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On Tue, 23 Mar 2004 09:47:05 -0500 (EST), "Harry Krause"
wrote: ...Samuel Taylor Coleridge read his poem, "The Rime of the Ancient Mariner," to William Wordsworth. If you haven't read "The Rime," I recommend it. It is on-topic for this newsgroup. Hmmmm - how so? The "Ancient Mariner" was basically a concordant theme of never ending redemption - concordant in that it is part of a series of set pieces in which tales are told as moral lessons: the Mariner forced to tell the tale whenever the angst of error becomes too heavy to bear. The story is akin to stories developed with the "wanderer" theme - doomed to wander the earth telling a moralistic tale which never absolves the sin of the teller. Frankly, "The Ancient Mariner", while a classic piece of literature, isn't as good or as instructive as "Kubla Khan". And if I may, Monsarrat did it much better with "The Master Mariner". Later, Tom S. Woodstock, CT ----------- "Angling may be said to be so like the mathematics that it can never be fully learnt..." Izaak Walton "The Compleat Angler", 1653 |