Wednesday, November 13, 2019
Chivalry :: essays research papers
 Chivalry      We live in an age where the brutality and the vigilante justice of the knight  errant is no longer acceptable for people with positions of stature in society.  While courage and honor are still praised by society, one rarely finds a man  true to his word regardless of cost. Chivalry towards ladies is sometimes  mistakenly decried by those supporting equality for women. And Courtly love, in  it's modern form, is frowned upon. Those who might have a keen sense of justice  often have only indirect methods of fighting for the right -- legislation just  can never be as satisfying as clouting a knave over the head with the flat of a  blade. It seems that justice in American society is often tempered by compromise,  rather than a blacksmith. Skill at arms is more often attained as an exercise,  rather than a useful tool, and strength of body, while glamorized, is degraded  by large numbers of "men of the mind." Chivalry is a lot like ethics; it is a  governing principle concerning fair play as far as medieval combat among your  peers was concerned. Do not attack an unarmed knight - allow him to arm himself  first, if you unhorse your opponent and your opponent is still able to fight,  get off your horse to fight, etc. - fair play with honor and respect. At the end,  there still was a winner, and the winner ended up with more respect and  admiration from those concerned that had he fought without chivalry. What am I  getting at? Capitalism can be much the same way. American businesses have taken  advantage of this system though, a system that one can cheat in and get away  with, instead of being honorable and respectable institutions that children  could look up to. So many things are like this that I just shake my head and  sigh when I think about them - is American just a scam? Where did all the honor  and respect go? In "Sir Gawain and the Green Knight," Gawain made a promise to  the huntsman to give him whatever gifts he received that day in exchange for  whatever gifts the huntsman received that day. On the third and final day of  Sir Gawain's visit, he received a green girdle from the huntsman's wife, who was  his secret lover. The only reason that he accepted it was because he, like  Lancelot, had fear in his heart; only Gawain's fear was dying. The huntsman's  wife told Gawain that the girdle had magic powers and would protect him from his  fate, for the next day Gawain was going to fulfill a promise that he had made to    					    
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