The Wife has an idea based on experience about what married life should be. I suspect since women were considered property, they yearned for freedom often. The Wife begins her tale, stating hundreds of years ago, when fairies walked the earth and when King Author and his Queen reigned, there was a young knight in his court who violently raped a young girl and stole her maidenhead. This was a crime punishable by death but the King let his Queen decide the knight's fate. They obviously had a very unconventional marriage for back then but the queen deliberates and tells the guilty knight these words (The Wife of Bath's Tale verses 48-54):
48 I'll grant you life if you can tell to me
49 What thing it is that women most desire.
50 Be wise, and keep your neck from iron dire!
51 And if you cannot tell it me anon,
52 Then will I give you license to be gone
53 A twelvemonth and a day, to search and learn
54 Sufficient answer in this grave concern.
In short, she asks him : What do women most desire? He has precisely one year to seek his answer. If he is right, it'll save his neck. If not, then...slice! Of course the knight travels far and wide talking to all types of women which confuses him more. As the year came to a close, he saw some fairies dancing in the forest. When they disappear, an old hag emerges who told him if he agrees to offer her one future favor --whatever she asks--she will tell him the answer he seeks.
He agrees and heads back to court with his answer (The Wife of Bath Tale verses 182-184):
182 Women desire to have the sovereignty
183 As well upon their husband as their love,
184 And to have mastery their man above;

What do you make of this tale? Its quite the fairly tale I think. I think Chaucer's notion of what women wanted which back then was probably true. Do you? What do you think he would say about today's modern woman? I think he'd have to write a thousand tales to figure that one out. HeHe.
Mina B.