BAG TECHNIQUE Bag technique-a tool making use of public health bag through wh...
Trifles significant event
1. Trifles by Susan Glaspell
Abdul Wafi bin Abdul Halim
Amzar bin Ahmad Annuar
Mohd Al hafiz bin Mohd Sabri
Khairul Arif bin Razi
Muhamad Alif bin Ismail
2. Significant event
Well, women are used to worrying over trifles
Mr. Hale,
He suggests that men should forgive them for their foibles
because they are only women and thus deal every day in
small, unimportant details. Furthermore, his words imply that
because women deal in trifles, women must also be trifles.
3. Significant event
But, Mrs. Peters –look at it! It’s neck! Look at it’s neck!
It’s all—other side to.
Mrs. Hale,
• When gathering up the quilting material, they discover a fancy little
box. Inside, wrapped in silk is a dead canary. Its neck has been
wrung. The implication is that Minnie’s husband did not like the
canary’s beautiful song (a symbol of his wife’s desire for freedom
and happiness). So, Mr. Wright busted the cage door and strangled
the bird.
• Mrs. Hale and Mrs. Peters do not tell the men about their discovery.
Instead, Mrs. Hale puts the box with the deceased bird into her coat
pocket – resolving not to tell the men about this little “trifle” they
have uncovered.