Which sentence best states the main message of "Marigolds"-
A) "I had indeed lost my mind, for all the smoldering emotions of that summer swelled in me and burst-the great need for my mother who was never there, the hopelessness of our poverty and degradation" B) "The half-dawn light was more eerie than complete darkness, and in it the old house was like the ruin that my world had become-foul and crumbling, a grotesque caricature. It looked haunted, but I was not afraid, because I was haunted too" C) I know that that moment marked the end of innocence. Innocence involves an unseeing acceptance of things at face value, an ignorance of the area below the surface. In that humiliating moment I looked beyond myself and into the depths of another person D)"we children hated those marigolds. They interfered with the perfect ugliness of the place they were too beautiful they said too much that we could not understand they did not make sense