I think the answer is their
A. Landon must decide whether to go on a senior trip now that his best friend cant go.
An internal conflict is a decision that must be made. The decision is usually difficult because there are pros and cons to either side. Even though Jennifer not being able to find the eggs seems like it's only Jennifer's problem, it's not an internal conflict. It is not only taking place within her head. She's actually in a battle with the eggs who are "hiding". Bobi's conflict with the video game console is also external because it's not within her. The cat fighting the dog is a clear cut case of external conflict as it is two different things battling it out.
Answer:
Evidence supports the claim:
- The clock kept saying the time over and over and the house kept preparing food, but no one ate it.
- No one got up to go to work or school.
- The house was the only one standing in the neighborhood, which was among dust and ashes.
Explanation:
The name of the story refers to the poem by Sara Teasdale where the idea that nature will survive humanity is transmitted.
It can be interpreted that what happened to the family of the house was that they were exposed to a nuclear explosion, since their figures marked with fire are seen on the side of the house, the same thing happened in Japan after the atomic bomb of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Even the poem was published 5 years after this event.
The poem shows an automated house that continues to operate even though there are no longer any people. Keep cleaning, keep cooking and reporting the time, but no one exists anymore.
In fact, this house was the only one left standing in the desolate neighborhood. Even when the house collapses and is almost destroyed, it still has some basic functions.
Assuming
that the essay is the epic poem from around 1000 CE focusing on Beowulf in a third
person narrative:
<span>“A
man would roar, "I'll steal their gold and burn their meadhall!"
shaking his sword as if the tip were afire, and a man with eyes like two pins
would say, "Do it now, Cowface! I think you're not even the man your
father was!" The people would laugh. I would back away into the darkness,
furious at my stupid need to spy on them, and I would glide to the next camp of
men, and I'd hear the same.”</span>
Referring to an excerpt from “I Explain a Few Things” by Pablo Neruda the correct choice is: By addressing the reader directly and asking the reader to see what is happening in Spain, the speaker reinforces his view that poetry could and should be used to inspire action—not just to describe beautiful things.