210 likes | 780 Views
Prologue. Contention: The Pardoner mocks the wife?I was about to take a wife?There'll be no wife for me this year"This is in response to the Wife's mentioning her desire for a sixth husband. Prologue continued. Shows that not all members of the group get alongUnderscores Chaucer's admiration for
E N D
1. The Wife of Bath’s Tale
2. Prologue Contention: The Pardoner mocks the wife
“I was about to take a wife…There’ll be no wife for me this year”
This is in response to the Wife’s mentioning her desire for a sixth husband
3. Prologue continued Shows that not all members of the group get along
Underscores Chaucer’s admiration for the Wife by the Pardoner’s opposition
4. The Tale Theme: marriage
Theme: “What women want”
Character: Chivalry (the knight)
Comments on the general treatment women received from other men, especially their husbands
5. Background Religion is set up to “fall”
Friars have displaced spirits in lines 31-56
Women had been ravaged by spirits, but the wife suggests that friars are even worse
Scathing commentary on the “morality” of the friars
6. Background Chivalry is set up to “fall”
59: “There was a knight who was a lusty liver.”
64: “By very force took her maidenhead”
These examples are directly contrary to the values espoused by chivalry
7. Irony The knight was to be beheaded, but Fate intervenes: the queen
The knight is saved by the queen and her court
His next task is Herculean: discover “what women most desire” in a year
8. What Women want Honor
Jollity and pleasure
Gorgeous clothes
Fun in bed
To be oft widowed and remarried
Pampered and flattered The variety of answers suggests that there is no answer
Suggests that women are impossible to please
9. Midas’ Wife Line 119-120: “…vicious we may be within/ We like to be thought wise and void of sin.”
Women have an image to keep up
Pertains to men only—women know their true natures among themselves
10. Midas’ Wife Vicious: though Midas “loved her best,” his wife’s vicious nature superceded her own love
Of Midas’ ears transforming: “she thought she would have died keeping this secret bottled up inside”
Wife must gossip
11. The Secret’s Out The Midas story prefaces the secret to what women want
The knight finds fairies who disappear, leaving an old hag
Note that fairies are mentioned favorably
12. Secret The hag gets the knight’s promise to give her whatever she asks in exchange for the difference
“And then she crooned her gospel in his ear”
Crooned suggests intimacy; gospel means truth
13. Secret Revealed A woman wants the self-same sovereignty/ Over her husband as over her lover,/ And master him: he must not be above her.”
Women want equality in the relationship
14. The Bargain Met The old hag takes he knight to be her husband
This is the woman in “sovereignty”
This is ironic for the knight, who ravaged a maiden at the beginning of the tale
15. The Bargain Met Line 248: “He takes his ancient wife to bed”
At this point, the old woman teaches the knight “chivalry”
16. The Arguments Line 276-277:
Old
Ugly
Poor
Low-bred These are the Knight’s reasons for not loving his wife
They reinforce his character as not chivalrous
17. Rebuttal: Low-bred Lines 285-293
The hag says that the idea of noble birth guaranteeing “gentility”
The hag claims that deeds make a nobleman (gentleman)
18. Rebuttal: Poverty 355
Hag mentions that God approves of poverty
This appeals to Chaucer’s audience, who would have been familiar with this Christian concept
19. Rebuttal: Poverty Claims that poverty is not shameful—indulgence and avarice are
The poor are not missing what counts: being happy
20. Rebuttal: Old and Ugly The hag claims that these two attributes ensure that she is chaste
The old hag will still satisfy the knight’s “worldly appetites”
21. Submission The knight finally submits
He has a “loyal, true, and humble wife
At the time of submission, he finds his wife young and beautiful
22. ‘The Moral to the Story’ “cut short the lives of those who won’t be governed by their wives”
Request by the Wife for all husbands
The wife displays her real world intelligence