Home > The Sailor-Boy's Tale Summary & Study Guide > Essays and Criticism > Anecdote as Destiny: Isak Dinesen and the Storyteller
The Sailor-Boy's Tale | Anecdote as Destiny: Isak Dinesen and the Storyteller
In the following essay excerpt, the author analyzes ‘‘The Sailor-Boy’s Tale,’’ in the context of its similarity to Coleridge’s ‘‘The Rime of the Ancient Mariner,’’ especially its ‘‘exploration of isolation and community.’’
One of Dinesen’s most anthologized tales in Winter’s Tales is ‘‘The Sailor-Boy’s Tale,’’ a tale that orchestrates many of Dinesen’s dominant concerns. It is a tale too that is most reminiscent of a work which exercised a great influence on Dinesen’s writing, Coleridge’s ‘‘Rime of the Ancient Mariner.’’ Her friend, Denys Finch-Hatton, introduced her to it, and one can see echoes of it in other Dinesen tales. There are many reasons why the Coleridge poem should have appealed to Dinesen. It is a poem which stresses the role of the narrator, particularly...
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- The Sailor-Boy's Tale: Introduction
- The Sailor-Boy's Tale: Summary
- The Sailor-Boy's Tale: Isak Dinesen Biography
- The Sailor-Boy's Tale: Characters
- The Sailor-Boy's Tale: Themes
- The Sailor-Boy's Tale: Style
- The Sailor-Boy's Tale: Historical Context
- The Sailor-Boy's Tale: Critical Overview
- The Sailor-Boy's Tale: Essays and Criticism
- The Sailor-Boy's Tale: Compare and Contrast
- The Sailor-Boy's Tale: Topics for Further Study
- The Sailor-Boy's Tale: Media Adaptations
- The Sailor-Boy's Tale: What Do I Read Next?
- The Sailor-Boy's Tale: Bibliography and Further Reading
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