A noble lady named Bath told a story on her way to pilgrimage. The story is roughly as follows: a knight did a bad thing, King Arthur wanted to execute him, the queen and the women interceded for him, and the queen gave him one year and one day to find the answer to "What is a woman's greatest desire?" He traveled across mountains and rivers, met many people, and asked many people. Every answer was good, but none of them seemed to be the answer the queen wanted. On the way back, he met an old woman who was very ugly, but told him that she knew the answer, but asked him to agree to the first thing she asked him to do, and the knight agreed. He met the queen and said the answer was "to control her husband and be the head of the family." The queen pardoned him. At this time, the old woman stood up and asked the knight to marry her. The knight was forced to agree, but it was a wedding without flowers and ceremony. In the evening, the old woman asked the knight what he had done wrong to treat her so badly. The knight said that she had no money, was old, and was ugly. Then there is a long paragraph about the old woman's interpretation of these shortcomings, and finally the knight is convinced that his wife is a good wife and kisses her. She turned into a beautiful young girl. Well, this ugly old woman is the legendary fairy. I think the passage about the little fairy in the English version of this story is quite classic. This is the story, uh, don’t be too shocking