Susan Glaspell's Trifles

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Susan Glaspell’s Trifles starts slowly, as we are introduced to George Henderson, Henry Peters and his wife, and Lewis Hale and his wife as they are looking for clues about the murder of John Wright. As was typical at the time, the two women are pushed to the side as the men search for clues. Instead of looking to the women for help, they don’t take them seriously and laugh at the things the women discuss. However, women always seem to pay more attention to details, especially ones that men find to be trivial things, and this is very important in solving the murder mystery. Throughout the story, we see the women pay attention to the small, intimate details of Mrs. Wright, details that only women would be considered with, but in doing so, they solve a very sad, complicated murder mystery. Armed with the details of the murder, the women make a moral choice to stick together and keep Mrs. Wright’s secret. At the beginning of the story, we see the women keep to …show more content…

Wright’s things in, they come across a bird cage. Oddly, there is no bird in it and “the door is broke. One hinge is pulled apart” (1044). The two women don’t think much of this until they find Mrs. Wright’s sewing box. When they look inside it, they find the bird that is missing from the cage and “somebody had wrung its neck” (1045). The canary represents more than just a singing bird, it “represents Minnie Wright’s youth which was also killed by her husband” (Mulry). Mrs. Peters doesn’t want to jump to any conclusions but “The mundane details of Minnie’s life leader Mrs. Hale and Mrs. Peters to comprehend what their husbands do not, the motive for murder” (Holstein) and Mrs. Hale talks about how “Wright wouldn’t like a bird- a thing that sang” because “Mrs. Wright used to sing and he killed that too” (1045). But just like with the bad stitching, the women hide the bird, once again protecting Mrs. Wright and the secrets that the kitchen

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