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Story Of An Hour

Decent Essays

“The Story of an Hour” by Kate Chopin is a tightly written short story that takes place within a single hour of Mrs. Louise Mallard’s seemingly unsatisfying marriage. Although the story is no more than two pages long, one should not look down upon the shortness of the story, but instead be amazed at how packed such a small piece of literature is. The major theme the story revolves around is the oppressive views of marriage that the main character, Mrs. Mallard experiences in the latter part of the 19 century, a time in which when women had very few rights and it was normal for women to keep a tidy house and stray away from any type of manual work, including the workforce. When Kate Chopin wrote the story, Chopin managed to use all of the …show more content…

Seeing the death of her husband as a gift, Mrs. Mallard sits in “a comfortable, roomy armchair” (477) and rejoices about her newly found freedom from her husband, yelling out “free, free, free” and “body and soul free” (477), but she is unaware that Brantly, her husband, a kind and loving man, who she actually loves, is in fact, alive and in good health. But once she exclaims “free, free, free” (477) it is clear to the reader that Mrs. Mallard now feels joy and freedom from her husband. Above all, situational irony presents itself in a big way to the reader at the end of “The Story of an Hour”. It is now revealed to the reader that Brantly Mallard. He arrives home and Chopin made clear to the reader that “he had been far from the scene of the accident, and did not even know” about the railroad disaster that had pronounced him dead. Because of this unexpected surprise, Mrs. Mallard falls dead and doctors the “said she died of a heart disease – of joy that kills” …show more content…

First off, the last name ‘Mallard’ is a symbolic feature considering that a mallard is a type of duck that is free to fly wherever it chooses, along with “countless sparrows” that “were twittering in the eaves” (476). Additionally, one will also notice that the seasons are changing and it is now spring time. Chopin states that Mrs. Mallard “could see in the open square before her house the tops of trees that were all aquiver with the new spring life” (476). The season of spring symbolically represents a new beginning, something that Mrs. Mallard believes she has now obtained since at the time, she believes that her marriage is now over. In the end, with symbolism, Chopin manages to reveal to the reader that Mrs. Mallard feels like she is becoming unbound from a “powerful will” and “private will”(477) in which she connects to her marriage which means that in a underlying tone, Mrs. Mallard is feels restrained in her marriage. In turn, with the examples of symbolism, the theme of oppressiveness within ones marriage is

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