Nostradamus C10 R100: N's treatment of the constraints his patrons religious embargoes imposed.
Copyright: Allan Webber, December 2015
This verse is placed at this crucial position to satisfy a request made by one of
Nostradamus' patronesses.
It is unrepentantly a praise of England but its anagrams contain an apology for the things not said in the Prophecies.
The anagrams are the key, with their strength being in the reference to
poems, preselections, silence and
patronesses consent.
The patroness is likely to have been someone Nostradamus met on a real level.
In this verse he delivers a cursory summary giving the broad scope of Britain's future and in the process apologises for using Saint Amand (and not Melaine) of Rennes as his capstone.

|