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+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 11441 ***
+
+THE SOLITARY OF JUAN FERNANDEZ;
+
+OR,
+
+THE REAL ROBINSON CRUSOE
+
+
+BY THE AUTHOR OF PICCIOLA.
+
+
+TRANSLATED FROM THE FRENCH
+BY
+ANNE T. WILBUR.
+
+
+
+MDCCCLI.
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+The Royal Salmon.--Pretty Kitty.--Captain Stradling.--William Dampier.
+--Reveries and Caprices of Miss Catherine.
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+Alexander Selkirk.--The College.--First Love.--Eight Years of Absence.
+--Maritime Combats.--Return and Departure.--The Swordfish.
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+The Tour of the World.--The Way to manufacture Negroes.--California.
+--The Eldorado.--Revolt of Selkirk.--The Log-Book.--Degradation.
+--A Free Shore.
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+Inspection of the Country.--Marimonda.--A City seen through the Fog.
+--The Sea every where.--Dialogue with a Toucan.--The first Shot.
+--Declaration of War.--Vengeance.--A Terrestrial Paradise.
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+Labors of the Colonist.--His Study.--Fishing.--Administration.
+--Selkirk Island.--The New Prometheus.--What is wanting to Happiness.
+--Encounter with Marimonda.--Monologue.
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+The Hammock.--Poison.--Success.--A Calm under the Tropics.--Invasion
+of the Island.--War and Plunder.--The Oasis.--The Spy-Glass.
+--Reconciliation.
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+A Tête-a-tête.--The Monkey's Goblet.--The Palace.--A Removal.--Winter
+under the Tropics--Plans for the Future.--Property.--A burst of
+Laughter.--Misfortune not far off.
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+A New Invasion.--Selkirk joyfully meets an ancient Enemy.--Combat on
+a Red Cedar.--A Mother and her Little Ones.--The Flock.--Fête in the
+Island; Pacific Combats, Diversions and Swings.--A Sail.--The Burning
+Wood.--Presentiments of Marimonda.
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+The Precipice.--A Dungeon in a Desert Island.--Resignation.--The passing
+Bird.--The browsing Goat.--The bending Tree.--Attempts at Deliverance.
+--Success.--Death of Marimonda.
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+Discouragement.--A Discovery.--A Retrospective Glance.--Project of
+Suicide.--The Last Shot.--The Sea Serpent.--The _Porro_.
+--A Message.--Another Solitary.
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+The Island of San Ambrosio.--Selkirk at last knows what Friendship is.
+--The Raft.--Visits to the Tomb of Marimonda.--The Departure.--The two
+Islands.--Shipwreck.--The Port of Safety.
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+The Island of Juan Fernandez.--Encounter in the Mountains.--Discussion.
+--A New Captivity.--Cannon-shot.--Dampier and Selkirk.--_Mas a Fuera_.
+--News of Stradling.--Confidences.--End of the History of the real
+Robinson Crusoe.--Nebuchadnezzar.
+
+CONCLUSION.
+
+NEW BOOKS AND NEW EDITIONS. (advertising section)
+
+
+
+
+THE SOLITARY OF JUAN FERNANDEZ,
+
+OR
+
+THE REAL ROBINSON CRUSOE.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+
+The Royal Salmon.--Pretty Kitty.--Captain Stradling.--William Dampier.
+--Reveries and Caprices of Miss Catherine.
+
+About the commencement of the last century, the little town of St.
+Andrew, the capital of the county of Fife, in Scotland, celebrated
+then for its University, was not less so for its Inn, the Royal
+Salmon, which, built in 1681 by a certain Andrew Felton, had descended
+as an inheritance to his only daughter, Catherine.
+
+This young lady, known throughout the neighborhood under the name of
+pretty Kitty, had contributed not a little, by her personal charms,
+to the success and popularity of the inn. In her early youth, she had
+been a lively and piquant brunette, with black, glossy hair, combed
+over a smooth and prominent forehead, and dark, brilliant eyes, a
+style of beauty much in vogue at that period. Though tall and slender
+in stature, she was, as our ancestors would have said, sufficiently
+_en bon point_. In fine, Kitty merited her surname, and more than one
+laird in the neighborhood, more than one great nobleman even,--thanks
+to the familiarity which reigned among the different classes in
+Scotland,--had figured occasionally among her customers, caring as
+little what people might say as did the brave Duke of Argyle, whom
+Walter Scott has shown as conversing familiarly with his snuff
+merchant.
+
+At present Catherine Felton is in her second youth. By a process
+common enough, but which at first appears contradictory, her
+attractions have diminished as they developed; her waist has grown
+thicker, the roses on her cheek assumed a deeper vermilion, her voice
+has acquired the rough and hoarse tone of her most faithful customers;
+the slender young girl is transformed into a virago. Fortunately for
+her, at the commencement of the eighteenth century, and especially
+in Scotland, reputations did not vanish as readily as in our days.
+Notwithstanding her increasing size and coarser voice, Catherine still
+remained pretty Kitty, especially in the eyes of those to whom she
+gave the largest credit.
+
+Besides, if from year to year her beauty waned, a circumstance which
+might tend to diminish the attractions of her establishment, like a
+prudent woman she took care that her stock of ale and usquebaugh
+should also from year to year improve in quality, to preserve the
+equilibrium.
+
+Undoubtedly the visits of lairds and great noblemen at her bar were
+less frequent than formerly, but all the trades-people in town, all
+the sailors in port, from the Gulf of Tay to the Gulf of Forth, still
+patronized the pretty landlady.
+
+Meanwhile Catherine was not yet married. The gossips of the town were
+surprised, because she was rich and suitors were plenty; they
+fluttered around her constantly in great numbers, especially when
+somewhat exhilarated with wine. When their gallantry became obtrusive,
+Kitty was careful not to grow angry; she would smile, and lift up her
+white hand, tolerably heavy, till the offenders came to order.
+Catherine possessed in the highest degree the art of restraining
+without discouraging them, and always so as to forward the interests
+of her establishment.
+
+To maintain the discipline of the tavern, nevertheless, the presence
+of a man was desirable; she understood this. Besides, the condition of
+an old maid did not seem to her at all inviting, and she did not care
+to wait the epoch of a third youth, before making a choice. But what
+would the unsuccessful candidates say? Would not this decision be at
+the risk of kindling a civil war, of provoking perhaps a general
+desertion? Then, too, accustomed as she was to command, the idea of
+giving herself a master alarmed her.
+
+She was vacillating amid all these perplexities, when a certain
+sailor, with cold and reserved manners, whose face bore the mark of
+a deep sabre cut, and who had for some time past, frequented her inn
+with great assiduity, without ever having addressed to her a single
+word, took her aside one fine morning and said:
+
+'Listen to me, Kate, and do not reply hastily. I came here, not like
+many others, attracted by your beautiful eyes, but because I wished
+to obtain recruits for an approaching voyage which I expected to
+undertake at my own risk and peril. I do not know how it has happened,
+but I now think less about sailing; I seem to be stumbling over roots.
+Right or wrong, I imagine that a good little wife, who will fill my
+glass while I am tranquilly smoking my pipe before a blazing fire, may
+have as many charms as the best brig in which one may sometimes perish
+with hunger and thirst. Right or wrong, I imagine to myself again that
+the prattle of two or three little monkeys around me, may be as
+agreeable as the sound of the wind howling through the masts, or of
+Spanish balls whistling about one's ears. All this, Kate, signifies
+that I mean to marry; and who do you suppose has put this pretty whim
+into my head? who, but yourself?'
+
+Catherine uttered an exclamation of surprise, perfectly sincere, for
+if she had expected a declaration, it was certainly not from this
+quarter.
+
+'Do not reply to me yet,' hastily resumed the sailor; 'he who
+pronounces his decree before he has heard the pleader and maturely
+reflected on the case, is a poor judge. To continue then. You are no
+longer a child, Kate, and I am no longer a young man; you are
+approaching thirty----'
+
+At these words the pretty Kitty made a gesture of surprise and of
+denial.
+
+'Do not reply to me!' repeated the pitiless sailor. 'You are thirty!
+I have already passed another barrier, but not long since. We are
+of suitable age for each other. The man should always have traversed
+the road before his companion. You are active and genteel; that does
+very well for women. You have always been an honest girl, that is
+better still. As for me, my skin is not so white as yours, but it is
+the fault of a tropic sun. It is possible that I may be a little
+disfigured by the scar on my cheek; but of this scar I am proud; I had
+the honor of receiving it, while boarding a vessel, from the hand of
+the celebrated Jean Bart, who, after having on that occasion lost a
+fine opportunity of being honorably killed, has just suffered himself
+to die of a stupid pleurisy; but it is not of him but of myself that
+we are now to speak. After having fought with Jean Bart, I have made a
+voyage with our not less celebrated William Dampier, whom I may dare
+call my friend. You may therefore understand, Kate, that if you have
+the reputation of an honest girl, I have that of a good sailor. The
+name of Captain Stradling is favorably known upon two oceans, and it
+will be to your credit, if ever, with your arm linked in mine, we walk
+as man and wife, through any port of England or Scotland. I have said.
+Now, look, reflect; if my proposition suits you, I will settle for
+life on _terra firma_, and bid adieu to the sea; if not, I resume my
+projected expedition, and it will be to you, Kate, that I shall say
+adieu.'
+
+Catherine opened her mouth to thank him, as was suitable, for his good
+intentions.
+
+'Do not reply to me!' interrupted he again; 'in three days I will come
+to receive your decision.'
