Ebbing-Hand Equals Flat-Use

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ChrisThies
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Re: 'Alleged Edged Talhoffer'

Postby ChrisThies » Mon Apr 18, 2005 9:22 pm

Thanks James,
I didn't really think of Talhoffer's messer plate 230 as a possible end plate, or alternative culmination, for one of the prior sequences [those 3 sequences mentioned in my previous post as being plate's 223 - 225; 226 - 227; and 228 - 229]. I guess it could be either a summarization of the first sequence (plates 223 - 225) since it only varies from plate 225 in the type of blow delivered (i.e. a thrust vs. a cut to the head); or an alternative culmination for any other sequence as dictated by situational prudence; or perhaps even a bold usage of the off hand to thwart and trap an oberhau!
{Good fencers make good neighbors}
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George Turner
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Re: Ebbing-Hand Equals Flat-Use

Postby George Turner » Mon Apr 18, 2005 10:27 pm

Jon, you illustrate my point better than I could solo.

You'll note there are complaints here about those who clutch to any textual phrase to justify their preconceptions. I said moving your sword two feet wouldn't accomplish anything, as it's just a light wrist blow, and you reply with Godfrey. Here's Godfrey's comment.

John Godfrey, commenting on the skill of the 18th century prize-fighter, William Gill, foremost pupil of the renowned prize-fighter, James Fig, wrote: "I never beheld any Body better for the Leg than Gill. …he oftener hit the Leg than any one; and…his Cuts were remarkably more severe and deep.


Obviously Godfrey is talking about someone whose strength of blows exceeds most everyone else's of the period, winning him quite some renown for how hard he hits. Given the simplicity of the physics I would posit that he landed with real hard swings. Yet you offer this as evidence that a wrist cut, like those I sometimes hit myself with to stay awake (using an authentic sharp), will somehow cleave someone's leg. As I said, touching is not wounding. You followed this later with another Silver quote.

OTOH he does use at least one wrist cut - in BI 8.14 he says that your wrist blow at his dagger hand "shall hurt him although he have a gauntlet thereon, for ... your blow will cut off the fingers of his gauntlet." Not exactly wimpy.


Actually, exactly wimpy, and there's the rub. Silver actually uses a couple wrist cuts and note that he reserves them for blows at fingers. Hold your index finger down next to your thigh and see if you detect any slight difference in size, strength, padding, and vulnerability. Note that your thigh must mass as a hundred, even two hundred fingers. Note that your big femur bone could be used as a hammer or pestle to grind your little hand bones up for garden fertilizer. Though a light blow may be effective and even devastating against the smaller limbs, this does not in any way indicate that it can seriously hurt the greater ones. With luck you can take down a charging hippo with a well placed eye-brain shot with a .22 pistol, and with practice possibly master the feat, but this doesn't somehow grant "guaranteed lethal against hippos" status to .22 pistols, especially if you're dead set on shooting them in the crotch. But it's fascinating that you suggest as much.

We've inherited a logical system where one thrust to vital areas counts the same as any other. Into this logical system we tried to splice in some form of simulated edged combat, the specialty of those dead schools that taught the hard blows. So the masters of the thrust expanded their practice to allow hits with the edge to count as kills too, though never forgetting to remind us that a thrust is always better. The fly in the ointment is that edge hits are treated like a binary system just as the thrusts were, with any edge hit counting the same as any other. The real secret of edge blows is that they're not digital like a thrust, they're very, very analog, with impact energies ranging everywhere from zero to simply eye-popping. But if all edge hits are counted the same in a salon, a simple "1", why spend time and motion trying to land a 14-point bold italic Times New Roman " 1 "?

Silver, Meyer, and other masters of the school of dismemberment target light blows at parts that are vulnerable to light blows, knowing the strength of one blow versus another. They likely wouldn't flick their blade between a man's legs after clearing his blade to their right, forcing them to shield that side with the buckler in their left hand in a game of death-twister. They might instead note that their own sword arm is now in counterclockwise motion while the opponent's sword and buckler are both over on his left side, leaving his upper right quarter open. So they just might continue the motion around and into a blow while stepping to the left, forcing him to cover himself instead of replying to the crotch-insult with a full power horizontal blow to the neck. But hey, at least the crotch blow would score the point. Then again, I haven't had time to test this move, so maybe not.

