A Literary Analysis of Three Lessons Learned in Rime of the Ancient Mariner
[2023-09-07 19:36:35]
When the old man was at sea, he experienced many different things, including each of his 200 crewmen who died except him. This must be a life changing event. He himself is very close to death, but because he is being cursed to live, he must endure the difficult period of his crew's death. Sailors know that he needs to have a thought life. "Going to Kirk together and praying together, everyone depended on his great father, the old man, and the baby, and his beloved friends, young people, and teen homosexuals!"
Samuel Taylor Coleridge is one of the most outstanding poets of literary romanticism and his most famous poem "The Ancient Mariner's Kite" is a typical example of this movement style and attention. Coleridge's poem is talking about a sailor who returned from a tragic voyage. Sailors telled him of his story of preventing guests from attending weddings, escaping death, and learning to cherish each creature. The romantic elements found in the "Knights of ancient crew members" include a supernatural, natural strong image, as well as deep clues of spirituality, all explored in an experimental format.
Rime of Coleridge 's ancient crewman, Rime of Coleridge' s ancient crewman, the reader found a long story. This poem has a history of nearly two hundred years, but it is still a popular work, through the persuasive explanation of juxtaposition of novels and contradictions, the reader was fascinated by the logic of the explanation and the explanation is completely truthful It is not. I was fascinated. Poetry Everyone can not understand the events that ancient crew members have told - today's readers and Coleridge's era is like men at wedding receptions, the story of seafarers is panic, surprise and disbelief It is filled.
Over the years many scholars have conducted a detailed analysis of some important literary content with the epic "The Ancient Sailor's Kite". These include the meaning of the wedding guests, the seafarer's motives, and in particular the importance of the peaceful albatross and the wanton's killing. He used the albatross as "a combination of sailing, supernatural, and cycle of the navigator's action" (Boulger 84). Coleridge chose the albatross in his poem, "It's a special size, loneliness, unbearably limited, and strange rare birds" (Blum 205). Coleridge never embeds meaningless prose in prose; he thought it useful to use albatross to express herself. In the Cape Horn area, there are usually superstitious dangers for albatross and sailors.