She refutes his objections to her lack of gentility, her poverty, her age and ugliness. She reminds him that she saved his life.
At about 7 years old a noble boy went to train with a knight and spent his life in training until at 21 years old he became a knight.
This is not a question and it needs to be rewritten.
a place to stay:]
No, Thirty-six is not old for a women.
In "The Wife of Bath's Tale," the knight is spared from death by agreeing to marry an older, unattractive woman. As part of the bargain, the old woman asks the knight to promise to treat her as he would a wife, regardless of her appearance. This agreement leads to the ultimate lesson of the story about what women truly desire: sovereignty over their husbands.
The knight promises to marry the old woman if she saves his life.
After thinking long and hard, the knight told his wife to make the decision and he will be happy with it. (He came to his senses.)
The irony in the Knight's quest to find out what women want in "The Wife of Bath's Tale" is that he ultimately discovers that what women desire most is sovereignty in marriage, while the old hag teaches him that true gentility is being kind and respectful to women. This contrasts with the Knight's initial belief that women desire dominance and control.
The knight keeps his promise to the woman who saved his life.The knight is not happy about being married to an ugly old woman.The knight lets the woman make an important choice.The old woman transforms into a beautiful maiden.
he wants that tight young pussycat
In the tale of Wife of Bath's the knight is sentenced to find what women want and all women agree they want control over their husbands. So when the knight gave the old women sovereignty, she was very pleased and turned into a young women and the knight was very happy as well.
She can become young and lovely but possibly unfaithful, or remain old and ugly but obedient. She can remain an old, ugly woman who is faithful and obedient, or become a young, pretty woman who might not be faithful.
In the tale of Wife of Bath's the knight is sentenced to find what women want and all women agree they want control over their husbands. So when the knight gave the old women sovereignty, she was very pleased and turned into a young women and the knight was very happy as well.
The old woman tells the knight that it is not shameful to be poor and relates this to Jesus being poor and not wishing for material objects. She also tells him that her age directly correlates with her level of faithfulness.
In "The Wife of Bath's Tale," the knight's second punishment was to find out what women desire most. He found the answer by asking an old woman for help, who revealed that women desire sovereignty over their husbands and lovers. This answer ultimately led to the knight's redemption.
In "The Wife of Bath's Tale," the knight learns the answer to the question posed by the queen: "What do women most desire?" He reveals the answer - that women desire sovereignty over their husbands. As a result, the knight is spared from his death sentence and must marry an old woman, who later transforms into a young and beautiful woman. They live happily ever after.