blog




  • Essay / Summary of Concerns by Eugenia W. Collier - 562

    She said to her brother, “If you want to come, come. » In the story, Elizabeth feels like her life is falling apart. His mother is never there and his father can't find work. Poverty put pressure on his parents. Listening to her father cry without hope disturbed her. All these causes push Elizabeth to transfer her anger and distress onto the Marigolds. He follows her; chasing her down the road, Elizabeth approached the marigolds. She pulls marigolds from the ground. Soon Miss Lottie stood before her. The book states: “And this was the moment when childhood faded and womanhood began. This violent and crazy act was the last of childhood. This passage clearly shows how Elizabeth grows from her