Concetti Chiave
- Samuel Taylor Coleridge was an influential English poet known for his masterpiece, The Rime of the Ancient Mariner.
- The poem is the first in the collection Lyrical Ballads and tells the story of an ancient mariner who captivates a wedding guest with his tale.
- The mariner recounts a sea voyage where he kills an albatross, leading to dire consequences for him and his crew.
- The crew punishes the mariner by hanging the albatross around his neck, symbolizing his guilt.
- The story ends with "Death" and "Life-in-Death" playing dice, resulting in the mariner's eternal fate to wander and tell his tale.
Samuel Taylor Coleridge
Samuel Taylor Coleridge was an English poet (21 October 1772 – 25 July 1834) and he wrote: The Rime of the ancient mariner. It is Coleridge’s masterpiece, and it’s the first poem of Lyrical Ballads.
An ancient mariner compels a wedding guests listen to an incredible story about a sailing voyage. The wedding guest is unhappy, but the mariner can mesmerize him, to tell a story. He narrates that during a journey by sea, he and his shipmates meet an albatross that leads them in the clear: at first the crew receives well the albatross, then the ancient mariner kills him and after a while, a storm rages. So, the sailors hang the albatross around the mariner’s neck to punish him. At the end, “Death” and “Life in death” come to play dice…Death wins the lives of the crew members and Life-in-Death the life of the mariner: he has to wander the earth and tell eternally his story.