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Wife Of Bath Character Analysis

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In the Wife of Bath (written in such a way that authorship is through her), by Geoffrey Chaucer, he offers context through the prologue and her tale to reveal the issues of marriage through cultural problems and the legal rights of a woman in the middle ages. This can be seen through the exemplified through her husbands, the use of biblical passages and the interruptions from male figures within the play.
The Wife of Bath uses marriage as a means to gain legal rights and position in society. Marriage was the only advantage for a woman for it promised stability and in some cases certain rights or freedoms that came with the class system that one could go into. For the Wife of Bath, she had “three of hem were good, and two bade. The three men were goode, and riche, and olde” (Chaucer lines 201-202). Her first three husbands she married for riches as they had married her for her beauty. She saw the advantages of marriage as she “hadde hem hoolly in myn hand, And sith that they hadde yiven me al hir land, What sholde I take keep hem for to plese, By it were for my profit and myn ese” (Chaucer lines 217-220). Marriage became a transaction for her where she exchanged herself through it for money and power. The Wife of Bath sees it as “al is for selle; With empty hand men may no hawkes lure. For winning (profit) wolde I al lust endure” (Chaucer lines 420-422). Chaucer suggests that she is potentially a prostitute or more specifically that the concept of marriage becomes

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