In D.H. Lawrence's "The Horse Dealer's Daughter,"ÃÂ Mabel "did not share the same life as her brothers "ÃÂ(195).
Mabel Pervin was not close to her brothers, because there were personal and physical separations. Mabel was a plain, uninteresting woman. She seldom showed emotion on her face. In fact her face usually remained impassive and unchanged. Her brothers could be described as three handsome and well-spoken men. Mabel was independent, having taken care of the house for ten years without a servant. Even though they depended upon her, they seemed to have control over her. The Pervin brothers "did not care about anything"ÃÂ (195). They were poised and felt secure about themselves. Her brothers felt superior to her.
"They had talked at her and round her for so many years, that she hardly heard them at all"ÃÂ (196). She would either give a neutral response to her brothers, or remain quiet when they talked to her.
Instead of giving her encouragement, they teased her. This treatment could have led to her insecurity. They would tease her about becoming a maid or about her "bulldog"ÃÂ face. Her brothers were full of energy and very talkative. Mabel also seemed to be alone in the world. Unlike her brothers who had many companions, she had had no friends of her own sex.
Sometimes it seemed that Mabel wanted to escape her life.
One place Mabel felt secure and immune from the world was at her mother's grave. "There she always felt secure, as if no one could see her"ÃÂ (200). Mabel was extremely devoted to her deceased parents, especially her mother.
She was mindless and persistent. At the graveside, she had many different feelings. She seemed to be coming nearer to her own glorification. Also she would become remote and intent. She seemed...