Saturday, June 1, 2019
Hiding From The Truth :: essays research papers
Hiding From The Truth     In the reading, "The Story of an Hour," many things weren&8217t as they seemed. This is called symbolism. Where one write something and it symbolizes another thing. For example, someone&8217s blood gets warmer. That wouldn&8217t symbolize them getting hot, it symbolizes them having a warm and happy feeling about something. This shows that things ben&8217t impression of as they are supposed to be. Symbolism also leads to unfathomable truths. Things that also don&8217t mean what they seem. Just as symbolism, confidential truths need to be thought out, and thoroughly processed in one&8217s head. In the reading, "The Story of an Hour," many things aren&8217t as they seem, leading to hidden truths, symbolism, and an droll ending.      There were many things that could be considered to be hidden truths in the reading. There were just a few that stuck out with ease. One of the hidden truths would be when the married woman Louise Mallard is thinking about the news she was just told, she is sitting in a "comfortable roomy chair," comfort and roominess are relaxing and fun. The priming coat the writer uses comfortable and roomy is to show that the wife, Louise, was happy and relaxed when she heard the news and thought about it. She was pretty much happy with the result. Another easy hidden truth was when Louise was saying, "free, free, free" and "free, body and soul free." These phrases would, in reality, show that she was happy and felt like her own self now. She wasn&8217t restricted by her save, he was gone and she was her own woman. She was finally "free" as she would say. And finally, Louise&8217s pulse beats harder. That is just like the blood warming. Her pulse debacle hides that she is full of joy. She is happy of what happened, and that she is "free." There are many truths that are hidden in this story, tha t just leads to making the readers get into the story.     Not only were there hidden truths, but a lot of symbolism came up in the reading. The symbolism starts with an open window. That is what Louise was staring at and looking through when she was told about the death of her husband Brently. The open window symbolizes freedom. Louise was now free of her husbands rein. She was unhappy with the marriage and liked finally being free and her own person.
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