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Difference between revisions of "User:Kendra Brown/Florius/English MS Latin 11269 02v"

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==English 2v==
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==English 02v==
 
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<poem>

Latest revision as of 19:45, 22 October 2024

Latin 02v

Page:MS Latin 11269 02v.jpg

Regia forma decet muliebris. teque mucrone[1]
Percutiens contra que furens transmittet ad umbras
Hic animus / faveant illi modo numina caeli.

Stringens membra simul, iaculum complector[2] acerbus
In medio. tardatus eris refringere[3] tandem
Vulnere letali sonipes[4] tuus ictus abibit.

Italian

I'll beat your lance with my sword, 
And I'll wound you with either point or edge. 

At mid-lance I come, well-enclosed like this, 
So that you'll be delayed in beating my lance. 
I believe I'll wound your horse without fail; 
You'll see my play carried out hereafter. 

English 02v

The royal, womanly form is proper. And this spirit,
striking and raging against you with the point, sends [you] to the shadows.
Should the gods in heaven favor this method.

Drawing [my] limbs simultaneously inward, I, the Bitter One, grip the javelin
in the middle. You will have been delayed in breaking through [my guard].
In the end, your horse will depart having been struck with deadly wounds.

  1. Added later: "de la pointe".
  2. Added later: "remoror [!] jaculum".
  3. The translator appears to be using 'stringere-refringere' as a pair, as both words are associated with defending and attacking fortified gates, for rhetorical effect; however, English doesn't have a good oppositional pair that also conveys the meanings of the words.
  4. Added later: "eqqus". Probably meant to be “equus”, but the two q’s are fairly clear.

MS Latin 11269 02v.jpg