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No best answer has yet been selected by Dolly1308. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I've read the Prophecies of Nostradamus, and some of them 'appear' to be quite accurate.
I'm not sayin I believe them, but they can give food for thought, it was some time ago, but the one that springs to mind, is where he's describing an aerial battle, and he says the 'half pig men are heard to speak', which is what a pilot might look like to him, with his helmet on, and the speaking, would be on the intercom.
He does predict the Third World War, and life after it, he names Napoleon as the first Anti Christ, Hister/Hitler as the second, and the third and last, he names as an anagram, Mabus.
My problem with all this, is that if you believe in this sort of thing, then our lives are pre-ordained, and we have no say in whar we do or say.
That if you believe it.
I have a book which seeks to interpret the quatrains. The prophesies are quite plausible, especially the comparison of the predicted war with the battlefield of Armageddon. Fortunately all the dates predicted by the book have now passed.
It is, however, quite possible to predict a war. In around 1895, Bismark said (I do not guarantee the exact wording) "The next war will be over some damned silly thing in the Balkans".
Nostradamus' predictions are, in fact, extremely accurate, though as Lonnie demonstrates, prone to misinterpretation.
The 'aerial war' to which Nostradamus alludes is not the battle for air supremacy during WWII, but in fact an accurate prediction of the making of Francis Ford Coppola's Apocalypse Now.
They will think they have seen the sun at night,
When they see the half-pig man:
Noise, chants, battles seen fought in the sky:
And one will hear brute beasts speaking
Is obviously a reference to the scene where Kilgore's Air Cavalry fly in blasting Wagner over their loudspeakers, as bright napalm explosions burn bright on the tree line. It continues;
And the men of the air shall come down
With boards they will cross the sea
Or shall face the enemy forthright.*
is obviously the scene where, having secured the beach, but still under fire, Kilgore orders that they go surfing - "You either surf or fight, is that clear?"
My hat is off to Nostradamus for foreseeing Coppola's masterpiece.
Isn't hindsight a great thing?
* - oh, I made this bit up, by the way.