• TABLE OF CONTENTS
HIDE
 Title Page
 Table of Contents
 Biographical notice of the author...
 Robinson's family
 First adventures at sea, and experience...
 Robinson's captivity at Sallee
 He settles in the Brazils as a...
 Robinson finds himself in a desolate...
 Carries all his riches, provision,...
 Robinson's mode of reckoning...
 Robinson's journal
 Robinson obtains more articles...
 His recovery
 Robinson makes a tour to explore...
 He returns to his cave
 His manufacture of pottery, and...
 Meditates his escape from...
 He makes a smaller canoe, in which...
 He rears a flock of goats
 Unexpected alarm and cause for...
 Precautions against surprise
 Robinson discovers a cave, which...
 Another visit of the savages
 He visits the wreck and obtains...
 Robinson rescues one of their captives...
 Robinson instructs and civilizes...
 Robinson and Friday build a canoe...
 Robinson releases a Spaniard
 Robinson discovers himself to the...
 Atkins entreats the captain to...
 Robinson goes to Lisbon, where...
 Friday's encounter with a bear
 He is seized with a desire to revisit...
 Robinson's ship relieves the crew...
 Relieves the crew of a bristol...
 Robinson and Friday go ashore
 The account continued
 The mutinous Englishmen dismissed...
 Several savages killed; the remainder...
 Robinson learns from the Spaniards...
 Encounter with savages at sea
 The sailors refuse to sail with...
 Meets with an English merchant...
 Journey to Pekin
 Route through Muscovy






Group Title: Robinson Crusoe
Title: The Life and adventures of Robinson Crusoe of York, mariner
CITATION THUMBNAILS PAGE TURNER PAGE IMAGE ZOOMABLE
Full Citation
STANDARD VIEW MARC VIEW
Permanent Link: http://ufdc.ufl.edu/UF00073598/00001
 Material Information
Title: The Life and adventures of Robinson Crusoe of York, mariner
Uniform Title: Robinson Crusoe
Physical Description: viii, 312 p. : ill. ; 20 cm.
Language: English
Creator: Defoe, Daniel, 1661?-1731
De Wolfe, Fiske & Company ( Publisher )
Publisher: De Wolfe, Fiske & Co.
Place of Publication: Boston ( 365 Washington Street )
Publication Date: 188-?
 Subjects
Subject: Castaways -- Juvenile fiction   ( lcsh )
Shipwrecks -- Juvenile fiction   ( lcsh )
Survival after airplane accidents, shipwrecks, etc -- Juvenile fiction   ( lcsh )
Imaginary voyages -- 1885   ( rbgenr )
Genre: Imaginary voyages   ( rbgenr )
fiction   ( marcgt )
Spatial Coverage: United States -- Massachusetts -- Boston
 Notes
Citation/Reference: Lovett, R.W. Robinson Crusoe,
General Note: Spine title: Robinson Crusoe.
General Note: Date from Lovett citation below.
General Note: Biographical notice of Defoe, p. vii-viii.
General Note: Parts I and II of Robinson Crusoe, divided into numbered sections. Part II originally published under title: The farther adventures of Robinson Crusoe.
Statement of Responsibility: illustrated with one hundred and ten wood engravings.
 Record Information
Bibliographic ID: UF00073598
Volume ID: VID00001
Source Institution: University of Florida
Rights Management: All rights reserved by the source institution and holding location.
Resource Identifier: oclc - 28307137

Table of Contents
    Title Page
        Page i
        Page ii
    Table of Contents
        Page iii
        Page iv
        Page v
        Page vi
    Biographical notice of the author of Robinson Crusoe
        Page vii
        Page viii
    Robinson's family
        Page 1
        Page 2
        Page 3
        Page 4
    First adventures at sea, and experience of a maritime life
        Page 5
        Page 6
        Page 7
        Page 8
        Page 9
        Page 10
    Robinson's captivity at Sallee
        Page 11
        Page 12
        Page 13
        Page 14
        Page 15
        Page 16
        Page 17
        Page 18
        Page 19
        Page 20
        Page 21
        Page 22
    He settles in the Brazils as a planter
        Page 23
        Page 24
        Page 25
        Page 26
        Page 27
        Page 28
        Page 29
        Page 30
    Robinson finds himself in a desolate island
        Page 31
        Page 32
        Page 33
        Page 34
        Page 35
        Page 36
        Page 37
        Page 38
        Page 39
    Carries all his riches, provision, etc. into his habitation
        Page 40
        Page 41
    Robinson's mode of reckoning time
        Page 42
        Page 43
        Page 44
        Page 45
    Robinson's journal
        Page 46
        Page 47
        Page 48
        Page 49
        Page 50
        Page 51
        Page 52
    Robinson obtains more articles from the wreck
        Page 53
        Page 54
        Page 55
        Page 56
    His recovery
        Page 57
        Page 58
        Page 59
        Page 60
        Page 61
        Page 62
        Page 63
        Page 64
    Robinson makes a tour to explore his island
        Page 65
        Page 66
        Page 67
        Page 68
    He returns to his cave
        Page 69
        Page 70
        Page 71
        Page 72
        Page 73
    His manufacture of pottery, and contrivance for baking bread
        Page 74
        Page 75
        Page 76
        Page 77
    Meditates his escape from the island
        Page 78
        Page 79
        Page 80
        Page 81
        Page 82
        Page 83
    He makes a smaller canoe, in which he attempts to cruise round the island
        Page 84
        Page 85
        Page 86
        Page 87
        Page 88
    He rears a flock of goats
        Page 89
        Page 90
        Page 91
        Page 92
    Unexpected alarm and cause for apprehension
        Page 93
        Page 94
        Page 95
        Page 96
        Page 97
        Page 98
    Precautions against surprise
        Page 99
        Page 100
        Page 101
        Page 102
    Robinson discovers a cave, which serves him as a retreat against the savages
        Page 103
        Page 104
        Page 105
        Page 106
        Page 107
    Another visit of the savages
        Page 108
        Page 109
        Page 110
        Page 111
    He visits the wreck and obtains many stores from it
        Page 112
        Page 113
        Page 114
        Page 115
    Robinson rescues one of their captives from the savages, whom he names Friday, and makes his servant
        Page 116
        Page 117
        Page 118
        Page 119
        Page 120
        Page 121
        Page 122
        Page 123
    Robinson instructs and civilizes his man Friday
        Page 124
        Page 125
        Page 126
        Page 127
        Page 128
        Page 129
        Page 130
    Robinson and Friday build a canoe to carry them to Friday's country
        Page 131
        Page 132
        Page 133
        Page 134
        Page 135
        Page 136
    Robinson releases a Spaniard
        Page 137
        Page 138
        Page 139
        Page 140
        Page 141
        Page 142
        Page 143
        Page 144
        Page 145
        Page 146
        Page 147
        Page 148
        Page 149
        Page 150
        Page 151
    Robinson discovers himself to the English captain
        Page 152
        Page 153
        Page 154
        Page 155
        Page 156
        Page 157
        Page 158
        Page 159
        Page 160
        Page 161
        Page 162
    Atkins entreats the captain to spare his life
        Page 163
        Page 164
        Page 165
        Page 166
        Page 167
        Page 168
        Page 169
        Page 170
    Robinson goes to Lisbon, where he finds the Portugues captain, who renders him an account of his property in the Brazils
        Page 171
        Page 172
        Page 173
        Page 174
        Page 175
        Page 176
        Page 177
        Page 178
    Friday's encounter with a bear
        Page 179
        Page 180
        Page 181
        Page 182
        Page 183
        Page 184
        Page 185
        Page 186
    He is seized with a desire to revisit his island
        Page 187
        Page 188
        Page 189
    Robinson's ship relieves the crew of a french vessel that had caught fire
        Page 190
        Page 191
        Page 192
    Relieves the crew of a bristol ship, who are starving
        Page 193
        Page 194
        Page 195
        Page 196
        Page 197
        Page 198
    Robinson and Friday go ashore
        Page 199
        Page 200
        Page 201
        Page 202
        Page 203
        Page 204
    The account continued
        Page 205
        Page 206
        Page 207
        Page 208
        Page 209
        Page 210
        Page 211
        Page 212
        Page 213
        Page 214
        Page 215
        Page 216
        Page 217
        Page 218
        Page 219
        Page 220
        Page 221
    The mutinous Englishmen dismissed from the island
        Page 222
        Page 223
        Page 224
        Page 225
        Page 226
        Page 227
        Page 228
        Page 229
        Page 230
        Page 231
        Page 232
    Several savages killed; the remainder leave the island
        Page 233
        Page 234
        Page 235
        Page 236
        Page 237
        Page 238
        Page 239
        Page 240
        Page 241
        Page 242
        Page 243
        Page 244
        Page 245
    Robinson learns from the Spaniards the difficulties they had to encounter
        Page 246
        Page 247
        Page 248
        Page 249
        Page 250
        Page 251
        Page 252
        Page 253
    Encounter with savages at sea
        Page 254
        Page 255
        Page 256
        Page 257
        Page 258
    The sailors refuse to sail with Robinson, who is left by his nephew, the captain, in Bengal
        Page 259
        Page 260
        Page 261
        Page 262
    Meets with an English merchant with whom he makes some trading voyages
        Page 263
        Page 264
        Page 265
        Page 266
        Page 267
        Page 268
        Page 269
        Page 270
        Page 271
        Page 272
        Page 273
        Page 274
        Page 275
        Page 276
        Page 277
        Page 278
        Page 279
        Page 280
        Page 281
        Page 282
        Page 283
    Journey to Pekin
        Page 284
        Page 285
        Page 286
        Page 287
        Page 288
        Page 289
        Page 290
        Page 291
        Page 292
        Page 293
        Page 294
    Route through Muscovy
        Page 295
        Page 296
        Page 297
        Page 298
        Page 299
        Page 300
        Page 301
        Page 302
        Page 303
        Page 304
        Page 305
        Page 306
        Page 307
        Page 308
        Page 309
        Page 310
        Page 311
        Page 312
Full Text



THE


LIFE AND ADVENTURES

OF


ROBINSON CRUSOE,

OF YORK, MARINER.


ILLUSTRATED WITH

ONE HUNDRED AND TEN WOOD ENGRAVINGS.


BOSTON:
DE WOLFE, FISKE & CO., PUBLISHERS,
365 WASHINGTON STREET


7
















CONTENTS.




SECTION I.
PAGR
Rohinsou's Family, &c.-His Elopement from his Parents ........................ 1

SECTION II.
First Adventures at Sea, and Experience of a Maritime Life.-Voyage to
Guinea ............. ...................................................

SECTION III.
Robinson's Captivity at Sallee.-Escape with Xury.- Arrival at the tlrazils. 11

SECTION IV.
He settles in the Brazils as a Planter.-Makes another Voyaqe. and is Ship-
wrecked ........ ........ ........... ....................................... ...............

SECTION V.
Robinson finds himself In a Desolate Island.-Procures a Stock of Articles
from the Wreck.-Conatructs his Habitation ....................................... 3

SECTION VI.
Carries all his Riches, Provisions, &c. Into his Habitation,-Dreariness or
Solitude.-Cosolatory Reflections ........................................... 4

SECTION VII.
Robinson's Mode of Reckoning Time.-Difficulties arising from want of
Tools.-He arranges his Hlabitationi. ................... ..... ...- 42

SECTION VIII.
Robinson's Journrl....Details of his Domestic Economy and Contrivance.
-Shock of an Earthquake .................................*.....-........ 4

SECTION IX.
Robinson obtains more Articles from the Wreck.-His Ilness and Amiction S3
SECTION X.
His Recovey.--His Comfort in RePding the Scriptures.-Makes an Excur-
sion into the Interior of the Islaud.-- orms his Bower" .......5.....-. 57








CONTENTS.


PAGE
SECTION XI.
Robinson makes a Tour to Explore his Island ................... .......... .. 65

SECTION XII.
He returns to his Cave.--His Agricultural Labours and Success................. 69

SECTION XIII.
His Manufacture of Pottery, and Contrivance for baking Bread................ 74

SECTION XIV.
Meditates his Escape from the Island.-Builds a Canoe.-Failuro of his
Scheme.-lResignation to his Condition.-Makes himself a new Dress ...... 78

SECTION XV.
He makes a smaller Canoe, in which Ie attempts to cruise round the Island.
-His perilous situation at Sea.-He returns home..................................... 84
SECTION XVI.
He rears a Flock of Goats.-His Diary.-His Domestic habits and Style of
Living.-Increasing Prosperity .................................... .....- 80
SECTION XVII.
Unexpected Alarm and Cause for Apprehension.-He Fortifies his Abode,- 93
SECTION XVIII.
Precautions against Surprise.-Robinson discovers that his Is and has been
visited by Cannibals.................................................................-- 99
SECTION XIX.
Robinson discovers a Cave which serves him as a Retreat against the
Savages............................................................. .... .......................... 10
SECTION XX
Another visit of the Savages.-Robinson sees them dancing.--Perceives the
W reck of a Vessel............................................................................. 108

SECTION XXI.
He visits the Wreck and obtains many Stores from it.-Again thinks of
quitting the Island.-Has a remarkable Dream........................................ 112
S ACTION XXII.
Robinson rescues one of their Captives from the Savages, whom he names
Friday, and makes his Servant........................................... ........ .. 116
SECTION XXIII.
Robinson instructs and civilizes lii man Friday-Endeavours to give him
an Idea of Christianity ...... ....................................................... 124








CONTENTS.


SECTION XXIV.
PAGE
Robinson and Friday build a Canoe to carry them to Friday's Country.-
Their Scheme prevented by the arrival of a Party of Savages................... 131

SECTION XXV.
Robinson releases a Spaniard.-Friday discovers his Father.-Aerommoda.
tion provided- for these new Guests-who are afterwards sent to liberate
the other Spaniards.-Arrival of an English Vessel............................... 137

SECTION XXVI.
Robinsor discovers himself to the English Captain.-Assists him in reducing
his mutinous Crew,-who submit to him ............................................ 15

SECTION XXVII.
Atkins entreats the Captain to spare his Life.-The latter recovers his Vessel
from the Mutineers.-And Robinson leaves the Island............................ 16

e SECTION XXVIII.
Robinson goes to Lisbon, where he finds the Portuguese Captain, who renders
him an Account of his Property in the Brazils.-Sets out on his Return to
England by Laud............................................... ............................ 171

SECTION XXIX.
Friday's Encounter with a Bear.-Robinson and his fellow Travellers
attacked by a Flock of Wolves.- His Arrangement of his Affairs, and
Marriage after his Return to England.................................................. 179

SECTION XXX.
He is seized with a Desire to revisit his Island.-Loses his Wife-is tempted
to go to Sea again.-Takes out a Cargo for his Colony ............................ 187

SECTION XXXI.
Robinson's Ship relieves the Crew of a French Vessel that had caught Fire... 190

SECTION XXXII.
Relieves the Crew of a Bristol Ship, who are starving.-Arrives at his
Island ................................................................. ........................... 193

SECTION XXXIII.
Robinson and Friday go ashore.-The latter meets with his Father.-Account
of what passed on the Island after Robinson's quitting it ..................... 199

SECTION XXXIV.
The Account continned.-Quarrels between the Englishmen.-A Battle
between two Parties of Savages who visit the Island.-Fresh Mutiny
among the Settlers .................................................... ...................


r








CONTENTS.


SECTION XXXV.
PAGH
The mutinous Englishmen are dismissed from the Island.-Return with
several captive Savages.-Take the Females as Wives .............................. 223

SECTION XXXVI.
Several Savages killed; the Remainder leave the Ibland.-A Fleet of them
afterwards arrive.-A general Eattle.-The Savages are overcome, and
tranquillity restored .............................................................................. 233

SECTION XXXVII.
Robinson learns from the Spaniards the Difficulties they had to encounter.-
He furnishes the People with Tools, &c.-The French Ecclesiastic............ 246

SECTION XXXVIII.
Encounter with Savages at Sea.-Friday's Death.-Robinson finds his former
Partner in hlie Brazils.-Salls for the East Indies .................................. 251

SECTION XXXIX.
The Vessel touches at Madagascar.-Affrav with the Natives,-who are mas-
sacred by the Crew.-The Sailors afterwards refuse to sail with Robinson,
who is left by his Nephew, the Captain, in Bengal................................. 25O

SECTION XL.
Meets with an English Merchant with whom he makes some trading
Voyages.-They are mistaken for Pirates.-Vanquish their Pursuers.-
Voyage to Ohina.-Recontre with the Cochin-Chinese.-Isbandof Fornj,'s.
-Gulf of Nanquin.-Apprehension of falling into the Hands of the Dutch. 263

SECTION XLI.
Journey to Pekin.-Robinson joins a Caravan proceeding io Moscow.-Ren-
contres with the Tartars ..................................................... . .... ....... 284

SECTION XLI1.
Route through Muscovy.-Robinson and a Scots Merchant destroy an Idol.
-The whole Caravan in great Peril from the Pursuit of the Pagans.-
Tobolski.- Departure from Tobol-ki.-Encounter with a Troop of Robbers
iu the Desert.-Robinson reaches Archangel, and finally arrives in England -95










BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICE
OF THE

AUTHOR OF ROBINSON CRUSOE.

DANIEL DEFOE, the author of numerous works of fiction, among
which the "History of the Plague" has attained a certain popularity,
and Robinson Crusoe" a lasting and world-wide renown, was born
in the parish of St. Giles, Cripplegate, in the city of London, in the
year 1661. He was educated at a dissenting school at Newington
Green; his father, a strict dissenter, intending 1im for the priesthood.
But this project seems to have been abandoned, for some unknown
season, and young Daniel became a tradesman, like his father. Some-
thing of the roving, restless nature, so admirably described in
" Rolinson Crusoe," seems to have been inherent in Defoe himself;
for his life is full of strange vicissitudes, and he appears continually
involved in trouble on one account or another. We lind hun taking
part in the most ill-considered and unfortunate enterprise of his
time, the Rebellion of Monmouth, and narrowly escaping what the
cynical spirit, of the time dubbed a merry go-round at rope fair,"
namely, death by strangulation, for the offence. In after-life he
was hotly embroiled in the political quarrels of his age. At one
time lie was compelled to stand in the pillory, as a punishment for
writing a well-timed and thoughtful pamphlet on "The shortest way
with tihe Dissenters." The populace, sympathizing with and ad-
miring him, crowned the pillory with flowers, and converted his
penance into a triumph; but this could not relieve him from the
burden of the heavy fine he was compelled to pay, and which ham-
pered him for years afterwards. At another time lie suffered a long
imprisonment, obtaining his release after twb years by the interven-
tion of Harley, Earl of Oxford. But lie had not the art of advancing
his fortunes, though his evident merit procured him employment in
several matters of consequence; and, at the end of his long life, he
was in poverty and neglect. He died in his native parish of St.
Giles, Cripplegate, April 24, 1781, at the age of seventy, and was
interred in Bunhill Fields burial-ground.
The political works of Defoe are numerous, and had a sensible
eflfct on the times in which he lived. A thorough Englishman, out-
spoken, vehement, and uncompromising, he shouted out lustily
against abuses and wrong-doing wherever ie found them; and in many
respects his ideas were greatly in advance of his time. Some of his
schemes may have been visionary and impracticable; but it is pleasant
to hear his sturdy voice raised, and to see his nervous pen wielded so
unflinchingly in advocacy of his nrioniples, and to mark howunvaryingly
those principles point to moderation, mei cy and the law of kindness.








Vill. BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICE.

His Review, Nwhich he conducted for nine years, may certainly be
considered as the pioneer of the Spectator, Taller, Guardian, and
other collections of essays which enriched the literature of the first
half of the eighteenth century.
His political writings, however, have mostly passed away with the
troublous times which gave them birth, and to which their interest
was confined. It was as a writer of fiction that Defoe was to
achieve more lasting fame. Two, at least, of his works have a value
and a significance quite irrespective of time and place,-the one as a
record of a national calamity, the other as a wonderful piece of ima-
ginary autobiography. These two books are the "History of the
league of 1665," and the Adventures of Robinson Crusoe."
At the time when the scourge was decimating London, Daniel
Defoe was only four years old. It could not, therefore, be from
memory that he so vividly described its incidents; though, doubtless,
in his youth he heard many an anecdote about the pestilence and its
ravages, from men of maturer years, on whose memories it must have
made an indelible impression. But his chief talent lay in the
management of detail and accurate description; and it is difficult to
imagine, as we read the graphic record of the state of the terror-
stricken, desolate city, that we have not before us the real daily
notes of a. actual indweller in the city of the plague. In Robinson
Crusoe the same marvellous power is shown, but in a much higher
degree. With matchless skill, the doubts and sorrows, the shifts
and expedients, the little domestic triumphs and disappointments of
the ship-wrecked mariner in his solitary home are put before the
reader in the very form most calculated to enlist his interest and
sympathies. So thoroughly has the author identified himself witli the
hero of his romance, that Defoe disappears, and it is lobinson Crusoe
himself wlio becomes a living personality, and moves and speaks
before the reader, and becomes as clearly and distinctly personified
as any hero of real life.
The first edition of Robinson Crusoe was published in 1719. In
the century and a half that has since elapsed, hundreds of edi-
tions have appeared in all European languages. Everywhere the
book has worked its way; and as for the German version, Robinson
de Jungere" is chronicled as one of the greatest successes of the
eminent Hamburgh firm of Campe and Co.
In the present volume, the original text, slightly shortened, has
been adhered to. The operation of modernizing the language, ne-
cessary, perhaps, in a scientific work, would have taken away one of
the chief charms from the narrative of the simple sailor, who is
therefore left to tell his tale in his own rough, pathetic, old-fashioned
way. The drawings ai: from an eminent German pencil, and apart
from their artistic value, serve the purpose of thoroughly illustrating
the text.























SECTION I.
ROBINSON'S FAMILY, ETC.-HIS ELOPEMENT FROM HIS PARENTS.
I WAS born in the year 1632, in the city of York, of a good family,
though not of that country, my father being a foreigner of Bremen,
named Kreutznaer, who settled first at Hull. He got a good estate
by merchandise, and leaving off his trade, lived afterwards at York;
from whence he had married my mother, whose relations were named
Robinson, a very good family in that country, and after whom I was
so called, that is to say, Robinson Kreutznaer; but, by the usual
corruption of words in England, we are now called, nay, we call
ourselves, and write our name, Crusoe; and so my companions always
called me.
I had two elder brothers, one of whom was lieutenant-colonel to an
English regiment of foot in Flanders, formerly commanded by the
famous Colonel Lockhart, and was killed at the battle near Dunkirk
against the Spaniards. What became of my second brother, I never
knew, any more than my father and mother did know what was
become of me.
Being the third son of the family, and not bred to any trade, my
head began to be filled very early with rambling thoughts. My
father, who was very aged, had given me a competent share of
learning, as far as house education and a country free school generally
go, and designed me for the law; but I would be satisfied with
nothing but going to sea; and my inclination to this led me so
strongly against the will, nay, the commands of my father, and
against all the entreaties and persuasions of my mother and other
friends, that there seemed to be something fatal in that propension of
nature, tending directly to the life of misery which was to befall me
1 B








ADVENTURES OF ROBINSON CRUSOE.

