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Difference between revisions of "User:Kendra Brown/Florius/English MS Latin 11269 10r"

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:Whether throwing the sword or striking cuts and thrusts,<br/>It comes to nothing because of the guard that I hold.<br/>Come one by one whoever wants to go against me<br/>Because I want to contend with you all.<br/>And whoever wants to see covers and strikes,<br/>Taking the sword and binding without fail,<br/>Watch what my Scholars know how to do:<br/>If you don't find a counter, they have no equal.
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:Whether throwing the sword or striking cuts and thrusts,<br/>It amounts to nothing because of the guard that I hold.<br/>Come one by one whoever wants to go against me<br/>Because I want to contend with you all.<br/>And whoever wants to see covers and strikes,<br/>Taking the sword and binding without fail,<br/>Watch what my Scholars know how to do:<br/>If you don't find a counter, they have no equal.
  
 
==English 10r==
 
==English 10r==

Revision as of 20:51, 27 December 2022

Latin 10r

Page:MS Latin 11269 10r.jpg

Hac ego captura[1] the faciam fortasse rotatum.
Hinc tua perdetur / mea secundum te fronte tricuspis
Percutiet / modo fata velint superesse potenti.


Ensis sive ferus iaculetur / scindere[2] sive
Praeparet alter / adhuc cupiat me cuspide solum /
Haec cautela docet / ne nunc ridendo[3] pavescam.

Italian

I will make a quick rotation from this catch:
You will lose your axe; mine will strike you in the head.


Whether throwing the sword or striking cuts and thrusts,
It amounts to nothing because of the guard that I hold.
Come one by one whoever wants to go against me
Because I want to contend with you all.
And whoever wants to see covers and strikes,
Taking the sword and binding without fail,
Watch what my Scholars know how to do:
If you don't find a counter, they have no equal.

English 10r


Perhaps I would make a rotation using this capture.
From there, your [triple-point] is lost, afterwards, my triple-point beats you in the face.
If the fates are willing for the strong to survive.

bottom

  1. We are translating 'captura' as 'the taking' or 'the takings'. Other possible contexts for this word in Latin are from hunting (captura=prey, the fishing catch, the bag of animals brought in) or from economics, in which 'captura' refers to ill-gotten or immorally gained profits.
  2. The second letter appears to have been corrected.
  3. A pun for ridere/riddare?.