By regretting her actions of throwing rocks at Miss Lottie’s marigolds. She is ashamed of herself, she didn’t notice her father’s silence. Being a child in Lizabeth thought that it was fun, but the woman in her flinched and thought about the malicious attack. After that, Lizabeth felt so ashamed that it lasted until afternoon.
Her grandmother was a wealthy 70 year old. She took the responsibility to take care of Dorothea and her two brothers. Dorothea, 12 was not used to the wealthy life. She was raised to give to those in need and not to take more than she's was supposed to. Her grandmother wanted Dorothea to act as if she had always been wealthy, but Dorothea did not want that.
Hurston describes the transition Janie makes from being identified by others to recognizing her self worth. “The young girl was gone, but a handsome woman had taken her place. She tore off the her handkerchief from her head and let down her plentiful hair. The weight, the length, the glory was there” (Hurston 170). The author uses the handkerchief to symbolize how people and objects have constantly covered and concealed the true beauty that Janie has never been able to embrace.
The most rewarding attributes of this experience for Edna would be the feeling of satisfaction of conquering something in a world where woman are seen as nothing; much like a child’s excitement at their newly gained knowledge. In Chopin’s own word she describes “A feeling of exultation overtook her as if some power of significant import had been given her to control the working of her body and her soul” (page27). Although she is not ashamed of who she is becoming there is still a need to hide which is greatly caused by her surroundings. This can be seen when Edna takes her turn reading a shared book that has been passed around the cottages. Reading this book left her wonderstruck
The second quote to show Miss Lottie’s persistence is after Lizabeth destroyed her flower’s, “The witch was no longer a witch but only a broken old women who had dared to create beauty in the midst of ugliness and sterility. She had been born in squalor and lived in it all her life” (Collier 5). This sentence demonstrates the point where Lizabeth realized that Miss Lottie was impoverished as well. She is starting to recognise that Miss Lottie’s flowers represented the hope of better times to come.
Edna fully understands that society would brand her as a terrible woman, but she does not view herself as a bad person. There is an external and internal difference that Edna hopes to one day reconcile. Chopin, instead of creating tension within Edna, created tension within the society and Edna with her newfound independence does not mind how society classifies her. Decisively, it can be concluded that the tension between outward conformity and inward questioning builds the meaning of the novel by examining Edna’s role as a wife, mother, and as nontraditional woman in the traditional Victorian period.
Lizabeth felt confused and angry with the beauty of the flowers because they were a beacon of beauty and hope. Miss Lottie’s ugly house and mean demeanor are a symbol of the ugliness of poverty and the world Lizabeth lived in. Subconsciously, Lizabeth did not want the flowers there because they showed joy and happiness in the mean old woman and Lizabeth’s world of hardship and poverty. Without the flowers, without knowing about the world she was missing out on, Lizabeth felt that she could be happier. So, she sought to destroy that beauty so that she could go back to her own life of innocence.
Therefore she did everything in her power to draw attention away from
Her daughter Pearl was not a ordinary child in any ways comparing to others, she has a tendency of asking question and ridicule her mother often. Pearl took some grass and imitated her mother as best she could on her own bosom the decoration of letter A which is as same like of her mother’s. In this same instance she keeps on questioning “What does the letter mean, mother? And why does you wear it?
In the short story “The Necklace” Madame Loisel was a rich women who thought she was poor. She valued having a nice appearance and looking elegant. Madame Loisel borrowed a necklace that she thought was gorgeous, she then lost the necklace but didn’t want to tell the lady she lost it so she went to look for
“Whatever verve there was left in her, whatever was of love and beauty and joy that had not been squeezed out by life, had been there in the marigolds she had so tenderly cared for. '' Children see the world far more simplistic than adults. Lizabeth says she no longer saw Miss Lottie as a witch, but just an old woman who tried to cover up the ugliness of her life with the beauty of marigolds. This was the first time she felt compassion and remorse for her actions. Lizabeth then develops the ability to distinguish what is right from wrong, and is able to feel proud when she does the right thing, as well as ashamed when she does not.
Polly’s sensibility is one of her most noticeable traits, Polly does not usually over react to things or spend money foolishly on objects she does not need. After Polly moved to the city and became a music teacher, she saved most of the money she earned and used it to pay for her brother’s education. Although Polly’s family did not have the money to pay for Wills education, Polly had no problem earning the needed money for her brother. Polly can also be very frugal, she makes and mends most of her own clothes rather than buying new ones like most of the other ladies, later she even helps Fanny and Maud make their own dresses, hats, and other garments. Polly does not find mending clothes a chore, she finds the activity rather fun and relaxing.
Charlotte Perkins Gilman’s “The Yellow Wallpaper” critiques Victorian womanhood in several ways throughout the text. Victorian women were expected to be pure, dainty, and perfectly angelic. They were also expected to be perfect mothers, wives, and hostesses at all times. If a woman were to express too much emotion, she would be called hysterical. Hysteria was considered a medical condition which rendered a woman incapable of reason or generally thinking like an adult.
The protagonist of ‘The Necklace’, Madame Loisel, live a rather steady, ordinary middle-class life in the beginning of the story. However, she views that she is intended for a luxurious life, and, therefore, does not cherish what she has. She takes a step forward to her desires, as she was invited to a ball where all the upper-class woman would be, yet she was unhappy with the fact that she does not even have a stone to put on.