What does this excerpt from George Bernard Shaw’s Pygmalion reveal about Eliza’s character?


MRS. PEARCE: Stop, Mr. Higgins. I won't allow it. It's you that are wicked. Go home to your parents, girl; and tell them to take better care of you.

LIZA: I ain't got no parents. They told me I was big enough to earn my own living and turned me out.

MRS. PEARCE: Where's your mother?

LIZA: I ain't got no mother. Her that turned me out was my sixth stepmother. But I done without them. And I'm a good girl, I am.


A. Eliza despises her father’s habits
.
B. Eliza lives and earns money independently.
C. Eliza misses her childhood home.
D. Eliza craves a mother’s love.

Respuesta :

the answer is letter: c.

Answer:

C. Eliza misses her childhood home.

Explanation:

In Pygmalion, phonetics educator Henry Higgins takes in a blossom young lady named Eliza Doolittle. He means to transform Eliza into a woman by teaching her elocution.  

Eliza ends up being a well-suited understudy and effectively persuades the women at a greenery enclosure party that she's one of them. Nevertheless, Henry never really thinks about her as a woman and still treats her as a servant. She flees, looking for her freedom.