Wednesday, April 29, 2020
Wife Of Bath Essays (798 words) - The Canterbury Tales, Literature
  Wife of Bath        Geoffrey Chaucer was born in London in 1340 (Fuller 12). Geoffrey Chaucer's fortunes were closely bound with these of John Of Gaunt, the   son-in-law to the Earl of Derby (Fuller 12). Around the year 1380,   Geoffrey Chaucer was charged with rape by a woman named Cecily   Chaumpaigne (Williams 28). It is most likely that a distinguishable   character, such as Chaucer would not have been guilty of this charge.   However, the word "rape" probably referred to abducting rather than   assaulting a woman as it means today (Halliday 68). Cecily Chaumpaigne   in 1380 released Chaucer of all charges of "raptu meo," a phrase  that could be interpreted as "seizing me" (Williams 28). It is   possible that this allegation of rape brought on to Chaucer by  Cecily Chaumpaigne, is the very reason behind the Tale of the Wife of   Bath.       The wife of Bath was a plump, florid, jolly, bold, lusty, and   voluptuous woman. She was the most valuable of women. The wife of bath   cannot resist telling her companions about all of her sexual   experiences. She has had five husbands. Her husbands fell into two   categories. The first category of husbands was: rich, but also old and   unable to fulfill her demands, sexually that is. The other husbands   were sexually vigorous, but harder to control. The first three were   rich, old, and jealous. She tamed them by accusing them of promiscuous   behavior, that she herself practiced. Her fourth husband had a   mistress, so she "gave him a real cause for jealousy" (Halliday 119).   At the funeral of her first husband she fell in love with the legs of   an Oxford clerk. Although he was half her age, he became her fifth   husband. This marriage was unhappy because he beat her. To anger her   fifth husband, the wife of Bath tore three pages from his book. After   this he beat her again. She pretended to be dead and he felt so guilty   that he threw his whole book in the fire. This gave her the upper hand   for the rest of his life. She presently is looking for a sixth  husband when her character is introduced (Halliday 119).      The tale the wife of Bath tells us all is about a Knight who   ultimately rapes a maiden and is sent by the queen on a quest to seek  out what it is that women want most. If he succeeds and finds the   answer, he lives, if he fails, he dies.      The penalty for rape in the medieval era is death. The king is   ready to have the knight put to death when the queen speaks up and   allows to give him the chance to live. The knight is morally raped   when he gives up all his power of choice to the queen in order to live   (Williams 64). The word rape is often promoted by the wife throughout   the story (Williams 64). The king in the wife's tale represents   authority. The king would have inflicted punishment on the knight. The   queen on the other hand would have commuted his sentence to rape him   back, "An eye for an eye (Williams 66)." The conclusion is triumph of   her theme, tyranny. The wife is the rapist knight herself (Williams   66). The wife having created the knight and theme of rape is a   perpetual self-rapist (Williams 66). There is irony in the wife's   tale. Her tale is of the antifeminist clich?, that all women in their   hearts desire to be raped (Williams 67). Through her tale she fulfills   her desires and resolves the oppositions that she faces (Williams 69).    The women of the middle ages tended to be anonymous (Evans 330). They   were not soft nor sheltered, but mere property. They were at the   disposal of their parents and later on husbands. They had no say in   fighting, administrating, justice, or learning. These duties were   taken care of by the men to take care of (Evans 330). Even though   women played no role in society other than child bearing, they fell in   love, became married, became divorced, and coped with problems the   same as we do in the present day (Evans 3330).    The wife's tale is one of struggle of power and who has the upper hand   in any relationship. The    
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