+
+And he went out, leaving her amazed at having listened to so long a
+speech from one, who until then, seated motionless in a distant corner
+of the room, had always appeared to her the most rigid and silent of
+seamen.
+
+That very day Catherine has come to a decision concerning the captain;
+she thinks him ugly and disagreeable, coarse and ignorant; he has
+dared to tell her that she is thirty years old, and she will hardly be
+so at St. Valentine's Day, which is six weeks ahead, at least. Besides
+the scar which he has received from the celebrated Jean Bart, his
+countenance has no beauty to boast of: his face is long and pale, his
+temples are furrowed with wrinkles, and his lips thick and heavy; his
+eyebrows, at the top of his forehead, seem to be lost in his hair; his
+eyes are not mates, his nose is one-sided; his form is perhaps still
+worse; he walks after the fashion of a duck. Fie! can such a man be a
+suitable match for the rich landlady of the Royal Salmon, for the
+beautiful Kitty; for her who, among so many admirers and lovers, has
+had but the difficulty of a choice?
+
+The next day towards nightfall, Catherine, seated in her bar, in the
+large leathern arm-chair which served as her throne, with dreamy and
+downcast brow, and chin resting on her hand, was still thinking of
+Captain Stradling, but her ideas had assumed a different aspect from
+those of the evening before.
+
+She was saying to herself: 'If he has thick and heavy lips, it is
+because he is an Englishman; if he walks like a duck, it is because he
+is a sailor; if he has taken me to be thirty years old, that proves
+simply that he is a good physiognomist, and I shall have one painful
+avowal the less to make after marriage. As for his scar, he has a
+thousand reasons to be proud of it, and, upon close examination, it is
+not unbecoming. It would be very difficult for me to choose a husband,
+on account of the discontented suitors who will be left in the lurch;
+but I will relinquish my business, and that will put an end to all
+inconvenience. He is rich, so much for the profit; he is a captain, so
+much for the honor. Come, come, Mistress Stradling will have no reason
+to complain!'
+
+At this moment, Catherine Felton could meditate quite at her ease,
+without fear of being noticed; for the tobacco smoke, three times as
+dense and abundant as usual, enveloped her in an almost opaque cloud.
+There was this evening a grand _fête_ at the tavern of the Royal
+Salmon. The concourse of customers was immense, and this time, it was
+neither the beauty of the hostess, nor the quality of the liquors
+which had attracted them thither.
+
+The serving-men and lasses were going from table to table, multiplying
+themselves to pour out, not only the golden waves of strong beer and
+usquebaugh, but the purple waves of claret and port; all faces were
+smiling, all eyes sparkling, and in the midst of the huzzas and
+_vivas_, was heard, with triple applause, the name of William Dampier.
+
+This celebrated man, now a corsair, now a skilful seaman, who had just
+discovered so many unknown straits and shores, who had just made the
+tour of the world twice, in an age when the tour of the world did not
+pass, as at present, for a trifling matter; who had published, upon
+his return, a narrative full of novel facts and observations; this
+pitiless and intelligent pirate, who studied the coasts of Peru while
+he pillaged the cities along its shores, and meditated, in the midst
+of tempests, his learned theory of winds and tides, William Dampier,
+had landed, this very day at the little port of St. Andrew.
+
+At the intelligence of his arrival, the whole maritime population of
+the coast was in commotion; the society of the _Old Pilots_, with
+that of the _Sea Dogs_, had sent to him deputations, headed by the
+principal ship-owners in the town. Captain Stradling had not failed
+to be among them, happy at the opportunity of once more meeting and
+embracing his former friend. Speeches were made, as if to welcome
+an admiral, speeches in which were passed in review all his noble
+qualities and the great services rendered by him to the marine
+interest. To these Dampier replied with simplicity and conciseness,
+saying to the orators:
+
+'Gentlemen and dear comrades, you must be hoarse, let us drink!'
+
+This first trait of eccentricity could not fail to enlist universal
+applause.
+
+Commissioned by him to lead the column, Stradling could not do
+otherwise than to take the road to the Royal Salmon. It was on this
+occasion that he appeared there before the expiration of the three
+days: but he had not addressed a word to Catherine, scarcely turned
+his eyes towards her. Nevertheless the circumstances were favorable to
+his suit.
+
+Then a millionaire, William Dampier had immediately declared his
+intentions to treat at his own expense the whole company and even the
+whole town, if the town would do him the honor to drink with him.
+Catherine at once took him into favor. When she heard him praise his
+friend and companion, the brave Captain Stradling, she felt for the
+latter, not an emotion of tenderness, but a sentiment of respect and
+even of good-will. Dampier, excited by his audience, did not fail,
+like other conquerors by land and sea, to recount some of his great
+deeds. Among others, he recapitulated a certain affair in which he and
+his friend Stradling had captured a Spanish galleon, laden with
+piastres. From this moment the beautiful Kitty became more thoughtful,
+and began to see that the scar was becoming to the face of this good
+captain. After drinking, when Dampier, still escorted by his _fidus
+Achates_, came to settle his account with the hostess, he chucked her
+familiarly under the chin, as was his custom with landladies in the
+four quarters of the globe. From any one else, the proud Catherine
+would not have suffered such a liberty; to this, she replied only by a
+graceful reverence, and, while the hero and paymaster of the _fête_
+shook a rouleau of gold upon her counter, she said, hastily bending
+towards Stradling:
+
+'To-morrow!' accompanying this word with an expressive look and her
+most gracious smile.
+
+The enamored Stradling, always impassible, contented himself with
+replying:
+
+'It is well!'
+
+The day following, the third, the important day, that which Catherine
+already regarded as her day of betrothal, early in the morning, she
+dressed herself in her best attire, not doubting the impatience of the
+captain. Before noon, the latter entered the inn and went directly up
+to the landlady.
+
+She received him carelessly and coldly; she was nervous, she had not
+had time for reflection; she did not know what the captain wished; if
+he would let her alone for the present, by and by she would consider.
+
+'Boy! a new pipe and some ale!' exclaimed Stradling, addressing a
+waiter.
+
+And, perfectly calm in appearance, he sauntered to his accustomed
+place at the farther end of the bar-room. However, before leaving the
+Royal Salmon, approaching Catherine, he said:
+
+'Yesterday, by your voice and gesture you said, or almost said, yes;
+we sailors know the signals; to-day it is no, or almost no. Very well,
+I will wait; but reflect, my beauty, we are neither of us young enough
+to lose our time in this foolish game.'
+
+But what had thus unexpectedly changed, from white to black, the good
+intentions of Catherine in the captain's behalf? The presence of a
+young boy whom she had not seen for many years, and towards whom she
+had, until then, felt only a kindly indifference.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+
+Alexander Selkirk.--The College.--First Love.--Eight Years of Absence.
+--Maritime Combats.--Return and Departure.--The Swordfish.
+
+Alexander Selkirk,--the name of the principal personage in this
+narrative,--was born at Largo, in the county of Fife, not far from St.
+Andrew. Entered as a pupil in the university of the town, he at first
+distinguished himself by his aptitude and his intelligence, until the
+day when, hearing of the beauty of the landlady of the Royal Salmon,
+he was seized with an irresistible desire to see her: he saw her, and
+became violently enamored. It was one of those youthful passions,
+springing rather from the effervescence of the age, than from the
+merit of the object; one of those sudden ebullitions to which the
+young recluses of science are sometimes subject, from a prolonged
+compression of the natural and affectionate sentiments.
+
+From this moment, all the words in the Greek and Latin dictionaries,
+all the principles of natural philosophy, mathematics and history,
+suddenly taken by storm, whirled confusedly and pell-mell in the head
+of Selkirk, like the elements of the world in chaos, before the day of
+creation.
+
+His professors had predicted that at the annual exhibition he would
+obtain six great prizes; he obtained not even a premium.
+
+As a punishment, he was required to remain within the college grounds
+during the vacation. But its gates were not strong enough, nor its
+walls high enough to detain him.
+
+Condemned, for the crime of desertion, to a classic imprisonment, he
+was shut up in a cellar; he escaped through the window; in a garret;
+he descended by the roof.
+
+Then, pronounced incorrigible, he was expelled from the university.
+
+He left it joyous and happy, escaped from the tutor commissioned to
+conduct him to his father, and at last wholly free, his own master, he
+took lodgings in a cabin, not far from the Royal Salmon, and thought
+himself monarch of the universe.
+
+As soon as the doors of the inn were opened, he penetrated there with
+the earliest fogs of morning, with the first beams of day; in the
+evening he was the last to cross the threshold, after the extinction
+of the lights.
+
+All day long, seated at a little table opposite the bar, between a
+pipe and a pewter pot, he watched the movements of Kitty, and followed
+her with admiring eyes.
+
+Catherine was not slow to perceive this new passion; but she was
+accustomed to admiring eyes, and therefore paid but little heed to
+them. She was then at the age of twenty-two, in all the glory of her
+transient royalty; he, scarcely sixteen, was in her eyes a boy, a raw
+and awkward boy, like almost all the other students, and she contented
+herself with now and then bestowing a slight smile upon him, in common
+with her other customers.
+
+But this mechanical smile, this half extinguished spark, did but
+increase the flame, by kindling in the young man's soul a ray of hope.
+
+At this age, passion has not yet an oral language; it is in the heart,
+in the head especially, but not on the lips; one comprehends,
+experiences, dreams, writes of love in prose and verse, but does not
+talk of it. Selkirk had twenty times attempted to confess his
+affection to Catherine; he had as yet succeeded only in a few simple
+and hasty meteorological sentences, on the rain and fine weather. He
+therefore wrote.
