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Summary Of Trifles By Susan Glaspell

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The play Trifles is a one-act play written by Susan Glaspell. This play is a murder mystery. The husband of Mrs. Wright, John Wright, is strangled with a rope around his neck, but no one knows who did it. The main suspect, however, is his wife, Mrs. Wright. The farmer, Lewis Hale, discovered Mr. Wrights death when he went into his home to try to convince him to be in a party telephone line with him. County attorney, the town sheriff, and farmer Lewis Hale begin to investigate the house to try to solve the murder. Between the three of them, none can figure out what happened between Mr. and Mrs. Wright. The real investigators turn out to be Mrs. Peters and Mrs. Hale. They find out exactly how their relationship was and how it ended. This …show more content…

Wright makes this clear. Mrs. Hale and Mrs. Peters, together, solve this crime. Mrs. Hale says, “No, Wright wouldn’t like the bird – a thing that sang. She used to sing. He killed that, too” (781). By killing the bird, Mr. Wright silenced Mrs. Wright. Mrs. Wright used to sing in a choir, and just like her, the canary bird sang also. Mr. Wright killed the canary by strangling it with a rope. When Minnie Foster, Mrs. Wright, was young she was, “kind of like a bird herself – real sweet and pretty, but kind of timid and – fluttery” (780), but according to Mrs. Hale, things changed. When she married John Wright, things changed. When a woman gets married, she is immediately dominated by the man. She takes on her husband’s name; therefore she is his and is changed for life. Mrs. Wright was trapped in the marriage, just like the bird was trapped in the cage. Being that Mr. Wright killed her bird, she was sick of her marriage and her husband. She plotted her revenge. She gave him a taste of his own medicine. As told by Mrs. Peters, “Killing a man while he slept, slipping a rope around his neck that choked the life out of him” (782). She strangled him with a rope just like he did to her canary. When Mrs. Peters and Mrs. Hale discovered this, they decided to keep it to themselves because the men had made fun of them for paying attention to the girly insignificant things. Throughout this play, Mrs. Peters and Mrs. Hale make evident just how suffocating and abusive

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