because she described her house kind of like a prison. She just wanted out. She wanted to see the world. So she ran away and that led her to meeting the tucks.
To run away
she told the toad that she would run away
Because she felt trapped at her house, and her mom and grandma always watched her.
She tells the toad about how she wishes she had other siblings so that her parents wouldn't always be watching her. She also pours the spring water on the toad so that it will be safe forever. She tells the toad all her secrets.
i guess its because they have a sense of mystery in them like there's a secret that needs to be discovered and also Winnie just wants to step out side her gate she doesn't really want to run away and her parents own the woods so she probably thinks its not really like shes running away
She didn't know if it was the right thing to do and she knew that there were many dangerous things out in the wood
Winnie gives the bottle from The Spring 2 a frog and years later Mae and Agnus Tuck come back and find her tombstone. They almost run over a frog and Tuck makes a comment that the frog thinks he will live 4ever which made me think that it is the same frog that Winnie gave the water 2
i guess its because they have a sense of mystery in them like there's a secret that needs to be discovered and also Winnie just wants to step out side her gate she doesn't really want to run away and her parents own the woods so she probably thinks its not really like shes running away
Winnie ran away from home into the woods her family owned (i know, not the best place to run away to), and saw Jesse Tuck drinking from a spring under a giant oak tree in the center of the wood.
drink the water when she's 17 and find them so they could run away and marry and live forever together
To get out of school- ever hear of the Hooky Club- Kant Reid, Prez.
First, there is the "moral" probelm of being immortal. Winnie will one day die, while the Tucks will live forever. It is the dilema of whether Winnie should follow the path of life as it naturally is, or live forever like the Tuck's do. Another problem that rises is the man in the yellow suit going after Winnie, but then Mae Tuck killing the man. Mae is set to be executed, but since she cannot die they break her out of jail. Winnie takes Mae's place in jail. A message here is not to be afraid of death. In the epilogue, Jesse stands over Winnie's grave almost a century later.