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What Is The Overarching Theory In The Rime Of The Ancient Mariner

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Burke’s overarching theory applies in ‘The Rime of the Ancient Mariner’ as the Mariner is cursed to tell his tale for what seems to be the rest of time as he states “Since then, at an uncertain hour, / That agony returns: / And till my ghastly tale is told, / This heart within me burns” (582-585). When he tells his tale to the wedding guest, the bond is created between the two of them that Burke argued was necessary for an individual to feel the pleasure of the sublime. Therefore, the Mariner enables the wedding guest in the poem who hears the tale to experience the delight of emotions as evidenced in the lines “He went like one that hath been stunned, / And is of sense forlorn: / A sadder and a wiser man / He rose the morrow morn” (622-625) and therefore the sublime. This is due to the misfortune in the story is solely occurring to the Mariner; meanwhile the guest is safe and distanced from its pain. …show more content…

Instead it is a way for the Mariner and the wedding guest (and others who hear the tale) to form a connection with one another through the misfortune that occurs to the Mariner, and the delight it provides to the wedding guest as he experiences the “fear” (224, 345) from the Mariner’s

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