Documented Literary Analysis
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John Walker
Mrs. Sharon Watts
ENG102 English Composition II
2 May 2018
The Conflict of Marriage
In marriage, everything is not always as happy as it sometimes seems. In Kate Chopin’s
“The Story of an Hour,” Mrs. Louise Mallard is in conflict after the reported death of her
husband. She is not satisfied with the relationship she has with him in which he, as her husband
in the 1800s, is able to exercise his complete will over hers. Thus, Mrs. Mallard experiences a
conflict within herself over her unusual reaction to the death of her loved one. Mrs. Mallard, who
has a weak heart, experiences a range of emotions caused by events that only fate could have
caused to happen as they do. Mrs. Mallard is a character who is in conflict with her husband and
society, herself, and fate throughout the events of the story.
First, Mrs. Mallard is struggling in her relationship with her husband, Brently Mallard,
because of society’s view of roles in a marriage. Chopin writes of Mrs. Mallard’s feelings for her
husband, “And yet she had loved him--sometimes. Often she had not” (296). Mrs. Mallard is in
conflict with Mr. Mallard because of the way the society of the time period allows the husband to
exercise dominance over the wife in the guise of love. Berkove states, “It is obvious that there is
quite a discrepancy between the way Louise and Brently Mallard feel about each other, but all
the mystery of the difference is on Louise's side. Whatever her original reason had been for
marrying Brently, it is clear now that feeling the way she does about him she would be better off
not being married” (154). Chopin further reveals Mrs. Mallard’s thoughts about life without her
husband when the author writes, “There would be powerful will bending hers in that blind
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persistence with which men and women believe they have a right to impose a private will upon a
fellow creature. A kind intention or a cruel intention made the act seem no less a crime as she
looked upon it in that brief moment of illumination” (296). Louise no longer wishes to have a
relationship with and is downtrodden by the thought of a future life with Brently.
Furthermore, Mrs. Mallard is in conflict with herself over her reaction to her husband’s
death. Chopin describes Louise Mallard as not being like a normal woman who receives the
news of her husband’s tragic, unexpected death. The author writes, “She did not hear the story
as many women have heard the same, with a paralyzed inability to accept its significance. She
wept at once, with sudden, wild abandonment in her sister’s arms” (Chopin 296). Papke states,
“Her response is atypical, however, and that is the subject of the story: what Louise thinks and
feels as she finds herself thrust into solitude and self-contemplation for the first time” (Koloski
133). Mrs. Mallard continues not to process the death of her husband with the normal
response. When she is in her room alone and the new feeling approaches her, she longs to be
able to suppress the unusual response. Berkove argues, “Louise also recognizes self-assertion "as
the strongest impulse of her being. This is a peculiar value for a married person and is indeed
incompatible with marriage, where an emphasis upon shared goals and mutual commitment is
the opposite of self-assertion” (153). When she goes to her room alone and is trying to fight back
the feeling coming to her, she is conflicted because she knows the joy of her newfound freedom
is not what she should be experiencing.
Probably the most forceful conflict present in the story is Mrs. Mallard’s conflict with
fate. To begin, it is certainly fate that causes the family friend, Richards, to be present in the
telegram office to receive the news of the husband’s death “with Brently Mallard’s name leading
the list of killed” (Chopin 296) and to be ready to deliver that news to Mrs. Mallard in her
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weakened state. Moreover, it is fate that allows Mrs. Mallard, with her weak heart, to become so
joyful about life that she goes down the stairs feeling like a goddess who can never die. It is fate
again that allows Brently Mallard to come through the door alive. Cunningham writes:
Chopin pays a great deal of attention to two areas of Louise's experience: the
strain placed upon her physical system by the various shocks--the surprise of her
husband's death, the grief that this news brings, the realization that her life is now
utterly changed, and the understanding that this change is quite possibly for the
better--that sweep over her, and the strain upon her spiritual outlook as she
struggles to understand the apparent freedom opened to her. (50)
All of the conflict present in Chopin’s short story seems to be resolved, as it is so often in
literature, with the protagonist’s death. The irony that Mrs. Mallard dies surprising death at the
end. Mrs. Mallard, of course, is no longer in conflict with her husband and society, herself, or
fate. In fact, it is fate who has been merciful and makes Mrs. Mallard ultimately “Free! Body
and soul free!” (Chopin 296) through her death.
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Works Cited
Berkove, Lawrence I. "Fatal Self-Assertion in Kate Chopin's 'The Story of an Hour'." Twentieth-
Century Literary Criticism, edited by Janet Witalec, vol. 127, Gale, 2002. Literature
Resource Center,
http://link.galegroup.com/apps/doc/H1420056308/GLS?u=avlr&sid=GLS&xid=fee3dd8f
. Accessed 15 Apr. 2018. Originally published in American Literary Realism, vol. 32, no.
2, Winter 2000, pp. 152-158.
Chopin, Kate. "The Story of an Hour." The World's Best Short Stories: Anthology & Criticism,
vol. 3: Famous Stories, Roth Publishing, 1990, p. 296. The World's Best Series.
LitFinder,
http://link.galegroup.com/apps/doc/LTF0000119071WK/GLS?u=avlr&sid=GLS&xid=a1
94aafa. Accessed 15 Apr. 2018.
Cunningham, Mark. "The Autonomous Female Self and the Death of Louise Mallard in Kate
Chopin's 'Story of an Hour.'." Short Story Criticism, edited by Jelena Krstovic, vol. 110,
Gale, 2008. Literature Resource Center,
http://link.galegroup.com/apps/doc/H1420082721/GLS?u=avlr&sid=GLS&xid=2a55c9e
8. Accessed 15 Apr. 2018. Originally published in English Language Notes, vol. 42, no.
1, Sept. 2004, pp. 48-55.
Koloski, Bernard. "Mary E. Papke on “the Story of an Hour”." Kate Chopin: A Study of the Short
Fiction, Twayne Publishers, 1996, pp. 132-134. Twayne's Studies in Short Fiction 65.
Twayne's Authors Series,
http://link.galegroup.com/apps/doc/CX1706800036/GLS?u=avlr&sid=GLS&xid=9b754e
5d. Accessed 15 Apr. 2018.