Table of Contents
- 1 What does Paul learn about his mother after visiting with his sister upon his return home?
- 2 What happens to Paul at the end of the story in The Rocking Horse Winner?
- 3 What does Paul’s mother discover when she returns home?
- 4 How does Paul’s mother better understand him than his father?
- 5 What happens to Paul at the end of the story?
- 6 Who is to blame for Paul’s death in The Rocking Horse Winner?
- 7 How does Paul change in Paul’s case?
- 8 Why does Paul feel there is a distance between his family?
- 9 How does Paul react when he hears his sister’s voice?
What does Paul learn about his mother after visiting with his sister upon his return home?
Paul and His Mother When Paul comes home and his sister sees him, she calls out to him. Paul’s mother isn’t very physically expressive, but Paul knows that she cares deeply for him because she has saved the food to make his favorite dish even though the family is poor and hungry.
What happens to Paul at the end of the story in The Rocking Horse Winner?
Paul is the protagonist of the story. Paul becomes increasingly obsessive over the course of the story, and even transitions into an almost supernatural or inhuman figure. In the end he rides his rocking-horse with such intensity that he collapses and dies.
What does Paul’s mother discover when she returns home?
Paul’s parents return home after midnight. Paul’s mother discovers that Paul is still riding his rocking horse in his room. Paul collapses with a brain fever, screaming, “Malabar!” For three days, Paul lies ill and unconscious in his room with his mother at his bedside.
What does Paul want from the house itself?
The idea that fills the inhabitants of the house is that there is never enough money. For the mother money is an end in itself; by contrast, Paul hopes that enough money will finally satisfy his mother and she will love him.
What happens to Albert and Paul after they evacuate the village How does Paul help Albert?
A few days later, the men are sent to evacuate another village. As the men watch the miserable villagers pass by, their formation is shelled. Paul is wounded and must help a severely injured Albert to safety. Paul is then sent to surgery, where he fights madly not to be put unconscious.
How does Paul’s mother better understand him than his father?
How does Paul’s mother understand him better than his father does? Kantorek leads the boys into danger. Kat is trustworthy and wise and teaches the boys how to survive. You just studied 22 terms!
What happens to Paul at the end of the story?
You might also want to trace the way that Paul’s eyes are described through the story, and how the more he uses the rocking horse to predict the winner, the brighter they blaze. Note the last time he uses it, his eyes “blazed”, before he crashes to the ground.
Who is to blame for Paul’s death in The Rocking Horse Winner?
The Silent Killer The Responsibility for Paul’s Death in The Rocking Horse Winner Greed is a vice that affects every human being in one way or another. It is inescapable and often is the culprit for many broken relationships, shattered goals, and even death.
Why does Paul’s House continue to whisper what does it say?
Though this is a family who apparently has plenty of money (as evidenced by the fact that they have servants and stables and expensive gifts and other such extravagances), there’s a constant hunger for more. This desperation is what is being whispered by the house.
What was Paul’s problem in Paul’s case?
Paul’s trouble is that he wants more than the mediocre middle-class existence he has been born into, where the stale smells of cooking linger in his house. He wants more than Sunday School picnics and a dull, low-paying job.
How does Paul change in Paul’s case?
During the course of the story, however, we see Paul’s behavior change for the worse: he steals money to finance his escape and lies about being wealthy. No real clues are presented earlier to indicate he was suicidal, but at the end, apparently driven by fear, he takes his own life.
Why does Paul feel there is a distance between his family?
Although Paul mentions that his family was never demonstrative, he feels there is a distance, a veil that did not exist earlier. Unable to relieve his mother’s illness, Paul assuages her worries with lies. Later, in the kitchen, Paul’s sister informs him that his mother has suffered for several months with a recurrence of cancer.
How does Paul react when he hears his sister’s voice?
He walks to his home. Weak from the emotion he feels when he hears his sister’s voice, Paul leans on his rifle and weeps, then recovers his military bearing and demands a handkerchief.
What is the relationship between Paul and his mother and father?
Though his mother doesn’t speak very much, there is clearly love between them, even if Paul feels that he’s emotionally distanced from his mother because of his war experiences. Paul and his father, on the other hand, are even less in emotional sync. His father asks numerous questions about the war that are painful for Paul to try and answer.
What does Paul’s wife ask him to do for his neighbors?
Paul’s wife begs his to help their neighbors – who trust him even though he his Hutu. One of Paul’s friends comes and tells them that his son Roger has gone out to check on a Tutsi friend who lives next door. They find Roger hiding in the bushes and covered with blood.