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Robinson Crusoe (Penguin ed.)

Page 37

by Daniel Defoe


  In this voyage I visited my new collony in the island, saw my successors the Spaniards, had the whole story of their lives, and of the villains I left there; how at first they insulted the poor Spaniards, how they afterwards agreed, disagreed, united, separated, and how at last the Spaniards were oblig’d to use violence with them, how they were subjected to the Spaniards, how honestly the Spaniards used them; a history, if it were entred into, as full of variety and wonderful accidents, as my own part, particularly also as to their battles with the Carribeans, who landed several times upon the island, and as to the improvement they made upon the island it self, and how five of them made an attempt upon the main land, and brought away eleven men and five women prisoners, by which, at my coming, I found about twenty young children on the island.

  Here I stay’d about 20 days, left them supplies of all necessary things, and particularly of arms, powder, shot, clothes, tools, and two workmen, which I brought from England with me, viz. a carpenter and a smith.

  Besides this, I shar’d the island into parts with ’em, reserv’d to my self the property of the whole, but gave them such parts respectively as they agreed on; and having settled all things with them, and engaged them not to leave the place, I left them there.

  From thence I touch’d at the Brasils, from whence I sent a bark, which I bought there, with more people to the island, and in it, besides other supplies, I sent seven women, being such as I found proper for service, or for wives to such as would take them: As to the English men, I promis’d them to send them some women from England, with a good cargo of necessaries, if they would apply themselves to planting, which I afterwards perform’d. And the fellows prov’d very honest and diligent after they were master’d, and had their properties set apart for them. I sent them also from the Brasils five cows, three of them being big with calf, some sheep, and some hogs, which, when I came again, were considerably encreas’d.

  But all these things, with an account how 300 Caribbees came and invaded them, and ruin’d their plantations, and how they fought with that whole number twice, and were at first defeated, and three of them kill’d; but at last a storm destroying their enemies canoes, they famish’d or destroy’d almost all the rest, and renew’d and recover’d the possession of their plantation, and still liv’d upon the island.

  All these things, with some very surprising incidents in some new adventures of my own, for ten years more, I may perhaps give a farther account of hererafter.

  GLOSSARY

  acted by: moved to action by

  admiration (admire): astonishment (to wonder at)

  affection: zeal, enthusiasm

  affections: emotions, feelings

  ague: fever, chills or fit of shivering (Crusoe probably has some sort of malaria)

  alcamies: see curlieus

  Algerines: pirates from North Africa, from Algeria

  all adventures: great risk, all risk

  alloes: aloes; a purgative or tonic drug derived from the dried juice of aloe leaves

  amuse, amusement: to trick, befuddle; to be distracted, entertained

  antick: grotesquely animated

  antient and pendants: flags – ensign and pennants

  attempted: attacked, tried to kill or capture

  bays: baize cotton or woollen material napped to imitate felt

  beachy rough: gravelly

  better end: utmost length, bitter end

  boltsprit: bowsprit, a spar or wooden pole extending from the stem of a ship

  brand goose: species of wild goose, called in America, brant

  breach of the sea: breaking waves

  bruised: crushed into flour

  bulg’d: bilged; with a hole or leak in the inner part of the ship’s hull

  burthen: cargo capacity

  buskins: foot and leg covering or half-boot stretching half way to the knee

  calenture: tropical fever, from Spanish, calentura

  canes: sugar canes

  carriage: ready to be hauled away

  case-bottle: bottle designated for use in cases, fitting into divisions of the case

  cassava root: tropical American plant with a large, starchy root, also called ‘manioc’

  casuist: one who determines what is right or wrong in matters of conscience

  chickens meat: grain, chicken feed

  chop’d: swerved or changed direction suddenly

  colliers: ships carrying coal

  come home: come loose

  confus’d: assembled in a disorderly fashion, jumbled

  conscience: consciousness

  consequence: by-product

  conversation: friendship, social interaction

  converse of spirits: communication of spirits with human beings

  cordial waters: liqueurs – sweet, syrupy alcoholic beverages, often with a brandy base

  corn: in British usage, any cereal plant food such as oats, wheat, rye or barley

  crowded to the utmost: spread all the sail possible in order to go as fast as possible

