The Rime Of The Ancient Mariner Essay

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In the story of, “The Rime of the Ancient Mariner” the mariner learns that he must think about the people around not just himself and his dumb decisions, because they can lead to hurting or even killing the people surrounding him like they say in the story, but he also learns that nature is greater than mankind and can build or destroy anybody at any time. The mariner in the story doesn’t think about his crew or anything else really. He ends up doing something devastating that affects the whole crew but mostly hurts himself at the end.
In the story, “The Rime of the Ancient Mariner” the mariner and his crew's ship get driven by storm to the cold continent of the South Pole, which there they get stuck on the ice of the frozen continent. The …show more content…

The ship had stopped in the middle of nowhere and the sun began to beat on the crew. It had started to get increasingly hot and the crew had ran out fresh water to drink, and they could not drink any from the salty water of the ocean, so they had to hold their thirst. For a long time the crew went without water and now the water had even ended up being contaminated with hideous and slimy creatures, which made it even more difficult for them to even think about drinking the salty water. The crew started to get mad and desperate to getting out of that misery they were in. They blamed the mariner for his doing and for killing the Albatross. They thought it was his fault they were living this, so they decided to hang the Albatross of the mariner's neck as a symbol of his sin, and for not thinking carefully of his decisions. If the mariner had knew that from the point where he killed the Albatross, nature would soon get its revenge for not being truly appreciated, he would have never killed or even thought about shooting at the Albatross in the first place.
After a while of being in the middle of nowhere with no water and no sign of other humans around, a ship appeared out of nowhere. The mariner says, “At its nearer approach, it seemeth him to be a ship ; and at a dear ransom he freeth his speech from the bonds of thirst.”(Coleridge Globe

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