the summary of " the ship on fire at sea "
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Answer:
Italian movie producer Gianfranco Rosi makes documentaries about people at various points during the time spent awful recuperation. Flame at Sea pursues two gatherings of subjects, one whose past customs are being referred to and one whose present land arrangement is obscure.
Set nearby Lampedusa, an island 70 miles east from the African coast and 120 miles south from Sicily, the film compares the islanders' quotidian lives with those of the African outcasts crossing the encompassing, regularly heavy waters of the Mediterranean Sea.
These double strings establish parallel directions that welcome the watcher to contemplate their association with each other.
Answer:
Larkin's poem, "The North Ship," concerns the sailing of three ships. Each of the ships "goes sailing by" past the speaker of the poem. The poem depicts these ships as each undertaking qualitatively different journeys, experiencing success, hardship and suffering depending on the direction taken.
Starkly elemental and broadly (inscrutably) metaphorical, the poem portrays three different paths that may be taken and suggests that intentions and outcomes are intimately linked.
The style of the poem can be connected to imagism, a poetic trend of the early/mid 20th century that relied on specific images to convey meaning organically (i.e., without much exposition, if any).
In the poem, the speaker watches as the first ship heads west, "carried to a rich country." The second ship heads east "to anchor in captivity" and the third ship heads north.
The first two ships travel under a wind that is, respectively, helpful and violent. The third ship going north travels with no wind at all.
The third ship drove towards the north, Over the sea, the darkening sea, But no breath of wind came forth, And the decks shone frostily.
The northbound ship, unlike the others, is "rigged for a long journey." It does not return, as the others do "happily or unhappily" but instead journeys "far and wide/into an unforgiving sea.