The Rime of the Ancient Mariner
Three young men are walking together to a
wedding, when one of them is detained by a grizzled old sailor. The young
Wedding-Guest angrily demands that the Mariner let go of him, and the Mariner
obeys. But the young man is transfixed by the ancient Mariner’s “glittering
eye” and can do nothing but sit on a stone and listen to his strange tale. The
Mariner says that he sailed on a ship out of his native harbor—”below the kirk,
below the hill, / Below the lighthouse top”—and into a sunny and cheerful sea.
Hearing bassoon music drifting from the direction of the wedding, the
Wedding-Guest imagines that the bride has entered the hall, but he is still
helpless to tear himself from the Mariner’s story. The Mariner recalls that the
voyage quickly darkened, as a giant storm rose up in the sea and chased the
ship southward. Quickly, the ship came to a frigid land “of mist and snow,”
where “ice, mast-high, came floating by”; the ship was hemmed inside this maze
of ice. But then the sailors encountered an Albatross, a great sea bird. As it
flew around the ship, the ice cracked and split, and a wind from the south
propelled the ship out of the frigid regions, into a foggy stretch of water.
The Albatross followed behind it, a symbol of good luck to the sailors. A
pained look crosses the Mariner’s face, and the Wedding-Guest asks him, “Why
look’st thou so?” The Mariner confesses that he shot and killed the Albatross
with his crossbow.
At first, the other sailors were furious with
the Mariner for having killed the bird that made the breezes blow. But when the
fog lifted soon afterward, the sailors decided that the bird had actually
brought not the breezes but the fog; they now congratulated the Mariner on his
deed. The wind pushed the ship into a silent sea where the sailors were quickly
stranded; the winds died down, and the ship was “As idle as a painted ship /
Upon a painted ocean.” The ocean thickened, and the men had no water to drink;
as if the sea were rotting, slimy creatures crawled out of it and walked across
the surface. At night, the water burned green, blue, and white with death fire.
Some of the sailors dreamed that a spirit, nine fathoms deep, followed them
beneath the ship from the land of mist and snow. The sailors blamed the Mariner
for their plight and hung the corpse of the Albatross around his neck like a
cross.
Poet Understanding
“The Rime of the Ancient Mariner” is unique
among Coleridge’s important works— unique in its intentionally archaic language
(“Eftsoons his hand drops he”), its length, its bizarre moral narrative, its
strange scholarly notes printed in small type in the margins, its thematic
ambiguity, and the long Latin epigraph that begins it, concerning the multitude
of unclassifiable “invisible creatures” that inhabit the world. Its
peculiarities make it quite atypical of its era; it has little in common with
other Romantic works. Rather, the scholarly notes, the epigraph, and the
archaic language combine to produce the impression (intended by Coleridge, no
doubt) that the “Rime” is a ballad of ancient times (like “Sir Patrick Spence,”
which appears in “Dejection: An Ode”), reprinted with explanatory notes for a
new audience.
But the explanatory notes complicate, rather
than clarify, the poem as a whole; while there are times that they explain some
unarticulated action, there are also times that they interpret the material of
the poem in a way that seems at odds with, or irrelevant to, the poem itself.
For instance, in Part II, we find a note regarding the spirit that followed the
ship nine fathoms deep: “one of the invisible inhabitants of this planet,
neither departed souls nor angels; concerning whom the learned Jew, Josephus,
and the Platonic Constantinopolitan, Michael Psellus, may be consulted.” What
might Coleridge mean by introducing such figures as “the Platonic
Constantinopolitan, Michael Psellus,” into the poem, as marginalia, and by
implying that the verse itself should be interpreted through him?
This is a question that has puzzled scholars
since the first publication of the poem in this form. (Interestingly, the
original version of the “Rime,” in the 1797 edition of Lyrical Ballads, did
not include the side notes.) There is certainly an element of humor in
Coleridge’s scholarly glosses—a bit of parody aimed at the writers of serious
glosses of this type; such phrases as “Platonic Constantinopolitan” seem
consciously silly. It can be argued that the glosses are simply an amusing
irrelevancy designed to make the poem seem archaic and that the truly important
text is the poem itself—in its complicated, often Christian symbolism, in its
moral lesson (that “all creatures great and small” were created by God and
should be loved, from the Albatross to the slimy snakes in the rotting ocean)
and in its characters.
If one accepts this argument, one is faced
with the task of discovering the key to Coleridge’s symbolism: what does the
Albatross represent, what do the spirits represent, and so forth. Critics have
made many ingenious attempts to do just that and have found in the “Rime” a
number of interesting readings, ranging from Christian parable to political
allegory. But these interpretations are dampened by the fact that none of them
(with the possible exception of the Christian reading, much of which is
certainly intended by the poem) seems essential to the story itself. One can
accept these interpretations of the poem only if one disregards the glosses
almost completely.
A more interesting, though still questionable,
reading of the poem maintains that Coleridge intended it as a commentary on the
ways in which people interpret the lessons of the past and the ways in which
the past is, to a large extent, simply unknowable. By filling his archaic
ballad with elaborate symbolism that cannot be deciphered in any single,
definitive way and then framing that symbolism with side notes that pick at it
and offer a highly theoretical spiritual-scientific interpretation of its
classifications, Coleridge creates tension between the ambiguous poem and the
unambiguous-but-ridiculous notes, exposing a gulf between the “old” poem and
the “new” attempt to understand it. The message would be that, though certain
moral lessons from the past are still comprehensible—”he lives best who loves
best” is not hard to understand— other aspects of its narratives are less
easily grasped.
In any event, this first segment of the poem
takes the Mariner through the worst of his trials and shows, in action, the
lesson that will be explicitly articulated in the second segment. The Mariner
kills the Albatross in bad faith, subjecting himself to the hostility of the
forces that govern the universe (the very un-Christian-seeming spirit beneath
the sea and the horrible Life-in-Death). It is unclear how these forces are
meant to relate to one another—whether the Life-in-Death is in league with the
submerged spirit or whether their simultaneous appearance is simply a
coincidence.
After earning his curse, the Mariner is able
to gain access to the favor of God—able to regain his ability to pray—only by
realizing that the monsters around him are beautiful in God’s eyes and that he
should love them as he should have loved the Albatross. In the final three
books of the poem, the Mariner’s encounter with a Hermit will spell out this
message explicitly, and the reader will learn why the Mariner has stopped the
Wedding-Guest to tell him this story.
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