Daisy was driving when Myrtle was killed. She killed Myrtle but Gatsby is willing to take the blame and the consequences in order to protect Daisy. Daisy only wants to save her own skin. She is selfish and self-centered and Tom is only concerned with maintaining his status in the elite world of the rich and wants nothing to do with scandal. The external conflict would be the law. Daisy will not confess to the hit and run she committed and Tom would not give up his standing in the community to do the honest thing and go to the police with the truth. Daisy and Tom are content with allowing Gatsby to take the blame since it is presumed by some, namely Myrtle's husband, that Gatsby was driving the car at the time of Myrtle's death. Unfortunately for Gatsby, Myrtle's husband arrived before the police and killed him. Both Daisy and Tom are without conscience or a moral compass. They get out of town and never even attend Gatsby's funeral. Kind of hard to face a corpse when you are the reason they are dead.
Vocabulary enriches expressions used to explain feelings evoked by our senses. This stimulates the brain to look for such details and creates sense of recognition and an eye for detail. :)
Answer:
"<em>So exhausted and battered it barely stirred</em>" works as a great replacement for "<em>Its dark eyes dim and not at their prime</em>."
Explanation:
Both metaphors refer to exhaustion and a feeling of "nothingness."
Grievers. They are these huge terrifying gooey things that inject you with poison that will make you go insane.
Answer:
Explanation:
In the lady of shallot, The speaker calls her tapestry "a magic web" because the lady was weaving a tapestry picture without even straight to the world, except viewing the world through a mirror placed besides her.
Though she was happy weaving but was fed up viewing life through a reflection.
One day, when the bold and handsome Lancelot was riding by,She rushed to the window to view directly towards Camelot, This act placed a curse on her which later leads to her death.