Just remember, we're the heirs to the schools that Silver despised, unless you can show me a fencing master who's never heard of Fabris, Saviolo, Capo Ferro, or Destreza. We'll thus have some of the same misconceptions that he ranted about.

-- "Oh bother," said Poo as he cycled the bolt on his Ma-Deuce.

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Re: Ebbing-Hand Equals Flat-Use

Postby Jon Pellett » Tue Apr 19, 2005 1:41 am

George:
Jon, you illustrate my point better than I could solo.
Why thank you, but you underestimate yourself. <img src="/forum/images/icons/smile.gif" alt="" />
You'll note there are complaints here about those who clutch to any textual phrase to justify their preconceptions.
But not about me, I trust, since I merely read things carefully. <img src="/forum/images/icons/grin.gif" alt="" />
Obviously Godfrey is talking about someone whose strength of blows exceeds most everyone else's of the period, winning him quite some renown for how hard he hits. Given the simplicity of the physics I would posit that he landed with real hard swings.
"His excellence lay in doing it from the Inside...from the narrow Way he had of going down (which was mostly without receiving) he oftener hit the Leg than anyone; and from the drawing Stroke, caused by that sweeping Turn of the Wrist, and his proper way of holding his Sword, his cuts were remarkably more severe and deep." It was good technique, not big swings. Drawing the blade is precisely what you don't do when hitting yourself with sharp blades, I suspect; I sometimes do the same thing with knives, but my inherent sense of self preservation prevents me from injuring myself by cutting correctly, rather than just hitting. Touching is not wounding, indeed. <img src="/forum/images/icons/tongue.gif" alt="" />

Really, I am aware this was an unusual case; it was an off-hand reference in response to your facetious comment about short blows to the leg never hurting anyone. I hadn't expected to spawn yet another branch of the debate. <img src="/forum/images/icons/smile.gif" alt="" />
Actually, exactly wimpy, and there's the rub...[stuff about fingers]
I was referring to the gauntlet, not the fingers. IMHO Silver would strike however wherever, and be thankful, even if it was weak wristy stuff. Remember BI 4.12.

The illiac and femoral arteries pass through the crotch region, hence my suggesting it as a possible target. I shall treasure your advice on hippo targeting, BTW. <img src="/forum/images/icons/tongue.gif" alt="" />
We've inherited a logical system where one thrust to vital areas counts the same as any other. Into this logical system we tried to splice in some form of simulated edged combat, the specialty of those dead schools that taught the hard blows.
In case you've forgotten, I just challenged that view of fencing history, and claimed it was silly. Please present evidence for it. <img src="/forum/images/icons/smile.gif" alt="" />
They likely wouldn't flick their blade between a man's legs after clearing his blade to their right, forcing them to shield that side with the buckler in their left hand in a game of death-twister.
Except that Silver does - he explicitly gives the ripostes, which are a cut to the outside of the left leg or a thrust to the thigh or belly.
They might instead note that their own sword arm is now in counterclockwise motion while the opponent's sword and buckler are both over on his left side, leaving his upper right quarter open. So they just might continue the motion around and into a blow while stepping to the left, forcing him to cover himself instead of replying to the crotch-insult with a full power horizontal blow to the neck.
Some might. Silver wouldn't though, because Silver doesn't work that way. I.33 wouldn't either, incidentally. Lignitzer might, but I don't know his style. If you figure Silver's method sucks, go ahead and say so - after all, he has no track record, no status, he may well have been a loony theorist.
Just remember, we're the heirs to the schools that Silver despised, unless you can show me a fencing master who's never heard of Fabris, Saviolo, Capo Ferro, or Destreza. We'll thus have some of the same misconceptions that he ranted about.
Since I've never studied modern fencing, or anything connected to it, my preconceptions are drawn from, I suppose, Hollywood, which nowadays has more bad Kendo than bad fencing; also bad Chinese and Filipino MA, I suspect. My real introduction to swordplay was from this very site.

