when desiree goes to her husband and asks what it means if the baby looks mixed and he says that it means that she is part black.
then desiree asks her mom what to do and she says to go back to valmonde.
so desiree asks aramnd if she should and he was like "YEAH YOU ShOULD JUST LEAVE I WANT YOU TO" (not really but baiscally)
Desiree's Baby was created in 1893.
get money
The baby would surely be dead at the end of the story. It was made clear that Desiree wanted to die. If Desiree walked into the water they may have been killed by alligators. The baby would have died of exposure or starvation if Desiree died before the baby.
The baby would surely be dead at the end of the story. It was made clear that Desiree wanted to die. If Desiree walked into the water they may have been killed by alligators. The baby would have died of exposure or starvation if Desiree died before the baby.
The exposition of "Desiree's Baby" by Kate Chopin introduces the characters Desiree and Armand Aubigny, their marriage, and the setting of Louisiana in the antebellum period. It establishes the happiness of the couple and their newborn baby, as well as hints at the racial issues that will come to play a significant role in the story.
Kate Chopin
The pillars in the short story Desiree's Baby may symbolize strength and protection.
Yes.In fact that is what I'll name my baby.
The conflicts in "Desiree's Baby" include Desiree's struggle with her identity and place in society, the racial discrimination faced by her and her child due to their mixed heritage, and the revelation of Armand's own mixed ancestry and the subsequent societal implications. These conflicts highlight themes of race, identity, and the destructive power of prejudice.
the falling action to the falling action is that darren gets a potion for
Desiree is the protagonist of the story because while she knows that her little baby was a black negro she didn't leave him and took him with her when madame valmonde asked her to come. Rula E . Omeir
I feel really shocked, because he throws away all of Desiree's letters and even the last memory of his mother's. He tells Desiree to leave in spite of knowing thaat his mother was from the negroes, and thus he could expect his baby to be so.