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The Rime of the Ancient Mariner

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The Rime of the Ancient Mariner is a long poem written by the English poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge in 1797-1798 and published in the first edition of Lyrical Ballads (1798). It is the longest significant poem that Coleridge wrote.

Written in language that imitates the Anglo-Scots border ballads, it relates the supernatural events experienced by a solitary mariner. Its most famous episode is the mariner's unexplained killing of an albatross.

There is no conventional plot, as the poem consists largely of descriptions of what the mariner sees. Interpreting the poem along moral or religious lines has proved difficult. There are suggestions that the mariner is punished for killing the albatross, but the relationship between this, the only real action of the poem, and what follows is unclear.

The poem may have been inspired by James Cook's second voyage of exploration (1772-1775) of the south seas and the Pacific Ocean; Coleridge's tutor William Wales was astronomer on the Resolution (Cook's flagship) and had a strong relationship with Cook. On his second voyage Cook plunged repeatedly below the Antarctic circle to determine whether the fabled great southern continent existed.

When Wordsworth and Coleridge planned the scheme for Lyrical Ballads, it was agreed that Wordsworth would contribute poems describing common life and Coleridge would contribute poems on supernatural themes. It is useful to keep this in mind when examining this poem.

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The Rime of the Ancient Mariner is also the title of a song by Iron Maiden from their 1984 album Powerslave, a 14-minute heavy metal epic based on Coleridge's poem. As a literary adaptation it is probably not meant to be taken altogether seriously, although it can be taken as a short version of the story in the poem. Lyrics:


     Hear the rime of the ancient mariner
     See his eye as he stops one of three
     Mesmerizes one of the wedding guests
     Stay here and listen the nightmares of the sea
     And the music plays on, as the bride passes by
     Caught by his spell and the mariner tells his tale
     Driven south to the land of the snow and ice
     To a place where nobody's been
     Through the snow fog flies on the albatross
     Hailed in God's name, hoping good luck it brings
     And the ship sails on, back to the North
     Through the fog and ice and the albatross follows on
     The mariner kills the bird of good omen
     His shipmates cry against what he's done
     But when the fog clears they justify him
     And make themselves a part of the crime
     Sailing on and on and North across the sea
     Sailing on and on and North 'til all is calm
     The albatross begins with its vengeance
     A terrible curse a thirst has begun
     His shipmates blame bad luck on the mariner
     About his neck the dead bird is hung
     And the curse goes on and on at sea
     And the curse goes on and on for them and me
           "Day after day, day after day, we stuck nor breath nor motion
           As idle as a painted ship upon a painted ocean
           Water, water everywhere and all the boards did shrink
           Water, water everywhere nor any drop to drink."
                 (Quoted from poem)
     There, calls the Mariner, there comes a ship over the line
     But how can she sail with no wind in her sails and no tide?
     See... onward she comes, onward she nears, out of the sun
     See... she has no crew, she has no life, wait but there's two
     Death and she Life in Death, they throw their dice for the crew
     She wins the mariner and he belongs to her now
     Then... crew one by one, they drop down dead, two hundred men
     She... She Life in Death, she lets him live, her chosen one
           "One after one by the star dogged moon, too quick for groan or sigh
           Each turned his face with a ghastly pang, and cursed me with his eye
           Four times fifty living men, (and I heard nor sigh nor groan)
           with heavy thump, a lifeless lump, they dropped down one by one."
                 (Quoted from poem)
     The curse it lives on in their eyes
     The mariner he wished he'd die
     Along with the sea creatures
     But they lived on, so did he
     And by the light of the moon
     He prays for their beauty not doom
     With heart he blesses them,
     God's creatures all of them too
     Then the spell starts to break
     The albatross falls from his neck
     Sinks down like lead into the Sea
     Then down in falls comes the rain
     (9:15 – Solo: Adrian Smith)
     (9:41 – Solo: Dave Murray)
     Hear the groans of the long dead seamen
     See them stir and they start to rise
     Bodies lifted by good spirits
     None of them speak and they're lifeless in their eyes
     And revenge is still sought, penance starts again
     Cast into a trance and the nightmare carries on
     Now the curse is finally lifted
     And the Mariner sights his home
     Spirits go from the long dead bodies
     Form their own light and the Mariner's left alone
     And then a boat came sailing toward him
     It was a joy he could not believe
     The Pilot's boat, his son and the hermit
     Penance of life will fall onto Him
     And the ship it sinks like lead into the sea
     And the hermit shrieves the Mariner of his sins
     The Mariner's bound to tell of his story
     To tell his 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...