Even after hundreds of years, good still existed during the time of Chaucer; he criticizes most of the characters in his story. In the Canterbury Tales, Chaucer shows this when he talks about his characters, the Nun and the Wife of Bath. Chaucer’s opinion of them is shown by the way he has written about their characteristics. The characters show their thoughts and feelings by how they act and look. So, the similarities and differences between the Nun and the Wife of Bath are viewed by Chaucer’s opinion of all women.
In the Canterbury tales, Chaucer explains his characters so deeply that their personalities show their “true colors” and beliefs. The personalities and characteristics of the Nun and Wife of Bath vary but also explain the feelings
people expected women to fill one of only two roles: a faultless nun or submissive wife (Vaněčková 15). Many people in this time period believed that women could not fully fill even those roles because they thought women were sinful. The Catholic Church used the story of Adam and Eve to reveal the wicked and tempting nature of…