Read the following sentences from "Day of the Butterfly. "
She picked up a leatherette case with a mirror in it, a comb and a nail file and a
natural lipstick and a small handkerchief edged with gold thread. I had noticed it
before. "You take that," she said.
. All the presents on the bed, the folded paper and ribbons, those guilt-tinged
offerings, had passed into this shadow, they were no longer innocent objects to be
touched, exchanged, accepted without danger. I didn't want to take the case now but I
could not think how to get out of it, what lie to tell. I'll give it away, I thought, I
won't ever play with it. I would let my little brother pull it apart.
The main conflict in these sentences can be identified as
Oman vs. Man.
Oman vs. Nature.
Oman vs. Society.
Oman vs. Himself