In January 1845, one of Edgar Allan Poe’s most famous
works was published: his poem ‘‘The Raven’’. Even when at first it was not
published under his real name, when the text was released in The Public Mirror it became an overnight
success. The storyline of a talking raven entering a distraught scholar’s room after
the death of his lover Lenore grabbed the attention of both general public
and scholars. Poe’s works have been
scrutinised through various approaches, yet this blog post will focus on the
figure of the raven. As French anthropologist and ethnologist Claude
Lévi-Strauss explains, ‘‘carrion-eating animals are like beasts of prey (they
eat animal food), but they are also like food-plant producers (they do not kill
what they eat)’’ (Lévi-Strauss 224). The employment of the raven in Poe’s
narrative can have different meanings, and the influence of folklore is vital in
the American author’s poem. Perceived as a trickster, and connected to death
and war in several mythologies, the bird is given diverse interpretations
throughout legends. This blog post will develop three fragments to study the
figure of the raven: how its classical folklore emerges in Poe’s poem, how
devil’s folklore is present in the plot, and how Charles Dickens and Samuel
Taylor Coleridge’s narratives are significant to set the text. A Jungian
explanation of some of his archetypes will be given.
In order to introduce the reader to the verses, the
following video with ‘’The Raven’’ read by actor Christopher Lee and with
illustrations by Gustave Doré can be seen here:
Classical
Folklore in ‘‘The Raven’’:
Russian occultist, philosopher and co-founder of the
Theosophical Society Helena Blavatsky penned:
‘‘DARKNESS is always associated with this first symbol
(the origin) and surrounds it, - as shown in the Hindu, the Egyptian, the
Chaldeo-Hebrew and even the Scandinavian systems – hence black ravens, black
doves, black waters and even black flames … Noah lets out a black raven after
the deluge, which is a symbol for the Cosmic pralaya, after which began the
real creation or evolution of our earth and humanity. Odin’s black ravens
fluttered around the Goddess Saga and ‘‘whispered to her of the past and the
future.’’ What is the real meaning of all those black birds?’’ (Blavatsky 443).
The question Blavatsky poses echoes the likely
interrogations of Poe’s bird. The American author claims that the raven is ‘‘the
bird of ill omen’’, and that the idea of a creature ‘‘capable of speech’’ makes
the corvid ‘‘infinitely more in keeping with the intended tone’’ of the verses
than a parrot (Poe). Nevertheless, this quote leaves some of the bird’s characteristics
in the poem aside, since night and darkness are key features of the text.
Actually, Blavatsky’s connection of the raven with Noah can be endorsed in the
poem when the narrator listens to the tapping at his chamber and opens the door:
‘‘Deep into that darkness peering, long I stood there
wondering, fearing,
Doubting, dreaming dreams no mortal ever dared to
dream before’’ (Poe 25-26)
''Noah and the Raven'' by John Buck |
In the Genesis, a raven is sent out by Noah ‘‘to see
if the water had abated’’ (Genesis vii), and the Hebrew text claims that the
bird ‘‘continuously went out and returned until the waters had dried up from
the earth’’ (Genesis). Nevertheless, as R. W. L. Moberly illustrates, ‘‘the
Greek (text) continues ‘‘and the raven went out and did not return until the
water had dried up from earth’’’’ (Moberly 346). This difference in the quote ‘‘raises
the question of how the raven could survive all this time, and so may already
presuppose (or else it may give rise to) the interpretative tradition regularly
attested in postbiblical literature, that the raven, an unclean bird in Mosaic
law (Lex. xi 15, Deut. xiv 14), fed on floating carcasses’’ (Moberly 346). This
last view of the bird leads to the conclusion that the bird is a trickster, he
represents vice in contrast with the virtuous dove Noah releases afterwards, since
he does not return to inform Noah. Carl Jung considered the trickster as an archetype
from the collective unconscious, that is, a prototype ‘‘buried in the mind of
all human beings’’ (Carroll 105), a buffoon or clown which both helps but hides
selfish intention as well.
