Nguyen 1 Thuy Le Minh Nguyen Professor Rice Chaucer 21 November 2022 Is Sovereignty What the Wife Most Desires? Setting a life goal is to give life a purpose to carry on. Some would like to set their life goals as a list of want-tohave things or want-to-go places. Some others, by contrast, might set their life goals as journeys of pursuing, and in that case, the finish line tends to be no more the ultimate point. Sometimes the goal is neither necessary to be achieved nor to be specific, measurable, achievable, or even realistic. People with goals as journeys do love their experiences during the journey of pursuing more than literally reaching the finishing line because they perceive that the moment that they reach their goals, their journeys are over. The same case goes for the Wife of Bath. Since the correct answer for “What thyng is it that wommen moost desire” is sovereignty, many must believe that sovereignty is what the Wife desires most in marriage. If sovereignty is the goal in marriage, the Wife of Bath already has got and achieved it since she was twelve. However, through her fourth and especially fifth husband, and the knight in her Nguyen 2 tale, it seems like there is something else that the Wife wants even more than sovereignty. When it comes to the topic of marriage, the Wife of Bath desires the challenge of pursuing unattainable goals. In marriage, first of all, the Wife of Bath wishes to get even to men. The main reason for why this goal is unattainable is she demands gender equality in a patriarchal world. In her sense, there are two things making her get even to men in marriage. One is the number of spouse and two is no matter how many spouses she may have, she still has people’s respect. To prove that it is fine to have more than one marriage, the Wife brings up a lot of great Old Testament figures like Abraham, Jacob, and Solomon. She is not aware of the fact that all of her examples are going against her thesis. The core problem here is that they are men, and society permits them to have as many wives or concubines as they desire. The Wife is in a debate that she does not bear a single chance to win. Therefore, the more examples she lists out, the weaker her thesis will be. Besides, the Wife’s choice of competing to men in the number of spouses also reveal some of her real thoughts of marriage. If there is something about her background that she can bring up as a topic, it must be her marriages. On the surface, it seems like the Wife is proud of the number of her marriages; she is boasting about Nguyen 3 it. But is that what she really feels inside since boasting is really a sign of insecurity (Burton 38)? Readers may want to keep in mind a detail appeared in the beginning of her prologue: “Experience, though noon auctoritee / Were in this world, were right ynogh to me / To speke of wo that is in marriage;” (Chaucer 1-3). From this point, is that what she is experiencing so far in marriage is woe? Receiving people’s respect, the second thing believed by the Wife that it would bring her the power to get even with men, is an unattainable goal as well. The Wife seems to know very well how society sets its convention for women. She perceives that at her time, virginity must be the ideal, “Lat hem be breed of pured whete-seed, / And lat us wyves hoten barly-breed;” (149-150). She knows that she is beneath that standard; she is in a society where being wife is already inferior, let alone being a wife of more than one man. The Wife must know well enough where she is with her marital status, a wife of five husbands, in a society idealizing virginity; she is violating the current social standard for women. And as a person obsessing about pursuing unattainable goals, she cannot help going against that. And to go against the ideal, first, she has to confirm again (and again) that she has no hard feelings for chastity and virginity. Second, she is trying to prove but completely fails that how people should not feel guilty for getting married as Nguyen 4 well as she herself will not care if people find marriage subordinate to virginity. But it seems hard to believe every word of the Wife of Bath or take them literally because this woman has a contradictory and paradoxical personality. She is over forty years old, but she still has a youthful energy. She examines the woe of marriage, yet she is willing to embrace the coming of sixth husband (Pratt 45). Besides her paradox, most importantly, the value of marriage is not mentioned at all; what she is declaring all the time is the pleasure of having sex. And by that, her audiences get nothing for why they should marry. How about the reason that one should get married is to have sex? Too ridiculous even for a sex-addicted person like the Wife of Bath. Besides, if she does have no hard feeling for virginity, why does not she talk less about it and focus more on the importance of marriage? In addition, if she does not mind people’s