Postby david welch » Fri May 26, 2006 8:20 am
I just cut out the guard descriptions to get the Liechtenauer part. That was what the "..." was.
"Liechtenauer
has a saying “He who is still, is dead,
he who moves will live”. And from these
guards comes the understanding that you
should move in swordplay, and not wait in a
guard and thus waste your chance.
The first guard, the plough [Pflug], is when
you hold the point [of the sword] in front
of you aimed at the ground or to the side.
After a displacement [Abesetzen] it is called
the barrier guard [Schranckhute] or simply
the gate [Pforte].
The second guard is the ox [Ochse], or the
upper hanging from the shoulder.
The fool [Alber] breaks what [your opponent]
strikes or thrusts. From the hanging
[Hengen] strike and at once and follow by
attacking after [Nochreizen].
The third guard the fool [Alber] is the lower
hanging [Undenhengen], and with it you
break all strikes and thrusts when it is done
correctly.
The fourth guard is from the roof [Vom
tage], is also the long point [Lange ort]. He,
who does it well with outstretched arms, is
not easy to hit with strikes or thrusts. It can
also be called the hanging above the head.
Also know that you break all guards and
positions with the strikes. You should strike
bravely at the opponent so that he must move
away and defend him. Therefore Liechtenauer
does not hold the guards in such a
high esteem; he is more interested in that
you try to win the first strike [Vorschlag]"
"A sword never kills anybody; it is a tool in the killer's hand." Lucius Annaeus Seneca 4BC-65AD.