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Difference between revisions of "User:Kendra Brown/Florius/English MS Latin 11269 42v"
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{{par|b}}You press the face with twin hands in this play. | {{par|b}}You press the face with twin hands in this play. | ||
− | But the counter will then hurt | + | But the counter will then hurt the eye more. |
</poem> | </poem> | ||
<noinclude>{{reflist}} | <noinclude>{{reflist}} | ||
[[file:MS Latin 11269 42v.jpg|900px]]</noinclude> | [[file:MS Latin 11269 42v.jpg|900px]]</noinclude> |
Latest revision as of 19:12, 20 August 2024
Latin 42v
¶ Subque tuo mento plures tibi tracto dolores.
Renibus ut terram contingam tristibus imam.[1]
- ¶ Cum manibus faciem premis hic ludendo gemellis.
Contrarium sed et hoc oculo magis inde nocebit.[2]
Italian
I make sorrow and grief for you under the chin, |
[5b-c] Soto el'mento ti faço doia e greveza |
You bother me with your hands on my face, |
[5b-d] Cum le man al volto tu me fa impaço |
English 42v
¶ I drag more pains to you and under your chin.
In order to touch your sorrowful kidneys to the farthest ground. [3]
¶You press the face with twin hands in this play.
But the counter will then hurt the eye more.
- ↑ The accusatives [direct objects] are unusual in both of these lines
- ↑ There are no personal pronouns indicating whose eyes are getting injured in this couplet. Only the second person verb in the first line indicates whose eyes are getting damaged.
- ↑ "So that I connect the farthest ground to your sorrowful kidneys" is actually how the throw is expressed in the Latin.