Character Analysis of Susan Glaspell's A Jury of Her Peers

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Mrs. Martha Hale is an apologetic, dutiful, and rational character who serves as a defense to justify Mrs. Wright’s murderous crime. Mrs. Hale as featured in “A Jury of Her Peers” Written by Susan Glaspell has the storyline of a mother who has intense apologetic regret over allowing her life to push things aside, of being a dutiful homemaker, and of unseen rational processing to the truth of the crime.

Martha is mixed with regret in an apologetic manner for the lack of social outreach. Her first quote “I ought to go over and see Minnie Foster” (Insert Cite) after feeling as if she could not cross the line into Minnie Foster’s home because she felt regret for making excuses for twenty years. From the same paragraph we see that life was always to blame in pushing socialization to the side. However, we see in the prior paragraph that the home they were coming upon looked and had a feel of being lonesome. We later see that through dialogue like “There’s a great deal of work to be done on a farm” (pg.187), and the conservation between Mrs. Hale and Mrs. Peters that divulged in Martha not liking to come down to Minnie’s house because it was not viewable from the road shows great pain in not coming before, and the underlining actions in cleaning Minnie’s kitchen after the men made sly comments, mending of the quilt, and the saving of the murdered bird’s body for proper burial. She shows an apologetic attitude that she might have been able to prevent the actions of Minnie towards her husband. The memories that Mrs. Hale share of the early life of Minnie Foster including her personal qualities like “she was like a bird” (pg. 192) and the lack of style in Minnie’s present rocker (pg. 185) along with the clothing selections dibble in a pe...

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...ith hopes of her returning to her former self.

After completion of this story a reader can clearly see a defense stance upon Mrs. Hale’s character and see that after twenty years she would like to see Minnie have a second chance. Through her apologetic attitude in pushing Minnie to the side, her un-realization of duty within her duty to continue housework, and her rational excuses to offer the readers that Minnie’s actions were justified. Martha could be assumed as a pivotal character that releases Minnie from certain life within further walls of stifling control that she has already suffered with for the last twenty years.

Works Cited

Gladspell, Susan. "A Jury of Her Peers." Literature: An Introduction to Reading and Writing. Roberts, Edgar V. and Robert Zweig. 10th ed. New York: Longman, 2012. 183-196. Print.

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