Pursuit of Happiness in Edith Wharton's Novel, Ethan Frome

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While everyone is legally intitled to the pursuit of happiness, the truth of the matter is that very few ever achieve it. One’s morals, standards, conscious, or perhaps even fate, keep them from accepting a pure form of satisfaction. While a person can search and struggle their entire life for happiness, the truth of the matter is, that they will never be happy with what they have infront of them. The character Ethan, portrayed in Edith Whartons novel, Ethan Frome, is emotionally weak, he battles constantly with what he wants, how to get it, and what is ethically right. Ethan was obligated to care for his wife Zeena until death, but his misguided decisions lead him to be concerned only with his immediate happiness. Much like Ethan in Ethan Frome, people who concentrate on personal happiness, without factoring in personal responsibility, set themselves up for a painful reality check.

Only the ruthlessly devoted and heartless can make it to the top without feeling bad about who they knocked down to triumph. Ethan can’t strive for a higher level of happiness because so many factors pull him down. To leave Starkfield with his love, Mattie, he would need more money than he can afford, and to get this he would be forced to lie and compromise his friendships. Ethan decides not to lie about a loan from the Hales, and in this decision he proves he cannot let go of his morals, because that would make him more miserable than he was to begin with. His conscience holds him back even more, as he is constantly reminded of what would become of Zeena if she was left alone to care for herself. His inescapable fate is foreshadowed by the gravestones that lie on his property, which echo the lifestyle he is obligated to live with Zeena in Starkf...

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Ethan now must forever live in shame and mediocrity, facing every day with both Zeena and Mattie, consumed now by guilt instead of misery. He is proof that happiness can be pursued to maintain hope and faith, but selfish measures for your own benefit can only result in a worse off life. In avoiding his personal responsibilities to pursue happiness, he ultimately failed at succeeding because he put his selfishness infront of his obligations. The idea of ‘shooting for the stars’ is told to encourage people to pursue what they believe will make them happy. They are not told that when reaching that high, the fall back to reality is the farthest it could possibly be. Human’s will never be satisfied with the idea that they cannot physically touch the stars, and in that ignorance and frustration, they prove that they are unworthy of pure happiness.

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