Monday, March 11, 2019
The Marigolds- Lizabeth
THE LIFE THAT MAKES UP WHO LIZABETH IS TODAY Because of her going through depression and regretting mistakes she has done, Lizabeths maturity take aim has risen and so has her understanding of life causing this to make up the person she is today. To begin with, Lizabeths depression interferes with her teenage experience. When I call up of the hometown of my youth, all that I seem to remember is scatter the brown, crumbly dust of late summer arid, sterile dust that gets into the throat between the toes of ransack brown feet. According to the story, Lizabeth sounds like a depressed person that would alternatively stay in the house all day alone than go outside and have fun with friends. She is letting the Great Depression bust her one-in-a-lifetime experience that no child will ever forget. And so, when I work out of that time and that place, I remember just the dry September of the turd roads and grassless yards of the shantytown where I lived. Lizabeth only thinks of her pa st and remembers it better than all other of her childhood memories.The reason is because the depression has a huge final result on her and her familys life because they are poor and they live in poverty. Also, it is difficult to make a living off of so particular money back then, especially with only the mom working. It is also disenfranchised to support a family with only one person working. Not only does Lizabeth suffer from depression but she also has regrets. I feel once again the chaotic emotions of adolescence, illusive as smoke, yet as real as the potted geranium before me now. Lizabeth regrets what she does in the past and she cannot find any(prenominal) way to deserve forgiveness. Lizabeth is a confusing teenager that still believes she has no idea why these things have been happening to her. Furthermore, Lizabeths maturity level rises as she deals with her problems as an adult rather than be childish astir(predicate) things. Joy and rage and wild animal gladness an d shame constitute tangled together in multicolored skein of fourteen-going-on-fifteen as I retract that devastating moment when I was suddenly more woman than child, geezerhood ago in Miss Lotties yard. We children, of pass, were only vaguely cognisant of the extent of our poverty. Having no radios, few newspapers, and no magazines, we were somewhat unaware of the mankind outside of our community. Lizabeth knows that the Great Depression is going on but she isnt worried because she has always been living in poverty with no communication theory with the outside world she will never know how poor her lifestyle really is.Last but not least, although Lizabeth is a confused teenager, she still knows her unspoiled from wrong and she is shameful of the disrespectful and rude remarks she makes at Miss Lottie. Of course I could not express the things that I knew about Miss Lottie as I stood there awkward and ashamed. For one does not have to be ignorant and poor to find that his life is as barren as the dusty yards of our town. And I have too planted marigolds. Lizabeth finally accepts who she is as a person and does the right thing by moving on and forgetting the past.
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