This cover of The House of Mirth by Edith Wharton uses John Singer Sargent's notorious painting Portrait of Madame X, which outraged people when it was shown in 1884. |
Edith Wharton, 1862-1937. |
The House of Mirth, published
in 1905, was Edith Wharton’s second novel and the book that established her as
one of America’s most talented writers. Often referred to as a “novel of
manners,” The House of Mirth follows
the travails of Lily Bart. As the novel opens, Lily is 29 years old and still
unmarried, rare for New York high society of that era. Lily has some money, but
she is dependent on her dull aunt for her housing and occasional gifts. Wharton
describes Lily’s aunt thus: “It was impossible to believe that she had herself ever
been a focus of activities.” (p.37) Unfortunately, Lily has very expensive
tastes, and her inability to live within her means leads her to a risky
financial arrangement with George Dorset, her best friend’s husband.
Lily is looking for a rich husband, and at the beginning of
the novel she seems to find easy prey in Percy Gryce, who is fabulously wealthy
but dull as toast. Lily self-sabotages her flirtations with Gryce as she stands
him up, instead spending time with Lawrence Selden, a handsome lawyer who
unfortunately doesn’t earn enough money to really be husband material.
There’s a marvelous passage at the beginning of the novel where
Lily describes her plight, asking Selden if he would marry a wealthy woman. After
Selden says no, Lily replies:
“’Ah, there’s the difference—a girl must, a man may if he
chooses.’ She surveyed him critically. ‘Your coat’s a little shabby—but
who cares? It doesn’t keep people from asking you to dine. If I were shabby no
one would have me: a woman is asked out as much for her clothes as for herself.
The clothes are the background, the frame, if you like; they don’t make
success, but they are a part of it. Who wants a dingy woman? We are expected to
be pretty and well-dressed till we drop—and if we can’t keep it up alone, we
have to go into partnership.’” (p.10)
This is the world that Lily lives in, and it’s a social
milieu that Edith Wharton knew very well from her own life. Lily’s options are
limited, and as the book goes on her options keep shrinking. Throughout the novel,
whenever Lily makes a decision, it turns out to invariably be the wrong one.
Lily is a complicated character, at once sympathetic and
frustrating. She can be a penetrating critic of her friends, as she thinks “Under
the glitter of their opportunities she saw the poverty of their achievement.”
(p.57) Lily also has great insight into her own foibles: “Since she had been
brought up to be ornamental, she could hardly blame herself for failing to
serve any practical purpose.” (p.315)
Lily bemoans the fact that her wealthy friends are winning
money at cards, while she has lost three hundred dollars, which she needs to
pay her dressmaker and her jeweler: “A world in which such things could be
seemed a miserable place to Lily Bart; but then she had never been able to
understand the laws of a universe which was so ready to leave her out of its
calculations.” (p.27)
The House of Mirth is
full of Wharton’s sharp observations about people and life. Some of my
favorites are: “Mr. and Mrs. Wetherall’s circle was so large that God was
included in their visiting-list.” (p.53) “The only way not to think about money
is to have a great deal of it.” (p.71) “Miss Gertrude Farish, in fact, typified
the mediocre and ineffectual.” (p.92) “It is less mortifying to believe one’s
self unpopular than insignificant, and vanity prefers to assume that
indifference is a latent form of unfriendliness.” (p.128)
Wharton is highly critical of the characters she has
created, writing of them: “The strident setting of the restaurant, in which
their table seemed set apart in a special glare of publicity, and the presence at
it of little Dabham of the ‘Riviera Notes’ emphasized the ideals of a world where
conspicuousness passed for distinction and the society column had become the
roll of fame.” (p.227)
Lily’s maid never has a name. This must have been a
deliberate decision on Wharton’s part, as the servants in the book are largely invisible
until they suddenly crop up for a sentence or two and we are reminded of their
existence. This was probably analogous to the role they played in the lives of
the wealthy.
In her 1934 autobiography, A Backward Glance, Wharton explained that she wanted to write a
novel about New York high society: “Fate had planted me in New York, and my
instinct as a story-teller counselled me to use the material nearest to hand,
and most familiarly my own.” (p.206) Wharton went on to rebut those critics who
questioned the subject of her fiction, writing “There could be no greater
critical ineptitude than to judge a novel according to what it ought to have been about.” (p.206) This is an excellent
rule for critics. You have to meet the work of art on the ground where it
stands, and try not to judge it according to your own Platonic ideal of what
art should be about.
In A Backward Glance, Wharton
informs readers that The House of Mirth was
somewhat rushed in its writing, as Edward Burlingame, the editor of Scribner’s Magazine, needed Wharton to begin
serializing the book before she was finished writing it. Wharton knew what the
ending of the book would be, but wasn’t entirely sure of the journey the
characters would take on the way there. It would be interesting to know if
Wharton made many changes or revisions to the book in between its serialization
and the book publication.
The House of Mirth is
an excellent novel, and although it focuses on the lives of the wealthy in New
York City in the early 20th century, like all the best fiction, what
it tells us about human behavior is not limited to the time and place of its
setting.
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