ILL MARK BRAINLIEST IF CORRECT!!!
At the start of the play, Walter would be described as stubborn, but by the end of the play, we see him develop as a character. What quote highlights Walter’s growth as a character?
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WALTER (Bitterly) Now ain’t that fine! You just got your mother’s interest at heart, ain’t you, girl? You such a nice girl—but if Mama got that money she can always take a few thousand and help you through school too—can’t she?
WALTER It ain’t that nobody expects you to get on your knees and say thank you, Brother; thank you, Ruth; thank you, Mama—and thank you, Travis, for wearing the same pair of shoes for two semesters—
WALTER And we have decided to move into our house because my father—my father—he earned it for us brick by brick. (MAMA has her eyes closed and is rocking back and forth as though she were in church, with her head nodding the Amen yes)
WALTER (Quietly) Sometimes it’s like I can see the future stretched out in front of me—just plain as day.
Characters are sometimes revealed through their physical appearance or descriptions (LOOKS). Read the following passage from Act I, Scene 1, and then answer the question that follows. RUTH is about thirty. We can see that she was a pretty girl, even exceptionally so, but now it is apparent that life has been little than she expected, and disappointment has already begun to hang in her face. In a few years, before thirty-five even, she will be known among her people as a “settled woman.” What do the physical characteristics in these stage directions indicate about Ruth?
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1 point
She finds her work as a housekeeper to be very fulfilling.
She keeps her personal hopes and dreams alive despite her circumstances.
She has been defeated by the lack of control over her life.
She blames others for her circumstances in life.