  Cruisadoes (crusados): Portuguese silver coins, named after the cross inscribed on them

  cur’d: cleared and ready for cultivation

  curlieus: curlews – brownish, long-legged shore birds having long, slender, downward-curving bills

  depending: impending, about to happen

  design: plan, strategy

  discover: explore; display, show

  discover’d: showed, displayed

  discoveries: revelations

  doctor: teacher, scholar

  Doubloons: Spanish gold coin, a double pistole

  drills: rills or small streams

  dubb: to strike, cut, or rub (wood or leather) to make them smooth

  Ducats: any of various gold and silver coins formerly current in most European countries

  eat: ate

  embarrass’d: impeded by or encumbered with

  entertain’d: preoccupied

  Equinox: Equator, line dividing the northern and southern hemispheres; see also Line

  fain: gladly, preferably, ready, willing

  fancy: imagination, a fantasy, to imagine

  fetch’d a compass: circled

  fewel: fuel

  flags: plants having long blade-like leaves

  flea: to flay, that is, to skin

  fleet: float

  fluxes: dysentery

  fore-castle: section of the upper deck of a ship located at the bow

  fowling-piece: shotgun for hunting birds or small animals

  frame: that is, frame of mind (p. 131)

  freshning: increasing in velocity

  frog: loop fastened to a belt to hold a weapon

  fustic: tropical American tree that yields a yellow dye

  fuzees: muskets

  Generalissimo: commander-in-chief.

  genius: inclination, talent, personal tendency

  glaz’d powder: grains of the best gunpowder glazed with graphite to slow down combustion and thereby make it safer

  graplin: grappling iron, an iron shaft with claws at one end used for drawing and holding an enemy ship alongside

  ground-tackle: equipment (cable, anchor, etc.) used to anchor or moor a ship

  gudgeons: metal pins joining the wheel, in this case, to the shaft of the wheelbarrow

  Guinea grains: seeds of African plants

  gyb’d: jibbed, swung around and shifted from one side of the boat to the other

  hale, hal’d, hailing: to haul, hauled, hauling

  hallow: see hollow

  hanger: short sword

  hawser: cable or rope used in mooring or towing a ship

  head: fore part of the ship

  hogshead: large barrel

  hollow, hallow: to shout, to call

  indifferently: neither good nor bad, mediocre

  iron crows: crow bars

  jealous: apprehensive, fearful

  jealousy: suspicion

  jerkin: vest or waistcoat

  league: about 3
miles or 4.8 kilometers

  lee: side of the land that provides shelter from the wind

  Line: Equator

  long-boat: longest boat carried by a sailing ship

  luxuries: excessive, unnecessary or self-indulgent pleasures

  magazine: storehouse or place where goods are stored

  main: mainland

  man of war: warship

  Maresco: variant of Moresco, Spanish for Moor

  meat: as used by Crusoe, often refers to food in general rather than specifically or exclusively to animal flesh

  mechanical, mechanick: manual, of manual labour (also one who earns a living by manual labour)

  medium: compromise

  memento: reminder or example, an emblem or warning.

  mere, meer: completely, perfectly, entirely, ‘nothing more than’; see ‘my meer fate’, i.e. purely and fully my fate (p. 7)

  misen-yard: the mizzen is the third mast aft on sailing ships carrying three or more sails, so the misen-yard is the pole supporting the mizzen mast

