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The interaction between the wife of bath and the friar in the wife of bath's prologue is : part of Chaucer's frame story.
Because Chaucer's frame story includes the exchange between the Wife of Bath and the Friar in "The Wife of Bath's Prologue." What links exist between this passage in the prologue and the story itself? It has to do with how women were treated in the middle ages. It has to do with how women were viewed during the middle ages.
The Wife of Bath uses the prologue to present her main idea—that women most want total control ("sovereignty") over their husbands—as well as the foundations of her views about experience against authority. The Wife of Bath just accidentally reaches this conclusion. Her message is that, regardless of how attractive a woman is, her husband should always obey her.
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A. Wiley gets out of the tree without being hurt by the Hairy Man.
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The British people should support the British
Empire to maintain political influence and a strong
economy
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Orsino, the lovesick duke of Illyria, speaks these lines. He introduces the audience to the theme of love as overpowering and fickle. He calls sweet music the "food of love" and wants "an excess of it" so that he can satisfy his appetite for it. However, when the music is no longer sweet, Orsino compares it to the sea. Like the sea, it engulfs everything and debases its value to a "low price." He concludes that love can change from sweet music to an engulfing sea in a matter of one minute. He also suggests that it shifts shape at whim. The fickleness of love reflects Orsino's own inconstant nature, casting him as self-indulgent and melodramatic. Finally, because Orsino never names the object of his love in these opening lines, the emotional outpouring indicates that Orsino is consumed more by the idea of love than by love for Olivia.
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