Answer:
(Hope this helps can I pls have brainlist (crown)☺️)
Explanation:
Roland dies from the force of blowing the olifant, which causes his temple to rupture, rather than a wound caused by the adversary (ll. 1764, 1786). This is not a suicidal gesture, but rather a display of the hero's incredible power, which has rendered him mortally injured.
He ultimately made his way to Storybrooke, where he began to bond with his father's new girl_friend, Regina, and became embroiled in much of their turmoil. His father died eventually, and he returned to Sherwood Forest, just as Robin had wished.
Roland, the Song's hero and Charlemagne's nephew, leads the French forces' rear guard and explodes his temples by blowing his olifant-horn, wounds from which he dies facing the enemy's country.