Why so much anti-May?


I'm not exactly sure why people dislike May so much, except that she "prevents" Newland from running off with Ellen. Not that it would have lasted, because the moment Ellen heard that May was pregnant, she would have kicked Archer back across the Atlantic. He would have been in exactly the same position as before, except disgraced.

As far as I can see, May's only sin was to tell Ellen a half-truth (which turned out to be quite true), and to play the pretty dim little woman as all women of the time were expected to. It's not WRONG to expect your spouse to stick to the commitments they made to you, and to expect them to not run out on you and your child. Nor is it wrong to try to protect your marriage even if it makes somebody unhappy.

Okay, so it made Newland unhappy. He should have thought of that before he married May and got her pregnant. He made HIMSELF unhappy. It's not May's fault that the idiot married and had sex with her, when he was in love with someone else, and LIED TO HER about not loving anyone but her.

Her only overwhelming flaw is that she fell for a sad, pitiful little man who had neither the strength to defy convention, nor the integrity to stick to his commitments. And she stuck with him despite his continuous emotional infidelity and him ignoring her, which shows that she honored those commitments a lot more than he did, despite all his lies and deceptions.

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The reason people feel repulsed by May is that the story sets us up to see her as Newland sees her, in the beginning as a very innocent and sheltered young woman, someone he has a duty to protect, only to reveal later that she has attained willful and cunning power over him and the choices he makes.

Newland's own sense of duty and propriety is the tool others use against him, not only May but her entire family, his own mother and sister, Jackson, Letterblair and so on. May is at the helm of this mob mentality and uses it in her own self interest. In fact May and her family have manipulated Newland from the beginning of the story.

Ellen's arrival in New York is a very delicate problem for the Wellands. When they bring Ellen to the opera, Newland understands that they need him to use his pending engagement to May to strengthen their family position, and by association protect his own reputation. What Newland misses is that they are also using this social positioning as a bargaining chip against his own feelings.

It's safe to say that the Wellands are well aware that Newland and Ellen already had some past youthful attraction to each other, as Ellen so casually mentions it in the opera box. Everyone guesses Newland's real feelings for Ellen, long before he even guesses it himself. Being a lawyer, Newland is in a position to fight for Ellen's freedom, so they ask Newland up front to serve as Ellen's legal advisor and discourage her from divorce.

Newland believes himself to be the kind protector and champion of others who are gentle and innocent. This is what Ellen loves in him and why she says that to love him she must give him up. Unfortunately his own character traits are in direct opposition with his assertion that women ought to be free. In fact he believes and acts in accordance with a stronger belief that women need protection.

Newland is blindsided several times over, and this is what makes the reveal so brutal and sets us up to see May as a villain.

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Yes. They used Newland from day 1. He was too kind to see it.

They also got him to go to the Van Der Luydens and accuse Larry Lefferts of causing trouble for Granny's party for Ellen.

Newland just never understood that he was the powerhouse in the situation. He kept giving his power away. The Archers socially towered over the Wellands and the Mingotts. The Van Der Luydens LISTENED to him!

He gave it all away to a bunch of schemers.

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