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Jeffrey Hull wrote:Please view the actual video. Our fellow Casper, starting in ward of Ochs with his longsword,
is clearly seen to start moving his hands/arms and hence swing his weapon before he starts stepping with foot/leg. The hands/arms & weapon movement happens a split-second prior to movement of the rest of his body, especially foot/leg. One may detect that whether viewing video of his Hau at full-speed or frame-by-frame.
Similar sequence of movement is indicated by the sequential photos of Zornhau in one of my PDFs.
Hence we each demonstrate German Hauen done in harmony with Silver's true-time principle for striking.
Jay Vail wrote:Andrzej, your weapon or your buckler are not in the true place.
YOU are in it. It is the distance from your opponent that is measured by the length of the weapon plus the length of your arm. Naturally this means it will vary depending on the weapon you happen to wield at the time.
Because of this, guards or wards have nothing to with the location of the true place.
This is all very clear from Silver's discussion of the concept and from the quote from the Brief Instructions above.
Obviously you dispute not only my interpretation of Silver's words, but Silver's word themselves. Since you dispute this quote and you think other portions of Silver's work contradict the quoted statement, it is not helpful to make unsupported claims. It is more helpful if you cite the exact pages of his works where the alleged contradictions can be found.
Andrzej Rosa wrote:Jay Vail wrote:Andrzej, your weapon or your buckler are not in the true place.
Oh, my.
"For distance being broken, judgement fails, for lack of time to judge, and the eye is deceived by the swift motion of the hand, and for lack of true space with the dagger hand, which cannot be otherwise, for lack of circumference to defend both blow and thrust, "
So what the above paragraph means, according to you?YOU are in it. It is the distance from your opponent that is measured by the length of the weapon plus the length of your arm. Naturally this means it will vary depending on the weapon you happen to wield at the time.
Because of this, guards or wards have nothing to with the location of the true place.
"and although the warder does perfectly see the blow or thrust coming, so shall he see his own ward so far from the true place of his defence,"
So how you interpret the above quote?This is all very clear from Silver's discussion of the concept and from the quote from the Brief Instructions above.
Obviously you dispute not only my interpretation of Silver's words, but Silver's word themselves. Since you dispute this quote and you think other portions of Silver's work contradict the quoted statement, it is not helpful to make unsupported claims. It is more helpful if you cite the exact pages of his works where the alleged contradictions can be found.
I don't dispute Silver. I also agreed with your interpretation of the quoted by you passage of text. It's true, but not the whole truth.
But I never knew anie, that wanne the Close withe the Dagger upon the Sword and Buckler, but did with himselfe out again: for distance being broken, judgement faileth, for lacke of time to judge, and the eie is deceived by the swift motion of the hand, and for lacke of true Space with the Dagger hand, which cannot be otherwise, for lacke of circumference to defende both blow and thrust, it is impossible for lacke of true Space in just time, the agent have gotten the true place, to defend one thrust or blow of an hundred.
Andrzej Rosa wrote:Jeffrey Hull wrote:Please view the actual video. Our fellow Casper, starting in ward of Ochs with his longsword,
I've seen this video before, but I checked it again now. He does start with different position than the one from which he delivers his final strike, but it actually supports my point. He has time enough to go from Ochs all the way to Vom Tag before he even moves his feet. If he wanted to thrust from Ochs or if he started in Vom Tag, he wouldn't be able to "start with the hand". That's what I'm saying all the time.
I did write before that this "sequence" is a simplification, because it ignores distance.is clearly seen to start moving his hands/arms and hence swing his weapon before he starts stepping with foot/leg. The hands/arms & weapon movement happens a split-second prior to movement of the rest of his body, especially foot/leg. One may detect that whether viewing video of his Hau at full-speed or frame-by-frame.
Similar sequence of movement is indicated by the sequential photos of Zornhau in one of my PDFs.
Hence we each demonstrate German Hauen done in harmony with Silver's true-time principle for striking.
I never said that one contradicts the other. Silver was simply smart enough to form a coherent theoretical rule, which tells you which action you will have time to perform and which will work only in slow motion training. German masters seemed to emphasize power, Silver is more concerned with speed, but I don't see where one contradicts the other (beyond artificial difference between "allowing" to strike without stepping or not).
Jay Vail wrote:"True place" here in part means the spot you need to put your defense to set aside the blow or thrust. It does not refer to "true place" as it relates to distance between you and your adversary.
The two concepts are separate and should not be confused, and Silver, I am sure, does not mean you to confuse them.
The real point of Silver's discussion on this page is that when the enemy gains the true place (the distance required to strike or be struck without stepping), you have a difficult if not impossible task to defend against his attack. On the remainder of the page, he discusses why this is so.
