Monday, 31 October 2016

When the First is the Last






The Prophecy of St Malachy (1095-1148):

"In the final persecution of the Holy Roman Church there will reign Peter the Roman, who will feed his flock amid many tribulations, after which the seven-hilled city will be destroyed and the dreadful Judge will judge the people. The End.”

The father of the current pope was Peter, or Pietro, and was from Italy even though the family would eventually move to Argentina.

In 1139, Archbishop Malachy went to Rome from Ireland to give an account of his affairs. While there he received a strange vision about the future that included the name of every pope, 112 in all from his time, who would rule until the end of time. We are now at the Last Prophecy.

His predictions are taken very seriously. As one report states: "In 1958, before the Conclave that would elect Pope John XXIII, Cardinal Spellman of New York hired a boat, filled it with sheep and sailed up and down the Tiber River, to show that he was 'pastor et nautor,' the motto attributed to the next Pope in the prophecies."

As for the prophecy concerning the 111th pope, Pope Benedict, the prophecy says of him, "Gloria Olivae," which means "the glory of the Olive."

The Order of Saint Benedict is also known as the Olivetans, which many claim makes Malachy's prophecies correct. The next and final pope then should be "Peter Romanus."

St Malachy gave an account of his visions to Pope Innocent II, but the document remained unknown in the Roman Archives until its discovery in 1590.

Many of the prophecies are incredibly accurate. For example, the one pertaining to Urban VIII is Lilium et Rosa (the lily and the rose). He was a native of Florence and on the arms of Florence figure a fleur-de-lis. Pope John Paul II is De labore Solis meaning "of the eclipse of the sun." Karol Wojtyla was born on May 18, 1920 during a solar eclipse.

Peregrinus apostolicus (pilgrim pope), which designates Pius VI, appears to be verified by his many journeys to new lands.

Pope Francis the First (born in 1936, three years prior to what some believe to be last legitimate pope, Pius XII, being elected) is clearly prophesied to be the Last pope. He was ordained on 13 December 1969, became pope on 13 March 2013 and was announced to the world at the thirteenth chime, aged seventy-six (7+6=13), and is the 266th pope; though many traditionalists hold that all popes after Pius XII are antipopes due to heresies introduced by Vatican II. White doves were released from the Vatican by the new pope. A large black crow instantly attacked the doves. The black crow is a symbol of cunning, death and war. It is also believed to be an indication and sign that great change is coming.





Tuesday, 13 September 2016

Phantoms



In part, we are,
In part, we always were
Phantoms from another time.
Time travellers. Ghosts.
Fading in. Now fading out.
Like spectral curls of mist
From time past to time present.
And back to whence we came.


Monday, 5 September 2016

Why, Oh Why, The Dye?




"By the way I saw the Useless Article (with dyed hair), - the blighter had the cheek to get into my carriage when my train stopped at Highgate. I did a nifty exit into the next carriage. What is the Northern line coming to? I noticed Farrant had dark brown hair, sandals, no mac, it was a hot day, what looked like a '70's shirt with large collar (charity shop), but no zimmer frame, as yet." — A. Hill (18 August 2016)


Why, oh why, does Farrant dye

His hair when there is no need

For a man in his seventies to try

To cover the grey and deceive?



We can all see the whiskers white

And undyed where sideburns greet

Strangely coloured hair and light

Grey bristles evidentially meet

Startled eyes expecting the chops

To match the darkened mop on top.



Why dye? 'Cause it's in the eye

Of the beholder that this is a lie.



Saturday, 3 September 2016

The Last Time I Saw Arthur



Adieu, said the upturned glass in 1966. Adieu.
Was it you? No not me. He said he knew who.
The electric socket suddenly sparked and blew.
Adieu! Adieu! Adieu! Adieu! Adieu! Adieu!


The last time I saw Arthur was a handful of days ago,
Or was it, all considered, a handful of decades or so,
When first I occasioned upon him in another studio
At Kilburn where he learned darkroom processing.

He came to Islington part-time, while confessing
The early mornings he delivered pints of milk
Before printing off pictures of females in silk
And gents in top hats and all that. I'm guessing

The Arthur who worked at my studio back then
Is not the one before me now. Today he is a ghost
Who looks distantly with eyes vacant at his host
As I await for the Arthur of old to spark again.

Occasionally it does, and laughter breaks anew;
And then, Adieu! Adieu! Adieu! Adieu! Adieu!  





Monday, 27 June 2016

The Night Consumes Feathery Farewells of Distant Waves



The night consumes feathery farewells of distant waves;
Darkness steals memories of vortexing vampire vapours;
As you slip into that void where only a name once spoken
Tells of another voluptuous time when we were not corpses
Feeding upon the elements of time and the sod's sad song.

I knew you as flaxen fairness flew around your face,
Eyes green glinting malachite meteorites skyward falling
Like tears understood as pearls of our inevitable parting.
Symbols of death emerged one by one with the mellow,
Sonorous sound of notes gently stroked and tinkling

Echoes of a piano plucking adagio-like at my soul,
As gently the footsteps descend into inky oblivion.


Sunday, 19 June 2016

How It Used To Be



Those of us who recall
How it used to be
Will never fall
For what we see

Now.

It was so much better
How it used to be
Before the flow
Of antipathy

Unfettered.

Those not here
In England
Of yesteryear
Cannot comprehend

How

It

Used

To

Be.