Saturday, January 26, 2013

In "The Rime of the Ancient Mariner," what living thing appeared through the fog?

Your question pertains to Part I of this incredible poem.
The ship, although it left with good weather, has been subject to a tremendous storm
that has blown it off course towards the South Pole. Now, the ship is surrounded by
icebergs that are mast high and "green as emerald." As the crew try to see through the
fog, all they can observe is more and more ice:


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The ice was here, the ice was
there,


The ice was all
around:


It cracked and growled, and roared and
howled,


Like noises in a
swound!



Note the onomatopoeia
in the description of how the ice sounded. We can only imagine how the fog, combined
with the unnatural appearance of these massive icebergs and the sound they were making,
struck the sailors with horror to their very beings. However, in the midst of this
darkness and despair, a symbol of hope emerges:


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At length did cross an
Albatross,


Through the fog it
came;


As if it had been a Christian
soul,


We hailed it in God's
name.



Thus the living thing
that the sailors are able to see through the fog is the albatross, that is described in
distinctly religious terms and is seen by the sailors as a symbol of some divine,
righteous power. This of course makes the Mariner's crime in killing it all the more
terrible.

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