The Yellow Wallpaper Essay

695 Words2 Pages

Often times in a story what an object is and what it represents by the end of the story, is a very different thing. In the short story by Charlotte Perkins Gilman titled “The Yellow Wallpaper,” a woman finds herself in a horrible position in which mundane things come to mean very ominous things for her. In the story, the narrator is in a room with a yellow wallpaper and several other things. The room is a symbol for her feeling of being trapped and by the end of the story the room takes over her mind. To start with, the most important symbol to “The Yellow Wallpaper” is the wallpaper itself. In the room in which she spends most of her time, there is a wallpaper. This wallpaper persistently annoys her and causes her the most pain in the story. The wallpaper is symbolic for her feeling of being trapped and her descent from sanity. “But, on the other hand, they connect diagonally, and the sprawling outlines run off in great slanting waves of optic horror, like a lot of …show more content…

Early in the story, she wants to sleep in the room downstairs but John tells her she has to go upstairs. The important features of the room are: a bed which is nailed down, a yellow wallpaper, and a window with iron bars. This room’s meaning slowly changes through the story. In the beginning, she dislikes it because of its aesthetics but she is glad that her baby doesn't have to live in it. In the middle of the story, the room starts to occupy all of her thoughts, and by the end the rooms takes over her and drives her to insanity. “Then the floor is scratched and gouged and splintered, the plaster itself is dug out here and there, and this great heavy bed which is all we found in the room, looks as if it had been through the wars” (Gilman 311). The narrator doesn't feel comfortable in the room and notices all of its imperfections. As the story progresses, the room slowly starts to creep more and more from the physical world into her

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