Friday, July 19, 2019
Attitudes Towards Women in Fragment VII of Canterbury Tales :: Canterbury Tales Essays
      Attitudes Towards Women in Fragment VII of Canterbury  Tales     Ã       One of the most prominent themes in Fragment VII of the  Canterbury Tales is the attitudes of the pilgrims towards women. There are two  distinct sides in the dispute: that women are simply objects of lust that must  never be trusted, and that women are highly respectable and loving.     Ã       The Shipman's Tale starts off this debate with his  depiction of women, which was less than favorable. The woman who is depicted in  this tale is the wife of a merchant. She is not treated well by her husband, but  certainly is not trustworthy or honorable herself. She sells her body to the  best friend of her husband for a measly 100 francs. Her faithfulness to her  husband was worth only a few extravagant garments for her to wear. It is her  greed for these material goods that drives her into cuckolding her unsuspecting  husband. Her worldly desires are more important than her marriage, and in the  end she is hardly punished at all. She does manage to keep her husband from  finding out, by saying that the Monk was simply repaying his debt and she used  the money to buy some clothes. So, she gets away with a crime that would have  dealt her a far greater punishment. This outcome, while it certainly wasn't  perfect for the wife, was much less than she deserved.     Ã       The Prioress steps in with the next tale, and takes a much  different view. The Prioress herself is a very humble and well-mannered woman,  as she is described in the General Prologue. She is also extremely compassionate  towards all of God's creatures. Her tale is a tribute to the greatest woman of  all, the Virgin Mary. While it is a tribute to the Virgin, the focus of the  story is more on the little boy and his widowed mother. The mother is greatly  distressed at her son's disappearance, and is eventually led by Jesus himself to  the place where her son has been tossed. The idea that Jesus himself was  consorting with this woman and answering her prayers makes a strong statement.  Jesus certainly would not aid an evil person, so this widow must have been  virtuous and humble.  					    
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