Capitolo 22
religion, and you/he/she was sincerely whispering among them around his
conversion, believing that he had from any means abandoned this world,
he withdrew his/her brotherhood and he together with his,
students, to a certain piece of ground of distant ground far in the city. Immediately
I returned from Melun to Paris, while hoping in the peace from him in the
future. But since then, as I have said me, he had caused my place to be
occupied by a the competitor of mine, I tarred the field, as am, of mine
school out in the city on Mont Ste. Genevieve. This way I was as one
I besiege that places to him who had taken possession of my place. Anybody sooner
if mine master you/he/she had felt of this that he impudently returned the alacrity of place to
the city, bringing again with him such students as him was able, and
rehabilitating his/her brotherhood in them for convent of mer, very as if
he would free his/her soldiery that he had abandoned from my block.
In the truth, nevertheless if it were his/her purpose for portarloro succour, him
it did nothing but it hurt them. In front of that duration my competitor had had indeed
a certain number of students, of a kind and another mainly from
reason for his/her lectures on Priscian in which he was considered of
great authority. After our master is returned, however, him lost
almost all of these followers, and so it was forced to abandon
the direction of the school. Not long since then in then, apparently
subsequently despairing some worldly fame, he was converted the
monastic life.
Following the return of our master to the city, the fights in
it disputes that my researchers undertook both with him him and with
his/her pupils and the successes that fortune gave to us, and above
all to me, in these wars you have from very since learned of through
His/her own experience. The boasting of Ajax, although I speak to him more
me he/she anchors I am moderately, daring enough to do:
"... if fain that you would now learn
As victory crowned the battle, from him it was