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The Tale of The Wife of Bath

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Title: The Tale of The Wife of Bath


1
The Tale of The Wife of Bath
  • Brianna Boland
  • Laurel Lorber
  • Melissa Markowich
  • Shelly Sodhi

2
The Prologue
  • This autobiography fills the readers in on the
    Wife of Baths life before her tale begins. The
    Wife of Bath first marries at age twelve. She has
    four more husbands later in her life and tells
    briefly of her experiences throughout these five
    marriages. She tells the reader that three of her
    husbands have been good and two of them have
    been bad. The Wife of Bath says that virginity
    is left to the perfect and that the others should
    use their gifts. Her gift, of course, is her
    sexual power, as she controls her husbands in
    every way that she can. She teases them and
    expects money after being in bed with them. The
    Wife of Bath is portrayed as unfaithful and full
    of sin, but she is proud to tell her story.

3
The Tale
  • The tale begins in the days of King Arthur, where
    elves and fairies were replaced by lustful people
    such as friars who harmed women. The story goes
    on to tell of a knight who rapes a young maiden
    and is given one chance to save himself from
    decapitation. The queen challenges the knight by
    giving him a year to figure out what women most
    desire. The knight learns that every woman he
    asks has a different answer to his question. Some
    women would love to have money, some want fame,
    and some desire to be beautiful. Others told the
    knight that they would like to be viewed as
    trustworthy.

4
The Tale
  • The Wife also tells Ovids story of Midas to
    prove that women cannot keep a secret. In this
    story, Midas shares a secret with his wife and
    trusts her not to tell anyone. When his wife is
    unable to keep keep the secret to herself any
    longer, she goes to a marsh and tells it to the
    water. Later on, as the knight rides through the
    forest, he asks another woman to tell him her
    greatest desire. The woman tells him that his
    life will be saved and that women want to be in
    charge of their husbands. The queen agrees with
    this and the woman asks the knight to marry her.
    He is not happy and his wife finally realizes the
    reason for this. She asks him why he treats her
    poorly if she is his true love and if she is the
    one who saved his life. His wife gives him a
    choice to be with an ugly woman that is loyal to
    him or to have her, young and unfaithful. She is
    told to choose for him and she becomes beautiful
    and loyal and good to him as well.

5
  • Title The Wife of Bath
  • Author Chaucer
  • Narrator the Wife of Bath
  • Protagonist the Wife of Bath
  • Genre Arthurian Tale
  • Conflict Man vs. Society
  • Theme the empowerment of women
  • Setting During the reign of King Arthur in
    England

6
Methods of Characterization
  • The author creates the character of the wife in
    the prologue through the use of the direct
    description
  • Her kerchiefs were of finest weave and
    ground Her hose were of the choicest scarlet
    red. Bold was her face, and hair, and red of
    hue.
  • Chaucer used the color scarlet red to intensify
    and show the wealth of the wife. The wife of
    bath does not seem timid like the women of that
    time. In fact it can be understood that the
    color scarlet red when worn is used to illustrate
    someone who is opinionated and confidant. Also
    the Wifes clothes illustrate extravagance her
    face is wreathed in heavy cloth, her stockings
    are a fine scarlet color, and the leather on her
    shoes is soft, fresh, and brand newall of which
    demonstrate how wealthy she has become.

7
The Wife
  • The Wife of Bath has her own views of Scripture
    and Gods plan.
  • She says that men can only guess and interpret
    what Jesus meant when he told a Samaritan woman
    that her fifth husband was not her husband. With
    or without this bit of Scripture, no man has ever
    been able to give her an exact reply when she
    asks to know how many husbands a woman may have
    in her lifetime.
  • The Wife carelessly flings around references as
    textual evidence to support her argument, most of
    which dont really correspond to her points.
    Many of her errors convey Chaucers mockery of
    the churchmen who often misused Scripture to
    justify their devious actions.

