Woah big question! He had hair as yellow as wax like rats tails and his voice was like a little plaintive goats voice. Sorry that's all i know
The Pardoner seems to have an unusually close friendship with the Summoner (the two sing a suggestive lovesong in harmony together). The Pardoner has lanky yellow hair which he wears shoulder-length - he seems very proud of it, since he refuses to wear a hat. He is pop-eyed and both speaks and sings in a squeaky voice. One of the most unusual features of the Pardoner is that he has no facial hair. Rather unusually, Chaucer remarks that several of the saints' relics in which the Pardoner deals are fakes.
The summoner
The narrator seems to dislike the Pardoner the most in "The Canterbury Tales" due to his dishonest and manipulative nature. The Pardoner is portrayed as greedy and hypocritical, using his position in the church to exploit and deceive people for personal gain.
In "The Pardoner's Tale," the relics the Pardoner sells are most likely fake. The Pardoner admits in his prologue that he uses deception to manipulate people for financial gain. He is shown to be greedy and deceitful, making it unlikely that the relics he sells are authentic.
Individuals with ethics similar to those of the Pardoner, who are dishonest and hypocritical in their actions, could exist today. However, the Pardoner's character is a portrayal of extreme corruption and manipulation, so most people today would not have ethics as extreme as his.
In "The Pardoner's Tale," the knight shows the most courtliness. He is described as noble, brave, and honorable, and his actions align with the ideals of chivalry and courtesy towards others.
A reader may not connect with a character who seems dishonest.
The Pardoner insults the innkeeper at the end of "The Pardoner's Tale" by calling him a fool, suggesting he lacks understanding and discernment. This insult is delivered in response to the innkeeper's comments about the tale being a joke or lie, revealing the Pardoner's contempt for the innkeeper's skepticism.
I'm pretty sure its boxer but I'm not 100% positive
I remember "Nike" to be the most famous character on that server, it seems everyone knew him!
Ralph is the character who seems to be most connected with adult worlds in "Lord of the Flies." He tries to maintain order, focus on rescue, and uphold rules, resembling the qualities typically associated with adults rather than children.
The Pardoner is the most controversial of all the pilgrims for four reasons: his work, his sin (greed), his unrepentant pride, and his sexuality. The Pardoner's job-giving people written absolution from sin-was a dubious profession in medieval Europe. As he reveals in his Prologue, the Pardoner is well aware that he himself is covetous, which is the very sin against which he preaches in order to con people into giving him money. What makes him so distasteful to the other characters, especially the Host, is that fact that he is so proud of his vice. In the General Prologue, the narrator suggests that the Pardoner's sexual orientation is ambiguous, which means that he occupies an even further marginalized position in fourteenth-century society.