Overview
The scene is the living room/kitchen of a small house on an isolated
country road, which is shared by Jessie and her mother. Jessie's father
is dead; her loveless marriage ended in divorce; her absent son is a
petty thief and ne'er-do-well; her last job didn't work out and, in
general, her life is stale and unprofitable. As the play begins Jessie
asks for her father's service revolver and calmly announces that she
intends to kill herself. At first her mother refuses to take her
seriously, but as Jessie sets about tidying the house and making lists
of things to be looked after, her sense of desperate helplessness begins
to build. In the end, with the inexorability of genuine tragedy, she
can only stand by, stunned and unbelieving, as Jessie quietly closes and
locks her bedroom door and ends her profound unhappiness in one fatal,
stunning and deeply disturbing moment—a moment never to be forgotten by
those who have witnessed, and come to understand, her plight.