I recall responding to this question earlier:
He is guilty of rape:
In the days of King Arthur, the Wife of Bath begins, the isle of Britain was full of fairies and elves. Now, those creatures are gone because their spots have been taken by the friars and other mendicants that seem to fill every nook and cranny of the isle. And though the friars rape women, just as the incubi did in the days of the fairies, the friars only cause women dishonor—the incubi always got them pregnant.
In Arthur’s court, however, a young, lusty knight comes across a beautiful young maiden one day. Overcome by lust and his sense of his own power, he rapes her. The court is scandalized by the crime and decrees that the knight should be put to death by decapitation. However, Arthur’s queen and other ladies of the court intercede on his behalf and ask the king to give him one chance to save his own life. Arthur, wisely obedient to wifely counsel, grants their request. The queen presents the knight with the following challenge: if, within one year, he can discover what women want most in the world and report his findings back to the court, he will keep his life. If he cannot find the answer to the queen’s question, or if his answer is wrong, he will lose his head.
The contexy above should zero you in to the specific line.
good luck to you
2007-10-12 00:55:59
·
answer #1
·
answered by ari-pup 7
·
0⤊
0⤋
He took the chick's maidenhead(raped her). I don't remember the line since I read it back in HS, but it's at the beginning of the tale.
2007-10-12 03:03:15
·
answer #2
·
answered by Ja 3
·
0⤊
0⤋