Answer:
Sigo aqui a pesar
Explanation:
Sigo aqui a pesar de lo malo
De ese oscuro pasado
Siempre estoy junto a ti
Sigo aqui abrazado a lo nuestro
A este amor tan inmenso
Que no sabe morir
He llorado tanto mas
Que el cielo
Lagrimas de dolor
He tocado fondo tantas veces
luchando por tu amor
Soy incondicional
Un amor tan real que
No juzga que suena
Que sufre y perdona
Un amor de verdad
Soy Incondicional
Un amor tan real
Que no espera
Algo a cambio
Que no tiene horario
Un amor de verdad
NNNnno no no
Descubri
Que un amor verdadero
Se entrega por completo
Y eso hice por ti..
He llorado tanto mas
Que el cielo
Lagrimas de dolor
He tocado fondo tantas veces
luchando por tu amor
(coro)
Soy incondicional
Un amor tan real que
No…
“With torn and bleeding hearts we smile”
Sorry this is late but...
Answer:
B:Places a great deal of pressure on himself
Explanation:
Because "You tell me that I shall astonish the world if I make out the demotic inscription on the Rosetta Stone. On the contrary, I think it astonishing that It should not have been made out already, and that I should find the task so difficult.” really puts some self pressure on him to find out what the Rosetta Stone says
Hope this helps and sorry that no one answered for the time you needed it
Answer:
Yes, "An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge" is an example of realism, even though Bierce employs romantic techniques in the story.
Explanation:
<u>Romanticism had among its characteristics the glorification of war and heroism. At first, that seems to be what Ambrose Bierce will do in his short story "An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge".</u> The main character, Peyton Farquhar, is tricked into trying to burn a bridge that would allow Union soldiers to cross. Farquhar is a Confederacy supporter. He ends up being caught as a traitor and, when he is about to be hanged, he escapes. So far, Romanticism has prevailed.
<u>However, Bierce is only deceiving readers.</u> We are led to believe Farquhar has escaped, that the noose broke, and he found himself swimming in the creek, dodging bullets, free to return home. <u>We are soon disappointed</u>, however, as it is revealed that it was all his imagination - or even a hallucination - in the brief moments it took Farquhar to die. <u>The ending of the story is based on Realism. Far from being romanticized, it describes how horrid and gruesome death and war are, and how heroism is not always rewarded:</u>
<u><em>Peyton Farquhar was dead; his body, with a broken neck, swung gently from side to side beneath the timbers of the Owl Creek bridge.</em></u>
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