• In
Fyodor Dostoevsky's novel
Demons, the character Nikolai Stavrogin deliberately shoots his pistol multiple times into the air during a duel with Artemy Gaganov, leaving the latter deeply angered and insulted. • In the 1958 film
The Big Country, the character played by
Gregory Peck contemptuously delopes when his opponent first fires prematurely and then cowers in fear. • In the duel scene of the 1975 film
Love and Death, the character played by
Woody Allen shoots in the air (and hits a bird) after his opponent fires. • In the 1975 film
Barry Lyndon, the title character is challenged to a duel by his stepson Lord Bullingdon. A preliminary coin flip gives Lord Bullingdon the privilege of first shot, but he prematurely misfires because of his inexperience with firearms. Barry fires into the ground honourably and hopefully, but Bullingdon demands a second round in which Barry's leg is critically shot and requires amputation below the knee. • In
Flashman, by
George MacDonald Fraser, the title character and scoundrel
Harry Paget Flashman gets into a duel with a fellow officer over a woman. He promises a huge bribe to the officer responsible for loading the pistols to ensure that his opponent's pistol has gunpowder but no bullet. When his opponent appears to miss, Flashman makes a great show of deloping but accidentally shoots the top off of an attending doctor's brandy bottle and so wins renown as a crack shot as well as a gentleman. When his opponent angrily accuses Flashman of mocking him by deloping, he responds, "I didn't presume to tell you where to aim your shot; don't tell me where I should have aimed mine". He later blithely refuses to pay the bribe by noting that the loader cannot publicly complain of bad faith without admitting to a capital crime. • In Episode 3, Book 1, of the television miniseries
North and South, the character Charles Main fights a duel in which his opponent fires first, misses and collapses in fear while he waits for Main's return shot. Main delopes and is surprised when the spectators applaud him. They view his conduct as both courageous and generous since he refrained from killing his opponent, who has shown himself to be a coward. • In the original
Star Trek series episode "
The Squire of Gothos", the alien being Trelane forces Captain Kirk's party to remain on his planet. Kirk challenges him to a duel. Trelane agrees and produces a pair of pistols that are copies of those from the Burr–Hamilton duel. Trelane delopes and declares himself at Kirk's mercy. Kirk then fires past Trelane into the mirror which appears to be the source of Trelane's power. That has the desired effect of allowing the crew members to escape. • In AMC's ''
Turn: Washington's Spies'' Season 1 Episode 7 "Mercy Moment Murder Measure", John Simcoe delopes after Abraham Woodhull misses and Anna Strong and Judge Woodhull try to intervene. Woodhull demands a reload, but the duel is halted. • In the BBC series ''
Garrow's Law'', based upon the real-life 18th-century barrister and reformer,
William Garrow hot-headedly challenges fellow barrister Silvester to a duel but is informed by his instructing attorney, John Southouse, that Silvester is a crack-shot with a pistol. On the morning of the duel, Garrow delopes by firing wide in the hope of ending the duel but is ordered by Silvester to stand his ground or to "risk being considered a
poltroon." Silvester fires only a deliberately-glancing blow to the arm with the intention of teaching Garrow a lesson. • In
The Custom of the Army, a novella by
Diana Gabaldon,
Lord John Grey delopes during a duel with Edwin Nicolls. • In
The Even Chance, the first episode of
ITV's
Horatio Hornblower adaptation, the title character delopes despite being wounded by his opponent, who deliberately shot before the command to fire and falsely claimed it was an accident. • The 2015 musical
Hamilton in which duelling and deloping are themes throughout the story, features dramatisations of the
Eacker–Hamilton and
Burr–Hamilton duels. • In the fourth episode of the first season of the
Netflix drama
Bridgerton, the Duke of Hastings chooses to delope and fires upwards in his duel since he believes that he wronged his opponent by dishonouring his sister. ==Notes==