Sunday, April 16, 2017

What happens when Lyddie goes to sign the petition in Lyddie? What is her reaction?

Whengoes to sign the petition,
she learns that it has already failed.  She is devastated.


When Lyddie first hears of the factory workers petition, she does not want to sign
it.

"But we'd be paid less." Couldn't Betsy
understand that? "If we just work ten hours, we'd be paid much less." (Ch.
12)

Betsy tells her to think about the big picture,
saying that her time is is more precious than money.  The petition in question is from Diana
Gross.  She is a member of the Female Labor Reform Association.

The girls are
afraid to ask for their rights.  They assume, as Amelia says, that they will lose their jobs if
they complain or if they sign the petition.  Lyddie is upset because she needs the money to pay
off her familys debts.  She refuses to be a slave, but she is working because she needs to.  It
is her mindset that matters to her.

Unfortunately, Lyddie injures herself on
the job.  She wants to go to work even though she has a bad cut and part of her head is shaved. 
She didnt even want to leave work when she injured herself.  Even with this, Lyddie is still
refusing to sign the petition.  She is angry at Betsy when she does.  However, when Betsy gets
sick and loses all of her savings, Lyddie considers it.


When I'm ready to go myself, she thought, maybe I could sign that cussed petition. Not
for me. I don't need it, but for Betsy and the others. It ain't right for this place to suck the
strength of their youth, then cast them off like dry husks to the wind. (Ch. 14)


Just when Lyddie feels that she has almost all of the money she
needs and can sign the petition, she gets a visit from an uncle she barely remembers.  He tells
her that her mother has been sent to an asylum.  Lyddie is upset, because she did not feel that
her mother was actually crazy.  He tells her he is selling the farm, and drops off her little
sister, who is weak and seems more dead than alive.  Lyddie is horrified.  It feels like
everything she has worked for is gone.

Lyddie finally decides to sign the
petition, for Diana, and goes to find her at an association meeting.  There she learns that the
petition has already been submitted. They tell her she can try again the next time.  Lyddie is
devastated.

Lyddie stood there, openmouthed, looking from
Diana's thin face to the other woman's robust one. Too late. She'd come too late. She was always
too late. Too late to save the farm. Too late to keep her family together. Too late to do for
Diana the only thing she knew to do. (Ch. 19)

Learning
that Diana is going to have a baby, but cant marry the father, is another blow to Lyddie.  Her
friend had to leave, and Lyddie feels as if she was too late to do the only thing that she could
for her.

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