Cheers. <img src="/forum/images/icons/smile.gif" alt="" />

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George Turner
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Re: Ebbing-Hand Equals Flat-Use *DELETED*

Postby George Turner » Tue Apr 19, 2005 2:38 am

Post deleted at George Turners request as off-topic.

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Jon Pellett
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Re: Ebbing-Hand Equals Flat-Use

Postby Jon Pellett » Tue Apr 19, 2005 11:59 am

George:

I am also surprised that Silver thought gauntlets could be compromised by wrist cuts. But he did. Maybe I have interpreted it wrongly - if so, explain, don't just make noise.
Is this the extent of depth of opposition?
What, providing actual argument, while you again fail to offer evidence for your view? Got anything but rhetoric? You have to make a case, not assume it. Any time now.

If I didn't make it clear before, I am saying that late-period cutting sword work does not arise from the smallsword, but rather evolved from earlier cutting-sword play (with, no doubt, influence from the thrusting play.) My reasons are:
a) parsimony - cutting sword use continued uninterrupted, and I have seen no reason to think it was all given up and reinvented;
b) sword use similar to late period backsword is found in sources such as Swetnam, as well as Viggiani and DiGrassi, forming a period of transition between old and new.
c) According to Hope, smallsword comes from broadsword, and broadsword is what teaches the dealing and parrying of blows. Page's bizarre "history" of the broadsword has its play derived from that of older cutting swords, saying nothing of the small. Many masters say that the two are similar and should be taught together, but none say that the broad derives from the small, particularly in the cutting play.

Cheers (and sorry if that sounded huffy)

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George Turner
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Re: Ebbing-Hand Equals Flat-Use

Postby George Turner » Tue Apr 19, 2005 2:48 pm

I am also surprised that Silver thought gauntlets could be compromised by wrist cuts. But he did. Maybe I have interpreted it wrongly - if so, explain, don't just make noise.


The light blow to the hand is very effective in unarmored fighting or against maille where it breaks fingers, and against a gauntlet it still might break a finger. Silver despised weak cuts yet has to justify why he's using one, so he conjurs up a gauntlet for his opponent's hand. He's writing a rant, not a peer-reviewed treatise for the Royal Armory.

What, providing actual argument, while you again fail to offer evidence for your view? Got anything but rhetoric? You have to make a case, not assume it. Any time now.


So far your argument on the light blows holds for Jedi lightsabers and other imaginary weapons, and matches well with the received wisdom we're awash in. That somehow good technique makes cuts devastating without adding any impetus to the impacting blade. That a little draw to the cut turns light taps into cleaving muscle carvers. Yet I often draw cut my leg too, and still nothing. Cloth is much harder to cut than you've been led to assume. Take an old pair of blue-jeans and drap them over your favorite cardboard target and see if light wrist blows with an authentic sharp or a good replica cuts well in the real world. Then note that Silvers techniques had to work against poor English ploughmen dressed for the dead of winter.

If our use of the cutting sword forms an uninterrupted line why'd we lose the stepping footwork, the guard positions of I.33 and other texts, the diagonal motions, the grips and seizures, leading with the left leg, staying square to the opponent, and so much of the terminology? Why can you photoshop out the blade of a fencer and not be able to tell whether he's using a foil or a saber?

Given that Burton says the most important thing for a swordsman to know is the location of his center of percussion, how did we lose all knowledge of what the center of percussion even is? In contrast to a text in the 1600's devoting 35 theorems and 80+ postulates to it, (applying this to swords and tennis racquets), the lastest I've so far seen COP traced in the sword world is an Italian sword designer discussing his innovative military saber hand-guard modification in the 1890's, and even then he has to take pains to refer to it as "the true center of percussion".

At some point in that "unbroken line" we seem to have dumped most of the good stuff. Possibly during the long period when any military officer in charge of selecting a new military sword was also inevitably in charge of choosing hats, belts, and shoes.

