"Greed will always leave you dissatisfied because you'll never be able to get everything you desire. Greed never allows you to think you have enough; it always destroys you by making you strive ever harder for more." (Rabbi Benjamin Blech). This statement points to the idea that one's greed will never be satisfied because it will always keep wanting more. Greed is only achieved through an individual's selfish desires which creates conflicts in personal relationships and society. The short stories The Rocking Horse Winner, D.H. Lawrence, The Lottery Ticket, Anton Chekhov and Twins, Eric Wright illustrate this truth. These three short stories clearly portray that greed destroys relationships, fosters materialism within society, and causes betrayals. Greed can destroy relationships to a point where two people detest each other. In The Rocking Horse Winner, the relationship between a mother and her son is shattered because the mother continuously wants more money. Money makes her feel as if she is elite in comparison to others. Her need for money completely destroys the son as he feels like it is his duty to help raise money for his mother. Even with his help, she was never grateful for the $5000 that was gifted from the son. She complains that it was not enough and still wants more money. Her greed places too much stress on her son, and he passes away due to all the anxiety and pressure he feels from his mother's greed of money. "His eyes blazed at her for one strange and senseless second, as he ceased urging his wooden horse. Then he fell with a crash to the ground, and she, all her tormented motherhood flooding upon her, rushed to gather him up." (Lawrence 1206). When his mother realizes that her greed in money affects her son, it is too late, and he is already dead. In The Lottery Ticket, the story begins by introducing Ivan Dmitritch and his wife, Masha. They purchase a lottery ticket and start to talk about what they would do about
"Greed will always leave you dissatisfied because you'll never be able to get everything you desire. Greed never allows you to think you have enough; it always destroys you by making you strive ever harder for more." (Rabbi Benjamin Blech). This statement points to the idea that one's greed will never be satisfied because it will always keep wanting more. Greed is only achieved through an individual's selfish desires which creates conflicts in personal relationships and society. The short stories The Rocking Horse Winner, D.H. Lawrence, The Lottery Ticket, Anton Chekhov and Twins, Eric Wright illustrate this truth. These three short stories clearly portray that greed destroys relationships, fosters materialism within society, and causes betrayals. Greed can destroy relationships to a point where two people detest each other. In The Rocking Horse Winner, the relationship between a mother and her son is shattered because the mother continuously wants more money. Money makes her feel as if she is elite in comparison to others. Her need for money completely destroys the son as he feels like it is his duty to help raise money for his mother. Even with his help, she was never grateful for the $5000 that was gifted from the son. She complains that it was not enough and still wants more money. Her greed places too much stress on her son, and he passes away due to all the anxiety and pressure he feels from his mother's greed of money. "His eyes blazed at her for one strange and senseless second, as he ceased urging his wooden horse. Then he fell with a crash to the ground, and she, all her tormented motherhood flooding upon her, rushed to gather him up." (Lawrence 1206). When his mother realizes that her greed in money affects her son, it is too late, and he is already dead. In The Lottery Ticket, the story begins by introducing Ivan Dmitritch and his wife, Masha. They purchase a lottery ticket and start to talk about what they would do about