Tuesday, April 1, 2014
Headlet's Cross
As another Lame Cherry exclusive in matter anti matter......
In the year 1467 AD in the year of our Lord, a child was born on Whitsuntide to John Nixon, a landowner farmer in England. The boy was christened Robert and it was at this that an era began where the locals of Delamere Forest began to hear of the strange things of this seer.
Robert Nixon was known locally as the most stupid of humans. He could not be made to understand the simplest of tasks as driving oxen, but he would utter fantastic prophecies which time and again came to be.
Robert Nixon would at one time be driving oxen and call them Richard and Henry, as a war was taking place between Richard III and Henry VII, and he spoke that Henry would win the battle, which he did.
King Henry upon learning of the mad prophet summoned him and at that Robert Nixon foretold that he would starve to death under the King's protection.
The King tested the seer in hiding a ring before Robert Nixon arrived and the seer when asked about the ring simply replied, "He that hideth is he that can findeth".
Satisfied the King kept Robert Nixon at court, but the prophecy of the starvation was yet to be.
This took place as the King away on going away on a hunt was begged by Robert to take him along or he would die. The King desiring to protect the seer, put him charge of a court officer.
The King leaving, the servants began tormenting the seer and the officer locked Robert in a closet, and more orders came from the King, and a three day travel was undertaken, forgetting about Robert Nixon, who upon returning, found the seer starved to death.
Mother Shipton would arise in the same period and predict something interesting in the world would be done in the year of 1881.
This did not come to be, even if numerous other prophecies were fulfilled.
As I have noted in the Age of Obama, that Edgar Cayce and Nostradamus both were very accurate at things close in the future, but in the 21st century their endings of the world and wars are completely wrong now.
I wonder at the below which was a fixation in England where a cross was swallowed up by the ground, and it was on that spot that decisive action was to be fought.
"I must also observe that the cross on Delamere forest , that is, three steps and the socket in which the cross formerly stood are now sunk within a few inches of the ground, though all remember to have seen it within the memory of man nearly six feet above, the cross itself having been destroyed long since.
It is also remarkable that Headlets cross is mentioned by Merlin de Rymer and most other English and Scotch prophets as the last place in England on which it is supposed a decisive action will happen; but as to any fixed period when the things will come to pass I cannot learn, being all mentioned with the greatest uncertainty."
This action never seemed to take place. It appears it is yet to be fulfilled
agtG