Delope
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Delope (French for "throwing away") is the practice of throwing away one's first fire in a duel, in an attempt to abort the conflict. According to most traditions the deloper must first allow his opponent the opportunity to fire after the command ("present") is issued by the secondary, without hinting at his intentions. The Irish code duello forbids the practice of deloping explicitly.
The delope could be attempted for practical reasons if one's opponent was thought to be superior in ability, or for moral reasons if the duelist had objections to attempting to kill his opponent.
For one's opponent to insist upon a second shot after a delope was considered bloodthirsty and unbecoming. Often, it would fall to the secondaries to immediately end the duel after a delope had been observed.
Contents |
[edit] Notable uses
- William Pitt, Prime Minister of the United Kingdom chose to delope to indicate "moral superiority", having been forced into a duel with another member of parliament.[1]
[edit] In popular culture
- In Stanley Kubrick's Barry Lyndon, Lyndon attempts the delope only to have his opponent insist upon a second fire, resulting in Lyndon's leg being amputated.
- In Woody Allen's Love and Death, Allen's character Boris, having been wounded in one arm, delopes by firing his pistol straight up. The descending bullet then wounds him in the other arm.
- In George MacDonald Fraser's novel Flashman, the title character appears to delope in a duel, though the matter is a little more complicated than that.
- In John Jakes' novel (and subsequent miniseries), North and South, Charles Main delopes into the air during his first duel after proving this challenger, Whitney Smith, was "a coward"; Main also took pity on Smith's attempts to hide from the bullet after Smith's shot missed.
[edit] In game theory
Deloping is the best strategy for a duelist with lower accuracy than both his opponents in a truel (against rational opponents) who is given first fire.
[edit] References
- Flemming, Thomas. 1999. The Duel: Alexander Hamilton, Aaron Burr, and the Future of America. New York: Perseus Books. ISBN 0-465-01736-3, p. 8-9.
[edit] Notes
- ^ Reilly, Robin. William Pitt the Younger. New York, 1978: 358-359.