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By Daniel James Wood - January 01, 1995

In Edith Wharton's The House Of Mirth, money is the most evident and most basic value held by the characters who populate the author's turn-of-the-century New York. Essentially, money is valued for only one reason - it provides the means by which those in possession of it may do as they please. But it is valued as such in two distinct ways, by two…

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