In book 13 Odysseus is returned to Ithaca but does not recognize the land because Athena has shrouded it in mist. In the meantime, the sailors who helped him are punished by Poseidon who is angry at them for helping Odysseus, who is his nemesis. Odysseus and Athena make a plan on how to get rid of the suitors.
The food talked to me as I chewed it.
Fish is to water as a bird is to air.
Duck and Sparrow are types of birds and it's not really logical for it to be butterfly, I don't think.
The poem "A Thousand Martys" was written by Aphra Behn. Some of the themes presented are love, desire and betrayal from the point of view of a promiscuous and libertine character. It has three stanzas and each one of them is used in the following way:
The first stanza is used by the speaker to state how a "thousand martyrs" were made from a "thousand beauties," for desire purposes only.
On the second one, the reader is shown how the speaker deceived the thousand lovers by making them believe he/she was in pain. The feelings shown were always false, as only "Love's pleasures" mattered.
The third and final stanza is more introspective, and while the speaker "despises the fools that whine for love," he also implies that he has no joy and roves (wanders without direction).