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Similarities Between The Wife Of Bath And The Pardoner's Tale

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Geoffrey Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales is a fictional book about people who are going to Canterbury to receive the blessings of St. Thomas Becket. The Host suggests that to make a journey pleasant, every member has to tell a story and the person who tells the best story will get free dinner paid by the other members. The Host decides to accompany other members to Canterbury and serves as the judge of the Tale. A relationship is usually seen between a teller of a tale and the tale that he or she decides to share. The Pardoner, The Merchant, and the Wife of Bath use their feelings and experience to teach the lessons in the tale. Merchant has poor and second-rate views on marriage whereas Pardoner commits lot of sins and frauds and Wife of Bath wants womens to have control over their life.
The Merchant uses his feelings on the marriage to teach the lesson in the tale. He despises being married and his intolerable wife causes him constant agony, and because of this he has a bitter and cynical view of marriage. Merchant states, “I have a wife, the worst that there could be; For a friend were coupled to …show more content…

The Wife of Bath thinks that the thing which women most desire is power over their husbands and in the prologue, she tells how she got the upper hand with each of them. She states, “bridle over to my hand, gave me the government of house and land, of tongue and fist, indeed of all he’d got” (280). The Wife of Bath has control over all her five husbands and is only happy when she has dominance over her partners. It is seen both in the tale and Wife of Bath’s prologue when knight returns to the castle and he states, “A women wants the self-same sovereignty* not be above her” (286). In both situations, power and sovereignty is the only topic being talked about and Wife of Bath thinks that the control of marriage should be given to the women, both financially and

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