The answer would be a or b
Chrysanthemums are the central symbol of life, vital energies, sexuality in the story. Just like Elisa herself, they need nurturing and attendance. She lives a boring and unfulfilled life in a dull, loveless marriage, and she has never had a chance of finding her true self, except in the garden. That is why she commits to gardening so eagerly: because she couldn't bear to see those flowers withered. At the end of the story, she sees her chrysanthemums on the road, thrown away, "a dark speck" as Steinbeck says. They are wasted, just like Elisa's life, love, and happiness.
Answer:
C) Adult Wolves help feed the Mother
Explanation:
Answer:
I think we do have the responsibility to see knowledge from literature. I think books can be used to better us as humans by giving us more knowledge about a certain event that has happened or is happening. Sadly books can't make the world a better place because in the end it comes down to one person able to do that and that one person is yourself we can't count on other people to try and make the world a better place when it's the world you live in and if you want change your going to be the one to try and make it first.
Explanation:
Waverly Jong represents to the narrator a) a rival prodigy.
She is a Chinese chess champion and brags about it to the narrator, Jing-mei.