Answer:
They drive to town together, and Elisa notices a dark speck on the road in the distance. She realizes it's the chrysanthemum sprouts that the tinker has dumped by the side of the road, keeping the pot. Eventually, they overtake the tinker's wagon, but Elisa refuses to look at it as they pass. Elisa asks Henry about the boxing fights in town, then asks if they can get wine with dinner. He agrees. She again asks him about the fights, and if fighters hurt each other a lot - she explains that she's read they can be quite violent. Henry, surprised, asks her what's wrong, and tells her that if she wants to go to the fights, he'll take her, but he doesn't think she'll like it. She answers that she doesn't want to go to the fights - wine will be enough. As they continue to drive, she turns up her coat collar so he can't see that she's crying.
Explanation:
Answer:
I'm not completely sure but I would say: C.) Unlike Michelangelo, few painters had the talent to also sculpt statues.
It is the "also" that makes it sound off.
Tom was reading a fictional book called "The Rise of the Colored Empires" by the equally fictional author Goddard. It was an immensely racist book tailored toward white supremacists. Fun fact: Fitzgerald based this book on a real piece, "The Rising Tide of Color: The Threat Against White World-Supremacy" by <span>Lothrop Stoddard, published in 1920.</span>
Without a doubd I can say that after reading this excerpt from Leo Tolstoy’s ''The Death of Ivan Ilyich'' it is clear for me that the statement that shows its summary in the best way is the last lines '<span>‘there had been something really pleasant with which it would be possible to live if it could return. But the child who had experienced that happiness existed no longer, it was like a reminiscence of somebody else''</span>