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.…
Begins: The sea has many voices. ….man is first in pre-existence, rocked and comforted, and then is born into an earthly world. “Man is a fighter and when not fighting he is a farmer, earth is his element” One day he will return to grains. But first his life is full of shifting forms.…
He fished for a living, to keep his wife happy, but he was never truly a fisherman. He did not enjoy fishing like the rest of his wife’s family did. His skin was not tough enough as “the salt water irritated his skin as it had for sixty years…and his arms, especially the left, broke out into the oozing saltwater boils”. (paragraph 60) The sun and wind took a toll on his body that the others did not experience. To him, the boat held emotions such as pain, despair and struggle. He would rather be inside, reading and learning, but was instead forced to…
From the first interaction between the wedding-guest and the Ancient Mariner, the reader is able to get a hold on something more than his unnaturally old appearance, as he is also described to have a “glittering eye”. This disturbs the wedding-guest, who consequently calls him a “grey-beard loon”. However, there is more to his “glittering eye” than initially expected, as he is able to compel the wedding-guest to listen to the tale, he so eagerly wants to expose, like a “three years’ child”. Although the Ancient Mariner clearly takes the form of a human, there are subtle suggestions that he does possess unworldly qualities to him. This unworldly quality is consolidated by the fact that Coleridge chooses to describe him as “it” in the…
In Homer’s mythological epic: The Odessey the reader follows what is thought to be a story of a courageous soldier and his battle hardened crew fresh from their victory at the stronghold of Troy. Yet a dark shadow of greed and lust for power hangs over these heroic men. Odysseus is a supposed hero, an icon to all his men who are just as power hungry as he is thought to be heroic. Nevertheless at the time of Greek mythology all men had a level of lust, greed, and power hunger at their side. This ultimately leads to their downfall in suffering or death.…
“Thales' Influence on philosophy; how a solar eclipse managed to shed new light on philosophical thought”…
Inner conflict is explored throughout Time and Tide as Winton recalls, through memories, the decay of his personal image of the ocean by the very people he grew up around, and even by himself. The piece begins with Winton using visual imagery to recall his view of the ocean as a positive concept, “peered down into the turquoise blur to see wild mobs of silver trevally ride”, and also makes the reader feel as if they are recalling the same memory as him. As the text progresses, more negative adjectives are introduced as Winton realises how carelessly people treat the ocean, such as “gross”, “choking” and “dead”. The juxtaposition of humans doing horrible things but describing them as enjoying themselves doing it, “men in beanies and seaboats cheerfully tore blubber” and “thousands of blowfish on the wharf where children had stamped them playfully to their death”, makes Winton’s point that human beings treat the sea with “a kind of thoughtless contempt”. He also uses personal pronouns, “We took and took and took”, to show that he also feels partly responsible for the damage being wrought upon his own childhood playground. Through Winton’s use of powerful visual imagery and juxtaposition, we are…
Starting with the The Seafarer, this anglo saxon hates a boring life - he needs adventure, even if it causes him pain. He begins to say that he has no love, that is why he wants to spend his time on the ocean. For him, a storm is a symbol of life, and he wants to spend his life on the water with adventure everyday. Even though the loneliness, the cold, and hard work is painful, he will continue this lifestyle. He doesn’t want to be like a person back at home, they are soft, not tough. He wants to be that mighty warrior, he spends most of his time alone and in his thoughts thinking about the more adventurous times that he has to come. All the pain that he goes through on a day to day basis, we only appreciate the pain that is our own. The people back home don’t know what kind of pain that they go through out on the water. Our thoughts should turn to where our home is.…
As fate goes, Life-in-Death and Death gambled for the Ancient Mariner's soul, Life-in-Death won. The sun sank into the ocean, night fell rapidly and the ghost ship left. The Ancient Mariner was stared down by the sailors cursing him with their eyes. When all the crew dropped dead, the Ancient Mariner watched each sailor's soul leave out of his body remembering the arrow he shot at the Albatross, "And every soul, it passed me by, Like the whiz of my…
In the Odyssey by Homer, an epic story is told. Odysseus, the king of Ithaca, was sent to fight in the Trojan War. After Odysseus and his crew had won the war, they set sail on their long journey home. Their journey lasted 20 years and they had to overcome many tragic obstacles along the way. Eventually, Odysseus makes it home to his beloved wife, Penelope, only to find his homeland has been taken over by suitors. The tale of Odysseus's long journey home, the Odyssey qualifies as an epic poem.…
The Seafarer tells the tale of an old sailor bound to a life at sea, and his longing for land as he ventures on. After is lord passes on, he is forced to go on in exile in search of a new lord to serve. The sailors struggle is emphasized in a multitude of ways especially when it comes to how he longs for warmth and faces hunger. “My feet –fettered by cold, as with chains –…
I am seeking a Master degree in Clinical Mental Health Counseling-Military Families and Culture (MSCMHCMFCP) at Walden University Online program.…
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 that the very appearance of the didactic spirit is fatal to the fascination of a poem.…
"The Rime of the Ancient Mariner" is a tale of retribution, since the Ancient Mariner spends most of the poem paying for his one, impulsive error of killing the Albatross. The spiritual world avenges the Albatross's death by wreaking physical and psychological havoc on the Ancient Mariner and his shipmates. Even before the sailors die, their punishment is extensive; they become delirious from a debilitating state of thirst, their lips bake black in the sun, and they must endure the torment of seeing water all around them while being unable to drink it for its saltiness. Eventually the sailors all die, their souls flying either to heaven or hell. There are at least two ways to interpret the fact that the sailors suffer with the Ancient Mariner although they themselves have not erred. The first is that retribution is blind; inspired by anger and the desire to punish others, even a spirit may hurt the wrong people. The second is that the sailors are implicated in the Ancient Mariner's crime. If the Ancient Mariner represents the universal sinner, then each sailor, as a human, is guilty of having at some point disrespected one of God's creatures-or if not, he would have in the future. But the eternal punishment called Life-in-Death is reserved for the Ancient Mariner. Presumably the spirit, being immortal, must endure eternal grief over the murder of its beloved Albatross. In…
“If men could learn from history, what lessons it might teach us. But passion and party blind our eyes, and the light which experience gives us is a lantern on the stern, which shines only on the waves behind us.” This is one of the famous quotes by Samuel Taylor Coleridge (1772-1834). In his one of the magnificent work, “The Rime of the ancient Mariner”, Coleridge has been able to prove his quote mentioned above. The decision made by the young and excited Mariner to kill the albatross helping them and the consequences which was faced by the entire sailing crew. Mariner, the main character not only was sorry for what he did, he also went through a series of transformation making him understand his sin. He then suffered all his life searching for redemption.…