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User:Kendra Brown/Florius/English MS Latin 11269 27r
Latin 27r
- ¶ In cruce prevalidus proprium tibi carpo mucronem.
Hinc te iam mestum cesura cuspide sive
Percutiam. spätaeque manus attollere dicor
Conträrium[1]. et valeo tua membra ferire patenter.
Tangere nec poteris ullis violatibus ensem.
¶ Te iacio in terram magno/ quem precipis / actu
Nec sum deceptus ensem tibi ponere collo.
Italian
I have trapped your sword by the hilt, |
[23a-b] La tua spada per l'elço si o inpresonada |
I send you to the ground in this match; |
[22b-a] Io te mando in terra a'questo partito |
English 27r
¶ I strong in the preceding cross, seize your own special sword [mucronem].
Hence if I would now strike you, the Ill-Omened One, cutting with the point.
And I am called the counter to lifting the sword in the hands.[2]
And I am strong to openly strike your limbs.
You won't be able to touch the sword using any dishonorings.
¶
- ↑ These umlaut-like dots appear on a few other pages, where they indicate words that should be read as a pair. Here the marked words are both part of a phrase naming a technique, similar to other times the dots appear. Interestingly, on this page it looks like the dots were written by the original scribe (for example, the dots over the a in spataeque have the same faded look as the a). However, appearing on so few pages, these dots don't seem to be part of the overall orthographic style of the manuscript.
- ↑ This actually reads 'lifting the hands and the sword located in the hands', as spatae is locative case, or indicative of the sword's location. We omitted the repetitions for the sake of clarity.