Oh my lord almost the entire thing is a series of devises, especially irony.
A very obvious example you'd be advised not to use: the irony of Romeo's sacrifice, drinking the poison to be with his love, only to be the cause of her demise. Very poetic.
Another example of irony: The Montague's and Capulet's determination to keep their children safe from the other family, only to drive them both to their graves through increasingly hateful acts.
Honestly the entire story is riddled with irony. Pick a situation where a character makes a choose that ends up doing the oppositite of what they intended.
The simile of Lines 18 through 23 compares the storm clouds that whip across the sky from the horizon to the zenith to: locks of hair of a frenzied woman. (Ode to the West Wind).
Answer:
Catherine says Nick that both Tom and Myrtle should divorce their partners since they both cannot stand their spouses.
Explanation:
'The Great Gatsby' is a novel authored by F. Scott Fitzgerald which revolves around the theme of money and American dream. In the chapter 2 of The Great Gatsby, there occurred an incident where Tom and Myrtle happen to meet each other and they both shared a very friendly relationship. Catherine, the sister of Myrtle knew it was something more than friendship, and that's when she says Nick Carraway that, when both of them hate the person they're married to then why don't they divorce? Catherine has a very modern attitude when it comes to relationship and she feels Tom and Myrtle should marry each other.
No, its the side of the bumper