jetro 5,349 Posted July 6, 2020 Report Share Posted July 6, 2020 He's been right so far Atb j 1 Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Ken's Deputy 4,460 Posted July 6, 2020 Report Share Posted July 6, 2020 Ted Nugent. Where have I seen that name before? Quote Link to post Share on other sites
jetro 5,349 Posted July 6, 2020 Author Report Share Posted July 6, 2020 3 minutes ago, Ken's Deputy said: Ted Nugent. Where have I seen that name before? He was/is an American singer Atb j 1 Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Qbgrey 4,143 Posted July 7, 2020 Report Share Posted July 7, 2020 Good ole ted. Quote Link to post Share on other sites
DIDO.1 22,845 Posted July 7, 2020 Report Share Posted July 7, 2020 I think this is very accurate, considering it was written in 1871. I know it's quite long but it's frightening how accurate it is. It takes a while to get going but if you can read give it a go Tom Hill was in the saddle. One bright November morn, The echoing glades of Guiting Wood Where ringing with his horn. The diamonds of the hoar-frost Were sparkling in the sun, Upon the falling leaves the drops Were shining one by one. The hare lay on the fallow, The robin caroled free; The linnet and the yellow finch Twittered from tree to tree. In stately march the sable rook Followed the clanking plough; Apart their watchful sentinel Cawed from the topmost bough. Peeped from her hole the field-mouse Amid the fallen leaves; From twig to twig the spider Her filmy cable weaves. The wavings of the pine boughs The squirrel’s from disclosure; And through the purple beech-tops The whirring pheasant rose. The startled rabbit scuttered Across the grassy ride; High in mid-air the hovering hawk Wheeled round in circles wide. The freshest wind was blowing O’er groves of beech and oak, And through the boughs of larch and pine The struggling sunbeam broke. The varied tints of autumn Still lingered on the wood, And on the leaves the morning sun Poured out a golden flood. Soft, fleecy clouds were sailing Across the vault of blue; A fairer hunting morning No huntsman ever knew. All nature seemed rejoicing That glorious morn to see; All seemed to breathe a fresher life - Beast, insect, bird, and tree. But sounds and sight of beauty Fell dull on eye and ear; The huntsman’s heart was heavy His brow oppresses with care. High in his stirrups raised he stood, And long he gazed around; And breathlessly and anxiously He listened for a sound. But nought he heard save song of bird, Or jay’s discordant cry; Or when among the tree-tops The wind went murmuring by. No voice of hound, no sound of horn; The woods around were mute, As though the earth had swallowed up His comrades-man and brute. The thought, ‘I must essay to find My hounds at any cost; A huntsman who has lost his hounds Is but a huntsman lost.’ The round he turned his horse’s head, And shook his bridle free, When he was struck by an aged fox That sat beneath a tree. He raised his eyes in glad surprise, That huntsman keen and bold; But there was in that fox’s look That made his blood run cold. He raised his hand to touch his horn, And shout a ‘Tally-ho!’ But, mastered by that fox’s eye, His lips refused to blow, For he was grim and gaunt of limb, With age all silvered o’er; He might have been an Artic fox Escaped from Greenland’s shore. But age his vigor had not tamed, Not dimm’d his sparkling eye, Which shone with an unearthly fire - A fire could never die. And thus the huntsman he addressed, In tones distinct and clear, Who heard as they who in a dream The fairies’ music hear. ‘Huntsman,’ he saida sudden thrill Through all the listener ran, To hear a creature of the wood Speak like a Christian man ‘Last of my race, to me ‘tis given The future to unfold, To speak the words which never yet Spake fox of mortal mould. ‘Then print my words upon your heart, And stamp them on your brain, That you to others may impart My prophecy again. ‘Strong life is yours in manhood’s prime, Your cheek with heat is red; Time has not laid his finger yet In earnest on your head. ‘But ere your limbs are bent with age, And ere your locks are grey, The sport that you have loved so well Shall long have passed away. In vain shall generous Colmore Your hunt consent to keep; In vain the Rendcombe baronet With gold your stores shall heap. In vain Sir Alexander, And Watson Keen in vain, O’er the pleasant Cotswold hills The joyous sport maintain. ‘Vain all their efforts: spite of all, Draws nigh the fatal morn, When the last Cotswold fox shall hear The latest huntsman’s horn. ‘Yet think