The Lay of the Were Wolf is a French-language medieval poem that tells the story of a werewolf and its life and struggles. The poem details how this creature must live in two worlds: one as human, living in town with other villagers; and one as wolf, alone on the hillsides at night. At first glance it could appear to be simply an entertaining narrative about humans transformed into wolves – however there are moral lessons within this tale worth exploring. When you first read the lay of the werewolf the turning point of the story occurs when the wife betrays him by not only cheating on him with another knight but also telling the night where her husband's clothes were to turn him into a werewolf forever, The text clearly states (De France …show more content…
The major event at play is the way the wife treats the baron amazingly and graciously when she is with him showing a notable example of courtly love being Curties at time but like all medieval dramas, she talks bad about him behind his back and has an affair with another. When his wife thinks about her husband, she thinks about a beast not a man showing her beaten and bruised moral code obviously showing us the true colors of what she decides right or wrong. In the text (De France pg. 4 “when BIsclavaret looked upon his master, he ran to him for pity and for grace. He took the stirrup within his paws, and fawned upon the prince's foot) this proves that he is in need left stranded in the forest when he sees the king, he recognizes that he can receive help and the king calls off his men showing that the king is a morally honest and respectable man not judging a book by its cover trusting bisclavaret and taking him in unlike his backstabbing wife that is now married to another man. When it comes down to the end of the story, she and her new husband are banished from the land to go live elsewhere after what they did was brought to