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- Cloak_and_dagger abstract ""Cloak and dagger" is an English term sometimes used to refer to situations involving intrigue, secrecy, espionage, or mystery.The phrase has two possible origins. One dates from the early 19th century, and is a translation from the French de cape et d'épée and Spanish de capa y espada (literally "of cloak and sword"). These phrases referred to a genre of swashbuckler drama in which the main characters literally wore these items. In 1840, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow wrote, "In the afternoon read La Dama Duende of Calderón - a very good comedy of 'cloak and sword'." Charles Dickens subsequently used the phrase "cloak and dagger" in his work Barnaby Rudge a year later as a sarcastic reference to this style of drama. The imagery of these two items became associated with the archetypal spy or assassin: The cloak, worn to hide one's identity or remain hidden from view, and the dagger, a concealable and silent weapon.Numerous works of fiction, including film, have subsequently used the term or taken the phrase in their title. For examples see the disambiguation link.In historical European martial arts, the term can be taken literally, and refers to wielding a dagger in one hand and a cloak in the other. The purpose of the cloak was to obscure the presence or movement of the dagger, to provide minor protection from slashes, to restrict the movement of the opponent's weapon, and to provide a distraction. Use of the cloak and dagger was considered a "dishonest" method of combat because of its deceptive tactics. Giacomo di Grassi, in "His True Arte of Defence" (1570, English 1594), included a section called "The Rapier and Cloake" that demonstrates how the cloak is used in combat.".
- Cloak_and_dagger thumbnail Hutton's_dagger_and_cloak,_guard.jpg?width=300.
- Cloak_and_dagger wikiPageID "20870326".
- Cloak_and_dagger wikiPageRevisionID "593691233".
- Cloak_and_dagger subject Category:English_idioms.
- Cloak_and_dagger subject Category:Historical_European_martial_arts.
- Cloak_and_dagger type Genre.
- Cloak_and_dagger type MusicGenre.
- Cloak_and_dagger type TopicalConcept.
- Cloak_and_dagger type Concept.
- Cloak_and_dagger comment ""Cloak and dagger" is an English term sometimes used to refer to situations involving intrigue, secrecy, espionage, or mystery.The phrase has two possible origins. One dates from the early 19th century, and is a translation from the French de cape et d'épée and Spanish de capa y espada (literally "of cloak and sword"). These phrases referred to a genre of swashbuckler drama in which the main characters literally wore these items.".
- Cloak_and_dagger label "Cloak and dagger".
- Cloak_and_dagger label "外套と短剣".
- Cloak_and_dagger sameAs 外套と短剣.
- Cloak_and_dagger sameAs m.054h444.
- Cloak_and_dagger sameAs Q5134752.
- Cloak_and_dagger sameAs Q5134752.
- Cloak_and_dagger wasDerivedFrom Cloak_and_dagger?oldid=593691233.
- Cloak_and_dagger depiction Hutton's_dagger_and_cloak,_guard.jpg.
- Cloak_and_dagger isPrimaryTopicOf Cloak_and_dagger.