Analyzing Literary Elements
In Trifles, two plots run
parallel: the men have an off-stage story as they hunt for clues
to the murder of Mr. Wright; the
women have an on-stage story as they unravel the
life of Mrs. Wright. The tension
in the story’s plot has to do with the rate at which
Mrs. Hale and Mrs. Peters come to
understand what has happened. Suspense builds
as the two women, and the
audience, figure out who killed Mr. Wright and why. The
suspense is heightened by the
moral dilemma of whether the women should conceal
incriminating evidence — and
whether they’ll get caught doing it. Of course, one
reason the men in the story don’t
figure out what happened is that they dismiss the
things the women say as mere
trifles.
Trifles has two female
characters — Mrs. Hale and Mrs. Peters — and three male
characters — Mr. Hale, the
sheriff, and the county attorney. Mr. and Mrs. Wright, though
not on stage, have a presence as
well. Over the course of the play, Mrs. Hale and Mrs.
Peters change, feeling less certain
about their own beliefs, disappointed in themselves for not being better
friends to Mrs. Wright, and empathetic to her desperate loneliness.
The men don’t change. We learn about
all of the characters through their conversation,
especially in the way the
conversation changes when the men are involved.
The setting of Trifles helps us
understand character and also moves the plot along.
The play takes place in an empty
farmhouse, but the setting is more complicated than
that. The men go to the bedroom
where the murder occurred, while the women focus
on the kitchen. Both the men and
the women note the disheveled condition in which
Mrs. Wright left it, yet the
women are protective of her as well, understanding that she
probably wouldn’t have left such
a mess if she hadn’t been unexpectedly taken from
her home. They also come to
understand that the mess (which is a part of the setting)
may be a sign of the “sudden
feeling” the sheriff and attorney are looking for. We learn
that the community is close and
that Mrs. Peters is a newcomer. Mrs. Hale has known
the woman under suspicion for
many years, and it is through that familiarity that she
understands what has happened and
makes the decision she does.
Certain symbols are repeated in Trifles. The cold is brutal
and unrelenting. The
characters move toward the stove
whenever possible, and the cold is a repeated subject
of conversation. Mr. Wright is
depicted as being cold and unloving, making the
cold a clear symbol of a life
without affection or even company. Other symbols might
be Mrs. Wright’s quilt pieces,
the choice between quilting and knotting, the dead bird
and the broken birdcage, the
preserves (or trifles), and even the half-done chores.
Each of these things is more
fraught with meaning than it at first seems.
So, although the subject of Trifles is the unraveling
of a mystery and the decision
to protect the murderer, some of
its themes might be:
• Sexism can make people blind to
the truth.
• People may take desperate
measures when they feel entrapped in a loveless
marriage, in a cold isolated
house, or in a society that doesn’t value them.
• Someone who is a criminal by
one set of social standards might be a victim
according to another set of
social standards. Or, in other words, justice is not
always the same as the rule of
law.
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