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The, By Graham Greene And The Rocking Horse Winner

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The two stories “The Destructors” by Graham Greene and “The Rocking Horse Winner” by D.H. Lawrence are being analyzed through literary devices on how they demonstrate the shared theme. Greene and Lawrence both use setting, symbolism, and like-minded characters to demonstrate the theme of the destruction and effects of war are long lasting in the stories “The Destructors” and “The Rocking Horse Winner”. Both Graham Greene and D. H. Lawrence set their stories in London, England, after major world wars, “The Destructors” taking place after World War II and “The Rocking Horse Winner” after World War I. Greene’s story “The Destructors” occurs in London nine years after World War II where the Wormley Common Gang meet up in a car lot next to where the last bomb of the first blitz landed. Graham Greene writes that, “[o]n one side of the car-park leant the first occupied house, No. 3, of the shattered Northwood Terrace – literally leant, for it had suffered from the blast of the bomb and the side walls were supported on wooden struts” (105-6). Even nine years after the war there is still physical damage found in London; the blemish left on the earth’s surface caused by the bomb’s blast could be fixed but what occupied that space before will never be. In Lawrence’s “The Rocking Horse Winner” the story takes place after World War I in London as well but predominantly in a house whose occupants although higher up in the social ladder feel desperately that they need to obtain more

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