The speaker says that the ocean mirrors god almighty. He just enumerates the ways . Explain in detail how this is done in each instance
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Explanation:
In “Apostrophe to the Ocean,” Lord Byron gives his most explicit answer to this question in the final stanza, where the speaker confesses that, as a boy, the ocean’s “breakers…were to me a delight,” and that any fear caused by the untameable nature of the sea was “a pleasing fear.” He adds that, “For as it was, I was a child of thee.” Lord Byron spent his formative years in Aberdeen, near the ocean, and it seems that his speaker had a similar youth; from this poem we can assume that the water was his chief source of play and sport.
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