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Susan Glaspell-Personal Narrative

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Mrs. Hale: (Mrs. Hale, followed by her husban, comes out of the house while covering her pocket) See you later Mrs. Peters, I wish good luck to Mrs. Wright (They leave the room).
Mrs. Peters: Yes Mrs. Hale.
Sheriff: (He stays in the house while looking how the rest of the people goes out of the room. He holds Mrs. Peters arm) Well, we haven´t find anything that gives us a clue of who kill Mr. Wright.
Mrs. Peters: (She is nervous but holding her words in her mouth).
Sheriff: I will revise the evidence once more. I am still quite not sure of everything. There is something weird. But, why am I saying this to you? Women don´t quite understand this serious things, just kitchen and cleanning things (short laught and pass his hand on Mrs. Peter’s shoulder).
Mrs. Peters: I believe Mrs. Wright wasn´t as guilty as you …show more content…
Mrs. Peter: Maybe he just had troubles, probably he was unhappy or depressed. He could suicide or something like that. (She decides not to tell about the box with the bird).
Sheriff: I need to see the evidence again, once more, once more… Go home woman, I will be back after I clear the information in my brain (he goes upstair recounting at loud every piece of evidence he has).
Mrs. Peters just leaves the house thinking hopefully Mrs. Hale throws out the bird with the cage. In a different setting, out of the farms. Mrs. Hale carves a hole in the ground and put the bird in cage on it. She dissapears evidence that blames Mrs. Wright. As woman Mrs. Peters and Mrs. Hale dicede to argument in favor of Mrs. Wright. They understand how much Mrs. Wright could been suffering married to a man who disapear happiness in her face. The law decided to put in jail to Mrs. Wright, but after some months of absence of evidence Mrs. Wright could get out of it. To her return home she decided to move away and forget the tory and the people there. Nobody ever knew from her

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