Whom is objective, use it when describing the direct object, indirect object or object of a preposition. It should be used in place of him or them.
The speaker wanted the bard to stop singing because
<span>He was tired of sitting and wanted to participate in the games.
You can read these in the lines
"you've had our fill or food well shared and the lyre too"
and
"test ourselves in contests"</span><span />
The 3 sentence is the wrong with an
In the opening of the Declaration of Independence, Thomas Jefferson introduces the distinctly American political thought of "personal liberty," since this is what the colonists felt had been violated by the British.