Samuel Taylor Coleridge
Powerpoint adapted from the following site: ttosspon.wikispaces.com/file/view/Ancient+Mariner+and+Dore.ppt
An Ancient Mariner
stops one (of three)
on his way to a
wedding.
The Rime of the
Ancient Mariner
Powerpoint adapted from the following site: ttosspon.wikispaces.com/file/view/Ancient+Mariner+and+Dore.ppt
 The wedding guest
is mesmerized by
the Mariner’s
passion and begins
listening to the
story.
Powerpoint adapted from the following site: ttosspon.wikispaces.com/file/view/Ancient+Mariner+and+Dore.ppt
 The Mariner’s Tale:
 Their ship is driven
south, by a storm,
to a place of “mist
and snow.”
Powerpoint adapted from the following site: ttosspon.wikispaces.com/file/view/Ancient+Mariner+and+Dore.ppt
 “The ice was
here, the ice was
there, The ice
was all around:
It cracked and
growled, and
roared and
howled, Like
noises in a
swound!”
Powerpoint adapted from the following site: ttosspon.wikispaces.com/file/view/Ancient+Mariner+and+Dore.ppt
 Surrounded by
ice.
Powerpoint adapted from the following site: ttosspon.wikispaces.com/file/view/Ancient+Mariner+and+Dore.ppt
 An albatross
appears.
Powerpoint adapted from the following site: ttosspon.wikispaces.com/file/view/Ancient+Mariner+and+Dore.ppt
 The albatross
leads them out
of the fog.
Powerpoint adapted from the following site: ttosspon.wikispaces.com/file/view/Ancient+Mariner+and+Dore.ppt
 The Mariner shoots the
albatross. At first the
crew condemns him,
but when a favorable
breeze appears, they
justify his action. This
implicates them in his
crime.
Powerpoint adapted from the following site: ttosspon.wikispaces.com/file/view/Ancient+Mariner+and+Dore.ppt
 Later, the wind stops and
the ship is stranded for
days, “As idle as a painted
ship upon a painted
ocean.”
 “Water, water, every
where, and all the boards
did shrink; Water, water,
every where, nor any drop
to drink.”
 The crew blames the
Mariner for no wind and
hangs the albatross
around his neck as
punishment.
Powerpoint adapted from the following site: ttosspon.wikispaces.com/file/view/Ancient+Mariner+and+Dore.ppt
 A ghost ship
approaches with
a Specter-Woman
and her Death-
Mate as crew.
Powerpoint adapted from the following site: ttosspon.wikispaces.com/file/view/Ancient+Mariner+and+Dore.ppt
 “Death” and “Life
in Death” roll dice
for the lives of the
ship’s crew.
 “Life in Death”
wins.
Powerpoint adapted from the following site: ttosspon.wikispaces.com/file/view/Ancient+Mariner+and+Dore.ppt
 “Each turned his face
with a ghastly pang,
and cursed me with his
eye”
 “With heavy thump, a
lifeless lump, they
dropped down one by
one.”
 “The souls did from
their bodies fly, - They
fled to bliss or woe!
And every soul, it
passed me by, Like the
whizz of my cross-
bow!”
Powerpoint adapted from the following site: ttosspon.wikispaces.com/file/view/Ancient+Mariner+and+Dore.ppt
 “Alone, alone, all,
all alone, alone on
a wide wide sea!
And never a saint
took pity on my
soul in agony.”
 “Seven days,
seven nights, I saw
that curse, and yet
I could not die.”
Powerpoint adapted from the following site: ttosspon.wikispaces.com/file/view/Ancient+Mariner+and+Dore.ppt
 “Beyond the
shadow of the
ship, I watched the
water-snakes”
 “O happy living
things! No tongue
their beauty might
declare: A spring
of love gushed
from my heart, and
I blessed them
unaware”
Powerpoint adapted from the following site: ttosspon.wikispaces.com/file/view/Ancient+Mariner+and+Dore.ppt
 The curse is lifted
and the albatross
falls from his neck
and sinks “like lead
into the sea.”
Powerpoint adapted from the following site: ttosspon.wikispaces.com/file/view/Ancient+Mariner+and+Dore.ppt
 The dead men
awaken and the
Mariner directs his
ghostly crew
North.
Powerpoint adapted from the following site: ttosspon.wikispaces.com/file/view/Ancient+Mariner+and+Dore.ppt
 As the Mariner returns
to his home port, the
spirits of his crew
leave their bodies.
 He receives
forgiveness (shrieve)
from a hermit.
Powerpoint adapted from the following site: ttosspon.wikispaces.com/file/view/Ancient+Mariner+and+Dore.ppt
 The Mariner’s
ship sinks.
Powerpoint adapted from the following site: ttosspon.wikispaces.com/file/view/Ancient+Mariner+and+Dore.ppt
 The story
concluded, the
wedding guest
leaves “a
sadder and a
wiser man.”
