Comparing the natural performance of the ruins of destruction of Wordsworth with the ancient sailor's poems of Coleridge plays a very important role in their work naturally for most poets in the romantic era. The existence of humans may be influenced and explained by the existence and depiction of extrinsicities surrounding it. William Wordsworth and Samuel Taylor Coleridge are no different from other romantic poets and their work is full of reference to nature and relevance to humans.
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 - a wise meaning of wedding guests at an ancient sailor 's wedding. The Webster dictionary defines the term "clever" as "characterized by deep understanding and sharp discernment." Telling the story of an ancient sailor will make the wedding guests more sad and smarter. He felt sad because he thought he was a self-absorption sailor in a shallow area. But seafarers changed his way
Perhaps the most strange aspect of this prophecy is that it doubles. "The Ancient Sailor's Fog .." has two versions. One was Wordsworth and Coleridge's lyrics of 1798 and the second was a template in the 17th century essay, revised in 1817 published in Sibylline Leaves. The end of running gloss explains that his zombie sailor and "Slimeu" are in the limelight. Between the 1st edition and the 2nd edition, Coleridge reconsidered his idea. Theologians did not approve the redemption, so they let themselves leave the church and by 1817 he softened in the Anglican church.
Seven poems by Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Rime of ancient seafarers first appeared in Lyrical Ballads and co - authored by Coleridge and William Wordsworth in 1798. The title character was attractive, detained one of the three young people during the trip to the wedding party. He talked about a young experience in the sea - his albatross massacre, the death of his fellow sailors, his pain, and his ultimate redemption. On ships on the ice near Antarctica, visitors to Albatrosses by navigators and his crew are considered good signs. The ship sailed from the ice to the north and then to a huge bird. Then, apparently the seafarer fired it and killed him, cursing the ship. After confusion, his crew crushed him and hung the bird's body around his neck. Passage of a ghost ship (ominous omen) tells the death of all ships except the narrator.