preview

Canterbury Tales Character Analysis

Decent Essays

In Geoffrey Chaucer’s The Canterbury Tales, a multitude of characters are on pilgrimage to the Canterbury Cathedral to visit the shrine of Thomas à Becket. The Host offers a challenge: whoever can tell the most entertaining stories will be rewarded with a lavish dinner paid by the other pilgrims. Each character then proceeds to conjure up their best stories in hopes of winning the coveted prize. In The Canterbury Tales, each character is given a prologue to describe themselves, which is then proceeded by the tale they presented. Each tale is representative of the character that told it to an extent. For example, the Wife of Bath is appropriate for her tale because the tale displays many similar characteristics and ideals that she upholds and lives by. The Wife of Bath is the most suitable character to relay her tale because it is within the tale that many principles are observed—such as the woman having power over the man—that the Wife of Bath herself preaches and lives by.
In the Wife of Bath’s prologue, the Wife of Bath, Allison, describes her experiences throughout different parts of her life and how those helped her to develop into the person she is. Allison is a well-traveled character who is a skilled seamstress and self-proclaimed marriage expert. Despite having been married five different times to five different men, Allison rejects the typical role of the “submissive wife,” and instead opts to use her sexuality to seduce her husbands into giving her money or

Get Access