My father, a wise and grave man, gave me serious and excellent
counsel against what lie foresaw was my design. He called me one
morning into his chamber, where he was confined by the gout, and
expostulated very warmly with me upon this subject; he asked me
oAhat reasons, more than a mere wandering inclination, I had for
leaving his house, and my native country, where I might be well
introduced, and had a prospect of raising my fortune, by application
and industry, with a life of ease and pleasure. He told me it was
men of desperate fortunes, on one hand, or of superior fortunes, on
the other, who went abroad upon adventures, aspiring to rise by
enterprise, and make themselves famous in undertakings of nature
out of the common road; that these things were all either too far
above me, or too far below me; that mine was the middle state, or
what might be called the upper station of low life, which he had
found, by long experience, was the best state in the world, the most
suited to human happiness ; not exposed to the miseries and hard-
ships, the labour and sufferings, of the mechanic part of mankind,
and not embarrassed with the pride, luxury, ambition, and envy of
the upper part of mankind : he told me, I might judge of the happi-
ness of this state by one thing, viz., that this was the state of life
which all other people envied; that kings have frequently lamented
tile miserable consequences of being born to great things, and wished
they had been placed in the middle of two extremes, between the
mean and the great; that the wise man gave his testimony to this
as the just standard of true felicity, when lie prayed to have "neither
poverty nor riches."
He bade me observe it, and I should always find, that the calami-
ties of life were shared among the upper and lower part of mankind;
but that the middle station had the fewest disasters, and was not
exposed to so many vicissitudes as the higher or lower part of man-
kind; nay, they were not subjected to so many distempers and
uneasinesses, either of body or mind, as those were, who, by vicious
living, luxury, and extravagancies, on one hand, or, by hard labour,
want of necessaries, and mean and insufficient diet, on the other hand,
bring distempers upon themselves by the natural consequences of
their way of living; that the middle station of life was calculated for
all kind of virtues, and all kind of enjoyments; that peace and
plenty were the handmaids of a middle fortune; that temperance,
moderation, quietness, health, society, all agreeable diversions, and
all desirable pleasures were the blessings attending the middle
station of life; that this way men went silently and smoothly through
the world, and comfortably out of it, not embarrassed with the
labours of the hands or of the head, not sold to the life of slavery
for daily bread, or harassed with perplexed circumstances, which rob
the soul of peace, and the body of rest; not enraged with the passion
of envy, or secret burning lust of ambition for great things; but, in
easy circumstances, sliding gently through the world, and sensibly








ADENBTURBS OF ROBINSON LUS3OB.


tasting the sweets of living, without the bitter; feeling that they are
happy, and learning by every day's experience, to know it more
sensibly.
After this he pressed me earnestly, and in the most affectionate
manner, not to play the young man, nor to precipitate myself into
miseries which nature, and the station of life I was born n seemed
to have provided against; that I was under no necessity of seeking
my bread; that he would do well for me, and endeavour to enter me
fairly into the station of life which he had been just recommending
to me; and that if I was not very easy and happy in the world, it.
must be my mere fate, or fault, that must hinder it; and that he
should have nothing to answer for, having thus discharged his duty
in warning me against measures which ie knew would be to my hurt;
in a word, that he would do very kind things for me if I would
stay a-al settle at home as he directed; lie told me I had my elder
brother for an example, who had run into the army, where he was
killed during the Low Country wars; that if I did take this foolish
step, God would not bless me; and I would have leisure, hereafter,
to reflect upon having neglected his counsel, when there might be
none to assist in my recovery.
I observed the tears run down his face very plentifully, especially
when he spoke of my brother who was killed, and that, when he
spoke of my having leisure to repent, and none to assist me, he was
so moved, that he broke off the discourse, and told me his heart was
so full, he could say no more to me.
I was sincerely affected with this discourse; as, indeed, who
could be otherwise ? and 1 resolved not to think of going abroad any
more, but to settle at home, according to my father's desire. But
alas! a few days wore it all off: and, in short, to prevent any of
my father's further importunities, in a few weeks after I resolved
to run quite away from him. However, I did not act so hastily,
neither, as my first heat of resolution prompted; but I took my
mother, at a time when I thought her a little pleasanter than ordinary,
and told her that my thoughts were so entirely bent upon seeing
the world, that I should never settle to anything with resolution
enough to go through with it, and my father had better give me his
consent than force me to go without it; that I was now eighteen
years old, which was too late to go apprentice to a trade, or clerk to
an attorney; that I was sure, if I did, should never serve out
my time, and I should certainly run away from my master before my
time was out, and go to sea; and if she would speak to my father to
let me make but one voyage abroad, if I came home -again, and did
not like it, I would go no more; and I would promise by a double
diligence, to recover the time I had lost.
This put my mother in a great passion: she told me she knew it
would be to no purpose to speak to my father upon any such a sub-
ject; that he knew too well what was my interest to give his consent
SS







4 ADVENTURES Oc BOBINSON CRIUSOB.
to anything so much for my hurt; and that she wondered how I
could think of any such thing, after such a discourse as I had from
my father, and such kind and tender expressions as she knew my
father had used: that for her part, she would not have so much hand in
my destruction; and I should never have it to say, that my mother
was willing when my father was not.
Though my mother refused to move it to my father, yet, as 1 have
heard afterwards, she reported all the discourse to lim; and that
my father, after showing a great concern at it, said to her with a sigh :
" That boy might be happy if he would stay at home; but if he goes
abroad, he will be the most miserable wretch that ever was born;
I cannot give consent to it."






cs-!












It was not till almost a year after this that I broke loose; though
in the meantime I continued obstinately deaf to all proposals of
settling to business, and frequently expostulating with my father
and mother about their being so positively determined against what
they knew my inclinations prompted me to. But being one day at
Hull, whether I went casually, and without any purpose of making
an elopement at that time, and one of my companions then going
to London by sea in his father's ship, and prompting me to go with
the'i by the common allurement of seafaring men, viz., that it should
cost me nothing for my passage, I consulted neither father nor
mother any more, nor so much as sent them word of it; but left
them to hear of it as they might, without asking God's blessing,
or my father's, without any consideration of circumstances or conse-
quences, and in an ill hour, God knows.

























SECTION II.


FIRST ADVENTURES AT SEA, AND EXPERIENCE OF A MARITIME LIFE.
VOYAGE TO GUINEA.
ON the 1st September, 1651, I went on board a ship bound for
London. Never any young adventurer's misfortunes, I believe,
began sooner, or continued longer, than mine. The ship had no
sooner got out of the Humber, than the wind began to blow, and the
waves to rise, in a most frightful manner; and as I had never been
at sea before, I was most inexpressibly sick in body, and terrified in
mind; I began now seriously to reflect upon what I had done, and
how justly I was overtaken by the judgment of Heaven, for wickedly
leaving my father's house. All the good counsels of my parents, my
father's tears, and my mother's entreaties, came now fresh to my
mind; and my conscience, which was not yet come to the pitch of
hardness to which it has been since, reproached me with the con-
tempt of advice, and the abandonment of my duty.
All this while the storm increased, and the sea, which I had
never been upon before, went very high, though nothing like what
I have seen many times since; no, nor what I saw a few days after;
but, such as it was, enough to affect me then, who was but a young
sailor, and had never known anything of the matter. I expected
every wave would have swallowed us up, and that every time the
ship fell down, as I thought, in the trough or hollow of the sea, we
should never rise more; and in this agony of mind I made many
vows and resolutions, that if it would please God to spare my life
this voyage, if ever I got my foot once on dry land, I would go
directly home to my father, and never set it into a ship again while
1*








ADVENTURES OF ROBINSON CRUSOE.


I lived; that I would take his advice, and never run myself into
such miseries as these any more. Now I saw plainly the goodness
of his observations about the middle station of life; how easy, how
comfortable, he had lived all his days, and never had been exposed
to tempests at sea or troubles on shore; and I resolved that I would,
like a true repenting prodigal, go home to my father.
These wise and sober thoughts continued during the storm, and
indeed sometime after; but the next day as the wind was abated,
and the sea calmer, I began to be a little inured to it. However, I
was very grave that day, being also a little sea-sick still; but towards
night the weather cleared up, the wind was quite over, and a charm-
ing fine evening followed: the sun went down perfectly clear, and
rose so the next morning ; and having little or no wind, and a smooth
sea, the sun shining upon it, the sight was, as I thought, the most
delightful that I ever saw.
I had slept well in the night, and was now no more sea-sick, but
very cheerful, looking with wonder upon the sea that was so rough
and terrible the day before, and could be so calm and pleasant in a
little time after.











And now, lest my good resolutions should continue, my companion,
who had indeed enticed me away, came to me, and said, Well, Bob,"
clapping me on the shoulder, how do you do after it ? I warrant
you you were frightened, wasn't you, last night, when it blew a cap-
full of wind ?"-" A cap-full, do you call it?" said I; "'twas a terrible
storm."-" A storm you fool ?" replies he, do you call that a storm!
Why, it was nothing at all; give us but a good ship, and sea-room,
and we think nothing of such a squall of wind as that; you are but
a fresh water sailor, Bob; come, let us make a bowl of punch, and
we'll forget all that. D'ye see what charming weather 'tis now ?"
To make short this sad part of my story, we went the way of all
sailors; the punch was made, and I was made drunk with it; and in
one nig! ''s wickedness I drowned all my repentance, all my reflec-
tions upon my past conduct, and all my resolutions for the future.
In a word, as the sea was returned to its smoothness of surface and








ADVENTURES OF ROBINSON CRUSo0. 7
settled calmness by the abatement of the storm, so the hurry of
my thoughts being over, my fears and apprehensions of being
swallowed up by the sea forgotten, and the current of my former
desires returned, I entirely forgot the vows and promises I had
made in my distress.
The sixth day of our being at sea we came into Yarmouth Roads;
the wind having been contrary and the weather calm, we had
made but little way since the storm. Here we were obliged to
come to an anchor, and here we lay, the wind continuing contrary,
viz. at south-west, for seven or eight days, during which tune a great
many ships from Newcastle came into the same roads, as a common
harbour where the ships might wait for a wind for the river Thames.
We had not, however, rid here so long, but we should have tided up
the river, but that the wind blew too fresh; and, after we had lain
four or five days, blew very hard. However, the roads being reckoned
as good as a harbour, the anchorage good, and our ground tackle
very strong, our men were unconcerned, and not in the least appre-
hensive of danger, but spent the time in rest and mirth, after the
manner of the sea. But the eighth day, in the morning, the wind
increased, and we had all hands at work to strike our topmasts, and
make everything snug and close, that the ship might ride as easy as
possible. By noon the sea went very high indeed, and our ship rode
forecastle in, shipped several seas, and we thought, once or twice our
anchor had come home; upon which our master ordered out the sheet
anchor; so that we rode with two anchors ahead, and cables veered
out to the better end.
By this time it blew a terrible storm indeed; and now I began to
see terror and amazement in the faces of even the seamen themselves.
The master was vigilant in the business of preserving the ship; but,
as he went in and out of his cabin by me, I could hear him softly
say to himself several times, "Lord, be merciful to us! we shall be
all lost; we shall be all undone;" and the like.
The storm was so violent, that I saw what is not often seen, the
master, the boatswain, and some others, more sensible than the rest,
at their prayers, and expecting every moment the ship would go to
the bottom. In the middle of the night, and under all the rest of
our distresses, one of the men, that had been down on purpose to see,
cried out, We have sprung a leak!" another man said "there was
four foot water in the hold." Then all hands were called to the
pump. At that very word my heart as I thought, died within me,
and I fell backwards upon the side of my bed, where I sat in the
cabin. However, the men roused me, and told me that I, who was
able to do nothing before, was as well able to pump as another; at
which I stirred up and went to the pump, and worked very heartily.
While this was doing, the master seeing some light colliers, who,
not able to ride out the storm, were obliged to slip and run away to
sea, and would not come near us, ordered us to fire a gun as a signa







8 ADVENTURES OF ROBINSON CRUSOe.
of distress. I, who knew nothing what that meant, was so surprised,
that I thought the ship had broke, or some dreadful thine happened.
In a word, I was so surprised, that I fell down in a swoon. As this
was a time when everybody had his own life to think 3f, no one
minded me, or what was become of me; but another man stepped
up to the pump, and thrusting me aside with his foot, let me lie,
thinking I had been dead; and it was a great while before I came to
myself.
We worked on; but the water increasing in the hold, it was
apparent that the ship would founder; and though the storm oegan
to abate a little, yet as it was not possible she could swim till we
might run into a port;-so the master continued firing guns for help;
and a light ship, who had rid it out just ahead of us, ventured a boat
out to help us. It was with the utmost hazard the boat came near
us, but it was impossible for us to get on board, or for the boat
lie near the ship's side; till at last the men rowing very heartily,
and venturing their lives to save ours, our men cast them a rope
over our stern with a buoy to it, and then veered it out a great
length, which they, after great labour and hazard, took hold of, and
we hauled them close under our stern, and got all into the boat.
It was to no purpose for them or us, after we were in the boat, to
think of reaching their own ship; so all agreed to let her drive, and
only to pull her in towards shore as much as we could; and our
master promised them, that if the boat were staved upon shore, he
would make it good to their master; so partly rowing and partly
driving, our boat went away to the northward, sloping towards the
shore almost as far as Winterton-Ness.
We were not much more than a quarter of an hour out of our ship
when we saw her sink; and then I understood, for the first time,
what was meant by a ship foundering in the sea. I must acknow-
ledge, I had hardly eves to look up when the seamen told me she was
sinking; for, from that moment, they rather put me into the boat
than that I might be said to go in.. My heart was, as it were, dead
within me, partly with fright, partly with horror of mind, and the
thoughts of what was yet before me.
While we were in this condition, the men yet labouring at the oar
to bring the boat near the shore, we could see (when, our boat
mounting the waves, we were able to see the shore) a great many
people running along the strand, to assist us when we should come
near; but we madelbut slow way towards the shore; nor were we
able to reach it, till being past the lighthouse at Winterton, the
shore falls off to the westward, towards Cromer, and so the land
broke off a little the violence of the wind. Here we got in, and,
though not without much difficulty, got all safe on shore, and walked
afterwards on foot to Yarmouth ; where, as unfortunate men, we were
used with great humanity, as well by the magistrates of the town, who
assigned us good quarters, as by the particular merchants and owner







ADVENTURES OF ROBINSON CRUSOE.


of ships; and had money given us sufficient to carry us either to
London or back to Hull, as we thought fit.
Had I now had the sense to have gone back to Hull, and have
gone home, I had been happy: and my father, an emblem of our



_J -----












blessed Saviour's parable, had even killed the fatted calf for me; for,
hearing the ship I went in was cast away in Yarmouth Roads, it was
a great while before he had any assurance that I was not drowned.
My comrade, who had helped to harden me before, and who was
the master's son, was now less forward than I; the first time he spoke
to me after we were at Yarmouth, which was not till two or three
days, for we were separated in the town to several quarters ; I say the
first time he saw me, it appeared his tone was altered, and, looking
very melancholy, and shaking his head, he asked me how I did;
telling his father who I was, and how I had come this voyage only
for a trial, in order to go farther abroad. His father talked very
gravely to me; exhorted me to go back to my father, and not tempt
Providence to my ruin; told me, I might see a visible hand of
Heaven against me; '' and, young man," said he, "depend upon it, if
you do not go back, wherever you go, you will meet with nothing but
disasters and disappointments, till your father's words are fulfilled
upon you."
We parted soon after, for I made him little answer, and I saw him
no more; which way he went, I know not; as for me, having some
money in my pocket, I travelled to London by land; and there, as
well as on the road, had many struggles with myself what course of
life I should take, and whether I should go home or go to sea. As
to going home, shame opposed iLh best motions that offered to my








10 ADVENTURES OF ROBINSON CRUSOE.

thoughts ; and it immediately occurred to me how I should be laughed
at among the neighbours, and should be ashamed to see, not my
father and mother only, but even everybody else. From whence I
have often observed, how incongruous and irrational the common
temper of mankind is, especially of youth, to that reason which
ought to guide them in such cases, viz., that they are not ashamed to
sin, and yet are ashamed to repent; not ashamed of the action for
which they ought justly to be esteemed fools; but are ashamed of
the returning, which only can make them be esteemed wise men.
I went on board a vessel bound to the coast of Africa; or as the
sailors vulgarly call it, a voyage to Guinea.
It was my lot, first of all, to fall into pretty good company in Lon-
don; I became acquainted with the master of a ship, who had been
on the coast of Guinea, and who having had very good success there,
was resolved to go again. He, taking a fancyv to my conversation,
which was not at all disagreeable at that time, and hearing me say I
had a mind to see the world, told me, that if I would go that voyage
with him, I should be at no expense; I should be his messmate and
his companion; and if I could carry anything with me, I should have
all the advantage of it the trade would admit and perhaps I might
meet with some encouragement. I embraced the offer, and, entering
into strict friendship with this captain, who was an honest and praim-
deahng man, I went ithe voyage with him, and carried a small adventure
with me; which, by the disinterested honesty of my friend the cap-
tain, I increased very considerably; for I carried about forty pounds
in such toys and trifles as the captain directed me to buy. This
forty pounds I mustered together by the assistance of some of my
relations whom I corresponded with; and who I believe, got my
father, or at least, my mother, to contribute so much as that to my
first adventure. This was the only voyage which I may say was
successful in all my adventures, and which I owe to the integrity and
honesty of my friend the captain; under whom also I got a
competent knowledge of mathematics and the rules of navigation,
learned how to keep an account of the ship's course, take an observa-
tion, and, in short, to understand some things that were needful to
be understood by a sailor; for, as he took delight to instruct me, I
took delight to learn; and, in a word, this voyage made me both a
sailor anda merchant ; for I brought home five pounds nine ounces
of gold dust for my adventure, which yielded me in London, on
my return, almost three hundred pounds, and this filled me with
those aspiring thoughts which have since so completed my ruin. Yet
even in this voyage I had my misfortunes, too; particularly, that I
was continually sick, being thrown into a violent calenture by the ex-
cessive heat of the climate; our principal trading being upon the coast,
from the latitude of fifteen degrees north, even to the line itself.












CA4


C'


-C-, 2S
~^ ^it


SECTION III.
ROBINSON'S CAPTIVITY AT SALLEE-ESCAPE WITH XURY--ARIVAL
AT THE BRAZILS.
I WAS now set up for a Guinea trader; and my friend, to my great
misfortune, dying soon after his arrival, I resolved to go the same
voyage again; and I embarked in the same vessel with one who was
his mate in the former voyage, and had now got the command of the
ship. This was the unhappiest voyage that ever man made; for
though I did not carry quite a hundred pounds of my new-gained
wealth, so that I had two hundred pounds left, and which I lodged
with my friend's widow, who was very just to me, yet I fell into
terrible misfortunes in this voyage; and the first was this, viz.-our
ship, making her course towards the Canary Islands, or rather
between those Islands and the African shore, was surprised, in the
grey of the morning, by a Turkish rover, of Sallee, who gave chase
to us, with all the sail she could make. We crowded also as much
canvass as our yards would spread, or our masts carry, to get clear;
but finding the pirate gained upon us, and would certainly come
up with us in a few hours, we prepared to fight, our ship having
twelve guns and the rover eighteen. About three in the afternoon
he came up with us; and bringing to, by mistake, just athwart our
quarter, instead of athwart our stem, as he intended, we brought
eight of our guns to bear on that side, and poured in a broadside'
upon him, which made him sheer off again, after returning our fire,
and pouring in also his small shot from near two hundred men
whom he had on board. However, we had not a man touched, all







12 ADVENTURES OF ROBINSON CRUSOE.
our men keeping close. He prepared to attack us again, and we to
defend ourselves; but laying us on board the next time upon our
other quarter, he entered sixty men upon our decks, who immediately
fell to cutting and hacking the sails and rigging. We plied them
with small shot, half-pikes, powder-chests, and such like, and cleared
our decks of them twice. However, to cut short this melancholy
part of our story, our ship being disabled, and three of our men
killed, and eight wounded, we were obliged to yield, and were
carried all prisoners into Sallee, a port belonging to the Moors.
The usage I had there was not so dreadful as at first I appre-
hended; nor was I carried up the country to the emperor's court,
as the rest of our men were, but was kept by the captain of ths-
rover as his proper prize and made his slave, being young and nimble,
and fit for his business. At this surprising change of my circum-
stances, from a merchant to a miserable slave, I was perfectly over-
whelmed; and now looked back upon my father's prophetic discourse
to me, that I should be miserable, and have none to relieve me;
which I thought was now so effectually brought to pass, that it could
not be worse; that now the hand of Heaven had overtaken me, and
I was undone, without redemption. But, alas! this was but a taste
of the misery I was to go through, as will appear in the sequel of
this story.
As my new patron, or master, had taken me home to his house,
so I was in hopes he would take me with him when he went to sea
again, believing that it would, some time or other, be his fate to be
taken by a Spanish or Portuguese man of war, and that then I
should be set at liberty. But this hope of mine was soon taken
away, for when lie went to sea he left me on shore to look after his
little garden, and do the common drudgery of slaves about his house;
and when he came home again from his cruise, he ordered me to lie
in the cabin, to look after the ship.
Here I meditated nothing but my escape, and what method I
miglit take to effect it, but found no way that had the least proba-
bility in it. Nothing presented to make the supposition of it rational;
for I had nobody to communicate it to that would embark with me;
-no fellow-slave, no Englishman, Irishman, or Scotchman there but
myself; so that for two years, though I often pleased myself with
the imagination, yet I never had the least encouraging prospect of
putting it in practice.
After about two years, an odd circumstance presented itself,
which put the old thought of making some attempt for my liberty
again into my head. My patron lying at home longer than usual,
without fitting out his ship, which, as I heard, was for want of
money, he used constantly, once or twice a week, sometimes oftener,
if the weather was fair, to take the ship's pinnacle, and go out into
the road a fishing ; and as he always took me and a young Moresco
with him to row the boat, we made him very merry, and 1 proved







ADVENTURES OF ROBINSON CRUSOE. 13

very dexterous in catching fish, insomuch that sometimes he would
send me with a Moor, one of his kinsmen, and the youth, the
Moresco, as they called him, to catch a dish of fish for him.
It happened one time, that going a fishing in a stark calm
morning, a fog rose so thick, that though we were not half a league
from the shore, we lost sight of it; and rowing, we knew not
whither, or which way, we laboured all day, and all the next night,
and when the morning came, we found we had pulled off to sea,

















instead of pulling in for the shore, and that we were at least two
leagues from the shore; however, we got well in again, though with
a great deal of labour, and some danger, for the wind began to blow
pretty fresh in the morning; but particularly we were all very
hungry.
But our patron, warned by this disaster, resolved to take more
care of himself for the future; and having lying by him the long-
boat of our English ship he had taken, he resolved he would not go
a fishing any more without a compass and some provision; so he
ordered the carpenter of the ship, who was an English slave, to
build a little state-room or cabin in the middle of the longboat, like
that of a barge, with a place to stand behind it, to steer and haul
home the main sheet, and room before for a hand or two to stand
and work the sails. She sailed with what we called a leg-of-mutton
sail, and the boom jibbed over the top of the cabin, which lay very
snug and low, and had in it room for him to lie, with a slave or two,
and a table to eat on, with some small lockers to put in some bottles
of such liquor as he thought fit to drink, and particularly his bread,
rice, and coffee.
We went frequently out with this boat a fishing, and as I was
2







1i ADVENTURES OF ROBINSON CRUSOE.
most dexterous to catch fish for him, he never went without me.
It happened that he had appointed to go out in this boat, either
for pleasure or for fish, with two or three Moors of some distinction
in that place, and for whom he had provided extraordinarily, and
had therefore sent on board the boat, overnight, a larger store of
provisions than ordinary, and had ordered me to get ready three
fusees, with powder and shot, which were on board his ship, for that
they designed some sport of fowling as well as fishing.
I got all things ready as he directed, and waited the next morning
with the boat washed clean, her ensign and pendants out, and every-
thing to accommodate his guests: when, by and by, my patron came














on board alone, and told me his guests had put off going, upon some
business that fell out, and ordered me, wilh a man and boy, as
usual, to go out with the boat, and catch them some fish, for that
his friends were to sup at his house; and commanded, that as soon
as I had got some fish, I should bring it home to his house; all
which I prepared to do.
This moment my former notions of deliverance darted into my
thoughts, for now I found I was like to have a little ship at my
command; and my master being gone, I prepared to furnish myself,
not for a fishing business, but for a vo yge; though I knew not,
neither did I so much as consider, whither I should steer; for any
where, to get out of that place, was my way,
My first contrivance was to make a pretence to speak to this Moor,
to get something for our subsistence on board; for I told him we
must not presume to eat of our patron's bread; he said, that was
true ; so lie brought a large basket of rusk or biscuit, of their kind,
and three jars with fresh water, into the boat. I knew where my
patron's case of bottles stood, which it was evident, by the make,
were taken out of some English prize, and I conveyed them into the
boat while the Moor was on shore, as if they had been there before







ADVENTURES OF ROBINSON CRUSOE. 15
for our master. I conveyed also a great lump of bees-wax into the
boat, which weighed above half a hundred-weight, with a parcel of
twine or thread, a hatchet, a saw, and a hammer, all which were of
great use to us afterwards, especially the wax, to make candles.
A another trick I tried upon him, which he innocently came into also;
his name was Ishmael, whom they call Muley, or Moley; so I called to
him; Moley," said I, our patron's guns are on board the boat, can
you not get a little powder and shot ? It may be we may kill some
alcamies (fowls like our curlews)for ourselves, and I know he keeps the
gunner's stores m the ship."-" Yes," says he, I will bring some;"
and accordingly he brought a great leather pouch, which held about
a pound and a half of powder, or rather more, and another with shot,
that had five or six pounds, with some bullets, and put all into
the boat; at the same time I found some powder of my master's in
the great cabin, with which I filled one of the large bottles in the
case, which was almost empty, pouring what was in it into another;
and thus furnished with every thing needful, we sailed out of port to
fish. The castle, which is at the entrance of the port, knew who we
were, and took no notice of us; and we were not above a mile out
of the port, when we hauled in our sail, and set us down to fish.
The wind blew from NN. E., which was contrary to my desire; for,
had it blown southerly, I had been sure to have made the coast of
Spain, and at last reached to the bay of Cadiz; but my resolutions
were, blow which way it would, I would be gone from the horrid
place where I was, and leave the rest to fate.
After we had fished some time and caught nothing, for when I
had fish on my hook I would not pull them up, that he might not see
them, I said to the Moor: This will not do; our master will not be
thus served; we must stand further off." He, thinking no harm,
agreed; and being at the head of the boat, set the sails; and as I
had the helm, I run the boat near a league farther, and then brought
to, as if I would fish. Then giving the boy the helm, I stepped for-
ward to where the Moor was, and I took him by surprise, with my
arm under his waist, and tossed him clean overboard into the sea.
He rose immediately, for he swam like a cork, and called to me,
begged to be taken in, and told me he would go all the world over
with me. He swam so stroll after the boat, that he would have
reached me very quickly, there being but little wind; upon which
I stepped into the cabin, and fetching one of the fowling-pieces,
I presented it at him, and told him, I had done him no hurt, and
if he would be quiet, I would do him none. But," said I, you
swim well enough to reach the shore, and the sea is calm; make the
best of your way to shore, and I will do you no harm; but if you
come near the boat, I will shoot you through the head; for I am
resolved to have my liberty." So he turned himself about, and swam
for the shore; and I make no doubt but he reached it with ease, for
he was an excellent swimmer.







