English, asked by kkmanojkumar1973, 3 months ago

write summary of adventure at sea​

Answers

Answered by shrutii5
0

Explanation:

The Sea of Adventure is the fourth exciting instalment in the Adventure series by Enid Blyton, one of the best-loved children's writers of all time.

A mysterious trip to the desolate Northern Isles soon turns into a terrifying adventure when Bill is kidnapped!

Marooned far from the mainland on a deserted coast, Philip, Dinah, Lucy-Ann, Jack and Kiki the parrot find themselves playing a dangerous game with an unknown enemy. Will they escape with Bill and their lives

Answered by sinturanjan928
0

Sea travel is synonymous with adventure. Dull must the heart be that doesn't quicken to John Masefield's "I must go down to the seas again, to the lonely sea and the sky...". Of course, in real life the last thing most of us want to do when we travel by water is adventure. We want a quiet trip, an even keel, a good book, and not to get our feet wet. It's not that we want our lives to be dull, of course. It's just that adventure works best for most of us as story rather than experience. So here are eight truly great maritime adventure stories.

The Old Man and the Sea, by Ernest Hemingway (1952) Some Hemingway fans don't much like this spare, intense little story about an old Cuban fisherman alone on the ocean struggling for many days with the giant Marlin he has hooked--who miss the range and factual precision of earlier Hemingway. But the sea as theme brings something newly intense and clear-eyed out of Hemingway as a writer; and this novella uses the sea to say simple, powerful things about life, death and the need to carry on the struggle.

The Rime of the Ancient Mariner (1798) by Samuel Taylor Coleridge This Gothic sea-fantasia contains some of the most brilliantly outlandish magic and mystery in all literature--the mariner's killing of the albatross, the death of all his crewmates, the mysterious undersea force that propels his ship, night Life-in-Death and an ocean surface swarming with serpents. Nonetheless, perhaps paradoxically, there is a peculiar solidity and believability about the voyage that Coleridge describes here.

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