The Rime of the Ancient Mariner by Samuel Taylor Coleridge; is a story that is told in a series of poems. The Rime of the Ancient Mariner focuses on the transformation of the main character, the Mariner. The story illustrates the importance of loving other individuals and God’s creation.…
Humankind’s threat to the earth and the natural world has been a common theme of writing since the industrial revolution and underpins The Crest. Kinsella’s forboding poem presents a powerful analogy with man’s pastoral development and it’s intrusion into the natural world.…
Before the actual narrative of the poem begins, the reader is presented with a Latin epigraph taken from Burnet’s "Archaeologiae Philosophicae" (1692). The main theme taken from this quotation is that one must maintain a balance between acknowledging the imperfect, temporal world, yet also striving to understand the ethereal and ideal world of spirits, ghouls and ghosts in order to reach an eventual understanding of the truth. Coleridge uses this quotation in order to remind the reader to pay attention to the near-constant interactions between the real world and the spiritual world in the poem, and like the Ancient Mariner, the reader must explore and navigate these interactions in order to understand the truth behind the poem.…
B. Thesis: Wordsworth and Muir convey their deep connection and passion for nature by utilizing similes and hyperboles to assert the reader how much nature has affected their life.…
Nature is key to many aspects of life; one could even say that it is needed for survival. Humans were meant to interact with nature, so it is beneficial to periodically connect with the world. When analyzing the two writing pieces, Fahrenheit 451 and “Nature”, one can discover how Montag’s journey into nature reflects the one depicted by Emerson, and how there is “an occult relation between man and the vegetable” (Emerson). While applying what is known about Montag and his venture into the world around him, it resonates with Emerson’s explanation of nature. Both pieces of writing exemplify how nature is a safe place, and that everything in the world that is abysmal just becomes lost in the beautiful scenery.…
Poems have a way of drawing an audience to several interpretations. This is clear in Elizabeth Bishop’s poem “The Fish” as the speaker has second thoughts of capturing a fish to eat after realizing the severities it went through. This poem does a great job of using several techniques to get its point across on the central theme, which is interpreted as the ongoing struggle of humans versus nature. The author uses several literary approaches to convey its message. By utilizing diction, figurative language and imagery, the power of man over the environment is easily developed.…
Evidence/Explanation: After the mariner rashly chooses to kill an innocent creature of nature, Coleridge depicts a series of gruesome torments for the mariner. He faces dehydration, his entire crew dies, and he has to deal with solitary confinement. Through these painful moments, Coleridge wants his readers to recognize that even the smallest infraction against nature can and should have dire consequences for people. If readers take this lesson to heart, they should walk away from Coleridge’s poem with a completely different view of the natural world. By experiencing the Mariner’s pain through such visceral poetic language, readers cannot help but see Coleridge’s point about the sanctity of our world.…
From the bitter, cold winters in Antarctica to the blazing, hot summers in Africa and from the ugly, thick swamplands of Louisiana to the beautiful, clean coasts of Hawaii, nature plays a pivotal role in life on this wonderful planet. Nature is extremely dangerous but it is also a beautiful component of the earth. People view nature in unique ways that are displayed through actions and words. Jack London, author of “To Build a Fire”, and Henry David Thoreau, author of Walden, both value nature and view it in a unique way that is translated to their works of literature. These two authors apply a unique perspective of how nature can apply to everyday life. The aspects of interacting with nature and human emotions analyzed and examined in the works of Jack London and Henry David Thoreau.…
The Ancient Mariner’s punishment for killing the albatross is fair. After killing the Albatross and committing a crime against nature, the Ancient Mariner is punished by the spiritual and natural world. The Ancient Mariner is now living in his nightmare as a reality and suffering each day for his wrong doing. Now that he has done wrong, he pays for it by being miserable and wiser. He is now telling his story, not because he has to, but because he wants everyone to know that he made a mistake that can never be changed.…
How does the poet vividly convey ideas concerning the influence that nature has upon man?…
Here the images of nature can be referred to the decaying mind of Lear. His mind and feeling hurt by his daughter is mixed up like the weather. The state of his kingdom is also in a…
The whole cycle begins with the mariner’s crime against nature: the shooting of the albatross. In the story, the mariner betrays nature by shooting the Albatross. This action against nature is rather extreme, for he takes this thought of death lightly. The Albatross, as a representative of nature, means nothing to the Mariner. These thoughts are quickly changed, though, as Nature begins to start the punishment for his crimes commence when there is, "Water, water, everywhere nor any drop to drink." He is punished harshly for killing the symbol of nature that everyone reveres. He is beaten down by the sun with its rays and is taunted by the endless sight of water that he cannot drink. Nature is the force in this poem that has power to decide what is right or wrong and how to deal with the actions.…
In Coleridge’s Ancient Mariner the didactic purpose is too apparent. The poet has nowhere attempted to conceal the fact that the poem has a definite moral purpose behind it. It is on record that Coleridge himself was intensely aware that this may be considered a weakness in the poem by some readers. When Mrs. Barbauld told him that she found two faults in the Ancient Mariner, that it was improbable and that it had no moral, Coleridge replied that the probability of the poem might admit of some questions, but regarding the moral, he thought there was too much of it. He believed that the obtrusion of the moral sentiment so openly in a work of pure imagination constituted the chief blemish in the poem.…
The first piece we read by Samuel Taylor Coleridge was his poem called The Rime of the Ancient Mariner. In this piece, Coleridge tells a trying story of a Mariner who’s rash behavior resulted in the death of his ship mates. When his situation seemed irreversible, he happens upon a coast where he is rescued by three men. However, the journey that occurred cursed the Mariner to tell his story in order to eleven his heart of the burdensome guilt. Coleridge relays this story to the reader through lyrical and vivid word that ease the reader into contemplation and reflection. At the end, the Gentleman who listened to the Mariner’s story was described as “A sadder and wiser man,/ He rose the morrow morn.” This was meant to reach out to the reader, so that the he/she would not repeat the mistakes of the Mariner and understand that “For everything that lives is holy.”…
Man, though wonders at the beauty of nature and its creations, fails to realize that they are also part of the web of life in the earth. Moreover, they adopt an anthropocentric attitude towards nature which, in fact, results in exploitation of it. This kind of attitude towards nature has urged several critics and writers to warn them of nature’s two-sided faces - its power and its rebellious nature. They create many nature-centred texts and bring in the importance of establishing a harmonious relationship with nature through their concepts and critical essays. This becomes evident when Serpil Oppermann in his article “Ecocriticism: Natural world in the Literary Viewfinder” says, “Ecocriticism does enable the critics to examine the texualizations of the physical environment in literary discourse itself and to develop an earth-centered approach to literary studies” (1). In this way, Amitav Ghosh has examined the physical environment in his novel The Hungry Tide. As an anthropologist, he finds it easy to locate the problems encountered by the people living in an immense archipelago of islands, the Sundarbans.…