+
+Unfortunately, Catherine could not easily read writing; she applied to
+him to interpret his letter. This was a hard task for the poor boy,
+who, with a tremulous and hesitating voice, saw himself forced to
+stammer through all that burning phraseology which seemed to congeal
+under the breath of the reader.
+
+The result however was that Catherine became his friend; she
+encouraged his confidence, and gave him good advice as an elder sister
+might have done. She even called him by the familiar name of Sandy,
+which was a good omen.
+
+Meanwhile his scanty resources became exhausted; he had no longer
+means to pay for the pot of ale which he consumed daily. The idea of
+asking credit of his beloved, of opening with her an account, which he
+might never have means to pay, was revolting to him. On the other
+hand, the thought of returning home, and asking pardon of his father,
+was not less repugnant to his feelings. He was endowed with one of
+those haughty and imperious natures which recognize their faults, not
+to repair them, but to make of them a starting point, or even a
+pedestal.
+
+He was rambling about the port, reflecting on his unfortunate
+situation, when he heard mention made of a ship ready to set sail at
+high tide, and which needed a reinforcement of cabin-boys and sailors.
+This was for him an inspiration; he did not hesitate, he hastened to
+engage. That very evening he had gained the open sea, beyond the Isle
+of May, and, with his eyes turned towards the Bay of St. Andrew, was
+attempting, in vain, to recognize among the lights which were yet
+burning in the city, the fortunate lantern which decorated the sacred
+door of the Royal Salmon.
+
+At present, Alexander Selkirk is twenty-four years old. He has become
+a genuine sailor, and he loves his profession; the sea is now his
+beautiful Kitty. Besides, it is long since he has troubled himself
+about his heart. It is empty, even of friendship, for, among his
+numerous companions, the proud young man has not found one worthy of
+him. After having served two years in the merchant marine, he has
+entered the navy. Thanks to the war kindled in Europe for the Spanish
+succession, he has for a long time cruised with the brave Admiral
+Rooke along the coasts of France; with him, he has fought against the
+Danish in the Baltic Sea, and in 1702, in the capacity of a master
+pilot, figured honorably in the expedition against Cadiz, and in the
+affair of Vigo. Finally, under the command of Admiral Dilkes, he has
+just taken part in the destruction of a French fleet.
+
+But all these expeditions, rather military than maritime, and
+circumscribed in the narrow circle of the seas of Europe, have not
+satisfied the vast desires of the ambitious sailor. He experiences an
+invincible thirst to apply his knowledge, to exercise his intelligence
+on a larger scale; he is impatient for a long voyage, a voyage of
+discovery.
+
+The terrific hurricane of the twenty-seventh of November, 1703, which
+drove the waves of the Thames even into Westminster, Hall, and covered
+London almost entirely with the fragments of broken vessels, appeared
+to Selkirk a favorable occasion for asking his dismissal. He easily
+obtained it. So many sailors had just been thrown out of employment by
+the hurricane.
+
+Once more, the undisciplined scholar found himself free and his own
+master! He profited by this to pay a visit to his birthplace in
+Scotland. His father was dead, but he had some business to regulate
+there.
+
+On reaching Largo he learned the arrival of William Dampier at St.
+Andrew. He set sail for that port immediately.
+
+'Ah!' said he on his way, 'if this brave captain should be about to
+undertake a voyage to the New World, and will let me accompany him, no
+matter in what capacity, all my wishes will be gratified. I thirst to
+see tattooed faces, other trees besides beeches, oaks and firs; other
+shores than those of the Baltic, Mediterranean and Atlantic. Who knows
+whether I may not aid him in the discovery of some new continent, some
+unknown island which shall bear my name!'
+
+And, cradled by the wave in the frail canoe that bore him, he dreamed
+of government, perhaps of royalty, in one of those archipelagoes which
+he imagined to exist in the bosom of the distant Southern seas, long
+afterwards explored by Cook, Bougainville and Vancouver.
+
+Once in port, he hastened to inquire for the dwelling occupied by
+Dampier. The latter was absent; he was in the harbor.
+
+While awaiting his return, our young sailor thought of his old friend
+Catherine, his pretty black-eyed Kitty, and directed his steps towards
+the inn.
+
+He found her already enthroned in her leathern arm-chair, her hair
+neatly braided, with two small curls on her temples; in a toilette
+which the early hour of the morning did not seem to authorize; but it
+was the famous third day, and she was awaiting Stradling.
+
+On seeing Selkirk enter, she exclaimed to the boy, pointing to the
+newly-arrived: 'A pot of ale!'
+
+'No,' cried the young man smiling; 'the ale which I once drank here
+was for me a philter full of bitterness; a glass of whiskey, if you
+please,----' and, pointing to the little table opposite the bar at
+which he was formerly accustomed to place himself, he said:
+
+'Serve me there; I will return to my old habits.'
+
+Catherine looked at him with astonishment.
+
+'Does not pretty Kate recognize me?' said he in a caressing tone,
+approaching her.
+
+'How! Is it possible! is it you, indeed, Sandy?'
+
+'Yes, Alexander Selkirk, formerly a fugitive from the University of
+St. Andrew; recently a master pilot in the royal marine; now, as ever,
+your very humble servant.'
+
+And they shook hands, and examined each other closely, but the
+impression on both sides was far from being the same.
+
+Catherine finds Selkirk much changed, but for the better; time and
+navigation have been favorable to him. He is no longer the raw student
+with embarrassed air, awkward manner, bony frame and dilapidated
+costume; but a stout young man, with a broad chest, active and
+graceful form; though his features are decidedly Scotch, they are
+handsome; his eyes, less brilliant than formerly, are animated with a
+more attractive thoughtfulness, and the naval uniform, which he still
+wears, sets off his person to advantage.
+
+On his part, Selkirk finds Catherine also much changed; the rosy
+complexion, the soft voice, the youthful look, the twenty-two years,
+all are gone. Her form has assumed a superabundant amplitude.
+
+They drop each other's hands and utter a sigh; he, of regret; she, of
+surprise.
+
+Both close their eyes, at the same time; she, with the fear of gazing
+too earnestly; he, to recall the being of his imagination.
+
+However this may be, she is not yet a woman to be despised by a
+sailor. He therefore prolongs his visit: they come to interrogations,
+to confidences.
+
+Catherine acquaints him with the situation of her little business
+affairs; her fortune is improving; she gives him an estimate of it in
+round numbers, as well as of the suitors she has rejected; but she
+does not mention Captain Stradling, whose arrival she yet fears every
+moment.
+
+Selkirk relates to her his campaigns, his combats against the French,
+against the Danish, the victorious attack of the English ships against
+the great boom of Vigo; but, when she asks him what motive has brought
+him back to St. Andrew, he replies boldly that he came to see her and
+no one else, and says not a word of Captain Dampier, whom he is even
+now impatient to meet.
+
+At last the old friends say adieu.
+
+Then the gallant sailor, with an apparent effort, goes away, not
+forgetting, however, to drink his glass of whiskey.
+
+And this is the reason why, on the third day, Catherine has the
+vapors; this is the reason why, notwithstanding her soft words of the
+evening before and her grand morning toilette, she receives so coldly
+the scarred adversary of the celebrated Jean Bart.
+
+During the whole of the week following, Stradling, Dampier and
+Selkirk, did not fail to meet at the Royal Salmon. Selkirk came to see
+Dampier; Dampier came to see Stradling; Stradling came to see
+Catherine Felton.
+
+The latter thought the young man already knew the two others, that he
+had sailed with them, and was not surprised at their intimacy.
+
+Sometimes Selkirk, leaving his companions in the midst of their
+bottles and glasses, would describe a tangent towards the counter, and
+come to converse with the pretty hostess. He no longer felt love for
+her, and notwithstanding this, perhaps for this very reason, he now
+talked eloquently.
+
+Kitty blushed, was embarrassed, and poor Captain Stradling, listening
+with all his ears to the narratives of his illustrious friend William
+Dampier, or pre-occupied with his pipe, lost in its cloud, saw
+nothing,--or seemed to see nothing.
+
+Nevertheless one evening, he went, in his turn, to lean on the
+counter:
+
+'Kate,' said he, 'when is our marriage to take place?'
+
+'Are you thinking of that still?' replied she, with an air of levity
+which would once have became her better; 'I hoped this fancy had
+passed out of your head.'
+
+'I may then set out on my voyage, Kate?'
+
+'Why not? We will talk of our plans on your return.'
+
+'But I am going to make the tour of the world, as well as my friend
+Dampier. Kate, it is the affair of three years!'
+
+'So much the better! it will give us both time for reflection.'
+
+'It is well!' replied the phlegmatic Englishman, and nothing on his
+polar face betokened an afterthought.
+
+The doors closed, the lights extinguished, Catherine retired to rest
+the happiest woman in the world. She said to herself: 'Alexander loves
+me, and has loved me for eight years! he deserves to be rewarded. He
+has less money than the other, it is a misfortune; but he has more
+youth and grace, that balances it. As to rank, a master pilot of
+twenty-four is as far advanced as a captain of forty. Between Selkirk
+and myself, if the wealth is on my side, on his will be gratitude and
+little attentions. At all events, I prefer a young husband who will
+whisper words of love in my ear, to amusing myself by pouring out
+drink for my lord and master, while he smokes his pipe, with his feet
+on the brands. Was it not thus that icicle, dressed in blue, called
+Stradling, talked to me of the pleasures of marriage? And what a name!
