Answer:
“Life without memory is no life at all, just as intelligence without the possibility of expression is not really intelligence. Our memory is a coherence, our reason, our feeling, even our action. Without it, we are nothing.” – Buñuel
Explanation:
Answer:
It may be the second one
Explanation:
Compare one character’s actions to the other characters, look for emotions, and come to a conclusion
Answer:
<u>a raisin cake</u>
<u>Explanation:</u>
Remember, in the short story "The Dog of Pompeii" written by Louis Untermeyer. We are told that to their surprise the excavator and his assistant found in the dog’s mouth a raisin cake.
Browning's and Neruda's sonnets present love as a feeling or
sensation that should not grip to anything impermanent or passing. They try to say
what love is by expressing to us what it shouldn't be.
Browning presents the following negatives like smile, look,
gentle manners, and the need for relief. She emphasizes that these things may
pass. Even if they are usually understood as emblems of love, she wants somewhat
better and steadier than that. She wants to be loved for love's sake, as love
is everlasting.
On the other hand, for Neruda, love is somewhat he can't define by associating
it to exact, precise, well-known things or feelings. It is inexpressible and incomprehensible,
and as a result it is indefinite. It escapes any kind of effort to grip it by influences
to this world.
Answer:
wheres the passage?
Explanation: can´t answer the question if i haven´t read the story