The choice of lily in a house of pleasure is close to the beginning of a house of pleasure, and Wharton decided that Lily does not marry a really wealthy man. Yuri, like her wealthy world, has a strange relationship with money. She needs money to buy the kind of life she lives in and her relative poverty makes her situation unstable. Unfortunately, Lily has not received any training to earn money in various ways.
Jane Eyre and Happy House Lily by Jane Bronte and Jane's House, Eddie Wharton's Jane Eyre and Jane Eyre contain many of the same points and differences described in this article. The focus is placed on the main characters of each book, Jane Air and Lily Bart, and contains important ideas and ideas presented in these novels. Starting with Charlotte Bronte's novel Jane Eyre, Jane hates her and is an orphan raised by a strong family of society who does not want her. Under the servants.
The choice of Lily in a house of pleasure is close to the beginning of a house of pleasure, and Wharton decided that Lily would never marry a wealthy man. Yuri, like her wealthy world, has a strange relationship with money. She needs money to buy the kind of life she lives in and her relative poverty makes her situation unstable. Unfortunately, Lily has not received any training to earn money in various ways.
If money is the dominant factor in the lily's living, what can it bring? There are basically two possibilities in the House (and every ritual novel). It is acceptance / marriage or exile / death. I believe that this book can be made in any way: Lily can succeed after marriage, fail and die. In this case, the latter option will occur. How does Wharton work for this purpose? All chapters, especially the second volume, bad luck and social instability will slowly eliminate Lily's society. That's because Lily is having a mistake in France. Lily is not deeply rooted in society, her words are more respected than Berta's words.
Edith Wharton 's Joy House objecting women with a happy home insults the wrong social values of fashionable New York society. The heroine is Lily Bert, a woman destroyed by the society that produced her. Lily was born, but he is very poor. This story traces Lily's decline through a series of dwellings from home to the residence of the hotel. Yuri lives in a society in New York and looks good. Women have decorative features in such circumstances, and her name Lily suggests that she is feminine temperament, ie,