Ethan Frome Despair Theme

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Despair

Ethan Frome Despair is not anonymous, it has a name, and the name is Starkfield. "Guess he's been in Starkfield too many winters." This significant phrase describing Ethan Frome in the prologue of Edith Wharton's novel, Ethan Frome, provides insight into the most major theme portrayed in this story. The imagery of the harshness and despair of winter, first brought up in the prologue, is present in every aspect of this book. Winter describes the character of Zeena as well as the character of Ethan after the "smash up" which contrasts that of Mattie, Ethan's true love. It is also used to illustrate the themes of silence and isolation, and darkness and despair.

Zeena is a character often portrayed using …show more content…

He considers his marriage a mistake and attributes it to the fact that he met Zeena at a time when he felt isolated and alone, another major theme in the book. After his mother died one winter, he needed companionship and attached himself to Zeena. Ethan resents winter because he associates it with the death of a loved one. Due to his isolation, Ethan overlooks Zeena's true character when he decides to marry her. Also, the narrator connects the winter with the "deadness of the community." He states, "It (winter) seemed to provide no change except that of retarding still more the sluggish pulse of Starkfield." This statement in the prologue foreshadows Ethan's feelings of being trapped and dead when he is forced to stay in Starkfield because of his wife. It again shows the connection made between winter and death and …show more content…

All imagery of light, sunlight, and springtime represent the character of Mattie. This is contrary to the imagery used to describe Zeena. In the prologue there are contrasting images of the goodness of light shed on something not as good. An example of this is the description of Ethan's house when the narrator states his observation of, "A flash of watery sunlight exposed the house on the slope above us in all its plaintive ugliness." This indicates how the inner beauty of Mattie, the sunlight, illuminates the aspects disliked in Zeena, the ugly house, which become evident later in the

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