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User:Kendra Brown/Florius/English MS Latin 11269 11r
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Latin 11r
¶ Hic ego sanguineo percussi vulnere frontem.
Hoc quia me texi volucri cum tegmine dantem[1].
- ¶ Derideas me voce tua / cecumque vocato /
Si tuus hic ensis / capulo quem prendo patenter
Non cadet in terram. nudus tu deinde maneto
Italian
[13b-b] Aqui io t'o ferido in la tua testa
Per la coverta ch'i'o fata acosi presta
- Here I have struck you in your head
Because of the cover that I have made so quickly.
[13b-c] Per la mane ch'i'o posta sotto tuo elzo
Si tua spada non va in terra dime guerzo.
- Because of the hand that I have put beneath your hilt,
If your sword doesn't go to the ground, call me squint-eyed.
English 11r
¶ Here, I have thrust through your forehead with a bloody wound,
because during the time[2] of giving this [wound], I covered myself with a fleeting cover.
¶ You should mock me with your voice and [definitely] call me blind,
If your sword doesn't fall to the ground, once I grasp it by the hilt[3]
Then you [definitely][4] remain bare.