Two bodies, one head, fields divided into two,

And then answer to four unheard ones,

Small for great ones, open evil for them,

The Tower of Aigues beaten by Lightning, worse for Eussovis.

ANNOT.

Out of this crabbid Stanza we shall pick what we can, and leave the rest to the judgment of the judicious Reader. First,

The two bodies, one head may be understood either a Monster that was so, as it did happen once in Italy, as Pareus witnesseth; or of the union of the two Kingdoms of France and Navarre, under Henry the IV. or of England and Scotland under King James.

The Tower of Aiguemortes was strucken with the Lightning, a while after our Author had put out his Prophecies.

V.

French.