Poe’s raven is also a trickster for the narrator at
the beginning of the poem:
‘‘Then this ebony bird beguiling my sad fancy into
smiling’’ (Poe 49)
The speaker considers the entrance of the corvid a
humorous anecdote, yet as the narrative continues, the raven is given the role
of informant as in the aforementioned tale of Noah. Sailors employed the bird
frequently in long journeys when seeking land; therefore, adding the power of
revelation and knowledge to the animal. Whereas the Genesis mentions the waters
and the darkness around the Ark, Poe’s scholar is surrounded by an obscure
emptiness which represents the unconscious.
''Odin'' by Sir E. Burne-Jones |
Vikings also gave the
responsibility for information of an unknown land to the ravens when sailing,
and Norse mythology emphasises the bird as a relevant figure. The god Odin, ‘‘the
raven-god’’, was said to own two ravens which enlightened him about the facts
which occurred both in the man’s world and also in the underworld: Hugin
(Thought), and Mugin (Mind). In this case, the raven is not perceived as a
trickster, but as a key figure to the acquirement of wisdom. The loss of the birds
worried the God, as it can be read in the Eddic poem Grímnismál:
‘‘Hugin and Munin
Fly each day
Over the spacious earth.
I fear for Hugin
That he come not back,
Yet more anxious I am for Munin’’ (Guerber)
This fear of lack of knowledge is seen in Poe’s poem,
when, in despair, the narrator cries out:
‘‘‘‘Prophet!’’ said I, ‘‘thing of evil!- prophet
still, bird or devil!
By that Heaven that bends above us- by that God we
both adore-
Tell this soul with sorrow laden if, within the
distant Aidenn,
It shall clasp a sainted maiden whom the angels name
Lenore’’ (Poe 97-100)
This relates to the Greco-Roman Apollo, the god of
prophecy. According to Ovid in the Metamorphoses
(8AD), Apollo sends a white raven to spy on his lover, Coronius, and when
the bird informs him of her unfaithfulness, the god changes the white feathers
of the bird, and, consequently, that is why the corvid is black. The raven also
murders Coronius following Apollo’s commands, although the deity regrets this
action shortly. In Poe’s poem, the speaker may have killed the deceased Lenore,
and that is why the raven claims ‘‘Nevermore’’ throughout the stanzas. Not only
the American poet employs the bird as a prophet itself, he also relates it to a
possible deed committed against Lenore.
Nevertheless, Poe’s ‘‘The Raven’’ is also related to
darker folklore, since there are continuous mentions to the Devil and evil
forces, as it has been cited previously. The following section will study
closely how the bird is connected the malevolent threats upon the narrator.
Devil
Folklore in ‘‘The Raven’’
In ‘‘The Philosophy of Composition’’ Poe explains how
‘‘he (the narrator) speaks of him (the raven) as a “grim, ungainly, ghastly,
gaunt, and ominous bird of yore”’’, and how the ‘‘revolution of thought, or
fancy, on the lover’s part, is intended to induce a similar one on the part of
the reader—to bring the mind into a proper frame for the dénouement’’ (Poe).
The speaker is doomed because ‘‘it is the folkloric connotation of the raven as
the Devil’s bird and as one of the forms he takes upon occasion for convenience
which makes clear exactly why the young man will never again see his lost
Lenore’’ (Granger). The main features which relate Poe’s scholar to evil forces
are the bird’s landing on the bust of Pallas, the speaker’s mention of the
Greco-Roman world of the underworld Pluto, and the raven as the embodiment of
the devil.
When the speaker opens the window of his chamber, the
raven sits on a bust of Pallas. Poe clarifies how he uses the sculpture ‘‘as
much in keeping with the scholarship of the lover’’ (Poe- Composition). Pallas,
the ‘‘goddess of wisdom, scholarship and enlightenment, seems an emblem left
over for the eighteenth century, when reason had an owl and not a raven as its
tutelary bird’’ (Merivale 960). Consequently, the fact that the scholar reads ‘‘a
quaint and curious volume of forgotten lore’’(Poe 2) can be understood as lore
of black magic, as if the student were trying to summon his deceased lover, but
instead he calls upon the devil himself. Therefore, the search for knowledge
represented by the Greek goddess, who is also given the byname of Athena, leads
to the appearance of forces which will curse the narrator.
