Meaning In Kate Chopin's The Story Of An Hour

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When I first started reading "The Story of an Hour," Mrs. Mallard seemed to me as an old woman and as we are told in the very first line, “afflicted with a heart trouble.” to my surprised in the eighth paragraph when Chopin tells us that "She was young," but what was even more interesting to me was that she is described as having “a fair, calm face, whose lines bespoke repression” which describes her as being too old for her age. “The Story of An Hour” by Kate Chopin is a story about a woman, who is expressing hurt and sorrow toward the supposed death of her husband. This news took her by surprise and causes her to become very depressed and mute. The story showed in detail the effects of the death of her husband on her life. Kate Chopin uses extremely descriptive diction and figurative language to represent her pain and sorrow. After reading this story the first time, I had many questions and had came to many conclusions. For instance, it seems as if Chopin is showing us a social situation of the times with women as prisoner of their
Before this point she was mentioned as Mrs. Mallard or “she,” and after the point of when her husband returns home, she was then referred to as “wife.” Chopin is calling attention to something very interesting here which took me back to the title of woman as “wife.” When Louise marries Bently she became Mrs. Mallard; she neglect her identity and accept a new and strange one. While it seems very normal for a wife to assume her husband’s name in marriage and at the period of time, to put it harshly, become the property of her husband, it cannot be overlooked that a certain part of the self is lost. This woman is very in harmony with this bad luck and although her love for her husband keeps her from it, the freedom she felt when she thought he is dead became inescapable and

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