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Difference between revisions of "User:Kendra Brown/Florius/English MS Latin 11269 04r"
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{{par|r}} It is expedient that you beat the ground while your chest is trampled underfoot. | {{par|r}} It is expedient that you beat the ground while your chest is trampled underfoot. | ||
− | + | I will be able to try whatever I would want next with regard to you. | |
</poem> | </poem> | ||
[1] prostratus can mean struck down, exhausted, overthrown, or laid low. There is no indication in the text of image as to *why* the person is lying on the ground or how they got there. | [1] prostratus can mean struck down, exhausted, overthrown, or laid low. There is no indication in the text of image as to *why* the person is lying on the ground or how they got there. |
Revision as of 19:44, 6 September 2022
Latin 4r
- ¶ Tu pudibundus obhoc ensem vel forte relinques
Vel prostratus humi nullo prohibente iacebis.[1]
¶ Expedit ut terram calcato pectore pulses.
Quidque velim de te potero tentare deinde.
English 4r
¶ You [are] appropriately shameful, therefore, you wil either abandon the sword by chance,
or you, prostrate[1], will lie down on the ground, restrained by nothing
¶ It is expedient that you beat the ground while your chest is trampled underfoot.
I will be able to try whatever I would want next with regard to you.
[1] prostratus can mean struck down, exhausted, overthrown, or laid low. There is no indication in the text of image as to *why* the person is lying on the ground or how they got there.
- ↑ Enjambment bracket