1 ADVENTURES OF ROBINSON CRUSOE.
I could have been content to have taken this Moor with me and
have drowned the boy, but there was no venturing to trust him.
When he was gone, I turned to the boy, whom they called Xury,
and said to him, Xury, if you will be faithful to me 1 will make you
a great man; but if you will not stroke your face to be true to me
(that is, swear by Mahomet and his father's beard), I must throw you
into the sea too." The boy smiled in my face, and spoke so innocently,
that I could not mistrust him; and swore to be faithful to me, and
go all over the world with me.



















While I was in view of the Moor that was swimming, I stood out
directly to sea with the boat, rather stretching to windward, that
they might think me gone towards the Straits' mouth (as indeed any
one that had been in their wits must have been supposed to do); for
who would have supposed we were sailing on to the southward, to the
truly Barbarian coast, where whole nations of negroes were sure to
surround us with their canoes, and destroy us; where we could never
once go on shore but we should be devoured by savage beasts, oi
more merciless savages of human kind ?
But as soon as it grew dusk in the evening, I changed my course,
and steered directly south and by east, bending my course a little
towards the east, that I might keep in with the shore; and having a
fair fresh gale of wind, and a smooth quiet sea, I made such sail,
that I believe by the next day, at three o'clock in the afternoon,
when I made the land, I could not be less than one hundred and
fity miles south of Sallee, quite beyond the Emperor of Morocco's








ADVENTURES OF ROBINSON CRUSOE. 17

dominions, or indeed of any other king thereabout; for we saw no
people.
Yet such was the fright I had taken at the Moors, and the dread"nl
apprehensions I had of falling into their hands, that I would not stop,
or go on shore, or come to an anchor, the wind continuing fair, till l
had sailed in that manner five days; and then the wind shifting to
the southward, I concluded also that if any of our vessels were in
chase of me, they also would now give over ; so I ventured to make
to the coast, and came to an anchor in the mouth of a little river;
I knew not what or where, neither what latitude, what country,
what nation, or what river. I neither saw, nor desired to see, any
people; the principal thing I wanted was fresh water. We came
into this creek in the evening, resolving to swim on shore as soon
as it was dark, and discover the country; but as soon as it was
quite dark, we heard such dreadful noises of the barking, roaring,
and howling of wild creatures, of we kn-w lot what kinds, that the
poor boy was ready to die with fear, and begged of me not to go on
snore till day. Well, Xury," said I, then I will not; but it may be
we shall see men by day, who will be as bad to us as those lions."
Then we may give them the shoot-gun ," says Xury, laughing, "make
them run away. Such English Xury spoke by conversing among
us slaves. However, I was glad to see the boy so cheerful, and
gave him a dram out of our patron's case of bottles to cheer him up.
After all, Xury's advice was good, and I took it. We dropped our
little anchor, and lay still all night; I say still, for we slept none; for in
two or three hours we saw vast creatures (we knew not what to call
them), of many sorts, come down to the sea-shore, and run into the
water, wallowing and washing themselves, for the pleasure of cooling
themselves; and they made such howlings and yelling, that I never
indeed heard the like.
Xury was dreadfully frightened, and indeed so was I too; but we
were both more frightened when we heard one of these creatures
swimming towards our boat; and we could hear by his blowing that
he was a monstrous, huge and furious beast. Poor Zury cried to me
to weigh the anchor and row away. No," says I, Xury, we can slip
our cable with a buoy to it, and go off to sea; they cannot follow us
far." I had no sooner said so, but I perceived the creature within two
oars' length, which surprised me; however, I immediately stepped
to the cabin door, and taking up my gun, fired at him; upon
which he immediately turned about, and swam to the shore
again.
It is impossible to describe the horrible noises, and hideous cries
and cowlings that were raised, as well upon the edge of the shore as
higher within the country, upon the noise or report of the gun ; a
thing, I believe, those creatures had never heard before. This con-
vinced me there was no going on shore for us in the night upon that
coast; and how to venture on shore in the day, was another question
S2 c








IS ADVENTURES OF ROBINSON CRUSOE.
too; for to have fallen into the hands of any of the savages, had
been as bad as to have fidlen into the paws of lions and tigers; at
least, w we re equally apprehensive of the danger of it.
Be that as it would,w w were obliged to go on shore somewhere or
other for water, for we had not a pint left in the boat; when and
where to get it was the point. Xury said, if 1 would let him go on
shore with one of the jars, he would find if there was any water, and
bring some to me. I asked him why he would go; why 1 should
not go, and he stay in the boat. The boy answered with so much
















affection, that. lie made me love hiii ever after. Says he, If wild
mans come, they cat. nic, you go away.-" Well, Xury," said I, we
will both go ; and if the wild mans come, we will kill t fem ; they shall
eat neither of us." So I gave Xury a piece of rusk bread to eat, and
a drain out of our pat ron's case of bottles, whieh I inent ioned before;
and we hauled in the boat as near the shore as we thought was
proper, and so waded to shore, carrying nothing but our arms, and
t wo jars for water.
I did not care to go out of sight of the boat, fearing the coming
of canoes with savages down the river; but the boy, seeing a low
place about a mile up the country, rambled to it ; and, by and by,
1 saw him come running towards ne. I thought le was pursued by
some savage, or frightened by some wild beast, and I therefore ran
forwards to help him ; but when I came nearer to him, I saw some-
thing hanging over his shoulders, which was a creature that he had
shot, like a hare, but, different in colour and longer legs ; however,
we were very glad of it, and it was vcrj good meat; but the great
joy that poor Xury c:ame with, was to tell me he had found good
water, and seen 1no wild mans.








ADVENTURES OF ROIINSON CRUSOB. 19
AP T had been one voyage to this coast before, I knew very well
that the islands of the Canaries, and the Cape de Verd Islands also,
lay not, far from the coast. But as I had no instruments to take an
observation, to find what latitude we were in, and did not exactly
know, or at least, remember, what latitude they were in, I knew not
where to look for them, or when to stand off to sea towards them,
otherwise I might now have easily found some of these islands. But
my hope was that if I stood along this coast till I came to the part
where the English traded, I should lind some of their vessels upon
their usual design ot ride, lhat would relieve and take us in.
By the best of my calculation, the place where I now was, must
be that country which, lying between the Emperor of Morocco's
dominlions and the Negroes, lies waste, and uninhabited, except by
wild beasts; the Negroes having abandoned it, and gone farther
south, for fear of the Moors, and the Moors not thinking it worth
inhabliting, by reason of its barrenness ; and, indeed both forsakiIn
it becausee of the prodigious numbers of tigers, lions, leopards, and
other furious creatures which harbour there; so that the Moors use
it for their hunting only, where they go like an army, two or three
thousand men at a time; and, indeed, for near a hundred miles
toget her upon this coast, we saw not thing but a waste, uninhabited
country by day, and heard nothing but cowlings and roaring of
wild beasts by night.
Once or twice, in the day-time,.I thought I saw the Pico of
Teceriffe, being the top of the mountain Teneriffe, in the Canaries,
and had a great mind to venture out, in hopes of reaching thither;
but. having tried twice, I was forced in again by contrary winds; the
sea also going too high for my little vessel; so I resolved to pursue
my first itsign, and keep along the shore.
After this stop we made on to the southward continually, for ten
or twelve days, living very sparingly on our provisions, which began
to abate very much, and going no oftener into shore than we were
obliged to for fresh water. My design in this, was to make the
river Gambia. or Seneal ; that is to say, anywhere about the Cape
de Verd, where I was in hopes to meet some European ship; and if
I did not, 1 knew not what course I had to take, but to seek for the
islands or perish among the Negroes. 1 knew that all the ships from
Europe, which sailed either to the coast of Guinea, or to Brazil, or
to the East Indies, made this Cape, or those islands ; and in a word
I pat the whole of my fortune upon this single point, either that I
must meet some ship, or perish.
When I had pursued this resolution about ten days longer,
I began to see that the land was inhabited; and in two or three
places, as we sailed by, we saw people stand upon the shore to
look at us; we could also perceive they were quite black and stark
naked. I was once inclined to have gone on shore to them; but
Xury was my better counsellor, and said to me, No go, no go." Haw-
cS








O0 ADVENTURES OF ROBINSON CRUSOE.
ever, I hauled in nearer the shore, that I might talk to them ; and 1
found they ran along the shore by me a good way. 1 observed
they had no weapons in their hands, except one, who had a long
slender stick, which Xury said was a lance, and that they wouli
lhrow them a great way with good aim ; so I kept at a distance, but
1:ilked to them by signs, as well as I could, and particularly made
signs for something to eat. They beckoned to me to stop my boat,
and I hey would fetch me some meat; upon this 1 lowered the top of
my sail, and lay by, and two of them ran up into the country ; and
in less than half an hour came back, and brought with them two
pieces of dry flesh and some corn, such as the produce of their
country ; but we neither knew what the one or the other was; how-
ever, we were willing to accept it. But how to come at it was our
next dispute, for 1 was not for venturing on shore to them, and
they were as much afraid of us; but they took a safe way for us all,
for they brought it to the shore, and laid it down, and went and
stood a great way off till we fetched it on board, and then came
close to us again.
We made signs of thanks to them, for we had nothing to make
them amends ; but an opportunity offered that very instant to oblige
tlem wonderfully; for while we were lying by the shore, came two
mighty creatures, one pursuing the other (as we took it) with great
fury, from the mountains towards the sea ; whether it was the male
pursuing the female, or whether they were in sport or in rage, we
could not tell, any more than we could tell whether it was usual or
strange; but I believe it was the latter, because, in the first place,
these ravenous creatures seldom appear but in lie night; and, in the
second place we found the people terribly frightened, especially the
women. The man that had the lance, or dart, did not fly from them,
but the rest did; however, as the two creatures ran directly into the
water, they did not seem to offer to fall upon any of the Negroes,
but plunged themselves into tlie sea, and swam about, as if they had
come for their diversion; at last, one of them began to come nearer
our boat than I at first expected; but 1 lay ready for him, for I had
loaded my gun with all possible expedition, and bade Xury load both
the others. As soon as he came fairly within my reach, 1 fired, and
shot him directly in the head; immediately lie sunk down into the
water, but rose instantly, and plunged up and down, as if he was
struggling for life, and so indeed he was; lie immediately made to
the shore ; but between the wound which was his mortal hurt, and the
strangling of the water, ie died just before he reached the shore.
It is impossible to express l tn altonishment of these poor crea-
tures, at the noise and lire of my gun; some of them were evel
ready to die for fear, and fell down as dead with tle very terror;
but when thliy saw 1i e creature dead, and sunk in the water, and
that I made signs for them to come to the shore, they took heart
and came to the shore, and began to search for the creature. I







ADVENTURES OF ROBINSON CRUSOE. 21

found him by his blood staining the water; and by the help of a
rope, which 1 slung round himi, and gave the Negroes to haul, they
dragged him on shore, and found that it was a most curious leolard,
spot ted, and fine to an admirable degree ; and the Negroes held up
their hands with admiration, to think what it was I had killed him
with.
The other creature, frightened with the flash of fire, and the noise
of t lie gun, swam on shore, and ran up directly to the mountains
from whence they came; nor could I, at that distance, know what
it was. 1 found quickly the Negroes were for eating the flesh of this



















creature, so I was willing to have them take it as a favour from me;
which, when I made signs to them that they might take him, they
were very thankful for. Immediately they fell to work with him;
and though they had no knife, yet with a sharpened piece of wood,
they took off his skin as readily, and much more readily, than we
could have done with a knife. They offered me some of the flesh,
which I declined, making as if I would give it them, but made
signs for the skin, which they gave me very freely, and brought me a
great deal more of their provisions, which, though I did not under-
stand, yet I accepted. I then made signs to them for some water,
and held out one of my jars to them, turning it bottom upwards, to
show that it was empty, and that I wanted to have it filled. They
called immediately to some of their friends, and there came two
women, and brought a great vessel made of earth, and burnt, as I
suppose, in the sun ; this they set down to me, as before, and I sent
Xury on shore with my jars, and killed them all three.







e2 ADVENTURES OF ROBINSON CRUSOE.
I was now furnished with roots and corn, such as it was, and
water; and leaving my friendly Negroes, I made forward for eleven
days more, without offering to go near the shore, till I saw the land
run a great length into the sea, at about the distance of four
or five leagues before me; and the sea being very calm, I kept a
large offing, to make this point. At length, doubling the point, at
about two leagues from the land, I saw plainly land on the other
side, to seaward ; then I concluded, as it was most certain indeed,
that this was the Cape de Verd, and those the islands, called, from
thence, Cape de Verd Islands. However, they were at a great dis-
tance, and I could not well tell what I had best to do; for if I
should be taken with a gale of wind, I might reach neither.
In this dilemma, as I was very pensive, I stepped into the cabin,
and sat me down, Xury having the helm; when, on a sudden, the
ooy cried out, Master, master, a ship with a sail!" and the foolish
boy was frightened out of his wits, thinking it must needs be some
of his master's ships sent to pursue us, when I knew we were
gotten far enough out of their reach. I jumped out of the cabin,
and immediately saw, not only'the ship, but what she was, viz. that
it was a Portuguese ship, and, as 1 thought, was bound to the
Coast of Guinea, for Negroes.
With all the sail I could make, I found I should not be able to
come in their way; but after I had crowded to the utmost,
and began to despair, they, it seems, saw me, by the help of their
perspective glasses, and that it was some European boat, which, they
supposed, must belong to some ship that was lost; so they shortened
sail; and in about three hours' time I came up with them.
They asked me what I was in Portuguese, and in Spanish, and in
French; but I understood none of them; but, at last, a Scotch
sailor who was on board, called to me, and I answered him, and told
him I was an Englishman, that I had made my escape out of slavery
from the Moors, at Sallee; they then bade me come on board, and
very kindly took me in, and all my goods.
It was an inexpressible joy to me, which any one will believe, that
I was thus delivered, as I esteemed it, from such a miserable, and
almost hopeless condition as I was in; and I immediately offered all
I had to the captain of the ship, as a return for my deliverance; but
he generously told me, lie would take nothing from me, but that all
I had should be delivered safe to me, when I came to the Brazils.
I will carry you thither in charity, and these things will help to buy
your subsistence there, and your passage home again.








1 a


SECTION IV.
HE SETTLES IN THE BRAZILS AS A PLANTER-MAKES ANOTHER
VOYAGE, AND IS SHIPWRECKED.
As he was charitable in this proposal, so he was just in the perform-
ance, to a tittle: for he ordered the seamen, that none should offer
to touch anything I had: then he took everything into his own
possession, and gave me back an exact inventory of them, that I
might have them, even so much as my three earthen jars.
We had a very good voyage to the Brazils, and arrived in the Bay
de Todos los Santos, or all Saints' Bay, in about twenty-two days
after. And now I was once more delivered from the most miserable
of all conditions of life; and what to do next with myself, I was now
to consider.
The generous treatment the captain gave me, I can never enough
remember: he would take nothing of me for my passage, gave me
twenty ducats for the leopard's skin, and forty for the lion's skin,
which I had in my boat, and caused everything I had in the ship to
be punctually delivered to me; and what I was willing to sell, lie
bought of me; such as the case of bottles, two of my guns, and a
piece of the lump of bees-wax,-for I had made candles of the rest;
i a word, I made about two hundred and twenty pieces of eight of
all my cargo; and with this stock, I went on shore in the Brazils.
I had not been long here, before I was recommended to the house
of a good honest man, like himself, who had an ingenio as they call
it (that is, a plantation and a sugar-house.) I lived with him some
time, anl acquainted myself, by that means, with the manner of
planting and of making sugar; and seeing how well the planter;







24 ADVENTURES OF ROBINSON CRUSOB.
Eved, and how they got rich suddenly, I resolved, if I-could get a
license to settle there, I would turn planter among them: endeav-
ouring, in the meantime, to find out some way to get my money,
which I had left in London, remitted to me. To this purpose,
getting a kind of letter of naturalization, I purchased as much land
that was uncured as my money would reach, and formed a plan for
my plantation and settlement; such a one as might be suitable to
the stock which I proposed to myself to receive from England.
I had a neighbour, a Portuguese of Lisbon, but born of English
parents, whose name was Wells, and in much such circumstances as
I was. I call him my neighbour, because his plantation lay next to
mine, and we went on very sociably together. My stock was but
low, as well as his; and we rather placed for food than anything
else, for about two years. However, we began to increase, and our
land began to come into order; so that the third year we planted
some tobacco, and made each of us a large piece of ground ready for
planting canes the next year.
I was, in some degree, settled in my measure for carrying on the
plantation, before my kind friend, the captain of the ship that took
me up at sea, went back; for the ship remained there, in providing
his landing, and preparing for his voyage, near three months ; when
telling him what little stock I had left behind me in London, he
gave me this friendly and sincere advice: Senhor Inglez," says he
(for so he always called me,) "if you will give me letters, and a pro-
curation here in form to me, with orders to the person who had your
money in London, to send your effects to Lisbon, to such persons
as I shall direct, and in such goods as are proper for this country, I
will bring you the produce of them, God willing, at my return: but
since human affairs are all subject to changes and disasters, I
would have you give orders for but one hundred pounds sterling,
which, you say, is half your stock, and let the hazard be run for the
first, so that if it come safe, you may order the rest the same way;
and, if it miscarry, you may have the other half to have recourse to
for your supply." This was so wholesome advice, and looked so
friendly, that I could not but be convinced it was the best course I
could take; so 1 accordingly prepared letters to the gentlewoman
with whom I left my money, and a procuration to the Portuguese
captain, as he desired me.
I wrote the English captain's widow a full account of all my
adventures; whereupon she not only delivered the money, but, out
of her own pocket, sent the Portuguese captain a very handsome
present for his humanity and charity to me.
The merchant in London, vesting this hundred pounds in English
goods, such as the captain had written for, sent them directly to
him at Lisbon, and he brought them all safe to me at the Brazils: I
found means to sell them to a very great advantage; so that I
nught say, I had more than four times the value of my first cargo,







ADVENTURES OF ROBTNSON CRnlSOE. M
and was now infinitely beyond my poor neighbour, I mean in the
advancement of my plantation; for the first thing I did, I bought
me a Negro slave, and a European servant also, 1 mean another
besides one whom the captain brought me from Lisbon.
Having lived almost four years in the Brazils, and beginning to
thrive and prosper very well upon my plantation, I had not only
learned the language, but had contracted an acquaintance and
friendship among my fellow-planters, as well as among the mer-
chants at St. Salvador, which was our port; and that, in my dis-
courses among them, I had frequently given them an account of my
two voyages to the coast of Guinea, the manner of trading with
the Negroes there, and how easy it was to purchase on the coast for
trifles-such as beads, toys, knives, scissars, hatchets, bits of glass,
and the like-not only gold dust, Guinea grains, elephants' teeth,
&c., but Negroes, for the service of the Brazils, in great numbers.

















They listened always very attentively to my discourses on these
heads, but especially to that part which related to the buying
Negroes; which was a trade, at that time, not only not far entered
into, but, as far as it was, had been carried on by the assientos, or
permission of the kings of Spain and Portugal, and engrossed from
the public; so that few Negroes were bought, and those excessively
dear.
It happened, being in company with some merchants and planters
of my acquaintance, and talking of those things very earnestly, three
of them came to me the next morning, and told me they had been
musing very much upon what I had discoursed with them of the
last night, and they came to make a secret proposal to me: and,







16 ADVENTURES OF ROBINSON CRUSOE.

after enjoining me to secrecy, they told me that they had a mind tc
fit out a ship to go to Guinea; that they had all plantations as well
as I, and were straitened for nothing so much as servants; that as
it was a trade that could not be carried on, because they could not
publicly sell the Negroes when they came home, so they desired to
make but one voyage, to bring the Negroes on shore privately, and
divide them among their own plantations; and, in a word, the
question was, whether I would go as their supercargo in the ship, to
manage the trading part upon the coast of Guinea; and they offered
me that I should have an equal share of the Negroes, without pro-
viding any part of the stock.
I, that was born to be my own destroyer, could no more resist the
offer, than I could restrain my first rambling designs. In a word, I
told them I would go with all my heart, if they would undertake to
look after my plantation in my absence, and would dispose of it as I
should direct, if I miscarried. This they all engaged to do, and en-
tered into writings or covenants to do so, in case of my death;
making the captain of the ship that had saved my life, as before, my
universal heir; but obliging him to dispose of my effects as I had
directed in my will; one-half of the produce being to himself, and the
other to be shipped to England.
The ship being fitted out, and the cargo furnished, and all things
done as by agreement, by partners in the voyage, I went on board m
an evil hour again, the first of September, 1659, being the same day
eight years that I went from my parents at Hull, in order to act the
rebel to their authority, and the fool to my own interest.
We passed the Line in about twelve days' time, and were, by our
last observation, in seven degrees twenty-two minutes northern lati-
tude, when a violent tornado, or hurricane, took us quite out of our
knowledge; it began from the south-east, came about to the north-
west, and then settled in the north-east ; from whence it blew in
such a terrible manner, that for twelve days together we could do
nothing but drive, and, scudding away before it, let it carry us
whithersoever fate and the fury of the winds directed; and, during
these twelve days, I need not say that I expected every day to be
swallowed up; nor, indeed, did any in the ship expect to save their
lives.
About the twelfth day, the weather abating a little, the master
made an observation as well as he could. He found that he had got
upon the coast of Guiana, or the north part of Brazil, beyond the
river Amazon, toward that of the Oronoco, commonly called the
Great River; and as the ship was leaky and very much disabled he
was for going back to the coast of Brazil.
I was positively against that ; and looking over the charts of the
sea coast of America with him, we concluded there was no inhabited
country for us to have recourse to, till we came within the circle of
the Carribee islands, and therefore resolved to stand away for Barba.







