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Mrs. Mallard's Emotions In The Story Of An Hour

Decent Essays

In the passage, "The Story of an Hour", by Kate Chopin, Mrs. Mallard expresses many different emotions; she experiences a sense of mourning, and then a realization of freedom and independence. Ironically, Mrs. Mallard experiences the sense of freedom only to find her husband is not truly dead, but Mrs. Mallard herself. Even after the news of her husband's death, she only mourns for a split second, but she shows more excitement. Mrs. Mallard expresses feelings irregular to a woman who has lost her husband which shows a lot about her feelings towards marriage. Firstly, Mrs. Mallard mourns after the news of her husbands death. In the passage it states, "She was young, with a fair, calm face...But now there was a dull stare in her eyes..." After the news of her husband's death, she falls down and upset, but that feeling doesn't last long. Also in the passage it states "She wept at once, with sudden, wild abandonment, in her sister's arms." It seemed that she was in complete shock from the news. Her first reaction was completely ordinary, and when the news was first brought to her attention she mourned at the thought of what she would face as a widow in the future. Mrs. Mallard has aged and realized her …show more content…

Mallard felt free at last. It is shown in the passage, "She said it over and over under her breath: Free, Free, Free!" Her pulse fastens and her breath grows, quicker as she processes the fact that she is now free to do as she pleases. She began to realize all her decisions for her life were now up to her. Another look at her character feeling free is she felt a monstrous joy overwhelm her. Even though she would mourn again once she saw her deceased husband, she let the trivial feeling go. The story says, "And she opened and spread her arms out to them in welcome." Although she would in fact miss her husband the feeling of freedom overwhelmed her from head to toe. The realization to be free was to much that it overwhelmed

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