Preview

Who Peynted The Lion

Satisfactory Essays
Open Document
Open Document
278 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Who Peynted The Lion
“Who peynted the leon, tel me who?” (The Wife of Bath Prologue line 857).This quote is describing how the lion is metaphorically representing a person in this case women and the who men. Men are the individuals who painted women into their image of how they want them to be. This is what exactly The Wife of Bath is trying to do. According to Mary Carruthers' article
The Wife of Bath and the Painting of Lions she states how Alisoun has often been characterize as attempting to do away with authority altogether, as setting up a heterodox doctrine of marriage based on female supremacy. This is what I best feel describes The Wife of Bath clearly. She is someone who wants to change how her gender is being treated through the eyes of the superior

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    One main thing people in this world strive and desire for is power. It’s what strongly drives humans to make themselves feel privileged. In the play, Julius Caesar, by William Shakespeare, Portia is a character that seems to struggle to free herself from the power of her husband, Brutus. In addition, to being a woman, she is viewed at differently and treated differently than men. Women are the weak figures of the world and hold different responsibilities than of men.…

    • 687 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The text shows that she is a leader, and also that she is even more evil than her husband. Being the leader of something means you have the most passion for it, and in this case it’s evil.…

    • 598 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Primarily, the “Wife of Bath’s Tale” reveals that one should have sovereignty over her significant other. The Wife of Bath conspicuously states her…

    • 1296 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    She has had five husbands, which is very looked down upon in her culture. She believes that this should be acceptable in her culture. She explains this in the Prologue by saying “Should father leave, and mother, and cleave to me; but no specific number mentioned he, whether bigamy or octogamy; why should men speak of it reproachfully?” (Lines 31-34). After this section of lines, she begins to bring up tales from the bible and stories of men that have more than two or three wives, her point being that if men can have more than one wife at one time, why is it so bad that some women, like herself, have been married more than two or three times? This section of the Wife of Bath’s Prologue indicates that Alisoun believes that women should be able to marry whomever, whenever they please. She doesn’t believe that men should look at it shamefully. Throughout the prologue you also get a good sense of her feminist beliefs, common to the beliefs today. She doesn’t think that living a lustful lifestyle should matter and she believes that men and women should be equal in power within the…

    • 802 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    After reading this line, readers are able to conclude that the Wife of Bath believes that women are superior to men—they are neither bold nor wise. The Wife of Bath wants to spread her cult—she wants the other women to become powerful and superior to their husbands—just like she is. For instance, line 234 translates to the following: a woman should swear and lie to their husband—they have the power to do it (Benson). In line 235, the Wife of Bath makes it clear that her advice is not meant for the wise wives (Benson). Therefore, the readers are able to argue that the wise wives that listen to her advice—take a moment to reflect on their wise manipulation skills. In line 236, the readers learn that the Wife of Bath’s advice is also intended to seek the attention of the wise wives that have been improperly advised on how to make their husbands feel guilty—by using their effective manipulation skills…

    • 539 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    The Cowardly Lion, in The Wizard of Oz written by L. Frank Baym, had already had courage, even though he had thought that was what he’d been lacking. To begin, the Cowardly Lion first had courage once he had came out from hiding to threaten Dorothy and her friends, which takes courage to do in the first place, even though he had scared himself while doing it. After he had scared them, the lion decided to follow the trail with Dorothy, even though he had not known what was going to happen. This part of the movie shows that the lion has courage, even though he doesn’t know it yet, because of the fact he had scared Dorothy and her friends and put his trust into them, even though he had just met them. Secondly, The Cowardly Lion sings the song…

    • 291 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    The wife of bath is a very confident woman who, in the prologue of her tale, talks about her five husbands. She seems very satisfied with her life and her choices; she is fulfilled regardless of the men she was married to. Even with all their deaths, she remains happy and independent. “But even now I will strive to be merry.” (Lines 478-479) The story she tells is about a knight who, after he rapes a young girl, is forced by the queen to find out what women desire the most. He finally discovers that what women want the most is to have sovereignty over their husbands. This goes directly along with the character of the wife of bath, who loved the control she had over her husbands more than anything else. The story proves that the answer to what women want the most is not just one static statement. What a person desires most in life depends on their own character and their own…

    • 830 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    “..She will never attempt to rule, or appear to rule her husband. Such conduct degrades husbands—and…

    • 1262 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Better Essays

    Book Review

    • 1046 Words
    • 5 Pages

    The novel Good Wives is a study of the many roles women play in Northern New England from 1650-1750. The book is split into three sections; all named after biblical females who portrayed idealized feminine traits within New England society. The first part is named Bathsheba, which shows and explains the responsibilities and possibilities women had as a housewife focusing on economic life. The second part is dedicated to Eve. It includes not only the role of being a mother, but also the complexities of sexual life and childbirth in New England. In the third section, Jael, Ulrich explains the connection between female aggression and religion through many stories of violence. The novel shows in great detail the church requirements of what it means to be a “good wife” for a women living Colonial New England throughout their daily lives. In doing so, and then contrasting it to what actually happened in their lives, it shows that these women were far from just submissive beings to their husbands; but rather very important to colonial society, unlike how they may have been thought of in the past.…

