The night was black as a witch's cat.
just as an angler poised on a jutting rock
flings his treacherous bait in the offshore swell
whips his long rod-hook sheathed in an oxhorn lure
and whisks up little fish he flips on the beach-break
writhing, gasping out their lives...so now they writhed
gasping as Scylla swung them up her cliff and there
at her caverns mouth she bolted them down raw
screaming out, flinging their arms down toward me
lost in that mortal struggle
From Book 12 of The Odyssey
There isn't a direct comparison to men mentioned. The simile actually compares Scylla to a fisherman - which by proxy would make Odysseus' men the fish.
I think this is a simile...
he/she has a heart as dark as the deepest depths of the ocean
Then, the whining schoolboy with his satchelAnd shining morning face, creeping like asnailUnwillingly to go to school
A heroic simile also called a homeric is a simile that compares something of heroic proportions to something that canbe found in everyday life. It is primarily seen in the Iliad and the Odyssey. an example is from the Iliad this passage describes Athena preventing an arrow from striking Menelaus she brushed it away from his skin as lightly as when a mother Brushes a fly away from her child who is lying in sweet sleep
A metaphor and simile compare one thing in terms of another, but they do have to be literally true. Metaphor and simile are poetic devices; they are poetic language. As such, they often exaggerate or make comparisons that are meant to show a connection that is poetic, but not the absolute truth. For example, saying, "She runs as fast as a cheetah" is a simile that describes her speed in relationship to a cheetah, but it is not literally true. Whereas, saying, "She is a cheetah" also makes a comparison describing her speed in relationship to a cheetah, but again it is not true.
In Homer's Odyssey, Scylla is described as snatching and devouring six men like fish from a ship's deck. This vivid simile emphasizes the speed and violence of Scylla's attack during the sailors' journey.
they are like fish dangling from a hook
Strong - as strong as an ox.
he/she has a heart as dark as the deepest depths of the ocean
I think this is a simile...
A Homeric simile is a long and poetic simile. An example of a Homeric simile is: She gently touched the carpet, as a butterfly delicately swoops its wings against the dew covered grass in the morning, before it takes off into the sky.
No it does not it only describes something using like or as
he/she has a heart as dark as the deepest depths of the ocean
The simile that the author uses to describe Judge Taylor is "like a sleepy old shark."
soldiers lay like sleeping lions.
No, "fell into disfavor" is not a simile. It is a phrase that describes someone or something losing favor or popularity. A simile is a figure of speech that compares one thing to another using "like" or "as."
One epic simile in the Fitzgerald Translation of the Odyssey is when Odysseus describes the scene of the Cyclops (Polyphemus). "...I leaned on it turning it as a shipwright turns a drill in planking..." (IX, 416-418) This shows how Odysseus rammed the scorched olive tree in Polyphemus' eye.