The poet is actually saying he will come quickly to be beside the person he loves; A
Hi, you've asked an incomplete question. However, I added the missing explanations below.
<u>Quotation/Explanation:</u>
- <em>"But that's chicken and I've got a reputation to consider." </em>Meaning: <em>The fact is "Squeaky sees things in Raymond that other people don't."</em>
- <em>"I almost stop to watch my brother Raymond on his first run." </em>Meaning: What this quotation show is that <em>"Squeaky thinks kids are as important as adults".</em>
- <em>"People like to act like things come easy to them...Not me." </em>Meaning: His willingness to state his opinion despite been different shows that <em>"Squeaky values honesty."</em>
- <em>"He's got no right to call me Squeaky, if I can't call him Beanstalk." </em>Meaning: <em>It shows that "Squeaky pays more attention to people she respects."</em>
- <em>"Besides, there's just me and Gretchen standing there really." </em>Meaning:<em> It shows that "Squeaky cares what other girls think about her."</em>
Answer:
The primary theme in An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge is (C) the line between dreams and reality is thin. Throughout the course of the short story, the illusion of Farquhar represents a reality for the readers.
The domestication of horses behavior changed quite a lot because before they were domesticated they were WILD horses. So they probably were aggressive animals. Considering how big horses are they definitely would have kicked you if you approached them. Since horses have been domesticated they act less hostile. They have also became smarter, they have a really strong fight or flight system.
(I don't know if this helped, but it took me awhile to find this information)
One I have heard at school is that when the people in front of you down the narrow hallway are walking too slow is, "You walk slower than a herd of elephants stamping through peanut butter."