Read the following sentences from “Day of the Butterfly.” “Oh,” said Miss Darling dubiously. “Well you ought to try to be nicer to her anyway. Don’t you think so? Don’t you? You will try to be nicer, won’t you? I know you will.” Poor Miss Darling! Her campaigns were soon confused, her persuasions turned to bleating and uncertain pleas. When she had gone Gladys Healey said softly, “You will try to be nicer, won’t you? I know you will,” and then drawing her lip back over her big teeth she yelled exuberantly, “I don't care if it rains or freezes.” She went through the whole verse and ended it with a spectacular twirl of her Royal Stuart tartan skirt. Question Use the passage to answer the question. In the selection from "Day of the Butterfly," how does the writer mostly reveal Gladys’s character? (1 point) Responses through what she says through what she says through the narrator's description of her through the narrator's description of her through the perspective of other characters through the perspective of other characters through her interactions with other characters through her interactions with other characters

The writer mostly reveals Gladys’s character through what she says and through her interactions with other characters.