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Jon Pellett
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Re: Ebbing-Hand Equals Flat-Use

Postby Jon Pellett » Wed Apr 20, 2005 1:47 pm

George:
Silver despised weak cuts yet has to justify why he's using one, so he conjurs up a gauntlet for his opponent's hand.
Uh, what? Armour to justify a weak cut? I don't follow. Nor do I see any evidence that he 'despises weak cuts,' though obviously he favours strong blows. Finally, he didn't 'conjure up' the gauntlet; he mentions the combination of "rapier, poniard, and gauntlet" several times in Paradoxes.
He's writing a rant, not a peer-reviewed treatise for the Royal Armory.
Now that we can agree on.
So far your argument on the light blows holds for Jedi lightsabers and other imaginary weapons, and matches well with the received wisdom we're awash in. That somehow good technique makes cuts devastating without adding any impetus to the impacting blade.
Please stop abusing that poor strawman. 'No impetus'? 'Devastating'? I was just quoting Godfrey to refute your claim. I do not imagine that wrist cuts are particularly deadly, nor did the guys who actually used them.

'Received wisdom'? Did you have some kind of weird experience with modern fencing? Maybe that is why we're talking past each other. <img src="/forum/images/icons/smile.gif" alt="" /> The late-period masters certainly don't claim their cuts are devastating. Consider McBane's infamous 'forty cuts.' Godfrey recommends the cut to the wrist because it disables instantly, while any other cut can be borne, at least for a while.
Cloth is much harder to cut than you've been led to assume.
You have no idea what I assume. The protective qualities of clothing are a regular topic of discussion in the HEMA community, as you are no doubt aware.
If our use of the cutting sword forms an uninterrupted line why'd we lose the stepping footwork, the guard positions of I.33 and other texts, the diagonal motions, the grips and seizures, leading with the left leg, staying square to the opponent, and so much of the terminology?
There's an unbroken line between therapods and turkeys; that doesn't mean Thanksgiving dinner is going to disembowel you with a kick and feast on your intestines. I didn't say things didn't change; they changed a lot.

Are you talking about modern sport fencing, BTW? I'm thinking more of 18th c. backsword, to be honest, though if you ask someone like Chris Holzman or Russ Mitchell or one of the classical fencing guys, you may find there's more of that stuff still around than you think.

I have to go now, but I can address your other statements later. I get a strong feeling we're arguing at cross-purposes here, though. Let's cool down.

Cheers

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Re: Ebbing-Hand Equals Flat-Use

Postby Shane Smith » Wed Apr 20, 2005 3:36 pm

Last time;
This forum is for scholarly debate gentlemen. If you have a position, support it with reason and logic, not jabs that serve no instructional purpose. There is much genuinely good debate in this thread on all sides. That is what this forum is for.

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Re: Ebbing-Hand Equals Flat-Use

Postby Jon Pellett » Wed Apr 20, 2005 6:25 pm

You are right Shane. Sorry for snapping, George. <img src="/forum/images/icons/blush.gif" alt="" />

Seth:

I doubt you are reading this anymore - sorry to take so long to respond! I would love to know how you interpret that leg parry to get edge on flat. My interpretation isn't great by any means, and something better would be welcome.

Cheers everybody

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Re: Ebbing-Hand Equals Flat-Use

Postby George Turner » Wed Apr 20, 2005 8:59 pm

That's okay Jon. I'm used to heated discussions on swords, but we should ratchet it down a bit <img src="/forum/images/icons/laugh.gif" alt="" />

Part of this heat probably gets back to how we're attached to our own concepts of how to beat on things, and this very same familiarity and preference probably contributes to our difficulties in clearly conveying our actions into words, as shown repeatedly throughout this thread. We can show much easier than we can describe, and when we have people coming from different biomechanical backgrounds words for a position or blow can often do more to cause confusion than bring clarity. This is one of the reasons we prefer to stick with the terms used by the master we're studying, or invent a new equivalent, than borrow an existing term, as another term will for some convey something possibly different from the master's intent. Plus it lets us rethink the posture of guard ______ instead of having to explain why it mysteriously went from being a prime to a seconda, especially when it's actually neither.

