Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 507153577 series 3585226
Content provided by PoemAnalysis.com. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by PoemAnalysis.com or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://staging.podcastplayer.com/legal.

In this week’s episode of “Beyond the Verse,” the official podcast of PoemAnalysis.com and Poetry+, Maiya and Joe dive into Samuel Taylor Coleridge’s haunting masterpiece, The Rime of the Ancient Mariner’.

They begin with Coleridge’s life and the birth of the Romantic movement, situating the poem within its 1798 publication in Lyrical Ballads. The hosts explore Coleridge’s radical youth, his bond with Wordsworth, and the wider cultural context of exploration, superstition, and shifting faith in the late eighteenth century.

The discussion moves through the Mariner’s fateful journey: the killing of the albatross, the curse that follows, and the unsettling mix of Christian and pre-Christian imagery. Maiya and Joe consider how Coleridge plays with ballad form, rhyme, and rhythm, using sing-song quatrains to deliver some of the darkest content in English poetry. They unpack how the albatross becomes one of literature’s most enduring symbols, resonating across writers from Mary Shelley and Charles Baudelaire to Herman Melville, Robert Eggers, and even Taylor Swift.

By the end, the episode weighs whether the Mariner’s tale is really a moral teaching or simply an endless cycle of guilt and retelling, a punishment that reflects both ancient myth and Coleridge’s own troubled mind.

Get exclusive Poetry PDFs on Samuel Taylor Coleridge and his poetry, available to Poetry+ users:

Send us a text

Support the show

As always, for the ultimate poetry experience, join Poetry+ and explore all things poetry at PoemAnalysis.com.

  continue reading

40 episodes