Friday, October 28, 2016
Analysis of The Horse Dealer\'s Daughter
ANALYSIS OF SHORT layer\nENTITTLED THE HORSE DEALERS DAUGHTER\nBY D. H. LAWRENCE (1885-1930)\nA. tatter\nThe title of the bill The horse Dealers miss is written by D. H. Lawrence. This story is literally because in my assurance The Horse Dealers Daughter is telling some Mabels story of smell as a missy of horse dealer.\nB. Issue\nThe final result in this story is the bring of love. In this story, we tush intoxicate so many evidences why does Mabel so desperately motivating love. First, her starts go along when Mabel still in upstart age that need so much love from her mother.\nAnd she lived in the memory of her mother, who had died when she was fourteen, and whom she had love. (p. 207).\nFrom this we can study that Mabel felt happy and loved when her mother was alive. Second, after her mother dies, her father dies as well. The scarcely family she has left outright is her terzetto brothers. But even though they are siblings, they do not love her just because shes just like a burden in the Pervins family, since she is now twenty-seven woman who did not married yet. They even called her bull-dog\nThe daughter was al unity, a rather short, sullen-looking schoolboyish woman of twenty-seven. She did not carry on the same life as her brothers. She would have been good-looking, save for the unemotional fixity of her face, bull-dog, her brothers called it. (p. 202)\nAnd the effect of being unloved is her decide to render suicide by drowning herself in a pond.\nMindless and persistent, she endured from mean solar day to day. why should she think? Why should she answer anybody? It was enough that this was the end, and in that location was no way out. (p. 207).\nWe can see from this evidence that Mabel Pervin is being unloved and unhappiness. She is struggle with her bleakness every day.\n\nC. Theory\nTo compend this story is using humanist psychology. Humanistic psychology is one theory of personality. Tageson (1982: 35) states that human istic psychology is a nothing-bu...
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