Gilman mirrors the house description to the narrator's life as isolated, due to the way her husband treated her nervousness. Gilman achieves this by describing the house as, “alone, standing well back from the road” and “there are hedges and walls and gates that lock”. Gilman use the word, “road”, to represents society to state that the narrator been separated from society. The “hedges”, “walls” and “gates” represents how the narrator been blocked in from reality and people. Thus, the author creates the effect of the narrator’s isolated life. The author creates the phrase, “the windows are barred”, …show more content…
Gilman creates the phrases, “I never saw worse paper in my life” and, “the color is repellent, almost revolting”, to directly state that the narrator does not like the wallpaper at all. However, later throughout the story the narrator states, “ I grown quite fond of the paper” to show the narrator’s acceptance towards the wall paper. In addition to, the narrator states, “I am here and no person touches this paper but me” to display her obsession of the wall paper by stating that nobody should touch it except her. Not only the wallpaper the narrator grew an acceptance to, also the house itself she grew to accept it, due to her obsession to the wallpaper. The narrator says, “I wished he[John] would take me away”, the narrator says this because, she does not like the house. However, later on in the story the narrator states, “I don’t want to leave now until I have found it out”, which shows that the narrator grew an acceptance to the house due to her obsession of the yellow wallpaper. Gilman creates these phrases to show the narrator’s growing madness by the narrator hating the wallpaper, then becoming obsessed with the wallpaper, due to her husband isolating her in the