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Page 1: Many critics see the Rime of the Ancient Mariner as an allegory of some kind of fall, like… Of Coleridge - Of Lucifer -Of Adam & Eve - …forbidden fruit…cast
Page 2: Many critics see the Rime of the Ancient Mariner as an allegory of some kind of fall, like… Of Coleridge - Of Lucifer -Of Adam & Eve - …forbidden fruit…cast

Many critics see the “Rime of the Ancient Mariner” as an allegory of some kind of fall,

like…

Of Coleridge -

Of Lucifer - Of Adam & Eve - …forbidden fruit…cast into hell

…opium?

“…the very deep did rot…”

“…slimy things …

Slimy sea”

“I shot the albatross”

“…and I had done a hellish thing…”

“witch’s oils, / …burnt green, and blue and

white”

Phantasmagoria! A shifting series or succession of things seen or imagined, as in a dream.

STRUCTURE:

Sin, Punishment, Redemption…

Milton Parallels?

(Paradise Lost)

Shelley’s Interpretation?

(Frankenstein)

Cain

?

Page 3: Many critics see the Rime of the Ancient Mariner as an allegory of some kind of fall, like… Of Coleridge - Of Lucifer -Of Adam & Eve - …forbidden fruit…cast

“poetry gives most pleasure when only generally and not perfectly understood"

- Coleridge

Many critics maintain, as Christopher Lamb does, that the ‘Ancient Mariner’ is a work of complete

and pure imagination. As…

No single interpretation seems to fit the entire poem…

In essence, it is a very imaginative and unusual piece…

Purely inspirational? Dark gothic?

“cursed me with his eye”

“Life-in-death”

“spectre bark”

Gustav Doré’s Dark Etches…

Page 4: Many critics see the Rime of the Ancient Mariner as an allegory of some kind of fall, like… Of Coleridge - Of Lucifer -Of Adam & Eve - …forbidden fruit…cast

Coleridge felt a deep sense of sin, for his opium addiction.

The poem could be his way of fathoming his feelings.The “strange power” of the Ancient Mariner, as his difficult feelings.

“mingled strangely with my fears”

“I know that man … must hear me” / “To him my tale I teach”

Hence, his sensitivity and saying that the poem should not be analyzed?

(“poetry gives most pleasure when only generally and not perfectly understood“)

Page 5: Many critics see the Rime of the Ancient Mariner as an allegory of some kind of fall, like… Of Coleridge - Of Lucifer -Of Adam & Eve - …forbidden fruit…cast

“Instead of the cross, the Albatross/ About my neck was hung”

“I had killed the bird / That made the breeze to blow”

“Hailed it in God’s name”

“Christian soul”

“Crimson red like Gods own head”

- “Hid in mist”

- “dungeon-grate” “blessed them unawares”

Crew distanced from God

Page 6: Many critics see the Rime of the Ancient Mariner as an allegory of some kind of fall, like… Of Coleridge - Of Lucifer -Of Adam & Eve - …forbidden fruit…cast

Vs.Some critics maintain that this ballad was an exploration, by Coleridge, into the science vs. spirituality debate:

There are many mysterious fantastical images, the “glittering eye” with its “strange power…”

the “polar spirits” and “seraph band…”

The Latin preface says, “Human cleverness has always sought knowledge of these things, never attained it.”

He was at a point in his life where he was more concerned with the rational than the empirical, this poem was an exploration of the former.

Page 7: Many critics see the Rime of the Ancient Mariner as an allegory of some kind of fall, like… Of Coleridge - Of Lucifer -Of Adam & Eve - …forbidden fruit…cast