  Moidore, Moydor: moidores, Portuguese and Brazilian gold coins

  moiety: one half share

  moletta: mulatto, since Crusoe is dark from exposure to the sun

  molossus: molasses

  moorish: like a moor, poorly drained and infertile land

  move: urge

  murthering humour: in the mood or disposition to commit murder

  naked: defenceless

  naturalists: those who study natural phenomena, scientists

  Nicaragua Wood: South American redwood, also called Brazil wood

  nice: particular, fastidious

  oakum: hemp or jute fibre, sometimes treated with tar or creosote and used for caulking seams in wooden ships

  obligation: contractual promise

  observation: navigational reckoning

  offing: position at a distance from the shore

  opticks: eyes

  original: originator or organizer

  osiers: see sallows

  pale: fence enclosing a field, or the area thus enclosed

  pantaloons: men’s tight trousers, normally reaching from the waist to the ankle

  parch’d: cooked and dried

  parly: to negotiate, negotiations

  paste: flour moistened with water or milk and kneaded to make pastry

  penthouse: shed or sloping roof attached to the main house

  periagua: dug-out canoe made from a single tree trunk

  perspective-glasses: prospective-glasses, telescopes

  physical: medicinal, curative

  physick: medicine, medical treatment

  Pieces of Eight: Spanish silver dollars marked with a figure ‘8’

  pinnace: small boat or tender attached to a ship

  pipkins: small earthenware pots

  presently: immediately

  primitive: earlier or original

  procuration: power of attorney

  prospective-glass: telescope, ‘perspective glass’

  prudential: worldly wisdom, the prudent or practical thing to do

  pumps: low-heeled shoes without laces

  quarter: upper portion of the deck of a ship; mercy

  rack: arrack, intoxicating liquor made of palm sap or coconuts

  rankling: festering

  regiment of foot: foot soldiers, infantry

  rid forecastle in: with the bow of the ship underwater

  round-house: cabin in the stern or rear of the ship, just below the poop or rear deck

  Royals: Spanish silver coins, reals (from ‘real’ = royal)

  rubb’d out: separated the kernel or grain of the barley from the chaff or straw

  runlet: cask of varying sizes, usually holding about eighteen gallons

  sallows: willows and osiers: trees in the willow family, all having long, rodlike twigs used in basketry

  scuttle: hatchway

  sheet anchor: large, extra anchor intended for use in emergencies

  shoal: shallow

  shoulder of mutton sail: triangular sail

  simplicity: naive or foolish behaviour

  skrew-jack: jack for lifting heavy objects, operated by a screw

  softly: quietly or slowly

  spatter-dashes: leather or cloth gaiters, leggings extending from the knee to the instep

  sprit-sail: sail extended by a pole from the lower part of the mast to the peak of the main sail

  step at the stern: platform to support the end of the mast

  stern: rear of a ship

  strike our top-masts: that is, lower the sails on those masts and secure them

  stuff: woven material, especially woollens

  stupid: in a stupor

  sublunary: earthly

  succades: candied fruit

  supra cargo, super-cargo: officer on a merchant ship who has charge of the cargo, its purchase and sale

  take a round: circle around

  tell: count

  thrash: thresh, to beat the stems and husks of cereal plants in order to separate the grain or seeds from the straw

  toy: small article of little value but prized as a curiosity

  traffick: business, trade

  turn’d off: hanged, executed

  twist: crotch

  uncur’d: unprepared for planting

  upon the ladder: upon the gallows, about to be hanged

  vapours: anxiety or hysteria, depression

  vesting: investing

  virtue: said of plants, their efficacious medicinal properties

  viz.: shortened form of videlicit: that is to say, namely (Latin); literally, ‘it is easy or plain to see’

  warmly: strongly, clearly

  wave: to waive

  whelming down: to place a hollow vessel upside down over something

  willows: see sallows

  yard: spar or pole used to support the sails on a ship

  NOTES

  1 dispatch’d: That is to say, stories such as this were meant to be read quickly (with dispatch) and inattentively, so that their truth or falsity did not matter.

  2 Robinson Crusoe: Defoe’s model for Crusoe seems to have been Alexander Selkirk: see Introduction. The ‘Great River of OROONOQUE’ (see title-page) is the Orinoco, in Venezuela, one of South America’s longest rivers, extending about 2560 km (1590 miles).