+But Mistress Selkirk!--that sounds well. In our Scotland, there is the
+county of Selkirk, the town of Selkirk; there is even a great nobleman
+of this name, who is something like minister to our Queen Anne, I
+believe. Who knows? we are perhaps of his family! As for walking about
+the port arm-in-arm with a captain, I am sure my very dear friends and
+neighbors would die with jealousy if I took, instead of this scarred
+captain, a young and handsome man. It is settled. I will marry
+Alexander; to-morrow I will myself announce it to him. I hope he will
+not die of joy!'
+
+On the morrow she attired herself as on the day of Selkirk's return,
+in her beautiful dress of cloth and silk, with the two little curls
+upon her temples. She thus waited a great part of the day. At last,
+about four o'clock, Selkirk arrives in haste, his face beaming with
+joy, and a gleam of triumph in his eye.
+
+'Has he then,' thought Catherine, 'a presentiment of the happiness in
+store for him?'
+
+'Congratulate me, pretty Kitty,' said the young man, almost out of
+breath; 'I am appointed mate of the brig Swordfish, which I am to join
+at Dunbar.'
+
+'How! you are going?'
+
+'In an hour.'
+
+'For a long time?'
+
+'For three years at least. In a fortnight we set sail for the East
+Indies. It will be a great commercial voyage and a voyage of
+discovery. Unfortunately William Dampier does not accompany us; but he
+furnishes funds to the brave Captain Stradling.'
+
+'Stradling!'
+
+'Yes, it is he who has just engaged me, and with whom I am to sail.
+Our agreement is signed,--I am mate! I am going to explore the New
+World! Ah! I would not exchange my fate for that of a king. But time
+presses; adieu, Kitty, till I see you again!'
+
+'Three years!' murmured Catherine.
+
+And her curls grew straight beneath the cold perspiration that covered
+her forehead.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+
+The Tour of the World.--The Way to manufacture Negroes--California.
+--The Eldorado.--Revolt of Selkirk.--The Log-Book.--Degradation.
+--A Free Shore.
+
+The Swordfish, well provisioned, even with guns and ammunition, left
+Dunbar one morning with a fresh breeze, sailed down the North Sea,
+passed Ireland, France and Spain, the Azores, Canaries, and Cape Verd
+Islands on the coast of Africa, and, after having stopped for a short
+time in the harbors of Guinea and Congo, doubled the Cape of Good
+Hope, amid the traditional tempest.
+
+Entering the Indian Ocean, and passing through the Straits of Sunda,
+she touched at Borneo, and at Java, reached the Southern Sea by the
+Gulf of Siam, passed the Philippine Isles, then, through the vast
+regions of the Pacific Ocean, pursued the route which had been marked
+out by the exploring ship of William Dampier in 1686. Like that, the
+Swordfish remained a few days at the Island of St. Pierre, before
+launching into that immensity where, during nearly two months, wave
+only succeeded to wave; at last she reached the coasts of South
+America, and cast anchor in the Gulf of California.
+
+This gigantic voyage, which seemed as if it must have been attempted
+under the inspiration of science and with the hope of the most
+important discoveries, had been undertaken by Stradling with no object
+but of traffic and even of rapine. These had been the great ends of
+most of the bold enterprises which had preceded. The Spanish and
+Portuguese, in their discoveries of new continents, had thought less
+of glory than of riches; they had conquered the New World only to
+pillage it; the vanquished who escaped extermination, were forced to
+dig their native soil, not to render it more fruitful, but to procure
+from it, for the profit of the vanquisher, the gold it might contain.
+Among the European nations, those who had had no part in the conquest
+now sought to share the spoils. For this the least pretext of war or
+commerce sufficed.
+
+Stradling availed himself of both these pretences; when he touched at
+the coasts of Guinea and Congo, it was to obtain negroes whom he
+expected to sell in America. At Borneo, the opportunity presented
+itself for an advantageous disposal of the greater part of his black
+merchandize; as he was a man of resources and not at all scrupulous,
+he soon found means to replace them.
+
+In the Straits of Sunda, several barques, manned by negroes and
+Malays, had become entangled in the masses of seaweed which are every
+where floating on the surface of the wave; Stradling encountered them,
+made the rowers enter his ship, and obligingly took the barques in
+tow, to extricate them from their difficulty. But those who ascended
+the side of the Swordfish, descended only to be sold in their turn.
+
+Although he had received an education superior to that of his
+companions, Selkirk shared in the prejudices of his times; he had
+therefore found nothing objectionable in seeing his captain exchange
+at Congo little mirrors, a few glass beads, half a dozen useless guns,
+and some gallons of brandy, for men still young and vigorous, torn
+from their country and their families. Their skin was of another
+color, their heads woolly; this was a profitable traffic, recognized
+by governments; but when he saw Stradling seize the property of others
+to refill his empty hold, he could not control his indignation and
+boldly expressed it:
+
+'It is for their salvation,' replied the captain, without emotion; 'we
+will make Christians of them.'
+
+On approaching the Vermilion Sea, a deep gulf which separates
+California from the American continent, and makes it almost an island,
+the Malays were rubbed with a mixture of tar and dragon's blood,
+dissolved in a caustic oil, to give to their olive skins a deeper
+shade, and their flat noses and silky hair making them pass for Yolof
+negroes, they were exchanged at Cape St. Lucas, along with the rest,
+for pearls and native productions.
+
+The young mate thought this proceeding not less mean and dishonorable
+than the first; he made new observations.
+
+'Nothing now remains to be done, captain,' said he, 'but to shave and
+besmear with tar the monkey you have just bought, and to include it
+among your new race of negroes.'
+
+This time, the captain looked at him askance, and shrugged his
+shoulders without replying.
+
+The storm was beginning to growl in the distance.
+
+It was not without a secret object that, in his course through the
+Southern Sea, Stradling had first of all aimed at California.
+
+He devoted an entire month to cruising along both shores of this
+almost island, and penetrating all the bays of the Vermilion Sea; he
+hoped to find there a passage to an unknown land, then predicted and
+coveted by all navigators. What was this land? The _Eldorado_!
+
+Although I would hasten over these details of the voyage to arrive at
+the more important events of this history; now that the recent
+discovery of the immense mines of gold buried beneath the hills of
+California has aroused the entire world, that the name alone of
+_Sacramento_ seems to fill with gold the mouth which pronounces it,
+there is a curious fact, perhaps entirely unknown, which I cannot pass
+over in silence.
+
+After the middle of the sixteenth century, and long before the
+seventeenth, a vague rumor, a confused tradition, had located, in the
+neighborhood of the Vermilion Sea, a famed land, whose rivers rolled
+over gold, and whose mountains rested on golden foundations; the
+treasures of Mexico and Peru were nothing in comparison with those
+which were to be gathered there. An ingot of native gold was talked
+of, of a _pepite_ or eighty pounds weight.
+
+It was a grape from the promised land.
+
+This marvellous country had been named, in advance, _Eldorado_.
+
+Among the bold Argonauts of these two centuries, there was a contest
+as to who should first raise his flag over this new Colchis, defended,
+it was said, by the Apaches, a terrible, sanguinary and cannibal race,
+whom Cortez himself could not subdue. This land of gold some had
+located in New Biscay or New Mexico; others, in the pretended kingdoms
+of Sonora and Quivira; then, after several ineffectual attempts, the
+possibility of reaching it was denied; learned men, from the various
+academies of Europe, proved that the _Eldorado_ was not a country, but
+a dream; on this subject the Old World laughed at the New; the
+Argonauts became discouraged, and during a century the subject was
+named only to be ridiculed.
+
+And yet, in spite of sceptics and scoffers, the _Eldorado_ existed. It
+existed where tradition had placed it, on the shores of this Vermilion
+Sea, now the Gulf of California. For once, popular opinion had the
+advantage over scientific dissertations and philosophic denials;
+there, where, according to the Dictionary of Alcedo, nothing had been
+discovered but mines of pewter! where Jacques Baegert had indeed
+acknowledged the presence of gold, but _in meagre veins_; where Raynal
+had named as curiosities only fishes and pearls, declaring, in
+California, _the sea richer than the land_; where in our own times M.
+Humboldt discovered nothing but cylindrical cacti, on a sandy soil,
+remained buried, as a deposit for future ages, this treasure of the
+world, which seemed to be waiting in order to leave its native soil,
+the moment of falling into the hands of a commercial and industrious
+people, that of the United States.
+
+This _Eldorado_, Stradling sought in vain; he therefore decided to
+pursue his route along the coast of Mexico, now under the French flag,
+when he found an opportunity for traffic with the natives, colonists
+or savages; now under the English flag, when he wished to exercise his
+trade of corsair, an easy profession, for since the disaster of Vigo,
+the Spanish had abandoned their transatlantic possessions to
+themselves.
+
+The Spanish soldiery of America then found themselves, in the presence
+of European adventurers, in that state of pusillanimous inferiority in
+which had been, at the period of the conquest, the subjects of the
+Incas and Montezuma before the soldiers of Cortez and Pizarro. The
+time was not already far passed, when a few bands of freebooters, from
+France, England and Holland, had well nigh wrested from his Majesty,
+the King of Spain and the Indies, the most extensive and wealthy of
+his twenty-two hereditary kingdoms.
+
+Stradling was following in the footsteps of these freebooters.
