In The Prologue: The Wife of Bath, Chaucer explains where the Wife of Bath travels, “And she [travels] trice to Jerusalem. [Witnesses] many strange rivers and [passes] them. [She goes] to Rome and also to Boulogne, St. James of compostilla and Cologne. She [is] skilled in wandering by the way (473-476). Unlike the misogynist ideas, the Wife of Bath is a woman that doesn’t stay home all day. She is out traveling the world and visiting places most men couldn’t travel to. Woman during this time period were expected to stay home and keep the house in order, she contradicts this belief by being well
In The Prologue: The Wife of Bath, Chaucer explains where the Wife of Bath travels, “And she [travels] trice to Jerusalem. [Witnesses] many strange rivers and [passes] them. [She goes] to Rome and also to Boulogne, St. James of compostilla and Cologne. She [is] skilled in wandering by the way (473-476). Unlike the misogynist ideas, the Wife of Bath is a woman that doesn’t stay home all day. She is out traveling the world and visiting places most men couldn’t travel to. Woman during this time period were expected to stay home and keep the house in order, she contradicts this belief by being well