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Story Of An Hour Analysis

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“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 …show more content…

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

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