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Volume  Volume2\Humorous Writings

Entry#  1293. IV. PROPHECIES. (1293 - 1313)


 Contents: Vol. 1  |  Vol. 2

 

IV.


PROPHECIES.


THE DIVISION OF THE PROPHECIES.


First, of things relating to animals; secondly, of irrational

creatures; thirdly of plants; fourthly, of ceremonies; fifthly, of

manners; sixthly, of cases or edicts or quarrels; seventhly, of

cases that are impossible in nature paradoxes , as, for instance,

of those things which, the more is taken from them, the more they

grow. And reserve the great matters till the end, and the small

matters give at the beginning. And first show the evils and then the

punishment of philosophical things.


(Of Ants.)


These creatures will form many communities, which will hide

themselves and their young ones and victuals in dark caverns, and

they will feed themselves and their families in dark places for many

months without any light, artificial or natural.


Footnote: Lines 1--5l are in the original written in one column,

beginning with the text of line 11. At the end of the column is the

programme for the arrangement of the prophecies, placed here at the

head: Lines 56--79 form a second column, lines 80--97 a third one

(see the reproduction of the text on the facsimile PI. CXVIII).


Another suggestion for the arrangement of the prophecies is to be

found among the notes 55--57 on page 357.  


(Of Bees.)


And many others will be deprived of their store and their food, and

will be cruelly submerged and drowned by folks devoid of reason. Oh

Justice of God! Why dost thou not wake and behold thy creatures thus

ill used?


(Of Sheep, Cows, Goats and the like.)


Endless multitudes of these will have their little children taken

from them ripped open and flayed and most barbarously quartered.


(Of Nuts, and Olives, and Acorns, and Chesnuts, and such like.)


Many offspring shall be snatched by cruel thrashing from the very

arms of their mothers, and flung on the ground, and crushed.


(Of Children bound in Bundles.)


O cities of the Sea! In you I see your citizens--both females and

males--tightly bound, arms and legs, with strong withes by folks who

will not understand your language. And you will only be able to

assuage your sorrows and lost liberty by means of tearful complaints

and sighing and lamentation among yourselves; for those who will

bind you will not understand you, nor will you understand them.


(Of Cats that eat Rats.)


In you, O cities of Africa your children will be seen quartered in

their own houses by most cruel and rapacious beasts of your own

country.


(Of Asses that are beaten.)


Footnote 48: Compare No. 845.  O Nature! Wherefore art thou so

partial; being to some of thy children a tender and benign mother,

and to others a most cruel and pitiless stepmother? I see children

of thine given up to slavery to others, without any sort of

advantage, and instead of remuneration for the good they do, they

are paid with the severest suffering, and spend their whole life in

benefitting those who ill treat them.


(Of Men who sleep on boards of Trees.)


Men shall sleep, and eat, and dwell among trees, in the forests and

open country.


(Of Dreaming.)


Men will seem to see new destructions in the sky. The flames that

fall from it will seem to rise in it and to fly from it with terror.

They will hear every kind of animals speak in human language. They

will instantaneously run in person in various parts of the world,

without motion. They will see the greatest splendour in the midst of

darkness. O! marvel of the human race! What madness has led you

thus! You will speak with animals of every species and they with you

in human speech. You will see yourself fall from great heights

without any harm and torrents will accompany you, and will mingle

with their rapid course.


(Of Christians.)


Many who hold the faith of the Son only build temples in the name of

the Mother.


(Of Food which has been alive.)


84  A great portion of bodies that have been alive will pass into

the bodies of other animals; which is as much as to say, that the

deserted tenements will pass piecemeal into the inhabited ones,

furnishing them with good things, and carrying with them their

evils. That is to say the life of man is formed from things eaten,

and these carry with them that part of man which dies . . .


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