Anyway,

There's an unbroken line between therapods and turkeys; that doesn't mean Thanksgiving dinner is going to disembowel you with a kick and feast on your intestines. I didn't say things didn't change; they changed a lot.


Exactly, and much of it comes down to the physics of winning and losing, and how changes in the rules and actions can produce evolutionary pressure.

When we wore varieties of armor we had a greater ability to absorb blows, essentially establishing a floor on the impulse required to do harm. In the case of plate this impulse is quite high, making pole-axes a better choice against it than a sword. But in all cases we have to use more space and better mechanical efficiency to supply the energy necessary to deliver a harder blow, also taking care that the blow attacks a target that's vulnerable to it, or else purchases a response from the opponent that sets up for a better follow-on blow. The rate our muscles can produce energy is necessarily limited, so we're just stuck with aspects of this tradeoff of time for energy.

In very crude linear terms the energy in the blow is the force multiplied by the distance of application, and the blow's momentum boils down to the square root of twice the product of the force times the useful delivery distance times the effective mass (mv=sqrt[2*F*s*m]). So at this same crude level of analysis the blow's momentum increases equally according to either the square root of your force, its distance of application, or the effective mass of the weapon. Thus to hit strongly and effectively you need to be strong, swing through some fair distance, and have a weapon of some sufficient weight. Ignore any one of those and your blows are weakened.

Yet though strength always adds to both power and quickness the other two of those basic factors, effective weapon mass and swing distance, both increase the time it takes for the blow's delivery (t=sqrt[2*s*m/F]). Increased weapon mass also slows down your defensive response time overall, as does having your guard positions normally located far from your opponent, as with tail guards and such.

So the optimization of your technique and your weapon for both ballistic effectiveness and always hitting first has two of the three basic elements in conflict. Absent this conflict swordsmanship would've shot all the way to an end of the spectrum, becoming a lumberjack competition on the one end or fingertip mounted laser pointers on the other. If you raise the armor's kinetic energy limit (or rather the impulse limit) either the weapon weight must go up or the blow delivery positions must cock further back, or both. If you lower the kinetic energy limit by lightening or removing the armor then the optimum weapon weight drops and the normal positions for the start of a blow can shift forwards. In the practice hall, where hitting first and being quicker than your opponent wins the day without regard to a blow's momentum, this effect puts a downward pressure on weapon weight and and tries to shift guard positions forward, and any trends in this direction would have to get corrected based on feedback from periodic experience on the battlefield.

Add the complexities due to our body's biomechanics and varying vulnerabilites of our different parts and you don't necessarily get a smooth transition, you get shifts in weapon design until you hit a jerky jump between elements of one basic set of styles, weapons, and techniques and another. When we stripped off the armor our weapons and techniques got the inevitable jolt, and there's no way this wouldn't happen. Since the older positions offered suddenly unneccessary power while being hindered by the slightly extra time required for the delivery of this power, we had a new optimizations to make. So we rethought the optimal art and produced a new set of methods that looked quite strikingly different from the old. Early rapier manuals just don't look like Talhoffer.

It was fitting and proper that we did this, and from one perspective why would a perfect art require armor in the first place? Shouldn't a proper method of swordsmanship keep you from getting hit at all, and wasn't all the armor therefore just a crutch to patch over the fact that prior arts were imperfect? So we not only have an evolutionary pressure due to simple physics, we have it butressed by an obvious argument in favor of change, and thus we got the early masters of what we recognize as somewhat modern fencing. In their view the old arts would seem archaic and imperfect, while the older view would hold that only a fool goes into a sword fight ballistically naked. The greater reality was that only a fool goes up against guns with a sword.

But then we have our practice, and in practice we don't use real blows with authentic weapons so we can't really tell the effect of one blow versus another. Applying greater impulse and momentum takes more time, using either space or weight, and the person doing it will generally be beaten in competition by someone who's equally strong but using a lighter weapon and closer, quicker hits. In our practice sessions and competitions this response time continues to favor quickness over power because it's easier to tell a first hit than it is to carefully gage the power of that hit. At first those with real-life fighting experience might argue against the effectiveness of weaker blows and lighter weapons, but one-on-one they'll be losing the competition matches. Their battlefield reputations might for a time give weight to their arguments, but since we'd quit using swords on the battlefield such naysayers would certainly soon disappear. So later people will likely read their arguments but not really heed them, like respecting your elders' wisdom without actually believing their complaints about the evils of rock and roll.