  3 Bremen: City in northwestern Germany, capital of the state of Bremen on the Weser River, near the North Sea.

  4 Dunkirk against the Spaniards: Sir William Lockhart (1621–76), one of Oliver Cromwell’s generals, captured Dunkirk from the Spanish in 1658.

  5 Wise man…poverty or riches: Solomon, considered the wisest man in the Old Testament, as recorded in Proverbs 30:8 (though not directly attributed to him).

  6 1651: The first edition has 1661, but this would make Crusoe twenty-nine years old. Subsequent editions correct the date to 1651.

  7 Humber: Estuary in eastern England, flowing generally east from the junction of the Trent and Ouse rivers and then southeast into the North Sea.

  8 Prodigal: Refers to Christ’s parable of the Prodigal Son (Luke 15:11–24): this son goes on a journey to a ‘far country’ and wastes his money, but when he returns his father kills the ‘fatted calf’ for the celebration of his homecoming.

  9 Yarmouth: Now Great Yarmouth, at the junction of the Yare and Waveney rivers with the North Sea. From medieval times, it was a port and centre of herring fishing.

  10 Winterton-Ness: Promontory on the Norfolk coast.

  11 Jonah in the Ship of Tarshish: Old Testament prophet on a ship bound for Tarshish was the cause of a fierce storm at sea because of his disobedience to God and was ‘cast…forth into the sea’ by the sailors to save the ship (Jonah 1:2–15); hence any person causing bad luck.

  12 Sallee: Seaport in Morocco, which was a notorious base for pirates (‘rovers’). From the seventeenth to the early nineteenth century, Morocco and the other Barbary Coast states were bases for piracy on the Mediterranean trade.r />
  13 athwart our quarter…stern: The pirates draw their ship up alongside the ‘quarterdeck’ of the ship Crusoe is on instead of by the stern or rear part, and so are vulnerable to the mounted guns.

  14 Emperor’s court: Probably in Rabat, the capital. After a couple of centuries of struggle, the Moroccans expelled the Spaniards and the Portuguese, and by the end of the seventeenth century the country was ruled by the Alawite dynasty.

  15 Straits-mouth: Straits of Gibraltar.

  16 Canaries…Cape de Verd Islands: Canary Islands – seven islands in the Atlantic off the northwestern coast of Africa, which constitute two Spanish provinces; Cape Verde Islands – an archipelago, Portuguese territory, in the Atlantic about 400 miles west of Senegal. Crusoe is sailing southward away from the Canaries along the northwest coast of Africa, by the peninsula of Cape Verde (the westernmost point in Africa) and in the direction of the Cape Verde Islands.

  17 Gambia or Sennegall: The Gambia river flows generally west through the nations of Senegal and The Gambia before emptying into the Atlantic Ocean by a wide estuary near Saint Mary’s Island, the site of Banjul, the capital of The Gambia.

  18 All-Saints-Bay: Harbour in northern Brazil where San Salvador, then the capital, is located.

  19 Assiento’s: Assiento (mod. asiento) was a monopoly on the African slave trade into their American colonies enforced by the Spanish and the Portuguese.

  20 the —th of —: Spaces were left for the day, month and year in the first three editions. In the fourth and subsequent editions, these were replaced with ‘the first of September, 1659’.

  21 120 tun burthen: Having a cargo capacity of about 120 tons.

  22 Fernand de Noronha: They are sailing toward the Fernando de Noronha Archipelago, which is a Brazilian possession in the Atlantic Ocean.

  23 Den wild Zee: The wild sea.

  24 For sudden…confound at first: Professor Geoffrey Sill has discovered the source of these lines: ‘Wild’s Humble Thanks for His Majesties Gracious Declaration for Liberty of Conscience, March 15, 1672’, a broadside published in 1672 by Robert Wild (1609–79). The poem was written in response to Charles II’s suspension that year of penal laws against Catholics and Nonconformists. Wild was a Nonconformist minister and a Royalist.

 

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