Marigolds (short story)

Which textual evidence would best support a readers claim but the conversation between Elizabeth parents to strips her perception of the respective rules in the family

Re-read paragraphs 42 and 43 of the stories announce the multiple-choice questions to follow

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From the text:

“It ain’t right. Ain’t no man ought to eat his woman’s food year in and year out, and see his children running wild. Ain’t nothing right about that.”
“Honey, you took good care of us when you had it. Ain’t nobody got nothing nowadays.”

I had never heard a man cry before. I did not know men ever cried. I covered my ears with my hands but could not cut off the sound of my father’s harsh, painful, despairing sobs. My father was a strong man who could whisk a child upon his shoulders and go singing through the house. My father whittled toys for us, and laughed so loud that the great oak seemed to laugh with him, and taught us how to fish and hunt rabbits. How could it be that my father was crying?"

Source(s)

Marigolds