4.6 • 9.2K Ratings
🗓️ 4 March 2021
⏱️ 53 minutes
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0:00.0 | BBC Sounds, Music, Radio, Podcasts. |
0:04.8 | Thanks for downloading this episode of In Our Time. |
0:07.3 | There's a reading list to go with it on our website, |
0:09.5 | and you can get news about our programs if you follow us |
0:12.1 | on Twitter at BBC In Our Time. |
0:14.7 | I hope you enjoyed the programs. |
0:16.4 | Hello, the rhyme of the ancient Mariner |
0:18.2 | is one of the best known and most influential |
0:20.8 | of the poems of the romantic movement |
0:22.6 | and one of the most loved. |
0:24.5 | Coleridge wrote it in 1798 and refined it over the next 40 years, |
0:29.5 | and he came to define him a foreshadowing of his opium |
0:32.9 | addicted, lonely, wandering life. |
0:35.8 | The permters of a sailor compelled to tell and retail |
0:38.7 | the story of a terrible voyage in his youth, |
0:41.0 | this time as guests heading to a wedding party |
0:43.8 | where he stop at one in three. |
0:45.6 | With me to discuss the rhyme of the ancient Mariner |
0:48.2 | on this 900 edition, I'll ask a Jonathan Bates, |
0:51.3 | Professor of Environmental Humanities |
0:53.2 | at Arizona State University, Tom Moll, Professor of English Literature |
0:57.3 | and Book History at the University of Edinburgh, |
... |
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