Creative background:
Pushkin was deeply influenced by December Party members in his youth and wrote many political lyric poems praising freedom and democracy. 1820, Pushkin was exiled to southern Russia by the czar, at the age of 2 1. 1in the summer of 824, he clashed with the governor of Odessa and was escorted by the gendarmerie to the village of Mikhailovsk, where he was imprisoned for two years.
He kept company with the sea for a long time in Odessa, and regarded the surging sea as a symbol of freedom. When he left Odessa and bid farewell to the sea, thousands of thoughts flooded into his heart, and melancholy and angry poems were brewing in his chest. Pushkin started writing in Odessa and finally finished the poem in Mikhailovsk.
To the Sea is a political lyric poem by Russian romantic poet Pushkin. Through the trilogy of love, thought and sea thought, the whole poem expresses the poet's thoughts and feelings of resisting tyranny, dictatorship, pursuing light and eulogizing freedom.
About the author:
Pushkin (1799- 1837) was a great Russian poet in the 9th century. In Russian literature, he is the pioneer of positive romanticism and the founder of critical realism literature. Pushkin stood firmly on The Decemberists's side, opposed autocratic serfdom, and loved and pursued freedom, so he was persecuted by the czar government.
Pushkin has written many works with various forms and a wide range of subjects, and the poetic novel yevgeni onegin is his masterpiece. Pushkin had a great influence on the development of Russian literature and was praised by Gorky as "the father of Russian literature".
He is proficient in everything, founded Russian national literature and literary language, and provided a model for Russian literature in literary fields such as poetry, novels, plays and even fairy tales. There are Pushkin's poems.
Literary appreciation:
Pushkin's To the Sea is a political lyric poem against tyranny, dictatorship, light and freedom. The poet took the sea as his confidant and freedom as his aim, and poured out his heart from many angles and sides, describing his mental journey of pursuing freedom. The feelings are dignified, deep and changeable, and the style is bold and exciting.