Ode on Solitude - Alexander Pope
Alexander Pope is one of the best known
writers of the seventeenth century. He wrote Ode on Solitude in 1700, at the age of twelve. It is a beautiful and peaceful poem. The poet emphasizes how solitude is another important part of
the equation. It asserts the poet’s
desire to live a good, simple life and go unnoticed by the world.
In the first stanza of the poem, the poet speaks
of a man with simple dreams, only living off his own land, which is also the
land of his fathers. In the second stanza, his desires are further explained,
as he wants to farm and live off his land, being completely self-sufficient.
The third stanza states how this way of life is good because time has no
meaning, one is healthy, has few worries, and lives quiet days. In the fourth
stanza, recreation and innocence are revealed to be the results of this
lifestyle. In the fifth and final stanza, it is revealed that the poet is the
man in the poem, and he wishes to be left alone, unknown from the world.
According to the poet, a man can be truly happy if he leads a life of contentment and simplicity. He should not be greedy. He should be satisfied with the few acres of land inherited from his ancestors. His field will give him food and his cow will give him milk. His trees will give him shade and firewood and his sheep will give him the wool for clothing. He will have a healthy body and peace of mind, spending his time in study, rest and recreation. He will lead an innocent life and a life of meditation and prayer.
The poet considered this man blessed! Time almost doesn’t
have meaning for this man; his world provides for all of his needs. Hours go
by, days go by, years go by, and everything remains the same. The health the
man is in at the beginning of this cycle is the health he remains in when it is
finished. Peace of mind is normal for him — what is there to trouble him? It
seems as though, in a world of peace and quiet, there is absolutely nothing that
could disrupt the life of this farmer, and the poet sees that as a high
blessing.
He
concludes the poem by asking that he live “unseen, unknown” and die away from
the world where no one can find him. It’s this kind of life, without exterior
pressures or an image to maintain that appeals to him.