1 / 18

The Symbolism and Style in Samuel Taylor Coleridge's "The Rime of the Ancient Mariner

Explore the poetic genius of Coleridge through vivid imagery, supernatural symbolism, and eerie atmospheres in this classic Romantic work. Uncover the religious and aesthetic interpretations of this timeless poem.

earled
Download Presentation

The Symbolism and Style in Samuel Taylor Coleridge's "The Rime of the Ancient Mariner

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Samuel Taylor Coleridge October 21, 1772 – July 25, 1834)

  2. born in Ottery St Mary, Devonshire in 1772 • Christ’s Hospital School in London in 1782 • Cambridge University (never graduated) • influenced by French Revolutionary principles • disillusioned by the Revolution • attempted to create a utopian community in Pennsylvania – Pantisocracy – based on communist principles • use of opium to reduce his bodily pains due to chronic rheumatism – drug addiction

  3. 1797 – artistic collaborationwithWordsworth • “Lyrical Ballads” – the manifesto of the English Romanticmovement • 1798 – “The Rime of the Ancient Mariner” • 1797 – “Christabel” – unfinished poem • 1798 – Kubla Khan – a fragment of 54 lines • 1799 – Lake District period with Wordsworth • 1804 – 1806 period of solitude in Malta • return to England – a career as a journalist and as a literary critic: lectures on Shakespeare • 1817 – “BiographiaLiteraria”, a text of literary criticism and an autobiography.

  4. Imagination the sovereign creative power • primary imagination • the human capacity to: a) perceive b) produce images c) to give a certain shape and order to the material (i.e. the world) perceived. • secondary imagination • the faculty the poet used, not only to give shape and order to a given world, but mainly to build and create new worlds.

  5. Fancy • the poet’s ability to use material which already exists to produce new images • a capacity the poet has to shape old material into something different. The role of Nature • not a moral guide or a source of consolation and happiness • not the manifestation of God on earth • the reflection of the perfect world of “ideas” which is not subject to time or space • natural images have abstract, supernatural meanings.

  6. “The Rime of the Ancient Mariner” • The Rime is the story of a Mariner who is punished for killing an albatross. • His shipmates are also punished because they justify his crime. • They die of thirst one by one while the ship is stuck on the ocean under a blazing sun. • The Mariner’s penance is even more terrible: • he will return to his native country but …….. will be obliged to travel endlessly in orderto tell people about his experience and teach them to love and respect all creatures of God.

  7. the world of ‘The Rime’ is like that of a dream a juxtaposition of ordinary experience and supernatural events. Examples of ordinary experience: the fury of the storm the world of ice, snow and mist the ocean Reality and symbol

  8. Examples of supernatural events: A spirit follows the ship. The albatross falls from the mariner’s neck as soon as he repents. The Mariner has a ghostly appearance and exerts a hypnotic power on the wedding-guest. The dead on the ship do not rot. Reality and symbol

  9. Reality and symbol • All elements belonging to the world of nature (the sun, the sea, the storm) are vividly described and evoke real images in the reader’s mind but …. they are also charged with a deeper symbolic meaning: • the Sun = severe divine justice. • the Calm = the desolation of a sinful soul. • the Rotting sea = the Mariner’s soul troubled by his guilt. • the Moonlight spreading a sort of white frost = the refreshing coolness of forgiveness

  10. The Atmosphere The dominant atmosphere is: • uncanny and eerie • full of strange, mysterious, supernatural and frightening elements • built up through the accumulation of strange and mysterious incidents : • the Mariner has a ghostly appearance • he exerts a hypnotic power on the wedding guest • the ice is a threatening presence • the dead bodies of the Mariner’s shipmates curse him with their eyes ……

  11. Style and form • The poem is rich insound effectsandimagery: • Repetition; • Internal rhyme; • Alliteration • Similes; • Personification;

  12. Form the Rime reproduces the traditional form of a ballad but with some variations. Traditional Ballad • 4-line stanzas rhyming abab; • stress pattern : 4-3-4-3; • story-line: simple and short; • narrative technique : narrator and direct speech; • subjects: universal themes ( love, death, revenge, ) supernatural themes (ghosts); • language : use of repetition.

  13. Variations in the Rime • the stanza is basically a 4-line stanza but there are also stanzas with 5 or more lines; • the typical ababrhyme is present but not very regular, • the length of the story is untypical; • the long descriptions of natural landscapes are not typical; • the moral drawn at the end is not usual. • the presence of the supernatural is, instead, typical.

  14. Rime’s interpretations Religious interpretation: the killing of the albatross is a sin against nature or God ; the Mariner’s sufferings are a form of purgatorial fire and … the return to his country represents salvation.

  15. Rime’s interpretations Aestheticinterpretation: the Mariner is seen as an artist who …. breaks the bounds of conventions in his search for beauty and self-knowledge, he passes through a terrible period of trial, and is eventually saved by his power of imagination (watching the beautiful sea-snakes); his mission is to pass his discovery of truth to ordinary men, but… he only finds a largely uncomprehending audience (the wedding guest).

  16. c b a 5 Listening Ex.3 p.300 You are going to hear an extract from a radio programme about the content of The Rime of the Ancient Mariner. Listen and put the pictures in the slide in the correct order. 1 3 2 4 Listening Text 91 e d

  17. Somerset

  18. Devonshire

More Related