Search
  • Search
  • My Storyboards

Sea Fever Figurative Language

View Lesson Plan
Copy this Storyboard
Sea Fever Figurative Language
Storyboard That

Create your own Storyboard

Try it for Free!

Create your own Storyboard

Try it for Free!
You can find this storyboard in the following articles and resources:
Sea Fever Visualization & Activities

Sea Fever by John Masefield

Lesson Plans by Bridget Baudinet

”Sea Fever” is one of English poet John Masefield’s best-known works. Masefield employs many poetic devices in his lyric poem, effectively conveying the speaker’s wanderlust and love of the seafaring life.




'

Sea Fever

Storyboard Description

Figurative Language in Sea Fever poem

Storyboard Text

  • "sea's face"
  • Hello, my dear.
  • "call of the running tide"
  • Come to the sea again!
  • Come!
  • Come to the sea!
  • "wind's song"
  • Calling the surface of the water a "face" suggests that the sailor has a personal relationship with the sea. Just as we can tell a person's emotions by looking at their face, the sailor can read the mood of the sea by looking at it.
  • The tide is personified when it seems to call out to the sailor. This reinforces the idea that the sea has a mind and emotions of its own. It also suggests a kind of hypnotic power that the sea has over the sailor. To a certain degree, the sailor feels almost forced to go to sea.
  • The wind, like the sea, comes alive in this poem. It too is personified when it is said to be singing. The word "song" suggests a beautiful and melodious sound, emphasizing the sailor's positive experience of the sea.
Over 30 Million Storyboards Created