Aubrey Snyder Mr. T Williams Honors English ll 01 March 2023 Paper Intro- Within this time period, authors demonstrated Naturalism and Realism in their writings by harnessing economic conflicts, exhibiting constraints holding someone from achieving their dreams. DEFINITION. In the passage Ethan Frome, the marriage between Ethan and Zeena would begin from the illness of Ethan’s mom and the need for money for Zeena. Furthermore, “When [Ethan and Zeena] married it was agreed that, as soon as he could straighten out the difficulties resulting from Mrs. Frome's long illness, they would sell the farm and saw-mill and try their luck in a large town... But purchasers were slow in coming, and while he waited for them Ethan learned the impossibility …show more content…
DEFINITION. In the passage Ethan Frome, the marriage between Ethan and Zeena would begin from the illness of Ethan’s mom and the need for money for Zeena. Furthermore, “When [Ethan and Zeena] married it was agreed that, as soon as he could straighten out the difficulties resulting from Mrs. Frome's long illness, they would sell the farm and saw-mill and try their luck in a large town... But purchasers were slow in coming, and while he waited for them Ethan learned the impossibility of transplanting her. And within a year of their marriage she developed the sickness which had since made her notable even in a community rich in pathological instances” (Wharton 4). In fact, the only reason Ethan and Zeena married each other was for the desperate demand for money due to sickness, first with the poor health of Ethan’s mother and then the sickness of Zeena. They were stuck in a cycle of finding money just to take care of each other, especially since all the debt that accumulated from the farm was now stuck to their name. While some people were constrained by money, others went out to look for ways out, such as in the story, “A Wagner Matinee,” which illustrates Aunt Georgiana, a young Boston music teacher, who decides to marry a younger man named Howard Carpenter. The author explains, “Carpenter, who of course had no money, took a homestead in Red Willow County, fifty miles from the railroad...They built a dugout in the red hillside, one of those cave dwellings whose inmates usually reverted to the conditions of primitive savagery. Their water they got from the lagoons where the buffalo drank, and their slender stock of provisions was always at the mercy of bands of roving Indians” (Cather 482). Aunt Georgiana found a way to support herself but that meant that she had to give up her