ADVENTURES OF ROBINSON CRUSOE. 27
doe. ; which by keeping off to sea, to avoid the indraft of the bay or
gulf of Mexico, we might easily perform, as we hoped, in about
fifteen days' sail; whereas we could not possibly make our voyage to
the coast of Africa without some assistance, both to our ship and
ourselves.
With this design, we changed our course, and steered away N. W.
by W. in order to reach some of our English islands, where I hoped
for relief; but our voyage was otherwise determined; for in the
latitude of twelve degrees eighteen minutes a second storm came
upon us, which carried us away with the same impetuosity westward,
and drove us so out of the very way of all human commerce, that
had all our lives beer. saved, as to the sea, we stood a greater chance
of being devoured by savages than ever returning to Our own
country.
In this distress, the wind still blowing very hard, one of our men
early in the morning, cried out, Land!" and we had no sooner run out
of the cabin to look out, in hopes of seeing whereabouts in the world
we were, than the ship struck upon a sand, and in a moment, her
motion being so stopped, the sea broke over her in such a manner,
that we expected we should all have perished immediately; and we
were immediately driven into our close quarters, to shelter us from
the very foam and spray of the sea.
The ship naving thus struck upon the sand, and sticking too fast
for us to expect her getting off, we were in a dreadful condition
indeed, and had nothing to do, but to think of saving out lives as
well as we could. We had a boat at our stern just before the storm,
but she was first staved by dashing against the ship's rudder, and, in the
next place, she broke away, and either sunk, or was driven off to
sea; so there was no hope from her; we had another boat on board,
but how to get her off into the sea was a doubtful thing; however,
there was no room to debate, for we fancied the ship would break in
pieces every minute, and some told us she was actually broken
already.
In this distress, the mate of our vessel laid hold of the boat, and
with the help of the rest of the men, they got her flung over the
ship's side; and getting all into her, we let go, and committed our-
selves, being eleven in number, to God's mercy, and the wild sea;
for though the storm was abated considerably, yet the sea went
dreadfully high upon the shore, and might be well called den wild
see, as the Dutch call the sea in a storm.
After we had rowed, or rather driven, about a league and a half,
as we reckoned it, a raging wave, mountain-like, came rolling astern
of us, and plainly bade us expect the coup de grace. In a word, it
took us with such fury, that it overset the boat at once; and separa-
ting us, as well from the boat as from one another, gave us time
hardly to say, "0 God!" for we were all swallowed up in a
moment.








28 ADVENTURES OF ROBINSON TRUSO1.
Nothing can describe the confusion of thought which I felt, when
I sunk into the water; for though I swam very well, yet I could not
deliver myself from the waves so as to draw my breath, till that
wave having driven me, or rather carried me, a vast way on towards
the shore, and having spent itself, went back, and left me upon the
laud almost dry, but half dead with the water I took in. I had so
much presence of mind, as well as breath left, that seeing myself
nearer the main land than I expected, I got upon my feet, and
endeavoured to make on towards tle land as fast as I could, before
another wave should return and take me up again; but I soon found
it was impossible to avoid it; for I saw the sea come after me as
high as a great hill, and as furious as an enemy wlich I had no
means or strength to contend with; my business was to hold my
breath, and raise myself upon the water, if I could; and so, by swim.
ming, to preserve my breathing, and pilot myself towards the shore, if
possible; my greatest concern now being, that the wave, as it would
carry me a great way towards the shore when it came on, might not
carry me back again with it when it gave back towards the sea.
The wave that came upon me again buried me at once twenty or
thirty feet deep in its own body ; and I could feel myself carried
with a mighty force and swiftness towards the shore, a very great'
way; but I held my breath, and assisted myself to swim still forward
with all my might. I was ready to burst with holding my breath,
when, as I felt myself rising up, so, to my immediate relief, 1 found
my head and hands shoot out above the surface of the water; and
though it was not two seconds of time that 1 could keep myself so,
yet it relieved me greatly, gave me breath and new courage. 1 was
covered again with water a good while, but not so long but I held it
out; and finding the water had spent itself, and began to return, I
struck forward against the return 4'f the waves, and felt ground
again with my feet. I stood still a lew .anments, to recover breath,
and till the water went from me, and tiLen tolk to my heels, and ran
with what strength I had farther towards the shore. But neither
would this deliver me from the fury of the sea, which came pouring
in after me again; and twice more I was lifted up by the waves and
carried forwards as before, the shore being very flat.
The last time of these two had well nigh been fatal to me ; for the
sea, having hurried me along, as before, landed me, or rather dashed
me, against a piece of rock, and that with such force, that it left me
,seuseless, and indeed helpless, as to my own deliverance ; for the
blow, taking my side and breast, beat the breath, as it were, quite
out of my bodv ; and had it returned again immediately, I must have
been strangled in the water; but I recovered a little before the
return of the waves; and, seeing I should again be covered with the
water, I resolved to hold fast by a piece of rock, and so to hold my
breath, if possible, till the wave went back. Now as the waves were
not so high as the first, being nearer land, I held my hold till the







ADVENTURES OF ROBINSON causoE. 29

wave abated, and then fetched another run, which brought me so
near the shore, that the next wave, though it went over me, yet did
not so swallow me up as to carry me away; and the next run I took,
I got to the main land! where, to my great comfort, I clambered up
the cliffs of the shore, and sat me down upon the grass, free from
danger, and quite out of the reach of the water
I was now landed, and safe on shore; and began to look up and
thank God that my life was saved, in a case wherein there was,
some minutes before, scarcely any room to hope. I believe it is im-
possible to express, to the life, what the ecstasies and transports of
the soul are, when it is so saved, as I may say, out of the grave; and




















I did not wonder now at the custom, viz., that when a malefactor,
who has the halter about his neck, is tied up, and just going to be
turned off, and has a reprieve brought to him-I say, I do not
wonder that they bring a surgeon with it, to let blood that very
moment they tell him of it, that the surprise may not drive the
animal spirits from the heart, and overwhelm him.
For sudden joys, like griefs, confound at first.
I walked about on the shore, lifting up my hands, and my whole
being, as I may say, wrapped up in the contemplation of my deliver-
ance; making a thousand gestures and motions, which I cannot des-
cribe; reflecting upon my comrades that were drowned, and that
there should not be one soul saved but myself; -for, as for them, I
never saw them afterwards, or any sign of them, except three of
their hats, one cap, and two shoes that were not fellows.
3*








30 ADVENTURES OF ROBINSON CRUSOE.

I cast my eyes to the stranded vessel-when the breach and froth
of the sea being so big I could hardly see it, it lay so far off-and
" considered, Lord i how was it possible I could get on shore i'"






(5 ..; .











I began to look around me to see what kind of a place I was
in, and what was next to be done; and I soon found my comforts
abate, and that, in a word, I had a dreadful deliverance ; for I was
wet, had no clothes to shift me, nor anything either to eat or drink,
to comfort me; neither did I see any prospect before me, but that
of perishing with hunger, or being devoured by wild beasts; and that
which was particularly afflicting to me was, that I had no weapon
either to hunt and kill any creature for my sustenance, or to defend
myself against any other creatures that might desire to kill me for
theirs. In a word, I had nothing about me but a knife, a tobacco-
pipe, and a little tobacco. Night coming upon me, I began, with a
heavy heart, to consider what would be my lot if there were any
ravenous beasts in that country.
All the remedy that offered to my thoughts, was, to get up into a
thick bushy tree. I walked about a furlong from the shore, to see
if I could find any fresh water; which I did, to my great joy; and
having drunk, and put a little tobacco into my mouth to prevent
hunger, I went to the tree, and getting up into it, endeavoured to
place myself so as that, if I should fall asleep, I might not fall; and
having cut me a stick, for my defence, I took up my lodging; and
having been excessively fatigued, I fell asleep, and slept as con-
fortable as, I believe, few could have done in-my condition; and
found myself much refreshed.
















A-
"- <^


SECTION V.


ROBINSON FINDS HIMSELF IN A DESOLATE ISLAND-PROCURES A
STOCK OF ARTICLES FROM THE WRECK CONSTRUCTS HIS
HABITATION.
WHEN I woke it was broad day, the weather clear, and the storm
abated, so that the sea did not rage and swell as before; but that
which surprised me most was, that the ship was lifted off in the
night from the sand where she lay, by the swelling of the tide, and
was driven up almost as far as the rock which I at first mentioned,
where I had been so bruised by the wave dashing me against it.
This being within about a mile from the shore where I was, and the
ship seeming to stand upright still, I wished myself on board, that
at least I might save some necessary things for my use.
When I came down from my apartment in the tree, I looked about
me again, and the first thing I found was the boat; which lay, as
the wind and sea had tossed her up, upon the land, about two miles
'on my right hand. I walked as far as I could upon the shore to
have got to her; but found a neck, or inlet, of water, between me
and the boat, which was about half a mile broad; so I came back
for the present, being more intent upon getting at the ship, where I
hoped to find something for my present subsistence.
A little after noon, I found the sea very calm, and the tide ebbed







3S ADVENTURES OF ROBINSON CRUSOE.
so far out, that I could come within a quarter of a mile of the ship:
and here I found a fresh renewing of my grief; for I saw evidently,
that if we had kept on board, we had been all safe; that is to say,
we had all got safe on shore, and had not been so miserable as to be
left entirely destitute of all comfort and company, as I now was.
This forced tears from my eyes again; but as there was little relief"
in that, I resolved, if possible, to get to the ship : so I pulled off
my clothes, for the weather was hot to extremity, and took the
water : but when I came to the ship, my difficulty was still greater
to know how to get on board: for as she lay aground, and high out
of the water, there was nothing in my reach to lay hold of. I swam
round her twice, and the second time I spied a small piece of rope,
which I wondered I did not see at first, hang down by the fore-
chains so low, as that with great difficulty I got hold of it, and by
the help of that rope got into the forecastle of the ship. Here I
found that the ship was bilged, and had a great deal of water in her
hold; but that she lay so on the side of a bank of hard sand, or rather
earth, that her stern lay lifted up upon the bank, and her head low,
almost to the water. By this means all her quarter was free, and
all that was in that part was dry; for you may be sure my first work
was to search and to see what was spoiled and what was free: and,
first, I found that all the ship's provisions were dry and untouched
oy the water; and being very well disposed to eat, I went to the
bread-room, and filled my pockets with biscuit, and ate it as I went
about other things, for I had no time to lose. I also found some
rum in the great cabin, of which I took a large dram, and which I
had indeed need enough of, to spirit me for what was before me.
Now I wanted nothing but a boat, to furnish myself with many
things which I foresaw would be very necessary to me.
It was in vain to sit still and wish for what was not to be had,
and this extremity roused my application: we had several spare
yards, and two or three large spars of wood, and a spare topmast or
two in the ship; I resolved to fall to work with these, and flung as
many overboard as I could manage for their weight, tying every one
with a rope, that they might not drive away. When this was done,
I went down the ship's side, and pulling them to n-:e, I tied four of
them fast together at both ends, as well as I could, in the form of a
raft, and laying two or three short pieces of plank upon them, cross-
ways, I found I could walk upon it very well, but that it was not
able to bear any great weight, the pieces being too light: so I went
to work, and with the carpenter's saw I cut a spare topmast into
three lengths, and added them to my raft, with a great deal of labour
a.id pains. But the hope of furnishing myself with necessaries,
encouraged me to go beyond what I should have been able to have
done upon another occasion.
My raft was now strong enough to bear any reasonable weight.
My next care was what to load it with, and how to preserve what I








ADVENTITRES OF ROBINSON CRUSOE. 33

Said upon it from the surf of the sea; but I was not long considering
this. I first laid all the planks or boards upon it that I could get,
and having considered well what I most wanted, I got three of the
seamen's chests, which I had broken open and emptied, and lowered
them down upon my raft; these I filled with provisions, viz. bread,
rice, three Dutch cheeses, five pieces of dried goats' flesh (which we
lived much upon), and a little remainder of European corn, which
had been laid by for some fowls which we had brought to sea with
us, but the fowls were Killed. There had been some barley and
wheat together, but, to my great disappointment, I found afterwards
that the rats had eaten or spoiled it all. As for liquors, I found
several cases of bottles belonging to our skipper, in which were
some cordial waters ; and, in all, five or six gallons of rack. These
I stowed by themselves, there being no need to put them into the
chests, nor any room for them. While I was doing this, I found
the tide began to flow, though very calm; and I had the mortifica-
tion to see my coat, shirt, and waistcoat, which I had left on shore,
upon the sand, swim away; as for my breeches, which were only
linen, and open-kneed, I swam on board in them, and my stockings.
HIowever, this put me upon rummaging for clot les, of which I found
enough, but took no more than I wanted for present use, for I had
other things which my eye was more upon; as, first, tools to work
with on shore: and it was after long searching that I found the
carpenter's chest, which was indeed avery useful prize to me, and
much more valuable than a ship-lading of gold would have been
at that time. I got it down to my raft, even whole as it was,
without losing time to look into it, for I knew in general what it
contained.
My lneit care was for some ammunition and arms. There were
two very good fowling-pieces in the great cabin, and two pistols;
these I secured first, with some poli der-horns and a small bag of
shot, and two (oIl rusty swords. 1 knew there were three barrels of
S powder in the ship, but knew not where our gunner had stowed
them ; but with much search I found them, two of them dry and
good, t the third had taken water. Those two I got to my raft, with
the arms. And now I thought myself pretty well freighted, and
began to think how I should get to shore with them, having neither
sail, oar, nor rudder; and the least capful of wind would have over-
set all my navigation. I hoped to find some creek or river which I
might make use of as a port to get to land with my cargo.
As I imagined, so it was; there appeared before me a little
opening of the land, and I found a strong current of the tide set
into it; so I guided my raft, as well as I could, to get into the
middle of the stream. But here I had like to have suffered a second
shipwreck, which, if 1 bad, I think it verily would have broken my
neart ; for, knowing nothing of the coast, my raft ran aground at
one end of it upon a shoal, anid, not heiin aground at the other end,








0% ADVENTURES OF ROBINSON CHUSOE.

it wanted but a little that all my cargo had slipped off towards the
end lhat w as afli:; anld so fallen into t lie water. I did my utmost,
by setting my back again t tiht chests, to keep them in their places,
but could not thrust oil' tlie rai'l \ illi all my t rengtl ; ncit her durst
I slir flromii tlie postlure I was in, but holdlig up the chests with all
nmy might, I s ood in that manner near half :i hour, in which time
the rising of tlie water brought nme a little more upon a level ; mid
a little after, lihe water still rising, my raft, located again, ald I
thrust her- off wilt the oar I had into the channel, and then driving
up higher, I at length found myself in the moutil of a little river,
with land on both .ides, and a strongly current or title running up.
I looked on both sides for a proper place to get to shore. for I was
not willing to be driven too hill up ihe river; liopii,. in time. to
see some ship at sea, and therefore resolved to p!ace myself as near
the coast ,as I could.
At length I spied a little cove on the right shore of lihe creek, to
which, with gCreat pain and difficulty, I guided my raft, and at last
got so near, as lhat, reaching ground wih my oar, I could thrust
wier directly il; lbut here I had like to have dipped all my cargo into
tle sea a-ainl; for that shore lying pretty steep, that is to say,
sloping, there was no police to land, but where one end of my float,
if it ran on shore, iwo.d lie so high, and the other sink lower, as
before, that it would endanger my cargo again. All that I could do
was to wait till llie tide wats at the highest, keeping the raft with my
oar like anc amiI'r, to hold the side of it fast to the shore, near a
flat piece cf ground, which I expectell the water would flow over ;
and so it did. As soon as I found water enough, for my raft drew
about a foot of water, I thrust her upon that flat piece of ground,
anl there fastened or moored her, by sticking my two broken oars
into the ground, one o one side, near one end, and one on lhe other
side, near the oilier end : and tlis I lay till tie water ebbed a\way,
ani left mly raft and all my cargo safe oni shore.
My next work was to view lihe country, and seek a proper place
for ni; habitation, and where to stow Im goods, to secure them from
wNhatever might happen. lWhere I was I yet knew not; whetller
on the continent, or on an island; whellher inhabited, or not in-
halited ; whetlier in danger of wild beasts, or not. There was a
hill, not above a mile from me, which rose up very sleep and high,
and which seemed to overtop some other hills, which lay as in a
ridge from it, northward. I took out one of tihe fiio ling-pieces, and
one of the pistols, and a horn of powder; and thus armed, I travelled
for discovery up to the top of that hill; where, after I had, with
great labour and dillicultv, got up to the lop, I saw my fate, to my
great affliction, viz. that I xwas in an island, environed ini every way
witl llhe sea, no land to be seen, except some rocks, which laiv a
great way off, and iwo small islands, less than this, which lay about
three leagues to the west.








ADVENTURES OF ROBINSON CRISOE. 35

I found also that the island I was in was barren, and, as I saw
good reason to believe, uninhabited, except by wild beasts, of whom,
however, I saw none; yet I saw abundance of fowls, but knew not
their kinds; neither, when I killed them, could I tell what was fit
for food, and what not. At my coming back, I shot at a great bird,
which I saw sitting upon a tree, on the side of a great wood. I
believe it was the first gun that had been fired there since the
creation of the world: I had no sooner fired, but from all parts of
the wood there arose an innumerable number of fowls, of many
sorts, making a confused screaming, and crying, every one according
to his usual note; but not one of them of any kind that I knew.
As for the creature 1 killed, I took it to be a kind of a hawk, its
colour and beak resembling it, but it had no talons or claws more
than common. Its fle bh was carrion, ani lit for nothing.
I now began to consider that I might yet get a great many things
out of the ship, wiichl would be useful to Inm, and particularly some
of the rigging and sails, and sueh other things as mingt come to
land; and I resolved to make another voyage on board the vessel,
if possible. And as I knew that the first storm that blew must
necessarily break her all in pieces, I resolved to set all other things
apart, till I got everything out of the ship that I could get. Then
I called a council, that is to say, in my thoughts, whether I should
take back the raft.; but this appeared impracticable : so I resolved
to go as before, when the tide was down; and I did so, only that I
st ripped before I went, from my hut; having nothing on but a
clequered shirt, a pair of linen drawers, and a pair of pumps on my
feet.
I got on board the ship as before, and prepared a second raft;
and having had experience of the first, I neither made this so un-
wi ldy, nor loaded it so hard, but yet I brought away several things
very useful to me ; as, first, in the carpenter's stores, I found two
or tlree bags of nails and spikes, a great screw-jack, a dozen or two
of hatchets ; and, above all, that most uselui thing called a grind-
stone. All these I secured together, with several things belonging
to the gunner; particularly, two or three iron crows, and two barrels
of musket bullets, seven muskets, and another fowling-piece, with
some small quantity of powder more ; a large bag full of small shot,
and a great roll of sheet lead; but this last was so heavy, I could
not hoist it up to get it over the ship's side. Besides these things,
I took all the men's clothes that I could find, and a spare fore-top-
sail, a hammock, and some bedding; and with this I loaded my
second raft, and brought them all safe on shore, to my very great
comfort.
Having got my second cargo on shore-though I was fain to open
the barrels of powder, and bring them by parcels, for they were too
heavy, being large casks-I went to work to make a little tent, with
the sails, and some poles which I cut for that purpose; and into
D 2








86 ADVETLURES OF ROBIXSON ClOUSOE.

this tent I brought every thing that I knew would spoil either with
rain or sun; and I piled all tlh emipty hests and casks up in a ciirle
round the cent, to fortify it from any sudden attempt either from
man or beast.
When I had done this, I blocked up the door of the tent with
some boards within, and an empty chest set up on end without;
aad spreading one of the beds upon the ground, laying my two pistols
just at my head, and my gun at length by me, I went to bed for the
first time, and slept very quietly all night, for I was very weary and
heavy; for the night before I had slept little, and had labioured very
hard all day, as well to fl':leh all those things froin the ship, as to get
them oil siloc.



:,--a -- .


IIt













I had the biggest magazine of all kinds now that ever was laid
up, I believe, for one man : but I was not satisfied still; for while
the ship sat upright in that posture, I thought I ought to get every
thing out of her that I could; so every day, at low water, I went
on board, and brought away something or other : but particularly
the third time I went, I brought away as much of the rigging as I
could, as also all the small ropes and rope-twine I could get, with a
piece of spare canvass, which was to mend the sails upon occasion,
and the barrel of wet gunpowder. In a word, I brought away all
the sails first and last ; only that I was fain to cut them in pieces,
and bring as much at a time as I could; for they were no more
useful to be sails, but as mere canvass only.
But that which c )mforted me still iiiore was, that, last of all, after








ADVENTURES OF ROBINSON CRUSOE. 61

I had made five or six such voyages as these, and thought I had
nothing more to expect from the ship that was worth my meddling
with ; say, after all this, I found a great hogshead of brfd, and
three large' unlets of rum or spirits, and a box of sugar, and a barrel
of fine flour; this was surprising to me, because I had given over
expecting any more provisions, except what was spoiled by the
water. I soon emptied the hogshead of that bread, and wrapped it
up, parcel by parcel, in pieces of the sails, which I cut. out; and, in
a word, 1 got all this safe on shore also.
'Tlie next day 1 niade anol her voyage, and now having plundered
the ship of wliat was portable and lit to hlaned out, I began with the
cables, and cutting tlie great cable into pieces such as I could move,
J got two cables and a hawser on shore, xwill all the iron work I
could get ; and lhavini cut down the spritsail-yard, and the mizen-
yard, and everything I could, to make a large raft, I loaded it with
all those heavy goods, and came away: but. my good luck began now
to leave me; for this raft was so unwieldy, and so overladen, that
after I was entered the little cove, where I had landed the rest of
my goods, not being able to guide it so handily as I did the other, it
overset, and threw me and all my cargo into the water; as for
myself, it was no great harm, for I was near the shore; but as to
ny cargo, it was a great part of it lost, especially the iron, which 1
expected would have been of great use to me : however, when the
tide was out, I got most of the pieces of cable ashore, and some of
the iron, though with infinite labour; for I was fain to go for it into
the water, a work which fatigued me very much. After this I went
every day on board, and brought away what I could get.
I had been now thirteen days ashore, and had been eleven times
on board the ship; in which time I had brought away all that one
pair of hands could well be supposed capable to bring; though I
believe verily, had the calm weather held, I should have brought
away the wliole ship, piece by piece, but preparing the twelfth tune,
to go on board, I found the wind began to rise: however, at low
S water, I went on board; and though I thought I had rummaged the
cabin so effectually, as that nothing could be found, yet I discovered
a locker witl drawers in it, in one of which I found two or three
razors, and one pair of large scissors, with some ten or a dozen of
good knives and forks; in another I found about thirty-six pounds
Sin money, some European coin, some Brazil, some pieces of eight,
some gold, and some silver.
I smiled to myself at the sight of this money; O drug!" I ex-
claimed, what art thou good for? Thou art not worth to me, no,
not the taking off the ground; one of those knives is worth all this
heap: I have no manner of use for thee; e'en remain where thou
art, and go to the bottom, as a creature whose life is not worth
saving." However, upon second thoughts, I took it away; and
wrapping all this in a piece of canvass, I began to think of making
4








38 ADVENIIt&ES OF ROBINSON CRUSOE-

another raft; hut while I was preparing this, I found the sky over-
cast, and the wind began to rise, and in a quarter of an hour it blew
a fresh gale front the shore. It presently occurred to me, that it
was in vain to pretend to make a raft with the wind off shore ; and
that it was my business to be gone before the tide of flood began, or
otherwise I might not be able to reach the shore at all. Accordingly
I let myself down into the water, and swam across the channel
which lav between the ship and the sands, and even that with
dillicultl'enough, partly with the weight of the things I had about
me, and pari l the roughness of ihe water; for the wind rose very
hastily, and before it was quite high water it blew a storm.






