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Difference between revisions of "User:Kendra Brown/Florius/English MS Latin 11269 26r"
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| </noinclude> | </noinclude> | ||
| <poem>   | <poem>   | ||
| − | {{par|b}} I will cut your face open so swiftly using this action | + | ✅{{par|b}} I will cut your face open so swiftly using this action | 
| From the cross,<ref>cruce is locative case, which the translation reflects</ref> the student teaches this: fashioning a cloak for the sword from the ground. | From the cross,<ref>cruce is locative case, which the translation reflects</ref> the student teaches this: fashioning a cloak for the sword from the ground. | ||
| But your tip will depart either bent | But your tip will depart either bent | ||
Revision as of 20:01, 24 June 2025
Latin 26r
- ¶ Tam celer hoc actu faciem tibi nempe rescindam.
 Discipulus docet hoc cruce ducens ensis amictum
 Per terram. Sed mucro tuus vel flexus abibit
 Vel fractus numquam poteris operarier[1] illum.
¶ Percutiam nulloque tuum prohibente tenebo
Pignore mucronem / tam turpiter ipse gubernas
Jura tenedo meum. quo nunc traiectus obibis.
Italian
| From the crossing at the ground which the Scholar makes  | [21a-c] Per lo incrosar de terra che fa lo scolar | 
| Because of your hilt which I hold in my hand, | [22a-b] Per lo mantiger[!] tuo che in man io tegno | 
English 26r
 
✅¶ I will cut your face open so swiftly using this action
From the cross,[2] the student teaches this: fashioning a cloak for the sword from the ground.
But your tip will depart either bent
or broken. You will never be able to use that [sword].
🛠️¶ I would hit your tip and, prohibited by no pledge of security/debt, I will keep it  / you conduct yourself so disgracefully [that]
you must swear an oath: you must hold[3]  mine [my sword] / by which you will now die transfixed.



