Frigid cold steel encloses around the wrist as the clasps tight from the handcuffs, the walk to the car plays in slow motion, and the car door slams shut echoing a jail cell locking--but if they only knew the truth behind what really happened. In A Jury of Her Peers, written by Susan Glaspell, recites the story behind wives of men within the town seek out clues to decide the verdict of guilty or not guilty in the court case of Minnie Wright’s involvement of Mr. Wright’s death. Each clue found links with personal connections with the wives, but contains hidden from the men who believe in superiority. Susan Glaspell displays symbolism through half done work, the bird cage, and the dead canary which can only have the same effect if one walks in …show more content…
Wright when discussing Mr. Wright. “‘...Look at it! Its neck-look at its neck! It’s all-other side to.’... ‘Somebody wrung its neck,’” (10) Unwrapping the bird from the small silt fabric like a Christmas present, the wives connected the bird and Mr. Wright’s death together. The canary’s neck snapped in half which killed from liveliness and singing. Mr. Wright died from a rope tied around his neck that would snap the cervical vertebrae and damage the spinal cord. Just like Mr. Wright wanted the singing to come to a dead halt, Mrs. Wright wanted the torture to end not caring about the repercussion that followed behind her actions. No one understood the loneliness and abuse granted each day to Minnie Wright until after the fact of killing Mr. Wright. If Mrs. Hale, Mrs. Peters, or Mrs. Gorman got set in the exact situation as Minnie, drastic measures would get taken to enable oneself the freedom to survive in a dark lifestyle lined with heartbreak and pain. To truly make sense of a particular situation, one must undergo it themself, which the women in A Jury of Her Peers get due to Mrs. Wright happens to reflect identical characteristics in each
Hale and Mrs. Peters find a dead canary and a broken bird cage, it becomes obvious that Mr. Wright was an aggressive and controlling husband. Mrs. Hale states, “No, Wright wouldn’t like the bird- a thing that sang. She used to sing. He killed that, too” (1012). The canary represents Minnie Foster. Before she married Mr. Wright, she was a joyful girl who sang in the church choir. After her and Mr. Wright get married, she is forced to stop singing and is stripped of her happiness. The broken cage represents Mr. and Mrs. Wright’s controlling marriage. The bird cage is violently broken to represent how Mrs. Wright violently escaped her marriage. The women’s discoveries cause Mrs. Peters to sympathize with Mrs. Wright. Ultimately, Mrs. Peters decides to stand up for what she believes.
Mrs. Wright eventually deteriorated just has her environment, her rocking chair, and the canary. In “Jury of Her Peers” Minnie Wright’s situation illustrates many women of the world. In the story and in our society many woman are stereotyped in the marriage to complete all home duties and take of care the children while consumed in pleasing their husband. While doing so we lose ourselves. While reading the store I also realized how blessed I am to be symbolized as a modern
She had got the canary a year ago. When her husband killed the canary it was like killing her last connection to her old world. She snapped and started planning his murder, she saw how the bird’s neck was broken and she broke his. Mrs. Peters says that “somebody-wrung- its-neck.”
In Susan Glaspell's “ A Jury Of Her Peers” Mrs. Wright’s husband is found strangled in their bed and Mrs. Wright is in the living room calm but in the same way concerned, claiming she “sleeps sound” and didn’t wake up or hear anyone in their house that night. Mrs. Hale a lifetime friend of Mrs. Wright compares her to the canary saying “She was like a bird herself. Real sweet and pretty, but kind of timid and-fluttery.” Although Mrs. Wright does not initially appear capable of murder, Mrs. Peters and Mrs. Hale concluded Mrs. Wright strangled her husband as evidence by the crazily sewn quilt patch, the unhinged bird cage, and the mutilated canary.
The men were still looking for evidence, but women are replaying the scene of murder in there minds. They conclude that Mrs. Wright was sewing in kitchen, when Mr. Wright came into the kitchen and saw the bird. This explains why Mrs. Wright was sewing nervously. I assumed that Mr. Wright didn’t like birds, because they are very noisy referring to conversation with Mr. Hale about the joining party phone line. Mr. Wright must have seen the birdcage with the bird. He must have broken the birdcage and broke the bird’s neck. This was enough of a motive need for Mrs. Wright to kill her husband. The
He says that’s what he can’t understand” (Glaspell 622). The victim was strung up by a rope in an elaborate manner; but why would the only person alive on earth with knowledge of the hidden gun not use the weapon sure to properly complete the job? Next, Naysayers might claim that the dead bird, killed in the same manner as the victim, is proof enough to connect Minnie to the crime. This simply is not true. Minnie’s pet bird, which she loves, is obviously a symbol of who Minnie was many years ago. She was forced to stop singing, and to stop just being who she was, by her late husband, John. During her talk with Mrs. Peters, Mrs. Hale compares Minnie to the bird and informs Glaspell’s audience of the alleged dark history of the Wrights: “Wright wouldn’t like the bird – a thing that sang. [Minnie] used to sing. He killed that, too” (Glaspell 625). Mrs. Hale undoubtedly knows, or at least surmises, of dark and vile things John did to emotionally batter his wife, Minnie. The important point to take away from the bird, though, is not read in this quote. It is contained between the lines. The bird was found in an ornamental box presumed to be its coffin. Immediately following this discovery, Mrs. Hale and Mrs. Peters form their own conclusions: “[L]ook at it! Its neck! Look at its neck! It’s all – other side to,” states Mrs. Peters (Glaspell 624). Despite the two gossiping ladies drawing their own conclusions, the bird cannot be used against Minnie in a
One of the women made the comment that Mrs. Wright used to be pretty and happy, when she was Minnie Foster not Minnie Wright. This is just the beginning of realizing that she was just pushed to far into depression and couldn't live up to John Wright's expectations anymore. The Wrights had no children and Mrs. Wright was alone in the house all day long. The women perceive John Wright to be a controlling husband who in fact probably wouldn't have children and this may have upset Mrs. Wright. They eventually find vacant bird cage and ponder upon what happened to the bird, realizing Mrs. Wright was lonely they figured she loved the bird and it kept her company. The women make reference to the fact that Mrs. Wright was kind of like a bird herself, and that she changed so much since she married John Wright. They begin looking for stuff to bring her and they find the bird dead and they realize someone had wrung its neck. This is when they realize Mrs. Wright was in fact pushed to far, John Wright had wrung her bird's neck and in return Minnie Wright wrung his.
