"The Rime of the Ancient Mariner" Essays and Research Papers

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    In Samuel Taylor Coleridge’s poem "The Rime of the Ancient Mariner"‚ the author uses the story of a sailor and his adventures to reveal aspects of life. This tale follows the Mariner and his crew as they travel between the equator and the south pole‚ and then back to England. The author’s use of symbolism lends the work to adults as a complex web of representation‚ rather than a children’s book about a sailor. First‚ in the poem‚ the ship symbolizes the body of man. The ship experiences trials and

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    The Rime Of The Ancient Mariner Barry J. Owens Jr. October 9‚ 2008 Eng. 262-Paper 1 Dr. Liesl Ward The Rime of the Ancient Mariner Have you ever made a decision that you eventually regretted? We make decisons on a daily basis. The decisions that we make have consequences. Some of the consequences are good and some are bad. We should be very careful when making decisions‚ because there are some decisions that you cannot easily change. In Mr. Coleridge’s’ poem‚ “The Rime of the Ancient

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    lessons in their literary works. Both Coleridge and Tolstoy teach their readers life lessons by using cautionary tales. In Coleridge’s “The Rime of the Ancient Mariner”‚ the Mariner is the character that gives the wedding-guest in the poem‚ and readers‚ essential life lessons. The importance of Christianity and having faith is displayed in this poem when the Mariner says‚ “As if it [an Albatross] had been a Christian soul‚ / We hailed it in God’s name.” (Coleridge 365). That line is essential because

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    Deconstructionism views “The Rime of the Ancient Mariner” through a different approach which unveils new ideas to current readers. Under deconstructionist thought‚ people are able to reconsider their own language. Susan Eilenberg traces how the Mariner’s tale does not have a source in order to illustrate how language does not have one set meaning or interpretation. She states that “An alien spirit thus comes to inhabit the body of the Mariner’s speech‚ which…must be regarded as enclosed in invisible

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    “The Rime of the Ancient Mariner” by Samuel Taylor Coleridge The poem‚ “The Rime of the Ancient Mariner‚” by Samuel Taylor Coleridge is a truly imaginative work utilizing the familiar yet timeless themes of good fortune‚ the power of Mother Nature‚ and adventurous voyages over the sea. The Mariner relates the bone-chilling tale of his adventure to a guest at a wedding in his native country. Although the guest succumbs to the Mariner’s tale‚ he is eager to get to the wedding‚ which is about to start

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    A close reading of The Rime of the Ancient Mariner will reveal that the Ancient Mariner-who is at once himself‚ Coleridge and all humanity-having sinned‚ both incurs punishment and seeks redemption; or‚ in other words‚ becomes anxiously aware of his relation to the God of Law (as symbolized by the Sun)‚ and in his sub-consciousness earnestly entreats the forgiveness of the God of Love (represented by the Moon-symbol). ... For Professor Lowes‚ while he has disclosed a Coleridge of amazing

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    THE RIME OF THE ANCIENT MARINER The Moral of the Poem: It is usually thought that great art suffers‚ if its didactic purpose is over-emphasized. Everyone recognizes that didacticism has something very impressive and effective about it‚ but no one likes a moral to be offensively obtruded in a work of art. Some go even to the extent of thinking that art and literature should be content to give pleasure and should never set out to teach a truth or preach a moral. There are those who believe

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    In “The Rime of the Ancient Mariner”‚ a poem by Samuel Taylor Coleridge‚ a sailor probes the dynamics of his relationship with God through the medium of nature. At the beginning of the poem‚ the mariner and his crew face a storm that is soon remedied by the arrival of an albatross that brings with it the gift of wind. However‚ reflecting the destruction and sin of human nature‚ the mariner soon shoots the albatross with a crossbow‚ a grave mistake that brings with it misfortune. Throughout his sea

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    The romantic era also viewed as the “age of crisis” occurs from 1750 to 1850. (Eighteenth and nineteenth centuries). It is hard to define the term romanticism. It is the era of movements in the poetry‚ personal symbols‚ and abstracts. Romanticism reacts against neoclassicism from the previous centuries. Artists during this period of time produce works that are considered “unusual”. For example‚ in the novel Frankenstein‚ Victor criticizes what he was taught at school and what his teachers told him

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    Within ‘The Rime of The Ancient Mariner’ it seems to be that Coleridge uses a lot of religious meanings throughout this poem. Coleridge uses this to explore the Mariner and his supernatural beings. Coleridge is showing the readers the gothic and mysterious feel towards this poem‚ also showing us the immoral and imaginative sides to this. The gothic novel/poems was popular in England in the 1790’s and came replete with castles‚ prisons‚ mysterious forces‚ gloomy landscapes‚ and sexual perversions

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