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In this cartoon, we see a knight on horseback saying, "I will not fight a child," while standing next to an electric fan. The humor here comes from a play on words and visual pun.
The knight is likely an allusion to the character Don Quixote from the famous Spanish novel "Don Quixote" by Miguel de Cervantes. In the novel, Don Quixote famously mistakes windmills for giants and attempts to fight them. Here, the fan stands in for a "windmill," but the knight refrains from fighting it by saying "I will not fight a child."
The joke hinges on the word "fan," which could refer to an actual child (as fans often idolize heroes like a knight), but here it's a literal electric fan. So, the knight is humorously mistaken or overly chivalrous by respecting a common household appliance as if it were a small fan (child) or a windmill-giant.
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In this cartoon, we see a knight on horseback saying, "I will not fight a child," while standing next to an electric fan. The humor here comes from a play on words and visual pun. The knight is likely an allusion to the character Don Quixote from the famous Spanish novel "Don Quixote" by Miguel de Cervantes. In the novel, Don Quixote famously mistakes windmills for giants and attempts to fight them. Here, the fan stands in for a "windmill," but the knight refrains from fighting it by saying "I will not fight a child." The joke hinges on the word "fan," which could refer to an actual child (as fans often idolize heroes like a knight), but here it's a literal electric fan. So, the knight is humorously mistaken or overly chivalrous by respecting a common household appliance as if it were a small fan (child) or a windmill-giant.
ExplainTheJoke via The Internet
July 26, 2024, 5:14 p.m.