Skip to content

✌🏼 Free Shipping on orders £20

Mariner

Mariner

By: Guite, Malcolm
Genre:
  • Biography: literary
Regular price £13.50
Sale price £13.50 Regular price
Tax included. Shipping calculated at checkout.

Out of stock

  • Free UK shipping on orders over £20
  • Order before 1pm for same day dispatch
Sold and shipped by SpeedyHen
Payment & Security
Payment methods
  • American Express
  • Apple Pay
  • Bancontact
  • Diners Club
  • Discover
  • Google Pay
  • Maestro
  • Mastercard
  • Shop Pay
  • Union Pay
  • Visa

Your payment information is processed securely. We do not store credit card details nor have access to your credit card information.

Mariner

Mariner

Regular price £13.50
Sale price £13.50 Regular price

''The story of Coleridge''s life does undoubtedly echo that of his poem; this is a book that provides rewarding rereadings of both'' - The Sunday Times

A new biography of Samuel Taylor Coleridge, shaped and structured around the story he himself tells in his most famous poem, ''The Rime of the Ancient Mariner''.

Though the ''Mariner'' was written in 1797 when Coleridge was only twenty-five, it was an astonishingly prescient poem. As Coleridge himself came to realise much later, this tale - of a journey that starts in high hopes and good spirits, but leads to a profound encounter with human fallibility, darkness, alienation, loneliness and dread, before coming home to a renewal of faith and vocation - was to be the shape of his own life. In this rich new biography, academic, priest and poet Malcolm Guite draws out how with an uncanny clarity, image after image and event after event in the poem became emblems of what Coleridge was later to suffer and discover.

Of course ''The Rime of the Ancient Mariner'' is more than just an individual''s story: it is also a profound exploration of the human condition and, as Coleridge says in his gloss, our ''loneliness and fixedness''. But the poem also offers hope, release, and recovery; and Guite also draws out the continuing relevance of Coleridge''s life and writing to our own time.

''Forcefully and convincingly argued'' - The Telegraph