Children In Chopin's The Awakening

Words: 253
Pages: 2

Edna’s children have always been a mystery in Edna’s life. While she and Madame Ratignolle are talking on the beach about Edna’s childhood and past life, Edna says this about her children:
Chopin uses the absence of Edna’s children to show how Edna is fighting the truth of whether or not she truly thinks that her kids are withholding her from having the freedom of being an individual women. Edna uses the adjectives “uneven” and “impulsive” to described the affection she has toward her children. Children are mostly described as being sweet, kind, and that they love them, but Edna’s affection for them is the opposite. After saying that “their absence was a sort of relief”, Edna says, “though she did not admit this, even to herself.” A basic