Illustration by John Rea Neill for ''THE RAVEN'' and Other Poems Edgar Allan Poe |
Furthermore, Poe indicated English poet John ‘‘Milton
as his source’’ (Haviland 841), with ‘‘additional annotations by his editors,
and a considerable number of references to the bind bard in his essays and
critical pieces’’(Haviland 841). This is significant when in the second book of
Paradise Lost (1667), Milton ‘‘alludes
to the parallels between the birth of Athena and the birth of Sin’’(Mulryan
16):
‘‘In darkness, while thy head flames thick and fast
Threw forth, till on the left side opening wide,
Likest to thee in shape and countenance bright,
Then shining heavenly fair, a goddess armed,
Out of thy head I sprung. Amazement seized
All th' host of Heaven; back they recoiled afraid
At first, and called me Sin, and for a sign
Portentous held me; but, familiar grown,
I pleased, and with attractive graces won’’
Threw forth, till on the left side opening wide,
Likest to thee in shape and countenance bright,
Then shining heavenly fair, a goddess armed,
Out of thy head I sprung. Amazement seized
All th' host of Heaven; back they recoiled afraid
At first, and called me Sin, and for a sign
Portentous held me; but, familiar grown,
I pleased, and with attractive graces won’’
Athena/Pallas is not the only deity from classical
mythology the American author employs. As the poem continues, the narrator
claims:
‘‘Ghastly
grim and ancient Raven wandering from the Nightly shore—
Tell me
what thy lordly name is on the Night’s Plutonian shore!” (Poe 46-47)
The mention of Pluto, the Greek god of the
underworld whose earlier name was Hades, is also related to Hell. In medieval
mythographies, which conflated the Greek and Roman deities in an attempt to
emphasise Christian values, Pluto was equalled to a double of Satan, Lucifer or
the Devil. In the Little Book on Images
of the Gods, Pluto is represented as
‘‘an
intimidating personage sitting on a throne of sulphur, holding the scepter of
his realm in his right hand, and with his left strangling a soul. Under his
feet three-headed Cerberus held a position, and beside him he had three Harpies.
From his golden throne of sulphur flowed four rivers, which were called, as is
known, Lethe, Cocytus, Phlegethon and Acheron, tributaries of the Stygian
swamp’’ (Chapter 6).
Consequently, Poe’s use of the raven in connection
with Pluto represents the narrator’s dark side, what Carl Jung names the ‘‘shadow’’:
‘‘That hidden, repressed, for the most part inferior
and guilt-laden personality whose ultimate ramifications reach back into the
realm of our animal ancestors…If it has been believed hitherto that the human
shadow was the source of evil, it can now be ascertained on closer
investigation that the unconscious man, that is his shadow does not consist
only of morally reprehensible tendencies, but also displays a number of good
qualities, such as normal instincts, appropriate reactions, realistic insights,
creative impulses etc’’ (Diamond 96)
Furthermore, the myth of Pluto/Hades and its
involvement in the abduction of Persephone makes it possible that Poe’s scholar
may have been responsible for an evil deed against Lenore which ended
unfavourably, and now the Devil is demanding the narrator’s soul.
The raven answers ‘‘Nevermore’’ to all the questions
posed by the speaker, until the latter falls into madness for his loss of hope
and self-torture. Nevertheless, the bird may be requiring the narrator’s soul
after he strikes a deal with the Devil. If this consideration is taken into
account, Poe’s plot echoes that of Faust
and his exchange of his soul for limitless knowledge.
''Doctor Faust'' by Rembrandt van Rijn |
On the subject of demonology and devil-lore, the ‘‘Black
Raven’’ is present in the Raven Book, and
‘’explained as the form in which the angel Raphael taught Tobias to summon
spirits’’(Conway 335). Therefore, necromancy is present in Poe’s verses with
this association. Moreover, ‘‘in this book (Raven
Book), poorly printed, and apparently on a private press, Mephistopheles is
mentioned as one of the chief Princes of Hell’’ (Conway 336). Faustian
tradition underlines the treacherous relationship among Faustus, Mephistopheles
and Satan, yet it is German playwright Klinger who makes use of imagery similar
to the one found in Poe’s poem: ‘‘Night covered the earth with its raven wing.
Faust stood before the awful spectacle of the body of his son suspended upon
the gallows. Madness parched his brain, and he exclaimed in the wild tones of
dispair’’ (Conway 344).
Nonetheless, Poe’s employment of the bird also has non-folkloric
sources of inspiration. The last section of the blog post will explain how
Charles Dickens and Samuel Taylor Coleridge are represented in the American
poet’s verses.
