Wang Lung Wealth

503 Words2 Pages

Throughout The Good Earth by Pearl S. Buck, Wang Lung accumulates wealth and becomes rich and successful. Although this seems positive, it is not completely the case. Wang Lung showed that good fortune comes at a price.
Wealth can bring families apart. When he found out that the pictures of beautiful women in the tea house were real prostitutes, “his desire overcame him” (178). After seeing one regularly, he took her as a second wife. When one is rich, he does not depend on loyalty within the family for survival. Families do not need to support each other to a great extent. When Wang Lung’s daughter complained about getting her feet bound, she told him that “my mother said I was not to weep aloud because… you might say to leave me as I am and then my husband would not love me even as you do not love her” (249). Since O-Lan was ugly and had big feet, Wang Lung felt that she was not fitting for a rich man’s wife. When a man is rich, his wife does not need to be hard working. If she is not beautiful, her husband may seek pleasure elsewhere. …show more content…

When Wang Lung’s eldest son requests more money for home improvement, he says, “Men in the town are beginning to call us the great family Wang. It is fitting that we live somewhat suitably to that name.” This pleased Wang Lung. Men with wealth want to live luxuriously so they are respected. They are expected among their peers to live in this manner. Wang Lung did not want O-Lan to work in the fields “lest men say, ‘and does your wife still work on the land and you rich?’” (250). Wealthy men are held to high standards. Men judge them if they do as common men do. Wealthy men often do not do what is in their heart but what would make people think highly of

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