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Tuesday, May 28, 2019

The Squire in The Caterbury Tales by Geoffrey Chaucer :: Canterbury Tales Chaucer Essays

The clotheshorse in The Caterbury Tales by Geoffrey ChaucerIn the General Prologue of The Canterbury Tales, the narrator, Geoffrey Chaucer, meets twenty order pilgrims at the Southwark at the Tabard Inn. They are all going to Canterbury Cathedral to visit the shrine of Sir Thomas Becket. Chaucer decides to tag along, taking some time to describe each pilgrim. The cause uses many metaphors, personal histories, and examples of how they would act in certain situations to fully describe the events in the story. However, some of the pilgrims are given only a fewer lines of direct description in a very straightforward, visual manner. One of the characters in the tales is Squire, who gets only twenty lines of details, focusing on his appearance, his abilities, and his sexuality.The physical description of the Squire illustrates him as if he was a Roman statue, or taken from a chivalric romance. Chaucer describes his lokkes crulle as they were leyd in presse(Norton, 83), average height , great strength, Of twenty yeer of age he was (Norton, 83), bravery and cleverness. The author illustrates Squires youth as fressh as is the month of may. (Norton, 83). The dress of the squire is colorful, embroidered with flowers, short with large sleeves. He is very talented, too. Chaucer dedicates some lines in the poesy to the squires skills - horsemanship, jousting, sketching, dancing, song and verse writing Wel koude he sitte on hors and faire ryde./ He koude songes make and wel endite,/ Juste and eek daunce, and weel purtreye and write. (Norton, 83). The physical illustration of Squire is carefully surrounded by sexual references. The author tells us in his poem that the young character is a lovere and a lusty bacheler(Norton, 83), who loves so hotly that he sleeps at night namoore than dooth a nyghtyngale(Norton, 83). Chaucer uses meadows, reinvigorated flowers, and squires songs as the methphors to represent the characters sexual image that hides under the portrait of th e candidate for a knight. Chaucer also refers to the object of squires chivalry, his lady.The strange thing about Squires sexuality and his character as a whole is its neutrality. He is illustrated as powerful and effective young knight. It seems however that he is lifeless, like a stone or up to now statue. The squires physical characteristics strongly hit the readers mind, yet not much is understood about Squire. Chaucer even portrays him in a morally neutral manner, he leaves the vox populi of the squire to the reader.

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