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It is Rime of the Acient Mariner not rise... \
According to ChaCha, "the Wedding-Guest's reaction turns from bemusement to impatience and fear to fascination as the Mariner's story progresses."
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.
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.
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.
the ancient mariner is most likely some semblance of the ancient order of men ruling over women, and this order was caused by the fact that men have penises while women have vaginas. in addition, the penis goes into the wet vagina, which is like a sea, so the penis could be considered to be a mariner itself.
The ancient mariner stopped the wedding guest by grabbing him with his hypnotic gaze and compelling him to listen to his tale without saying a word, mesmerizing him with the intensity of his eyes. This supernatural hold prevented the wedding guest from leaving and forced him to hear the mariner's haunting story.
None. Only superstition and a number of natural forces.
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.
In "Rime of the Ancient Mariner," several common literary devices are being used together. These include imagery, wordplay, and symbols.
The curse in "The Rime of the Ancient Mariner" does not die away because the mariner must continue to retell his story as a form of penance. By sharing his tale, he seeks to impart the moral lesson learned from his experience and warn others of the consequences of disrespecting nature and all its beings. The curse serves as a perpetual reminder of the mariner's past actions and the importance of living in harmony with the natural world.
The Aeneid by Homer The Rime of the Ancient Mariner by Samuel Taylor Coleridge John Brown's Body by Stephen Vincent Benet