not, huntsman, I rejoice To see the end so near; Nor think the sound of horn and hound To me a sound of fear. ‘In my strong youth, which numbers now Full many a winter back, How scornfully I shook my brush Before the Berkeley pack. ‘How oft from Painswick Hill I’ve seen The morning mist uncurl, When Harry Airis blew the horn Before the wrathful Earl. ‘How oft I’ve heard the Cotswolds’ cry As Turner cheered the pack, And laughed to see his baffled hounds Hang vainly on my track. ‘Then think not that I speak in fear, Or prophesy in hate; Too well I know the doom reserved For all my tribe by fate. ‘Too well I know, by wisdom taught The existence of my race O’er all wide England’s green domain Is bound up with Chase. ‘Better in early youth and strength The race for life to run, Than poisoned like the noxious rat, Or slain by felon gun. ‘Better by wily sleight and turn The eager hound to foil, Thank slaughtered by each baser churl Who yet shall till the soil. ‘For not upon these hills alone The doom of sport shall fall; O’er the broad face of England creeps The shadow on the wall. ‘The years roll on: old manors change, Old customs lose their sway; New fashions rule; the grandsire’s garb Moves ridicule to-day. ‘The woodlands where my race has bred Unto the axe shall yield; Hedgerow and copse shall cease to shade The ever-widening field. ‘The manly sports of England Shall vanish on by one; The manly blood of England In weaker veins shall run. ‘The furzy down, the moorland heath, The steam plough shall invade; Nor park nor manor shall escape Common, nor forest glade. ‘Degenerate sons of manlier sires To lower joys shall fall; The faithless lore of Germany, The guilded vice of Gaul. ‘The sports of their forefathers To baser tastes shall yield; The vices of the town displace The pleasures of the field. ‘For swiftly o’er the level shore The waves of progress ride; The ancient landmarks one by one Shall sink beneath the tide. ‘Time honoured creeds and ancient faith, The Altar and the Crown, Lordship’s hereditary right, Before that tide go down. ‘Base churls shall mock the mighty names Writ on the roll of time; Religion shall be held a jest, And loyalty a crime. ‘No word of prayer, no hymn of praise Sound in the village school; The people’s education Utilitarians rule. ‘In England’s ancient pulpits Lay orators shall preach New creeds, and free religions Self made apostles teach. ‘The peasants to their daily tasks In surly silence fall; No kindly hospitalities In farmhouse or in hall. ‘Nor harvest feast nor Christmas tide Shall farm or manor hold; Science alone can plenty give, The only god is Gold. “The homes where love and peace should dwell. Fierce politics shall vex. And unsexed woman strive to prove Herself the coarser sex. ‘Mechanics in their workshop Affairs of State decide; Honour and truth old fashioned words The noisy mobs deride. ‘The statesmen that should rule the realm Coarse demagogues displace; The glory of a thousand years Shall end in foul disgrace. The honour of old England, Cotton shall buy and sell, And hardware manufacturers Cry “Peace! lo! All is well.” Trade shall be held the only good, And gain the sole device; The statesman’s maxim shall be peace, And peace at any price. “Her army and her navy Britain shall cast aside; Soldiers and ships are costly things, Defence an empty pride. The German and the Muscovite Shall rule the narrow seas; Old England’s flag shall cease to float In triumph on the breeze The footstep of the invader Then England’s shore shall know, While homebred traitors give the hand To England’s every foe. ‘Disarmed, before the foreigner, The knee shall humbly bend, And yield the treasures that she lacked The wisdom to defend. ‘But not for aye-yet once again, When purged by fire and sword, The land her freedom shall regain, To manlier thoughts restored. “Taught wisdom by disaster, England shall learn to know That trade is not the only gain Heaven gives to man below. ‘The greed for gold departed, The golden calf cast down, Old England’s sons again shall raise The Altar and the Crown. “Rejoicing seas shall welcome Their mistress once again; Again the banner of St. George Shall rule upon the main. “The blood of the invader Her pastures shall manure; His bones unburied on her fields For monuments endure. ‘Again in hall and homestead Shall joy and peace be seen, And smiling children raise again The maypole on the green. ‘Again the hospitable board Shall groan with Christmas cheer, And mutual service bind again The peasant and the peer. “Again the smiling hedgerow Shall field from field divide; Again among the woodlands The scarlet troop shall ride.’ Again it seemed that aged fox More prophecies would say, When sudden came upon a wind, ‘Hark forrard! Gone away!’ The listener started from his trance He sat there all alone; That well-known cry had burst the spell, The aged fox was gone. The huntsman turned. He spurred his steed, And to the cry he sped; And, when he thought upon that fox, Said naught, but shook his head. Cheltenham, 1871 7 5 Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Ken's Deputy 4,460 Posted July 7, 2020 Report Share Posted July 7, 2020 Well; That took my breath away! Quote Link to post Share on other sites
