Saturday, April 28, 2012

The Prioress by Chaucer

The image of a nun should be represented by love, humility and peace because they are the face of the church and they represent God’s love on the earth. Chaucer describes the Prioress as “Who was very simple and modest in her smiling;”(The General Prologue, 119).However he also talks how this Prioress was not the perfect nun in a convent, one example of this is in the Mini-lecture on The Prioress, it states “She is elegant and wears jewelry. Her rosary has a brooch on it made of gold with the worded motto in Latin that reads: Amor Vincit Omnia, love conquers all, which can be understood as the love of God” (lines 8-10). The way this Prioress behaved, was different from the other nuns, she was a person who liked to have a sophisticated life; she was so elegant specially the way she used to eat. She had some small hounds and her behavior was not the most appropriate for a nun. In my previous post Wife of Bath I talked about Allison who as the Prioress was a sophisticated woman, she liked to have elegant dresses and she also was a woman with good manners.

Saturday, April 21, 2012

The Nun's Priest's Tale by Chauser

The Nun’s Priest’s is a tale about a widow who had a life full of difficulties and misfortunes. She was a poor peasant woman, advanced in age who was living in a small cottage. Her life was very difficult she had to provide for herself and her two daughters. She didn’t have enough food to eat only what was produced on her land the story state “Milk and dark bread, in which she found no lack, Broiled bacon, and sometimes an egg or two, For she was, as it were, a sort of dairywoman”(lines 2844-2846). She had 3 cows, 3 large sows1 sheep that she called Malle, 7 hens and one cock called Chauntecleer who was the king of the henhouse. In one of my previous post The Clerk’s Tale, I talked about Griselda who before to get married with a rich man face a lot of difficulties and misfortune. I believe Griselda and this widow represent the image of the poor women during the Middle Age, however their lives were different because Griselda had her father and they worked together to feed themselves with what they harvested, but this poor widow did not have anybody to help her. The Nun’s Priest’s widow face a lot of difficulties in her life, however to be poor did not stop her to dance and be a happy woman.   

Women and Wills During the Middle Age

The wills during the Middle Age were used as an important document where the husbands left written records specifying what was going to happen with their money after their death. Thanks to the wills a lot of widows during the medieval times were protected.  “A husband who made his wife an executor, as many wives were, indicates that he not only trusted but that he trusted her capacity to understand the intricacies of his business dealing, debts owed to him and those he owed to others”(Women and Wills, p1). One example of wills in one of my previous post “Wife of Bath” where I talked about Allison a woman who got marriage five times which gave her the opportunity to inherit money from all of her husbands. However not all of the widows inherited money from their husbands, because there were some husbands that did not have money and for that reason they couldn’t leave anything to their wives.

Monday, April 9, 2012

The Femme Sole

Thanks to the Femme Sole the women during the Middle Age had the opportunity to work; it gave the women the legal right to work. “The term femme sole, simply put, referred to women who conducted business on their own. The term's application extended far beyond its literal translation of "woman alone" or "single woman" to encompass married women who conducted their own businesses apart from their husbands” (Western Carolina University, p1). One example of this is in one of my previous post about “Wife of Bath”, I talk about Alison a woman who got marry five times and thanks to her Femme Sole status she could have her own business after her husbands died.

Wife of Bath by Chauser

The Wife of Bath by Chaucer is a story where the author describes the life of a woman during the Middle Age who was a wife and widow at the same time. Allison was a woman who used her intelligence to get everything she wanted. She got married five times which gave her the opportunity to inherit money from all of her husbands. Her personality, the money she inherited, and the way she used to talk and dress up helped her to get the power she wanted. She only used her husbands to get everything she wanted, the story states “Uses sexual politics to get what she wants in the relationship. What Alison wants most from her marriages is power and by bargaining sexual favors with her husband she appropriates a certain amount of power” (Mini-Lecture: Wife of Bath, lines10-13). In one of my previous post about “The Shipman’s Tale” I talk about a woman that was very similar to Alison because they both used sexual politics and intelligence to get money from men.