Chapter 4 – The Story of an Hour Solutions and Q&A
Content Structure
- 1. About the author – Kate Chaplin
- 2. Theme of The Story of an Hour
- 3. Summary of The Story of an Hour
- 4. Critical Analysis
- 5. Significance of the title
- 6. Word meanings
- 7. Additional Multiple choice questions & answers (MCQs)
1. About the author – Kate Chaplin
Kate Chaplin was a famous American writer who known for her short stories and novels about women’s lives, independence, and emotions. He was born on 8th February 1850. She wrote stories about women’s lives, feelings, and freedom. Her famous novel The Awakening talks about a woman’s desire to live her own life. She died on August 22, 1904.
2. Theme of The Story of an Hour
- The story shows how a woman wishes to live life in her own way.
- It also shows that marriage can limit a woman’s freedom and individuality.
- Mrs. Mallard feels both sadness and unexpected joy when she hears about her husband’s death.
- At the moment she begins to feel truly free and happy, her husband’s sudden return shocks her to death.
- The story expresses the hidden emotions and desires of women living in a male-dominated society.
3. Summary of The Story of an Hour
Mrs. Mallard had a weak heart, so her sister Josephine and their family friend Richards were very careful while telling her the news of her husband’s death in a train accident. Mrs. Mallard cried deeply when she first heard the news. Then she went to her room alone and locked the door. She sat in a comfortable chair by the window, feeling tired and heartbroken. She looked outside and saw trees covered with new spring leaves. She also noticed the clouds and sunlight playing across the sky. She could smell the rain and hear soft, distant music. Life outside seemed calm and peaceful. After some time, Mrs. Mallard began to feel a strange emotion growing inside her heart. She slowly whispered the word “free” again and again. She realized that the coming years would belong only to her and that she could now live for herself. The feeling of freedom filled her with warmth and joy, and she wished for a long life ahead. Josephine stood outside the room, worrying that her sister might make herself ill by crying too much. Mrs. Mallard, however, opened the door at last with a bright and happy look in her eyes. She and Josephine walked downstairs together. At that moment, Brently Mallard suddenly opened the front door and walked in, alive and unaware of any accident. The shock was too much for Mrs. Mallard, and she fell dead instantly. The doctor said later that she had died of a heart attack caused by “the joy that kills.”
4. Critical Analysis
Kate Chopin, one of the first writers to support women’s rights in modern literature, shows the real condition of women in 19th-century American society. At that time, men ruled society and women had very little freedom. It was believed that a woman should always be calm, gentle, and obedient. Mrs. Mallard represents such women. The calm lines on her face show that she has suffered quietly in her marriage. When she hears the news of her husband’s death, she feels sad but soon realises that she is now free from the control of marriage and its duties. Her feelings keep changing from sadness to happiness. She looks at the trees full of new spring leaves and hears the birds singing outside the window. These things reflect her sense of new life and hope. For her, her husband’s death brings more freedom than sorrow this shows how women in a male-dominated society were silently oppressed but could not express their feelings because of social pressure, money, and family honour. The one hour of the story shows many emotional changes inside Mrs. Mallard’s mind. She is a woman who deeply desires freedom, but marriage has taken it away from her. In the end, when she sees that her husband is still alive, she cannot bear the shock. She realises that her short moment of freedom is gone forever. The doctors say she died of the joy that kills, meaning too much happiness but in truth, she dies because she knows she can never live freely again. Chopin uses strong symbols in the story. The open window represents Mrs. Mallard’s hope and new freedom. Her weak heart stands for the pressure and pain she felt in marriage when her heart finally stops beating, it also means she has gained her final freedom from the cage of marriage. These contrasts between life and death, freedom and control, joy and sorrow make the story powerful and meaningful.