+
+Recently, two little cities on the coast had been put under
+contribution for the supplies of the Swordfish; there had been
+resistance, a threatened attack, a parley, and capitulation; in this
+affair, the young mate had nobly distinguished himself both as a
+combatant and a negotiator, and yet the captain had not deigned to
+give him a share in his distribution of compliments.
+
+Selkirk felt an irritation the more lively that this shore life began
+to be irksome. Not that his conscience disturbed him any more than in
+the treatment of the blacks; he thought it as honorable to war with
+the Spaniards in the New World, as to be beaten by them in the Old;
+but he compared his present chief, Captain Stradling, with his former
+commander, the noble and brave Admiral Rooke; the parallel extended in
+his mind to his old companions in the royal navy, all so frank, so
+gay, so loyal,--among whom he had yet never found a friend,--and his
+new companions of to-day, recruited for the most part in the marshy
+lowlands of the merchant marine of Scotland; his thoughts became
+overshadowed, and his desires for independence, which dated from his
+college life, returned in full force.
+
+As much as his duties permitted, he loved to isolate himself from all;
+when he could remain some time alone in his cabin, or gaze upon the
+sea from a retired corner of the deck and watch the ploughing of the
+vessel, then only he was happy.
+
+As if to increase his uneasiness, Stradling became daily more severe
+and more exacting towards his chief officer; he imposed upon him rude
+labors foreign to his station. It seemed as if he were determined to
+drive him to desperation.
+
+He succeeded.
+
+Selkirk protested against such treatment, and recapitulated his
+subjects of complaint. The other paid no more attention than he would
+have done to the buzzing of a fly.
+
+Irritated by this outrageous impassibility, the young man declared
+that there should no longer be any thing in common between them, and
+that, whatever fate might await him, he demanded to be set on shore.
+
+Stradling touched his forehead:
+
+'That is a good idea,' said he, and he turned away.
+
+The next day, they reached the Isthmus of Panama; the persevering
+Selkirk returned to the charge: 'The moment is favorable for ridding
+yourself of me, and me of you,' said he to the captain; 'let the boat
+convey me to the shore; I will cross the Isthmus, reach the Gulf of
+Darien, the North Sea, and return to Scotland, even before the
+Swordfish!'
+
+This time the honest corsair listened attentively, then shaking his
+head and winking his eye, with the smile of a hungry vampire, replied:
+
+'You are then in great haste to be married, comrade.'
+
+It was the first word he had addressed to him relative to Catherine
+during this long voyage, and this word Selkirk had not even
+understood.
+
+They were about passing Panama: the vessel continuing her voyage,
+Selkirk interposed his authority, ordered the men to put about, take
+in sail and approach the shore.
+
+This Stradling prohibited, uttered a formidable oath, and commanded
+the young man to bring the log-book. When it was brought, he made the
+following entry:
+
+'To-day, Sept. 24th, 1704, Alexander Selkirk, mate of this vessel,
+having mutinied and attempted to desert to the enemy, we have deprived
+him of his title and his office; in case of obstinacy we shall hang
+him to the yard-arm.'
+
+And he read the sentence to the offender.
+
+From this day, the rebel saw himself compelled to serve in the
+Swordfish as a simple sailor, and his subordinates of yesterday,
+to-day his equals, indemnified themselves for the authority he had
+exercised over them, which did not cure him of that native contempt he
+had always felt for mankind.
+
+A month passed away thus, during which the Swordfish several times
+touched the shores of Peru, now to renew her supplies of provisions
+and water, now to exchange with the Indians, nails, hatchets, knives,
+and necklaces of beads, for gold dust, furs, and garments trimmed with
+colored feathers.
+
+During one of these pauses, Selkirk, left on the ship, accosted the
+captain once more. He knew that the remains of some bands of
+freebooters were colonized there, leading a peaceful and agricultural
+life; this fact was known to all. At Coquimbo in Chili, some English
+and Dutch pirates had formed a settlement of this kind, now in the
+full tide of prosperity. Selkirk, who, during an entire month, had not
+spoken to the captain, now demanded, in a voice which he attempted to
+render calm and almost supplicating, to be landed at Coquimbo, from
+which they were only a few days sail.
+
+'You will not this time accuse me of wishing to desert to the enemy;
+they are the English, Scotch, Dutch, our countrymen and allies whom I
+wish to join! Do you still suspect me? Well, do not content yourself
+with setting me on shore; place me in the hands of the chief men of
+the settlement. Will that suit you?'
+
+Stradling winked significantly; but this was all.
+
+'Ah!' resumed the young man with increasing emotion, 'do not think to
+detain me longer on board, to crush me beneath this humiliation! I
+consented to serve under your orders as mate, and you have made me the
+lowest of your sailors; this you had no right to do.'
+
+Stradling took his glass and directed it towards the shore, where his
+people were engaged in trafficking their beads and hardware.
+
+Raising his head and folding his arms:
+
+'Captain,' pursued Selkirk with vehemence, 'some day or other we shall
+return to England, where the laws protect all; there, I shall have the
+right of complaint, and Queen Anne loves to render justice; beware!'
+
+Stradling, still spying, began to whistle _God save the Queen_; then
+he called his monkey and made it gambol before him.
+
+'I will depart, I will free myself from your presence, and that of
+your worthy companions; I will do so at all events, do you
+understand!' exclaimed Selkirk exasperated, 'I will not endure your
+infamous treatment another week! If you refuse to consent to my
+demand, I will leave without your permission; were the vessel twenty
+miles from the land, and were I to perish twenty times on the way, I
+will attempt to swim ashore. Will you land me at Coquimbo, yes or no?
+Reply!'
+
+By way of reply, Stradling ordered him to be confined in the hold.
+
+Poor Selkirk! Ah! if pretty Kitty, if the beautiful landlady of the
+Royal Salmon could know all thou hast endured for her sake, how many
+tears would her fine eyes shed over thy fate! But who knows whether
+she will ever hear of thee? Who can tell whether any human being will
+learn the sufferings in reserve for thee?
+
+Poor Selkirk! you who painted to yourself so smiling a picture of this
+grand voyage to America; who hoped to leave, like Dampier, your name
+to some strait, some newly discovered island; you who dreamed of
+scientific walks in vast prairies and under the arches of virgin
+forests, you have shared only in the career of a trafficker and a
+pirate; of this New World, full of marvellous sights, you have seen
+only the shore, the fringe of the mantle, the margin of this last work
+of God!
+
+Poor Selkirk, must you then return to your cold and foggy Scotland,
+without having contemplated at your ease, beneath the brilliant sun of
+the tropics, one of those Edens overshadowed by the luxuriant verdure
+of palm-trees, bananas, mimosas and gigantic ferns? In your country,
+the bark of the trees is clad with lichens and mosses, and the
+parasite mistletoe suspends itself to the branches, more as a burden
+than as an ornament; here, numerous families of the orchis, with their
+singular forms, showy and variegated blossoms, climb along the knotty
+stems of the tall monarchs of the forests; from their feet spring up,
+as if to enlace them with a magic network, the brilliant passiflora,
+the vanilla with its intoxicating perfume, the banisteria whose roots
+seem to have dived into mines of gold and borrowed from thence the
+color of its petals! Hither the birds of Paradise and Brazilian
+parrots come to build their nests; here the bluebird and the
+purple-necked wood-pigeon coo and sing; here, like swarms of bees,
+thousands of humming-birds of mingled emerald and sapphire, warble and
+glitter as they suck the nectar from the flowers. This was what you
+hoped to contemplate, poor Selkirk! and this joy, like many others, is
+henceforth forbidden.
+
+In his floating prison, in his submarine cell, his only employment is
+to listen to the dashing of the waves against the ship, or now and
+then to catch a glimpse of the blue sky through the hatchways.
+
+What cares he? He does not complain; he has learned to abhor mankind,
+and he loves to be alone, in company with himself and his own
+thoughts.
+
+Several days passed in this manner.
+
+One morning he felt the brig slacken its speed; the dashing of the
+wave against the prow diminished, and the Swordfish, suddenly furling
+its sails, after having slightly rocked hither and thither, stopped.
+They had just cast anchor. Where? he knows not.
+
+Soon he hears the rattling of the rope-ladder which serves as a
+stairway to those above who would communicate with his prison. They
+come, on the part of the captain, to seek him.
+
+He finds the latter seated on the deck, surrounded by his principal
+men.
+
+'Young man,' said Stradling, 'I have been obliged to be severe for the
+sake of an example; but you have been sufficiently punished by the
+time you have passed below there,'--and he pointed to the ship's hold.
+'Now, your wish shall be granted. You shall be allowed to land.'
+
+And the rare smile which sometimes hovered on his lips, stole over his
+rigid face.
+
+'So much the better,' replied Selkirk, laconically.
+
+The boat was let down; he entered it, and ten minutes afterwards
+disembarked on a green shore, where the waves, as they broke upon it,
+seemed to murmur softly in his ear the word, _liberty_!
+
+The boat immediately rejoined the ship, which set sail, coasted along
+Chili and Patagonia, and re-entered the Northern Sea by the Straits of
+Magellan.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+
+Inspection of the Country.--Marimonda.--A City seen through the Fog.
+--The Sea every where.--Dialogue with a Toucan.--The first Shot.
+--Declaration of War.--Vengeance.--A Terrestrial Paradise.
+
+While watching the departure of the Swordfish, Alexander Selkirk felt
+the same sensation as on that day when he had seen the doors of the
+college of St. Andrew thrown open for his exit; once more he was his
+own master. Now, however, it is at some thousands of miles from his
+country that he must reap the benefits of his independence, and this
+idea embitters his emotions of joy.
