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Horse In Mccarthy's All The Pretty Horses

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In describing John Grady Cole as “riding...bareback” McCarthy shows Cole to be sexually frustrated as ‘riding bareback’ has a double meaning of either riding a horse without a saddle or as a colloquialism for having unprotected sex. This idea of transferred sexual description is continued on immediately in Cole describing the mare (which is having the transferred, foreshadowing, sexual description for Alejandra put upon it) as “standing with her legs spread and her head down” which is a very common sex position [doggy style] and mimics the idea of the man being in charge in the bedroom; this was a common belief of the period in which ‘All The Pretty Horses’ was set. Horses being representative of Alejandra can also be seen by McCarthy’s choice

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