Wednesday, November 27, 2019
The Rime Of The Ancient Mariner By Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1772 - 183
  The Rime of the Ancient Mariner by Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1772 - 1834)    The Rime of the Ancient    Mariner  by Samuel Taylor Coleridge  (1772 - 1834)    Type of Work:    Lyrical fantasy ballad    Setting    A sailing ship traveling the seas; late    Medieval period    Principal Characters    The Ancient Mariner, a sailor-storyteller    The Wedding Guest, a listener    The Ship's Crew    The Allbatross, a symbolic representation  of God's creatures - and Man's guilt    The Hermit, a rescuer representing God    Story Overveiw  (Coleridge introduces his tale by describing  an old gray-headed sailor who approaches three young men headed for a wedding  celebration and compels one of them, the groom's next-of-kin, to hear his  story.    O Wedding-Guest! this sent both been    Alone on a wide wide sea:    So lonely 'twas, that God himself    Scarce seemed there to be.    At first the intrusion is resented, but  the stor is remarkable indeed, and the listener - who, of course, represents  you, the reader - soon falls captive to the building suspense, responding  at first with fear and then with horror as the tale unfolds.)    There was little apprehension among the  ship's crew as they sailed clear of the harbor, bound for the open sea.    Several days out, however, a storm arose and the vessel was driven before  the wind in a constant southerly direction, headed toward the South Pole.    As it entered the "land of ice, and of fearful sounds, where no living  thing was to be seen," a feeling of foreboding came over the helpless inmates;  and so it was with great relief that the crew eventually greeted the sight  of an albatross - a huge seabird - flying through the fog toward them.  ("As if it had been a Christian soul,"  the Ancient Mariner tells his listener, "We hailed it in God's name.")    Everyone took this as a good omen, and  the bird followed the ship faithfully as it returned northward. Then, one  day, weary of the bird's incessant and now unnerving presence, the Mariner  shot the albatross with his crossbow - and brought the curse down upon  them all.    The south wind continued to propel them  northward, but somehow the old sailor realized he had done "a hellish thing";  retribution would soon follow, in the form of loneliness and spiritual  anguish, like that of Adam when he fell from God's grace.    The crew at first berated their mate for  killing the bird that had brought the change in the breeze. But as the  ship made its way out of the fog and mist and continued on, they decided  it must be the bird that had brought the mist. Perhaps their shipmate had  rightfully killed it after all.    The vessel sailed on northward until it  reached the equator, where the breeze ceased and the craft became becalmed.    After days without a breath of wind, it was decided by all that an avenging  spirit had followed them from the land of mist and snow, leaving them surrounded  only by foul water. With the unabsolved curse thus restored, the thirsting  crew angrily hung the dead albatross around the Mariner's neck, as a symbol  of his guilt. Time lost all meaning. The lips of the men baked and their  eyes glazed over for want of water.    I looked to heaven, and tried to pray;    But or ever a prayer had gusht,    A wicked whisper came, and made    My heart as dry as dust.    Then the old sailor saw a speck on the  horizon, which, as it wafted towards them, became a sail. The men waited  in silent dread. This could be no earthly ship - it moved along the water  without the slightest breeze.    Wide-eyed and trembling, the crew looked  on as this skeleton ship came alongside their own. On its deck the Mariner  saw two spectres: a Woman, Life-in-Death; and her mate, Death himself.    They were casting dice to see which of them would take control of the drifting  ship. Death won the entire ship's crew - all but the Ancient Mariner, who  was won by the Woman; he alone would live on, to expiate his sin against    Nature.    There followed a ghastly scene as the sun  dropped into the sea and night came over the silent waters. One by one  the two hundred men on board turned toward the Mariner, denounced him with  a soulful stare - for they could not speak - and dropped dead upon the  deck. As their souls flew from their bodies and sped past the old seaman,  the sound was "like the whizz of my crossbow" when he shot the albatross.  (The Wedding Guest by this time is terrified  of the Ancient Mariner, who he thinks must be a ghost; but assuring him  he is indeed mortal, the    
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