Behind the wallpaper
The narrator thought she was the woman behind the wallpaper.
there are several themes... - guilt (mrs danvers for leaving rebecca) - first love (maxm and narrator) - insecurity (of the narrator at manderly) - jealousy (of 'the other woman') - battle between good ad evil (mrs danvers and rebecca evil, narrator good) - holding on to/forgetting the past (how rebecca's prescence lives on despite her death) - identity (the narrator's struggle to establish her identity) and some others...
Nana criticizes the narrator’s legs, she thinks that the narrator’s legs are too thin and long for women. “If any woman decides to come into the world with her two legs, then she should select legs that have meat on them: with good calves. Because you are sure such legs would support solid hips. And a woman must have solid hips to be able to have children.”
Can be either, depends on point of view written from
I believe it is an English way of saying adamn fine woman. if you excuse the language.
Answer this What does the narrator believe is trapped behind the wallpaper? question…
The narrator believes the other woman is trapped behind the yellow wallpaper in the room. She sees a figure moving behind the wallpaper and becomes convinced that a woman is trapped and trying to escape.
the pattern of the wallpaper
A woman
The narrator in "The Yellow Wallpaper" believes that the woman she sees trapped in the wallpaper is actually herself. This realization symbolizes her own entrapment and descent into madness, as she feels trapped and oppressed in her marriage and society.
By peeling the wallpaper off the wall
The narrator in "The Yellow Wallpaper" believes that she has fully transformed into the woman trapped behind the wallpaper, symbolizing her descent into madness and loss of identity. She feels liberated by her confinement and finally escapes by tearing down the wallpaper, losing touch with reality.
The narrator thought she was the woman behind the wallpaper.
Megan is the narrator of The Three Century-Woman.
I certainly believe so. I am a woman and I love another woman.
The narrator first sees a vague, unsettling pattern in the wallpaper that eventually intensifies into a complex, chaotic design. She becomes increasingly fixated on the wallpaper's pattern, which she believes hides a trapped woman trying to escape. This image symbolizes the narrator's own feelings of entrapment and oppression within her marriage and society.
The narrator is neither a "man or a woman" since the narrator speaks in the plural rather than the singular. In that sense the narrator can be thought of as several or all of the townspeople telling the story.