The feelings expressed by Pushkin in "To the Sea" are as follows:
Pushkin's "To the Sea" is a political lyric that resists tyranny, opposes dictatorship, pursues light, and eulogizes freedom. The poet uses the sea As a bosom friend, with freedom as the purpose, and with confiding as the form, he describes his journey of pursuing freedom from multiple angles and aspects. The emotions are dignified, deep and varied, and the style is vigorous and exciting.
The first to seventh stanzas of the poem are the first level, which mainly describe the poet's love for the sea, his pursuit of freedom and his lack of freedom. And feel the sadness and pain. The poet takes the sea as his close friend and expresses his heart to the sea in a face-to-face and heart-to-heart manner. First of all, he bids farewell to the sea with deep affection and sings the sea passionately.
The sea is free and unrestrained, majestic and vast, and has an earth-shattering and wild spiritual power. It appears in the mind of the author, with radiant beauty and vitality, a majestic blue rolling luster, a deep and rich sound of the abyss, and a surging forward momentum.
There are more capricious changes in passion, sometimes gentle and quiet, like the wind blowing the sails, pushing the boat along the current; sometimes the waves are stormy, like lightning cracking the sky, the ground shaking and the mountains shaking; sometimes affectionate and affectionate, like saying goodbye to a friend, calling and waiting; Sometimes I feel depressed and resentful, sharing my worries with my friends, complaining and crying.
In short, the sea has a broad mind, a magnificent bearing, and a magnificent power, and is a symbol of freedom and strength. There is the power to sweep away everything, and there is the unbridled courage to break through the snare. The poet sings heartily about the spirit and strength of the sea, which actually expresses his admiration for freedom and admiration for greatness. Secondly, the poet also poured out his troubles and sadness to the sea with great emotion.
Here are the unspeakable sufferings of the author who wanted to get rid of the darkness and sought freedom but could not; the helpless determination of the spiritual struggle that turned out to be in vain; and the regret of following the sea and rushing to the distance but not being able to do so. In front of the sea, the poet sometimes wanders and is confused, sometimes sings reveliously, and sometimes calls out affectionately: joy, anger, sorrow, and joy are poured into the sea without reservation.
Listen to lines like this: “I wanted to leave forever / your lonely and motionless shores. / I congratulate you with joy, / and let my poetry follow your waves. Running towards the distance, / But I failed to achieve what I wanted!"
The sea is rolling forward with flying waves, running towards the distance. This picture vividly conveys the author's resistance to tyranny, pursuit of light, and spreading of knowledge. Faith in freedom: Let the waves of freedom run far away, let the song of freedom ring the world, and let the heart of freedom boil and stir! The poet's heart beats with the sea, and the feeling of freedom conveyed in the poem stirs up generations of people fighting for freedom.