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The Horse Dealer's Daughter Analysis

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The Horse Dealer's Daughter Analysis
In Kayleigh Moore, Response # 10A. I agree with her. The Edwardian period was all about class, moving up on the social ladder, and about money. People did not get married for love, during this time frame. They were mostly lying to themselves about why they are getting married. In the modernist period, they were about finding true love and happiness. They were about being real, true, not being fake with each other’s. They wasn’t worry about the class system very much. She is right about what she says about D.H. Lawrence’s “The Odeur of Chrysanthemums”. If, we look at another of his works, like “The Horse Dealer’s Daughter”. Mabel feelings are very much real in the story. We can feel her as a person. We can all relate to her in some way. We

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