In Geoffrey Chaucer's "Canterbury Tales", the Wife of Bath tells a tale that includes irony to her and Chaucer. She was considered a beautiful woman but today would be considered ugly. She is considered worthy but vulgar. The reader would think her title showed that she was a loyal wife but the reader will soon know that is not true. Her tale and she have some symbolism each other. Some aspects of the tale resemble Chaucer's life.
The general prologue of the "Canterbury Tales" by Chaucer the Wife of Bath is one of three of the women. She is the only women is not the nun. It talks about how she was from Bath. Bath is a city of great cloth making. This explains why she is such a good at sewing. She is over exaggerated. Her hat was large and made of fine cloth. She had scarlet stockings. The color scarlet was a symbol of wealth. She had leather shoes. They were new and of soft leather. She wore a skirt. She was said to be fat. She had larger hips and buttocks. She rode a slow horse. She has been to Jerusalem, Rome, Boulogne, Santiago in Spain, and Cologne. She was married five times. She talks about sexuality and love openly.
The Wife of Bath starts with her prologue, which is more of just her background. She tells of her five husbands. She talks about how the first three were good. The "good" she is talking about is one of being rich, old, and she had control. They could not satisfy her need for attention of intimacy. The last two were "bad" meaning that the fourth husband had a mistress and the fifth beat her. They were though very in tune with her need for intimacy. She talks about how she knows how to control men to get what she wants. She says that a person can control him by controlling the intercourse. She says she know this from her experience in life. She will also try to use references to other works to make her look more reliable. She talks of her fifth husband who had a book of works that showed unfaithful, superficial, evil creature, and who undermined their husbands. He uses this as a form of punishment. He would read this to her to make her feel bad about what she had done. She tries to use scripture as in having a point. She used "Be fruitful, and multiply, and replenish the earth, and subdue it". She takes this literally. She thinks the meaning is to go about can have intercourse freely. She then talks about how she loves to be in intimate with men a lot but only for money. She says because she had many husband does not make her unworthy. She tries again to use scripture. She says that Old Testament figures like Abraham, Jacob, and Solomon had many wives at once. She also referees to the apostle. The apostle is Paul. He preaches that virginity is necessary. She should still be considered worthy. She states that here gift is that one of sexual power. She believes everything could be control with this power. She thinks she can make any man do what she wants. She says it gives her the upper hand in her relationships.
The Wife of Bath tells the story of a Knight who rapes a maiden. His punishment is to find what women want otherwise put to death. He comes across an old hag. She tells him she has the answer. He says he would do anything for it. She says she wants him to marry her. He agrees to do that. She then gives him a choice if he wants her to be ugly and faithful or beautiful and wonder. He tells her it is her choice. He found that women really want is power. The Wife's tale has symbolisms of Chaucer's life. The knight can have some identify with Chaucer himself. The knight had raped a maiden. Chaucer was charged with rape. He was saved from punishment because he was distinguishable person. The knight was saved by marrying the hag
The Wife of Bath is an envious person; she wants little things in life. Her tales shows the person she really is. All she wants in life is to be more powerful. She wants to be more