Sensory Satires and the Virtues of Herbs in Sir Thopas’s Fair Forest

IF 0.2 3区 文学 0 LANGUAGE & LINGUISTICS STUDIES IN PHILOLOGY Pub Date : 2021-03-01 DOI:10.1353/sip.2021.0033
Stephen Gordon
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Abstract

Abstract:The parodic, exaggerated nature of The Tale of Sir Thopas has long been recognized in scholarship on the Canterbury Tales. Formally and thematically, it has been said to represent an affectionate criticism of the type of vernacular tail-rhyme romances that was read widely in fourteenth-century England. However, despite concerted efforts to elucidate the various parodic (and, indeed, satiric) elements of the first of “Chaucer’s” contributions to the storytelling contest, little attention has been given to the critical possibilities offered by a medical reading of the herbs contained in the “fair forest” encountered by Sir Thopas (lines 760–65). The aim of this sketch, then, will be to illustrate how an understanding of the humoral qualities associated with licorice, zedoary, cloves, and nutmeg augments the irony of Thopas becoming lovestruck following his experience of the birdsong. It will be argued that the foundations of Thopas’s impetuosity derives from the hot, sweet-smelling herbs having already tipped our delicate child hero into a semicholeric passion.
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感官讽刺与托帕斯爵士美丽森林中草药的功效
摘要:《托帕斯爵士的故事》的戏仿性、夸张性在《坎特伯雷故事集》学术界早已得到认可。从形式和主题上讲,它代表了对14世纪英国广泛阅读的白话尾韵浪漫小说类型的深情批评。然而,尽管共同努力阐明了“乔叟”对讲故事比赛的第一个贡献中的各种戏仿(实际上是讽刺)元素,但人们很少注意到对托帕斯爵士遇到的“美丽森林”中所含草药的医学解读所提供的关键可能性(第760-65行)。因此,这幅素描的目的将是说明,对甘草、莪术、丁香和肉豆蔻相关的体液品质的理解,如何增强了托帕斯在经历鸟鸣后坠入爱河的讽刺意味。有人会说,托帕斯冲动的基础来自于炎热、芳香的草药,这些草药已经让我们脆弱的儿童英雄陷入了半胆汁般的激情。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
20
期刊介绍: Founded in 1903, Studies in Philology addresses scholars in a wide range of disciplines, though traditionally its strength has been English Medieval and Renaissance studies. SIP publishes articles on British literature before 1900 and on relations between British literature and works in the Classical, Romance, and Germanic Languages.
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