The Wife of Bath in Chaucer's Canterbury Tales says she has traveled to Jerusalem, Rome, Cologne, Boulogne, and Santiago de Compostela.
They traveled to 42 places. The list is in Numbers ch.33.
he traveled some places but not all. he traveled lots of places
The wife was a cloth maker.
Orpheus
exemplum
exemplum
Hadrian
red
Of Course husband and wife can bathe together.
he traveled to three places
The objective that does not describe the Wife of Bath's narrative voice is detached or emotionless. The wife's narrative voice is known for being lively, passionate, and opinionated.
The Wife of Bath's Tale is not an epic. It is a tale from Geoffrey Chaucer's "The Canterbury Tales," a collection of stories written in the Middle Ages. The Wife of Bath's Tale is a narrative poem that explores themes of marriage, gender roles, and power dynamics.