Charles
Dickens and Samuel Taylor Coleridge’s Influence
In 1841 Charles Dickens published his historical novel
Barnaby Rudge: A Tale of Riots of Eighty.
It had appeared serialised in the author’s Master Humphrey's Clock, a periodical edited and written by Dickens,
between 1840 and 1841. The plot is set in the Gordon Riots of 1870, and it
combines history with the intrigues of two families. Nevertheless, what is
notable in the novel is that its main character, the eponymous Barnaby Rudge,
has a pet raven called Grip with an extraordinary talking ability. Dickens
himself had three pet ravens in his lifetime, and Grip was the first one. He
had it taxidermied once the animal died and now it can be seen at the
Philadelphia Free Library.
Image of Grip at the Philadelphia Free Library |
Poe reviewed different works by Dickens and, on this occasion, he
praised Barnaby Rudge ‘‘(and
especially Grip) in a review for Graham’s
Magazine’’ (Redmond 88). The fact that Poe published his famous poem four
years after Dickens’s novel raised suspicions of plagiarism among critics, as
James Russel Lowell penned: ‘‘There comes Poe, with his raven
like Barnaby Rudge / Three-fifths of
him genius and two-fifths sheer fudge’’ (Dauber 645).
The truth is that Poe focused his attention on the raven from the
beginning of his comments in his reviews, as he penned: ‘‘Intensely
amusing though it is, might have been made more than we now see it, a portion
of the conception of the fantastic Barnaby. Its croaking might have been heard
prophetically in the course of the drama” (Poe 128). The fact that he mentions
the bird as a prophetic figure foretells the intentions of his poem.
Furthermore, there are similarities between Barnaby Rudge and Grip and
Poe’s scholar with the raven. Both men attempt to communicate with the talking
birds rationally. When Barnaby is imprisoned for his role in the Gordon Riots,
he is accompanied by Grip, and they lament together:
“You hope! Ay, but your hoping will not undo these chains. I hope, but
they don’t mind that. Grip hopes, but who cares for Grip?”
The raven gave a short, dull, melancholy croak. It said “Nobody” as
plainly as a croak could speak’’ (Dickens 363)
Not only does Poe purloin the use of one unique word by the raven (in
his case the famous ‘‘Nevermore’’), the American writer
also follows Dickens’s idea of the bird as a devil. Dickens’s bird claims: “I’m
a devil! I’m a devil! I’m a devil!”(Dickens 80).
Nevertheless, other great author inspired Poe’s poetic bird: Romantic
poet Samuel Taylor Coleridge. ‘‘Poe felt without a doubt that he
had discovered the voice of a kindred spirit in Coleridge’s early poetry, a
voice that would continue to reverberate in Poe’s prose, where elements of
Coleridge’s Rime of the Ancyent Marinere resurface
with the persistence of those subconscious depths of guilt and speechless dread
that fascinated both writes equally’’(Schlutz 195). Coleridge’s voice is echoed
in Poe’s prose, but in his poetry too. Despite the fact that the American
writer disliked Coleridge’s insistence in analysing imagination and the
different categories the Romantic poet labelled it with in his Biographia Literaria (1817), Poe’s devotion
to the poet is clear:
‘‘Of
Coleridge I cannot speak but with reverence. His towering intellect! his
gigantic power. . . In reading his poetry I tremble -- like one who stands upon
a volcano, conscious, from the very darkness bursting from the crater, of the
fire and the light that are weltering below" ("Letter to B. --",
Schlutz 197).
Therefore, it is uncomplicated to create connection
between the two authors, and the first possible association is the albatross
killed by the sailor in the Rime of the
Ancient Mariner (1797-98). In this case as with Poe’s raven, the bird
creates the protagonist’s fate. As the mariner is guilty of the crime of shooting
the bird and its consequent back luck, Death (a skeleton) and the ‘‘Nightmare
Life-in Death’’ (a deathlike woman), play dice for the souls of the crew.
Afterwards, Death takes the sailors’ lives, and Death-in-Life curses the
mariner. Similarly, Poe’s raven curses the narrator though the latter does not
harm him; the damage has previously been done.
