Horse Dealer's Daughter

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In D.H. Lawrence’s The Horse Dealer’s Daughter, Lawrence writes about a discombobulated family who does how to react or stick together thereafter the death of their final parent. Naturally, the males seem to have stuck together as they have more in common with each other, the older sister is off living on her own, and that leaves one younger sister, alone. The young sister, Mabel, takes the death of her parents especially hard as she seems to feel extremely alone and ignored by her siblings. The brothers are cold towards her and Mabel is portrayed as a useless woman that is around to tend to the brothers and this seems have the impression on her that causes her to believe this herself. My claim about this piece of work is that Mabel seeks a good life but is miserable around her family because they give her no …show more content…

This is a portion that comes right before she visits her mother’s grave, a reason to believe that Mabel wants to live a good life but the death of her mother, her most loved family member, brings her so much pain even to this day. Mabel feels a connection to her mother as it is stated that tending to her mother’s grave allows her to have an “immediate contact with the world of her mother” (Lawrence 2501). The sorrow brought from her brother’s treatment towards her, along with the thoughts of her mother being gone, Mabel soon decided that the only thing to do in her situation was to commit suicide by walking into a lake to drowned. The sadness of the situation she was in, took over her mental state in the moment and luckily, Dr. Ferguson, who was out on the property, was there to see her attempt this and was able to stop her. As in my stated claim, I believe that Mabel wanted to live so I do not see this as an act of depression but more of a moment where she thought there was no other way to solve her

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