Critical Analysis Of Trifles, By Susan Glaspell

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The play “Trifles”, written by Susan Glaspell, is about the murder of a husband named John Wright. The Play starts out at the scene of the crime. A middleman named Hale who had dropped by to see if Mr. Wright wanted to install a telephone found him dead in his bed. Once the sheriffs arrive they comb through the crime scene looking for any evidence to prove the suspect, Wrights wife, guilty of the murder. The sheriffs brings along his wife, Mrs. Peters, and Mr. Hales wife to gather objects for Mrs. Wright while she waits in jail. As the men continue to search the gloomy old farmhouse, the ladies begin to gossip about Mrs. Wright and as to why she might have killed her husband. While shuffling through Mrs. Wrights things they find an empty bent birdcage and soon after find the bird that belonged to it dead,
Wright had that lead up the murder of her husband were that she was neglected by her husband, isolated from society, and the one thing that did make her happy was killed by her
Wright is completely isolated from society. She lives in a gloomy old farmhouse out of town with no neighbors near by for company and not even a phone to keep in contact with friends. Mr. Wright liked it this way. He liked the quiet and would not stand to have the noisy chatter that comes along with owning a telephone. “I 'm going to see if I can 't get John Wright to go in with me on a party telephone. ' I spoke to Wright about it once before and he put me off, saying folks talked too much anyway, and all he asked was peace and quiet”(Glaspell). Mrs. Wright on the other hand, used to be a very outgoing, social person before she married him. “She was kind of like a bird herself—real sweet and pretty, but kind of timid and—fluttery. How—she—did—change”(Glaspell). Mrs. Wright went from having friends and a social life to complete isolation when she married Mr. Wright. Being so cut off from society could have contributed to Mrs. Wright’s purpose of

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