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Synopsis of The Rime of the Ancient Mariner


The story has ended back where it began, therefore it is an epic. In the fourth and final line of the extract he says, "Let me free." Here, he is referring to the previous line about why he tells his tale. By telling the tale it releases him from the pain brought upon him. He was cursed by the god of life and death after he killed the albatross, which causes the curse.
             Between stanzas four and five, Coleridge switches perspectives from first person to third person. In doing so he creates a juxtaposition between the horrible pain he felt and the happiness of the wedding. From the fourth to the fifth paragraph the Mariner returned to third person. This caused the scenery of the fifth stanza to change. The reader becomes aware that the poem has returned to the wedding. This was an emotional experience that the Mariner had. His life goal has become warning all those who need to hear about his accident, or else he will have to suffer the pain internally of knowing that he is cursed. There is another important technique used in the transition from the fourth to the fifth paragraph. That is the juxtaposition created between the pain of the curse, and the happiness of the wedding. In the third paragraph he describes, "This heart within me burns." This describes the immense pain he feels emotionally from the shooting of the albatross earlier in the poem. .
             Throughout the ballad there are different references to religion, through the use of religious symbols, mostly surrounding Jesus and his execution. There are many different religious symbols, whether in this particular extract or through part seven. The first stanza there are two instances of religious references. This is when the Mariner has just arrived in England, and is greeted by the Hermit. He says, "O shrieve me, shrieve me, holy man!" To "shrieve" yourself, is to purify yourself of wrong doings through pain.


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