.. :-- _







But I was at home to my little tent, vwhre I liy, with all my
wealth about me very secure. It blew very hard all ihai night, and
in the morning, when I looked out, behold no more ship was to ie
seen! I was a little surprised, but recovered myself with this
satisfactory reflection, viz., that I had .lost no time, nor abated no
diligence, to get everything nut of her, that could be useful to me,
and that, indeed, tIhere was little left in her that I was able to bring
away, if I had had more time.
I now gave over any more thoughts of the ship, or of anything
out of her, except what might drive on shore, from her wreck ; as,
indeed, divers pieces of her afterwards did; but those things were
of small use to me.
My thoughts were now wholly employed about securing myself
agailst either savages, if any should appear, or wild beasts, if any
were in the island; and I lhad many thoughts of the method how to
do this, aid what kind of dwelling to make, whether I should nlake
a cave in tlie earth, or a tent upon the earth ; and, in short, I resolved
upon both; the manner and description of which, it may not be
improper to give an account of.
I soon found tile place I was in was not for my settlement, par-
ticularly because it was upon a low, umoorish ground, near the sea,







ADVENTURES OF ROBINSON CRUSOL. .39

and I believed it would not be wholesome; and more particularly
because there was no fresh water near it: so I resolved to find a
more healthy and convenient spot of ground.
I consulted several things in my situation, which I found would
be proper for me; first, air and fresh water, I just now mentioned:
secondly, shelter from the heat of the sun: thirdly, security from
ravenous creatures, whether men or beasts: fourthly, a view to the
sea, that if God sent any ship in sight, I might not lose any advan-
tage for my deliverance, of which I was not willing to banish all my
expectation yet.
In search for a place proper for this, I found a little plain on the
side of a rising hill, whose front towards this little plain was steep
as a house-side, so that nothing could come down upon me from the
top. On the side of this rock, there was a hollow place, worn a
little way in, like the entrance or door of a cave ; but there was not
really any cave, or way into the rock, at all.
On the flat of the green, just before this hollow place, I resolved
to pitch my tent. This plain was not above one hundred yards
broad, and about twice as long, and lay like a green before my door;
and, at the end of it, descended irregularly every way down into the
low ground by the seaside. It was on the N.N.W. side of the hill;
so that it was sheltered from the heat every day, till it came to a
' W. and by S. sun or thereabouts, which, hi those countries, is near
S tie setting.
Before I set up my tent, I drew a half-circle before the hollow
place, which took in about ten yards in its semi-diameter from
the rock, and twenty yards in its diameter, from its beginning and
ending.
In this half-circle I pitched two rows of strong stakes, driving
them into the ground till they stood very firm like piles, the biggest
end being out of the ground, about five feet and a half, and
sharpened on the top. The two rows did not stand above six inches
from one another.
Then I took the pieces of cable which I cut in the ship, and laid
them in rows, one upon another, within the circle, between these
two rows of stakes, up to the top, placing other stakes in the inside,
leaning against them. about two feet and a half high, like a spur to
a post; and this fence was so strong, that neither man nor beast
could get into it or over it. This cost me a great deal of time and
labour, especially to cut the piles in the woods, bring them to the
place, and drive them into the earth.
S The entrance into this place I made to be not by a door, but by a
short ladder to go over the top ; which ladder, when I was in, I
lifted over after me; and so I was completely fenced in and fortified,
as I thought, from all the world, and consequently slept secure in
the night, which otherwise I could not have done; though, as it
appeared afterwards, there was no need of all this caution against
the enemies that I apprehended danger from.

















;V A
If


SECTION VI.


CARRIES ALL IIIS IrCHIES, PROVISIONS, ETC. INTO II S KPITTATION-
DRI\BIINELSS OF SOLIT UE-CONSOLA'ORY Il.iLl.Cl'ONS.

INTO this fence, or fortress, with infinite labour, I carried all my
riches, all my provisions, ammunition, and stores, of which you hava
the account above; and I made a large tent, which, to preserve me
from the rains, that in one part of the year are very violent there, I
made double, viz., one smaller tent within, and one larger tent above
it, and covered the uppermost with a large tarpaulin, which 1 had
saved among the sails.
And now I lay no more for a while in the bed which I had brought
on shore, but in a hammock, which was indeed a very good one, and
belonged to thi nIate of the ship.
Into this tent I brought all my provisions, and everything that
would spoil by the wet; and having thus enclosed all my goods, I
made up the entrance, which till now I had left open, and so passed
and repassed, as 1 said, by a short ladder.
SWhlen I had done this I began to work my way into the rock, and
b.ininng all the earth and stones that I dug down out through my
t:'nt, I aid them up within imy fence in the nature of a terrace, so
that it raised the ground within about a foot and a half; and thus I
made me a cave, just behind my tent, which served me like a cellar
to nmy house. It cost me much labour and many days, before all







ROITNSON CRUSOE.


these things were brought to perfection; and therefore, I must go
back to some other things which took up some of my thoughts. At
tile same time it happened, after I had laid my scheme for the
setting up of my tent, and making the cave, that a storm of rain
falling from a thick, dark cloud, a sudden flash of lightning happened,
and after that, a great clap of thunder, as is naturally the effect of
it. I was not so much surprised with the lightning as I was wilh
a thought which darted into my mind as swift as the lightning
it self: O my powder M1y very heart sunk within me when I thought,
that at one blast all my powder might be destroyed; on which not
my defence only, but the providing me food, as 1 thought, entirely
depended. I was nothing near so anxious about my own danger,
liough, had the powder taken fire, 1 should never have known who
had hurt me.
Such impressions did this make upon me, that after the storm was
over, I laid aside all my works, my building and fortifying, and
applied myself to make bags and boxes to separate the powder, and
to keep it a little and a little in a parcel, in hope that whatever
might come, it might not all take fire at once; and to keep it so
apart, that it should not be possible to make one part fire another.
I finished this work in about a fortnight; and I think my powder,
wliicih in all was about two hundred and forty pounds weight, was
divided into not less than a hundred parcels. As to the barrel that
had been wet, I did not apprehend any danger from that ; so I placed
it in my new cave, which, in miy fancy, 1 called my kitchen, and the
rest I hid up and down in holes among the rocks, so that no wet
night come to it, marking very carefully where I laid it.
In the interval of time while this was doinz. I went out at least
once every day wit h my gun. One day I 1.I I,.1 a she-goat, which
had a little kid by her, which she gave suck to, which grieved me
heartily; but when the old one fell, the kid stood stock still by her,
till I came and took her up ; and not only so, but when I carried the
old one with me, upon my shoulders, the kid followed me quite to
mly enclosure ; upon which I laid down the dam, and took the kid
in my arms, and carried it over my pale, in hopes to have bred it up
lame; but it would not eat; so I was forced to kill it, and eat it
myself. These two supplied me with flesh a great while, for I eat
sparingly, and preserved my provisions (my bread especially) as
much as possibly 1 could.
And now being about to enter into a melancholy relation of a
scene of silent life, such perhaps, as was never heard of in the world
before, I shall take it from its beginning, and continue it in its
order. It was, by my account, the 30th of September, when, in the
manner as above said, I first set foot upon this horrid island; when
the sun being to us in its autumnal equinox, was almost just over
my head: for I reckoned myself, by observation, to be in the latitude
of nine degrees twenty-two minutes north of the Line.
4*













'

-N
-`I



7;-


SECTION VII.


ROBINSON'S MODE OF RE(CKONING TIME-DIFFICULTIES ARISING FROM
WANT OF TOOLS--lHE ARRANGE IS S HABITATION.

AFTER I had been there about ten or twelve days, it came into my
thoughts that I should lose my reckoning of time for want of books,
and pen and ink, and should even forget the Sabbath days from the
working days: but, to prevent this, I cut it with my knife into a
large post, in capital letters; and making it into a great cross, I set
it up on the shore where I first landed, viz., "I came on shore here
on the 301th of September, 1659." Upon the sides of this square
post I cut every day a notch with my knife, and every seventh notch
was as long again as the rest, and every first day of the month as
long again as that long one: and thus I kept my calendar, or weekly,
monthly, and yearly reckoning of time.
But it happened, that among the many things which I brought out
of the ship, in the several voyages which, as above mentioned, I
made to it, I got several things of less value, but not at all less
useful to me, which I found some time after, in rummaging the chests
as in particular, pens, ink, and paper; several parcels in the captain's,
mate's, gunner's, and carpenter's keeping; three or four compasses,
some mathematical instruments, dials, perspectives, charts, and books
of navigation; all of which I huddled together, whether I might
want them or no: also I found three very good Bibles, which came to
me in my cargo from England,and which I had packed up among my








ADVENTURES OF ROBINSON CRUSOE.


things; some Portuguese books also, and, among them, two or three
popish prayer-books, and several other books, all which 1 carefully
secured. And I must not forget, that we had in the ship a dog, aind
two cats, of whose eminent history I may have occasion to say some-
thing, in its place; for I carried both the cats with me; and as for
the dog he jumped out of the ship himself, and swam on shore the
day after I went on shore with my first cargo, and was a trusty ser-
vant to me for many years: I wanted nothing that he could fetch
me, nor any company that he could make up to me, I only wanted
to have him talk to me, but that he could not do. As I observed
before, 1 found pens, ink, and paper, and I husbanded them to the
utmost; and I shall show that while my ink lasted, I kept things
very exact, but after that was gone I could not; for I could not
make any ink by any means that I could devise.
And this put me in mind that I wanted many things, notwithstand.
ing all that I had amassed together; and of these, this of ink was
one; as also a spade, pickaxe, and shovel, to dig or remove the
earth; needles, pins, and thread; as for linen, I soon learned to want
that without much difficulty.
This want of tools niad every work I did go on heavily: and it
was nearly a whole year before I had entirely finished my little pale,
or surrounded my habitation. The piles or stakes, which were as
heavy as 1 could well lift, were a long time in cutting and preparing
in the woods, and more by far in bringing home; so that I spent
sometimes two days in cutting and briningg home one of those posts,
and a third in driving it into the ground; for which purpose, I got a
leavy peace of woo at first, but at last bethought me of one of the
iron crows; which, however, though I found it answer, made driving
these posts or piles very laborious and tedious work. But what
need I have been concerned at the tediousness of anything I had
to do, seeing I had time enough to do it in; nor had I any other
employment, if that had been over, at least that I could foresee,
except the ranging the island to seek for food; which I did more or
less, every day.
I have already described my habitation, which was a tent under
the side of a rock, surrounded with a strong pale of posts and cables;
but I might now rather call it a wall, for I raised a kind of wall
against it of turfs, about two feet thick on the outside: and after
some time (I think it was a year and a half) I raised rafters from it,
leaning to tie rock, and thatched or covered it with boughs of trees,
and such things as I could get, to keep out the rain; which I found,
at some times of the year, very violent.
I have already observed how I brought all my goods into this pale,
and into the cave which I had made behind me. But I must ob-
serve, too, that at first thi- was a confused heap of goods, which, as
they lay in no order, so they took up all my place; I had no room to
turn myself: so I set myself to enlarge my cave, and work further








44 ADVENTURES OF ROBINSON CRUSOE.

into the earth; for it was a loose sandy rock, which yielded easily to
the labour I bestowed upon it; and when I found I was pretty
safe as to the beasts of prey, I worked sideways, to the right hand,



















into the rock, and then turning to the right again, worked quite
out, and made me a door to come out in the outside of my pale or
fortification.
This gave me not only egress and regress, as it were, a back way
to my tent and to my storehouse, but gave me room to stow my
goods.
And now I began to apply myself to make such necessary things as
I found I most wanted, particularly a chair and a table; for without
these I was not able to enjoy the few comforts I had in the world;
I could not write, or eat, or do several things with so much pleasure,
without a table; so I went to work. And here I must need ob-
serve, that as reason is the substance and original of mathematics,
so that by stating and squaring everything by reason, and by making
the most rational judgment of things, every man may be, in time,
master of every mechanic art. I had never handled a tool in my
life; and yet, in time, by labour, application, and contrivance I found
at last, that I wanted nothing but I could have made, especially if I
had had tools. However, I made abundance of things, even without
tools; and some with no more tools than an adze and a hatchet, which
perhaps were never made that way before, and that with infinite
abour. For example, if I wanted a board, I had no other way but
to cut down a tree, set it on an edge before me, and hew it flat on
either side with my axe, till I had brought it to be as tlin as a plank,







ADVENTURES OF ROBINSON CRUSOE. 45

and then dub it smooth with my adze. It is true, by Ihis method, I
could make but one board of a whole tree; but this I had no remedy
for but patience, any more than I had for a prodigious deal of time
and labour which it took me up to make a plank or board: but my
time or labour was little worth, and so it was as well employed one
way as another.
I made me a table and a chair, in the first place; and this I did
out of the short pieces of boards that I brought on my raft from the
ship. But when I wrought out some boards, as above, I made large
shelves, of the breadth of a foot and a half, one over another, all
along one side of my cave, to lay all my tools, nails and iron work
on; and, in a word, to separate every thing at large in their
places, that I might easily come at them. I knocked pieces into
the wall of the rock, to hang my guns, and all things that would
hang up; so that had my cave been seen, it looked like a general
magazine of all necessary things; and I had every thing so ready
at my hand, that it was a great pleasure to me to see all my goods
in such order, and especially to find my stock of all necessaries so
great.
And now it was that I began to keep a journal of every day's em-
ployment; for, indeed, at frst, I was in too much hurry, and not
only as to labour, but in much discomposure of mind; and my
journal would, too, have been full of many dull things.
Some days after this, and after I had been on board the ship and
got all that 1 could out of her, I could not forbear getting up to the
top ofa little mountain, and looking out to sea, in hopes of seeing a
ship : then fancy that, at a vast distance, I spied a sail, please my-
self with the hopes of it, and, after looking steadily, till I was almost
blind, lose it quite, and sit down and weep like a child, and thus
increase my misery by my folly.
But having got over these things in some measure, and having
settled my household stuff and habitation, made me a table and a
chair, and all about me as handsome as I could, I began to keep my
journal: of which I shall here give you the copy (though in it will be
told all these particulars over again) as long as it lasted; for having
no more ink, 1 was forced to leave it off.


(C',~----~
































SECTION VIII.


ROBINSON'S JOTTRNAL--DT.AILS OF HIIS DOMESTIC ECONOMY AND
CONTR~IVANCES-SHOCK OF AN EARTHQUAKE.

THE JOURNAL.

SEPTEMBER 30th, 1659. I, poor Imiserable Robinson Crusoe, being
shipwrecked, during a drhadf'ul storm, in tih ..if c .. came on shore
oil this dismal unfortunate island, which I illi.I the ISLAND OF
DKsrlUi; all the rest of the ship's conpanly being drowned, and
myself almost dead.
OCTOBEn 1. In thi morning I saw, to my great surprise, the ship
had floated v ithl the high tide, and was drive'- on shore again much
nearer the island. I hoped, if the wind abated, I might get on
board, and get some food and necessaries out of her for my relief.
I spent great part of this day in pe-lexing myself on these things;
but, at length, seeing the ship almost dry, I went upon the sand as
near as I could, and then swam on board. This day also it continued
raining, though with no wind at all.
From the 1st of October to lhe 24th. All these days entirely
spent in many several voyages to get all I could out of the ship;








ADVENIUES OF ROBINSON CRUSOE. 47

which I brought on shore, every tide of flood, upon rafts. Much rain
also in these days, though with some intervals of fair weather: but
it seems this was the rainy season.
OCT. 25. It rained all night and all day, with some gusts of
wind; during which time the ship broke in pieces (the wind blowing
a little harder than before) and was no more to be seen, except the
wreck of her, and that only at low water. I spent this day in
covering and securing the goods which I had saved, that the rain
might not spoil them.
From the 26th to the 30th, I worked very hard in carrying all my
goods to my habitation, though some part of the time it rained ex-
ceedingly hard.
The 31st, in the morning, I went out into the island with my gun,
to see for some food, and discover the country; when I killed a she-
oat, and her kid followed me home, which 1 afterwards killed also,
because it would not feed.
NOVEMBER 1. I set up my tent under a rock, and lay there for
the first night; making it as large as I could, with stakes driven in
to swing my hammock upon.
Nov. 4. This morning I began to order my times of work, of
going out with my gun, time of sleep, and time of diversion; viz.,
every morning I walked. out with my gun for two or three hours, if
it did not rain; then employed myself to work till about eleven
o'clock; then eat what I had to live on; and from twelve to two I
lay down to sleep, the weather being excessively hot; and then, in
the evening, to work again The working part of this day and the
uext was wholly employed in making my table, for I was yet but
a very sorry workman: though time and necessity made me a
complete natural mechanic soon after, as I believe they would any
one else.
Nov. 13. This day it rained; which refreshed me exceedingly,
and cooled the earlh : but, it was accompanied with terrible thunder
and lightning, which frightened me dreadfully, for fear of my
powder. As soon as it, was over I resolved to separate my stock
of powder into as many little parcels as possible, that it might not
be in danger.
Nov. 17. This day I began to dig behind my tent, into the rock,
to make room for my further convenience.
NOTE. Three things I wanted exceedingly for this work, viz., a
pickaxe, a shovel, and a wheelbarrow, or basket: so I desisted from
my work and began to consider how to supply these wants, and make
me some tools. As for pickaxe, I made use of the iron crows, which
were proper enough, though heavy: but the next thing was a
shovel or spade; this was so absolutely necessary, that, indeed, I
could do nothing effectually without it; but what kind ot one to
make I knew not.
S Nov. 18. The next day, in searching the woods, I found a tree of







ADYENTUEES OF IROINSON CKLSOE.


that wood, or like it, which, in the Brazils, they call the iron tree,
from its ( feedingg hirdness: of this, with great labour, and almost
spoiling ,my axe, I cut a piece; and brought it home, too, with diffi-
culty enough,.for it was exceeding heavy. The excessive hardness
of the wood, and my having no other way, made ne a long while
upon this machine: for I worked it effectually y by ttle and little,
into the form of a shovel or spade; the handle exactly shaped
like ours in England, only that the broad part having no iron shod
upon it at tie bottom, it would not last. me so long however, it
served well enough ,,r the uses which I had occasion to put it to;
but never was a shovel, 1 believe, made after that fashion, or so long
in making.



















Nov. 23. My otlerr work having now stood still, because of my
making these tools, when t hev were finished I went on ; and working
every day, as my strength ;i:d time allowed, I spent eighteen days
entirely in wi dcnil n and deepenin g my cave, that it might hold lmy
goods commodi'ul-iy.
DECELMBER ). I ):eaan now to think im cave or vault finished;
when on a sudden (it seems I had made it too large) a great quantity
of earth fell down from the op and one side ; so much, that, in short,
it frightened me. and not witl;out reason too ; for if I had been under
it, I should never have wanted a gi-avc-digc-er. Upon this disaster,
I had a great deal of wo!k to do over again, for I had the loose
earth to e:;rry out and, whiieh was of more importance, I had
the ceiling to prop up, so that I might be sure no more would come
down.
Dic. 11. This day I went to work with it accordingly; and got








ADVENTURES OF ROBINSON CRUSOE.


two shores or posts pitched upright to the top, with two pieces of
board across over each post: this I finished the next day; and
setting more posts up with boards, in about a week more I had the
roof secured; and the posts standing in rows, served me for parti-
tions to part off my house.
DEC. 17. From this day to the 20th, I placed shelves, and knocked
up nails on the posts, to hang everything up that could be hung up:
and now I began to be in some order within doors.
DEC. 20. I carried everything into the cave, and began to furnish
my house, and set up some pieces of boards, like a dresser, to order
my victuals upon; but boards began to be very scarce with me; also
I made me another table.
DEC. 28, 29, 30, 31. Great heats and no breeze; so that there
was no stirring abroad, except in the evening, for food; this time I
spent in putting all my things in order within doors.















JANUARY 1. Very hot still; but I went abroad early and late with
my gun, and lay still in the middle of the day. This evening, going
further into the valleys which lay towards the centre of the island,
I found there were plenty of goats, though exceedingly shy, and hard
to come at however, 1 resolved to try if I could not bring my dog
to hunt them down. Accordingly, the next day, I went out with my
dog, and set him upon the goats: but 1 was mistaken, for they all
faced about upon the dog: and he knew his danger too well, for he
would not come near them.
JAN. 3. I began my fence or wall; which, being still jealous of
my being attacked by somebody, I resolved to make very thick ani
strong.
During this time, 1 made my rounds in the woods for game every
day when the rain permitted me, and made frequent discoveriesnJn
these walks, of something or other to my advantage ; particularly, I
5 z








5U ADVENTURES OF ROBINSON CRUSOE.

found a kind of wild pigeons, who build, not as wood-pigeons, in a
tree, but rather as house-pigeons, in the holes of the rocks: and,
;tkiig some youig ones, I endeavoured to breed them up tame, and
did so; but when they grew older, they flew all away; which, per-
haps, was, at first, for want of feeding them, for I had nothing to
give them; however, I frequently found their nests, and got their
young ones, which were very good meat. In the middle of all my
labours it happened, that in rummaging my things, I found a little
bag; which, as I hinted before, had been filled with corn, for the
feeding of poultry; not for this voyage, but before, as I suppose,
when the ship came from Lisbon. X What little remainder ot corn
had been in the bag was all devoured by the rats, and I saw nothing
in the bag but husks and dust: and being willing to have the b:a
for some other use (I think it was to put powder in, when I divideA
it for fear of tile lightning, or some such use), I shook the husks of
corn out of it, on one side of my fortification, under the rock.
It was a little before the great rain now mentioned, that I threw
t is stuff away; taking no notice of anything,'and not so much as
remembering that I had thrown anything there: when, about a monti i
af ter, I saw some few s alks of something green shooting out of the
ground, w hichi 1 fancied might be some plant I had not seen ; but I
was surprised, and perfectly astonished, when, after a longer time, I
saw about ten or twelve ears come out, which were perfect green
barley, of the same kind as our European, nay, as our English
barley.
I at first thought these the pure productions of Providence for my
support; and, not doubting that there was more in the place, I went
over all that part of the island where I had been before, searching in
every corner, and under every rock, for more of it; but I could not
find any. At last it occurred to my thoughts, that I had shaken out
a bag of chicken's-meat in that place, and then the wonder began to
cease; and I must confess, my religious thankfulness to God's
providence began to abate, too, upon the discovering that all this
was nothing but what was common; though I ought to have been
as thankful for so strange and unforeseen a providence, as if it had
been miraculous: for it was really the work of Providence, as to me,
that should order or appoint that ten or twelve grains of corn should
remain unspoiled, when the rats had destroyed all the rest, as if it
had been dropped from heaven; as also, that I should throw it
out in that particular place, where, it being in the shade of a
high rock, it sprang up immediately; whereas, if I had thrown
it anywhere else, at that time, it would have been burned up and
dest oyed.
I carefully saved the ears of this corn, you may be sure, in their
season, which was about the end of June; and, laying up every corn,
I r-solved to sow them all again; hoping, in time, to have some
quartity suflicinut to supply me with bread. But it was not till the







ADVENTURES OF ROBINSON CRUsoE. 51
fourth year that I could allow myself the least grain of this corn
to ,au, and even then but sparingly, as I shall show afterwards in its
order; for 1 lost all that I sowed the first season, by not observing
the proper time; as I sowed just before the dry Season, so that it
never came up at all, at least not as it would have done: of which
in its place.
Besides this barley, there were, as above, twenty or thirty stalks
of rice, which I preserved with the same care; and whose use was
of the same kind, or to the same purpose, viz., to make me bread,
or rather food; for I found ways to cook it up without baking,
though I did that also after some time.--But to return to my Journa.
1 worked excessively hard these three or four months, to get my
wall done; and the 14th of April I closed it up; contriving to get
into it, not by a door, but over the wall, by a ladder, that there
might be no sign on the outside of my habitation.
APRIL 16. I finished the ladder; so I went up with the ladder
to the top, and then pulled it up after me, and let it down in the
inside: this was a complete enclosure to me; for within I had room
enough, and nothing could come at me from without, unless it could
first mount my wall.
The very next day after this wall was finished, I had almost all
my labour overthrown at once, and myself killed; the case was
thus --As I was busy in the inside of it, behind my tent, just at the
entrance into my cave, I was terribly frightened by a shock of an
earthquake!
I was so much amazed with the thing itself (having never felt the
like, nor discoursed with any one that had) that I was like one dead
or stupified; and the motion of the earth made my stomach sick, like
one that was tossed at sea: but the noise of the falling of the rock
awaked me, as it were, and rousing me from the stupified condition
I was in, filled me with horror, and I thought of nothing but the hill
falling upon my tent and my household goods, and burying all at
once; this sunk my very soul within me a second time.
After tile third shock was over, and I felt no more for some time,
I began to take courage; yet I had not heart enough to go over n.y
wall again, for fear of being buried alive; but sat still upon the
ground greatly cast down and disconsolate, not knowing what to do.
All this while I had not the least serious religious thought; nothing
but the common "Lord, have mercy on me!" and when it was over
that went away too.
This set me thinking about what I had best do; conclud-
ing, that if the island was subject to earthquakes, there would be
no living for me in a cave, but I must consider of building me some
little hut in an open place, which I might surround with a wall, as 1
had done here, and so make myself secure from wild beasts or men;
for if I staid where I was, I should certainly, one time or other, be
buried alive







ADTENTURES OF ROBINSON C tUSOE.


