In “The Story of an Hour” Kate Chopin begins her
story introducing a lady named Mrs. Mallard as a woman who has been affected
with a heart trouble due to hearing the news of her husband’s death from a
railroad disaster. Mrs. Mallard receives the tragic news from her sister and
husbands friend. Her sister and her husband’s friend know of her heart trouble
and this is the reason they try to tell her the news carefully, thinking this
news will greatly affect her heart condition. On the contrary, we soon learn
that she is actually going through a series of different emotions and feelings
after hearing the news of her husbands’ death. “Her husband’s friend Richards
was there, too, near her. It was he who had been in the newspaper office when
intelligence of the railroad disaster was received, with Brentley Mallard’s
name leading the list of “killed” (Chopin 337). Because Chopin describes Mrs.
Mallard as a woman with heart trouble, in the story you would think that since
she has this type of illness hearing the news of her husband’s death would
deeply sadden her and possibly make her heart condition worse. Ironically, in a
weird, strange way she seems relieved that her husband has died and now she has
become a free soul. “She walked into her room alone and wanted no one to follow
her. “When she abandoned herself a little whispered word escaped her slightly
parted lips. She said it over and over under her breath: “free, free, free!”
(Chopin 338). The next statement from the narrator made me feel sad, and I don’t
know why but it my favorite part of the story! The statement has such a deep
meaning and with just that one statement alone you could really feel the pain
and suffering she had been through as a married woman. During these old ages I
get the feeling that many women who were married used to feel that way. “The
vacant stare and the look of terror that had followed it went from her eyes” (Chopin
338). She had an empty stare and in her eyes you could see that she had been
scared then suddenly it’s gone, you get a sense that she had been enlightened,
reborn again. With everything discussed above and after reading this short
story one begins to wonder whether this woman ever did love her husband. And it
is almost as if the narrator knew we would begin wonder, in paragraph 15 we get
some kind of answer along with an explanation. “And yet she loved
him-sometimes. Often she had not. What did it matter! What could love, the unsolved
mystery, count for in face of this possession of self-assertion which she suddenly
recognized as the strongest impulse of her being!” (Chopin 338). At the end of
the story we learn some sort of mistake has occurred. Brentley Mallard opens the
front door, after all he was alive and he had been far from the accident and didn’t
even know about it. The doctors came in and said Mrs. Mallard has died of heart
disease. Ironically, the doctors say that she has died of joy that kills. Now
we are all left contemplating the reason Mrs. Mallard has died. She could have
possibly been so shocked to see her husband alive and because of her heart
condition she died suddenly with such utter disbelief.
The story of an hour does leave its readers in shock and curious about the way she died at the end. I personally believe it was shock from utter disbelief and it just contributed to her heart problems she had already, so it just made everything worse.
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