+
+But is he not about to find countrymen at Coquimbo? And if their
+society should be unpleasing?--if their habits, their mode of life,
+their persons, should become objects of antipathy to the misanthropic
+Selkirk, as it is but natural to fear? Well! after all, no engagement
+binds him to them; he will be always free to enter, in the capacity of
+a sailor, the first vessel which may leave for Europe.
+
+Determined to act as shall seem good to him,--to make some excursions
+into the interior of the continent, if an opportunity presents itself,
+and he will know how to make one,--he casts a first glance at the land
+of his adoption.
+
+Before him extends a vast shore, studded with groves of trees, covered
+with fine turf and little flowers joyfully unfolding their petals to
+the sun: two streams, having their source at the very base of the
+opposite hills, after having meandered around this immense lawn, unite
+almost at his feet.
+
+He bends down to one of these streams, fills the hollow of his hand
+with water, and tastes it, as a libation, and as a toast to the
+generous land which has just received him; the water is excellent; he
+plucks a flower, and continues his inspection.
+
+On his left rise high mountains, terraced and verdant, excepting at
+their summits, on one of which he perceives a goat, with long horns,
+stationed there immovable like a sentinel, and whose delicate profile
+is clearly defined on the azure of the sky. On the side towards the
+sea, the mountains, bending their gray and naked heads, resemble stone
+giants, watching the movements of the wave which dashes at their feet.
+
+On his right, where the land declines, he sees little valleys linked
+together with charming undulations; but on the mountains at his left,
+in the valleys at his right, among the hills in the distance, his eye
+vainly seeks the vestige of a human habitation.
+
+He sets out in search of one. The boat from which he landed has
+deposited on the shore his effects--his arms, his nautical
+instruments, his charts, a Bible, and provisions of various kinds.
+Notwithstanding his piratical sentiments, the captain of the Swordfish
+has not designed to precede exile by confiscation. Selkirk takes his
+gun, his gourd; but, unable to carry all his riches, he conceals them
+behind a stony thicket, well defended by the darts of the cactus, and
+the sword-like leaves of the aloe, not caring to have the first comer
+seize them as his booty.
+
+As he is occupied with this duty, he feels himself suddenly clasped by
+two long hairy arms; he turns his head, it is Marimonda, the captain's
+monkey, a female of the largest species.
+
+How came she there? Selkirk does not know.
+
+Disgusted with her sea-voyages, with the intelligence natural to her
+race, Marimonda has undoubtedly profited by the moment of the boat's
+leaving the ship to conceal herself in it and gain the shore along
+with the prisoner, which she might easily have done, unseen by all,
+during the transporting of the effects and provisions.
+
+However this may be, Selkirk begins by freeing himself from her grasp,
+repulses the monkey and sets out: but the latter perseveres in
+following, and after having, by her most graceful grimaces, sought to
+conciliate him, marches beside him. Not caring to arrive at Coquimbo
+escorted by such a companion, which would give him in a city the
+appearance of a mountebank and showman of monkeys, Selkirk, this time,
+repulses her rudely, not with his hand, but with the butt of his gun.
+
+Struck in the breast by this home thrust, the poor monkey stops, rolls
+up her eyes, moves her lips, and growling confusedly her complaints
+and reproaches, crouches beneath a tuft of the sapota, leaving the man
+to pursue his way alone.
+
+Selkirk has at first directed his steps toward the valleys; after
+having traversed these, he arrives at the margin of a sandy plain, and
+as far as the eye can reach, perceives neither city, village, house,
+tent nor hut, nothing which can indicate the presence of inhabitants.
+
+Nevertheless, a little grove which he has just traversed, seems to
+have recently, in its principal path, passed under the shears of a
+gardener; the foliage presents a certain symmetry; fragments of
+branches are strewed, on the ground, which seem to have been freshly
+cut; he even thinks he sees vestiges of the passage of a flock. On the
+lawn of the shore, he has seen, and still sees around him, trees with
+tufted heads, which must owe this form to art. He continues his
+researches.
+
+At last, in the distance, beneath a fog which is just beginning to
+dissolve, he perceives a vast mass of white and red houses, some with
+terraced roofs, others covered with thatch; through the humid veil
+which envelopes them, he sees the glistening of the glass in the
+windows; already he hears at his feet the confused noise of cities;
+murmuring voices reply; the measured sound of hammers and of mills
+even reaches his ear.
+
+It is Coquimbo! he cannot doubt it, and shortening his route by a path
+across the hill, he quickens his pace.
+
+Meanwhile an east wind arises, the fog disappears; when he thinks he
+has reached the suburbs of the city, Selkirk sees before him only an
+irregular assemblage of calcareous stones, crowned with dry herbs, or
+reddish, arid, angular rocks, flattened at their summits, tessellated
+with fragments of silex and mica, on which the sun is just pouring his
+rays; a company of goats, which the mist had condemned to a momentary
+repose, are bounding here and there, startling flocks of clamorous
+black-birds and plaintive sea-gulls; the fearless and yellow-crested
+woodpeckers alone do not stir, but continue to hammer with their sharp
+beaks at some old stunted trees.
+
+The disenchantment is painful for our sailor; the fog has deceived him
+with the semblance of a city, as it has more than once deluded us in
+the midst of plains and woods, by the appearance of an ocean with its
+white waves, its great capes, its bold shores, and its vessels at
+anchor.
+
+Perhaps Coquimbo is still beyond. Fearing to lose himself if he
+ventures farther in an unknown land, he resolves to explore it first
+by a look. Returning to the shore upon which he had landed, he scales
+the mountains on the north, reaches the first platform, and from
+thence seeks to discover some indications of a city. Nothing! he still
+ascends, the circle enlarges around him, but with no better result.
+Summoning all his courage, through a thousand difficulties, climbing,
+drawing himself up by the arid and abrupt rocks, piled one upon
+another, he at last attains a culminating point of the mountain. He
+can now embrace with his eye an immense horizon, but this immense
+horizon is the sea! On his right, on his left, before him, behind him,
+every where the sea!
+
+He is not on the continent, but on an island.
+
+This evening, exhausted with fatigue, he lies down in a grotto at the
+foot of the mountain, where he passes a night full of agitation and
+anxiety.
+
+Rising with the sun, his first care, the next morning, is to examine
+his riches and his provisions. He returns to the thicket of cactus and
+aloes.
+
+Besides two guns, two hatchets, a knife, an iron pot, a Bible and
+nautical instruments, all articles belonging to him, he finds there a
+quantity of nails, a large fragment of a sail, several horns of powder
+and shot; a bag of ship biscuit, a salted quarter of pork, a little
+cask of pickled fish, and a dozen cocoa-nuts.
+
+The night before, at sight of these articles, he had supposed a
+sentiment of justice and humanity to exist in the soul of the corsair.
+Just now, he had said to himself that Stradling, deceived by a false
+reckoning of latitude, had landed him on an island, perhaps believing
+it to be a projecting shore of the continent. Now, the abundance of
+his supplies, this biscuit, these salt provisions, these fruits of the
+cocoa, all valueless if he had really landed at Coquimbo, lead him to
+suspect that the vindictive Englishman has designedly chosen the place
+of his exile.
+
+But this exile, is it complete isolation? Is the island inhabited or
+deserted? If it is inhabited, as he still believes he has reason to
+suppose, by whom is it so?
+
+That he may obtain a reply to this double question, he resolves to
+traverse the country in its whole extent. At the very commencement of
+his journey, the immobility of a bird suffices to give to the doubt,
+on which his thoughts vacillate, the appearance almost of a certainty.
+
+This bird is a toucan, of brilliant plumage and monstrous beak.
+Selkirk passes near it, with his eyes fixed on the branch which serves
+as a perch, and the toucan, without stirring, looks at him with a
+species of calm and placid astonishment.
+
+Selkirk stops; he comprehends the mute language of the bird.
+
+'You do not know then what a man is! He is the enemy of every creature
+to whom God has given life, the enemy even of his kind! You have then
+never been threatened by the arms that I bear!'
+
+And with the palm of his hand, striking the butt of his gun, he made
+the hammer click.
+
+At the sound of his voice, as at the noise of the hammer, the bird
+raised its head, manifesting new and redoubled surprise, but without
+any other movement. It seemed to think that the man and the gun were
+one, and that its strange interlocutor possessed two different voices.
+
+At last, by way of reply, it uttered a few shrill and prolonged cries,
+accompanied by the rattling of its two horny mandibles. After which,
+acting the great nobleman, cutting short the audience he has deigned
+to grant, the toucan is silent, turns its head, proudly raises one of
+its wings and busies itself in smoothing, with the point of its large
+beak, its beautiful greenish feathers, variegated with purple.
+
+At some distance from this spot, still following the margin of a
+wooded hill, Selkirk sees other birds, some in their nests, others
+warbling in the shade; all manifesting no more alarm at his presence
+than did the toucan. Crested orioles, hooded bullfinches, alight to
+pick up little grains or insects almost at his feet; humming-birds,
+variegated cotingas, red manaquins flutter before him in the sunbeams,
+pursuing invisible flies; little wood-peckers, black or green, hop
+around the trunks of the trees, stopping a moment to see him pass and
+then resuming their spiral ascent.
+
+The confidence which he inspires is not confined to these winged
+people. Upon a hillock of turf he perceives an animal, with pointed
+nose, brown fur enamelled with red spots, and of the size of a hare;
+seated on its hind paws, longer than those in front, it uses these,
+after the manner of squirrels, to carry to its mouth some nuts of the
+maripa, which constitute its breakfast. It is an agouti,[1] a mother,
+her little ones are near. At sight of the stranger they run to her,
+but quickly re-assured, quietly finish their morning repast.
