Don Quixote: The Lance In The 17th Century

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The Lance In The 17th Century In the novel of Don Quixote, he follows a strict code of chivalric honor. After reading many books about chivalry, he has decided that he was going to become a knight errant… even though it is out of style. With Don Quixote being a night one of the most important things for a knight, besides his honor is his lance, a commonly used weapon among knights in the chivalric days of our story. A lance was a weapon that went hand in hand with a horse. The use of a lance is possible without one but was designed to be wielded while on horseback. The knight would then charge his opponent on the horse while holding his lance up and impale the enemy or knock him off his horse. Don Quixote gives us an example of this when he is talking to the peasant beating his servant. “‘By the sun that shines down on us, I am ready to run through you with this lance,”’ (Cervantes, 36). The threat Don Quixote issues to the peasant shows how he would run through his enemy holding with the lance. Don Quixote shows us another example of this later on in chapter IV. “Having said this, he lowered his lance and charged the man who had spoken, with so much rage and fury, to the …show more content…

With that the use and the need for knights dropped at a substancial rate. With our story taking place in the 17th century, Don Quixote is using a very outdated weapon and living the life of a knight-errant which in also almost ceased to exist in the 17th century. I believe he has so many failures in his quests because of the tactics he chooses to employ. Although no one in the story has used a musket or pike against Don Quixote, his useless strategies seem to be hopeless in all of his conflicts. Also in the story there are no other knights. I believe that the once popular lance that Don Quixote read about in his books, has not only become irrelevant, but a problem in the 17th century as well as in the

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