5. Significance of the title
The Story of an Hour shows the deep emotional change Mrs. Mallard goes through in just one hour. During this short time, she hears the news of her husband’s death, feels great sorrow, then discovers a new sense of freedom, and finally faces another shock when she finds out that her husband is still alive. These quick changes in her emotions highlight the main ideas of the story, such as how society controls women, how marriage limits their freedom, and why women’s independence matters. Mrs. Mallard and her husband did love each other, and she would have cried for him, but at the same time, she feels relieved because his death gives her freedom from the rules and duties that society and marriage forced upon her. This shows how hard it is for women to find personal freedom in a world ruled by men. Louise Mallard’s emotional journey in that single hour helps Kate Chopin reveal the true position of women in her time. The title The Story of an Hour is very meaningful because it perfectly captures the powerful change that takes place in Mrs. Mallard’s life within just one hour.
6. Word meanings
| Word | Meaning | |
| 1. | afflicted | suffering from pain |
| 2. | veiled | covered |
| 3. | concealing | hiding something |
| 4. | disaster | a very bad accident |
| 5. | hastened | moved |
| 6. | paralyzed | unable to move |
| 7. | abandonment | giving up |
| 8. | aquiver | shaking |
| 9. | peddler | a person who sells things by going from place to place |
| 10. | faintly | weakly |
| 11. | twittering | high sounds like birds |
| 12. | glance | a quick look |
| 13. | striving | trying hard |
| 14. | slender | thin |
| 15. | monstrous | very wrong or shocking |
| 16. | coursing | moving or flowing quickly |
| 17. | bitter | full of pain or anger |
| 18. | bending | moving your body |
| 19. | repression | desires |
| 20. | stare | to look fixedly at something |
| 21. | elusive | understand |
| 22. | bosom | chest or heart area |
| 23. | tumultuously | in a wild or excited way |
| 24. | persistence | continuing to do something firmly |
| 25. | illumination | light |
| 26. | impulse | a sudden strong desire to do something |
| 27. | elixir | a magical liquid that gives life or energy |
| 28. | arose | started |
| 29. | triumph | a great success |
| 30. | latchkey | a key used to open a door lock |
| 31. | disease | an illness or sickness |
7. Additional Multiple choice questions & answers (MCQs)
1. What health problem did Mrs. Mallard have?
(a) Headache
(b) Heart trouble
(c) Fever
(d) Weak eyesight
Ans: (b) Heart trouble
2. Who first told Mrs. Mallard about her husband’s death?
(a) Her sister Josephine
(b) Her friend Richards
(c) A doctor
(d) A neighbour
Ans: (a) Her sister Josephine
3. How did Mrs. Mallard react after hearing the news?
(a) She became silent
(b) She cried suddenly
(c) She fainted
(d) She laughed
Ans: (b) She cried suddenly
4. Where did Mrs. Mallard go after crying?
(a) To the garden
(b) To her room
(c) To the kitchen
(d) To the street
Ans: (b) To her room
5. What did Mrs. Mallard see outside her window?
(a) Snow and wind
(b) Dead trees
(c) New spring life
(d) A train accident
Ans: (c) New spring life
6. What word did Mrs. Mallard keep whispering to herself?
(a) Happy
(b) Free
(c) Safe
(d) Alive
Ans: (b) Free
7. What did Mrs. Mallard feel about her future life?
(a) It would be full of sadness
(b) It would be her own and free
(c) It would be lonely and empty
(d) It would be short and painful
Ans: (b) It would be her own and free
8. What happened when Mrs. Mallard came out of her room?
(a) She went for a walk
(b) She smiled and looked happy
