103:. Fighting this way was not necessarily seen as a first choice of weapons, but may have become a necessity in situations of self-defense if one were not carrying a sword, with the cloak being a common garment of the times that could be pressed into use as a defensive aid. Both Marozzo and other masters such as
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95:. 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. Fencing master
282:"Where in the name of the Gunpowder Plot did you pick up this?" said his master. "It was given him by a person then waiting at the door", the man replied. "With a cloak and dagger?" said Mr Chester.
278:...his servant brought in a very small scrap of dirty paper, tightly sealed in two places, on the inside whereof was inscribed in pretty large text these words:
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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
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culminates in Romeo stabbing Tybalt repeatedly in the back with a dagger, having flung his cloak over the latter's head.
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owns a wristwatch called "The Cloak and Dagger", alluding to his affinity towards knives and backstabbing.
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The metaphorical meaning of the phrase dates from the early 19th century. It is a translation from the
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A version of "The Rapier and Cloake" that is easier to read and includes an illustration.
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A friend. Desiring of a conference. Immediate. Private. Burn it when you've read it.
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Taken literally, the phrase could refer to using the cloak and dagger in
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subsequently used the phrase "cloak and dagger" in his work
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taught and wrote about this method of combat in his book,
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referred to "The smiler with the knife under the cloak".
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in which the main characters wore these items. In 1840,
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Idiom describing activities of espionage and subversion
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The entire Di Grassi manual translated into
English.
107:also taught the use of the cloak with the rapier.
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264:Barnaby Rudge: A Tale of the Riots of 'Eighty
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143:– a very good comedy of 'cloak and sword'."
266:. London: Chapman & Hall. p. 203.
224:Geoffrey Chaucer,"The Knight's Tale" in
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84:", published around 1400, English poet
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48:illustration of the Dagger and Cloak
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32:Cloak and dagger (disambiguation)
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193:characters debuting in 1982.
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189:are also the names of two
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262:Dickens, Charles (1841).
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169:In contemporary culture
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82:The Knight's Tale
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105:Di Grassi
70:espionage
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141:Calderón
76:Overview
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119:Spanish
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