+
+Farther on, coatis,[2] with short ears, and long tails; companies of
+little Guinea pigs; armadillos, a species of hedge-hog without the
+quills, but covered with an armor of scales, more compact and
+impervious than that of the ancient knights of the Middle Ages,
+arrange themselves along the line of his route, as if to pass him in
+review.
+
+[Footnote 1: _Agouti_. An animal of the bigness of a rabbit, with
+bright red hair, and a little tail without hair. He has but two teeth
+in each jaw; holds his meat in his forepaws like a squirrel, and has a
+very remarkable cry: when he is angry, his hair stands on end, and he
+strikes the earth with his hind feet; and when chased, he flies to a
+hollow tree, whence he is expelled by smoke.--_Trevoux_.]
+
+[Footnote 2: The _coati_ is a native of Brazil, not unlike the racoon
+in the general form of the body, and, like that animal, it frequently
+sits up on the hinder legs, and in this position carries its food to
+its mouth. If left at liberty in a state of tameness, it will pursue
+poultry, and destroy every living thing that it has strength to
+conquer. When it sleeps it rolls itself into a lump, and remains
+immovable for fifteen hours together. His eyes are small, but full of
+life; and when domesticated, this creature is very playful and
+amusing. A great peculiarity belonging to this animal is the length of
+his snout, which resembles in some particulars the trunk of the
+elephant, as it is movable in every direction. The ears are round, and
+like those of a rat; the forefeet have five toes each. The hair is
+short and rough on the back, and of a blackish color; the tail is
+marked with rings of black, like the wild cat; the rest of the animal
+is a mixture of black and red.]
+
+Alas! this general quiet does but deepen in the heart of Selkirk the
+certainty of his isolation.
+
+Nevertheless, yesterday, said he to himself, in this thick wood, did I
+not see alleys trimmed with the shears, trees shaped by the
+pruning-knife?
+
+And the little grove which he visited the evening previous, at that
+instant presents itself before him. He examines the trees; they are
+myrtles of various heights; but among their glossy branches, he in
+vain seeks traces of the pruning-knife or shears; nature alone has
+thus disposed in spheroids or umbels the extremities of this rich
+vegetation.
+
+The same disappointment awaits him in the underwood. The only pruners
+have been goats, or other animals, daintily cropping the green shoots.
+
+Then only does the complete and terrible certainty of his disaster
+fall on him and crush him. Behold him blotted from the number of men,
+perhaps condemned to die of misery and of hunger! more securely
+imprisoned, more entirely forgotten by the world than the most
+hardened criminal plunged in the lowest depths of the Bastile! He at
+least, has a jailor! Miserable Stradling!
+
+At this moment he hears a noise above his head: it is the monkey.
+
+Marimonda, on her side, has also inspected the island; she has already
+tasted its productions. Whether she is satisfied with her discoveries,
+or whether forgiveness and forgetfulness of injuries are natural to
+her, on perceiving her old companion, wagging her head in token of
+good-will, she descends towards him from the tree on which she is
+perched.
+
+But Marimonda is the captain's monkey; she has been his property, his
+favorite, his flatterer! In the disposition of mind in which Selkirk
+finds himself, he does not need these thoughts to make him pitiless.
+Marimonda reminds him of Stradling; the monkey shall pay for the man!
+
+He lowers his gun, and fires. The monkey has seen the movement and
+divined his intentions; she has only time to retreat behind her tree,
+which does not prevent her receiving in her side a part of the charge.
+
+This detonation of fire-arms, the first perhaps which has resounded in
+this corner of the earth since the creation of the world, as it is
+prolonged from echo to echo, even to the highest mountains, awakens in
+every part of the island as it were a groan of distress. Instinct,
+that sublime prescience, has revealed to all that a great peril has
+just been born.
+
+To the cries of affright from birds of every species, to the uneasy
+and distant bleating of the goats, succeeds a plaintive moaning, like
+the voice of a wailing infant.
+
+It is Marimonda lamenting over her wound.
+
+At nightfall, after an entire day of walks and explorations, Selkirk
+is returning to his grotto on the shore, when he sees a stone fall at
+his feet, then another.
+
+While he, astonished, is seeking to divine the direction from which
+this invisible battery plays, a little date-stone hits him on the
+cheek. He immediately hears as it were a joyous whistling in the
+foliage, which is agitated at his right, and sees Marimonda leaping
+from tree to tree, using for this movement her feet, her tail, and one
+hand; for she holds the other to her side. It is a compress on her
+wound.
+
+War is already in the island! Selkirk has a declared enemy here! And
+this island, is it deserted? He has just traversed it in every
+direction without seeing any thing which betokens the existence of a
+human being.
+
+His disaster is then complete; henceforth not a doubt of it can exist.
+And yet his forehead wears rather the character of hope and fortitude
+than of discouragement; it is more than resignation, it is pride.
+
+He has just visited his empire. The island, irregular in form, is from
+four to five leagues in length; in breadth it is from one and a half
+to two leagues. This abode to which he is condemned, is the most
+enchanting retreat he could have chosen; a luxuriant park cradled upon
+the waves.
+
+If sometimes, in the mountainous parts, he has encountered sterile and
+rugged rocks, even abysses and precipices, they seem to be placed
+there only as a contrast to the fresh and green valleys which encircle
+them. If he has seen some dark, dense, inaccessible forests, entangled
+in the thousand arms of interwoven vines, he has not discovered a
+single reptile.
+
+Every where, springs of living water, little streams which are lost
+under a thick verdure, or fall in cascades from the summits of the
+hills; every where a luxuriant vegetation; esculent and refreshing
+plants, celery, cresses, sorrel, spring in profusion beneath his feet;
+over his head, and almost within reach of his hand, palm-cabbages, and
+unknown fruits of succulent appearance: on the margin of the shores,
+muscles, periwinkles, shell-fish of every species, crabs crawling in
+the moist sand; beneath the transparent waters, innumerable shoals of
+fishes of all colors, all forms. Will game be wanting here? After what
+he has seen this morning, he will not even need his gun to obtain it.
+Oh! his provision of powder will last him a long time.
+
+What has he to desire more in this terrestrial Paradise? The society
+of men? Why? That he may find a master, a chief, under whose will he
+must bend? Men! but he despises, detests them! Is he not then
+sufficient for himself? Yes! this shall be his glory, his happiness!
+To live in entire liberty, to depend only upon himself, will not this
+impart to his soul true dignity? Besides, this island cannot be so far
+from the coast, but, from time to time, ships, or at least boats must
+come in sight. This is then for him but a transient seclusion; but
+were he even condemned to eternal isolation, this isolation has ceased
+to terrify him, he accepts it! Has he not almost always lived alone,
+in spirit at least? When he was in the depths of the hold, was he not
+better satisfied with his fate than when surrounded by those coarse
+sailors who composed the worthy crew of the Swordfish?
+
+To-day he is no longer the prisoner of Stradling, he is the prisoner
+of God! and this thought reassures him.
+
+A sailor, he has never loved but the sea; well! the sea surrounds him,
+guards him! He has then only thanks to render to God.
+
+Arrived at his grotto, he takes his Bible, opens it; but the sun,
+suddenly sinking below the horizon, permits him to read only this
+passage on which his finger is placed: 'Thou shalt perish in thy
+pride!'
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+
+Labors of the Colonist.--His Study.--Fishing.--Administration.
+--Selkirk Island.--The New Prometheus.--What is wanting to Happiness.
+--Encounter with Marimonda.--Monologue.
+
+Three months have passed away.
+
+Thanks to Selkirk, the shore which received him at his disembarkation,
+presents to-day an aspect not only picturesque, but animated. The hand
+of man has made itself felt there.
+
+The bushes and tufts of trees which hid the view of the hills in the
+distance, have been uprooted and cut down; pretty paths, covered with
+gravel, wind over the vast lawn; one in the direction of the valleys
+at the right, another towards the mountains at the left; a third leads
+to a tall mimosa, whose topmost boughs and dense foliage spread out
+like a parasol. A wooden bench, composed of some round sticks, driven
+into the earth, with branches interwoven and covered with bark,
+surrounds it; a rustic table, constructed in the same manner, stands
+at the foot of the tree. This is the study and place of meditation of
+the exile; here also he comes to take his meals, in sight of the sea.
+
+All three paths terminate in the grotto which Selkirk continues to
+make his residence. This grotto he has enlarged, quarried out with his
+hatchet, to make room for himself, his furniture, and provisions. He
+has even attempted to decorate its exterior with a bank of turf, and
+several species of creeping plants, trained to cover its calcareous
+nudity. At the entrance of his habitation, rise two young palm-trees,
+transplanted there by him, to serve as a portico. But nature is not
+always obedient to man; the vines and palm-trees do not prosper in
+their new location, and now the long flexible branches of the one, and
+the broad leaves of the other, droop half withered above the grotto,
+which they disfigure rather than decorate.
