“The
Rime of the Ancient Mariner” by Samuel
Taylor Coleridge (1772-1834) was first published in 1798 with other
Coleridge poems and poems by William
Wordsworth. The collection was entitled Lyrical
Ballads, and “Mariner” was by far the longest poem. The collection was
originally planned as the first in a two-volume series, but Wordsworth and
Coleridge changed plans and published the first volume anonymously.
It is not an
understatement to say that Lyrical
Ballads changed poetry forever. What is less well known, except among Coleridge
biographers and teachers, is that “Mariner” was written as part of a five-year
burst of creativity by the poet. In fact, all of the poems we know as Coleridge’s
were written in this five-year period. Coleridge did edit the poem for the next
20 years, and he provided his own extensive commentary on it, but those five
years (1797-1802) saw the sum total of Coleridge’s poetic output.
The impact of “Mariner”
is still felt today. It is one of those poems that have continued to resonate
over the generations, although for often very different reasons. It is a poem
that allows us to read into it the burning questions of the day, and our own
individual journeys through life. Cambridge professor and chaplain Malcolm Guite has discovered
something else: the poem, although written when Coleridge was 25, is a
remarkable guide to the full span of Coleridge’s life. It’s as if “Mariner”
foreshadowed what was to come in the poet’s life.
To continue
reading, please see my post today at Tweetspeak
Poetry.
Illustration: One of Gustave Dore’s
engravings for “The Rime of the Ancient Mariner.”
No comments:
Post a Comment