Answer to question 14
The reader learns that Tom told Wilson that Gastby had driven the car that killed Myrtle and the reader learns that Tom was trying to protect Daisy from Wilson.
Answer to question 15
Gastby's determination and Daisy's weakness.
Answer to question 16
Even though the people are guests in Gastby's home, they know very little about him.
Answer to question 17
The lenght and syntax reveal Gastby's excitement and arousal about being in Daisy's large house.
<span>In fact, it seems like the room and its creepy atmosphere might really be getting to our speaker. Even the rustling sound of the curtains seems sad to him .As he listens, he begins to really freak out, his head filling with "fantastic terrors."His heart starts to beat faster too; to calm himself down, he has to tell himself (twice) that the knocking sound he hears is just a visitor.<span>The more he says it though, the more we all know that it can't just be that, or at least not the kind of visitor he might be expecting…</span></span>
This has the rhyme scheme of a hybrid sonnet, with the rhymes following:
abba abba cdcd ee
The first two stanzas follow the same rhyme pattern-abba abba-with the end words:
skies/face/place/tries
eyes/case/grace/decsries
Then the next quatrain begins a new, more Shakespearean format-cdcd-with the end words:
me/wit/be/yet
Finally, the rhyming couplet at the end finishes the sonnet with 'ee':
posesse/ungratefulnesse
Answer Choices:
A. Ronald Givens
B. The metro editor
C. Dolly Givens
D. Richard Brautigan
If I remember correctly, the answer is A. Ronald Givens