Jeffrey Hull wrote:AR: You are making absolutely no sense. You clearly implied that the video showed movement opposite of sequence that Silver advocates
(which it does not); and your assertion that the "sequence" which we advocate ignores distance
Our graphic presentations serve as de facto independently recorded and replicable illustrations of not only proper Hauen but also proper use of Silver's true-time. In other words, proof. You provide none yourself.
Silver's true-time is a method of moving properly in the fight.
Stepping while striking is a congruent method of attacking most forcefully with a sword as advocated by German Fechten. Get it
Andrzej Rosa wrote:IMO the real point is about that a dagger makes a lousy shield. Some guys obviously insisted that they can defend themselves sufficiently with just a dagger and it irked Silver enough to make a paragraph about how wrong they were.
Stacy Clifford wrote:Andrzej Rosa wrote:IMO the real point is about that a dagger makes a lousy shield. Some guys obviously insisted that they can defend themselves sufficiently with just a dagger and it irked Silver enough to make a paragraph about how wrong they were.
There is a certain amount of sense to this argument.
In Di Grassi he tells you that to defend with a dagger you must move in close and stifle the strong of the sword (and I think every other master says pretty much the same), which I believe would correspond to Silver's true place for the dagger.
In sparring with sword and dagger recently I have noticed that if I am not close enough to take a single step and achieve this block with the dagger as described (i.e. my space is too large),
one of two things can happen: either the dagger gets knocked aside by the force of the blow at the outer end of the sword, or the attacker has time to change the incoming blow to dodge the dagger. A buckler can receive (more forceful) blows at a greater distance from the opponent without the same level of danger, and it seems as though it could be argued that its "true place" or "true space" for defense is not as close as the dagger's.
From this I would say that you can put yourself in the true place to defend with a dagger, but that it almost definitely puts you in the opponent's true place to attack you by doing so, whereas this is not necessarily the case with the buckler.
I type this with fresh bruises on my dagger hand from learning this the hard way, so I agree that Silver could be arguing that a dagger makes a lousy shield since his argument rather neatly explains my evidence.
Jeffrey Hull wrote:[Casper] is clearly seen to start moving his hands/arms and hence swing his weapon before he starts stepping with foot/leg. The hands/arms & weapon movement happens a split-second prior to movement of the rest of his body, especially foot/leg. One may detect that whether viewing video of his Hau at full-speed or frame-by-frame.
Similar sequence of movement is indicated by the sequential photos of Zornhau in one of my PDFs.
Hence we each demonstrate German Hauen done in harmony with Silver's true-time principle for striking.
Jeffrey Hull wrote:Silver's true-time is a method of moving properly in the fight. Stepping while striking is a congruent method of attacking most forcefully with a sword as advocated by German Fechten.
Andrzej Rosa wrote:Jay Vail wrote:"True place" here in part means the spot you need to put your defense to set aside the blow or thrust. It does not refer to "true place" as it relates to distance between you and your adversary.
That's exactly what I wrote.
True place regards both offence and defence. You are in true place if you are able to perform an action in time. The action can be offence or defence, so one doesn't have to be within reach of an opponent to be in true place. But with this little comment, I think that you are right in pointing that time and place are codependent in Silver.
Vincent Le Chevalier wrote:
As I see it, Silver's true time is a tactical concept to avoid telegraphing. But since both strikes discussed here are out of Silver's true distance, perhaps it is unwise to apply the same principles to them?
If the point of the Zornhau is to generate power at the expense of tactical considerations, perhaps it does not have to respect true times? After all, we don't respect them when cutting firewood either
Andrzej Rosa wrote: In one sense "true place" means simply a distance, but I believe that the meaning of this term is a bit more universal.
Jay Vail wrote:Vincent Le Chevalier wrote:
As I see it, Silver's true time is a tactical concept to avoid telegraphing. But since both strikes discussed here are out of Silver's true distance, perhaps it is unwise to apply the same principles to them?
This may be a quibble about the meaning of "telegraphing." I see Silver's emphasis on true times to be aimed at the problem of moving within distance without threatening a strike at your adversary. This type of movement invites a stop hit. I generally don't think of that as telegraphing. Are you using the word in this sense, however? (I tend to think of telegraphing as when you wind up to deliver the blow.)
Jay Vail wrote:No, I am afraid it isn't. You actually wrote:True place regards both offence and defence. You are in true place if you are able to perform an action in time. The action can be offence or defence, so one doesn't have to be within reach of an opponent to be in true place. But with this little comment, I think that you are right in pointing that time and place are codependent in Silver.
This displays a fundamental confusion about what Silver means by "true place," and indicates a blurring of the distinction between it and "true space" for defense as covered on p. 24 of Paradoxes.
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