Lily waits to speak with August in August's bedroom.
Lily looks around the room and through some books. One book is filled with various
pictures of Mary being given a lily by the angel Gabriel. When August enters,
Lily shows her the picture of her mother and tells August who she is. August tells
Lily that she already knows. August says that as soon as Lily arrived she knew
she was Deborah's daughter because she looks just like her. August tells Lily
that when she was a housekeeper in Richmond, she worked for Deborah's family.
Lily explains that she ran away from T. Ray because he said her mother left her
when she was a child. Lily cries, and August comforts her. Lily then tells August
the truth about what happened to Rosaleen. Finally, Lily tells August that she
killed her mother accidentally with a gun. August tells Lily that she is the dearest
and most lovable girl she knows. August explains that it took June a while to
warm to Lily because she resented Deborah. June could not deal with August being
housekeeper for Deborah's family. August tells Lily that she loves her, just like
she loved Deborah.
August and Lily take some ice water out to the back porch to continue their conversation. August asks Lily how she ever figured out to come to her house. Lily shows her the picture of the Back Madonna. August tells Lily all about how she came to know Deborah and what Deborah was like as a child. August describes how T. Ray was a different man when Deborah met him. He treated Deborah like a princess. Deborah refused T. Ray's first marriage proposal, but then decided to marry him when she found out that she was pregnant with Lily. August says that Deborah was happy for a little while; however, after some time she decided to leave T. Ray and asked if she could stay with August.
Lily is devastated to learn that her mother did not bring her to August's house when she left the farm. When Deborah arrived at the pink house, it was apparent that she was in very bad shape. A doctor came to see her and suggested they place her in a mental institution. August says that she later realized Deborah had a nervous breakdown. When Deborah finally recovered she went back to the farm to get Lily. She even talked to Clayton about filing divorce papers. When Deborah did not return, August called Lily's house and a neighbor told her what happened. When she is done telling what she knows about Deborah, August takes Lily to the honey house and makes sure she goes to bed.
The epigraph
that begins Chapter Twelve comments that the queen never leaves the hive and if
she were smarter she would probably be neurotic. She is frequently called the
mother of the hive, which is ironic because she has no maternal instincts. In
this chapter, Lily learns the truth about her own queen and mother, Deborah.
Deborah, who apparently was smarter than the queen bee, grew neurotic from being
confined to the farm. In her deep depression, she lost her ability to care for
Lily. This information greatly disturbs Lily.
This chapter begins the resolution of Lily's conflict, which is that
she must learn the truth about her dead mother in order to understand
who she, herself, is. This conflict will not be fully resolved until Lily
confronts
T. Ray; however, in learning about her mother Lily begins to define herself.
In her conversation with August, Lily learns that the myth she has created
about her mother is false. Deborah is not the extraordinary woman Lily
imagined who would have saved her from her life. Now that Lily's mother
has been removed from her pedestal, she must seek new female role-models
and save herself from her life.
Clapsaddle, Diane. "TheBestNotes on A Long Way Gone".
TheBestNotes.com.
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