Coleridge's The Rime of the Ancient Mariner

About the poem

Coleridge's The Rime of the Ancient Mariner is the story of the Romantic archetype, the Wanderer, the man with the mark of Cain, doomed to walk the earth alone and alienated from all others. What is presented to the reader is a theme of guilt and remorse, juxtaposed with the background joy of a wedding feast. The audience is unwilling, but is forced to hear the tale anyway. It seems that as a penance for what he has done, the Mariner is compelled to tell his story whenever the agony returns. This poem is part of Coleridge's daemonic group of poems, which also includes Christabel and Kubla Khan, intending a reconciliation of the poet's self-consciousness with a higher state of being, but only reaching purgatory.


What themes should we be looking for? - Here are some examples:-

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LINKS

S.T.Coleridge Home Page | 40 Questions for "The Rime..."

The Coleridge Concordance | The Concordance Workbook contents | The Blake Workbook | The Coleridge Workbook | The Keats Workbook | My Home Page


This page is maintained by Catherine Poole. This page was last updated on 22 April 1999.