 The Mariner
must tell his
tale to warn
others
(redemption).
Powerpoint adapted from the following site: ttosspon.wikispaces.com/file/view/Ancient+Mariner+and+Dore.ppt
Powerpoint adapted from the following site: ttosspon.wikispaces.com/file/view/Ancient+Mariner+and+Dore.ppt
Powerpoint adapted from the following site: ttosspon.wikispaces.com/file/view/Ancient+Mariner+and+Dore.ppt
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)
Powerpoint adapted from the following site: ttosspon.wikispaces.com/file/view/Ancient+Mariner+and+Dore.ppt
“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…
Powerpoint adapted from the following site: ttosspon.wikispaces.com/file/view/Ancient+Mariner+and+Dore.ppt
Purely inspirational? Dark gothic?
“cursed me with his eye”
“Life-in-death”
“spectre bark”
Gustav Doré‟s Dark Etches…
Powerpoint adapted from the following site: ttosspon.wikispaces.com/file/view/Ancient+Mariner+and+Dore.ppt
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“)
Powerpoint adapted from the following site: ttosspon.wikispaces.com/file/view/Ancient+Mariner+and+Dore.ppt
“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
Powerpoint adapted from the following site: ttosspon.wikispaces.com/file/view/Ancient+Mariner+and+Dore.ppt
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.
Powerpoint adapted from the following site: ttosspon.wikispaces.com/file/view/Ancient+Mariner+and+Dore.ppt
Powerpoint adapted from the following site: ttosspon.wikispaces.com/file/view/Ancient+Mariner+and+Dore.ppt
Introduction
 Return to the enchantment of the
world before science
 Altered mental states (like those of
the outlaws and exiles)
 Look for the elements of a Gothic
novel (handout)
Readings listed on syllabus:
 Keats “The Eve of St. Agnes” (pp.
912-922)
 Walpole The Castle of Otranto (pp. 586-
589)
 Radcliffe The Mysteries of Udolpho (pp.
601-602)
Bring back your literature circle
rankings

September 16

  • 6.
    Samuel Taylor Coleridge Powerpointadapted from the following site: ttosspon.wikispaces.com/file/view/Ancient+Mariner+and+Dore.ppt
  • 7.
    An Ancient Mariner stopsone (of three) on his way to a wedding. The Rime of the Ancient Mariner Powerpoint adapted from the following site: ttosspon.wikispaces.com/file/view/Ancient+Mariner+and+Dore.ppt
  • 8.
     The weddingguest is mesmerized by the Mariner’s passion and begins listening to the story. Powerpoint adapted from the following site: ttosspon.wikispaces.com/file/view/Ancient+Mariner+and+Dore.ppt
  • 9.
     The Mariner’sTale:  Their ship is driven south, by a storm, to a place of “mist and snow.” Powerpoint adapted from the following site: ttosspon.wikispaces.com/file/view/Ancient+Mariner+and+Dore.ppt
  • 10.
     “The icewas here, the ice was there, The ice was all around: It cracked and growled, and roared and howled, Like noises in a swound!” Powerpoint adapted from the following site: ttosspon.wikispaces.com/file/view/Ancient+Mariner+and+Dore.ppt
  • 11.
     Surrounded by ice. Powerpointadapted from the following site: ttosspon.wikispaces.com/file/view/Ancient+Mariner+and+Dore.ppt
  • 12.
     An albatross appears. Powerpointadapted from the following site: ttosspon.wikispaces.com/file/view/Ancient+Mariner+and+Dore.ppt
  • 13.
     The albatross leadsthem out of the fog. Powerpoint adapted from the following site: ttosspon.wikispaces.com/file/view/Ancient+Mariner+and+Dore.ppt
  • 14.
     The Marinershoots the albatross. At first the crew condemns him, but when a favorable breeze appears, they justify his action. This implicates them in his crime. Powerpoint adapted from the following site: ttosspon.wikispaces.com/file/view/Ancient+Mariner+and+Dore.ppt
  • 15.
     Later, thewind stops and the ship is stranded for days, “As idle as a painted ship upon a painted ocean.”  “Water, water, every where, and all the boards did shrink; Water, water, every where, nor any drop to drink.”  The crew blames the Mariner for no wind and hangs the albatross around his neck as punishment. Powerpoint adapted from the following site: ttosspon.wikispaces.com/file/view/Ancient+Mariner+and+Dore.ppt
  • 16.
     A ghostship approaches with a Specter-Woman and her Death- Mate as crew. Powerpoint adapted from the following site: ttosspon.wikispaces.com/file/view/Ancient+Mariner+and+Dore.ppt
  • 17.
