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In an historic moment, Juvenal Urbino transports an entire piano to serenade Fermina. Dressed in his Sunday suit, Florentino Ariza weeps as he plays a love waltz composed for Fermina Daza. In Love in a Time of Cholera, Gabriel García Márquez describes two men in love with the same woman. Márquez expresses his attitudes towards love by contrasting Urbino and Florentino. He chooses to write of both Urbino and Florentino’s serenades, but views each situation differently. Urbino’s serenade he relates matter-of-factly while Florentino’s waltz is portrayed more complexly with ridicule and sincerity. Márquez’s use of tone illuminates the dichotomy of love he creates in Love in a Time of Cholera.

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In an historic moment, Juvenal Urbino transports an entire piano to serenade Fermina. Dressed in his Sunday suit, Florentino Ariza weeps as he plays a love waltz composed for Fermina Daza. In Love in a Time of Cholera, Gabriel García Márquez describes two men in love with the same woman. Márquez expresses his attitudes towards love by contrasting Urbino and Florentino. He chooses to write of both Urbino and Florentino’s serenades, but views each situation differently. Urbino’s serenade he relates matter-of-factly while Florentino’s waltz is portrayed more complexly with ridicule and sincerity. Márquez’s use of tone illuminates the dichotomy of love he creates in Love in a Time of Cholera.