The Cid is a fair and just man, which is part of the knightly image, and he lives a good and just life. He is pious, and he commands respect, as the growth of his forces during his exile indicates. The image of the knight is also extremely brave, especially in battle, and both books hold up this image. The Cid and his men are extremely brave on the battlefield, and they support each other, as well. In one battle, one of his knights loses his horse. Simpson writes, "His lance is broken, but he grasps his sword and smites mightily, now on foot" (Simpson 33). This is one of the enduring images of the knight, that he is brave among all other things, and that he is extremely brave in battle.
Another image of the knight in both books is that they share a camaraderie and sense of working together, in their fighting and in their lifestyle. El Cid and his men are friends as well as fighters, and when they are not fighting, they take time to have fun and to enjoy each other's company. This is shown on the battlefield, during their preparation, and in their celebrations after victories. The knights were like a team, and they supported each other when they needed it. The Cid supports his followers and shares his wealth with them, indicating that he was fair and honorable, and that was a very important ideal for the knights.
These two works are very different genres, and so, they do present the knights in different lights. The Cid is clearly meant to celebrate the life of a great, heroic knight, and so, it tells the story in romantic and heroic terms. The writing, which has been translated many different times, is flowery and old-fashioned, and My Cid can do nothing wrong in the poem. He also rises to great heights, takes car of his family, regains his wealth, and defies his enemies; he is the "perfect" knight and helped create some of the ideas people have about knights and how they lived. It is not written as a true history of knighthood, like the Gies book is, and the difference between the two gives a better understanding of knights and their lives.
The Gies book is meant to be a glimpse into real history -- how the knights lived and worked, and what it was like to live in a medieval castle. Their book gives a much more balanced view of the life and work of a knight, because they have used research and study to learn about how these people lived and worked, and they want to show the good and the bad. It gives a much more complex picture of the knights and their society, while the poem gives a hint at the battles and hardships the knights endured while they were fighting and battling others, like the Moors they face in the poem.
The image of the knight is also one filled with pageantry and...
The gatehouse at Harlech contained spacious chambers or halls, with fireplaces and latrines. There is little doubt that the guardhouse was home to the constable of the castle. Master James of St. George, the Harlech's builder, was himself appointed constable of his creation (Williams 2007, p. 7). The gatehouse was also occupied, in this period, by Sir John de Bonvillars, Deputy Justiciar of North Wales. The larger rooms on
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