All about the ancient tribes
Answer The symbol of the story is the house whispers that say things like, “There must be more money! There must be more money!” So, these imaginary voices represent the greed and materialistic attitude of Paul’s mother.
Paul starts to spend a lot of time riding his rocking horse. He believes that if he rides the horse long enough, it will tell him where he can find luck. Paul’s sister, Joan and his nanny are annoyed by his rocking horse habit. One day, Paul’s mother and Uncle Oscar watch as he rides on his rocking horse.
It is clear from the story that what drives Paul to making himself ill is his repeated riding sessions on his rocking-horse. … Paul then dies because he gives himself over more and more to the rocking horse and finding out the winners of races so that he can gain money for his mother.
The main conflict in “The Rocking-Horse Winner” relates to the fact that the family does not have enough money for their wants and desires. This desire for more money lies at the heart of all of the conflict that occurs in the story itself.
Lawrence put great emphasis on eyes in “The Rocking Horse Winner”. Paul’s eyes are described as “big blue eyes that had an uncanny cold fire in them” (Lawrence 1250) when he spoke of the whispering of his house. His eyes represent his dreams, his passion and the futility of his attempts to get luck for his family.
Situational irony occurs when actions have the opposite of an intended effect, precisely the problem that Paul, the prescient child of a greedy mother, experiences in D.H. Lawrence’s “The Rocking Horse Winner.” Paul uses his preternatural gift for picking winning horses to save a family already doomed by the …
Paul rides the rocking horse to make money in order to help make his mom less depressed by their financial situation.
Paul attempts to change his family’s luck by riding the rocking horse so that he can make them wealthy. … The reader discovers that Paul can intuitively guess the name of the real horse race winners as he rides, so betting becomes the way the family gains money.
Bassett is the “young gardener” who works for Paul’s family. … He keeps Paul’s secret because of the relationship of mutual respect which he has developed with the boy, and also because of his keen awareness of his place as a servant in Paul’s family. Bassett is the only adult in the story who treats Paul with respect.
Explanation/Discussion: This gift ought to be the happy ending, the resolution of the conflict: The parents are unlucky and poor, so the lucky and wealthy son gives them as much money as they could want. Unfortunately, this story doesn’t have a happy ending. Paul’s gift only seems to make them want even more money.
The main themes in “The Rocking-Horse Winner” are materialism, happiness, and generosity. Materialism: Lawrence suggests that materialism and love are incompatible. Hester is so focused on her own perceived sufferings that she fails to be an effective mother to Paul.
The climax comes when the boy dies and the reader (and his mother) find out what killed him. This story is about a middle class English family in which…
The author tells the story from the third-person and omniscient point of view, meaning we get the point of view of more than one character. In the Rocking Horse Winner, the reader is privvy to the point of view of both Paul and Paul’s mother.
Hester