“The Story of an Hour”, a story that portrays a new side about marriage which is not known to everyone in the 1890s. Mrs. Mallard, the wife of Brently Mallard, heard the tragic news about her husband's death. She became sad and cried in the sorrow of losing her husband, but soon experienced the joy of being free. As the time goes by she sees her husband walk in the house and dies of losing freedom again. In “The Story of an Hour”, the author Kate Chopin depicts Louise's dream of achieving the forbidden freedom through the use of point of view, symbolism, repetition, dramatic irony, and situational irony, to convey the meaning of the story.
Chopin writes the story in third person limited point of view instead of writing it in first person
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The spring life symbolizes Louise's new life, a happier life. Louise is happy to finally make her own identity and not live only as “Mrs. Mallard”.
Although Mrs. Mallard wanted to end her life to be free of restrictions, she changed her mind after seeing the new light that has come in her life. The "patches of blue sky showing here and there through the clouds that had met and piled one above the other in the west facing her window" (524). She does not want to end her life now that she is free from her marriage. The person who wanted to die was now praying for her life to be long.
Mrs. Mallard “was young, with a fair, calm face, whose lines bespoke repression”(524). This suggests that she is in repression. The readers are to know that she is depressed her marriage. Although, the story does not have any evidence that makes Mr. Mallard an abusive husband, through other reading analysis the readers know she was not happily married.
In addition, the narrator utilizes repetition to depict the emotions of Louise. Although Mrs. Mallard knows about her husband's death and is trying to process it, she can't help but be happy about gaining her freedom. She repeats the words "Free, free, free!" and can feel her heart beating faster (525). She can see her future filled with happiness and live “for herself” (525). Mrs. Mallard's dream to be her own person was about to come
Mallard, they get the idea that she is a small, frail woman who would do nothing more than rest for most of the day. Upon receiving news that her husband has died, it would be expected that she may cry or sob. However, after a brief moment of mourning, she begins to feel excited about her husband’s death. “Free! Body and soul free!”( ). At first, someone may be startled by this response, as it appears that she has no reason to be acting this way, but if you look between the lines, you realize why. Ms. Mallard was a woman who felt trapped in her marriage. She craved freedom and was never to reach it until the death of her husband. When she first feels it, she likens it to something vial or sinister, but soon after she compares it to an elixir of eternal life. While this reaction appears to be extreme, it is important to realize that divorce was not an accepted practice at the time of this story. This means that she was essentially stuck in her marriage until one of them died, which is why she was so untroubled by the demise of her
When her husband is killed in a train accident Mrs. Mallard cries, but for different reasons than would be expected. She is sad for her husband’s death, but, moreover, she is overcome with joy. For now she is free. No one recognizes her true emotions because women fall apart when their spouse dies; it’s required. Marriage is portrayed as a life sentence. "She said it over and over again under her breath: ‘free, free, free!' Her pulse beat fast, and the coursing blood warmed and relaxed every inch of her body"(1). Mrs. Mallard was relieved that her husband died for she thought her sentence was over. When she realized that he was still alive, and therefore she was still committed to the marriage, she died from the shock and horror of being trapped.
The reader might question as to why Mrs. Mallard’s feelings towards her husband’s death change so quickly. Was she previously unaware of the “subtle and elusive” (227) thoughts that made her believe that this death might be a blessing in disguise? Mrs. Mallard, before her husband’s death, had a romanticized view of her marriage. While she believed she loved Brently and was happy, after his death she became aware of the freedom she would now experience without a controlling husband. The “powerful will bending hers in that blind persistence” (228) would no longer be present. Mrs. Mallard was aware of her yearnings of independence and joy, but would never voice them while locked into her marriage with Brantley. While at first, it may seem as Mrs. Mallard was unaware of these feelings, the death of her husband was just the catalyst that allowed her deepest feelings to be revealed and her dreams of independence to finally
Mallard is unsatisfied with the limitations of her marriage, however, like Desiree, she is submissive and believes that the end of her duties as a wife will come at the death of her husband and her freedom will be given to her. Also, she experiences little or no feelings because of her marriage. This is shown when Mrs. Mallard, after hearing of her husband’s death, cries, but ironically she senses a moment of euphoric pleasure at the awaiting freedom in her remaining life. “She saw beyond that bitter moment a long procession of years to come that would belong to her absolutely.” Mrs. Millard is now aware of things that were not noticeable before such as: the beginning of spring, patches of blue sky through clouds, the twittering of sparrows and the smelling of the pending rain, which may signify the nature of her freedom. Mrs. Mallard would now be able to live her life outside the home and find her identity.
