Book 1: Mentes, a Taphian.
<span>Book 2: she is disguised as a Mentor to Telemachus as he walks away at the end of the Ithacan assembly. After, Athena disguises herself as Telemachus and goes among the Ithacan asking to their help. Lastly, to avoid the suitors Athena again takes the appearance of Mentor and urges Telemachus to set sail.</span>
Answer and Explanation:
Petrarch uses metaphors in his poem to intensify the idealization of the beloved woman, the loneliness of not getting her and even how the speaker of the poem feels about an unattainable love. The use of a figure of speech allows Petrarch to associate love with intense, yet subjective and poetic concepts, enriching his text and promoting a broad understanding of the feelings he wishes to convey, all involving love and the impossibility of having it.
An example of the use of metaphor can be seen when Petrarch characterizes the beloved woman, stating that she is able to "make a paradise on earth" and that she is "the light I loved so much." In addition, he uses metaphor as showing how sad it feels to not reach love, when he says he feels like "In a great storm on an unprotected raft."
Answer:
By confessing what you have done wrong you have begun to make amends; saying recorded from the mid 16th century.
Explanation:
Hope it helps:)
I would capitalize it just to be safe.
Answer:
jungle book
it is thr titlr which never adds a