Samuel Taylor Coleridge’s “Rhyme Of The Ancient Mariner” and John Keats’ “Ode to a Nightingale” both exemplify the new direction for the world and message that poets of the romanticism era were trying to covey to the reading public. Both poems encompass the turn toward the fusion of a number of aspects that romantic poets felt was needed to connect to the reader.
In Coleridge’s “Rhyme Of The Ancient Mariner” the concept of the fusion of reality and conciseness is evident throughout the poem. The wedding guest, whom is listening to the Ancient Mariners tale of the ship, has his reality fused with his conciseness in that he wants to leave to go to the