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.…
This quote tells what sailors did to respect those who have died. This shows me that things that were done back then are a lot different than what we do now.…
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…
“….But any man I catch trying to skulk behind his long beaked ship, hanging back from battle, he is finished. No way for him to escape the dogs and birds!” So he commanded and the armies gave a deep resounding roar like the waves crashing against a cliff when a South Wind whips it, bearing down, some craggy headland jutting out to sea, the waves will never leave it in peace, thrashed by gales that hit from every quarter, breakers left and right.”*1…
The subject in W.S. Merwin’s poem “Odysseus” feels comfortable only at sea, and, because such a notion is atypical, he cannot articulate or understand where his true home actually is.…
A passage will be extracted from the Iliad to analyze how the contents of passage are expressed and contain the similes. The selected passage describes the fight between Achilles and Hector. In fact, the scene tells how fierce Achilles chases after Hector. Furthermore, it describes how Hector gets frightened as facing his death by means of the similes:…
* Poetic devices such as similes and metaphors are used within passage. Examples of these include: “So tedious is this day as the night before some festival” (Simile), “For thou wilt lie upon the wings of night, Whiter than new snow upon a raven’s back” (metaphor)…
In the first stanza, he speaks of a meteor of the ocean air, which I assume compares the boat to a great and speedy force. In the second stanza, he says that the ship is the “eagle of the sea”, which compares it to the national bird and shows it’s strength and dignity.…
The most interesting poetic device found in the poem was the use of extended metaphor. It is evident in lines three to ten:…
His boat like a cork on the abundant sea. He knew he was to face severe risks on his way home. The boat began to roll from side to side. The day was being swallowed up, and the moon arising. The sea moaning with burden. The stench of salt disperses. The rain-shroud passed by, spitting teasingly at him with swarming tears. The sea swelling and the north wind sped him to his doom. His stomach churned, he felt sea sick, sensing a fever drawing near.…
In Homer’s book, The Iliad, epic similes are used throughout the book, by exploring one of these similes, Homer reveals ,in the simile, that men of war can transform into an animal and take on their characteristics.…
were frost-ringed. Sorrow groaned hot round my heart, hunger tore from bowels, spirit stifled by sea-weariness (lines8-14).” This excerpt shows of the harsh conditions the sailor faced and the pain he suffered through while on this voyage. With the pain he faced because of his exile, we also learn of a happiness he finds in it. He would much rather a life on sea then on land, on a plethora of lines he says how his heart longs for the sea; so his exile to there is not all gruesome for him. He enjoys the see, even though he does miss his life on land; the sea is where is heart…
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.…
Several noticeable phrases serve as major roles in the poem’s delivery of message. In the first stanza, the poet wrote about fear to be filled in “thin arms”. The use of the word “thin” emphasizes the vulnerability of individuals when put against the immense ocean. Later on, the poet vividly illustrated the horror and fear that one feels by writing down “in your mouth your heart dissolves”. This…
The ‘Ancient Mariner’ is a symbol of courage and family togetherness for many characters in this novel. This becomes clear when Allie continuously recites the ‘Ancient Mariner’ on board ‘Kitty four’, which ‘gave her a new determination every time she read it out loud.’ Reciting the ‘Ancient Mariner’ results in Allie feeling more connected with her deceased father and the sea itself. This connection causes Allie to confide in herself and her ability to accomplish her goals. Likewise, when Arthur recites the poem for Aunty Megs on her birthday her eyes were ‘full of tears and full of love’. The ‘Ancient Mariner’ brings Arthur, Marty and Aunty Megs closer and their shared love for this poem results in them uniting as a stronger family.…