Wednesday, September 4, 2019
Lilys Choice in The House of Mirth Essay -- House Mirth Essays
Lily's Choice in The House of Mirth     Ã     Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã   Near the beginning of The  House of Mirth, Wharton establishes that Lily would not indeed have cared to  marry a man who was merely rich: "she was secretly ashamed of her mothers crude  passion for money" (38). Lily, like the affluent world she loves, has a strange  relationship with money. She needs money to buy the type of life she has been  raised to live, and her relative poverty makes her situation precarious.  Unfortunately, Lily has not been trained to obtain money through a wide variety  of methods. Wharton's wealthy socialites do not all procure money in the same  way: money can be inherited, earned working in a hat shop, won at cards, traded  scandalously between married men and unmarried women, or speculated for in the  stock market. For Lily, the world of monetary transactions presents formidable  difficulties; she was born, in a sense, to marry into money, and she cannot seem  to come to it any other way. She is incapable of mastering the world of ec   onomic  transactions, to the point that a direct exchange is repulsive to her highly  specialized nature. Finally, these exchanges and the obstacles they present  prove to be the end of her, and Wharton's text joins naturalism's Darwinian  rules to an economic world. Whether Lily's death is accidental or a suicide does  not really matter in Wharton's vision, because the choice facing Lily at the end  of the novel--to make a transaction or to make a transaction--necessitates her  death. Near the end of the novel, Wharton's protagonist must make a choice--but  both options are part of the environment in which Lily has not evolved to  survive. In Lily's attempt at wage-earning and her moral dilemma regarding  Rosedale's marria...              ...1975.     Lyde, Marilyn Jones.Ã   Edith Wharton, Convention and Morality in the Work  of a Novelist.Ã   Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 1959.     Miller, Mandy.Ã   Edith Wharton Page.Ã   19 Nov. 2002Ã  Ã  Ã    <http://www.Kutztown.edu/faculty/Reagan.Wharton.html>.      Pizer, Donald.Ã   "The Naturalism of Edith Wharton's The House of  Mirth."Ã   Twentieth Century Literature  41.2Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã   (1995): 241-8.     Rehak, Melanie. Rev. of The House of Mirth, by Edith Wharton.Ã    Amazon.com 28 Oct. 2002Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã    Ã  Ã  Ã  <http://www.amazon.com/execs/obidos/ASIN/055321320/hallbook/>.     Ã  Ruschmann, Paul.Ã   "Climbing the Social Ladder...In the Wrong  Direction."Ã   Rev. of The House of Mirth, by Edith Wharton.Ã    Epinions.com 28 Oct. 2002      Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã    <http://www.epinions.com/./book-review-6AF6-7A25B6D-39DA>.     Wharton, Edith. The House of Mirth. (1905) New York: Signet,. 1998.     Ã                        
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