Log In
|
My Passes
|
Sign Up
Learning Guides
Teacher Resources
Test Prep
College Readiness
Schools & Districts
All of Shmoop
Literature
Bible
Poetry
Shakespeare
Mythology
Bestsellers
Dr. Seuss
Pre-Algebra
Algebra
Algebra II
Geometry
Biology
US History
Flashcards
DMV
Careers
SAT
ACT
AP Exams
En Español
Essay Lab
Videos
Literary Critics
Shmoop Shtuff
Cite This Page
To Go
Scribd PDF
Kindle: Learning Guide
Kindle: Full Text + Learning Guide
Nook: Learning Guide
Sony Reader: Learning Guide
Amazon Print-on-Demand
The Canterbury Tales: The Wife of Bath's Tale
by
Geoffrey Chaucer
Home
Literature
The Canterbury Tales: The Wife of Bath's Tale
Themes
Intro
Summary
Themes
Quotes
Characters
Analysis
Questions
Quizzes
Flashcards
Best of the Web
Write Essay
Advertisement
The Canterbury Tales: The Wife of Bath's Tale Quotes
Table of Contents
AP English Language
AP English Literature
SAT Test Prep
ACT Exam Prep
ADVERTISEMENT
The Canterbury Tales: The Wife of Bath's Tale Themes
Little Words, Big Ideas
Women and Femininity
The knight's punishment for rape is a quest in which he must discover what women most desire. This plot element is an occasion for the tale to expound upon all of the various things women desire an...
Power
A knight deprives a maiden of power over her own body; his punishment, as decided by the women of the court, is that he must find out what women most desire, which turns out to be power. "The Wife...
Rules and Order
At the beginning of "The Wife of Bath's Tale," a knight commits rape, and the rest of the tale is concerned with how the law punishes him for his misdeed (or not). The queen immediately asks for th...
Principles
The big principle at issue in "The Wife of Bath's Tale" is gentility. Gentility was thought to be a quality of a person that caused him to do noble deeds, keep his promises, and generally behave vi...
Appearances
Since the plot of "The Wife of Bath's Tale" has at its heart a loathly lady who shape-shifts into a beautiful, young damsel, we might expect appearances to be important here. And they are, just not...
Old Age
The loathly lady's old age is what makes her wise, a fact she establishes definitively when she reminds the knight that "thise olde folk kan muchel thing" (1010). The connection of age with the wis...
Poverty
When her husband attacks her suitableness as a wife because she is poor, the loathly lady launches into a long speech in "The Wife of Bath's Tale" that includes a meditation on the virtues of pover...