With these thoughts, I resolved to remove my tent from the place
where it, now stood, being just under the hanging precipice of the
hill, and which, if it should be shaken again, would certainly fall
upon my tent. I spent the next two days, being the 19th and 20th
of April, in contriving where and how to remove my habitation. I
resolved that I would go to work with all speed to build me a wall
with piles and cables, &c. in a circle as before, and set my tent in it
when it was finished; but that I would venture to stay where I was
till it was ready, and fit to remove to. This was the 21st.
APIIL 22. The next morning I began to consider of means to put
this measure into execution; and I was at a great loss about the
















tools. I had three large axes, and abundance of hatchets (for we
carried the hatchets for traffic with the Indians); but with much
chopping and cutting knotty hard wood, they were all full of notches,
and dull and though I had a grindstone, I could nor turn it and
grind my tools too. This caused me as much thought as a states-
man would have bestowed upon a grand point of politics, or a judge
upon the life and death of a man. At length I contrived a wheel
with a string, to turn it with my foot, that I might have both my
hands at liberty.
ArmIL 28, 29. These two whole days I took up in grinding my
tools, my machine for turning my grindstone performing very well.
APIL 30. Having perceived that my bread had been low a great
while, I now took a survey of it, and reduced myself to one biscuit-
cake a day, which made my heart very heavy.










~~- -
9%


SECTION IX.

ROBINSON OBTAINS MORE ARTICLES FROM THE WRECK-
ILLNESS AND AFFLICTION.

MAY 1. In the morning, looking towards the sea-side, the tide
being low, I saw something lie on the shore bigger than ordinary,
and it looked like a cask; when I came to it I found a small barrel,
and two or three pieces of the wreck of the ship, which were driven
on shore by the late hurricane; and looking towards the wreck itself,
1 thought it seemed to lie higher out of the water than it used to do.
I examined the barrel that was driven son shore, and soon found it
was a barrel of gunpowder; but it had taken water, and the powder
was caked as hard as a stone; however, I rolled it farther on the
shore for the present, and went on upon the sands, as near as I could
to the wreck of the ship, to look for more.
When I came down to the ship, I found it strangely removed.
The forecastle, which lay buried in the sand, was heaved up at least
six feet; and the stern (which was broke to pieces, and parted from
the rest, by the force of the sea, soon after I had left rummaging her)
was tossed, as it were, up, and cast on one side: and the sand was
thrown so high on that side next her stern, that I could now walk
quite up to her when the tide was out.
This wholly diverted my thoughts from the design of removing my
habitation; and I busied myself mightily, that day especially, in
searching whether I could make any way into the ship; but I found
nothing was to be expected of that kind, for all the inside of the ship
was choked up with sand. However, as I had learned not to despair
of anything, I resolved to pull everything to pieces that I could of
the ship, concluding that everything I could get from her would be
of some use or other to me.
5*


-


ac
OiP =h---=~- ~-i_:--r~^~
J- ---C~-








b4 ADVENTURES OF ROBINSON CRUSOR.

MAY 3. I began with my saw, and cut a piece of a beam through,
which I thought held some of the upper part or quarter-deck to-
gether: and when I had cut it through, 1 cleared away the sand as well
as I could from the side which lay highest; but the tide coming in, I
was obliged to give over for that time.
IMAY 4. I went a fishing, but caught not one fish that I durst eat
of, till I was weary of my sport; when just going to leave off, I
caught a young dolphin. I had made a long line of some rope-yarn,
but I had no hooks; yet I frequently caught fish enough, as much
as I cared to eat; all of which I dried in the sun, and ate them dry.
MAx 5 to 24. Every day, to this day, I worked on the wreck;
and with hard labour I loosened some things so much, with the crow,
that the first blowing tide several casks floated out, and two of the
seamen's chests ; but the wind blowing from shore, nothing came to
laud that day but pieces of timber, and a hogshead, which Tfad some
Brazil pork in it. I continued this work every day to the 15th of
June, except the time necessary to get food; which I always
appointed, during this part of my employment to be when the tide
was up, that I might be ready when it was ebbed out; and by this
time I had gotten timber, and plank, and iron work, enough to have
built a good boat, if I had known how; and I also got, at several
times, and in several pieces, near one hundred weight of the sheet-
lead.
JUNE 16. Going down to the seaside, I found a large tortoise, or
turtle. This was the first I had seen; which, it seems, was only to
my misfortune, not any defect of the place or scarcity; for had I
happened to be on the other side of the island, I might have had
hundreds of them every day, as I found afterwards; bu perhaps had
paid dear enough for them.
JUNE 17. I spent in cooking the turtle. I found in her three-
score eggs; and her flesh was to me, at that time, the most savoury
and pleasant that I ever tasted in my life ; having had no flesh, but
of goats and fowls, since 1 landed in this horrid place.
JUNE 18. Itained all day, and I stayed within. I thought at
this time, the rain felt cold, and I was somewhat chilly ; which I
knew was not usual in that latitude.
JUNE 19. Very ill, and shivering, as if the weather had been
cold.
JUNE 20. No rest all night; violent pains in my head, and feverish.
JUNE 21. Very ill; frightened almost to death with the apprehen-
sions of my sad condition, to be sick, and no help ; prayed to God,
for the first time since tile storm off Hull; but scarce knew what I
said, or why, my thoughts being all confused.
JUNE 22. A little better; but under dreadful apprehensions of
sickness.
JUNE 23. Very bad again; cold and shivering, and then a violent
headache.







ADVENTURES OF ROBINSON CROSOE. 55
JUNE 24. Much better.
JUNE 25. An ague very violent; the fit held me seven hours;
cold fit, and hot, with faint sweats after it.
JUNE 26. Better; and having no vituals to eat, took my gun, but
found myself very weak; however, I killed a she-goat, and with
much difficulty got it home, and broiled some of it, and ate. T'
would fain have stewed it, and made some broth, but had no pot.
JUNE 27. The ague again so violently that I lay a-bed all day,
and neither ate nor drank. I was ready to perish for thirst; but so
weak, I had not the strength to stand up, or get myself any water
to drink. Prayed to God again, but was light-headed; and when I
was not, I was so ignorant that I knew not what to say; only lay
and cried, Lord, look upon me! Lord, pity me! Lord, have mercy
upon me !" I suppose I did nothing else for two or three hours; till
the fit wearing off, I fell asleep, and did not wake till far in the night.
When I awoke, I found myself much refreshed, but weak, and
exceeding thirsty; however, as I had no water in my whole habita-
tion, 1 was forced to lie till morning.
1 had, alas! no divine knowledge: what I had received by the
good instruction of my father was then worn out, by an uninterrupted
series, for eight years, of seafaring wickedness, and a constant
conversation with none but such as were, like myself, wicked and
profane to the last degree. I do not remember that I had, in all
that time, one thought that so much as tended either to looking
upward towards God, or inward towards a reflection upon my own
ways; but a certain stupidity of soul, without desire of good, or
consciousness of evil, had entirely overwhelmed me; and I was all
that the most hardened, unthinking, wicked creature among our
common sailors, can be supposed to be; not having the least sense,
either of tle fear of God, in danger, or of thankfulness to him, in
deliverances.
It is true, when I first got on shore here, and found all my ship's
cr v drowned, and myself spared, I was surprised with a kind of
ecstacy, and some transports of soul, which, had the grace of God
assisted, might have come up to true thankfulness; but it ended
where it began, in a mere common flight of joy, or, as I may say,
being glad I was alive, without the least reflection upon the distin-
guished goodness of the hand which had preserved me, and had
singled me out to be preserved when all the rest were destroyed, or
an inquiry why providence had been thus merciful to me; just the
same common sort of joy which seamen have, after they are got safe
ashore from a shipwreck ; which they drown all in the next bowl of
punch, and forget almost as soon as it is over; and all the rest of my
life was like it, Even when I was, afterwards, on due consideration,
made sensible of my condition,-how I was cast off on this dreadful
place, out of the reach of human kind, out of all hope of relief, or
prospect of redemption, -as soon as I saw but a prospect of living,







Al ADVENTURES OF ROBINSON CRUSOE.
and that I should not starve and perish for hunger, all the sense of
affliction wore off, and I became to be very easy, applied myself to
the works proper for my preservation and supply, and was far enough
from being afflicted at my condition, as a judgment from heaven, or
as the hand of God against me; these were thoughts which very
seldom entered into my head.

















But now, when I began to be sick, and a leisure view of the
miseries of death came to place itself before me; when my spirits
began to sink under the burden of a strong distemper, and nature
was exhausted with the violence of the fever; conscience, that had
slept so long, began to awake; and I reproached myself with my
past life, in which I had so evidently, by uncommon wickedness,
provoked the justice of God to lay me under uncommon strokes, and
to deal with me in so vindictive a manner.
Now," said I, aloud, my dear father's words are come to pass;
God's justice has overtaken me, and I have none to help or hear me.
I rejected the voice of Providence, which had mercifully put me in a
station of life wherein I might have been happy and easy; but I
would neither see it myself, nor learn from my parents the blessing
of it. I left them to mourn over my folly; and now I am left to
mourn under the consequences of it." Then I cried out," Lord, be my
help, for I am in great distress." This was the first prayer, if I may
call it so, that I had made for many years. But I return to my
Journal.

























SECTION X.


HIIS RECOVERY-HIS COMFORT IN READING THE SCRIPTURES-
MAKES AN EXCURSION INTO THE INTERIOR OF THE ISLAND-
FORMS HIS "BOWER."
JuNE 28. Having been somewhat refreshed with the sleep I had
had, and the fit being entirely off, I got up, and considered now
was my time to get something to refresh and support myself
when I should be ill. The first thing I did was to fill a large
case-bottle with water, and set it upon my table, in reach of my bed;
and to take off the chill or aguish disposition of the water, I put
about a quarter of a pint of rum into it, and mixed them together.
Then I got me a piece of the goat's flesh, and broiled it on the coals,
but could eat very little. I walked about, but was very weak, and
withal very sad and heavy-hearted in the sense of my miserable con-
dition. dreading the return of my distemper the next day.
Now, as the apprehension of the return of my distemper'terrified
me very much, it occurred to my thought, that the Brazilians take
no physic but their tobacco for almost all distempers; and I had a
piece of a roll of tobacco in one of the chests, which was quite
cured; and some also that was green, and not quite cured.
I went, directed by Heaven, no doubt: for in this chest I found a
cure both for soul and body. I opened the chest, and found what I
looked for, viz., the tobacco; and as the few books I had saved lay
there too, I took out one of the Bibles which I mentioned before,
and which, to this time, I had not found leisure or so much as
inclination, to look into. I say, I took it out, and brought both
that and the tobacco with me to the table. What use to make of


4(








ADVENTURES OF ROBINSON CRUSOE.


the tobacco I knew not, as to my distemper, nor whether it was
good for it or not ; but I tried several experiments with it, as if I
was resolved it should hit one way or other. 1 first took a piece of
a leaf, and chewed it in my mouth ; whicl, indeed, at first, almost
stupified my brain; the tobacco being green and strong, and such
as I had not been much used to. Then I took some and steeped it
an hour or two in some rum, and resolved to take a dose of it when
1 lay down: and lastly, 1 burnt some upon a pan of coals, and held
my nose close over tie smoke of it as long as I could bear it; as
well for the heat, as almost for suffocation. In the interval of this
operation, I took up the Bible, and began to read : but my head was
too much disturbed by the tobacco to bear reading, at least at that
time ; only, having opened the book casually, the first words that
occurred to me were these: Call on me in the day of trouble, and
I will deliver thee, and thou shalt glorify me." These words were
very apt to my case; and made some impression upon my thoughts
at the time of reading them, though not so much as they did after-
wards ; for, as for being delivered, the word had no sound, as I may
say, to me; the thing was so remote, so impossible in my appre-
hension of things, that, as the children of Israel said when they
were promised flesh to eat, "Can God spread a table in the wilder-
ness ?" so I began to say, Can even God himself deliver me from
this place?" And as it. was not for many years that any hopes
appeared, this prevailed very often upon my thoughts: but, however,
the words made a great impression upon me, and I mused upon
them very often. It now grew late: and the tobacco had, as I said,
dozed my head so much, that I inclined to sleep: so I left my lamp
burning in the cave, lest I should want anything in the night, and
went to bed. But before I lay down, I did what 1 never had done
in all my life: 1 kneeled down, and prayed to God to fulfil the
promise to me, that if I called upon him in the day of trouble, lie
would deliver me. After my broken and imperfect prayer was over,
I drank the rum in which I lild steeped the tobacco ; which was so
strong and rank of 1lie tobacco, that indeed I could scarce get it
down ; immediately upon this I went to bed. I found presently the
rui flew up into my head violently; but I fell into a sound sleep,
and waked no more till by the sun, it must necessarily be near three
o'clock in the afternoon the next day; nay, to this hour, I am partly
of opinion, that I slept all the next day and night, and till almost
three the day after; for otherwise, I know not how I should lose a
day out of my reckoning in the days of the week, as it appeared
some years after I had done; for if I had lost it by crossing and
re-crossing the Line, I should have lost more than one day; but
certainly I lost a day in my account, and never knew which way.
Be that, however, one way or the other, when I awaked I found
myself exceedingly refreshed, and my spirits lively and cheerful:
when I got up 1 was stronger than I was the day before, and my








ADVENTURES OF ROBINSON CIUSOE. 59

stomach better, for I was hungry: and, in short, I had no fit the
next day, but continued much altered for the better. This was the
29th.
The 30th was my well day, of course; and I went abroad with
my gun, but did not care to travel too far. I killed a seafowl or
















two, something like a brand goose, and brought them home; but
.was not very forw ard to eat them ; so I ate sonic more of the turtle's
eggs, which were very good. This evening I renewed the medicine,
which I had supposed did me good the day before, viz the tobacco
steeped in rum; only I did not take so much as before, nor did I
chew any of the leaf, or hold my head over the smoke: however, I
was not so well the next day, which was the 1st of July, as I hoped
I should have been; for I fad a little of the cold fit, but it was not
much.
JULIY 2 and 3. I renewed the medicine all the three ways; and
dosed myself with it as at first, and doubled the quantity which I
drank.
JULY 4. In the morning I took the Bible; and beginning at the
New Testament, I began seriously to lead it; and imposed upon
myself to read a while every morning and every night; not binding
myself to the number of chapters, but as long as my thoughts
should engage me. It was not long after I set seriously to this
work, that I found my heart sincerely affected with the wickedness of
my past life. The words, "All these things have not brought thee to
repmntance," ran seriously in my thoughts. I was earnestly begging
of God to give me repentance, when it happened providentially, the
very same day, that, reading the scripture, I came to these words,
He is exalted a Prince and a Saviour; to give repentance and to







UU ADVENTURES OF ROBISSON CRUSO.

give remission." I threw down the book; and with my heart as
well as my hands lifted up to heaven, in a kind of ecstasy of joy, I
cried out aloud, Jesus, thou son of David Jesus, thou exalted
Prince and Saviour give me repentance." This was the first time
in all my life I' could say, in the true sense of the words, that I
prayed; for now I prayed with a sense of my condition, and with a
true scripture view of hope, founded on the encouragement of the
word of God: and from this time, I may say, I began to have hope
that God would hear me.















From the 4th of July to the 14th, I was chiefly employed in
walking about with my gun in my hand, a little and a little at a
time, as a man that was gathering up his strength after a fit of sick-
ness: for it is hardly to be imagined how low I was, and to what
weakness I was reduced. The application which I made use of was
perfectly new, and perhaps what had never cured an ague before:
neither can I recommend it to any one to practise, by this experi-
ment: and though it did carry off the fit, yet it rather contributed
to weakening me; for I had frequent convulsion in my nerves and
limbs for some time : I learned from it also this, in particular; that
being abroad in the rainy season was the most pernicious thing to my
health that could be, especially in those rains which came attended
with storms and hurricanes of wind ; for as the rain which came in
the dry season was almost always accompanied with such storms, so
I found that this rain was much more dangerous than the rain which
fell in September and October.
I had now been in this unhappy island above ten months: all
possibility of deliverance from this condition seemed to be entirely
taken from me; and I firmly believed that no human shape had ever
set foot upon that place. Having secured my habitation, as I
thought, fully to my mind, I had a great desire to make a more







ADVENTURES OF ROBINSON CRUSOE. 81

perfect discovery of the Island, and to see what other productions
I might find, which I yet knew nothing of.
It was on the Ibth of July that I began to take a more particular
survey of the island itself. I went up the creek first, where, as I
hinted, I brought my rafts on shore. I found, after I came about
two miles up, that the tide did not flow any higher; and that it was
no more than a little brook of running water, very fresh and good:
but this being the dry season, there was hardly any water in some
parts of it; at least, not any stream. On the banks of this brook
1 found many pleasant savannahs or meadows, plain, smooth, and
covered with grass ; and on the rising parts of them, next to the
higher grounds (where the water, as it might be supposed, never
overflowed), I found a great deal of tobacco, green, and growing to
a very great and strong stalk: and there were divers other plants,
which I had no knowledge of, or understanding about, and that
might, perhaps, have virtues of their own, which I could not find
out. I searched for the cassava root, whlich the Indians, in all that
climate, make their bread of; but I could find none. I saw large
plants of aloes, but did not understand them. I saw several sugar-
canes, but wild; and, for want of cultivation, imperfect. I con-
tented myself with these discoveries for this time; and came back,
musing with myself what course I might take to know the virtue
and goodness of any of the fruits or plants which I should discover;
but could bring it to no conclusion; for, in short, I had made so
little observations while I was in the Brazils. that I knew little of the
plants in the fields; at least, very little that might serve me to any
purpose now in my distress.
The next day, the 16th, I went up the same way again; and after
going something farther than I had gone the day before, I found the
brook and the savaunahs begin to cease, and the country become
more woody than before. In this part I found different fruits ; and
particularly I found melons upon the ground in great abundance,
and grapes upon the trees : the vines, indeed, had spread over the
trees, and the clusters of grapes were now just in their prime, very
ripe. and rich. This was a surprising discovery, and I was ex-
ceedingly glad of them, but I was warned by my experience to eat
sparingly of them, remembering that when I was ashore in Barbary,
thle eating of grapes killed several of our Englishmen, who were
slaves there, by throwing them into fluxes and fevers. I found,
however, an excellent use for these grapes; and that was to cure or
dry them in the sun, and keep them as dried grapes or raisins are
kept ; which I thought would be (as indeed they were) as whole.
some and as agreeable to eat, when no grapes were to be had.
Having spent three days in this journey, I came home, so I must
now call my tent and my cave.
When I came home from this journey, I contemplated with great
pleasure the fruitfulness of that valley, and the pleasantness of the
6







OZ ADVENTURES OF ROBINSON CRUSOE.

situation; the security from storms on that side ; the water and the
wood; and concluded that I had pitched upon a place to fix my
abode in, which was by far the worst part of the country. Ul)on
the whole, I began to consider of removing my habitation, and tn








-'








look out for a place equally safe as where I was now situate; if
possible, in that pleasant fruitful part of the island.
I was so enamoured of this place, that I spent much of my time
there for the whole remaining part of the month of July; and
though, upon second thoughts, I resolved not to remove, yet I built
me a little kind of a bower, and surrounded it at a distance with a
strong fence, being a double hedge, as high as I could reach, well
staked, and filled between with brushwood. Here I lay very secure
sometimes two or three nights together; always going over it with
a ladder, as before: so that I fancied now I had my country and
my sea-coast house. This work took me up to the beginning of
August.
About the beginning of August, I had finished my bower, and
began to enjoy myself. The 3rd of August, I found the grapes I
had hung up were perfectly dried, and indeed were excellent good
raisins of tle sun; so I began to take them down from the trees;
and it was very happy that I did so, as the rains which followed
would have spoiled them, and I should have lost the best part of my
winter food; for I had above two hundred large bunches of them.
No sooner had I taken them all down, and carried most of them
home to my cave, but it began to rain: and from hence, which was
the 14th of August, it rained, more or less, every day till the middle
of October; and sometimes so violently, that I coula not stir out of
my cave for several duiys.







ADVENTURES OF ROBINSON CRUSOE. 63

In this season, I was much surprised with the increase of my
family. I had been concerned for the loss of one of my cats, who
ran away from me, or, as I thought, had been dead; and I heard no
more of her, till, to my astonishment, she came home with three
kittens. This was the more strange to me, because, about the end













of August, though I had killed a wild cat, as I called it, with my
gun, yet I thought it was quite a different kind from our European
cats: yet the young cats were the same kind of house-breed as the
old one; and both of my cats being females, I thought it very
strange. But from these three, I afterwards came to be so pestered
with cats that I was forced to kill them like vermin, or wild beasts,
and to drive them from my house as much as possible.
From the 14th of August to the 26th, incessant rain; so that I
could not stir, and was now very careful not to be much wet. In
this confinement, I began to be straitened for food, but venturing out
twice, I one day killed a goat, and the last day, which was the 24th,
found a very large tortoise, which was a treat to me. My food was
now regulated thus: I ate a bunch of raisins for my breakfast; a
piece o? the goat's flesh, or of the turtle, broiled for my dinner, (for,
to my great misfortune, I had no vessel to boil or stew anything,)
and two or three of the turtle's eggs for my supper.
During this confinement in my cover from the rain, I worked daily
two or three hours at enlarging my cave; and by degrees worked it
on towards one side, till I came to the outside of the hill: and made
a door, or way out, which came beyond my fence or wall; and so I
came in and out this way. But I was not perfectly easy at lying so
open: for as I had managed myself before, I was in a perfect
enclosure; whereas now, I thought I lay exposed; and yet I could
not perceive that there was any living thing to fear, the biggest
creature that I had as yet seen upon the island being a goat.
SEPTEMBER 30. I was now come to the unhappy anniversary of
my landing: I cast up the notches on my post, and found I had







64 ADVENTURES OF ROBINSON CRUSOE.

been on shore three hundred and sixty-five days. I kept this day as
a solemn fast! setting it apart for religious exercise, prostrating
myself on the ground with the most serious humiliation, confessing
my sins to God, acknowledging his righteous judgments upon me,
and praying to him to have mercy on me through Jesus Christ; ann
having not tasted the least refreshment for twelve hours, even till
the going down of the sun, I then ate a biscuit and a bunch of
grapes, and went to bed, finishing the day as I began it. I had all
this time observed no sabbath-day; for as at first I had no sense of
religion upon my mind, I had, after some time, omitted to distinguish
the weeks, by making a longer notch than ordinary for the sabbath-
day, and so did not really know what any of the days were: but
nowl having cast up the days, as above, I found I had been there a
year; so I divided it into weeks, and set apart every seventh day for
a sabbatl : though I found, at the end of my account, I had lost a
d.ty or two in my reckoning. A little after this, my ink beginning
to fail me, I contented myself to use it more sparingly; and to
write down only the most remarkable events of my life.
The rainy season and the dry season began now to appear regular
to me, and I learned to divide them so as to provide for them
accordingly ; but I bought all my experience before I had it.
While my corn was growing, I made a little discovery, which was
of use to me afterwards. As soon as the rains were over, and the
weather began to settle, which was about the month of November,
I made a visit up the country to my bower; where, though I had
not been for some months, yet I found all things just as I had left
them. The circle or double hedge that I had made was not only firm
and entire, but the stakes which 1 had cut out of some trees that grew
thereabouts, were all shot out and grown with long branches, as
much as a willow-tree usually shoots the first year after lopping its
head; but I could not tell what tree to call it that these stakes were
cut from. I was surprised, and yet very well pleased, to see the
young trees grow; and I pruned them, and led them to grow as
much alike as I could: and it is scarce credible how beautiful a
figure they grew into in three years: so that, though the hedge
made a circle of about twenty-five yards in diameter, yet the trees,
for such I might now call them, soon covered it, and it was a com-
plete shade, sufficient to lodge under all the dry season. This made
me resolve to cut some more stakes, and make me a hedge like this, in
a semicircle round my wall (I mean that of my first dwelling), which
I did: and placing the trees or stakes in a double row, at about eight
yards distance from my fence, they grew presently; and were at
first a fine cover to my habitation, and afterwards served for a
defence also; as I shall observe iu its order.





























SECTION XI.
ROBINSON MAKES A TOUR TO EXPLORE HIS ISLAND.

