Wednesday, April 14, 2010

The Wife of Bath’s Prologue and Tale

Reading Chaucer’s The Wife of Bath’s Prologue and Tale is entertaining, especially some arguments of marriage and some attitudes of the relationship with the husband from the wife of bath.

At the very beginning, she argues against that “Christ went to a wedding only once.” For the wife of bath, she has married five times, and she does not agree that her life is “a sin and scandal;” otherwise, she enjoys sharing her “experiences” of her five marriages without feeling guilt.

The wife of bath has her own opinions about how the sex can assist her to get what she wants, such as her husbands’ wealth. She says her first three husbands were good because “they were kindly men, and rich, and old.” She uses her ways to let her old husbands feel guilty, like her husband is having an affair or when they got drunk, and she teased them at the night. Then, her old husbands will promise to give her money to satisfy her.

Although she gets wealthy, she does not feel love until she met her fifth husband, Jenkin. She claims that “to him I gave land, titles, the whole slate of goods that had been given me before.” She can give away everything just because she loves him. “I took for live, not money.”

Along with the wife of bath’s marriages’ experience, we sort of can realize that, in order to get the satisfaction, she always pay for it. To be wealthy, she pays her old husbands with her activities of sex and her youth. In order to marry the one that she truly loves, she lies to him about her forth husband’s funeral, and she completely disregards the big age gap. However, after Jenkin keeps reading the book about wicked women, she punches him, and he strikes her head which leads her one ear deaf.

We all know everything has two sides, so whatever we do affects other things, and that’s why life is expensive.

1 comment:

  1. Live is not only expensive, but also is challenging to everyone. Love can be expensive, and it can also be challenging as well. The life of a female in ancient Europe should be challenging unless she has social and or monetary power. The wife of Bath knows how to create her monetary power by using her sexual and verbal abilities. Cleopatra VII Philopator is another example of this type of smart lady.

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