He has procured to provide the narrator the break from activities that he considers necessary for her well-being and improvement. On the other hand, she doubted the need for such a move and was curious if the home is haunted. John shows his compelling character toward his wife by mocking her fancies; a reaction in which the storyteller finds very regular for the fact that she clarifies one must expect such treatment in marriage. She even proposes the lack of concern for her feelings about the house and her sickness keeps her from getting well quicker. Her recommendation ends up being an apocalyptic prediction.
John decided against her wishes that his wife and he would sleep in the attic room of the house, which may have been a nursery at one point. Apparently, the room is more of a prison than a spot for children to play. The bed is fixed to the floor, and the windows have bars on them. The stairs have a gate at the top. However, what is even more aggravating to the narrator is the yellow wallpaper, peeling off the walls in strips. In the beginning, the pattern of the wallpaper surprises and upset the narrator’s emotion, but later her approach has a remarkable