Posts Tagged ‘The Rime of the Ancient Mariner’
Written by Jason on 23 November 2008
Thread on The Rime Of The Ancient Mariner
Lines 1 through 5
The hermit is good and always likes talking to mariners and is likely to be a good person to talk to for the mariner to repent.
Lines 6
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Written by Jason on 16 November 2008
The Rime Of The Ancient Mariner
Lines 1 through 4 (First voice)
Generally questioning and enquiring about just what it is pushing the ship.
Lines 5 through 8 (Second voice)
Situation. The ocean is
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Written by Jason on 16 November 2008
Part of The Rime Of The Ancient Mariner thread.
Lines 1 through 5
Everyone loves sleep! Coleridge is giving praise for his ability to now sleep. He suggests that it is loved from “pole to
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Written by Jason on 29 October 2008
The Rime Of The Ancient Mariner
Lines 1 through 4
The wedding guest is afraid of the mariner and his “skinny hand” he is scared of the wizened up old man.
Lines 5 through 8
The guest is
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Written by Jason on 27 October 2008
Here are a couple of links for Samuel Taylor Coleridge for The Rime Of The Ancient Mariner.
Young Coleridge, a drama from the BBC about a day in the life of Coleridge and an essay about The Rime Of
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Written by Jason on 26 October 2008
The Rime Of The Ancient Mariner
Lines 1 through 6
The sailors are having a worse time, a “weary time” but Aho, something is approaching. Their throats are still parched.
Lines 7 through
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Written by Jason on 18 October 2008
Read the ancient mariner from my original post.
Lines 1 through 14
1 It’s now morning
5 the luck or the gods are still with them even though the mariner shot the bird
9 confirming he shot the
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Written by Jason on 16 October 2008
the teacher wasn’t in lesson today to we just carried on with the second part of Coleridge’s work albeit a little unsuccessfully.
Here are some of my notes for parts one and two (remember
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Written by Jason on 15 October 2008
Today was the start of the The Rime of the Ancient Mariner by Samuel Taylor Coleridge. The 1817 version with ‘gloss’.
It is something of a lengthy poem and all we looked at was the
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