     “Death” and“Life in Death” roll dice for the lives of the ship’s crew.  “Life in Death” wins. Powerpoint adapted from the following site: ttosspon.wikispaces.com/file/view/Ancient+Mariner+and+Dore.ppt
  • 18.
     “Each turnedhis face with a ghastly pang, and cursed me with his eye”  “With heavy thump, a lifeless lump, they dropped down one by one.”  “The souls did from their bodies fly, - They fled to bliss or woe! And every soul, it passed me by, Like the whizz of my cross- bow!” Powerpoint adapted from the following site: ttosspon.wikispaces.com/file/view/Ancient+Mariner+and+Dore.ppt
  • 19.
     “Alone, alone,all, all alone, alone on a wide wide sea! And never a saint took pity on my soul in agony.”  “Seven days, seven nights, I saw that curse, and yet I could not die.” Powerpoint adapted from the following site: ttosspon.wikispaces.com/file/view/Ancient+Mariner+and+Dore.ppt
  • 20.
     “Beyond the shadowof the ship, I watched the water-snakes”  “O happy living things! No tongue their beauty might declare: A spring of love gushed from my heart, and I blessed them unaware” Powerpoint adapted from the following site: ttosspon.wikispaces.com/file/view/Ancient+Mariner+and+Dore.ppt
  • 21.
     The curseis lifted and the albatross falls from his neck and sinks “like lead into the sea.” Powerpoint adapted from the following site: ttosspon.wikispaces.com/file/view/Ancient+Mariner+and+Dore.ppt
  • 22.
     The deadmen awaken and the Mariner directs his ghostly crew North. Powerpoint adapted from the following site: ttosspon.wikispaces.com/file/view/Ancient+Mariner+and+Dore.ppt
  • 23.
     As theMariner returns to his home port, the spirits of his crew leave their bodies.  He receives forgiveness (shrieve) from a hermit. Powerpoint adapted from the following site: ttosspon.wikispaces.com/file/view/Ancient+Mariner+and+Dore.ppt
  • 24.
     The Mariner’s shipsinks. Powerpoint adapted from the following site: ttosspon.wikispaces.com/file/view/Ancient+Mariner+and+Dore.ppt
  • 25.
     The story concluded,the wedding guest leaves “a sadder and a wiser man.”  The Mariner must tell his tale to warn others (redemption). Powerpoint adapted from the following site: ttosspon.wikispaces.com/file/view/Ancient+Mariner+and+Dore.ppt
  • 26.
    Powerpoint adapted fromthe following site: ttosspon.wikispaces.com/file/view/Ancient+Mariner+and+Dore.ppt
  • 27.
    Powerpoint adapted fromthe following site: ttosspon.wikispaces.com/file/view/Ancient+Mariner+and+Dore.ppt
  • 28.
    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) Powerpoint adapted from the following site: ttosspon.wikispaces.com/file/view/Ancient+Mariner+and+Dore.ppt
  • 29.
    “poetry gives mostpleasure 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… Powerpoint adapted from the following site: ttosspon.wikispaces.com/file/view/Ancient+Mariner+and+Dore.ppt
  • 30.
    Purely inspirational? Darkgothic? “cursed me with his eye” “Life-in-death” “spectre bark” Gustav Doré‟s Dark Etches… Powerpoint adapted from the following site: ttosspon.wikispaces.com/file/view/Ancient+Mariner+and+Dore.ppt
  • 31.
    Coleridge felt adeep 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“) Powerpoint adapted from the following site: ttosspon.wikispaces.com/file/view/Ancient+Mariner+and+Dore.ppt
  • 32.
    “Instead of thecross, 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 Powerpoint adapted from the following site: ttosspon.wikispaces.com/file/view/Ancient+Mariner+and+Dore.ppt
  • 33.
    Vs. Some critics maintainthat 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. Powerpoint adapted from the following site: ttosspon.wikispaces.com/file/view/Ancient+Mariner+and+Dore.ppt
  • 34.
    Powerpoint adapted fromthe following site: ttosspon.wikispaces.com/file/view/Ancient+Mariner+and+Dore.ppt
  • 35.
  • 36.
     Return tothe enchantment of the world before science  Altered mental states (like those of the outlaws and exiles)  Look for the elements of a Gothic novel (handout)
  • 37.
    Readings listed onsyllabus:  Keats “The Eve of St. Agnes” (pp. 912-922)  Walpole The Castle of Otranto (pp. 586- 589)  Radcliffe The Mysteries of Udolpho (pp. 601-602) Bring back your literature circle rankings

Editor's Notes

  • #7 In the Pirates of the Caribbean films, there are many parallels to the epic poem, including life in death playing dice for the souls of men (the game "Liar's Dice"), Calypso (as Tia Dalma's true form), smelly slimy creatures (Davy Jones' crew), the "frost and the cold" and even "water water everywhere and not a drop to drink" when the characters are at sea and out of drinking water.