Lily is the fourteen year-old narrator of the book, and she lives on a peach farm in South Carolina with her father T. Ray. One night, a swarm of bees appears in Lily's bedroom, but when she brings T. Ray back to see them, they are gone. T. Ray makes gestures like she's crazy, and he threatens to make her kneel on grits if she wakes him up again.In this chapter, Lily also talks about her memory of her mother's death.
Lily was there when her mother and T. Ray were having a violent argument, and she has a vague memory of watching her mom grab a gun from the closet, drop it on the floor, and then go off as Lily picked it up. It's the only memory of her mother that she has. All Lily has to remember her mother by is an old photograph, a pair of white cotton gloves, and a small wooden picture of Mary, the mother of Jesus. On the back was written "Tiburon, SC".
One day, T. Ray comes to tell her what happened to her mother. He says that she was cleaning out a closet, and Lily says that she remembers the gun. T. Ray gets very upset and demands to know everything Lily knows, and she says that all she remembers is picking up the gun off the floor. T. Ray then confirms that Lily accidently killed her own mother.At one point, Lily falls asleep in the orchard with the artifacts from her mother. T. Ray finds her, thinks that she has been fooling around with a boy, and makes her kneel on grits for an hour as punishment.
Rosaleen is another main character. She is a black worker in the orchard that T. Ray chooses to become Lily's caretaker. She watches President Johnson sign the Civil Rights Act and decides to go into town to register to vote. Lily goes along, and they eventually meet three racist men from town who give Rosaleen a hard time. In an act of defiance or stupidity, Rosaleen pours tobacco juice over their shoes. She gets arrested and she and Lily get taken to jail. -
Tuesday, February 23, 2010
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The first chapter had introduces the problems about the civil rights act.Lily watched the signing of the civil rights act on t.v with Rosaleen.She wonders whether to be happy, because Rosaleen is happy.Lily realizes that the equality suggested by the act might make life more difficult for Rosaleen.We know that in 1964 racism plagued America only in the south and the civil rights act helped decrease but did not eradicate racism or discrimination. The knowing of real history makes the hard relationship between Lily a white girl with Rosaleen a black woman more understandingOn the one hand, Lily feels a lot of love for Rosaleen and looks to her for guidance.
ReplyDeleteChapter 1 introduced the death of Lily's mother, but gave no insite as to what led to her death, it also informed us about how Lily has been living without her mother, and how she and her father T Ray do not get along with each other, and the relationship Lily has with their maid Rosaleen. Lily also is visited by bees each night and they swarm her room each night, and she is the only one who sees them.
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