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Unhappiness In Edith Wharton's Ethan Frome

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In Edith Wharton’s novel, Ethan Frome, Wharton introduces Frome’s ironic views on sickness and accidents early in the novel to convey the idea that unhappiness brought upon by a person’s own choice of obligations and duties can eventually tire them and bring them to act on desires to escape these responsibilities when given the chance for freedom and happiness, no matter the consequences that may ensure. Ethan Frome spent years studying as an engineer, but eventually found himself abandoning his dream, “left alone, after his father’s accident, to carry the burden of farm and mill, he had had no time for convivial loiterings in the village” and lived in a house that “grew more oppressive than that of the fields” “[after] his mother fell ill” …show more content…

After marrying his cousin, Zeena, who helped take care of his sickly mother, they made plans to sell the farm and move away, but, as time quickly passed, Zeena fell ill as well, leaving Frome to take care of her as well. He grew tired of taking care of his sickly wife, and even considered leaving with her cousin, Mattie, before realizing how “it was only by incessant labour and personal supervision that Ethan drew a meagre living from his land, and his wife, even if she were in better health than she imagined, could never carry such a burden alone” (Wharton 68). Ethan had abandoned his dreams of becoming an engineer to care for his sickly mother, and after her death, he was making plans for his now brighter future before he was forced to abandon those dreams to yet again to care for another sickly person. His desire to leave his wife is evident that he’s unhappy and tired of caring for her, but his realization about her inability to survive without him, due to her ill state, caused him to second doubt his idea about abandoning her and making him return to his responsibility of caring for

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