ARTICLE OF THE DAY

11/03/2026

The “poem of everyday life”.

The humble and the sublime in the Chanson de Guillaume.

William fights alone against the Saracens. - AI-generated image

When discussing chansons de geste, the mind inevitably turns to the Chanson de Roland, with its refined compositional balance, the admirable heroism of its protagonists, and the noble ideals of faith and loyalty that animate it. However, one should not assume that this is the standard model followed by all chansons. Beneath the sublime, the humble often lies hidden.  

The Chanson de Guillaume is a French epic poem composed around 1140 and preserved in a single manuscript, produced in an Anglo-Norman cultural environment. The story revolves around the battle fought on the plains of Archamp between the Saracens and the valiant knight William of Aquitaine, a historically attested figure associated with Louis the Pious. However, in the first part of the poem, it is not William who fights but rather the younger generation of French warriors, led by the courageous Vivien, William’s nephew. After nearly all the young warriors, including Vivien, fall heroically in battle, William is forced to take up the fight himself. With the aid of the giant Rainouart, he ultimately defeats the army of infidels.  

What strikes the reader is how the poem presents a vision of war quite different from the one to which epic poetry has accustomed us. In the Chanson de Guillaume, commanders do not deliver speeches filled with Ciceronian rhetoric, nor do its heroes verge on the status of semi-divine beings. Instead, the poem vividly details exhaustion, scorching heat, hunger, thirst, fear, and despair, the natural reactions of the body when confronted with terror. Warriors are not only covered in their enemies’ blood but also in their own excrement.  

In a particularly memorable scene, the young Girard, worn down by fatigue, anti-heroically throws away his lance, shield, and helmet, ultimately using his sword as a walking stick to support himself during his long march on foot under the blazing sun. A “poem of everyday reality”, then, one that refuses to sugarcoat what going to war in Carolingian times must have truly been like.



Bibliography:

A. Fassò (curated by), La Canzone di Guglielmo, Carocci, Rome 2007.

Author:

Marco Vittorio Pezzolo

Publication date:
11/03/2026
Translator:
Salvatore Ciccarello