Answer:
In a room.
Explanation:
From the poem, we can see that she is in a room, perhaps at night because it is indicated that she came into a room and she was described as kindling the narrator and they "wake up glowing" which could be in a literal or figurative way.
<u>When she comes slip-footing through the door,
</u>
<u>she kindles us
</u>
<u>like lump coal lighted,
</u>
<u>and we wake up glowing.
</u>
<u>She puts a spark even in Papa’s eyes </u>
<u>and turns out all our darkness.
</u>
<u>When she comes sweet-talking in the room,
</u>
<u>she warms us </u>
<u>like grits and gravy,
</u>
<u>
and we rise up shining.
</u>
<u>
Even at night-time Mama is a sunrise
</u>
<u>
that promises tomorrow and tomorrow.</u>
<u>Mama Is A Sunrise</u> by Evelyn Tooley Hunt.
<span>It has a negative implication, since it proposes that the reasons used to expel the issue were not important. "The Trapped Housewife" is an expression talked about in Betty Friedan's book, "The Feminine Mystique". She discusses the issue numerous ladies looked in the 1960's tied in with being miserable with their lives at home and subsequent to perusing half of the book, I'm starting to see parallels of these issues that still holds on in show day.</span>
Sentence 2 has the correct parallel structure.