(c) She sat down quietly
(d) She fainted
Ans: (b) She smiled and looked happy
9. Who opened the front door at the end of the story?
(a) A doctor
(b) Josephine
(c) Brently Mallard
(d) Richards
Ans: (c) Brently Mallard
10. What caused Mrs. Mallard’s death?
(a) Too much crying
(b) Shock and heart attack
(c) A fall from stairs
(d) An illness
Ans: (b) Shock and heart attack
11. What kind of feeling filled Mrs. Mallard’s heart?
(a) Fear
(b) Freedom
(c) Anger
(d) Regret
Ans: (b) Freedom
12. What was Mrs. Mallard’s full name?
(a) Louise Mallard
(b) Josephine Mallard
(c) Kate Mallard
(d) Mary Mallard
Ans: (a) Louise Mallard
13. Who was Brently Mallard?
(a) Her father
(b) Her husband
(c) Her friend
(d) Her neighbour
Ans: (b) Her husband
14. What happened when Mrs. Mallard came out of her room?
(a) She went for a walk
(b) She smiled and looked happy
(c) She sat down quietly
(d) She fainted
Ans: (b) She smiled and looked happy
15. Where had Brently Mallard been during the accident?
(a) Far from the place
(b) At home
(c) In the hospital
(d) In the same train
Ans: (a) Far from the place
16. What is the main theme of the story?
(a) Love and loss
(b) Freedom and self-identity
(c) Friendship and loyalty
(d) Dreams and success
Ans: (b) Freedom and self-identity
17. What does Mrs. Mallard’s death symbolize?
(a) Weak health
(b) Loss of hope
(c) The conflict between freedom and control
(d) The danger of happiness
Ans: (c) The conflict between freedom and control
18. Who wrote The Story of an Hour?
(a) Katherine Mansfield
(b) Kate Chopin
(c) Virginia Woolf
(d) Jane Austen
Ans: (b) Kate Chopin
19. When Mr. Mallard came home, who cried?
(a) Louise
(b) Richards
(c) Josephine
(d) None of them
Ans: (b) Richards
20. What happened to Mrs. Mallard when Brently came?
(a) She welcomed him
(b) She became angry
(c) She left the room
(d) She died
Ans: (d) She died
21. Louise Mallard died because she was shocked—
(a) to find treasure
(b) to see her husband alive
(c) to hear of her husband’s death
(d) none of these
Ans: (b) to see her husband alive
22. Mrs. Mallard died because of—
(a) breathing trouble
(b) kidney trouble
(c) heart disease
(d) liver trouble
Ans: (c) heart disease
23. The doctors said Mrs. Mallard died from—
(a) too much work
(b) deep sadness
(c) too much joy
(d) kidney failure
Ans: (c) too much joy
24. The open window symbolised—
(a) her sadness
(b) the end of life
(c) new life and freedom
(d) nature’s beauty
Ans: (c) new life and freedom
25. The front door was opened with a—
(a) push
(b) latchkey
(c) bang
(d) none of these
Ans: (b) latchkey
26. Who came in through the front door?
(a) A policeman
(b) A postman
(c) Brently Mallard
(d) Josephine
Ans: (c) Brently Mallard
27. Mr. Mallard was carrying—
(a) a briefcase and an umbrella
(b) a suitcase and an umbrella
(c) a travel bag and an umbrella
(d) a grip sack and an umbrella
Ans: (d) a grip sack and an umbrella
28. Brently Mallard was surprised because—
(a) Louise was crying
(b) Louise fainted
(c) Josephine fainted
(d) Josephine was crying
Ans: (d) Josephine was crying
29. Mrs. Mallard was suffering from—
(a) kidney trouble
(b) breathing trouble
(c) hearing trouble
(d) heart trouble
Ans: (d) heart trouble
30. Who told Mrs. Mallard the sad news?
(a) Her sister
(b) A messenger
(c) A phone call
(d) Her husband’s friend
Ans: (a) Her sister
31. Richards was—
(a) Mrs. Mallard’s friend
(b) Mr. Mallard’s friend
(c) Mrs. Mallard’s neighbour
(d) Josephine’s husband
Ans: (b) Mr. Mallard’s friend
32. Richards first heard the death news—
(a) by telegram
(b) in the newspaper office
(c) by phone call
(d) from Josephine
