Other important symbols in the yellow wallpaper are the nursery the barred windows and the nailed down bed.
The yellow wallpaper bed nailed to floor.
Having trouble understanding the yellow wallpaper.
However her husband disapproves of this practice and chastises her whenever he sees her writing.
When everyone is about to leave the nailed down bed is the only thing left in the room and the narrator describes it as fairly gnawed believing the children to be the culprits 655.
The yellow wallpaper is formatted as the narrator s journal entries.
She takes up writing whenever she needs relief and often writes in the second person as though she were speaking to a friend.
The fact that the bed in her room is nailed down is an ominous sign that the narrator of the yellow wallpaper is being treated like a prisoner who might move the bed to try to escape or harm.
There is a bed bolted to the floor the wallpaper is peeling off and the windows are barred.
It is heavy and old but most curiously it is nailed to the floor.
The nursery is said to represent 19th century society s tendency to view women as children while the barred windows symbolize the emotional social and intellectual prison in which women of that era were kept.
The bed is mentioned frequently throughout the story.