The Wife of
Bath’s Prologue
The Wife
of Bath begins the Prologue to her tale by establishing
herself as an authority on marriage, due to her extensive
personal experience with the institution. Since her first
marriage at the tender age of twelve, she has had five
husbands. She says that many people have criticized her for
her numerous marriages, most of them on the basis that
Christ went only once to a wedding, at Cana in Galilee. The
Wife of Bath has her own views of Scripture and God’s
plan. She says that men can only guess and interpret what
Jesus meant when he told a Samaritan woman that her fifth
husband was not her husband. With or without this bit of
Scripture, no man has ever been able to give her an exact
reply when she asks to know how many husbands a woman may
have in her lifetime. God bade us to wax fruitful and
multiply, she says, and that is the text that she
wholeheartedly endorses. After all, great Old Testament
figures, like Abraham, Jacob, and Solomon, enjoyed multiple
wives at once. She admits that many great Fathers of the
Church have proclaimed the importance of virginity, such as
the Apostle Paul. But, she reasons, even if virginity is
important, someone must be procreating so that virgins can
be created. Leave virginity to the perfect, she says, and
let the rest of us use our gifts as best we may—and
her gift, doubtless, is her sexual power. She uses this
power as an “instrument” to control her
husbands.
At this point,
the Pardoner interrupts. He is planning to marry soon and
worries that his wife will control his body, as the Wife of
Bath describes. The Wife of Bath tells him to have patience
and to listen to the whole tale to see if it reveals the
truth about marriage. Of her five husbands, three have been
“good” and two have been “bad.” The
first three were good, she admits, mostly because they were
rich, old, and submissive. She laughs to recall the
torments that she put these men through and recounts a
typical conversation that she had with her older husbands.
She would accuse her -husband of having an affair,
launching into a tirade in which she would charge him
with a bewildering array of accusations. If one of her
husbands got drunk, she would claim he said that every wife
is out to destroy her husband. He would then feel guilty
and give her what she wanted. All of this, the Wife of Bath
tells the rest of the pilgrims, was a pack of
lies—her husbands never held these opinions, but she
made these claims to give them grief. Worse, she would
tease her husbands in bed, refusing to give them full
satisfaction until they promised her money. She admits
proudly to using her verbal and sexual power to bring her
husbands to total submission.
For your Middle English lines: go to
http://www.librarius.com/canttran/wifetale/wifetale001-034.htm
and read the right
side of the page, clicking the link at the bottom of that
page and each subsequent page to move forward in the text.
Go to http://www.librarius.com/canttran/wifetale/wifetale794-834.htm
to read the last
part of the Prologue, or to http://www.mrtonk.com/english12/quarterone.html
and click on Wife
of Bath’s Prologue, Part 2.
Finally, read the Wife of Bath’s Tale, found on the
First Quarter Materials page of MrTonk.com or at
http://www.librarius.com/canttran/wifetale/wifetale863-887.htm.