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User:Kendra Brown/Florius/English MS Latin 11269 42v

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Latin 42v

Page:MS Latin 11269 42v.jpg

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, 
So that to the ground with your back you go quickly. 

With the hands on the face you make me mad, 
And with this contrary to the eyes I make you more mad. 

English 42v

 



  1. The accusatives [direct objects] are unusual in both of these lines
  2. 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.

MS Latin 11269 42v.jpg