DIDO.1 22,845 Posted July 7, 2020 Report Share Posted July 7, 2020 Gives you chills doesn't it. Nobody knows who wrote it. Just a date on the bottom Quote Link to post Share on other sites
stop.end 4,082 Posted July 7, 2020 Report Share Posted July 7, 2020 It was a mason wrote while being on bent knee. Quote Link to post Share on other sites
DIDO.1 22,845 Posted July 7, 2020 Report Share Posted July 7, 2020 It's amazing what we are doing in this country. We teach young couples marriage isn't worth bothering about but we tell the gays its something worth fighting for. We tell young black kids they arnt responsible for their actions but young white kids are responsible for things their ancestors might of done. We destroy Christianity and promote Islam. We teach women to be men and men to be more effeminate. We promote feminism while allowing foreigners to import young girls to marry men they have never met. It goes on and on. 10 3 1 Quote Link to post Share on other sites
sandymere 8,263 Posted July 7, 2020 Report Share Posted July 7, 2020 7 hours ago, DIDO.1 said: I think this is very accurate, considering it was written in 1871. I know it's quite long but it's frightening how accurate it is. It takes a while to get going but if you can read give it a go Its a bit Peasants should be peasants and the gentry have a right to rule for my tastes, I prefer something a bit more along the lines of Seamus Heaney, this although written about troubles in Ireland has a relevance to the whole world, basically were to busy looking inwards at our own interests to see the warnings all around us of what the future holds. My tongue moved, a swung relaxing hinge. I said to her, "What will become of us?" And as forgotten water in a well might shake at an explosion under morning Or a crack run up a gable She began to speak I think our very form is bound to change. Dogs in a siege. Saurian relapses. Pismires Unless forgiveness finds its nerve and voice Unless the helmeted and bleeding tree Can green and open buds like infants' fists And the fouled magma incubate Bright nymphs... My people think money And talk weather. Whilst silence has shoaled into the trawlers' echo-sounders. The ground we kept our ears to for so long Is flayed and calloused, and its entrails Tented by an impious augury. Our island is full of comfortless noises Quote Link to post Share on other sites
DIDO.1 22,845 Posted July 7, 2020 Report Share Posted July 7, 2020 Gay as fck that. Couldn't really follow it. Must be a thick peasant 2 2 Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Dougieboy 250 Posted July 7, 2020 Report Share Posted July 7, 2020 Dido 1 you just made a grown man shed a tear. It happens from time to time mate. beautiful that. Thanks for posting 1 Quote Link to post Share on other sites
low plains drifter 10,708 Posted July 7, 2020 Report Share Posted July 7, 2020 10 hours ago, Ken's Deputy said: Well; That took my breath away! Do you want Thambulance Are you on the floor, have your lips gone blue ? 1 Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Astanley 11,580 Posted July 7, 2020 Report Share Posted July 7, 2020 9 hours ago, DIDO.1 said: Gives you chills doesn't it. Nobody knows who wrote it. Just a date on the bottom Prophetic and beautifully written ,I have ever read the before mate ,where did you come across it ?if you don't mind me asking .I would like to learn a bit more o it's provenence . Quote Link to post Share on other sites
DIDO.1 22,845 Posted July 7, 2020 Report Share Posted July 7, 2020 20 minutes ago, Astanley said: Prophetic and beautifully written ,I have ever read the before mate ,where did you come across it ?if you don't mind me asking .I would like to learn a bit more o it's provenence . Just Google it. The foxes prophecy. I'm smashed mate, full off procecco, can't spell prophocy 1 Quote Link to post Share on other sites
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