‘‘I shot the Albatross’’ - from ''The Rime of the Ancient Mariner'' - by Gustave Dore |
Furthermore, stylistic similarities emerge between
Poe’s ‘‘The Raven’’ and Coleridge’s ‘‘Christabel’’ (1816), as ‘’the mention of
“each separate dying ember [which] wrought its ghost upon the floor,” is
reminiscent of Coleridge’s “Christabel” in which other embers reflect the
presence of evil in much the same way’’ (Granger).
There is one significant connection, however, which is
not commonly considered: Coleridge’s ‘‘The Raven or, A Christmas Tale, Told by
a School-boy to his Little Brothers and Sisters’’ (1798). This poem, set in
December, as well as Poe’s ‘‘bleak December’’ (Poe 7) employs the corvid. The
variation is that the raven is the main sufferer in Coleridge’s verses, since a
woodman brings down the oak tree where the bird and his family dwell, and uses
the wood to build a ship. After all the raven’s family dies (his young ones
when the woodman cuts the tree down, and his partner dies of sorrow), the bird
revenges with the aid of Death sinking the ship with its passengers.
Therefore, Coleridge once more relates a bird to the
sea and Death, yet this time there is no survivor:
‘‘Right glad was the Raven, and off he went fleet,
And Death riding home on a cloud he did meet,
And he thank'd him again and again for this treat:
They had taken his all, and Revenge it was sweet!’’ (45-48)
And Death riding home on a cloud he did meet,
And he thank'd him again and again for this treat:
They had taken his all, and Revenge it was sweet!’’ (45-48)
Although ‘‘some proposed interpretations read it
(Coleridge’s ‘‘The Raven’’)in political terms, the felling of the oak being
seen as the destruction brought about by French Revolution, and the raven
identified with the melancholy Burke prophesying the Revolution’s effect’’ (Beer
108), Poe’s raven may also seek to avenge the narrator and, thus,
psychologically tortures him.
In conclusion, Edgar Allan Poe’s most famous poem can
have different sources, some folkloric/mythological, other are merely literary
influences. This blog post has analysed some of them, with the focus on the
classical folklore appreciated in the verses, the demonic folklore as the
poetic narrative presents dark characteristics related to evil forces, and,
finally, on Charles Dickens and Samuel Taylor Coleridge and how they did
influence the American’s writing.
BIBLIOGRAPHY:
Beer,
John, Romanticism, Revolution and
Language: The Fate of the World from Samuel Johnson to George Eliot (Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press, 2009)-via Google Books
Blavatsky,
Helena, The Secret Doctrine by H. P. Blavatsky — Vol. 1, Theosophical
University Press Online Edition (First published in 1888) https://www.theosociety.org/pasadena/sd/sd1-2-12.htm
(Accessed 15th September 2018)
Carroll,
Michael P., ‘‘The Trickster as Selfish-Buffoon and Culture Hero’’, Ethos, Vol. 12, No. 2, (Summer, 1984), pp. 105-131.
Published by: Blackwell Publishing on behalf of the American Anthropological
Association http://pages.mtu.edu/~rlstrick/rsvtxt/faulkner/carroll
(Accessed 25th September)
Coleridge, Samuel Taylor, ‘‘The
Raven or, A Christmas
Tale, Told by a School-boy to his Little Brothers and Sisters’’ (First
published in 1798) https://www.poemhunter.com/poem/the-raven-christmas-tale-told-by-a-school-boy-to-his-little-brothers-and-sisters/
(Accessed 2nd October 2018)
Conway, Moncure Daniel, Demonology and Devil-Lore (Henry Holt
and Company: New York, 1879) http://www.gutenberg.org/files/40686/40686-h/40686-h.htm#v2fig22
(Accessed 15th September 2018)
Dauber, Kenneth, ‘‘The Problem of
Poe’’, The Georgia Review ,Vol. 32, No. 3 (Fall 1978), pp. 645-657 https://www.jstor.org/stable/41397649?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents
(Accessed 1st October 2018)
De deorum
