In the opening sentence, the mother “had no luck. ” 2. The opening sentence is literally true only in the restricted sense that the mother gives for luck: “It’s what causes you to have money. ” B. Dramatic irony 3. The boy’s last words are “I am lucky. ” 4. Again, the statement can only be literally true within the mother’s restricted definition of luck. 5. The boy’s mistake about “filthy lucker” points to Lawrence’s theme, for confusing luck with lucre causes all of the unhappiness in the story.
Note: The English language has many examples of this blurring of “luck” with “lucre” (e. g. , “having good fortune” and “amassing a fortune”).
C. Irony of situation: The woman who considers herself unlucky has been extremely lucky in a truer sense of the word. II. Characterization in “The Rocking-Horse Winner” D. The mother 6. Truly lucky in many ways a) Beauty b) “Started with all the advantages” c) Married for love d) Had “bonny” children e) Artistic talent 7. Has foibles which negate her true luck a) An inability to love b) A need to live “in style” ) A need to “keep up” social position d) Expensive taste 2. Differs, however, from evil stock characters of fairy tales e) Is not cruel f) Gentle and anxious for her children g) Has a heart that is “curiously heavy” when she sees her son becoming overwrought h) Feels “rushes of anxiety” for her son while she is at a party Note:We must question, however, if gentleness and anxiety are equal to love. Love always puts the beloved first, and is willing to sacrifice for the beloved. The mother subordinates her love to social concerns. A. Paul 1.
The Essay on Romeo And Juliet Love Juliets True
I consider myself a hopeless romantic. I have hopes and dreams of finding my true love. Although I would like for my true love to say he would die for me and would never want to live without me, and me the same for him, I know realistically that this would never be. There is no better example of this love than in William Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet. In this tale, their love was true and they ...
He feels the lack of love from his mother and unconsciously realizes that the whisperings of the house for more money are connected with the lack. 2. He blindly tries to cure the condition. 3. The whispers are symptoms, not causes, and Paul only makes things worse. 4. Paul’s compulsive efforts to satisfy his mother’s cravings finally kill him. III. Theme of “The Rocking-Horse Winner” Materialistic craving can never be satisfied; riding the rocking-horse is an effective symbol for materialistic pursuits, for it is a furious activity that gets one nowhere.