In the book, The Rime of the Ancient Mariner, whenever the mariner tells his tale, his anguished soul finds relief. The poem was written by Samuel Taylor Coleridge.
The mariner tells his story to a wedding guest whom he stops to share his tale with as he feels compelled to unload the burden of his experiences.
His penance is to wander the earth and tell his story to whomever he met and to teach them to respect all of God's creations.
It is Rime of the Acient Mariner not rise... \
The mariner's bound to tell of his story To tell this tale wherever he goes To teach God's word by his own example That we must love all things that God made. And the wedding guest's a sad and wiser man And the tale goes on and on and on. Fadi Y.
According to ChaCha, "the Wedding-Guest's reaction turns from bemusement to impatience and fear to fascination as the Mariner's story progresses."
Since this incident, the Mariner at uncertain hours is terrorized by this memory."Since then, at uncertain hour, That agony returns:And till my ghastly tale is told,This heart within me burns. "So now he must tell this story to others to relieve the pain of his memory."I know the man that must hear me:To him my tale I teach. "
SOMETHING
After hearing the Mariner's story, the Wedding Guest is left in disbelief and awe. He is transfixed by the Mariner's compelling tale and is deeply affected by its moral lesson. Ultimately, he is compelled to reflect on his own life and actions.
"The Rime of the Ancient Mariner" by Samuel Taylor Coleridge is an example of a ballad. It tells the story of a mariner who embarks on a fateful voyage and faces supernatural consequences for his actions. The poem follows a rhyme scheme and has a narrative structure typical of ballads.
The wedding guest is afraid of the Ancient Mariner because the Mariner has a compelling and eerie presence, and his intense, hypnotic gaze captivates the wedding guest, leaving him feeling both fascinated and disturbed by the Mariner's strange and haunting story about his cursed voyage.
The poem "The Rime of the Ancient Mariner" is important to Walton because it serves as a cautionary tale about the consequences of guilt and remorse. It also emphasizes the power of storytelling as a means of conveying important lessons and experiences. Walton sees parallels between the marinerβs story and his own quest for knowledge and adventure.
The ancient Mariner tells that he has the urge to tell his tale at unpredictable times. He also states that he is in agony until he does tell his tale to someone. This is something that he discloses to the wedding guest in the poem.
I don't have the Mariner year model chart, but close as I can tell this engine would be a 1984 - 1985 year model.