BCz, 1599, p. 1173
Neque te, neque me fefelli, mi Dantisce Dantisce, si locum apud te ullum habeat legitima excusatio, et tamen scio me disperisse animumque despondisse, ita me totum hosce dies stilis conscribillarunt et The Prussians ⌊PrussiThe Prussians ⌋ et probably Citizens of Lübeck ⌊Lubecensesprobably Citizens of Lübeck ⌋ et Danistae, plagiarios, edepol, pessimos et scelerosos, qui tot mendaciis me confectum iri curarunt. At si scias, quam ob nihili res: perierunt mihi horae pretiosissimae ms. o(!)
⌈aeae ms. o(!)
⌉, dum convicia, quibus se mutuo lacerant et mordicus trahunt, interpres elegans illustrissime enucleo. At scis: saeviant, clament, Stygiam ego paludem in sacramentum adhibui me confecto prandio prosus ad te volaturum neque ulterius restiturum, etiamsi catenas iniciant.
Vale.
Tuus probably Dietrich von Schönberg (*1484 – †1525), fell in the battle of Pavia ; 1515-1524 diplomat and advisor in Grand Master's Albrecht von Hohenzollern service, as his envoy, he held the talks at the imperial, English and Danish courts in order to get help against Poland; in 1517 was negotiating with Moscow for an anti-Polish alliance, in 1524 he entered the service of the French King Francis I (BORAWSKA 1984, p. 99, 117; SACH, p. 239-292; POCIECHA 2, p. 219-221)⌊orator Anglicusprobably Dietrich von Schönberg (*1484 – †1525), fell in the battle of Pavia ; 1515-1524 diplomat and advisor in Grand Master's Albrecht von Hohenzollern service, as his envoy, he held the talks at the imperial, English and Danish courts in order to get help against Poland; in 1517 was negotiating with Moscow for an anti-Polish alliance, in 1524 he entered the service of the French King Francis I (BORAWSKA 1984, p. 99, 117; SACH, p. 239-292; POCIECHA 2, p. 219-221)⌋ se missurum nescio quae fecerit necne nosti.