Others may take up their cause and try arguing about the effectiveness of blows, but absent a military reputation built on using swords in combat they'll be largely dismissed. Such people, after losing a bout because of their use of bigger sweeping motions, wouldn't be in a good position to argue the point. Their opponent, the one who consistently hit first, was obviously faster and better, while the one who kept getting hit would obviously be a sore loser and a whiner to boot. When the winner is decided by first hit and first hit alone citing the energy or momentum component is a pleading argument left to the losers, and to become winners they have to adopt a style that’s proven to hit first. And so in a competitive arena the art would keep shifting, the energy and momentum dropping until checked by standardizing the allowed weapon design.

If the average blow's energy crossed far below the threshold of combat effectiveness and lethality those skilled at the art would prefer to overlook it. Anyone arguing the point is probably using bigger swings with heavier weapons, almost by definition being one to lose in competition. Being losers they're easy to dismiss as lacking art and skill, and the effectiveness of the current state of the system, where ever it may be on a continuum, will be supported by pointing to the effect of blows in fights long ago, closer to the beginning of any downward trend in power. One sign that this point has been crossed is when statements and terminology about blows, momentum, and impact become quite vague. These will be replaced by voluminous discussions of various and obscure aspects of time, since optimization of time gets left standing as the single equation of profound importance, the other equation swept under the rug as it were. You'll inevitably get a blow's power attributed to some undefinable aspect of "technique" or "skill", as opposed to the obvious route of using more powerful swings and possibly switching to heavier blades. The distinctions between light blows and hard ones, and all blows in between, will become rather vague as well, without any hard numbers on any of it, not that hard numbers are all that easy to measure in actual combat.

Strangest of all, this is something that should by nature happen to all sword or stick arts once they adopt a scoring system based on the first hit. The same kind of thing can happen in a sport of pure accuracy without consideration to impact energy, such as archery, where pressure for accuracy over energy dropped draw weight down to 30 to 45 lbs. Fortunately archery by its very nature, and because we still go hunting, has always had to pay attention to power and draw weight.

So anyway, hand-to-hand weapons have a dichotomy between quickness and power, and while war requires armorers and masters of defence to divine the optimal compromise, competition naturally ignores the power because it's too hard to correctly measure, is invisible, and just results endless arguments and disputes. So sword arts must shift in the absence of combat, especially since civilized society can't maintain an art that requires hacking people's arms off for its reality checks.

I'd say that the simple physics would predict a shift in style when we dropped the armor, followed by an inevitable pressure favoring quickness over power and momentum.

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Re: Ebbing-Hand Equals Flat-Use

Postby Jon Pellett » Thu Apr 21, 2005 2:58 pm

It's probably best to end this discussion on the current high note. <img src="/forum/images/icons/grin.gif" alt="" /> I agree with most of what you've written, and we could argue about the rest for pages without getting anywhere. <img src="/forum/images/icons/smile.gif" alt="" />

So thanks everyone, especially George, for the thought-provoking debate; I'm going to try to interpret Silver with all-ARMA-approved parries and see where that gets me - not that I expect it to work mind you. <img src="/forum/images/icons/tongue.gif" alt="" />

Cheers all

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George Turner
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Re: Ebbing-Hand Equals Flat-Use

Postby George Turner » Thu Apr 21, 2005 6:09 pm

Oh, you mean George Silver!

Well why really bother, as I happen to have an rare unwritten copy of "A Full Accounting of My Notorious Brother the EDGE-BLOCKING Unpatriotic Francophile Italian Spy and Self-Doubting Swordsman" - Toby Silver, Gentleman, 1602. <img src="/forum/images/icons/wink.gif" alt="" />

I ran across it in the same dream as "Thorough Instructions for Those Going Bald over my Brief Ones"


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