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Wharton: The Other Two

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Wharton: The Other Two

Edith Wharton was brought up in a rich and privileged family. She lived in a time when the high-class circle feared the drastic social changes that occurred due to post-civil war expansionism and immigration (The Norton Anthology 829). The story, The Other Two, is Wharton’s way of reflecting on the social changes that American society was undergoing. I plan to focus my response on the psychology of the main character, Mr. Waythorn.

The story’s main character is a high society man who is the archetype for the values that most men during his time held as a standard. His status as a Wall Street investor and as a man who has the means to have servants, gives us a clear parallel between himself and high society. What he thinks or believes is a doorway into the psychology of high society as a whole. This is apparent throughout the story as the main character is always preoccupied with what the society pages have to say about his wife. Mr. Waythorn is a man who is having trouble reconciling with his wife’s past marriages. This reflection on the difficulties the issue of divorce is having within society is also attributed to Wharton herself. The author has been divorced and so this story can reflect her thoughts on that issue. The main character is concerned that his wife has had two divorces in the past. The ease in which divorce is granted is one of the important points in this story as well as Mr. Waythorn’s uneasy reconciliation with his wife’s two ex-husbands. Wharton is a person who did not divorce her husband easily due to her “devotions to family ties and the sanctities of tradition” (The Norton Anthology 829). In this story there is an exploration into how divorce can

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