opinions, why would she have so many lines on the topic of virginity? The Wife starts to talk about this topic from line 68 where she asks for the evidence of God’s order toward the virginity of women: “Or where comanded he virginitee?” After that question, this topic keeps lasting for almost a hundred lines. The Wife is turning from one point to another to prove how she herself and maybe others should not feel ashamed of getting married. She is preaching from the point that there is no commandment for virginity to the necessity of marriage toward Nguyen 5 the birth of new virgins (77-78), to St. Paul's virginity which she is going around for twenty lines (83-100), to her general idea of virginity (101-120), to the purpose of the genitals (121-140), to how a husband should pay his wife (141-168). Although she has such a long speech in favor of marriage, it does not help her gain respect from her audience at all because she has already been out of topic all along. Since the Wife cannot alter her marital status, she decides to take it as her tool to achieve people’s respect. She sees herself as a marital expert and also wants others to see her in the same way. She is confident and eager to offer others her marital advice. If being wife is a profession, then the Wife of Bath, who started her career at the age of twelve, must be an expert, and it makes sense to say that going through five marriages are quite impressive. However, experiences can be double-edged in the Wife of Bath case. Not similar to many other life aspects, when it comes to marriage, people tend to appreciate faithfulness and loyalty. And because of that, consequently, people might wonder what kind of woman is she who even cannot keep a single marriage last? They might see her as a failure than an expert and think that listening to failure might not be a good idea. After all, it is very common that when one needs some marital advice, he or she may want to ask some from people whose marriages seem to be happy and healthy, not from Nguyen 6 the one losing five relationships and now looking for number six. Her fourth and fifth husbands are also her unattainable goals because the number four is a “revelour” who has “a paramour” (459-460), and number five is a misogynist. In short, they are unattainable because she cannot control them as the way she does to her first three husbands; however, it needs a little explanation of to what extent she gives up on them. It is nothing wrong to simply state that the Wife of Bath has five husbands; it is just a matter of fact. However, simplifying her marriages into a number will waste a lot of chances to trace the thread of the Wife's philosophy in marriage. Readers can see that her marriages can be divided into two groups: commercial match and non-commercial match or as the Wife says, “goode” and “badde” (202). By saying that three are “goode,” she means that they are old and submissive to her; and by saying that two are “bade,” she means they are beyond her control, or to be more suitable to the thesis of this article, they are unattainable goals. Let’s start with the fourth husband. He is the first husband having some attention from the Wife although she only spends only around fifty lines for him (Burton 35). Despite that Nguyen 7 shortage, this husband is a pivotal character to see through the tendency of the Wife when it comes to choosing intimate partner. As the first one that the Wife of Bath married for a noncommercial reason, the fourth husband must attain some unique personality. It is hard to believe but that his unique personality is that he is a reveler having a paramour. According to the analysis “The Wife of Bath’s Fourth and Fifth Husbands and Her Ideal Sixth: The Growth of a Marital Philosophy” by T. L. Burton, the Wife is deeply attracted to her fourth husband even though she never admits that (36) or even say any kind words about him. However, it is logical to argue that the Wife does has her affection for her fourth husband because readers can see how much she is tortured when she learns that he has someone else:” I seye, I hadde in herte greet despit / That he of any oother had delit” (487-88). The fourth husband is sketched as an unattainable goal when “it seems clear that part of his attractiveness for the Wife lay precisely in his being the sort of man who might have had lovers” (Burton 36). Her relationship with him ends bitterly when she pays back for him what he did to her by making him jealous to die: “That in his owene grece I made hym frye / For angre and for verray jalousie” (403-94). They torture each other until dead in their complex love-hate relationship. The fourth husband is both dead in the Nguyen 8 physical way and in the Wife’s heart. She hates him so much that to her, “It nys but wast to burye hym preciously,” (506). The Wife is supposed to learn a lesson after the catastrophic fourth marriage; paradoxically, she does not learn anything at all and