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A Jury Of Her Peers. [Copyright, 1917, by The Crowell Publishing Company. Copyright, 1918, by Susan Glaspell Cook.] BY SUSAN GLASPELL. From Every Week. When Martha Hale opened the storm-door and got a cut of the north wind, she ran back for her big woolen scarf.
18 mar 2017 · A short story from The Best Short Stories of 1917, edited by Edward J. O'Brien. Uploaded to the Internet Archive by user galdraken. Addeddate. 2017-03-18 09:36:18.
16 sty 2023 · A Jury Of Her Peers by Susan Glaspell. Publication date 2004 Publisher Kessinger Publishing, LLC Collection internetarchivebooks; inlibrary; printdisabled Contributor Internet Archive Language ... Pdf_module_version 0.0.20 Ppi 360 Rcs_key 24143 Republisher_date 20230116171333 Republisher_operator associate-jessa-lubiano@archive.org ...
260 A JURY OF HER PEERS. and said all the women-folks liked the telephones, and. that in this lonesome stretch of road it would be a good. thing — well, I said to Harry that that was what 1 was. going to say — though 1 said at the same time that I.
Glaspell’s assertion that Mrs. Hale is called away by something “farther from ordinary than anything that had ever happened in Dickson County,” establishes this town as quiet and small. Glaspell thus creates a mysterious, suspenseful tone at the very start of the story.
Susan Glaspell. WHEN Martha Hale opened the storm−door and got a cut of the north wind, she ran back for her big woolen scarf. As she hurriedly wound that round her head her eye made a scandalized sweep of her kitchen.
"A Jury of Her Peers", written in 1917, [1] is a short story by Susan Glaspell, loosely based on the 1900 murder of John Hossack (not to be confused with the famed abolitionist), which Glaspell covered while working as a journalist [2] for the Des Moines Daily News. [1]