8
The Wife
  • She says God bade us to wax fruitful and
    multiply. She admits that many great Fathers of
    the Church have proclaimed the importance of
    virginity, such as the Apostle Paul. But, she
    reasons, even if virginity is important, someone
    must be procreating so that virgins can be
    created.
  • Leave virginity to the perfect, she says, and let
    the rest of us use our gifts as best we mayand
    her gift, doubtless, is her sexual power. She
    uses this power as an instrument to control her
    husbands.

9
The Wife
  • The wife exerts power over men.
  • She uses words to manipulate her husbands
  • She claims she will accuse her husband of having
    an affair and charge him with a bewildering array
    of accusations. If one of her husbands got drunk,
    she would claim he said that every wife is out to
    destroy him. He would then feel guilty and give
    her what she wanted.
  • The Wife of Bath tells the rest of the pilgrims
    that what she told her husbands was a pack of
    lies. Her husbands never held these opinions,
    but she made these claims to give them grief.
  • She teased her husbands in bed, refusing to give
    them full satisfaction until they promised her
    money. She admitted proudly to using her verbal
    and sexual power to bring her husbands to total
    submission.

10
Was the Wife the First Feminist?
  • Some question whether the Wife of Bath was the
    first feminist in literature.
  • Because the statements that the Wife of Bath
    attributes to her husbands were taken from a
    number of satires published in Chaucers time,
    which half-comically portrayed women as
    unfaithful, superficial, evil creatures who were
    always out to undermine their husbands, feminist
    critics have often tried to portray the Wife as
    one of the first feminist characters in
    literature. The wife of bath has been
    interpreted as Chaucers deliberate moral satire
    upon the human, especially female, sexual
    appetite.

11
Symbol
  • The knights decision to allow the old woman to
    choose to remain ugly or to become beautiful is
    symbolic of the transfer of power from the male
    to the female.

12
Motif
Feminism, the empowerment of women One example
of the recurring theme of womens empowerment is
when the king allows his wife to determine the
fate of the knight. Another example is when the
knight lets the old woman decide whether she
would rather be devoted and ugly or beautiful and
independent. Since the knight gave the woman
sovereignty, she decides to be loyal and
beautiful at the same time. The feminist motif
is also evident when the knight announces that he
has learned that what women truly desire is
sovereignty over their men.
13
Simile
  • Similies help to better describe certain people,
    objects and events. They give the reader a more
    vivid picture of what an object looks like or
    what something sounds like.
  • Examples
  • As thick as motes are in a bright sunbeam
  • As bittern booms in the quagmire
  • The knight did not stand dumb, as does a beast

14
Satire
  • There is debate over whether or not The Wife of
    Bath is an object of satire or an instrument of
    satire. The character of the wife could be a
    stereotypical feminist who Chaucer uses to poke
    fun at womens empowerment. On the other hand,
    Chaucer could have used the characters vitality
    to promote feminism

15
Allusion
  • The tale of The Wife of Bath makes references
    to
  • writers such as Dante and Ovid.
  • Well does that poet mise of great Florence,
    called Dante, speak his mind in this sentence
  • Think how noble, as says Valerius, was that
    same Tullius Hostilius, who out of poverty rose
    to high estate Serieca and Boethius inculate
  • Ovid, among some other matters small,said
    Midas had beneath his long curled hair

16
Foreshadowing
  • In the prologue, Chaucer uses the technique of
    foreshadowing to describe the way in which the
    Wife of Baths fifth husband, Jankyn, treats her.
  • Who- sad to say was deaf in either ear

17
Why include The Wife of Bath in The Canterbury
Tales?
  • The character of the wife is responding to a
    debate that had been going on for centuries
    regarding the place of women in the universe and
    society. Through her experiences with her
    husbands, she has learned how to provide for
    herself in a world where women had little
    independence or power.
  • In the Medieval times woman were looked upon as
    property. They played no role in society other
    than child bearing. The wife's tale is one of a
    struggle for power. In her relationships, the
    wife enjoyed having the power and control of her
    husbands. The knight discovered what women desire
    most, and that is power.
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