I am reading through Silver and wonder if anyone can give a good description of what he calls a "Morris pike", a "Black bill" and a "Forrest bill".
Jaron
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Thanks guys. Now I have another question about what he calls the Gardant fight.I rememeber Dr. Anglo's book has some info on the bills (chapter 5 on polearms I believe).

That is a good question since Silver never actually defines them. It stands to reason that two of the guards are the same as Swetnam's low and high guards (equivalent to pflug and hanging with the longsword) since those two guards also show up in just about every staff work there is. That covers one each point up and point down. If you use Swetnam as the closest English comparison, he talks about a pikeman's guard that sounds like a version of alber, though he's describing it as a guard other people use that you shouldn't. The Germans also have a staff guard like this. David Lindholm interprets Silver's fourth guard as a vom tag over the shoulder, based on his descriptions of "lying aloft." I'm not sure I agree with that, not exactly the way he does it at least, since even Meyer doesn't hold his high guard that far up and back and Silver is using longer staffs than what Meyer shows in his illustrations. Swetnam is adamantly against pulling the point offline to attack, though Silver isn't, but Lindholm's "aloft" positions seems awfully dangerous using an 8-foot staff and facing a potential thrust, the defense from that position would be way too slow with a staff that length. With a shorter staff it's more reasonable, but I'm inclined to think Silver's "aloft" position would probably be further forward where it can come into play faster like Meyer's, which stands up like a flagpole in front of the chest. It's all guesswork though when you only get one sentence to play with.Thanks for all the replies to this. I have one more question. This is from the published version (pg. 304):
"The short staff hath four wards, that is two with the point up, and two with the pointe downe."
Any suggestions?
I have always assumed that these wards are possible on either side of the body thereby giving eight possible positions. If we assume that the difference between the two that their point up is the position of the hands and the same with the point down we have four possible combinations.Thanks for all the replies to this. I have one more question. This is from the published version (pg. 304):
"The short staff hath four wards, that is two with the point up, and two with the pointe downe."
Any suggestions?
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