If you are referring to Pablo Neruda's "Tonight I can Write", then the poem describes kisses under the A. endless sky. This is what he says:
"Through nights like this one I held her in my arms.
<span>I kissed her again and again under the endless sky."</span>
If you have already had a research questing identifies, you should: B, turn it into an assertion.
I believe the correct answer is: “…the two pilgrims successfully resist Flatterer, who tries to trap them with a net, and Atheist, who tries to convince them that the Celestial City does not exist.”
In this excerpt from “Pilgrim's Progress” (1678), a Christian allegory written by John Bunyan, specific characters that serve as an allegory for distractions that one must resist to live a life of faith are Flatterer and Atheist which try to divert tempt Christian and Hopeful from the proper path. Therefore, the quotation that best develops this idea is:
“…the two pilgrims successfully resist Flatterer, who tries to trap them with a net, and Atheist, who tries to convince them that the Celestial City does not exist.”
P.S. Note that if it wasn't plural, the main distraction would be Apollyon, a form of Satan, as the Satan was tempting Christ the most in the desert.
Charles Baudelaire quoted; "... it is time, then for it to return to its true duty, which is to be the servant of the sciences and the arts- but a very humble servant,"