imaginibus libellous, Chapter 6,"De Plutone’’
Diamond, Stephen A., Anger, Madness and the Daimonic: The
Psychological Genesis of Violence, Evil and Creativity (New York: SUNY
Press, 1996)-via Google Books
Dickens, Charles, Barnaby Rudge: A Tale of the Riots of Eighty (First published in 1841) in Master Humphrey's clock Volume 3 (Ulan Press, 2012)- via Google Books
Granger, Byrd Howell, ‘‘Devil Lore in ‘‘The Raven’’’’, “MARGINALIA,” Poe Studies, December 1972, Vol. V, No. 2, 5:50-57 https://www.eapoe.org/pstudies/ps1970/p1972209.htm (Accessed 15th September)
Guerber, H.A., Myths of the Norsemen from the Eddas and Sagas (George G. Harrap & Company: London, 1909) http://www.gutenberg.org/files/28497/28497-h/28497-h.htm#ch2 (Accessed 24th September)
Haviland, Thomas
P., ‘‘How Well Did Poe Know Milton?’’, PMLA Vol. 69, No. 4 (Sep., 1954), pp. 841-860 https://www.jstor.org/stable/459934?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents
(Accessed 3rd October 2018)
Lévi-Strauss,
Claude, Structural Anthropology (New
York: Basic Books, Inc, 1963) https://monoskop.org/images/e/e8/Levi-Strauss_Claude_Structural_Anthropology_1963.pdf
(Accessed 15th September)
Merivale,
Patricia, ‘‘The Raven and the Bust of Pallas: Classical Artifacts and the
Gothic Tale’’, PMLA Vol. 89, No. 5 (Oct., 1974), pp. 960-966 https://www.jstor.org/stable/461369?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents
(Accessed 20th September 2018)
Moberly,
R.W.L., ‘‘Why Did Noah Send Out a Raven?’’ Vetus Testamentum Vol. 50, Fasc. 3 (Jul., 2000), pp. 345-356 https://www.jstor.org/stable/1585294?read-now=1&loggedin=true&seq=2#metadata_info_tab_contents
(Accessed 20th September)
Mulryan, John, ‘‘Satan’s
Headache: The Perils and Pains of Giving Birth to a Bad Idea’’, Milton
Quarterly Vol. 39, No. 1 (March 2005), pp. 16-22 https://www.jstor.org/stable/24465171?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents
(Accessed 2nd October 2018)
Poe, Edgar Allan, Review in Graham's
American Monthly Magazine of Literature, Art and Fashion, Volumes 20-21- via Google Books
---, ‘‘The
Philosophy of Composition’’ (First published in 1846) http://www.gutenberg.org/files/55749/55749-h/55749-h.htm
(Accessed 1st October 2018)
---, ‘‘The
Raven’’(First published in 1845) http://www.gasl.org/refbib/Poe_Dore__The_Raven.pdf
(Accessed 1st October 2018)
---, ‘‘The
Raven Read by Christopher Lee’’ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MyxsPHWSxlY
(Accessed 1st October 2018)
Redmond,
Matthew, ‘‘If Bird or Devil: Meta-Plagiarism in ‘‘The Raven’’’’, The Edgar Allan Poe Review, Vol. 19, No. 1 (Spring
2018), pp. 88-103 https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.5325/edgallpoerev.19.1.0088?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents
(Accessed 3rd October 2018)
Schlutz, Alexander, ‘‘Purloined Voices: Edgar Allan Poe
Reading Samuel Taylor Coleridge’’, Studies
in Romanticism, Vol. 47,
No. 2 (Summer, 2008), pp. 195-224 https://www.jstor.org/stable/25602142?read-now=1&loggedin=true&seq=4#metadata_info_tab_contents
(Accessed 26th September)
IMAGES:
Poe and a Raven: http://rmc.library.cornell.edu/poe/exhibition/theraven/index.html
Noah & The Raven by John Buck http://www.gallery-pangolin.com/works/noah-the-raven/829
Odin by Sir E. Burne-Jones http://www.gutenberg.org/files/28497/28497-h/28497-h.htm#ch2
Illustration by John
Rea Neill for THE RAVEN and Other Poems Edgar Allan Poe Drawings By John Rea
Neill The Reilly & Britton Co. Chicago 1910
Doctor Faust by Rembrandt van Rijn http://www.rembrandtpainting.net/rmbrdnt_selected_etchings/faust.htm
Grip the
Raven https://www.atlasobscura.com/places/grip-raven
‘‘I
shot the Albatross’’ - from The Rime of the Ancient Mariner - by Gustave Dore https://www.pinterest.es/pin/340373684308582007/?lp=true
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