Consequenses of Freedom in The Story of an Hour" and "A Pair of Silk Stocking" by Chopin

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In "The Story of an Hour" and "A pair of silk stocking" Chopin illustrates how women face the consequences of never acquiring happiness in their lives if they follow the ways society expects them too.
In "the story of an hour" Chopin discuss how getting married can lead you to live a life of anguish. In the beginning of the short story Mrs. Mallard revives terrible news that her husband has been recently killed, she "Wept at once, with sudden, wild abandonment." This intense reaction is how society would expect her to act if your husband dies. Mrs. Mallard then goes into her bedroom to grieve alone: "She could see in the open square before her house the tops of the trees that were all aquiver with the new spring life." Seeing the open square makes her crave freedom, something she doesn't remembering having. The new spring life will eventually represent her new-found freedom and happiness. As she stares outside the window she thinks, but "It was not a glance of reflection, but rather indicated a suspension of intelligent thought." She is critically thinking of what will come and what has just happened, she has not ever has to think for herself, her husband always did that for her. This is the first time her feelings start to stir, she tries to process the information more to figure out what they mean.
"The Story of an Hour" continues by Mrs. Mallard focusing on the freedom she secretly craves. As Mrs. Mallard is contemplating the news of freedom she didn't even stop to ask if it was a "monstrous joy" what she is feeling. At this point she is thrilled that she has newly found freedom, something society would conclude to be moral wrong after a depressing event just occurring. Even though she is happy she has freedom, when she g...

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..., she has never been there before so she felt a rush of emotion. She absorbed everything she could. When "the play was over, the music ceased, the crowd filed out. It was like a dream ended." This quote has a figurative meaning. For her, the day is almost over and she now has to return to her original life and give up her freedom she has enjoyed. Just like Mrs. Mallard did when her husband returned home; they didn't want it to end. She briefly left the present to recall her independent past. Fifteen dollars was enough to bring Mrs. Sommers back to her past, but it does not change her situation. Mrs. Sommers then gets into a cable car and reflects on her wonderful day she will probably never get again. All of the freedom that she enjoyed throughout the day will vanish once she steps out of the cable car, and she will be left again with nothing but unfulfilled hopes.

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