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Summary Of ' The Rocking Horse Winner '

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D.H. Lawrence’s “The Rocking Horse Winner” is a captivating dive into the primitive psyche of a mentally disturbed child. Paul has an incredible gift that he desperately wishes his mother, Hester, will notice. Hester does not recognize Paul’s talents and he refuses to quit until she realizes what he can do for her. In Paul’s despair he exhausts his short life in an oedipal flurry of attempts at indulging his mother’s desires for money and sexual fulfilment. Paul experiences an oedipal conflict towards his father and wishes that he could be the monetary provider for his mother. According to the psychoanalysis organization ChangingMinds “The Oedipus complex [is when] a boy is fixated on his mother and competes with his father for maternal attention” (changingminds.org). Paul discusses his father with Hester and asks if “[his] father [is] unlucky”. When she bitterly tells Paul that his father is “very unlucky”, he seizes the opportunity to claim that he “[is] a lucky person”. Through this exchange with Hester, Paul realizes that he must be “lucky” in order to dethrone his father as Hester’s provider. Paul goes off in search of luck to present to his mother, and the narrator emphasizes Paul’s desires by saying “He want[s] it” three consecutive times. Paul takes to his trusty rocking horse to find answers. He finds these answers by riding his horse until he “gets there”, and knows the winning horse in the upcoming races. After a few successes at the race track, Paul saves up

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