Be able to define the following words and understand them when they appear in the story and class discussions.

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Name:, per. Date: Be able to define the following words and understand them when they appear in the story and class discussions. Short Stories Marigolds by Eugenia Collier Vocabulary 1. bravado Part of speech: 2. compassions Part of speech: 3. degradation Part of speech: 4. futile Part of speech: 5. impotent Part of speech: 6. impoverished Part of speech: 7. perverse Part of speech: 8. poignantly Part of speech: 9. squalor Part of speech: 10. stoicism Part of speech:

Short Stories Why Did I Do That? Marigolds by Eugenia Collier Journal Prompt Think of a time when you did something in a fit of anger or frustration that you regretted later. Did you perhaps destroy something or hurt someone, simply because you were mad, depressed or having a hard time? Please write no less than a page on this topic, If you are having difficultly recalling a time, you may write from the other perspective, perhaps you were the recipient of someone s rage, depression, frustration, etc. Explain in detail leaving little to my imagination.

Short Stories Marigolds by Eugenia Collier Literary Terms Simile: a direct comparison of two essentially unlike things, often using the word like or as. Example: He hurried home like a snake slithering into its hole. Metaphor: a less direct comparison of two essentially unlike things. Example: The lamp of grandfather s love illuminated the difficult times after Sally s death. Allusion: a reference to something in history or literature. Example: All through high school, he played Romeo to my Juliet. Symbolism: something that both is itself and symbolizes one or more other things. Example: When we give our mothers flowers Mother s Day, the flowers are real flowers, but they also symbolize love, gratitude, loyalty, and other values.

Read each of the passages from Eugenia Collier s Marigolds. Explain your understanding of the passage, and point out specific similes, metaphors, and allusions. Short Stories Eugenia Collier s Clarity Through Comparison 1. I feel the chaotic emotions of adolescence, illusive as smoke, yet as real as the potted geranium before me now. 2. Joy and rage and wild animal gladness and shame become tangled together in the multicolored skein of a 14-going-on-15 3. if one were to have the grit rise before dawn each day and labor in the white man s vineyard offering one s sweat in return for some meager share of the bread. 4. Poverty was the cage in which we all were trapped, and our hatred of it was still the vague, undirected restlessness of the zoo-bred flamingo who knows that nature has created him to fly free. 5. those days are ill-defined in my memory, running together and combining like a fresh water-color painting left out in the rain.

Short Stories The Daffodil Principle

Short Stories And I too have planted marigolds Marigolds by Eugenia Collier Journal Prompt Marigolds are the main symbol in Eugenia Collier s story, and she emphasizes their symbolic value in the closing line. Please read The Daffodil Principle and then answer the following journal prompt. Have you ever planted marigolds when life seemed especially disappointing? Have you seen someone else create beauty to alter a grim landscape? Have you observed someone driven by anger or sadness to destroy beauty? Write your own Marigolds below.

Short Stories Description of Writing Assignment: In the short story Marigolds by Eugenia Collier, at one point in the story, the narrator, Lizabeth recalls an incident that occurred during the Great Depression when she was fourteen. After reading the historical fiction piece, you are to rewrite a portion of the short story from Miss Lottie s perspective. Circumstances of the Task/Directions: 1. You must write a micro mini short story from Miss Lottie s point of view. 2. The assignment has to be at least 25 sentences and 250 words in length. 3. You will work alone during the composition of the micro mini short story. 4. You are allowed to use your texts and your notes during your rewrites. 5. Your story must answer the following questions: a. How does Miss Lottie feel about her living conditions? b. How does she manage to take care of her son John Burke? c. Why does she plant marigolds? d. Why doesn t she get angry with Lizabeth after Lizabeth destroys her marigolds? Example of how to start: Marigolds by Eugenia Collier Short Story Rewrite Back when I was a kid, I was known as the weird girl that no one would talk to. I was also known as the poorest girl in my home town of Jackson, Mississippi. I didn t care about how my house looked back then and I certainly don t care about how it looks now. As long as I have a roof over my head, I m fine. I made a promise to my momma that I would grow marigolds when I got older.

Simile, Metaphor, and Allusion Name: By Eugenia Collier