Thursday, November 14, 2019
Geoffrey Chaucers The Canterbury Tales :: essays research papers
   The Canterbury Tales by Geoffrey Chaucer, which was published in March 1981 by  Bantam Books in New York, New York is a funny piece of work about twenty- nine  characters and their stories while on their way to Canterbury. The twenty-nine characters  have to tell two stories on their trip to Canterbury. In the Wife of Bath tale, the wife of  bath tells of a tale of a young knight, the central character in the story. After he raped a  woman, he must roam the countryside in search to the answer to the question ââ¬Å"what is it  that women most desire?â⬠ This is the plot, for he must find the answer in order to live.  The knight only has one year to get to answer this question and then he has to return to  King Arthurââ¬â¢s court and await his sentence.     The setting is in King Arthurââ¬â¢s court when a young man saw a pretty maiden and  raped her. The King was going to sentence him to death but the Queen decided to give  him one year to answer the question . The story is told from the Wife of Bathââ¬â¢s point of  view for she is narrating the story. So the conflict, being that he has to find the answer, is  established. The knightââ¬â¢s journey does not go well. Finally on the last day that he has, he  comes up to a group of women, as he approaches they disappear and an old woman  appears. This part is the climax of the plot because it is when the knight finally knows the  answer. The old woman says that she knows the answer but she will only tell it to the  Queen and in return she must do anything that she asks of him. The knight agrees. Finally,  while in the presence of the Queen, she tells her that the answer to what all women desire  is sovereignty over their husbands. No one disagrees with her answer and so the old  woman asks that she be married to the knight. The knight having sworn to do whatever  she pleased reluctantly agrees. But this is not the resolution. It happens later on while on  their wedding night. The knight is somewhat disgusted and so the old woman goes on to  lecture him on the trivial nature of appearances. She tells the knight whether he would  prefer to have a woman ugly by day, yet loyal and faithful the rest of the time or to be  beautiful and take his chances the rest of the time.  					    
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