H. Lawrence incorporates debt on account of gambling. The novel starts out with a young mother telling her son what luck is. She explained that luck was the ability to be successful or not. This intrigued the child and he decided that he wanted to find luck. He imagined that he was riding off to luck on his rocking horse. Turns out he does. When he rides the horse, the young boy somehow sees the answer to the horse race. This allows him to bid as much as he can, making thousands. However, the reason for all of this effort is on account of their family is poor and in debt. The walls of the house seem to whisper to him that they need supplementary money, “And so the house became haunted withe the unspoken phrase. There must be more money! There must be more money!” Consequently he gambles everything he has. In the conclusion of the story, he falls ill from riding on his horse so much, and he dies, after winning thousands. Only to find out that the reason they are in debt is since the mother’s family gambled everything they had away. This story is a warning to anyone who reads it to be selective in what they put their money in. It also warns one to restrain from gambling, for the reason that it affects beyond the individual, but also the family. Gambling can bring the entire family into …show more content…
This novel starts out with another young man who is a little different in the way he perceives the world. It shows him departing to school where her first is treated rudely, later finds friends among others. He travels home to visit his family, but finds out they are required to leave on account of his father can’t afford to stay where he is. He is inept with his money, and purchase items he can’t afford, causing him to reach into debt. Stephen, the boy, learns that he is unable to send him back to school. He has applied to college, and hopes for the best. He is accepted and soon finds himself at school and surrounded by temptations and yields to it. He decides to live his life to the fullest and forsaking his religion and family. “This was the call of life to his soul not the dull gross voice of the world of duties and despair, not the inhuman voice that had called him to the pale service of the altar,” (Ch. 4). From this novel, one can learn countless lessons from it; however, the one that will be focused on is the debt factor. The father caused a chain reaction to spreading into debt. When Stephen was unable to perform at the same school, he ventured off to a different school, where he fell to temptation. This caused him to fall away from his religion. This is a warning towards how debt effects more than just the individual and how lusting after