The extremes of black and white do not dominate our lives. Most of existence plays out in the gray areas. While drowning in the midst of this grayness, the vividness and absoluteness of the black or white are so very appealing. Rarely are we content with whom we are or what we have, but the voice of reason helps us come to terms with life's imperfections. However, the voice of reason cannot always appease us and we instead fantasize of new and different lives that will take away all our frustrations. We long for escape. In Kate Chopin's "The Story of an Hour- the main character, Louise Mallard, indeed escapes. The reported death of Mrs. Mallard's husband complimented by an atmosphere rich in contradictions triggers the onset of her contemplative journey through the known, murky waters of marriage to the unknown, green pastures of singleness. .
The narrator begins and ends the story with Mrs. Mallard's "heart trouble- (170). At first glance this appears to be indicative of a physical heart condition, but we quickly understand the narrator's double meaning as we learn of the emotional turmoil Louise Mallard experiences. The heart is symbolic of physical life in that it needs to be beating in order to live, but it also symbolizes love and the emotional state of a person's relationships. Mrs. Mallard is emotionally dead at the beginning of the story and is physically dead at the end. .
The news of her husband's tragic death produces an immediate reaction of grief. Mrs. Mallard expresses her sorrow "with sudden, wild abandonment in her sister's arms- (171). Her public reaction of grief is in sharp contrast with her private reaction of exhilarating joy. Not only are her reactions opposing, but her ability to express them is contradictory as well. She tries to repress the feeling of joy that is coming over her "striving to beat it back with her will- (171). .
The setting of the story is representative of Mrs.