The Wife of Bath's Prologue and Tale Contents
- The Prologue: introductory comments
- Part one: l.1 'Experience' - l.76 'Cacche whoso may'
- Part two: l.77 'But this word' - l.134 'To purge uryne'
- Part three: l.135 'But if I seye noght' - l.162 ' Al this sentence'
- Part four: l.163 'Up sterte' - l.192 'For myn entente'
- Part five: l.193 'Now sires' - l.234 'Of hir assent'
- Part six: l.235 'Sire old kanyard' - l.307 'I wol hym noght'
- Part seven: l.308 'But tel me this' - l.378 'This know they'
- Part eight: l.379 'Lordinges, right thus' - l.452 'Now wol I speken'
- Part nine: l.453 'My forthe housebonde' - l.502 'He is now in the grave'
- Part ten: l.503 'Now of my fifthe housebond' - l.542 'Had told to me'
- Part eleven: l.543 'And so bifel' - l.584 'As wel of this'
- Part twelve: l.585 'But now, sire' - l.626 'How poore'
- Part thirteen: l.627 'What sholde I seye' - l.665 'I nolde noght'
- Part fourteen: l.666 'Now wol I seye' - l.710 'That women kan'
- Part fifteen: l.711 'But now to purpos' - l.771 'Somme han kem'
- Part sixteen: l.772 'He spak moore' - l.828 'Now wol I seye'
- Part seventeen: The after words l.829 'The frere lough' - l.856 'Yis dame, quod'
- The Wife of Bath's Tale: Introductory comments
- Part eighteen: l.857 'In the' olde days' - l.898 'To chese weither'
- Part nineteen: l.899 'The queen thanketh' - l.949 'But that tale is nat'
- Part twenty: l.952 'Pardee, we wommen' - l.1004 'These olde folk'
- Part twenty-one: l.1005 'My leve mooder' - l.1072 'And taketh his olde wyf'
- Part twenty-two: l.1073 'Now wolden som men' - l.1105 'Ye, certeinly'
- Part twenty-three: l.1106 'Now sire, quod she' - l.1176 'To lyven vertuously'
- Part twenty-four: l.1177 'And ther as ye' - l.1218 'I shal fulfille'he Holocaust and the creation of
- Part twenty-five: l.1219 'Chese now' - l.1264 'God sende hem'
- Reaction to the Wife's Tale
- Themes in The Wife of Bath's Tale
- The struggle for power in The Wife of Bath's Prologue
- The 'wo' that is in marriage
- The portrayal of gender in The Wife of Bath's Prologue and Tale
- Desire and The Wife of Bath's Tale
- Is there justice in The Wife of Bath's Tale
- Social criticism in The Wife of Bath's Prologue and Tale
- Marriage and sexuality in The Wife of Bath's Prologue and Tale
- Mastery in The Wife of Bath's Prologue and Tale
- Debate, dispute and resolution in The Wife of Bath's Prologue and Tale
- Tale and teller in The Wife of Bath's Prologue and Tale
The Wife of Bath's Prologue and Tale essay and exam help
Be prepared, think positive. If you know the text well and have explored it in depth, then this is your chance to shine. Yes, somebody wants to know what YOU think. Hours of uninterrupted self-expression, where else can you get that?
Quick advice on answering questions
- Know the text well
- Read the question carefully
- Think
- Plan with a chart or brief notes
- Think again
- Enjoy the challenge of answering the question
Preparation for coursework and before the examination
Careful reading
Working with a literary text, whether it be a novel, play or poem, requires more than simply reading it and knowing ‘what happens' or what it is ‘about'. If you are to write good essays and be successful in examinations, it is important that you should engage with the text.
Engaging with a text
Engaging with a text involves much more than reading it once. It means reading it several times and being able to do something with it, e.g. activities like those set in the ‘Investigating' sections of the guide, planning structured notes, making diagrams and/or exploring creative writing possibilities.
Hearing the text
Allow yourself time to become accustomed to the language: Chaucer's poems were written over six hundred years ago, so don't worry if you read slowly at first, since you are learning to understand Middle English. Listening to the text can make it seem much clearer as well as helping the story come to life. If possible obtain a tape, CD or download of a reading of the text in Middle English. Listen with the text in front of you to begin with and then listen without it. Your confidence will grow with your understanding and you will enjoy the rhythms of the poetry. It was written to be heard.
Time and detail
Set aside time for reading and listening. Identify blocks of time when you can read or listen to the text without interruption and make notes as you read. This is the best way of keeping your reading alert and active – if you need guidance, use the ‘Investigating' sections to help you to compile a set of well thought out notes.
Different perspectives
As you read, think of the text in different ways, e.g.:
- The Wife of Bath's Prologue as a study of the struggle for power
- The Wife of Bath's Prologue as an attack on the Church.
Focus on particular sections, e.g.:
- The Old Woman's argument about the nature of ‘gentilesse' in The Wife of Bath's Tale
- The Wife's ‘domestic' with Jankin the clerk near the end of her prologue.
Concentrate on a theme or significant idea e.g.:
- Money
- Magic.
Answering
When the time comes to put pen to paper, remember these handy hints:
- Read the question carefully and underline the most important words
- Make a brief plan or diagram of your initial thoughts
- Don't be afraid to question the terms of the question if that seems appropriate, e.g., if the question asked is ‘Is the Wife of Bath a feminist?' define what you understand by the term ‘feminist' before starting the main body of the answer
- Keep thinking all the way through your essay, and keep answering, i.e. relating evidence from the text to the line of argument that you are taking. Remember that you are not being asked to tell the story, you are being asked to express a sustained argument about a view of the text or its characters
- Show that you enjoy the intellectual challenge of engaging with the text
- End brilliantly! Be thought provoking.
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