Garmentology in the Canterbury Tales

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The narrator of "The Canterbury Tales", by Geoffrey Chaucer spends a good amount of the General Prologue discussing the dress of the people upon the pilgrimage to the shrine of the martyr Saint Thomas Becket. One can learn a lot about a person by what they wear. By describing and discussing the pilgrims clothing, the reader can base their portraits on objective facts as well as the narrators own opinions. The "Garmentology" of the Knight, the Squire, the Yeoman, the Prioress, the Monk, and the Wife of Bath will be discussed.

The first pilgrim mentioned in the "Canterbury Tales" is the noble Knight. The Knight wears a tunic made of course cloth, and his coat of mail is rust-stained. "Of fustian he wered a gipoun/ Al bismothered with his habergeoun/ For he was late y-come from his visage/ And wente for to doon his pilgrimage" (ll. 75-79). The Knight's coat was stained because he had recently come back from battle and it was rusted with blood. The Knight's horses were brightly dressed, but the Knight himself wasn't. "His hors were gode, but he was nat gay" (line74). This line shows that the Knight did not care too much about his appearance, even though one of his love of ideals is "curteisye" (ll.46) or his refinement. By dressing his horses brightly gives the Knight refinement even though his own dress does not. One can argue that existence as a knight is refinement enough, and one doesn't have to dress up to prove himself worthy. The portrait that the narrator creates of the Knight portrays him as a noble man that has just come back from battle and has battled many times before. The Knight seems slightly rough around the edges but dignified in that manner. In the narrator's opinion, the Knight is a worthy man and very well-r...

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...ny things; from blood, to love, to infatuation. Basically red symbolizes strong emotions, or things of strong emotions rather than intellectual ideas. For example, red can symbolize excitement, energy, speed, strength, danger, passion, and aggression www.colorgenics.co.uk/). For the Wife of Bath, red probably symbolizes strong emotions of love and lust. She is also seen as lusty because of her gap-tooth (ll.469), which in Physiognomy means very sexual and lustful. The narrator sees and describes the Wife of Bath as fearless and outspoken, vain domineering and lustful.

What a person wears can give great definition to a person's identity. In the "Canterbury Tales" by Geoffrey Chaucer, the narrator describes each character using different colors and symbols to identify the characters personality and give the reader an inside look on the reality of a character.

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