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In Kate Chopin’S “The Story Of An Hour”, Kate Chopin Shows

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In Kate Chopin’s “The Story of an Hour”, Kate Chopin shows the realistic possibility to show what wives secretly wanted in her days. She chooses a character with a symbolic as well as a literal heart condition to provide both internal and external conflicts in such a short story to end with an ending so ironic. All in all, the conflicts and symbols that Chopin uses in “The Story of an Hour” complimented each other to reveal the theme how the true feelings of oneself can be so powerful that metaphorically, and in literal irony in the protagonist’s case, set a person free. Like most short stories, there is a conflict or two to get a reader to tag along in the story. Chopin, in this case, uses many external as well as internal for the …show more content…

The act of fending for yourself in public and possibly care for yourself and become a voice that males would normally take the role in for their wife and family. Chopin made it seem sad at first, but then the protagonist notices the upside to this new reality: freedom,
“Free! Body and soul free!” she kept whispering… “Go away I am not making myself ill” No; she was drinking in a very elixir of life through that open window. (Page 279)
She notices that there was freedom of the truth of being a widow, and beings to enjoy it till the end, setting her free. Another element that Chopin used within her piece “The Story of an Hour” would be symbolism. The title, for example, can bring up many ideas that can relate to the moral of the story. The time to take to read this story was not long at all, symbolizing the title in relevance to possibly the time it would take to read and learn from the story of Mrs. Mallard. Another possibility in likeliness to the theme is that the amount time Chopin wrote in that Mrs. Mallard took to realize that she would have freedom and, without hesitation or solace, started rejoicing:
She did not stop to ask if it were or were not a monstrous joy that held her. A clear and exalted perception enabled to dismiss the suggestion as trivial. (Page 279)
Another clear example of time being a key character of symbolism is the quick shock when “she had died of heart

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