The Assassinations of the Kennedy Brothers
PREDICTION:
A prophecy indexed 1 Q26, Nostradamus in 1555 wrote:
Original
"Le grand du fouldre tumbe d’heure diurne,
Mal & predict par porteur postulaire:
Suiuant presage tumbe d’heure nocturne,
Conflict Reims, Londres, Etrusque pestifere."
Translated
"The great man will be struck down in the day by a thunderbolt,
An evil deed foretold by the bearer of a petition.
According to the prediction, another falls at night time.
Conflict at Reims, London and a pestilence in Tuscany."
A prophecy indexed 1 Q26, Nostradamus in 1555 wrote:
Original
"Le grand du fouldre tumbe d’heure diurne,
Mal & predict par porteur postulaire:
Suiuant presage tumbe d’heure nocturne,
Conflict Reims, Londres, Etrusque pestifere."
Translated
"The great man will be struck down in the day by a thunderbolt,
An evil deed foretold by the bearer of a petition.
According to the prediction, another falls at night time.
Conflict at Reims, London and a pestilence in Tuscany."
Forty-five years ago, the first of two Kennedy brothers was killed. Four-and-a half centuries ago, the French prophet, Nostradamus may have foreseen it. With his remarkable sensitivity to major upheavals in our future history, Nostradamus would have been unlikely to miss the assassinations of President John F. Kennedy (JFK) and his brother, Senator Robert Kennedy (RFK) which shocked the world.
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President John Kennedy (great man) was shot shortly after twelve noon in Dallas Texas, on 22 November 1963. Senator Bobby Kennedy was killed just after Midnight moments after his victory speech on June 5th, 1968 (another falls at night time).
Jeane Dixon was one of the foremost prophets of modern times and earned international notoriety for predicting JFK’s assassination as early as 1956. The bearer of the petition, in this case, could be Dixon. The last line dates RFK’s murder through events occurring around that time: student riots in France and London during 1968-9, (Reims is a synecdoche for France) and the 1966 Florence flood, when authorities feared that pestilence in Tuscany would follow the disaster. |