Shane. Agreed. In the service of the prince speaks plainly about a military soldier and in melee situations. Silver, though, from what I have perused through, seems to also have as much political disdain in cursing the rapier (and the Italians who were successful in his country teaching it), as a functional disdain, so I be looking for more opinions than just Silver's (thinking he wrote with a bit of bias there). (Jeff, it seems it was actually Swetnam, not Silver who said "trust to thy heels" -which, if he had said it, would have appeared inconsistent with his general disregard for the weapon, if he thought it inferior to the cutting sword.
Statistically, for those in other study groups who have sparred rapier to longsword, what have been the success ratios, and on (or countering against) which cuts? I.e., 7 out of 10, etc. and what was the other guy trying to throw(i.e., oberhaus, unterhaus, thrusts, etc).
