Answer:
Elisa has a deep relationship with both environments. The garden of chrysanthemums nearly seems like an extension: it's her garden, and the space and the flowers within it are responsibility her. When the environment is changed to the road, Elisa is physically and mentally also moving and shifting.
Explanation:
This answer is for the attached picture...
Question is:
It's just one paragraph proving how the setting reveals information about a character aka how Elisa leaving the ranch and going on the road into town shows her weakness= she's confident at home in her garden, but when she leaves, she shows vulnerability and weakness.
What are the answer options?
Normally omniscient (3rd person pov) provides insight about the character's thoughts and motives, but sometimes 1st person can be helpful to gain information about how the character views the situation... Sorry if this seems confusing at all.
One of the ways that Lyddie changes is in her attitude towards education. Over the course of the story, she comes to understand the value of formal learning, improving her reading skills by tackling more challenging books and setting herself the goal of attending Oberlin College. Initially, Lyddie arrived at the mill with the sole purpose of providing for her family. But in setting herself the ambitious goal of attending college, whole new vistas of opportunity have opened up to her. To a large extent, Lyddie had been forced to live her life prior to this point through her family, putting their needs ahead of her own. But by the end of the story, Lyddie's come to realize that she's an individual in her own right with her own life to lead. This is another important change that she experiences.