I FOUND now that the seasons of the year might generally be divided,
not into summer and winter as in Europe, but into the rainy seasons
and the dry seasons, which were generally thus: From the middle
of February to the middle of April, rainy; the sun being then on
or near the equinox. From the middle of April till the middle of
August, dry; the sun being then north of the Line. From the middle
August till the middle of October, rainy; the sun being then come
back to the Line. From the middle of October till the middle of
February, dry; the sun being then to the south of the Line.
The rainy seasons held sometimes longer and sometimes shorter,
as the winds happened to blow; but this was the general observation
I made. After I had found, by experience, the ill consequences of
being abroad in the rain, I took care to furnish myself with provisions
beforehand, that I might not be obliged to go out; and I sat within
doors as much as possible during the wet months. In this time I found
much employment, and very suitable also to the time ; as I found
great occasion for many things which I had no way to furnish myself
with, but by hard labour and constant application; particularly, I
tried many ways to make myself a basket; but all the twigs I could
get for the purpose proved so brittle that they would do nothing. It
proved of excellent advantage to me now, that when I was a boy, I
used to take great delight in standing at a basket-maker's in the
town where my father lived, to see them make their wicker-ware;
6* r


WOR t
A


.n~gc_



J'







66 ADVENTURES OF ROBINSON CRUSOE.
and being, as boys usually are, very officious to help, and a great
observer of the manner how they worked those things, and sometimes
lending a hand, I had by these means full knowledge of the methods
of it, so that I wanted nothing but the materials; when it came into
my mind, that the twigs of that tree from whence I cut my stakes
that grew, might possibly be as tough as the sallows, willows, and
osiers, in England, and I resolved to try. Accordingly, the next
day, I went to my country-house, as I called it, and cutting some of
the smaller twigs, I found them to my purpose as much as I could










4 -- ,, -





desire; whereupon I came the next time prepared with a hatchet to
cut down a quantity, which I soon found, for there was great plenty
of them. These I set up to dry within my circle or hedge; and
when they were fit for use, I carried them to my cave ; and there,
during the next season, 1 employed myself in making, as well as
I could, several baskets; both to carry earth, or to carry or lay up
anything I had occasion for. Though I did not finish them very
handsomely, yet I made them sufficiently serviceable for my purpose;
and thus, afterwards, I took care never to be without them; and as
my wicker-ware decayed, I made more; especially strong deep
baskets to place my corn in, instead of sacks, when I should come
to have any quantity of it.
I mentioned before, that I had great mind to see the whole island;
and that I had travelled up the brook, and so on to where I had
built my bower, and where I had an opening quite to the sea, on the
other side of the island. I now resolved to travel quite across to
the sea-shore, on that side ; so taking my gun, a hatchet, and my
dog, ard a larger quantity of powder and shot than usual, with two
biscuit-cakes, and great bunch of raisins in my pouch, for my store,








ADVENTURES OF ROBINSON CRUSOE. 07

I began my journey. When I had passed the vale where my bower
stood, as above, I came within view of the sea, to the west; and it
being a clear day, I fairly described land, whether an island or con-
tinent I could not tell; but it lay very high, extending from W. to W.
S.W. at a very great distance; by my guess, it could not be less
than fifteen or twenty leagues off.














I could not tell what part of the world this might be; otherwise
than that I knew it must be part of America, and as I concluded
by all my observations, must be near the Spanish dominions; and
perhaps was all inhabited by savages, where, if I should have landed,
I had been in a worse condition than I was now. I therefore ac-
quiesced in the disposition of Providence, which I began now to
own and to believe ordered everything for the best ; I say, I quieted
my mind with this, and left off afflicting myself with fruitless wishes
of being there. Besides, after some reflection upon this affair,
I considered that if this land was the Spanish coast, I should certainly
one time or other, see some vessel pass or repass one way or other;
but if not, then it was a savage coast between the Spanish country
and the Brazils, whose inhabitants are indeed the worst of savages;
for they are cannibals, or men-eaters, and fail not to murder and
devour all human beings that fall into their hands.
With these considerations, walking very leisurely forward, I found
this side of the island, where I now was, much pleasanter than mine;
the open or savannah fields sweetly adorned with flowers and grass,
and full of very fine woods. I saw abundance of parrots; and fain
would have caught one, if possible, to have kept it to be tame, and
taught it to speak to me. I did, after taking some pains catch a
young parrot; for I knocked it down with a stick, and, having recov-
ered it, I brought it home; but it was some years before I could
make him spea&; however, at last I taught him to call me by my
name very familiarly.








r ADVENTURES OF ROBINSON CRUSOE.

I was exceedingly amused with this journ-y. I found in the low
grounds hares, as I thought them to be, and foxes; but they differed
greatly from all the other kinds 1 had met with; nor could I satisfy
myself to eat them, though I killed several. But I had no need to
be venturous; for I had no want of food, and of that which was very
good too, especially these three sorts, viz. goats, pigeons, and turtle,
or tortoise.
As soon as I came to the sea-shore, I was surprised to see that I
had taken up my lot on the worst side of the island; for here indeed
tlie shore was covered with innumerable turtles; whereas, on the
other side I had found but three in a year and a half. Here was
also an infinite number of fowls of many kinds ; some of which I had
not seen before, and many of them very good meat, but such as I knew
not the names of, except those called penguins.
I confess this side of the country was much pleasanter than mine;
yet I had not the least inclination to remove; for as I was fixed in my
habitation, it became natural to me, and I seemed all the while I was
here to be as it were upon a journey, and from home. However, I
travelled along the seashore towards the east, I suppose about twelve
miles, and then setting up a great pole upon the seashore for a mark,
I concluded I would go home again ; and that the next journey I
took should be on the other side of the island, east from my dwelling,
and so round till I came to my post again; of which in its place.
I took another way to come back than that I went, thinking I could
easily keep so much of the island in my view, that I could not miss
finding my first dwelling by viewing the country ; but I found myself
mistaken; for being come about two or three miles, 1 found myself
descended in a very large valley, but so surrounded with hills, and
those hills covered with wood, that I could not see which was my way
by any direction but that of the sun, nor even then, unless I knew
very well the position of the sun at that time of the day. And it
happened to my farther misfortune, that the weather proved hazy for
three or four days while I was in this valley; and not being able to
see the sun, I wandered about very uncomfortable, and at last was
obliged to find out the seaside, look for my post, and come back the
same way I went; and then by easy journeys I turned homeward,
the weather being exceeding hot, and my gun, ammunition, hatchet,
and other things very heavy. I,























SECTION XII.
HEJ-ETURNS TO HIS CAVE-HIS AGRICULTURAL LABOURS AND
SUCCESS.
IN this journey, my dog surprised a young kid and seized upon it;
and I running to take hold of it, caught it and saved it alive from
the dog. I had a great mind to bring it home if I could; for I had
often been musing whether it might not be possible to get a kid or
two, and so raise a breed of tame goats, which might supply me with
food when my powder and shot were 11 spent. I made a collar for
this little creature, and with a string which I had made of some rope
yarn, which I always carried about me, I led him along, though with
some difficulty, till I came to my bower, and there I enclosed him
and left him; for I was very impatient to be at home, from whence
I had been absent above a mon!h.
I reposed myself here a week, to rest and regale myself after my long
journey; during which, most of the time was taken up in the weighty
affair of making a cage for my Poll, who began now to be more do-
mestic, and to be mighty well acquainted with me. Then I began to
think of the poor kid which I had penned within my little circle, and
resolved to fetch it home, or give it some food; accordingly I went,
and found it where I left it (for indeed it could not get out,) but was
almost starved for want of food. I went and cut boughs of trees,
and branches of such shrubs as I could find, and having fed
it, I tied it as I did before, to lead it away; but it was so tame
with being hungry, that I had no need to have tied it, for it
followed me like a dog; and as I continually fed it, the creature be-
came so loving, so gentle, and so fond, that it was from that time
one of my domestics also, and would never leave me afterwards.


A


_-_ nA10







70 ADVENTURES OF ROBINSON CRUSOE.

It was now that I began sensibly to feel how much more happy the
life I now led was, with all its miserable circumstances, than the
wicked, cursed, abominable life I led all the past part of my days;
and now having changed both my sorrows and my joys: my very
desires altered, my affections, changed and my delights were per.
fectly new from what tCley were at my first coming, or indeed for the
two )ears past. Before, as I walked about, either on my hunting,
or for viewing the country, the anguish of my soul at my condition
would break out upon me on a sudden, and my very heart would die
within me, to think of the woods, the mountains, the deserts I w~s
in ; and how I was a prisoner, :ocked up with the eternal bars and
fiolts of the ocean, in an uninhabited wilderness, without redemption.
In the midst of the greatest composures of my mind this would
break out upon me like a storm, and make me wring my hands and
weep like a child: sometimes it would take me in the middle of my
work, and I would immediately sit. down and sigh, and look upon the
ground for an hour or two together: and this was still worse to me ;
but if I could burst into tears, or give vent to my feelings by words,
it would go off; and my grief having exhausted itself would abate.
Thlus, and in this disposition of iind, I began my third year ; and
though I have not given tllh reader the trouble of so particular an
account of my works this year as the first, yet in general it may be
observed, that I was very seldom idle, having regularly divided my
time, according to the seven daily employment that were before me;
such as, first, My duty to God, and reading the scriptures, which
1 constantly set apart some time for, thrice every day : secondly,
Going abroad with my gun for food, which generally took me up thice
hours every morning, when it did not rain: thirdly, The ordering,
curing, preserving, and cooking what I had killed or catclied for my
supply ; these took up great part of the day, when the sun was in
the zenith the violence of the heat was too great to stir out; so that
about four hours in the evening was all the time I could be supposed
to work in; with this exception, that sometimes I changed my hours
of hunting and working, and went to work in the morning, and
abroad with my gun in the afternoon.
To this short time allowed for labour, I desire may be added the
exceedingly laboriousness of my work ; the many hours which, for
want of tools, want of help, and want of skill, everything I did took
up out of my time: for example, I was full two and forty days
making me a board for a long shelf, which I wanted in my cave;
whereas, two sawyers, with their tools and a sawpit, would cut six
of i heim out of the same tree in half a day.
My case was this; it was a large tree that was to be cut down,
because my board was to be a broad one. This tree I was three
days cutting down, and two more in cutting off the boughs, and
reducing it to a log, or piece of timber. With inexpressible hacking
and hewing, I reduced both the sides of it into chips, till it was light







ADVENTURES OF IODINSON CRUSOE. 71

enough to move; then I turned it, and made one side of it smooth
and fat as a board, from end to end; then turning that side down-
ward, cut the other side, till I brought the plank to be about three
inches thick, and smooth on both sides. Any one may judge the
labour of my hands in such a piece of work; but labour and patience
carried me through that, and many other things; I only observe
this in particular, to show the reason wly so much of my time went
away with so little work, viz. that what might be a little to be done
with help and tools, was a vast labour, and required a prodigious
time to do alone, and by hand. Notwithstanding this, with patience
and labour I went through many things; and, indeed, everything
that my circumstances made necessary for me to do, as will appear
by what follows.



















I was now, in the months of November and December, expecting
my crop of barley and rice. The ground I had manured or dug up
for them was not great; for, as I observed, my seed of each was not
more than half a peck, having lost one whole crop by sowing in the
dry season: but now my crop promised very well; when, on a sudden,
I found I was in danger of losing it again by enemies of several
sorts, which it was scarce possible to keep from it; as, first, the
goats, and wild creatures which I called hares, who, tasting the
sweetness of the blade, lay in it night and day, as soon as it came
up, and ate it so close, that it could get no time to shoot up into
stalk.
I saw no remedy for this, but by making an enclosure about it






ADVENTURES OF ROBINSON CRUSOE.


with a hedge, which I did with a great deal of toil; and the more,
because it required speed. llowever, as my arable land was but
small, suited to my crop, I got it tolerably well fenced in about
three weeks' time; and shooting some of the creatures in the day-
time, I set my dog to guard it at night, tying him up to a stake at
the gate, where he would stand and bark all night long; so in a
little time the enemies forsook the place, and the corn grew very
strong and well, and began to ripen apace.















But as the beasts ruined me before, while my corn was in the
blade, so the birds were likely to ruin me now, when it was in the
ear; for going along by the place to see how it throve, I saw my
little crop surrounded with fowls, I know not of how many sorts, who
stood, as it were, watching till I should be gone. I immediately let
fly among them, for I always had my gun with me, and killed three
of them. I took them up, and served them as we serve notorious
thieves in England, viz. hanged them in chains, for a terror to others.
It is impossible to imagine that this should have such an effect as it
had; for the fowls not only never came to the corn, but, in short,
they forsook all lhat part of the island, and I could never see a bird
near the place as long as my scarecrows hung there. This I
was very glad of, you may be sure; and about the latter end of
December, which was our second harvest of the year, I reaped my
corn.
I was sadly put to it for a scythe or sickle to cut it down: and all
I could do was to make one as well as I could, o:t of one of the
broad swords, or cutlasses, which I saved among the arms out of the
ship. However as my first crop was but small, I had no great
difficulty to cut it down: in short, I reaped it my way, for I cut
nothing off but the ears, and carried it away in a great basket which
I had made, and so rubbed it out with my hands ; and at the end of







ADVENTURES OF ROBINBON CRUtSO. 73
all my harvesting, I found that out of my half peck of seed I had
near two bushels of rice, and above two bushels and a half of
barley ; that is to say, by my guess, for I had no measure.
However, this was great encouragement to me; and I foresaw
that, in time, it would please God to supply me with bread; yet here
I was perplexed again; for I neither knew how to grind, or make
meal of my corn, or indeed how to clean it and part it; nor if made
into meal, how to make bread of it; and if how to make it, yet I
knew not how to bake it; these things being added to my desire of
having a good quantity for store, and to secure a constant supply, I
resolved not to taste any of this crop, but to preserve it all for seed
against the next season; and, in the meantime, to employ all my
study and hours of working to accomplish this great work of provid-
ing myself with corn and bread.
It might be truly said, that now I worked for my bread. It is a
little wonderful, and what I believe few people have thought much
upon, viz. the strange multitude of little things necessary in the pro-
viding, producing, curing, dressing, making, and finishing this one
article of bread. I that was reduced to a mere state of nature,
found this to my daily discouragement, and was made more sensible
of it every hour, even after I had got thl first handful of seed corn,
which, as I have said, came up unexpectedly, and indeed to a
surprise.
I first, I had no plough to turn up the earth; no spade or shovel
to dig it; well, this I conquered by making a wooden spade, as I
observed before; but this did my work in but a wooden manner. The
corn was sown; I had no harrow, but was forced to go over itmyself,
and drag a great heavy bough of a tree over it, to scratch it, as it
may be called, rather than rake or harrow it. Then I wanted a mill
to grind it, sieves to dress it ; yeast and salt to make it into bread,
and an oven to bake it; and yet all these things I did without, as
shall be observed; and the corn was an inestimable comfort and
advantage to me; and as I resolved to use none of the corn for bread
till I had a greater quantity by me, I had the next six months to
apply myself wholly, by labour and invention, to furnish myself with
utensils proper for the performing all the operations necessary for
Leaking corn fit lor my Pse.



























SECTION XIII.


HIS MANUFACTURE OF POTTERY, AND CONTRIVANCE FOR BAKING
BREAD.

BUT now I was to prepare more land; for I had seed enough to sow
above an acre of ground. Before I did this, I had a week's work at
least to make me a spade; which, when it was done, was but a sorry
one indeed, and very heavy, and required double labour to work with
it; however, I went through that, and sowed my seed in two large
flat. pieces of ground, as near my house as I could find them to my
mind, and fenced them in with a good hedge; the stakes of which
were all cut off that wood which I had set before, and knew it would
grow; so that, in one year's time, I knew I should have a quick or
living hedge, that would want but little repair. This work took me
up full three months ; because a great part of the time was in the wet
season, wlen I could not go abroad. Within doors, that is, when it
rained, and I could not go out, I found employment on the following
occasions ; always observing, that while I was at work, I diverted
myself with talking to my parrot, and teaching him to speak; and I
quickly taught him to know his own name, and at last to speak it
out pretty loud, Poll; which was the first word I ever heard spoken,
in the island by any mouth but my own. This, therefore, was not
my work, but an assistant to my work; for now, as I said, I had a
great employment upon my hands, as follows: I had long studied,
by some means or other, to make myself some earthen vessels, which
indeed I wanted much, but knew not where to come at them; how-







ADVENIURES OF ROBINSON CRUSOE. 75

ever, considering the heat of the climate, I did not doubt but if I
could find out any clay, I might botch up some such pot as might,
being dried in the sun, be hard and strong enough to bear handling,
and to hold anything that was dry, and required to be kept so; and
as this was necessary in preparing corn, meal, &c., which was the
.thing I was upon, I resolved to make some as large as I could, and
fit only to stand like jars, to hold what should be put into them.
It would make the reader pity me, or rather laugh at me, to tell
hew many awkward ways I took to raise this paste; what odd, mis-
shapen ugly things I made; how many of them fell in, and how
many fell out, the clay not being stiff enough to bear its own weight;
how many cracked by the over violent heat of the sun, being set out
too hastily; and how many fell in pieces with only removing, as well
before as after they were dried; and, in a word, how, after having
laboured hard to find the clay, to dig it, to temper it, to bring it
home, and work it, I could not make above two large earthern ugly
things (I cannot call them jars) in about two months' labour.
However, as the sun baked these two very dry and hard, I lifted
them very gently up, and set them down again m two great wicker
baskets, which I had made on purpose for them, that they might not
break; and as between the pot and the basket there was a little
room to spare, I stuffed it full of the rice and barley straw; and
these two pots being to stand always dry, I thought would hold my
dry corn, and perhaps the meal, when the corn was bruised.
Though I miscarried so much in my design for large pots, yet I
made several smaller things with better success; such as little round
pots, flat dishes, pitchers, and pipkins, and everything my hand turned
to; and the heat of the sun baked them very hard.
But all this would not answer my end, which was to get an earthen
pot to hold liquids, and bear the fire, which none of these could do.
It happened some time after, making a pretty large fire for cooking
my meat, when I went to put it out after I had done with it, 1
found a broken piece of one of my earthenware vessels in the fire,
burnt as hard as a stone, and red as a tile. I was agreeably sur-
prised to see it; and said to myself, that certainly they might be
made to burn whole, if they would burn broken.
This set me to study how to order my fire, so as to make it burn
some pots. I had no notion of a kiln, such as the potters burn in,
or of glazing them with lead, though 1 had some lead to do it with;
but I placed three large pipkins and two or three pots in a pile, one
upon another, and placed my fire-wood all round it, with a great
heap of embers under them. I plied the fire with fresh fuel round
the outside, and upon the top, till I saw the pots in the inside red-
hot quite through, and observed that they did not crack at all; when
I saw them clear red, I let them stand in that heat about five or six
hours, till I found one of them, though it did not crack, did melt or
run; for the sand which was mixed with the clay melted by the








7G ADVENTURES OF ROIINSON CRUSOE.
violence of the heat, and would have run into glass, if I had gone on;
so I slacked my tire gradually, til the pots began to abate of the red
colour; and watching them all night, that 1 might not let the lire
abate too fast, in the morning I had three very good, 1 will not say
handsome, pipkins, and two other earthern pots, as hard burnt as
could be desired; and one of them perfectly glazed with the running
of tlie sand.
My next concern was to get a stone mortar to beat some corn in;
for as to the mill, there was no thought of arriving to that perfection
of art with one pair of hands. To supply this want I was at a great
loss; for, of all trades in the world, I was as perfectly unqualified
for a stone-cutter as for any whatever ; neither had I any tools to go
about it with. I spent many a day to find out a great stone big
enough to cut hollow, and make lit for a mortar; but could find none




















at all, except what was in the solid rock, and which I had no way
to dig or cut out; nor, indeed, were the rocks in the island of
sufficient hardness, as they were all of a sandy crumbling stone, which
would neither bear the weight of a heavy pestle, nor would break
the corn without filling it with sand; so, after a great deal of time
lost in looking for a stone, I gave it over, and resolved to look out
for a block of hard wood, which I found indeed much easier; and
getting one as big as I had strength to stir, I rounded and formed
it on the outside with my axe and hatchet; and then with the
kelp of the fire, and infinite labour, made a hollow in it, as the








ADVENTURES OF ROBINSON CSsUOE. "77

Indians in Brazil make their canoes. After this, I made a great
heavy pestle, or beater, of the wood called iron-wood; and this I
prepared and laid by against I had my next crop of corn, when
1 proposed to myself to grind, or rather pound, my corn into
meal, to make my bread.
The baking part was the next thing to be considered, and how I should
make bread when I came to have corn; for, first, I had no yeast;
as to that part, there was no supplying the want, so I did not con-
cern myself much about it; but for an oven I was indeed puzzled.
At length I found out an expedient for that also, which was this: I
made some earthen vessels very broad, but not deep, that is to say,
about two feet diameter, and not above nine inches deep ; these I
burned in the fire, as I had done the other, and laid them by ; and
x len I wanted to bake, I made a great fire upon my hearth, which
1 had paved with some square tiles, of my own making and burning
also; but I should not call them square. When the firewood was
burned into embers, or live coals, I drew them forward upon the
hearth, so as to cover it all over, and there let them lie till the hearth
was very hot; then sweeping away all the embers, 1 set down my
loaf, or loaves, and covering them with the earthen pot, drew the
embers all round the outside of the pot, to keep in and add to the
heat ; and thus, as well as in the best oven in the world, I baked my
barley loaves, and became, in a little time, a good pastrycook into
the bargain; for I made myself several cakes and puddings of he
rice; but made no pics, as I had nothing to put into them except
the flesh of towls or goats.
And now, indeed, my stock of corn increasing, I really wanted to
build my barns bigger; I wanted a place to lay it up in; for the
increase of the corn now yielded me so much, that I had of the
barley about twenty bushels, and of rice as much, or more, insomuch
that, now I resolved to begin to use it freely; for my bread had
been quite gone a great while; 1 resolved also to see what quantity
would be sufficient for me a whole year, and to sow but once a
year.
Upon the whole, I found that the forty bushels of barley and rice
were much more than I could consume in a year; so I resolved to
sow just the same quantity every year that 1 sowed the last, in
hopes that such a quantity would fully provide me with bread, &c.













1 4 -.
K~~ \!;1~~)~/


SECTION XIV.


MEDITATES IIIS ESCAPE FROM TIE ISLAND--BUILDS A CANOE-
FAILURE OF HIS SCHEMIE-RESIGNATION TO lIS CONDITION-
MAKES HIMSELF A NEW DRESS.

