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Read the passage below from “Marigolds” and answer the question.

I had indeed lost my mind, for all the smoldering emotions of that summer swelled in me and burst—the great need for my mother who was never there, the hopelessness of our poverty and degradation, the bewilderment of being neither child nor woman and yet both at once, the fear unleashed by my father’s tears. And these feelings combined in one great impulse toward destruction.

What does the passage reveal about the narrator’s feelings about her father?

The narrator is afraid for her father’s emotional stability.
The narrator realizes that her father is not the invincible hero she thought he was.
The narrator is afraid her actions have permanently damaged her relationship with her father.
The narrator realizes she is ashamed of her father’s cowardice.

User Itnelo
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1 Answer

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Answer:

The passage reveal about the narrator’s feelings about her father that the

B: The narrator realizes that her father is not the invincible hero she thought he was.

Step-by-step explanation:

The girl, Lizabeth, in the story 'Marigolds' always thought that his father was a hero. She used to see her parents as her ideals.

As Lizabeth entered her teenage, there was a depression in U.S. Her father went bankrupt. Because of his critical financial condition, he reacted very desperately. He cried and thus Lizabeth thought her father was very weak and not a real man.

She felt sad as he was not the ideal person as she had thought of.

User Adrian Klaver
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