Thursday, November 28, 2019
Rime Of Ancient Mariner Essays (305 words) -
  Rime Of Ancient Mariner  Does Coleridge agree with the interpretation of the moral as given by the simple  mariner, as seen in the ending stanzas? After this terrific bout with nature,  and the deep messages which may be derived, the mariner ends the poem by  simplistically saying that the moral is to just love all things. Yet the wedding  guest seemed to get more from this, as he was "stunned" and brings  thoughts of this tale to the next day, a "wiser" man. Perhaps all the  narration shift has to do with the fact that this simple mariner is unable to  perceive the deeper implications of his tale, which the wedding guest is able to  do. The wedding guest may act as a certain catalyst to inspire deeper  contemplation into this conundrum by the reader, who may not perceive a deeper  meaning from the tale of the mariner. We see the albatross as a sign of good  luck, yet the mariner shoots it anyway. The ship is floating in the middle of  unfriendly seas, already at the hands of nature. In the middle of nowhere, a  great albatross appears. Supposing that the albatross does not just obtusely  represent the whole of "nature" or Christianity/religion, what could  it represent? Its appearance is baffling: they are in the middle of the ocean  with no land around. At odds with nature, the albatross is one with nature,  surviving where nothing can survive. Perhaps the ocean and the ship represent  man's disunity with nature, building these awkward devices to try to thwart and  ride against nature. On a different plane is the bird, where man's imagination  will allow him to flow with nature instead of against it. The maturation process  of the mariner begins after he denies himself the imaginative luxury of enjoying  nature, slaying the albatross. It ends after a period of punishment with the  mariner's ship sinking, perhaps representative of his denial of physical means  to be one with nature.    
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