Ethan Frome, the
main character in the book entitled Ethan Frome, by Edith Wharton, has many
complex problems
going on at the same time. His family has died and he has a wife that is
continually sick, and the only form of happiness he has is from his wife's
cousin Mattie. This,
however, at times
proves to be hard because of Ethan's wifes interference. Nothing seems to be
going in Ethan's favor. The main theme of the book is failure, and this is
shown through marrying his wife, not being able to stand up to his wife, and
his involvement concerning the "smash up." The first way failure is shown in the book is
through the marriage of Ethan and his wife. He married her because she had
tried to help his mother recover from an illness, and once his mother died he
could not bear the thought of living in the house alone.
His wife was seven
years his senior and always seemed to have some kind of illness. It seemed all
she ever did was complain, and he
resented this
because it stifled his growing soul. Since his wife was continuously ill, and
her cousin needed a place to stay, they took her in to help around the house.
Ethan took an immediate propensity to her cousin, Mattie, because she brought a
bright light upon his dismal day. He seemed to have found someone that cared
for him, was always happy and could share his youth, unlike his sickly wife who
always nagged him. He longed to be with Mattie, however he had
loyalty to his
wife. Being married to the wrong person proved to be Ethan's first
failure. Ethan's second failure was not
being able to stand up against his wife. His wife claimed that a new doctor
said that she was extremely sick, and needed more help around the house. She
told him without any discussion that Mattie had to go. Ethan could not find the
words to make her alter her decision. His wife also decided that Mattie had to
leave the next day itself and Ethan could not do
anything about
it. It was stated in the book that his wife had the upper hand in the house by
the
line "Now
she [his wife] had mastered him [Ethan] and he obeyed her." Ethan just
could not find the right things to say and it was because of his failure of not
being able to stand up to his wife, he was going to lose the only thing that
made him happy. Ethan's last failure was
the way he modified his and Mattie's lives regarding the "smash up."
He so desperately wanted to run away with Mattie, but he could not because his
practical sense told him
it was not
feasible to do so. Mattie wanted so desperately to be with Ethan, that she
suggested in order to stay together forever, was to die together. It was
Ethan's job to steer into the tree with the sled so that it looked like an
accidental death instead of suicide. Instead of running square into the tree,
he did not hit the tree right and it did not kill either of them. Instead it
just injured them ,
and these
injuries stayed with them forever. In this way Ethan had his last failure in
not exceeding
to die with his
love, instead he had to live with the guilt from his wife, the injured Mattie,
and
broken
dreams. In these three ways, of marrying
the wrong person, not being able to stand up to his wife, and
incidents that
come from the smash up, proves that the main theme of the book is failure. It
seemed that everything Ethan tried to do, worked against his favor. With all
the incidents that
happened it
seemed inevitable that his life would always be a string of failure.
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