The Gothic Poets Society discussion

The Rime of the Ancient Mariner
This topic is about The Rime of the Ancient Mariner
27 views
Rime of the Ancient Mariner > Open Discussion

Comments Showing 1-9 of 9 (9 new)    post a comment »
dateUp arrow    newest »

Aaron Meyer (loptsson) | 79 comments Mod
Hello folks! The discussion folder is open to all discussions concerning the Rime of the Ancient Mariner. If you want to go into detail feel free. If you do not like to know what is going to happen in a book before reading it then I would suggest waiting until you are finished before jumping into the forum then. What did you like, what did you hate? Feel free to speak up! Don't let the urge to lurk hold you back! The book is set to be read over a month and a half so those who are wanting to read it will have ample opportunity to do so.


Aaron Meyer (loptsson) | 79 comments Mod
I really enjoy this poem! I like to come back to it ever so many years and revisit it. There a handful of verses that I will say at random moments on any given day to my own amusement usually because nobody has a clue what I am talking about, for most people are not readers of fine literature.
I enjoy considering the merit of the punishment of the Mariner at times, for it seems to me that if one doesn't pay penance for their sins on a regular basis they perchance may fall back in to them once again. His particular penance is interesting because he chooses the person who seems to need to hear about his tale. How he chooses we are never told but one may suppose that it is almost like a mystical connection or like two magnets attracting one another. In a sense he becomes like a harbinger of warning for that individual to straighten up his act.
I also have always liked that his saving grace was the fact that he unwittingly blessed the creatures of the sea. How many times have you found yourself utterly devastated by some situation come upon a momentarily beautiful moment that nature presents to you or just the random appearance of an animal which quite unwittingly you find yourself proclaiming how beautiful it was? Perhaps at these very moments in your life, as in my own, we were saved from utter destruction just as the Mariner is in the poem. Who knows? These are things that I often think about after reading this poem.


Latasha (latasha513) I love, love, love this story. I have a board on pintrest that is flavored water and it's name is water, water everywhere. I don't think anyone gets it. no one has commented on the name yet. lol oh well :(


Aaron Meyer (loptsson) | 79 comments Mod
LOL that is hilarious. It is definitely one of my favorite lines from the poem too. Water water everywhere nor any drop to drink. I know if I would of seen your pintrest I would of had a chuckle for sure.


Latasha (latasha513) Lol thanks Aaron! I doubt most ppl get it.


message 6: by Roisin (new)

Roisin | 7 comments This might be of interest...
https://www.theguardian.com/books/boo...


message 7: by Monica (new)

Monica Lee Floyd (monicaleefloyd) | 2 comments This was my first time reading the poem. It struck me as a great ghost story at sea. I particularly enjoyed the imagery of the ship of dead corpses sinking into the sea through a whirlpool and the hermit watching in horror with the mariner. I’m not sure I find the moral of the story to be as striking as the tale itself. The moral being, “have respect for God’s creatures great and small”, seems arbitrary next to the foreshadowing of the death of the albatross bringing destruction. The albatross is symbolic of upcoming doom. It only made sense for the mariner to be rid of it. The mariner must wait seven days with the dead crew before any relief is given to him. Obviously Coleridge found the number seven to be significant. What I enjoyed was the fact that he dared to conjoin the Biblical and paranormal in a time where it was frowned upon to do so. The mariner ends his days wandering the earth to tell his tale and warn others not to make the same mistake he did. Seems perhaps this Albatross must have been a metaphor for something else. That’s a lot of penance for killing a bird. I hate birds.


Aaron Meyer (loptsson) | 79 comments Mod
I have always found the Albatross to be the embodiment of pain, loss, sin, and sorrow. Also a metaphor for punishment for wrongdoing. By letting it go it was like learning to become free from that by understanding what was done wrong and instead of destroying, blessing life.


Aaron Meyer (loptsson) | 79 comments Mod
Roisin wrote: "This might be of interest...
https://www.theguardian.com/books/boo..."


Very interesting article Roisin thanks for sharing it :-)


back to top