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Sunday, February 17, 2019

Free Awakening Essays: The Pigeon House :: Chopin Awakening Essays

The Pigeon House in The Awakening   In a little four-room phratry around the corner. It looks so cozy, so inviting and restful.(79) With this description Chopin introduces the reader to Ednas new residence, which is affectionately cognise as the pigeon signaling. The pigeon house provides Edna with the comfort and security that her old house lacked. The soundlessness that the pigeon house grants to Edna allows her to experience a freedom that she has never felt before. The start taste of this newfound freedom is the satisfaction that Edna feels in being subject to provide for herself with her own money. The fact that she no longer has to rely on her husbands money breaks the last tie that she had with him I do it I shall like it, like the feeling of freedom and independence.(80) In her brainpower now, her marriage is dead, and Mr. Pontellier has no control over her. Financial freedom is not the only thing the pigeon house gives to Edna it also allows her both physi cal and ghostly freedom. When Edna kisses Arobin in her husbands house, she feels reproach looking at her from the international things around her which he had provided for her external existence.(84) Yet, her first night at the pigeon house she spends with Arobin, and this time feels no reproach or regret. As for the spiritual ramifications provided by her new home, Chopin writes, There was a feeling of descending in the societal scale, with the corresponding sense of having risen in the spiritual.., she began to look with her own eyes... no longer was she content to feed upon opinion.(94) The pigeon house provides a way for Edna to send off from the society that she hates. She has the freedom to make the decisions in her life now and she decides that she is release to alive life by her own rules, not the rules that society has rigid out for her. When she is within her home, she is free from the pressures of being the mother women which society forces her to be. The pigeon h ouse nourishes this newfound freedom, allowing it to grow and gain strength. Without the environment provided by the pigeon house, it is doubtful as to whether Edna would have ever awakened from the stupefied state that society was forcing her to live in.

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