Monday, March 18, 2019
Analysis of The Story of an Hour by Kate Chopin :: The Story of an Hour Kate Chopin
In The Story of an Hour Kate Chopin tells the myth of a woman, Mrs. mallard whose husband is thought to be dead. Throughout the story Chopin describes the emotions Mrs. Mallard felt about the news of her husbands death. However, the strong emotions she felt were not despair or sadness, they were something else. In a way she was relieved more than she was upset, and most rejoiced in the thought of her husband no longer living. In develop ment different literary elements throughout the story, Chopin conveys this to us on more than nonpareil occasion. In the third paragraph of the story, Chopin describes Mrs. Mallard as she goes into her room and sits on an armchair. Chopin describes how Mallard ?sank pressed eat up by a physical debilitation that haunted the body and pay heedmed to reach into her soul?. In this point of the story Chopin uses symbolism connecting Mrs. Mallard and the chair, the chair representing the death of her husband and her feelings about it. How it was ?a booming roomy chair?, she is showing us how Mrs. Mallard was ?comfortable? with her husband?s death and now felt she had room to pull through freely. This is supported by the lines ?she would live for herself now. There would be no healthy will bending her in the blind?? This demonstrating to the reader that she felt controlled by her husband, and that she would no longer bet tied down to the ways of the time, which were men control women. This also supported by Jennifer Hicks in her overview of the story which states Later, when we see Mrs. Mallard warm and relaxed, we realize that problem with her heart is that her marriage has not allowed her to live for herself. Another example of how Mrs. Mallard was more uplifted than brought down by the news of her husband?s death is the description of the window. As Mrs. Mallard looks out Chopin explains ?she could see in the open square earlier her house the tops of trees that were all a quiver with new action?. This is telling the re ader about the new life that Mrs. Mallard undersurface see in the distance that symbolizes the new life she saw that flummox ahead of her now that she was free of her husband. This thought being supported by Hicks in saying The revalation of freedom occurs in the bedroom
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