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The Wife Of Bath's Tale Feminist Analysis

Satisfactory Essays

Kensi Laube
Professor Parrish
British Literature I
22 September 2017
Critical Response Paper #2 In The Wife of Bath’s Tale, the addition of the maiden’s rape allows the audience to create an interpretation behind Chaucer’s change to the story. By having the main female characters accept and forgive the knight for his actions, Chaucer’s “forgotten” victim seems to represent a feminist criticism about a society which supports anti feminist beliefs. The Queen, old hag, and the Wife of Bath all portray this misogynist idea that the absurd crime the knight has committed can be resolved. When King Arthur was first notified about the maiden’s rape, he immediately sentenced the knight to death. Through pleading, the Queen was able to convince the King to allow her to decide his fate in which she, “graunte thee lif if thou canst tellen me / What thing it is that wommen most desiren:” (lines 910-911). At first glance, the mission in itself appears to be a feminist idea because the knight had to truly understand what women want. Since the Queen gave …show more content…

Being placed in a desperate state to save his life, the knight retrieved his answer from an old hag with the condition he has to do whatever she asks of him. When the knight informs the Queen that the answer to her question is “Wommen desire to have sovereinetee / As wel over hir housbonde as her love,” the old hag reveals he has to marry her (1061 and 1062). Despite being disgusted, the knight complies. In turn for “learning” his lesson, the old hag transforms into a beautiful woman: “That she so fair was and so young therto, / For joye he hente” (1257 and 1258). By being spared from death and rewarded with a wife that suites his standards, the knight avoided any negative impact from raping the maiden. In this example, Chaucer, again, shows how an entire society can fall to anti feminist

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