Analysis Of The Seafarer

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“My soul roams with the sea,the whales’ home, wandering to the widest corners of the world returning ravenous with desire, flying solitary, screaming, exciting me to the open ocean, breaking oaths on the curve of a wave” - The Seafarer In my opinion these lines are the great reverse of the poem . “The Seafarer” even if it was written in a pagan age, ends with an explicitly Christian view of God as wrathful and powerful. “The Seafarer” is divisible into two sections, the first elegiac (like a lament of his condition) and the second didactic (like a morals). This poem can be read as two poems on separate subjects or as one poem moving between two subjects. The first part of this poem is a painful description of the loneliness of this sailor, is incredible the state of anguish and suffering that the author transmitted just using imagery alliteration, and metaphor . For example the author during his description used strong word to emphasize the state of suffering that this poor sailor was subordinated like “terrible-tossing” (alliteration) or used a metaphor that makes the cold and frost …show more content…

He doesn’t like all the earthly life and the irrelevance of material gain.The speaker emphasizes that these materials and superficial things will all disappear, melting away in the presence of Fate. Even the person blessed with all these virtues feels fear at the start of a journey to the sea. He instructs his reader to conduce a good life, because Death will come for all men and, ultimately, God, is the last opportunity will hold every man accountable. The author in this poem talks about Christian themes in an unambiguous way. Like in “the Wanderer” ,a poem of the same age with a concept mainly similar, the protagonist is in exile but there is a big difference because the one in “the Wanderer” is forced into exile when his Lord dies, but “the Seafarer” protagonist exile is

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