even marries a much worse one. “She marries another man in the virile mold of her fourth husband, confessing that she married him ‘for love’” (Burton 41). Jankyn is also the first husband mentioned by name as “he is the first to elicit direct mention of personal pleasure in lovemaking” (Murphy 216). He is also a walking red flag; Jankyn is narcissistic, misogynistic, manipulative, brutal, and emotional unavailable. However, Jankyn can be seen as a perfect unattainable goal for the Wife of Bath. He fits most of her desire of an ideal husband, and he is the first and only one that the Wife confesses that she married “for love” (532). The Wife of Bath is aware of the real reason why she marries him “for love” as well: “I trowe I loved hym beste, for that he / Was of his love daungerous to me” (519-520). So up to this point, she admits that the reason she is in love with him is because his love “daungerous” to her. The word “daungerous” itself which means “offish, uncooperative sexually, reluctant to make love” and the explanation of “queynte fantasye” of women which is about how women falls in love with things they “lightly Nguyen 9 have” (523) suggest that the Wife favors Jankyn because he is quite unavailable to her (Burton 42). In fact, Jankyn treats her as he is her lord (Burton 42); he is both her unattainable goal and her turning point in marital life. She officially turns from a “wicked” wife to a submissive one showing her softer sides. As a result, not only does she capitulate him emotionally, but alo gives Jankyn the right to govern her property: “And to hym yaf I al the lond and fee / That evere was me yeven therbifoore;” (636-37). She only loses her interest in him when she realizes he is trying to make her get rid of her gossip hobby; she seems to be aware of the reasons why he does so but by forbidding her from gossiping, he violates her sovereignty, and that makes her furious: “I hate hym that my vices telleth me;” (668). The Wife of Bath ends her confession of the fifth husband by saying that they have a big fight, and after that the husband gives up on his authority, allows her to behave in any way she chooses, and gives the Wife her most favorite part: she makes him burn his book (822). By that, she gains back her sovereignty and but at the same time loses her own unattainable goal and her interest in her relationship with Jankyn. Although how much the Wife favors Jankyn, she bitterly goes to a final consent with herself that she is done with this man. In fact, she is so bitter him that she prefers him dying soon, “Whan myn housbonde is fro the world ygon,/ Som Cristen man shal Nguyen 10 wedde me anon” (53-54). Maybe he is the point making her realize that her game of marriage is only entertaining if she is the winner. However, the Wife changes her spouse but not her ideal for a perfect husband. Most importantly and also most perplexingly, she does not learn a single thing from her previous marriages; she is addicted to toxic relationships and sees that involving in one is the only way for her to spice up her life. My point is that there is a firm possibility that the Wife’s sixth husband will share some common points with Jankyn’s trait and since he has not come yet, the Wife set the ideal for her number six through the Knight. Before diving into analyzing the Knight or the Old Hag, it is necessary for readers to note that: “Far from picturing woe in marriage, this tale emphasizes Alice’s desire for a sixth husband” (Pratt 66). This can be said that the tale is “an imaginative wish-fulfillment, for it presented an old woman who gained a young husband and magically changed herself into everything he could desire in a wife” (Owen 303). The tale is also “an expression of Dame Alice’s hopes and dreams, for the Knight ‘is Dame Alice’s vision of masculine perfection’” (Townsend 3). The Knight is the reflection for the Wife of Bath’s ideal husband and through most of details related to this character, Nguyen 11 readers can trace to the Wife’s ideas of an ideal husband. The very first point about the Knight is his moral corruption: on one hand, the Knight is not introduced by his name but his lusty crime. What the Knight commits reveals him as “selfish and lusful, a man easily aroused by surface beauty and determined to satisfy his lusts without consideration of the cost to his victim or to himself” (Roppolo 266). On the other hand, his crime reflects how the Wife sets the ideal for her future husband; she does not care much about her future husband’s real identity such as his origin or his inner soul. All she cares about is sexual ability. Then, there is one minor but very powerful detail showing how the Wife feels about her ideal husband through the Knight, that is, the Knight is the favorite of the Queen and the ladies. This detail raises a question of why those women has to plead for the life of a person committing a such a horrible crime. Is that because they merely wants