Steinbeck shows moments of her being overly cruel. She gets lonely and looks around for people to talk to but when she realises that the guys don’t want to talk to her she turns on crooks telling him that she can get him hanged because she would accuse him of rape.…
For one does not have to be ignorant and poor to find that one’s life is barren as the dusty yards of one's town. And I too have planted marigolds” (Collier 116) What the author means in these few sentences is that when Lizabeth looks back on her childhood, she remembers the love of marigolds with pain because that is all she had growing up. The last sentence means that she still is fond of marigolds and holds on to those memories. This piece of evidence supports the theme because she developed this love for planting marigolds when she was a child and had…
The theme of Marigolds is poverty, maturity, and the connection between innocence and compassion. The symbolism in the story are the marigolds, because of their beauty during the hard times, and also poverty and desperate surroundings. Another example of symbolism in the story is fear because before she went on her rampage, she had fear towards her future after the Depression. My character analysis of Lisabeth is that she grew up from a violent child to a very mature woman. Nobody understood why there were marigolds outside the house when it was only showing the love and joy that Miss.…
Montague’s signature phrase “Pretty, pretty!” [Jackson 619]. Mrs. Montague basically only said this phrase throughout most of the story which once again would be an example of a definite omen that something is wrong with this women, who has everything except her mind. An ironic twist on this phrase is that everything that Mrs. Montague is surrounded by is extravagant and “pretty” yet she is unable to enjoy any of these luxuries. In the story “Cauliflower in her hair” Mrs. Garland repeats the same phrase to her husband, “She does not seem like an awfully nice girl, does she?” [Jackson 569]. Mrs. Garland’s intuition was telling her not to trust Millie and it was right. The foreshadowing taking place automatically points hatred towards Millie, however once it is known that the Millie is not corrupting Virginia, but rather sleeping with Mr. Garland, they hatred is spread out evenly between the both of them. Interesting enough a student of Jackson’s husband published an article which could give insight to why Jackson wrote the story “Cauliflower in her…
and through these choices we can learn about life’s journey. “Marigolds” explains this through its coming of age theme shown within Lizabeth’s battle between innocence and compassion. A…
In this essay I will show how Steinbeck presents Curley’s wife in a number of ways throughout the novel ‘Of Mice and Men’, showing both how she is portrayed as a ‘nice girl’ as well as a ‘floozy’. This novel was set during the great depression and is written around two key themes of the American dream, which every ‘ranch hand’ owned their own patch of land, and loneliness, the only common feeling that each individual in the novel feared. Loneliness was the main theme that caused Curley’s wife to be interpreted in a negative way by the other ranch men.…
The Effect of Gamma Rays on Man-in-the-Moon Marigolds was about named Tille it showed all the hard ships of being raised by a single mom with crushed dreams. Tille avoided her mom and her sister Ruth at all costs, and try’s to avoid any conflicts with them. This compares to the quote because it shows how her family knows she doesn’t like them but in real life people would just try to deal with it and put up with them. Tille was smart, unloved, brave, open minded, courageous living, passive, strong, and a leader. Her mom Beatrice unloving, selfish, and rude, mean lost, bitter, unfair enabler and lives through Ruth. And Ruth was ungrateful and otherwise a younger version of her mom.…
This quote is said by the governess, about the relationship between her and the children, Miles and Flora. This simple sentence reveals a lot about how the governess feels about Miles and Flora. The words "romance" and "poetry" bring to mind happy, wistful thoughts. It is clear from this sentence that the governess really, truly loves the children, even though she hardly knows them. I really liked this quote because it appeared so early in the book (and so early in the governess' care of the children) yet it is clear how much she cares for Miles and Flora, and sets the stage for how protective she is of them later on, when Quint and Miss Jessel appear.…
The novella ‘Of Mice and Men’ written by John Steinbeck was set in the Great Depression of the 1930s. It was difficult for everyone, especially women who were treated by contempt by men. One of the main characters of the novella is a woman who is referred to as ‘Curley’s Wife’. She is a misinterpreted woman who craves attention and this eventually leads to her death. Curley’s wife is important in this novella because as this character develops, we find that she is a complex character with more than we first perceive.…
The story “Marigolds” is written by Eugenia Collier and is about a young girls childhood. In the depression era, a young girl named Lizabeth expresses her frustration and her fury among a flower bed. When she looks up to see the owner over her she sees with the eyes of adulthood, and she knows that her innocence of her childhood is gone forever. Anna the narrator, tells this story from her childhood. The leader of her group of friends, Lizabeth takes part in throwing some stones at Miss Lottie's flower bed of marigolds. Miss Lottie's seems to be the town's outcast, and frustrating her was a common pastime for the children of the town. Miss Lottie's marigolds are described as one of the only spots with amazing colors.…
This quote shows how Mrs. Bennet is already thinking of marrying her daughters to a man she does not know well. She is talking to Mr. Bennet and telling him that he should already know about her plan. This information shows how it was a priority for women to get married back then so that they could be taken care of. Foreshadowing…
“Marigolds” written by Eugenia Collier is a story about a girl who realizes the end of her innocent childhood after a childish action. In The Scream by Edvard Munch, we see a man who seems scared and confused, the world around him seems undefined and confusing as well. In Kiseg’s painting Scared Girl, we see that she looks trapped and scared. All 3 of these pieces there is a common element: scared and confused. In “Marigolds”, the narrator, Lizabeth, is scared on page 319 where she says, “The fear unleashed by my father’s tears.” This shows that she was feeling fear from how upset her father was. Also, in The Scream, we see the fear in the face of the man in the painting, he’s screaming from the terror of something. There are similar themes…
The comedic structure of the play, allows for the reduction of Elizabethan social paradigms through the use of a utopian pastoral setting. The play begins in disharmony and banishment in the ‘perilous court’. Being excluded from the court, Rosalind’s notion of identity is challenged. Her exile, triggered because she is ‘thy father’s daughter’, causes her alienation, shocking the values held by Shakespeare’s 17thcentury audience. Rosalind and Celia shed their old identities, along with the burdens of court life, for new ones as Aliena and Ganymede, their theatrical disguise adding humour to their search for a new acceptance and a safe place of belonging.…
Despite Steinbeck’s rendering, Curley’s wife emerges as a relatively complex and interesting character. Although her purpose is rather simple in the book’s opening pages—she is the “tramp,” “tart,” and “bitch” that threatens to destroy male happiness and longevity—her appearances later in the novella become more complex. When she confronts Lennie, Candy, and Crooks in the stable, she admits to feeling a kind of shameless dissatisfaction with her life. Her vulnerability at this moment and later—when she admits to Lennie her dream of becoming a movie star—makes her utterly human and much more interesting than the stereotypical vixen in fancy red shoes. However, it also reinforces the novella’s grim worldview. In her moment of greatest vulnerability, Curley’s wife seeks out even greater weaknesses in others, preying upon Lennie’s mental handicap, Candy’s debilitating age, and the color of Crooks’s skin in order to steel herself against harm.…
The writer presents a young adolescent who is in her initial stages of life. Initially, she does not know that she is poor, but from her interactions with Miss Moore and the other rich kids, she becomes aware of her environment. She is however reluctant to accept that she is disadvantaged which a positive character is. It is surprising to note that believes she is the best despite realizing that she is disadvantaged. She portrays a positive character when she says, “aint nobody gonna beat me at nuthin.” She is different from many people who would feel this affects their ego. She is focused on remaining upbeat that she is the best among all of her…