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  • Essay / Analysis of Sunday in the Park - 1166

    The reader feels happy for her because she finally has time to relax with her family in the park,” Nicolas Lockhart described her in his analysis of the story. However, this mother faces an opposite scenario. Not only did the incident ruin her weekend, but the conflict forced her underestimated inner feelings towards her husband to come out and confront him "You and who else?" she also fought her son Larry. “Stop crying,” she said dryly. “I’m ashamed of you!” She felt like the three of them were dragging mud down the street. The child cried louder. She “despises her husband’s weakness. When he criticizes her for not disciplining their son effectively, she attacks him. Thank goodness her husband decided to end it all and return home. "Then Morton turned his back on the man and said quietly, 'Come on, let's get out of here.' » Now begins the conflict within the character of the mother. “His first feeling was one of relief that a fight had been avoided and no one had been hurt. Yet underneath was a layer of something else, something heavy and inevitable. She felt that this was more than just an unpleasant incident, more than a defeat of reason by force. She vaguely felt that it had something to do with her and Morton, something deeply personal and familiar and