The Wife of Bath: A Feminist before Her Time

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The Wife of Bath: A Feminist Before Her Time

The character of the Wife of Bath in Chaucer's The Wife of Bath's Prologue is a strong woman who knows what she wants from life. She is ahead of her time, seeing that women who portrayed themselves the way she does were not necessarily looked positively upon. In this sense, I believe that the Wife of Bath is a feminist. When I use the word feminist I do not mean bra-burning, men hating feminist. I mean a woman who is in touch with herself. She is her own genre when it comes to feminism. She is comfortable with her sexuality and what she wants from life. Through Chaucer, she is viewed as a promiscuous; however, she is actually in control of her sexual adventures.

"I wol bistowe the flour of myn age, in the actes and in fruyt of mariage" (119-120). What the Wife of Bath is saying here is that the flower of her age (her virginity or sexuality) is hers to give. She has intentions of devoting her sexuality of all of her ages (from youth till maturity) to all of the acts and harvests of marriage. The Wife of Bath is implying that the reason she has married so often is not only because she enjoys having rich husbands (found in lines prior) but also because she enjoys the "fruyt of mariage" (120), which would mean the act of sex. This is where her unique feministic attitude comes into play. She has allowed herself to enjoy the perks of marriage, and she is vocal about it. However, because she has married so many times the connotation between her "flour of myn age" and the number of husbands she has had becomes a negative one.

Previous to her exclamation of the acts and harvests of marriage, The Wife of Bath begins to discuss virtues other than chastity that are expected to be mastered and practiced by all "good" Christians (115-118). She readily admits that she has no intentions of obtaining perfect chastity.

"Al that he hadde, and gyve it to the poore,

And in swich wise folwe hym and his foore

He spak to hem that wolde lyve parfitly,

And lordynges by youre leve, that am not I." (115-118)

In these lines "He" is Christ. She is referring to all of the things that Christ has done for his followers and all he asks from them is to try to live perfectly.

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