I believe it would be a soliloquy. A soliloquy is defined as a person speaking to themselves without any regard for someone that may hear it (or oblivious to them).
Answer:
The Hadleys were thrilled to purchase their Happylife Home and were proud to provide their children with the high-tech nursery, a "miracle of efficiency selling for an absurdly low price." The nursery gives the children hours of entertainment, and the house itself performs all the chores that would otherwise occupy George and Lydia's time. There is no need for a routine, since all the cooking and cleaning are silently taken care of by the house, and there is no need for much personal interaction, either. Even...
Answer: Daisy is Nick's second cousin, once removed.
Explanation:
Nick, Daisy and Tom are characters from <em>The Great Gatsby</em>, a novel by F. Scott Fitzgerald.
Nick knows Daisy and her husband, Tom, because Daisy is Nick's second cousin, once removed. Moreover, Tom and Nick went to college together at Yale, but Nick was not very fond of Tom back then. Nick says that he spent two days in Chicago with them, shortly after the war ended. Nick and Daisy are not very close, but are reunited at the beginning of the novel, when Nick moves to West Egg.
Explanation:
The narrator speaks to the reader, saying, "as you I will apprise." Then, two lines later, this context clue appears: "Before yet farther in this tale I place." This clue suggests that "apprise" is a verb that gives some information to the reader before too much time passes.