English, asked by krrishbhurani1234, 3 months ago

see above picture and write about in 150 words​

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Answered by queen1234516
1

Answer:

The Golden Touch

A Tale from Ancient Greece

There was once a king named Midas who did a good deed for a Satyr and was granted a wish by the God of wine, Dionysus. For his wish, Midas asked that whatever he touched would turn to gold. Although Dionysus tried to dissuade him, Midas insisted that the wish was an excellent one, and it was granted!

Excitedly, Midas went about touching all sorts of things, turning them into gold.

Soon Midas became hungry. He picked up a piece of food, but he couldn't eat it, for it had turned to gold in his hand! "I'll starve," moaned Midas, "Perhaps this was not such a good wish after all!"

Midas' beloved daughter, seeing his dismay, threw her arms about him to comfort him, and, she too turned to gold! "The golden touch is no blessing," cried Midas. He went to the river and wept. The sand of that river turned as yellow as "fool's gold" for it is there, they say, that King Midas washed away the curse of the golden touch with his own tears.

hope's it help you ....

Answered by Himanidaga
1

Explanation:

another world. Fictional flying can take many forms, of course, all of it is unlikely, improbable and downright impossible but that makes it all the better.

Who wouldn’t want to be able to fly? At its most improbable but also most liberating is when it is without any machinery to help.

Top 10 things you didn’t know about Peter Pan

“Second star to the right, and straight on till morning”, one of the most thrilling exhortations in fiction, sets John, Wendy and Michael off on their adventure to Neverland in JM Barrie’s Peter Pan. With these words and a sprinkle of fairy dust Peter detaches the children from their safe and comfortable home life and spirits them away to a world of adventure complete with pirates, the Lost Boys, a crocodile and much more. An inveterate flier, Peter himself has been taught to do so by the birds but then, he has been in Neverland so long that anything is possible. Dressed only in their night clothes and despite never having flown before, the Darling children do their best to follow Peter’s instructions and arrive - just!

Fairy dust can achieve much! And yet somehow Mary Poppins manages without it. The eponymous governess heroine of PL Travers’s Mary Poppins is a very neat and flier as befits a person who’s catch phrase is “spit spot” – in the famous Julia Andrews Disney film anyway. With an umbrella in one hand and a handbag in the other she just appears and, without fuss, she can immediately get on with the business in hand.

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