William Cowper’s The Solitude of Alexander Selkirk
INTRODUCTION : English poet William Cowper (1731-1800) reconstructed the famous story of Alexander Selkirk, who spent a segregated life for four years on a deserted island and later rescued by a British ship. The poem highlights the sorrow and solitude suffered by Selkirk during his stay on an isolated island. According to Cowper Selkirk (the persona conceived by the poet) regretted his decision later considering his wrong decision the sole cause of his misery. In this poem Cowper projects Selkirk’s reflection on the entire subject of solitude. HISTORICAL ACCOUNT : Alexander Selkirk (1676 -1721) was a Scottish sailor. He ran away to the sea and joined the privatizing expedition by William Dampier in 1703.Having quarreled with the captain, he was put ashore on one of the uninhabited Pacific islands of Juan Fernandez in 1704 and he remained there until 1709 when he was rescued by Woodes Rogers. On his return, he met Richard Steele, who published the accounts of experiences in