A wife is obedient
and the man is in
control of organising
the marriage, shows
this is an important
feature of a wife
Rhetorical
Question
Link to Prologue:
'Between
Griseldas great
patience and the
cruelty of my wife'
The clerk before tells of the
prefect example of a patient wife
'that wife is mans help and his comfort'
'His earthly paradise, and his source of consolation'
Woman is Gods gift
(Adam and Eve)
Helps him to fulfill his religious obligations,
show a woman is only there for a man
Metaphor
give him sexual pleasure
and fulfill his sexual needs
Marriage= earthly paradise
OR Marriage= purgatory
'She may be your purgatory'
'O flessh they bbeen, and o fleesh,
as I gesse,/ Hath but oon herte'
'"Do this," says he; "Al redy, sire," seith she'
Husbands are in controls and women
are obedient and do as they are told
Link to Griselda
the patient wife
'the bride was brought to bed as still as stone'
Sibilance
Against her will, drunk, unconscious, scared,
unwilling, not in control, is she reluctant or passive?
'As blind as is a stone'
'A man can do no sin
with his wife,/ Nor hurt
himself with his own
knife'
'That from her heart she can not drive'
MARRIAGE
'And followed always his bodily desire/ On
women, where was his appetite,/ As do
these fools that are secular'
'God man and womman bond' 'housbond'
The Creation Story,
Adam and Eve, woman
was made for man.
Bound to
someone
else, trap of
marriage
'Were I released, so I may prosper,/ I
would never again come in the snare'
Metaphor
Sees himself as more powerful and thinks he is
more prestige than his wife. Implies she constrains
him and marriage is something against his will.
'As sooth as God is kyng, to
take a wyf is a glorious thyng'
Encomium (praise someone of
something highly) OR Eulogy
Using Authorities of God
People though
marriage would help
fulfill Gods plans
Uses this authority to justify his desire for
marriage and to hide his true intentions
'A wyf is Gods gift truly'
Would have appealed to those
travelling with him (pilgrims)
Metaphor
This highlights the importance
of religion and tests the
Patriachal society as it asserts
the wife is not a gift from the
Father or Family
Marriage is a full great sacrament'
Homily: full of platitudes (a remark or
statement, especially one with a moral
content, that has been used too often
to be interesting or thoughtful)
Marriage is
solely religious,
says this to hide
his true motives
'As Christ loved his church'
'A man can do no sin with his wife,/
Nor hurt himself with his own knife'
Sounds as though he is trying to convince himself, if your careless with
your own knife (relationship) you will hurt yourself, talks as though she
is his possession or belonging. Implies a man can do whatever he wants
with his wife and she will not betray him (too scared to hurt him)
'I had rather die on a knyf than
thee offend true dear wyf!'
DECEPTION/SECRETS
Jacob and Rebekke
Judith
Abigayle
Ester
'O brittle joy! O sweete venom deceitful!/ O monster, that
so subtly can disguise/ Thy gifts under appearance of
steadfastness,/ That thou deceivest both high and low'
'His own man shall make him cuckold'
SEXUALITY
'And followed always his bodily desire/
On women, where was his appetite,/
As do these fools that are secular'
'Thanne is a wyf the fruyt of his tresor'
Garden of Eden and the
Pear tree story: Forbidden
fruit, knowledge of the
world is a sin
'Fruit' links to the idea of fertility,
shows the wife is a product of the man,
'Treasure' suggests he uses money to
buy a wife (maybe uses dowries to pay
the Father), shows he is self deceptive
as he is confusing his motives and
manipulating them so they seem inter
changeable with the creation story
Metaphor
'I have my body foolishly wasted,/
Blessed be God that it shall be
amended!'
'I fair as does a tree,/ That blossoms before the fruit is grown;/
And a blossom-filled tree is neither dry nore dead./ I feel me
nowhere white haird but on my head;/ My heart and all my
limbs are as green/ As laurel through the yea is to be seen'
'Your heart hangs on a jolly pin'
'Many a fair shape and many a fair visage'
'In his heart he began to menace her'
'He lulleth hire; he kisseth hire full ofte' 'He rubbeth hire'
'He taketh and kisseth her full ofte'
Use of more violent and possessive language
Verbs
Tender and soft words, she is passive as
everything is being done to her
'I must do trespace'
Not wanted,
an invasion,
destruction of
innocence
Contrasts between the
courtly love he thinks
hes in and the reality
Fabliaux: Coarsely
humorous short
story based on
sexual intercourse
Bathos: Over in a second
'She rates his playing not worth a bean'
Shes more mature than him even though
she is younger and less experienced, putting
up with him, in control of her emotions
His is not good in bed and is selfish as he does not
care about her pleasure: Is she more interested in
sexual gratification? Mean? Looking down on him?
'playing' suggests she is still childish and superficial
''And' during sex description
Gives the sense it is fast, the quick rhythm shows
sudden action, passivity and submissiveness
Repetition
'that stood under a laurer alwey grene'
'That he will no one allow to bear the key/ Save he himself; for of the small gate/ He bore always of silver a latchkey,/ With which when he desired, he unlocked it'
WEALTH
'A worthy knyght, that was born of Pavye'
A city in Lombardy that was famous
for usury, wealth and sexuality
'worthy' suggests nobility, repetitive
use of worthy but what really makes
him so worthy? Foreshadows what
Januarie will be like and justifies his
viciously sexual nature
'Thanne is a wyf the fruyt of his tresor'
'they worked so, by sly and wise negotiation'
Emphasis on Januaries class and culture of being a knight
The wife is the fruit of his treasure, as
if she was bought in a market place
and he is boasting about his wealth
'this noble January with all his myght,/ In a
respectable manner as is suitable to a knight,/
Arranged himself to live full voluptuously'