why does the poet want to go to the sea
Answers
Answer:
The speaker begins each of the three stanzas with a refrain (refrain is the repetition of words, phrases, or even entire lines, generally as part of a pattern): "I must go down to the seas again [...]." He clearly longs to return to the ocean, to a life on the ocean; "And all [he] ask[s]" for is a masted ship, a star to guide him, a windy day, and a good tale from a fellow traveler. He seems to long for solitude in the first stanza, yearning for "the lonely sea and the sky," but then, in the final stanza, he wishes for a "laughing fellow-rover" to travel with. He seems to long for the excitement of travel and the mist in his face, the beauty of the dawn breaking over the water, the life of a wanderer, and a good night's sleep with peaceful dreams, when he comes to the end. For him, the "running tide / Is a wild call and a clear call that may not be denied." He must go because he cannot ignore the call of the sea.
he want to go to the lonly sea in a beautiful place