    • 1046 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    My personal favorite constellation is Leo Minor, or "The Lesser Lion". It's genitive name is "Leonis Minoris", and it's short form is "LMi". I have chosen this constellation because it embodies my favorite animal; the lion. There are six stars in this constellation, with four of them being unnamed. This spring constellation's coordinates are Right Ascension 10h, Declination +35°, and has an area of 232 sq degrees.…

    • 210 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Better Essays

    Canterbury Tales Response

    • 1012 Words
    • 5 Pages

    The novel contains many stories on how females were portrayed during medieval times. A tale in the novel called The Wife Of Bath's Tale, gives a common situation in which a man must pursue a women, but not for marriage. The Knight must find what women desire most in order to not be executed for rape. He finally finds the answer from an old woman, who tells him that all women desire to be in charge of their husbands/lovers. For example, Chaucer writes, “A women wants the self-same sovereignty, over her husband as over her lover, and master him he mustn't be above her (p. 282). “ This statement is more or less true, and is showing how women want to be their own person, but at the same time be viewed as equally powerful to their male counterparts. Women aren't the problem, the problem is what society expects them to be. Although the conflict concerns a man trying to get out of being killed for a crime, the women in this story serve a greater, and thoughtful purpose. Ultimately, the knight marries the old woman, but isn't satisfied because of her appearance. In contrast, the woman doesn't take offense to his behavior, instead…

    • 1012 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    The Elizabethan View of Women Women in Elizabethan times had few rights or luxuries. Their entire lifestyles depended upon that of their husbands, picked out for them by their fathers. They had almost no say in their lives, and they were expected to be thankful for having someone to rule over them. This is made abundantly clear by Katherina 's famous speech in 5.2.137-180 of The Taming of the Shrew. She compares a woman 's proper devotion to her husband to that a subject owes a prince, saying that the man provides everything for the woman, and the least she owes him is her complete obedience. While the play is sometimes seen as man 's tyranny over woman, it is in fact representing the conventional role women played. In Elizabethan England it was almost…

    • 1687 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    The roles of women in the Elizabethan time were very confined. Women could be tutored, but they were not allowed to attend universities. Women could not vote, they could not be heirs to their fathers title, and a man had the legal right to chastise his wife as he was seen as the head of the marriage. Gender roles are standards in which men and women are expected to play according to their sex. Women in many of Shakespeare's plays established their own identity in the story through a sequence of interactions with various characters in the play. The female characters in Shakespeare plays can be seen as two-dimensional and unrealistic portrayals of subservient women, or prominent for the time and culture that they lived in. In Shakespeare's The Taming Of the Shrew and Much Ado About Nothing both of these female characteristics are displayed. The protagonist of The Taming of The Shrew Katherine represents the women who did not give into gender roles by being rude, critical, scornful, and insulting. Katherine is an intelligent woman who is not afraid to assert her views on any given situation. The character Hero Of Much Ado About Nothing sweet and graceful characteristics gives right into the female gender roles.…

    • 1713 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Bereavement of the Lion-keeper is a poem about a relationship between an old Lion-keeper with his Lion who eventually died at the end of the poem. In my opinion, the relationship between the two of them is actually a metaphor of a relationship between two individuals where each of them loves each other equally. However, when the lion died, the Lion-keeper does not know how “to let go of love”. It depicts a situation where one of the two individuals die and the other one unable to let go, to move on with life.…

    • 511 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    John Dryden’s Absalom and Achitophel has long been established as a manifestation of the intricate fabric of patriarchal scheme of the Restoration monarchy. Generations of critics have found it as an extremely intriguing territory, swiftly trafficking with the contemporary socio-political notion of the king as the father of the nation and his celestial alignment with the God himself. This perspective locks Dryden’s text within the obvious interpretation of it as a literary tool to manifest the structures of the father-oriented monarchy. The woman-question, in this kind of critical thinking, becomes a vivid attempt on the poet’s part to wipe out the female voices and thereby underplaying female authority in a patriarchal society. This, indeed, becomes apparent when we focus upon the fact that in the text we hear no word uttered by any female subject; in fact, there are only three names of female characters mentioned in the text- Michal, Annabel, and Bathsheba and of course they are hardly the references to be proud of, for Michal’s soil is “ungrateful to the tillers care”, Annabel is almost a gift to Absalom from his father David and the king “Is grown in Bathsheba’s embraces old”. Apart from these three somewhat humiliating references there is no other mention of the women in Absalom and Achitophel. The poem surely aims at fashioning a binary opposition between the feminine qualities and the masculine faculties that David/Charles II represents. The perfidious nature of the group that goes against the divinely justified Monarchy is heightened by the feminization of the rebelling factions. As the kingship is settled by God, to stand against monarchy is logically to stand against God’s will. Achitophel’s luring of Absalom into the rebelling faction is therefore drawn as a reworking of the scene of Milton’s Paradise lost where Satan lures Eve into disobeying God’s words. Like Eve in the Garden, Absalom is cajoled to believe it…

    • 1156 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays

Related Topics