Mary’s wedding dress is also seen as a symbol as a hidden object that reminds her of what she had lost in her youthful days. Her wedding dress brings back memories of her happiness with her father, her youth and beauty. The wedding dress is a piece of Mary’s history that is now dead to her, it was the one tangible item she held onto from the past. Mary states “how I loved that grown! It was so beautiful! Where is it now, I wonder? I used to take it out from time to time when I was lonely, but it always made me cry, so finally a long while ago” (O’Neill 980). After she had done this she wonders where she had hidden it, it was probably in the attic and she would need to look for it. The symbol of the hidden gown is an evidence that old dreams can remain by which present grief is to be measured. …show more content…
For Minnie, being isolated and her husband having taking the one thing that she could associated herself, pushed her to her breaking point which caused her to kill her husband. Lisa Crocker notes that “Noe points out the need to trace the chain of cause-and-effect behind Minnie's action before assigning guilt: "Alienated from her husband, powerless and silenced by . . . her marriage . . . Minnie is an unseen woman long before she murders John Wright" (46). Unseen both "literally" and "metaphorically," Minnie becomes a surrogate for all the invisible women in Glaspell's society (46). Now the reader can adhere to the Glaspell play “Trifles” when Mrs. Hale states “I don’t think a place’d be any cheerfuller for John Wright being in it. “(Glaspell 478). As judgmental as her statement may seem, the reader can identify that Minnie was estranged by her marriage and evidently because of her husband’s