Ans: (b) in the newspaper office
33. Mr. Mallard’s first name was—
(a) Bennett
(b) Bretly
(c) Bartley
(d) Brently
Ans: (d) Brently
34. Mr. Mallard always looked at Louise with—
(a) love
(b) hatred
(c) revenge
(d) indifference
Ans: (a) love
35. Louise Mallard wanted to live her future life for—
(a) herself
(b) her sister
(c) her husband
(d) others
Ans: (a) herself
36. Kate Chopin describes love as—
(a) useless
(b) the most precious thing
(c) common
(d) a mystery
Ans: (d) a mystery
37. Josephine was afraid Louise would make herself—
(a) mad with grief
(b) sick with grief
(c) sad
(d) none of these
Ans: (b) sick with grief
38. In the list of people killed in the train accident, Mr. Mallard’s name was—
(a) first
(b) last
(c) second last
(d) in the middle
Ans: (a) first
39. Richards confirmed the news by—
(a) a phone call
(b) a newspaper report
(c) a telegram
(d) a messenger
Ans: (b) a newspaper report
40. Mrs. Mallard first reacted to the news by—
(a) crying in Richards’ arms
(b) crying in her sister’s arms
(c) laughing
(d) staying silent
Ans: (b) crying in her sister’s arms
41. In her room, facing the window, there was—
(a) a swing
(b) a soft armchair
(c) a sofa
(d) a bed
Ans: (b) a soft armchair
42. The look in Mrs. Mallard’s eyes showed—
(a) fear
(b) worry
(c) clear thinking
(d) dullness
Ans: (c) clear thinking
43. Mrs. Mallard’s feeling came to her like—
(a) running from the forest
(b) flying from the sky
(c) swimming from the lake
(d) creeping from the sky
Ans: (b) flying from the sky
44. The first word that came from Mrs. Mallard’s lips was—
(a) freedom
(b) free
(c) joy
(d) relief
Ans: (b) free
45. Mrs. Mallard said the word “free”—
(a) twice
(b) ten times
(c) three times
(d) seven times
Ans: (c) three times
46. Josephine asked Louise to—
(a) open the door
(b) listen to her
(c) close the door
(d) identify Brently’s body
Ans: (a) open the door
47. Mrs. Mallard enjoyed her freedom like—
(a) a glass of wine
(b) an endless experience
(c) a beginner
(d) the elixir of life
Ans: (d) the elixir of life
48. Louise Mallard prayed for—
(a) a short life
(b) a happy life
(c) a long life
(d) an easy life
Ans: (c) a long life
49. Louise opened the door because her—
(a) husband
(b) maid
(c) husband’s friend
(d) sister
Ans: (d) sister
50. In Louise’s eyes there was—
(a) joy of victory
(b) sorrow for her husband
(c) proud excitement
(d) despair
Ans: (c) proud excitement
51. Louise walked down the stairs like—
(a) a goddess of victory
(b) a goddess of self-love
(c) a goddess of wealth
(d) none of these
Ans: (a) a goddess of victory
52. In front of the Mallards’ house there was—
(a) a playground
(b) a lake
(c) an open square
(d) a park
Ans: (c) an open square
53. The air was filled with the smell of—
(a) daisies
(b) roses
(c) rain
(d) storm
Ans: (c) rain
54. The sparrows were chirping—
(a) on the tree
(b) on the window
(c) in the eaves
(d) none of these
Ans: (c) in the eaves
55. Mrs. Mallard was shaken by—
(a) fear
(b) worry
(c) a sob
(d) happiness
Ans: (c) a sob
56. Mrs. Mallard’s face showed—
(a) fairness
(b) calmness
(c) strength and control
(d) all of these
Ans: (c) strength and control
57. The main idea of the story is—
(a) power of love
(b) sadness of death
(c) false social pride
(d) marriage and freedom
Ans: (d) marriage and freedom
58. The ending shows—
(a) life and death are unpredictable
(b) women can’t be free
(c) both a & b
(d) none of these
Ans: (a) life and death are unpredictable
59. The ending is an example of—
(a) dramatic irony
(b) comic relief
(c) verbal irony
(d) situational irony
Ans: (a) dramatic irony
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