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Difference between revisions of "User:Kendra Brown/Florius/English MS Latin 11269 04v"

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</noinclude><poem>
 
</noinclude><poem>
 
{{par|r}}I now protect myself by withdrawing, and from the strong point.
 
{{par|r}}I now protect myself by withdrawing, and from the strong point.
I hit the face with the sword hilt, so that my very own sword would not have been grasped
+
I hit the face with the sword hilt, so that my own sword would not have been grasped
 
in these circumstances. Nor would I have been thrown to the farthest ground.<ref>the hand position pictured in this technique is very strange. Comparing it to the Italian copies, we think the artist doesn't have a martial background and has drawn a hand familiar from other artwork instead of a position that makes sense with a sword or other weapon.</ref>
 
in these circumstances. Nor would I have been thrown to the farthest ground.<ref>the hand position pictured in this technique is very strange. Comparing it to the Italian copies, we think the artist doesn't have a martial background and has drawn a hand familiar from other artwork instead of a position that makes sense with a sword or other weapon.</ref>
  

Latest revision as of 19:02, 11 June 2024

Latin 04v

Page:MS Latin 11269 4v.jpg

Protego[1] cesura me nunc / ac cuspide forti.
Et capulo[2] faciem ferio / ne prensus hic ensis[3]
Sit mihi / sim terram nec adhuc proiectus ad imam.

Teque tuum iaciam nullo prohibente caballum[4]
Cuius clune / mei pectus fremitando sedebit.
Quadrupedis nec linquo tui resonantia frena[5] /
Donec humum praeceps limosam vertice tangas.
Ista quidem armato valet optima captio / possuntque[6]
Ledere[7] non armis ullum sibi posse pavescit[8]

English 04v

I now protect myself by withdrawing, and from the strong point.
I hit the face with the sword hilt, so that my own sword would not have been grasped
in these circumstances. Nor would I have been thrown to the farthest ground.[9]

I will throw your horse; neither you nor anyone can prevent [it],
The chest [of my horse] will rest on the haunches of your whinnying horse
I will not release the ringing reins of your quadruped
until you precipitously strike the muddy ground with the crown of your head.
This best deception indeed prevails against [an] armored [person], and
[people] cannot injure with weapons anyone [who] trembles at their own capability.

  1. Added later: "te juc g???et".
  2. Added later: "de la poignee".
  3. There is no enjambment bracket, but the punctuation and text indicate it.
  4. Added later: "eqquus".
  5. Added later: "te mordé de\per bride".
  6. According to Cappelli, p. 257
  7. Probably laedere
  8. Possible scribal flourish
  9. the hand position pictured in this technique is very strange. Comparing it to the Italian copies, we think the artist doesn't have a martial background and has drawn a hand familiar from other artwork instead of a position that makes sense with a sword or other weapon.