Postby Jon Pellett » Tue Mar 07, 2006 10:43 am
Dylan:
Short answer is nobody knows. What you say definitely could be right, but I would argue it is slightly wrong.
Unlike Swetnam, who wants you to be able to switch hands (to have the same lead as your opponent), or DiGrassi (who wants you to take the opposite lead), Silver doesn't say you need to switch hands. All he says is "If you play with your staff with your left hand before & your right hand back behind, as many men find themselves most aptest when that hand is before.... The like must you do if you play with your right hand before, & your left hand back behind,
11. If both lie aloft as aforesaid, & play with the left hand before.... The like order must you use, in playing with the right hand before." The way he writes it seems to be your choice which lead you use. In Brief Instructions Cap. 11.8, where he describes the point-up ward, he says it defends either side, without telling you to switch leads.
That said, I know some people who study Silver (Greg Mele?) think the same as you, that it is like Swetnam, switching lead hands. One of the best-known Silver guys, Paul Wagner, thinks that the wards can be point back and point forward (kind of like Swetnam's High and Low, and Vom Dach and Tail, but the last two with the butt of the staff projecting forward). I personally think that they are both wrong, and that the wards are like Swetnam's but you use whichever lead you like; the four wards are high outside, high inside, low outside, low inside. (I have good reason to think that Silver's "wards" are parries or covering positions, rather than guard positions, which I can explain if you actually care. <img src="/forum/images/icons/smile.gif" alt="" />)
Sorry for the long-winded explanation; in short, you could easily be right, and if you think that fits the text best, go for it.
Cheers
PS Allen - Well, he didn't really bash the smallsword, since it didn't exist yet. But I'm sure he wouldn't have liked it much. <img src="/forum/images/icons/laugh.gif" alt="" />