Analysis Of Edith Wharton's Ethan Frome

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Finding himself in a small New England town of Starkfield during the winter, the narrator sets out to learn about the life of a mysterious local named Ethan Frome. Ethan Frome is a novel written by Edith Wharton, her writing style is characterized as simple and retrained, lives led by her main characters, is deceptive. Throughout the novel, Wharton builds up patterns of imagery, patterns of behavior and specially charged works. All of which serve a definite style and structure purpose. Her attention to minor details and her use of structure to relay Ethan’s complicated and tragic life story to readers enables her to portray her characters as victims of the rules of society while dealing with isolation and silence, love, and obstacles. Wharton …show more content…

The image of Ethan Frome is built around cold, ice and snow, and hues of white. The characters constantly complain about the cold weather and climactic scene hinges on the use of a winter sport-sledding-as a means of suicide. Initially found is physically and psychologically beauty in the drifts, flakes and icicles but eventually, the wintry imagery becomes overwhelming and oppressive. Wharton was far from making the residents lively, the atmosphere seemed to detain even more “the sluggish pulse of Starkfield” (Wharton 4). Nature declares war on Starkfield during the winter and forces the community into surrender by the use of Wharton metaphors: “the storms of February had pitched their white tents and the wild cavalry of March winds had charged down to their support; I began to understand why Starkfield emerged from its six months’ sage like a starved garrison capitulating without quarter” (Wharton 4). Winter shuts down the town of Starkfield, the village lay under a sheet of snow. The glaciation, isolation and rigidity of winter are symbolic of Ethan’s deadened and defeated vitality. He has only married Zeena to avoid spending a winter alone in the farmhouse after his mother’s death, a tactic that fails when she too falls silent and isolated, the marriage becomes buried under a “snow” of indifference and lack of …show more content…

Ethan tried to escape the isolation of Starkfield and his father’s farm by going off to the technological college in Worcester. He began to cultivate his own social traits and to overcome his silence; however, his father’s death forced him to give up college and return to the farm and his ill mother. After his marriage to Zeena, Ethan is imprisoned by the farm, Millwork, and caring for Zeena. He is physically isolated from the world and is also cut off from the possibility of any human fellowship that life in a village might afford. “To him, who was never gay but in her presence, her gaiety seemed plain proof of indifference” (Wharton 17). Mattie and Zeena are also isolated characters. Mattie is isolated by the deaths of both parents and the ill will of most of her relatives. She moves to the Fromes’, an unfamiliar farmhouse. She is cut off from contact with human beings other than the Fromes and her church

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