Wright's life in their hands to do with what they will. Mrs. Peters and Mrs. Hale find the evidence needed to convict Minnie Wright and they suppress it. They were women who understood the plight of loneliness and the death of a beloved pet. Mrs. Hale understood that Mr. Wright was a hard man to live with and she knew that he had not only killed Mrs. Wright's bird but he had also killed the real Minnie Foster, the girl she had been. The men in the story, Sheriff Peters, Mr. Hale, and the young unmarried County Attorney, see only surface things. They believe that the motive for John's murder lies in the bedroom or in the barn. The men flounder around ignorantly searching for something they will never find because they can not think as Minnie Wright did. If the women had told them about the discovery of the dead bird, they would probably laugh and say that the women needed to go back to their quilting and their jellies. The ragged and uneven sewing that suggests a misplaced state of mind in Minnie Wright would also have been laughed at. The men wanted to find something concrete that would easily convince an all male jury but they never would. To men, dead canaries are dead canaries, they would never read into it what Mrs. Hale, Mrs. Peters, and Mrs. Wright did.
When the two women come across the empty, broken bird-cage, they ponder the reason for the broken door and the fate of the canary who occupied it. Later they discover the dead bird wrapped in silk with its neck broken, presumably by the hands of Mr. Wright. The bird symbolizes Minnie Foster, the young choir girl. The dead bird symbolizes Minnie after marriage, when she loses her spirit, and the cage symbolizes her husband who mistreats and isolates her. While describing Mrs. Wright, Mrs. Hale compares her to the bird when she says to Mrs. Peters, " She used to sing real pretty herself”. ( 576) Literary critic Janet Stobbs Wright states," Only as a picture emerges of the way in which Minnie Foster has been changed by her marriage to John Wright, is a process of identification between the two women initiated".
Therefore, Mrs. Wright murdered her husband simply because he murdered her pet bird, and she did so the same way he murdered the bird, making the motive is unethical. Mrs. Hale finds a dead bird with a broken neck inside of Mrs. Wright’s sewing box wrapped in a cloth. Obviously as lonely as Mrs. Wright was the death of her bird would have been catastrophic for her. This is evidence of a motive proving Mrs. Wright killed her husband out of sheer revenge of the death of her bird, it was the last thing he was ever going to take away from her. Along with the broken cage Mrs. Peters states, “Why, look at this door. It’s broke. One hinge is pulled apart” (8). Then Mrs. Hale comments, “Looks like someone must have been rough with it” (8). This is how it happened, Mr. Wright came home from work in
Wright’s trapped and when Mr. Wright wrung it’s neck, Mrs. Wright felt as her husband took her child’s (canary) life. While Mrs. Wright is investigated, Elisa tended herself to the chrysanthemums, like they were all she had.
Wright so deeply that her whole view of right and wrong is distorted. Her decision to murder her husband in the name of her bird shows how corrupted her mind really is. Years and years of silent torture drove this woman to the brink of insanity. Her insanity symbolizes other women in that time that chose to stay in a loveless marriage rather than make a bold move like Nora did and go out into world on their own. Nora’s courageous choice empowered women to think for themselves, while Mrs. Wright’s choice revealed to them exactly how a loveless marriage can damage one’s mind to the point of no repair.
Mrs. Peters and Mrs. Hale both make the choice to protect Mrs. Wright from the men’s investigation. They believe they are making the right decision in not telling the men because they believe that Mrs. Wright was in an abusive relationship and the killing of her canary finally caused her to snap. In Marina Angel’s analysis of “Trifles”, she says “The symbolism is again clear. Minnie Foster ‘was kind of like a bird herself’… But Mr. Wright had been rough with her” (Angel 805). The dead bird that Mrs. Peters and Mrs. Hale find is a symbol for Mrs. Wright herself,
Even so, the domestic system the men have set up for their wives and their disregard for them after the rules and boundaries have been laid down prove to be the men's downfall. The evidence that Mrs. Wright killed her husband is woven into Mrs. Hale's and Mrs. Peters's conversations about Mrs. Wright's sawing and her pet bird. The knots in her quilt match those in the rope used to strangle Mr. Wright, and the bird, the last symbol of Mrs. Wright's vitality to be taken by her husband, is found dead. Unable to play the role of subservient wife anymore, Mrs. Wright is foreign to herself and therefore lives a lie. As Mrs. Hale proclaims, "It looks as if she didn't know what she was about!" (1177).
When Mrs. Hale finds a dead bird in Mrs. Wright's sewing box, she soon recognizes the obvious reason why John Wright was murdered. The audience sees character motivation in Mrs. Wright. Mr. Wright was a man who used silence and coldness to control and mold his wife into someone he thought she ought to be. He killed the singing bird, which was a symbol for Mrs. Wright as Minnie Foster. In an indirect way, he killed her joy of singing, her spirit, keeping her in her own "cage" which she can not escape from. Unless she "got rid of" what (or who) was holding her prisoner.