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North shall rise against the South._" "_The coek of the North shall be made to flee, And his feather be plucked for his pride, That he shall almost curse the day that he was born._" All these, say his admirers, are as clear as the sun at noon-day. The first denotes the defeat of Prince Charles Edward, at the battle of Culloden, by the Duke of Cumberland; the second, the execution of Lords Derwentwater, Balmerino, and Lovat; and the third, the retreat of the Pretender from the shores of Britain. Among the prophecies that still remain to be accomplished are the following: "_Between seven, eight, and nine, In England wonders shall be seen; Between nine and thirteen All sorrow shall be done._" "_Through our own money and our men Shall a dreadful war begin. Between the sickle and the suck All England shall have a pluck._" "_Foreign nations shall invade England with snow on their helmets, and shall bring plague, famine, and murder in the skirts of their garments._" "_The town of Nantwich shall be swept away by a flood._" Of the two first of these no explanation has yet been attempted; but some event or other will doubtless be twisted into such a shape as will fit them. The third, relative to the invasion of England by a nation with snow on their helmets, is supposed by the old women to foretell most clearly a coming war with Russia. As to the last, there are not a few in the town mentioned who devoutly believe that such will be its fate. Happily for their peace of mind, the prophet said nothing of the year that was to witness the awful calamity; so that they think it as likely to be two centuries hence as now. The popular biographers of Nixon conclude their account of him by saying, that "his prophecies are by some persons thought fables; yet by what has come to pass, it is now thought, and very plainly appears, that most of them have proved, or will prove, true; for which we, on all occasions, ought not only to exert our utmost might to repel by force our enemies, but to refrain from our abandoned and wicked course of life, and to make our continual prayer to God for protection and safety." To this, though a _non sequitur_, every one will cry, Amen! Besides the prophets, there have been the almanac-makers Lilly, Poor Robin, Partridge, and Francis Moore physician, in England and Matthew Laensbergh, in France and Belgium. But great as were their pretensions, t
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