The Story of an Hour
After reading Kate Chopin “The Story of an Hour” I felt a bit uncertain on how I felt for Mrs. Mallard when she received the news of her husband being killed. I don’t believe she felt real grief for the fact he was killed. Yes, she cried in her sister’s arms for a short moment and then went to her room to be alone where again Mrs. Mallard cried but was, she really crying because her husband passed or was, or crying because she was finally free. After what seems to be forever of looking out the window and seeing everything for what would seem the first time Mrs. Mallard finally realizes that she is free. With her husband gone she doesn’t have to be in a marriage that she wasn’t happy in and could finally live her life. Even though Mrs. Mallard had a serve heart condition she was determined to live her life free. The irony of the story was that when she saw her husband walk in the door at the end of the story she died from a heart attack but she died free just the way she wanted.
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