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FREE ESSAY ON "THE STORM" BY KATE CHOPIN

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"The Storm" by Kate Chopin
A thematic analysis. -- 650 words;

Kate Chopin's "The Storm"
A discussion of the main theme in Kate Chopin's "The Storm". -- 1,210 words;

Kate Chopin’s Literary Works
An analysis of the books, "The Storm" and "The Story of an Hour" by Kate Chopin. -- 2,160 words; MLA

Kate Chopin's Views on Marriage
An analysis of Kate Chopin's view of marriage from two of her works: "The Story of an Hour" and "The Storm". -- 720 words;

Kate Chopin
A summary of the main works of Kate Chopin and the reactions to them. -- 1,733 words; MLA

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"THE STORM" BY KATE CHOPIN

Is Bad Weather an Excuse for Deceit?
In the story "The Storm", Kate Chopin plots a situation in which two people surrender to
their physical desires. Chopin wrote fiction stories in the late 19th century. She was
condemned due to the immorality presented in her work. At her times, woman was considered
to be very innocent, and always faithful to her husband. In Chopin's work one sees a
totally different view of a woman's behavior. She is not a popular writer of her era
because of her crude works; the audience of her period could not justify her stories. In
the story "the storm", Kate Chopin by hiding the immoral behavior of her characters
behind the fear of bad weather is being ironic. 
The writer tries really hard to convince her readers that Calixta (the female character)
was a victim of her fear of the bad storm. Kate uses phrases such as "exclaimed", "put
her hands to her eyes, and with a cry" etc. to gather sympathy from her readers for
Calixta. Right before the act of betrayal comes in the plot, the heroine is worried about
her child and that instead of being one of the pathos makes her look guiltier. As Calixta
remembers that she is a mother of a child still it does not stop her from having sex with
Alcee. Kate describes in detail the destruction the storm causes, "The rain was coming
down . . . the very boards they stood upon" presenting a frightful atmosphere, but she is
not able to justify Calixta's cheating on her husband or Alcee with his wife. 
Kate is being ironic in many instances during the plot of the story. For example, the
four-year-old child of Calixta, Bibi is presented to be brave and not scared of the storm
"Bibi laid his little hand on his father's knee and was not afraid" compared to Calixta,
a grown up who looses her self-esteem due to her inner fear. Another example is when the
writer describes the emotions in Calixta's eyes during the act of betrayal, "As she
glanced up at him the fear in her liquid blue eyes had given place to a drowsy glean that
unconsciously betrayed a sensuous desire". It is ironic in this case because as the
writer builds up the plot, she constantly reminds her audience that 'the storm' is very
destructive and scary, but later the reader finds that the fear is gone and is replaced
by desire. It makes one think that the storm does not only destroy the characters'
belongings; it destroys the trust and faith on which their marriages were based on. 
Kate makes her audience go off the track by describing the act of deception. She makes
her readers forget that Calixta and Alcee are doing something wrong by getting in to
details of their sexual experience. However, if one reads closely they would find that
she is being sarcastic again when she makes the remark "without guile or trickery". It
makes the reader realize that at the 'Assumption' Alcee does not have Calixta because she
was a maiden, but now that both of them are married (to different people), does that
allow him to have her and is it not still 'guile'? 
Later in the story, Kate makes the guilty characters look resolute and which made her
audience exclaim in detest. After Calixta and Alcee had sex they do not feel guilty or
even regretful, instead Kate describes them to be delightful. "Calixta, on the gallery,
watched Alcee ride away. He turned and smiled at her with a beaming face; and she lifted
her pretty chin in the air and laughed aloud." After Calixta's husband and her child
returns home she is satisfied that they return safely but she does not show any regret on
what she has done. She is described to be very cheerful and full of energy. Her husband
thought she would be worried sick because of the storm and had brought her a can of
shrimps to make her feel better. Kate when says that " . . . they laughed so much and so
loud that anyone might have heard them as far away as Laballiere's" is being cynical
here. Cynical either because after having sex with Alcee, Calixta is described to be so
happy as if she was in a unhappy marriage before, or because Kate is showing to her
audience that a secret affair is what makes one more happy than a trustworthy marriage. 
Meanwhile Alcee is described to be happy too, and he writes to his wife and tells her
that she can stay longer at Bilioxi. When his wife receives the letter she is satisfied
because she actually taking a vacation from her marital life. "And the first free breath
since her marriage seemed to restore the pleasant liberty of her maiden days. Devoted as
she was to her husband, their intimate conjugal life was something which she was more
than willing to forego for a while." Kate is illustrating here that people in her era
were not happy in their marriages and they pursuit happiness elsewhere. In the end she
uses irony again "So the storm passed and everyone was happy", but awareness that comes
to a reader is that everyone was happy but they were not happy with their spouses. 
In the story "the storm", Kate Chopin is actually presenting the truth. She is describing
that in her era people were not faithful and the women were not as innocent as they were
portrayed in the society. She does not directly give us the situations but instead she
uses irony to prove her point. 

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