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The Rocking-Horse Winner

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The Rocking-Horse Winner RWH A fairytale style or folk tale style 3rd person omniscient narration Involves a dysfunctional family Notion of what it is to be lucky ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Rocking-Horse Winner


1
The Rocking-Horse Winner
2
RWH
  • A fairytale style or folk tale style
  • 3rd person omniscient narration
  • Involves a dysfunctional family
  • Notion of what it is to be lucky
  • Possible child abuse
  • Class consciousness

3
3rd person omniscient
  • .......D. H. Lawrence wrote the story in
    omniscient third-person point of view, enabling
    him to reveal the thoughts of the characters.
  • Paul's mother only made several hundreds, and she
    was again dissatisfied. She so wanted to be first
    in something, and she did not succeed, even in
    making sketches for drapery advertisements. 
  • His mother had sudden strange seizures of
    uneasiness about him. Sometimes, for half an
    hour, she would feel a sudden anxiety about him
    that was almost anguish. She wanted to rush to
    him at once, and know he was safe. 
  • She had bonny children, yet she felt they had
    been thrust upon her, and she could not love
    them. They looked at her coldly, as if they were
    finding fault with her. And hurriedly she felt
    she must cover up some fault in herself. 

4
Eye Imagery Forwards the Plot
  • D. H. Lawrence's attention to the eyes helps to
    convey the inmost feelings of characters in some
    instances. (characterization)
  • In fact a good deal of communication between
    human beings is nonverbal and glaring eyes,
    frowns, furrowed brows, and shrugs can sometimes
    communicate more meaning than words.
  • it enhances the mysterious and sometimes
    unsettling atmosphere of the story by leaving
    open to question what a gaze or a stare means.
    (atmosphere/mood)

5
Eye Imagery examples
  • pg. 19 Only she herself, and her children
    themselves, knew it was not so. They read it in
    each others eyes.
  • pg. 20 the boy watched her with unsure eyes.
  • Pg. 21 his eyes had a strange glare in them.
    The little girls dared not speak to him.
    (establishing character)
  • Pg. 21 Referring to the RH its big eye was wide
    and glassy-bright. link to Paul and the horse
  • Pg. 24The boy gazed at his uncle from those big,
    hot, blue eyes, set rather close together. The
    uncle stirred and laughed uneasily.
    (establishing mood)
  • Pg. 27 The boy watched him with big blue eyes,
    that had an uncanny cold fire in them, and he
    said never a word. (notice the author hear lets
    characterization speak in place of actual
    dialogue)

6
Atmosphere/mood
  • Personification
  • Pg. And so the house came to be haunted by the
    unspoken phrase There must be more money!
    There must be more money!
  • Repetition reinforces the impact of
    personification
  • Objects on pg. 20 the rocking horse, doll and
    puppy hear the secret whisper There must be
    more money

7
Cause and Effect
  • No luck
  • Pg. 20 Its because your father has no luck,
    said Pauls mother when asked why they were poor.

8
Foreshadowing
  • Reference is made to the supernatural when Paul
    told his mother that he was a lucky person.
  • Pg. 21 He stared at her. He didnt even know
    hwy he had said it. God told me, he
    asserted..He did mother!
  • Pg. 25 Were all right when were sure, said
    Paul. Its when were not quite sure that we go
    down.
  • Pg. 28 In relation to the continued whispering of
    the house. It was said that Paul could not bear
    up against it.
  • Pg. 31 Paul has his rocking horse moved to his
    own bedroom. His obsession will have deadly
    consequences - marks a passage of time

9
Other Lit terms
  • Alliteration
  • Pg. 22 Now! he would silently command the
    snorting steed.
  • Simile
  • Pg. 2 Bassett was serious as a church
  • And yet the voices in the house . . . simply
    trilled and screamed in a sort of ecstasy "There
    must be more money! 
  • His eyes blazed at her for one strange and
    senselesssecond, as he ceased urging his wooden
    horse. 

10
Lit terms contd
  • Metaphor
  • The child had never been to a race-meeting
    before, and his eyes were blue fire. Comparison
    of the eyes to fire
  • Oxymoron
  • It was a soundless noise, yet rushing and
    powerful.
  • Simile
  • The voices in the house suddenly went mad, like a
    chorus of frogs on a spring evening. Comparison
    of the voices to frogs
  • He neither slept nor regained consciousness, and
    his eyes were like blue stones. Comparison of
    the Paul's eyes to stones

11
Diction
  • Characterization through diction.
  • Paul reveals his youth when he claims that Uncle
    Oscar pronounces Filthy lucre as filthy lucker.
    Diction can have the purpose of revealing
    character. (Malapropism) lucre means monetary
    gain, or money.

12
Irony
  • Tragic Irony
  • .......Paul picks the winning horse in the Epsom
    Derby but loses his life. The fortune he had
    amassed, eighty thousand pounds (the equivalent
    of millions of dollars today), thus became his
    misfortune. 

13
Theme Topics
  • Neglect
  • .......In her preoccupation with material things,
    Hester neglects to provide Paul the love he needs
    to develop into a normal, mentally stable child. 
  • Faulty Sense of Values
  • .......Hester makes stylish living the chief goal
    of her marriage. Consequently, her relationship
    with her husband and the care and nurture of her
    childrenin particular, Paulstagnate. Whenever
    money becomes available, she spends beyond her
    means. Though she and her husband rear their
    children in a "pleasant house" with servants and
    a nurse, they seem to regard them as objects for
    display, like the furnishings in the home.
    Hester's spending and indebtedness create anxiety
    that haunts the house and personifies itself by
    repeatedly whispering the phrase "There must be
    more money."
  • Obsession
  • .......Lust for material objects, stylish living,
    and money so obsesses Paul's mother that she
    neglects Paul and his sisters. Paul then
    "inherits" her obsession. But he wants to win
    money for his mother, not for himself, in order
    to prove that he has the luck that his father
    lacks. Having luck and money will make him
    lovable to his mother, he apparently believes,
    and silence the house voices. When he discovers
    that the five thousand pounds he sets aside for
    her is not enough to achieve his goals, he
    becomes obsessed with winning more. His mania
    ultimately kills him.

14
Themes topics contd
  • Opportunism
  • .......Oscar Creswell acknowledges that Paul's
    wagering makes him nervous. But rather than take
    steps to stop Paul, he encourages him and asks
    for tips on winning horses. When Paul lies
    deathly ill muttering the name of his pick for
    the Derby, Oscar runs off "in spite of himself"
    and places a bet on the horse at fourteen to one
    odds. 
  • Quest
  • .......Paul rides his rocking horse like a knight
    on a quest. He seeks a great prize, luck, that
    will enable him to win money wagering on horses.
    His winnings will free his mother from a great
    monster, indebtedness, that consumes all of her
    attention. Once free, she will be able to turn
    her attention to Paul and give him the greatest
    prize of all love.
  • Deceit
  • .......In the first paragraph of the story, the
    narrator says Hester does not love her children.
    Nevertheless, outwardly she pretends to love
    them, and people say, "She is a good mother. She
    adores her children."

15
Theme Statements
  • Materialism vs Unconditional familial love (Topic
    not a statement)
  • When financial wealth and security are placed
    above the open
  • expression of unconditional love, a destructive
    and dysfunctional family
  • dynamic is created.
  • Destructive power of obsession
  • Dedicating oneself obsessively to achieving a
    goal can create an
  • unhealthy imbalance in the mind, emotions, and /
    or body.

16
Movie version
  • http//www.youtube.com/watch?viKUZVV_MrIc
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