Answer:
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Quite similarly, ever since I was a young kid I used to dream about going to London, it was my life goal you could say.
It seemed quite impossible as I come from a working class family however I decided to work during college in order to save every pennie and book a flight to the UK.
I was finally able to do it, I was one flight away from seeing London for the first time ever, I could not have been more excited.
Once I got there, for the first time in my life I knew how dissapointment felt like. It was nothing like I imagined, it was exactly how no one ever described it to me: crowded, dirty and ordinary.
I learned to love its streets and its people but frankly I'd only return if it was for free.
Hope this helps :)
The correct answer is <em><u>option C.</u></em> The most important symbol in "A Raisin in the Sun" is mama's plant. The play, written by Lorraine Hansberry in 1959, narrates the story of a black family that lives in Chicago, and that tries against all odds to become better, after the father dies and they get an insurance payment.
In the play, mama's plant is used by the author to represent the family itself, and how mama gives all her attention and care to the things she loves, like th plant and her family. The plant symbolizes the struggles that the family has been faced against, and how with perseverance, the family and the plant, will survive.