and have it at morn Then in the 7th year after it wil begin And be noysome to the King When warfare begins at a Spring Much care to E●gland it will bring Then will the North rue it wondrous sore But the South for evermore Hares shall kindle upon the cold stone And lads shal wed ladies bring them home Then shal the ladies cry wel away That we were born to see this day The wel wil be they that have the least And woe to them that have the most For a hill and a dale will be worth eight Oxen and a Plough and ten pound in Mony worth ten pound Per Annum in Land And when it coms it will last three years before it cease Betwixt Calder and Ayre It will be long Faire When all the World is alost It shall be called Christ-crost The first main battel of this shal begin Where crook-back Richard his battell did win And those that goes unto the Plain Shall few of them return again At that day shall England quake For the voice of a dead Man shall be heard speake And the Dragon shall give the Bull a sneape After this the enemy shall advance to London then said she weladay for London for destruction will come upon it for evermore After that there will be a great battel and they will be pacified for a while but afterwards will return to Stockton-Moore neer York where will be a sore battell then will the Raven sit upon the Crosse and suck as much of the Nobilities blood as the Comminalties and then there will come thither a Woman with one eye and tread over many a Man in blood to the knee until she come to a Man leaning upon a rest and shall say unto him who art thou and he shall say I am the King of the Scots she shall wish him to ●o to her House and he will go and there will be three Knights in her ●ouse and all of them will stay three dayes and three nights with her ●nd one shall not know of another Soone after shall England be won and lost twice of a day they will cry in the forenoone England is lost and in the afternoone It is won for Clubs and clouted shooes will get the day There will be against these times a Lord Mayor of York chosen out of course and three Knights one not knowing of another shall be in Peter-gate in Yorke and a Lad borne in Pontetract with three thumbs shall hould these three Knights Horses untill the battell be won Then will all the Noble blood of England be gone except one and he will be carried to Sheriffe Huttons Castle on Horse-back and there will dye Then will they make an Earle in the Field hanging their Horses on a Thorne and ruing the time that they were borne to see so much blood shed Then will they come to York and set upon it and it will keep them out three daies and three nights and a penny loafe within the Bar will be at halfe a Crown and without the Bar at a Penny and harder to get with them without then within for the scarcity of mony Then will the Enemy sweare if so they will not let them in they will blow up the Wals and the Towne and they will be let in and there will go to Cruse-Church three Knights or Earles and there shall but one come out againe and he will make Proclamation through the City That whosoever will take away Houses Manners Towers or Bowers to come and possesse them for one and twenty yeares then for evermore in England there shall be no more warefare then shall York be as London Then shall it be that one Woman shall say to another come Mother I saw a Man to day which will be joy to a Woman to see for for one Man there will be a thousand Women then will there be a White Harvest and Corne gotten in all with Women Then shall an Old Man sit on Saint James Kirk hill weeping his fill And King or queen shall there be none But Lords to Rule this Realm alone When these things are come to passe a ship shal come floting on Thames untill it come against London then shall the Master therof begin to weep and his Men shall say Master why weep you and we have had so good a Voyage for that will he say I have seen here the goodliest City in the World and now I feare there is none to give us drink for our Money After Nevill with the Childs voice be fled out of England he shall kill the Great Turk when this Child is in Yorke you shall have a Lord Mayor dwelling at the grate head neer the pavement he shall be forst to fly out at his back dore to save his life and the two Sheriffs of York that shall be then shall be both one Sir-Nam FINIS