to save a life or they have “excitement at his sexual “lustiness” and not want to such potential go to waste? ... Thus, the attitude of the court ladies may at least in part represent a projection of her own feelings” (Puhvel 292). If the knight is an unattainable goal, then the Old Hag’s final decision is the effort to reach that goal. On figurative level, this effort reflects Wife of Bath’s proneness for challenge of unattainable goals in marital life. First, the Nguyen 12 moment the Old Hag chooses to help the knight, she may or may not know the reason why he must find the answer for that question. However, the moment in which she decides to become his wife, she must know everything. The moment that the Old Hag has the Knight as her husband, she has already had a long-term nuisance. Ultimately, the Old Hag finds it fine to marry a rapist. Her desire to marry the Knight is the desire of an old woman to marry a young man which reflects very clear the Wife’s marital wish. The Knight's attempt to get the correct answer at first will be very impressive and surprising since there is no way that this “lusty bacheler” (889) can come up with that answer. However, according to Aaron Steinberg, the author of the article “The Wife of Bath’s Tale and Her Fantasy of Fulfillment,” it is not too puzzling to see how the Knight get the right answer. There are only two choices, and obviously, the Knight will absolutely says no to marry an old but faithful wife since “certainly he has not fallen in love with her in her present hideous condition” (191). Therefore, the Knight gives an immediate elimination for this option. The second option seems to be better to him. After all, he is rapist then a chance of being cheated seems nothing to him. “The Knight is only told that he must take his chance that she may be unfaithful. But he is not guaranteed that she will be unfaithful” (Steinberg 191). Nguyen 13 However, he does not pick the second one since he might face the Old Hag’s furious disagreement, and then she will choose the first option by her own. He cannot put himself at risk. Until now, there are only two ways to explain for the Knight’s sudden wit: one, he knew the pattern of the transformed-hag; two, this is the Wife of Bath’s tale, and it is her wish-fulfillment that her young husband will be both virile and absolutely respects sovereignty (Steinberg 191). The second way of explanation seem to make more sense. Besides, the Knight’s decision brings an immediate happy ending which is the Old Hag transforming into a beautiful wife, but there is a question remained: whether the Knight genuinely has his respect for his wife to let her make the decision for herself or whether he has merely learned how to give her the appropriate answer. If readers concur with the former idea, they can perceive the Wife as the one who thinks that evil men are capable of conversion. If the latter case chosen, one might see the Wife distrust all males. The Hag's transformation into a beauty, the material object of wishes, and the Knight's shallow, temporary alteration in his behavior but not in his ideology can be both seen as superficial changes. Both changes are just skin-deep; the body or temporary behavior are changed, but deep down the way in which they think about love or philosophy of marriage remains the same. However, in a way, these half-hearted changes are fair enough; none of these Nguyen 14 two are really into other's inner value at all. Not only does this happy ending reflect how Wife of Bath ends her fifth marriage, but also suggests how she set her new unattainable goal. Getting married at the age of twelve and being through five marriages give the Wife a ton of experience to “speke of wo that is in marriage” (3), to feel like on top of the world, and even to have sovereignty over someone else, but they never give her a sense of fulfillment. Her whole marital life is an endless, painful journey of chasing unattainable goals. Sometimes, she only finds the goals desirous if they are like the moon which is beautiful, unachievable, and faraway. That sounds so hopeless but that is how unattainable goals spice up her life. She does not perceive that she is not really “welcome the sixte, whan that evere he shal”(51), she is only welcome a new unattainable goal. Nguyen 15 Works Cited Benson, Larry D., et al. The Riverside Chaucer. Houghton Mifflin Company, 1987. Burton, T.L. “The Wife of Bath's Fourth and Fifth Husbands and Her Ideal Sixth: The Growth of a Marital Philosophy.” The Chaucer Review, Vol. 13, No. 1, Penn State UP, Summer, 1978, pp. 34-50. JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/2509344. Accessed 2 November 2022. Murphy, Ann B. “The Process of Personality in Chaucer’s Wife of Bath’s Tale.” The Centennial Review, vol. 28, no. 3, 1984, pp. 204–22. JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/23739468. Accessed 21 Nov. 2022. 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