Whatever side one picks on the character of Mrs. Mallard, it is hard to overlook her tragic ending. Some might disagree with the doctor’s opinion in the end of the story in that she died from “a joy that kills” (CITE). It could be quite the opposite, they might say she died in despair at the idea of her newly found freedom being taken
Kate Chopin’s The Story of an Hour is a brilliant short story of irony and emotion. The story demonstrates conflicts that take us through the character’s emotions as she finds out about the death of her husband. Without the well written series of conflicts and events this story, the reader would not understand the depth of Mrs. Mallard’s inner conflict and the resolution at the end of the story. The conflict allows us to follow the emotions and unfold the irony of the situation in “The Story of an Hour.”
The story unviels its theme at this point: Mrs. Mallard, for the first time in her life, experiences a new-found freedom. Instead of dreading the future without her husband, "she saw beyond that bitter moment a long procession of years to come that would belong to her absolutely". She could now live her life and be absolutely free of the imposing will of her husband: There would be no one to live for her during the coming years; she would live for herself. There would be now powerful will bending hers in the blind persistence with which men and women believe they have a right to impose a private will upon a fellow creature.(15)
Mrs. Mallard never explains in details on why she feels as though she is trapped in her marriage. After she finds out about her husband’s death she is heartbroken realizing she would never see him again in this life. Though she had loved him, she felt as though he oppressed her either by meaning to or not out of care for
Mallard’s marriage has extinguished her freedom. Her visage “spoke repression”(paragraph 7). This quote elucidates that Louis has been restrained from her true emotions towards her marriage. Furthermore, when Louis receives the news of her husband’s death, she is aware that “there would be no powerful will bending hers”(paragraph 11). She knows that, because her husband has died, there will be no one to believe that they have any “right to impose a private will upon a fellow-creature”(paragraph 11). In paragraph 10, Choplin declares “the face that had never looked save with love upon her.” This quote illuminates that Mr. Mallard did, in fact, love Louise. This paints the picture that Mr. Mallard was not a bad husband, he simply felt it was his obligation, as a husband, to direct Louise in everything that she takes part in. This role of a “controlling” husband and the role of a “dutiful’ wife is not a matter of choice, but rather put in effect by
Kate Chopin's The Story of An Hour, is a short story where the author conveys an obscured view of marriage. Mrs. Mallard, undergoes the elation of freedom, rather than the silence of loneliness, after she acquires knowledge of her husband's passing. With this information, Mrs.Mallard believes her desire for autonomy is gone. In the end, this crushing disappointment may have paved the way for the death of Louise.
The Story of an hour written by Kate Chopin is the best short-story because theme, characters, point of view, and style show the attitude that some women felt or may feel regarding marriage being repressive in their life and a longing for freedom. The story opens with Mrs. Mallard’s sister Josephine informing her that her husband has been killed. Because of Mrs. Mallard’s heart condition Josephine and Richards, who is a friend of the family and there to help deliver the news, are concerned with how the news will affect Mrs. Mallard. When Mrs. Mallard hears the news to is over taken with grief and locks herself in her room. While in her room she imagines herself in her new life that is no longer bogged down by her duties as a wife. When
Mallard’s husband died due to a railroad disaster. Some of the key moments/episodes is when she began to get a lot of anxiety due to the thought of her not having her husband with her for the rest of her life. I believe that the way the author explained how Mrs. Mallard was getting anxiety foreshadowed how she might end up dead considering how she was afflicted with heart trouble. At the end of the story, it had an indeterminate ending with a twist... throughout the whole story, we all believed that her husband was dead which lead to Mrs. Mallard’s death due to heart disease. Thereafter, her husband arrived home too
Mallard’s unhappiness in her marriage probably had to do more with her own desires and dreams than with her husband. The story even states “she had loved him---sometimes. Often she had not” (Chopin 2). During the time period in which the story takes place, the eighteen hundreds, marriage has an oppressive nature, which limits the wife’s choices, freedom, and independence. Because of this, “Maybe it's not about Mr. Mallard in particular that Mrs. Mallard has a problem with.
Mrs. Mallard feels tied down and trapped in her marriage. The lines of her face "bespoke repression" (paragraph 8). Once Mrs. Mallard receives the news of her husband's death, she knew that there will "be no powerful will bending her" (paragraph 14). There now would be no husband who believes he had the "right to impose a private will upon a fellow creature"
Next, Mrs. Mallard was a woman who suffered from the times where women were treated with less value and importance. She lost her own life because rejoice at her husband’s tragedy. Her uncontrollable desire to be free made her become a frivolous woman, who let his personal longing’s end with his own life. When she realized that her husband was alive all his plans vanished. Her happiness was a temporary happiness which lasted less than an hour.