Postby Bob Charron » Sun Jun 15, 2003 7:58 pm
John Clements quotes are below, my responses follow (***):
Sorry you feel I am reacting “strongly,” I consider it intelligent discourse to be challenged to think further. If you see the points raised and quotes cited as not relevant, I'm afraid I can't help you there. They speak for themselves. Broaden your interpretation perhaps if they seem obscure?
***You said that it defied logic to cut without stepping. That is not challenging me to think further. Challening me to think further would have involve you asking for citations from the manuscript in support. You then supplied quotes from other masters that supported cutting while stepping. This is all well and good, but misses the point that there can be, and is, cutting without stepping in Fiore. That was my point, which still stands. If you want to say that Fiore does not cut without stepping, then you need to prove that from the text of Fiore.
When someone sems to state categorically that a master said “XYZ” about some aspect of fencing, and that it absolutely can only mean one thing, I think that is a very limiting mindset, especially this early in our investigation of the craft, and even more so if that interpretation appears to contradict both common sense and a wealth of other period as well as modern sources.
***Well, it's pretty straightforward. Many masters are very clear in what they want you to do. Insisting that the original language doesn't say what it says is a device to allow free interpretation of the techniques and to avoid what the master tells you to do if you already do and insist on something entirely different.
***Here are Fiore's words:
"Volta stabile sie che stando fermo po zugar denanzi e di dredo de una parte." And later, "E per zo digo che la spada si ha tre movementi zoe volta stabile meza volta e tutta volta." Which translate respectively: "Volta stabile is that, standing firm one can play in front and in back on one side." and: "And because of that I say that the sword thus has three movements - that is the *volta stabile*, the meza volta and the tutta volta." It doesn't get much more straightforward than that. No difficult words or phrases in this passage.
In the first example you give, Fiore is simply lowering his weapon after intercepting and stifling a potential cut, using the opponent’s own momentum to resist against. This same thing is seen numerous times in German texts. No step is necessarily required because as he comes at you are only dropping the blade against his hands or forearms hard and pull slice by pulling it down. It would be semantic games to argue this is as equivalent to delivering a powerful downward cut from inaction. It is not the same technique as a powerful downward cut from a range outside the chest to chest distance of pressed swords he describes this technique as occurring under.
*** I don't believe it to be semantic games. You said cutting without moving your feet defies logic, and then you agree above that you can cut without moving your feet. Changing to "powerful downward cut outside the chest to chest distance" is a first step backward from your original position. My point and example still stand.
In the second example you give, the very act of “stepping off the line to establish a new place” is itself all the motion needed to add necessary momentum to your cut against an advancing opponent. So, again, footwork is involved, you can’t do the techniques as he says without moving.
***No. I described this as being delivered after the new position is established. Stepping before the cut does not add the power of the step to the cut. The example still stands.
In the third example, as with the first, the opponent has already moved into range, so to step again would certainly put you at too close a position to strike, and the opponent’s forward motion and blade position --having just been set aside --leaves you with your blade not forcefully impacting with a powerful cut but being placed against him in a way that permits a strong drawing slice. Again, not a powerful cut and so not contradicting the sources quoted in the previous post. Yet still, are we to believe that as the opponent flies forward in this manner to have his cut intercepted and his sword set off, that Master Fiore expects us to stand still while the opponent’s aggressive forward momentum magically stops without impacting us? Surely you must move you feet after to complete the action? Or perhaps, again, like in the second example, he has already moved off line and did not mention it.
***No again. In the example it is clear that the delivered cut was not done "flying at" me. It was done in a collected manner which kept him in the range of zogho largo. If he "flew at" me, we would be in the zogho stretto and an entirely different technique is called for. The example stands as cutting without moving the feet, given the obvious parameters of the situation necessary to it.
So maybe the error lies in equating a shearing, cleaving blow to a pulling slice as all just being "cuts" --but in fact they are different types.
***You made no fine distinction about what kind of cut it is, nor does a cut always have to be of a particular type. The examples still stand.
The point is there are subtleties involved that are not always explained or self-evident in the manuals –that once again, only become clear to us today when performing techniques at realistic speed with sufficient force.
***Subtleties in the systems taught by the masters in their treatises can be gotten at through many methods: better translation, time with the material, full-speed drill. All are valid and all are productive.
You can’t stand still when cutting at someone trying to kill you. But you can slice against someone flying at you. If you do, you are still going to have to move your feet at some point.
*** Maybe, maybe not. There are techniques in Fiore, and most evidently otherwise in German messer that involve a void of the body by shifting the weight backwards while pivoting on the balls of the feet. This requires no foot movement, and creates a void. If the circumstances are just so, even this may not be necessary. It does not require stepping.
I certainly would love to see someone in person try otherwise when fencing this way.
***The situation for the technique must arise. If one is always "flying" in then they will be immediately in zogho stretto if the opponent does not void. If they are playing carefully from zogho largo there are many opportunities to counter with a cut that does not involve moving the feet. I cut Brian Price's hands with just such a cut last weekend during the unarmored tournament in Benicia. Once again, there is no rule that you must step to cut within Fiore. In fact, there is instruction that among your options you may not have to move your feet. It is up to you to disprove that within Fiore to counter my position.
There is a problem is assuming that the manual teaches “all and everything” you need as is and that it’s whole and complete on its own. Which you know full well it is not so. After 500 years we must translate and then interpret their words and in reconstructing the techniques we cannot help but include things he did not mention or that he may have assumed knowledge of on part of the reader. Systematically or not, you cannot include everything about fighting with every singe technique in one short book. That is the whole problem. As Doebringer wrote “should know that one cannot speak or write about fighting as clearly as one can show and demonstrate with the hand; therefore use your common sense and reflect on things further.”
***The longer I spend with Fiore, the more I realize that darn near every single minute detail I need is there. So maybe I don't know that full well. I don't need to go to another treatise to find it. I need to study this one further. So we will undoubtedly perpetually disagree on this point, and let it fall away.
So perhaps you should consider that you’re misreading the text, mistranslating the text, or have misinterpreted the instructions.
***I consider that every day. Anyone studying these treatises must, in humility, approach it this way. But it doesn't make me think I have to look elsewhere. It makes me think I need to become better at understanding what is written. The text is above. Read it and see if I'm misunderstanding it.
As Dr. Sydney Anglo has said on the difficulties of trying to interpret Fiore and similar works, it poses “considerable problems which require for their solution much more than enthusiasm, good will, and a pragmatic knowledge of fighting.
***Indeed it does, which is why I don't limit myself to looking at the illustrations and creating techniques from them. I've even seen people use the illustration of the colpo di villano in support of a certain type of parrying. It is clear the person that did that hadn't read the text of the treatise.
Texts need to be accurately transcribed, meticulously collated one with another, and scrupulously translated. The language has to be studied, scribal details in manuscripts investigated, words and phrases glossed, and so on.”
***Which is exactly what I've been doing for the last 3-1/2 years - every day without interruption. I have purchased five various regional and historic dictionaries, glossed phrases, studied the batard hand so I could understand all the ligatures - all of it.
***My points and examples still stand, and have yet to be refuted by any evidence to the contrary. Matt Easton has studied Fiore, and I'm sure Eleanora is an excellent translator, so I'm sure they both are aware of volta stabile.
***It seems that no matter what I try to put forward here people try really hard to find fault with it or refute it. They do so far beyond discussion. I haven't been asked to prove it. I've been told it just isn't so. I hope the original Italian (and the translation for those who can't read it) help with understanding this.
Bob Charron
St. Martins Academy of Medieval Arms