ALL the while these things were doing, youmay be sure my thoughts
run many times upon the prospect of land which I had seen from the
other side of the island; and I was not without some secret wiche-
that I was on shore there; fancying, that seeing the main land, ana
an inhabited country, I might find some way or other to convey
myself farther, and perhaps at last find some means of escape.
Now I wished for my boy Xury, and the long-boat with the
shoulder-of-mutton sail, with which I sailed above a thousand miles
on the coast of Africa; but this was in vain; then [ thought I
would go and look at our ship's boat, which, as I have said, was
blown up upon the shore a great way, in the storm, when we were
first cast away. She lay nearly where she did at first, but not quite,
having turned by the force of the waves and the winds, almost
bottom upward, against a high ridge of beachy rough sand; but no
water about her as before. If I had had hands to have refitted her,
and to have launched her into the water, the boat would have done
very well, and I might have gone back into the Brazils with her


t








ADVENTURES OF ROBINC: 7 CRUSOE. 79

easily enough ; but I might have foreseen that I could no more turn
her and set her upright, upon her bottom, than 1 could remove tme
island; however, I went to the woods, and cut levers and rollers,
and brought thmn to the boat, resolving to try what I could do;
suggesting to myself, that if I could but turn her down, and repair
the damage she had received, she would be a very good boat, ald I
might venture to sea in her.
I spared no pains, indeed in this piece of fruitless toil, and spent
I think, three or four weeks about it; at last, finding it impossible
to heave her up with my little strength, 1 fell to digging away the
sand, to undermine her, and so as to make her fall down, setting
pieces of wood to thrust and guide her right in the fall. But when
Shad done this, I was unable to stir her up again, or to get under
her, much less to'move her forward towards the water; so 1 vas
forced to give it over; and yet, though I gave over the hopes of the
boat, my desire to venture over the main increased, rather than
diminished, as the means for it seemed impossible.
At length, I began to think whether it was not possible to make
myself a canoe, or periagua, such as the natives of those climates
make, even without tools, or, as I might say, without hands, of the
trunk of a great tree. This I not only thought possible, but easy,
and pleased myself extremely with the idea of making it, and with
my having much more convenience for it. than any of the Negroes or
Indians; but not at all considering the particular inconvenience
which 1 lay under more than the Indians did, viz. the want of hands
to move i4 into the water when it was made.
I went to wcrk upon this boat the most like a fool that ever man
did, who had any ot his senses awake. I pleased myself with the
design, without determining whether I was able to undertake it; not
but that the difficulty of launching my boat came often into my head;
but I put a stop to my own inquiries into it, by this foolish answer:
Let us first make it; 1 warrant I will find some way or other to
get it along when it is done.
This was a most preposterous method; but the eagerness of my
fancy prevailed, and to work I went. I felled a cedar tree, and I
question much whether Solomon ever had such a one for the building
of the Temple at Jerusalem ; it was five feet ten inches diameter at
the lower part next the stump, and four feet eleven inches diameter
at the end of twenty-two feet, where it lessened and then parted into
branches. It was not without infinite labour that I felled this tree;
I was twenty days hacking and hewing at the bottom, and fourteen
more getting the branches and limbs, and the vast spreading head of
it, cut off; after this, it cost me a month to shape it and dub it to a
proportion, and to something like the bottom of a boat, that it might
swim upright as it oughit to do. It cost me near three months more
to clear the inside, ani work it out so as to make an exact boat of it;
ttis I did, indeed, without fire, by mere mallet and chisel, and by








80 ADTIVENTUIRES OF RIOBINSON CRUSOE.

the dint of hard labour, till I had brought it to be a very hand-
some periagua, and big enough to have carried me and all my
cargo.
But all my devises to get it into the water failed me; though they
cost ain ilexpressblehi llabour too. It lay about one hundred yards
from tlie water, and not more ; litl Ilil first inconvenience was, it
was up liill towards tlie reek. Well, to take away this discourage-
icent, 1. resolved to dig into the surface of tlie eartl, and so make a
declivity; tilis I began, and it, cost, me a prodigious deal of pains;
but wlio grudge pains that have their deliverance in view ? When
this was worked through, and this dillicuilty managed, it was still
nimeh the same, for I could 11o Imore stir lhe canloe thlan l could the
other boat. Tlhin i imasured the distance of ground, and resolved






.4
-^ ^ ^ ^^-'












to cut a dock, or canal, to bring the water up to the canoe, seeing I
could not bring the canoe down to the water. ,Vcll, I began this
work ; and wheln 1 begaii to. enter upon it, and calculate how deep
it was to be dug, how broad, how the stuff was to be thrown out, I
found by the number of hands I had, having none but miy own, that
it must have been ten or twelve years before 1 could have gone
through with it ; for the shore lay so high, that at the upper cln it
muist Yhave been at least twenty feet deep ; this attempt, though Nith
great reluctance, I was at length obliged to give over also.
This grieved me heartily; and now I saw, though too late, the
folly of beginning a work before we count the cost, and before we
juuige rightly of our own strength to go through with it.
In the middle of this work, 1 finished l iy fourth year in this place,







ADVENtURES Of ROBINSON CRUSOE.


and kept my anniversary with the same devotion and with as much
comfort as before; for, by a constant study and serious application
to the word of God, and by the assistance of his grace, I gained a
different knowledge from what I had before ; I entertained different
notions of things ; I looked now upon the world as a thing remote,
which I had nothing to do with, no expectation from, and indeed, no
desires about: in a word, I had nothing to do with it, nor was even
likely to have; I thought it looked, as we may perhaps look upon
it hereafter, viz. as a place I had lived in, but was come out of it
and well might I say, as father Abraham to Dives, "Between me and
thee is a great gulf lixed."


/7-
















I spent whole hours, I may say whole days, in representing to
myself, in the most lively colours, how I must have acted if I had
got nothing out of the slip. I could not have so much as got any
food, except fish and turtles; and that, as it was long before I found
any of them, I must have perished, like a mere savage; that if I had
killed a goat or a fowl, by any contrivance, I had no way to flay or
open it, or part the flesh from the skin and the bowels, or to cut it
up, but must gnaw it with my teeth, and pull it to pieces with my
claws, like a beast.
These reflectious made me very sensible of the goodness of Provi-
dence to me, and very thankful for my present condition, with all its
hardships and misfortunes; and this part also I cannot but recommend
to the reflection of those who are apt, in their misery, to say, Is
any affliction like mine ? Let them consider how much worse the
0








82 ADVENTURI(IS OF ROBINSON CRUSOE.

cases of some people are, and their case would have been, if Provi-
dence had thought lit.
With these reflections I worked my mind up, not only to a resig-
nation to the will of God in the present disposition of my circum-
stances, but even to a sincere thankfulness for my condition; and
that I, who was yet a living man, ought not to complain, seeing
I had not the due punishment of my sins; that I enjoyed so many
mercies that I had no reason to have expected in that place, that I
ought never more to repine at my condition, but to rejoice, and to
give daily thanks for that daily bread, which nothing but a crowd


















of wonders could have brought; that I ought to consider I had been
fed by a miracle (even as great as that of feeding Elijah by ravens),
nay, by a long series of miracles; and that I could hardly have
named a place, in the uninhabited part of the world, where I
could have been cast more to my advantage; a place where, as I
had no society, which was my affliction on one hand, so I found no
ravenous beasts, no furious wolves or tigers, to threaten my life ; no
venomous or poisonous creatures, which I might feed on to my hurt;
no savages to murder and devour me. In a word, as my life was a
life of sorrow one way, so it was a life of mercy another ; and I
wanted nothing to make it a life of comfort, but to make myself
sensible of God's goodness to me, and care over me in this condition ;
and after 1 did make a just improvement of these things, I went
away, and was no more sad.
My clothes now began to decay mightily; as to linen, I had
none for a great while, except sonic chequered shirts which 1
found in the chests of the other seamen, and which I carefully







ADVENTURES OF ROBINSON CRUSOE. 58
preserved, because many times I could hear no clofles on but a
shirt, aiin it was a very great help to me that I had, anong all
the men's clothes of the ship, almost tireec dozen of shirts.
I began to consider about putting the few rags I had, which I
called clothes, into some order. I had worn out all the waistcoats
I had, and my business was now to try if I could not make jackets
out, of the great watch-coats that I, had by me, and with such other
materials as I had ; so I set to work a tailoring, or rather, indeed, a
botching, for I made most piteous work of it. However, I made
shift, to make two or three new waistcoats, which I hoped would
serve me a great while.
I have mentioned that I saved the skins of all the creatures that
I killed, I mean four-footed ones; and I had hung them up, stretched
out with sticks, in the sun, by which means some of them were so
dry and hard that they were fit for little, but others I found very
useful. The first thing I made of these was a great cap for my
head, with the hair on the outside, to shoot off the rain; and this I
performed so well, that after this I made me a suit of clothes wholly
of the skins, that is to say, a waistcoat, and breeches open at tile
knees, and both loose; for they were rather wanting to keep me cool
than warm. I must not omit to acknowledge that they were
wretchedly made; for if I was a bad carpenter, fwas a worse tailor
However, they were such as I made very good shift with ; and when
I was abroad, if it happened to rain, the hair of my waistcoat and
cap being uppermost, I was kept very dry.
After this, I spent a great deal of time and pains to make me an
umbrella. I made one and covered it. with skins, the hair upwards,
so that it cast off the rain like a pent-house, and kept off the sun
so effectually, that I could walk out in the hottest of the weather
with greater advantage than I could before in the coolest; and
when I had no need of it, could close it and carry it under my
arm.
Thus I lived mighty comfortably, my mind being entirely com-
posed by rcsignirg to the will of God, and throwing myself
wholly upon the disposal of his providence. This made my life
better than sociable; for when I began to regret the want of
conversation, I would ask myself, whether thus conversing mutu-
ally with my own thoughts, and as I hope I may say with even
God himself, by ejaculations, was not better than the utmost
enjoyment of human society in the world




























SECTION XV.


HE MAKES A SMALLER CANOE, IN WIIIHII HE ATTEMPTS TO CRUISE
ROUND TIE ISLAND--I1S PERLLOUS SITUATION AT SEA-HE
RETURNS 11OME.

I CANNOT say that after this, for five years, any extraordinary thing
happeMned to 11me, but 1 lived on in tlie same course, in the same pos-
ture and place, just as before; tlhe chief things 1 was employed in,
besides my yearly labour of planting my barley and rice, and curing
my raisins, of both which 1 always kept up just, enough to have sulli-
cient stock of one year's provision beforehand; I say, besides this
yearly labour, and my daily pursuit of going, out with my gun, I had
one labour, to make me a canoe, which at last 1 finished ; so that by
digging a canal to it, six feet wide, and four feet deep, 1 brought it
into the creek, almost half a mile.
however, though my little )priagua was finished, yet the size of
it was not at all answerable to the design which I had in view when
I made the first ; 1 mean, of venturing over to the terra firima, where
it was above forty miles broad; accordingly, the sinallness of iyn.
boat assisted to put an end to that design, and now I thought no
more of it. As I Ihad a boat, my text design was to make a cruise
around tihe island ; for as I had bi)'n on the olfher side inl one place,
crossing, as 1 halv already described it, over tlle land, so the dis-
coveries I made in llhat little journey made me rv er(eager to see
other parts of' the coast : and now I had a boat, 1 thought of nothing
but sailing round the island.








ADVENTURES OP FIOBINSON CRUSO. 8

It was on the sixth of November, in the sixth year of my reign, or
my captivity, which you please, that I set out on this voyage, and I
found it much longer than I expected ; for though the island itself
was not very large, yet when I came to the east side of it, 1 found a
great ledge of rocks lie out about two leagues into the sea, some
above water, some under it; and beyond that a sloal of sand, lying
dry hall' a league more, so that I was obliged to go a great way out
to sea to double the point.
When first I discovered them, I was going to give over my enter-
prise, and come back again, not, knowing how far it, might oblige me
to go out to sea, and above all, doubting how I should get back
again; so I came to an anchor with a piece of a broken grappling
which I got out of the ship.
Having secured my boat, I took my gun and went on shore, climb-
ing up on a hill, which seemed to overlook that point, where I saw
the full extent of it, and resolved to venture.
In mIy viewing the sea from that hill where I stood, I perceived a
strong, and indeed a most furious current, which ran to the cast, and
even came close to the point; and I took tile more notice of it,
because I saw there might be some danger that, when I came into
it, 1 might be carried out to sea by the strength of it, and not be
able to make the island again; and, indeed, had I not got first upon
this hill, I believe it would have been so; for there was the same
current on the other side of the island, only that it set off at a farther
distance, and I saw there was a strong eddy under the lorc ; so I
had nothing to do but to get out of the first current, and I should
presently be in an eddy.
I lay here, however, two days, because the wind blowing pretty
fresh at E. S. E., and that being just contrary to the said current,
made a great breach of the sea upon the point; so that it was not
safe for me to keep too close to the shore, for the breach, nor to go
too far off, because of the stream.
Tihe third day, in the morning, the wind having abated overnight,
the sea was calm, and 1 ventured; but I am a warning piece again to
all rash and ignorant pilots; for no sooner was I come to the point,
when I was not even my boat's length from the shore, but I found
myself in a great depth of water, and a current like the sluice of a
mill; it carried my boat along with it with such violence, that all I
could do could not keep her so much as on the edge of it; but I
found it hurried me farther and farther out from the eddy, which was
on my left hand. There was no wind stirring to help me, and all I
could do with my paddles signified nothing; and now I began to give
myself over for lost; for as the current was on both sides of the
island, I knew in a few leagues' distance they must join again, and
then 1 was irrecoverably gone; nor did I see any possibility of avoid-
ig it; so that I had no prospect before me but of perishing, not by
the sea, for that was calm enough, but of starving for hunger. I








86 ADVENTURES OF ROBIN80N CRUSOE.

had indeed found a tortoise on the shore, as big almost as I could
lift, and had tossed it into the boat; and I had a great jar of fresh
water, that is to say, one of my earthen pots ; but what was all this
to being driven into the vast ocean, where there was no shore, no
main land or island, for a thousand leagues at least?
It is scarce possible to imagine the consternation I was now in,
being driven from my beloved island (for so it appeared to me now
to be) into the wide ocean, almost two leagues, and in the utmost
despair of ever recovering it again. However, I worked hard, till
indeed my strength was almost exhausted, and kept my boat as
much to the northward, that is, towards the side of the current
which the eddy lay on, as possibly I could; when about noon, as the
sun passed tlhe meridian, I thought I felt a little breeze of wind in
miy face, springing up from S.S.E. This cheered my heart a little,
and especially when, in about half an hour more, it blew a pretty
gentle gale. By this lime I was got at a frightful distance from the
island, and had tle least cloudy or hazy weather intervened, I had
been undone another way too; for I had no compass on board, and
should never have known how to have steered towards the island, it
1 had but once lost sight of it; but the weather continuing clear, 1
applied myself to get up my mast again, and spread my sail, stand.
ing away to the north as much as possible, to get out of the
current.
Just as I had set my mast and sail, and the boat began to stretch
away, 1 saw even by the clearness of the water some alteration of
the current was near; for where the current was so strong, tho
water was foul; but perceiving the water clear, 1 found tlie current
abate; and presently I found to the cast, at about half a mile, a
breach of the sea upon some rocks; these rocks I found caused the
current to part again, and as the main stress of it ran away more
southerly, leaving t lie rocks to the north-east, so the ot her returned
by the repulse oft lie rocks, and made a strong eddy, which ran back
again to the north-west, with a very sharp stream.
They who know what it is to have a reprieve brought to them
upon the ladder, or to be rescued from thieves just going to murder
them, or wlho have been in such-like extremities, may guess what
my present surprise of joy was, and how gladly I put imy boat into
the stream of this eddy; and lie wind also fresliening, how gladly 1
spread my sail to it, running cheerfully before the Wind, and witli a
strong tide or eddy under foot.
This eddy carried me about a leaguein my way back again directly
towards the island, but about two leagues more to the northward
than the current whicl carried me away at first; so that when I
came near the island, I found myself open to the northern shore of
it, that is to say, the other end of the island, opposite to that which
I went out from.
When I had made something more than a league of way by the








ADVENTURES OF IRONSON CRUSOE. by

help of this current or eddy, I found it was spent, and served me no
farther. However, I found that being between two great currents,
viz. that on the south side, which had hurried me away, and that on
the north, which lay about a league on tle other side; I say,
between these two, in the wake of the island, I found the water at
least still, and running no way; and having still a breeze of wind
fair for me, I kept on steering directly for the island, though not
making such fresh way as I did before.
About four o'clock in the evening, being then within a league of
tile island, I found the point of the rocks which occasioned this dis-
aster stretclling out, as is described before, to tile southward, and
casting off the current more soul lihrly, had, of course, made another












------







eddy to the north; and this I found very strong, but, not directly
setting the way my course lay, which was due west, but almost full
north. However, having a fresh gale I stretched across this eddy,
slanting north-west; and, in about an hour, came within about a
mile of the shore, where, it being smooth water, I soon got to
land.
When I was on shore, I fell on my knees, and gave God thanks
for my deliverance, resolving to lay aside all thoughts of my deliver-
ance by my boat ; and refreshing myself with such things as I had, I
brought my boat close to the shore, in a little cove that I had spied
under some trees, and laid me down to sleep, being quite spent with
the labour and fatigue of the voyage.







88 ADVENTURES OF ROBINSON CRUSOR.

I now had enough of rambling to sea for some time, and had
enough to do for many days to cit still, and to reflect upon tile
danger 1 had been in. I would have been very glad to have had my
boat again on my side of the island; but I knew not how it was
practicable to get it about. As to the east side of the island, which
I had gone round, I knew well enough there was no venturing that
way ; my very heart would shrink, and my very blood run chill, but
to think of it; and as to the other side of the Island, I did not know
how it might be there ; but supposing the current ran with the same
force against the shore at the east as it passed by it on the other, I
might run the same risk of being driven down the stream, and
carried by the island, as I had been before of being carried away
from it; so, with these thoughts, I contented myself to be without
any boat, though it had been the product of so many months' labour
to make it, and of so many more to get it into the sea.
In this government of my temper I remained near a year, lived a
very sedate, retired life, as you may well suppose; and my thoughts
being very much composed, as to my condition, and fully comforted
in resigning myself to the dispositions of Providence, I thought I
lived really very happily in all things, except that of society.
I improved myself in this time in all the mechanic exercises which
my necessities put me upon applying myself to ; and I believe I could,
upon occasion, have made a very good carpenter, especially consider.
ing how few tools I had.
Besides this, I arrived at an unexpected perfection in my earthen-
ware, and contrived well enough to make them with a wheel, which
I found infinitely easier and better; because I made things round
and sliapeable, wiich before were filthy things indeed to look upon.
But I think I was never more vain of my performance, or more joy-
ful for anything I found out, than for my being able to make a
tobacco-pipe: and though it was a very ugly clumsy hilng when it
was done, and only burned red, like other earthenware, yet it was
hard and firm, and would draw the smoke, I was exceedingly com-
forted with it, for I had always been used to smoke.
I began now to perceive my powder abated considerably ; this was
a want which it was impossible for me to supply, and I began ser-
iously to consider what I must do when I should have no more
powder, that is to say, how I should do to kill any goats. I had, as
is observed, in the third year of my being here, kept a young kid,
and bred her up tame, and I was in hopes of getting a he-goat; but
I could not by any means bring it to pass, till my kid grew an old
goat; and as I could never find in my heart to kill her, she died at
last of mere age. C &




























SECTION XVI.


HE REARS A FLOCK OF GOATS-HIS DAIRY-IIIS DOMESTIC HABITS
AND STYLE OF LIVING--INCREASING PROSPERITY.

BEING now in the eleventh year of my residence, and as I have said
my ammunition growing low, I set myself to study some art to trap
and snare the goats, to see whether I could not catch some of them
ahve. I dug several large pits in the earth, in places where I had
observed the goats used to feed, and over those pits I placed hurdles,
of my own making too, with a great weight upon them; and several
times I put ears of barley and dry rice, without setting the trap ; and
I could easily perceive that the goats had gone in and eaten up the
corn, for I could see the marks of their feet. At length I set three
traps in one nmght, and going the next morning, I found them all
standing, and yet the bait eaten and gone. This was very discourag-
ing: however, I altered my traps; and one morning I found in one
of them a large old he-goat, and in one of the others three kids, a
male and two females.
As to the old one, I knew not what to do with him; he was so
fierce, 1 durst not go into the pit to him; that is to say, to go about
to bring him away alive, which was what I wanted. I could have
killed him, but that was not my business, nor would it answer my
end; so I even let him out, and he ran away, as if lie had been
frightened out of his wits. I went to the three kids, and taking them
one by one, I tied them with strings together, and with some difficulty
brought them all home.
8*







UU ADVENTURES OF ROBINSON CRUSOB.

It was a good while before they would feed; but throwing them
some sweet corn, it tempted them, and they began to be tame. And
now I found that if I expected to supply myself with goats' flesh
when I had no powder or shot left, breeding some up tame was my
only way; when, perhaps, I might have them about my house like a
flock of sheep. But then it occurred to me, that I must keep the
tame from the wild. or else they would always run wild when the"
grew up; and the only way for this was, to have some enclosed piece
of ground, well fenced, either with hedge or pale, to keep them m so






















effectually, that those within might not break out, or those without
break in.
But this was not all; for now I not only had goats' flesh to feed
on when I pleased, but milk too; a thing which, indeed, in the be-
ginning, I did not so much as think of, and wlich, when it came into
my thoughts, was really an agreeable surprise; tor now I set up my
dairy, and had sometimes a gallon or two of milk in a day. And as
Nature, who gives supplies of food to every creature, dictates even
naturally how to make use of it, so I, that had never milked a cow,
much less a goat, or seen butter or cheese made, only when I was a
boy, after a great many essays and miscarriages, made me botli butter
and cheese at last, and also salt (though I found it partly made to my
hand by the heat of the sun upon some of the rocks of the sea), and
never wanted it afterwards.







ADVENTURES OF ROBINSON CRUSOE.


It vould have made a stoic smile to have seen me and my little
family sit down to dinner. There was my majesty, the prince and
lord of the whole island; I had the lives of all my subjects at my
absolute command; I could hang, draw, give liberty, and take it
away; and no rebels among all my subjects.
Then to see how like a king I dined too, all alone, attended by my
servants; Poll, as if lie had been my favourite, was the only person
permitted to talk to me. My dog, who was now grown very old and
crazy, and two cats, one on one side of the table, and one on the
other, expecting now and then a bit from my hand, as a mark of
special favour.
My own figure was ancouth enough. I had a great high shapeless
cap, made of a goat's skin, with a flap hanging down behind, as well
to keep the sun from me as to shoot the rain off from running into
my neck; nothing being so hurtful in these climates as the rain upon
the flesh, under the clothes.
I had a short jacket of goat's skin, the skirts coming down to
about the middle of the thighs, and a pair of open-kneed breeches of
the same; the breeches were made of the skin of an old he-goat,
whose hair hung down such a length on either side, that, like paita-
loons, it reached to the middle of my legs; stockings and shoes I
had none, but had made me a pair of somethings, I scarce know what
to call them, like buskins, to flap over my legs, and lace on either
side like spatterdashes, but of a most barbarous shape, as indeed
were all the rest of my clothes.
I had on a broad belt of goat's skin dried, which I drew together
with two thongs of the same, instead of buckles; and in a kind ot
fro- on either side of this, instead of a sword and dagger, hung a
little saw and a hatchet; one on one side and one on the other. I
had another belt, not so broad, and fastened in the same manner,
which hung over my shoulder; and at the end of it, under my left
ari, hung two pouches, both made of goat's skin too; in one or
which hung my powder, in the other my shot. At my back I carried
my basket, and on my shoulder my gun; and over my head a great
clumsy ugly goat's skin umbrella, but which, after all, was the most
necessary thing I had about me, next to my gun. As for my face,
the colour of it was not so mulatto-like as one might expect from a
man not at all careful of it, and living within nine or ten degrees ot
the equinox. My beard I had once suffered to grow till it was about
a quarter of a yard long; but as I had both scissars and razors
sufficient, I had cut it pretty short, except what grew on my upper lip,
which I had tr m ed into a large pair of Mahometan whiskers, such
as I had seen wo n by some Turks at Sallee; for the Moors did not
wear such, though the Turks did; of these mustachios or whiskers,
I will not say they were long enough to hang my hat upon them, but
they were of a length and shape monstrous enough, and such as, in
England, would have passed for frightful.







9i ADVENTURES OF ROBINSON CRUSOE.

You are to understand, that now I had, as I may call it, two
plantations in the island; one my little fortification or tent with the
wall about it, under the rock, with the cave behind me, wlhch, by
this time, I had enlarged into several apartments or caves, one within
another. One of these, which was the driest and largest, and had a
door out beyond my wall or fortification, that is to say, beyond
where my wall joined to the rock, was all filled up with the large
earthen pots, of which I have given an account, and with fourteen or
fifteen great baskets, which would hold five or six bushels each,
where I laid up my stores of provision, especially my corn, some in
the ear, cut off short from the straw, and the other rubbed out with
my hand.
As for my wall, made, as before, with long stakes or piles, those
piles grew all like trees, and were by this time grown so big, and
spread so very much, that there was not the least appearance, to
any one's view, of any habitation behind them.
Near this dwelling of mine, but a little farther within the land,
and upon lower ground, lay my two pieces of corn land, which I
kept duly cultivated and sowed, and which duly yielded me their
harvest in its season; and whenever I had occasion for more corn, I
had more land adjoining as fit, as that.
Besides this, I had my country seat; and I had now a tolerable
plantation there also: for, first, I had my little bower, as I called it,
which I kept in repair; that is to say, I kept the hedge which
encircled it in constantly fitted up to its usual height, the ladder
standing always in the inside: I kept the trees, which at first were
no more than my stakes, but were now grown very firm and tall,
always cut so, that they might spread and grow thick and wild, and
make the more agreeable shade, which they did effectually to my
mind. In the middle of this I had my tent always standing, being a
piece of a sail spread over poles, set up for that purpose, and which
never wanted any repair or renewing ; and under this I had made
me a squab or couch, with the skins of the creatures I had killed,
and with other soft things; and a blanket laid on them, such as be-
longed to our sea bedding, which I had saved, and a great watch.
coat to cover me; and liere, whenever I had occasion to be absent
from icy chief seat, I took up my country habitation.




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