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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 | + | I hit the face with the sword hilt, so that my very own sword would not have been grasped |
− | have been grasped. 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> |
{{par|b}} I will throw your horse; neither you nor anyone can prevent [it], | {{par|b}} I will throw your horse; neither you nor anyone can prevent [it], |
Revision as of 18:58, 11 June 2024
Latin 04v
- ¶ 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 very 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.
- ↑ Added later: "te juc g???et".
- ↑ Added later: "de la poignee".
- ↑ There is no enjambment bracket, but the punctuation and text indicate it.
- ↑ Added later: "eqquus".
- ↑ Added later: "te mordé de\per bride".
- ↑ According to Cappelli, p. 257
- ↑ Probably laedere
- ↑ Possible scribal flourish
- ↑ 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.