Mrs Mallard example essay topic

757 words
In the Story of An Hour, Mrs. Mallard seemed to me like an old misunderstood woman and as we are told in the very first line, afflicted with a heart trouble. I was surprised later, when it said that she was young. I think that Chopin is showing us a social situation of the times with the woman as a prisoner of her husband. Marriage was not always about mutual love between two people and during that time Chopin was writing, which was during 1804-1904, this was often the case.

Marriage was as much about monetary comfort, social status as it was about possible love. There are no children mentioned in the story, which makes me wonder if there was a sexual relationship between the Mallards. It seems from the description that Mrs. Mallard has been trapped in this marriage for a long time even though we know she is young. How young is she?

I would probably guess that she would be in her middle thirties. She probably got married very young, as they usually did at that time. The women would usually stay at home and the men would go to work. Things have changed a lot now a day.

I don t think that this marriage is arranged. I think that she has been forced by her society to marry despite what she may want to do in her heart and soul. I believe she does love her husband, but it is possible to love a man and not be married to him. Is her heart condition purely physical or is it psychological and emotional? We know that women can be hysterical, timid, weak and very emotional. When is her first name mentioned and why?

That is the interesting part of the story that gave me the idea of my whole conclusion. Her first name is only told to us after she hears of her husband's death and when she feels the freest. Before her husbands death she is referred to us as Mrs. Mallard or she, and after when her husband returns home, she is referred to as wife. When Louise marries Brently she becomes Mrs. Mallard; she loses her identity and assumes a new and strange one. While it seems very normal and average for a wife to assume her husband's name in marriage and in that time, become the property of him, it cannot be ignored that a certain part of the self is lost.

This woman is very in tune with this loss and even though her love for her husband keeps her from it, the freedom she feels when she thinks he is dead, becomes unavoidable and enjoyable. She reacts with sadness at first, and seeks her solitude. In her solitude she is very descriptive of what she is feeling and sees, pointing out the sky showing patches of blue clouds, notes of a distant song, and sparrows were twittering in the eaves. Personally these things that she is describing are happy scenes to me. She is illuminated. She is free.

She remembers her husband with memories that are now of the past. She is in the present and she is overwhelmed of her freedom. We learn that her name is Louise and no longer Mrs. Mallard. She has her own identity because she is free.

Josephine is worried about Louise, who is her sister, left alone in her room in the solitude. She tells her, Louise, open the door! I beg; you will make yourself ill. What are you doing?

I find it hard to believe that Josephine would really think that Louise could hurt her herself. That meant that probably they were not very close. Louise finally opens the door and descends the staircase to freedom. Someone was opening the front door. It was Brently. Louise descends the staircase and everything is taken away from her.

She is dead. Mrs. Mallard's heart stopped. Her life stopped. Doctors said she had died of heart disease, maybe of joy that what really killed.

To me the word joy would be the joy that she felt when she realized that her husband was dead and that she was free, and the pain that killed her, when she saw him walking through the door.