Sir Gawain And The Green Knight Chivalry Essay

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The medieval poem Sir Gawain and the Green Knight follows the classic quest formula with a brave knight receiving a challenge and departing on a journey to complete it before ultimately returning back home to his king. The poem opens with the Green Knight storming in to challenge King Arthur's court, setting the stage for a deeper exploration of chivalry's complexities, specifically pertaining to the main character, Sir Gawain. The unknown author explores this theme of chivalry, and the ultimate hypocrisy that stems from its nature, by utilizing many different literary devices at his disposal. This medieval alliterative verse poem includes many well-defined codes of behavior. The Knight’s code of chivalry, in particular, helps to form not …show more content…

Arthur is introduced as the “most courteous of all,” (Sir Gawain and the Green Knight) indicating that people are ranked in this court according to their history and ability to exhibit good manners and behavior. When the Green Knight challenges the court, he mocks them for being so afraid of mere words, suggesting that words and appearances hold too much power over the company. The members of the court hide their true feelings from one another, and instead always make an effort to appear courteous, beautiful, and fair-spoken; further showcasing the hypocrisy of chivalry and how it differs from truth among …show more content…

The pentangle depicted on his shield is a representation of the five virtues of knights: generosity, chastity, friendship, courtesy, and piety. The pentangle also represents Gawain's challenges he faces in upholding such virtues when in the face of fear and temptation. Gawain’s ability to stick to such virtues is often tested throughout Sir Gawain and the Green Knight. The poem even goes a step further by not only questioning Gawain’s personal virtue, but also by indirectly asking whether ideals like heavenly virtue can truly operate in a fallen world. What is truly questioned in this story is the chivalric system as a whole, which is symbolized directly by

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