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  1. The Man Who Cried Blood - Hisashi Ouchi's Slow and Gruesome D*ath ‪@YTcrimechronicles‬. The Tragic Tale of Hisashi Ouchi: A Nuclear Nightmare by Chronicles's Workspace OUTLINE: ...more....

    • 8 min
    • 8
    • Crime Chronicles
    • Summary
    • Themes
    • Structure and Form
    • Literary Devices
    • Part 3: The Rime of The Ancient Mariner Analysis
    • Similar Poems

    During this terrible period of time in the ship’s journey, the sailors are incredibly parched. There’s a moment of hope when a speck comes close in the sky from the west, but due to their dehydration, no one can speak. The Mariner eventually bites his own arm and wets his lips with his blood. With this act, he’s able to alert the crew to the ship o...

    Coleridge engages with themes of sins/forgiveness and nature in ‘The Rime of the Ancient Mariner.’ The nature imagery in ‘The Rime of the Ancient Mariner’ is impossible to avoid. Throughout the poem, the poet uses nature as the controlling force in the Mariner’s life, and those of his fellow men. At various points, it appears that nature is on thei...

    The text is in short ballad stanzas that are usually four or six lines long. But, some reach as many as nine lines in length. The meter is only sometimes structured. The odd lines are usually in tetrameter while the even lines are in trimeter, features of ballad stanzas. The rhyme scheme is usually either ABAB or ABABAB but there are some alteratio...

    Coleridge makes use of several literary devices in this part of ‘The Rime of the Ancient Mariner,’ as well as in all the other sections. These include but are not limited to personification, alliteration, repetition, and imagery. The latter is one of the most important techniques a poet can use in their work. Without it, readers might leave the poe...

    Stanza One and Two

    In this first stanza of the third part of the poem, The Rime of The Ancient Mariner By S.T. Coleridge, the mariner says that we had a weary time, and each man’s throat was dried up with thirst. The eyes of each of us glazed, as if they were made of glass. It was a weary, painful time when our eyes glazed. And then, suddenly, looking westward, the mariner noticed a strange thing in the sky.

    Stanza Three

    In these lines, the mariner says that at first, the thing looked like a speck. And then it got enlarged into a dim appearance. It moved onward, and at last took a certain form, as I thought.

    Stanza Four

    The mariner further says beginning with the form of a dot; it assumed a dim appearance, and then a shape, as he could gather. It came closer and closer all the time. Yet its course was not course, and also changed directions frequently as if it evaded some water-spirit.

    Readers who enjoyed the third part of this poem should also read some of Samuel Taylor Coleridge’s other best-known poems. For example, ‘Kubla Khan,’ ‘The Knight’s Tomb,‘ and ‘The Pains of Sleep.’ The first of these is also quite well-known. In it, he describes Kubla Khan’s pleasure dome in a dream-like state. ‘The Knight’s Tomb’ is considered an a...

  2. In ‘The Ballad of Reading Gaol,’ Wilde engages with themes of loss, imprisonment, and emotional turbulence. The poet works from his own experiences in Reading Gaol, and those of men he met or knew about, to craft this poem about the sorrows of life, love, and solitude.

    • Female
    • October 9, 1995
    • Poetry Analyst And Editor
  3. Mar 1, 2024 · The Man Who Cried Blood: Hisashi Ouchi, the Most Radioactive Man in History | NHD 2024 Documentary. In 1999, Hisashi Ouchi, a Japanese nuclear fuel plant worker was exposed to critical...

    • 9 min
    • 157
    • Angie S
  4. In ‘Part V: The Rime of The Ancient Mariner,’ the dead crew rises, guided by spirits, in a quest for redemption. Supernatural meets divine.

  5. Mark Antony’s ‘Friends, Romans, countrymen’ speech from Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar is a masterclass of irony and the way rhetoric can be used to say one thing but imply something quite different without ever naming it.

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  7. Apr 28, 2021 · A Summary and Analysis of ‘The Boy Who Cried Wolf’. By Dr Oliver Tearle (Loughborough University) ‘The Boy Who Cried Wolf’ is one of the most famous fables attributed to the classical writer Aesop: it gave us the popular idiom to cry wolf, meaning to raise a false alarm.

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