+
+By constant care, and with the aid of his streams, Selkirk hopes to be
+able to restore them to life and health. He has imposed on his two
+streams another duty, that of supplying a bed of water-cresses and a
+fish-pond, both provident establishments, the first of which has
+succeeded perfectly. As for the second, his most arduous task has
+been, not to dig the fish-pond, but to people it. For this purpose he
+has been compelled to become a fisherman, to manufacture a net. He has
+succeeded, with some threads from his fragment of a sail, the fibres
+of his cocoa-nuts, and tough reeds, woven in close meshes;
+unfortunately those fine fishes, breams, eels and angel-fish, which
+show themselves so readily through the limpid wave, are not as easy to
+catch as to see. Under the surface, almost at a level with the water,
+there is a ledge of rocks, upon which the net cannot be managed. After
+several fruitless attempts, he is obliged to content himself with the
+insignificant employment of fishing with a line; a nail flattened,
+sharpened and bent, performs the office of a hook. Success ensues, but
+only with time and patience; fortunately the sea-crabs allow
+themselves to be caught with the hand, and the fish-pond does not long
+remain useless and deserted.
+
+Besides, has not our fortunate Selkirk the resource of hunting? The
+chase he had commenced generously, like a wise monarch, who wages war
+only for the general interest. It is true, that as it happens with
+most wise monarchs, his own private interest is also to be consulted,
+at least he thinks so.
+
+Wild cats existed in the island, destroying young broods, agoutis, and
+other small game; he has almost entirely rid it of these pirates,
+reserving to himself only the right of levying upon his subjects the
+tribute of blood. He has already signalized his administration by acts
+of an entirely different nature.
+
+This king without a people, is ignorant in what part of the great
+ocean, and at what distance from its shores, is situated his nameless
+kingdom.
+
+Armed with his spy-glass, by the aid of his nautical charts, he
+attempts to ascertain, by the position of the stars, its longitude and
+latitude. He at first believes himself to be in one of the islands
+forming the group of Chiloe; his calculations rectified, he afterwards
+thinks it the Island of Juan Fernandez, then San Ambrosio, or San
+Felix. Unable to determine the location exactly, for want of correct
+instruments, he persuades himself that the country he inhabits has
+never been surveyed, that it is really a land without a name, and he
+gives it his own; he calls it Selkirk Island.
+
+Ambitious youth, thou hast thus realized one of thy brightest dreams!
+Dost thou remember the day when, on the way from Largo to St. Andrew,
+to join William Dampier, thou didst already see thyself the chief of a
+new country, discovered and baptized by thee?
+
+Well! has he not more than discovered this country? He inhabits it, he
+governs it, he reigns in it! Not satisfied with giving his name to the
+island, he soon creates a special nomenclature for its various
+localities. To the shore upon which he landed, he gives the name of
+_Swordfish Beach_; the pile of white and red rocks, which he saw
+through the fog, is the _False Coquimbo_; he calls _Toucan Forest_,
+the wood where he saw that bird for the first time; the _Defile of
+Attack_, is that where Marimonda assaulted him with stones; upon these
+arid rocks, furrowed by deep ravines and abounding in precipices, he
+has imposed the odious name of _Stradling_! In his mountains he has
+the _Oasis_; it is a little shady valley, enlivened by the murmur of a
+streamlet, and with one extremity opening to the sea. There he often
+goes to watch the game and the goats, which come to drink at the
+brook. Above it rises the table-land, with difficulty scaled by him on
+the day of his arrival, and from whence he became convinced that he
+had landed on an island. This table-land, he has named _The
+Discovery_.
+
+The two streams which meander over his lawn, and before his grotto,
+have also received names. This, commissioned to feed the fish-pond,
+and which gently warbles through the grass, he calls _The Linnet_; the
+other, interrupted by little cascades, and whose course is more rapid
+and impetuous, he calls _The Stammerer_.
+
+He has now destroyed the noxious animals, administered government,
+opened ways of communication, given a name to every part of his
+island. How many great rulers have done no more!
+
+But his labors have not been confined to his fish-pond, his bed of
+water-cresses, his hunting, fishing, building, felling of trees; it
+has become necessary to procure that essential element of
+civilization, of comfort, fire.
+
+What could the opulent proprietor of this enchanting abode do without
+fire? Is it not necessary, if he would open a passage through the
+dense woods? Is it not indispensable to his kitchen? Some of his
+trees, it is true, afford fruits in abundance; but most of these
+fruits are of a dry and woody nature; besides, young and vigorous,
+easily acquiring an appetite by labor and exercise, can he content
+himself with a dinner which is only a dessert? Surrounded with fishes
+of all colors, with feathered and other game, must he then be reduced
+to dispute with the agoutis, their maripa-nuts?
+
+He reflects; armed with a bit of iron, he strikes the flinty rocks of
+the mountains, to elicit from them useless sparks. He then remembers
+that savages obtain fire without flint and matches, by the friction of
+two pieces of dry wood; he tries, but in vain; he exhausts the
+strength of his arms, without being discouraged; he tries each tree,
+wishing even that a thunderbolt might strike the island, if it would
+leave there a trace of burning. At last, almost discouraged, he
+attacks the pimento-myrtle;[1] he recommences his customary efforts of
+rubbing. The twigs grow warm with the friction; a little white smoke
+appears, fluttering to and fro between his hands, rapid and trembling
+with emotion. The flame bursts forth! He utters a cry of triumph, and,
+hastily collecting other twigs and dry reeds, he leaps for joy around
+his fire, which, like another Prometheus, he has just stolen, not from
+heaven, but from earth!
+
+[Footnote 1: _Myrtus aromatica_; its berries are known under the name
+of Jamaica pepper.]
+
+Afterwards, in his gratitude, he runs to the myrtle, embraces it,
+kisses it. An act of folly, perhaps; perhaps an act of gratitude,
+which ascended higher than the topmost branches of the trees, higher
+than the culminating summits of the mountains of the island.
+
+But this fire, must he, each time he may need it, go through the same
+tedious process? Not far from his grotto, in a cavity which a
+projecting rock protects from the sea breeze, he piles up wood and
+brush, sets fire to it, keeps it alive from time to time, by the
+addition of combustibles, and comprehends why, among primitive
+nations, the earliest worship should have been that of fire; why, from
+Zoroaster to the Vestals, the care of preserving it should have been
+held sacred.
+
+At a later period, in the ordinary course of things, he simplified his
+means of preservation. With some threads and the fat of his game, he
+contrived a lamp; still later, he had oil, and reeds served him for
+wicks.
+
+Dating from this moment, the entire island paid tribute to him; the
+crabs, the eels, the flesh of the agouti, savory like that of the
+rabbit, by turns figured on his table. When he seasoned them with some
+morsels of pork, substituting ship biscuit for bread, his repasts were
+fit for an admiral.
+
+Although the goats had become wild, like the other inhabitants of the
+island, since all had learned the nature of man, and of the thunder,
+which he directed at his will, Selkirk still surprised them within
+gun-shot. Not only was their flesh profitable for food; their horns,
+long and hollow, served to contain powder and other small articles
+necessary to his house-keeping; of their skins he made carpets,
+coverings, and bags to protect his provisions from dampness. He even
+manufactured a game-pouch, which he constantly carried when hunting.
+
+His salt fish, his biscuit, some well smoked quarters of goat's flesh,
+and the productions of his fish-pond, at present constitute a store on
+which he can live for a long time, without any care, but to ameliorate
+his condition.
+
+He is now in possession of all the enjoyments he has coveted,
+abundance, leisure, absolute freedom.
+
+And yet, his brow is sometimes clouded, and an unaccountable
+uneasiness torments him; something seems wanting; his appetite fails,
+his courage grows feeble, his reveries are painfully prolonged. But,
+by mature reflection, he has discovered the cause of the evil.
+
+What is it that is so essential to his happiness? Tobacco.
+
+Our factitious wants often exercise over us a more tyrannical empire,
+than our real ones; it seems as if we clung with more force and
+tenacity to this second nature, because we have ourselves created it;
+it originates in us; the other originates with God, and is common to
+all!
+
+Selkirk now persuades himself that tobacco alone is wanting to his
+comfort; it is this privation which throws him into these sorrowful
+fits of languor. If Stradling had only given him a good stock of
+tobacco, he would have pardoned all; he no longer feels courage to
+hate him. What to him imports the plenty which surrounds him, if he
+has no tobacco? of what use is his leisure, if he cannot spend it in
+smoking? what avails even this fire, which he has just conquered, if
+he is prevented from lighting his pipe at it?
+
+Careworn and dissatisfied, he was wandering one morning through his
+domains, with his gun on his shoulder, his hatchet at his belt, when
+he perceived something dancing on a point of land, shadowed by tall
+canes.
+
+It was Marimonda.
+
+At sight of her enemy, she darted lightly and rapidly behind a woody
+hillock. An instant afterwards, he saw her tranquilly seated on the
+topmost branch of a tree, holding in each of her hands fruits which
+she was alternately striking against the branch, and against each
+other, to break their tough envelope.
+
+The sight of Marimonda has always awakened in Selkirk a sentiment of
+repulsion; she not only reminds him of Stradling, but with her
+withered cheeks, projecting jaw, and especially her dancing motion, he
+now imagines that she resembles him; and yet, pausing before her, he
+contemplates her not without a lively emotion of surprise and
+interest.
+
+He had already encountered her within gun-shot, when engaged in the
+destruction of the wild cats, and had asked himself whether he should
+not reckon her among noxious animals. But then Marimonda, with her
+hand constantly pressed against her side, was with the other seizing
+various herbs, which she tasted, bruised between her teeth, and
+applied to her wound; useless remedies, doubtless, for, grown meagre,
+her hair dull and bristling, she seemed to have but a few days to
+live, and Selkirk thought her not worth a charge of powder and shot.
+
+And here he finds her alert and healthy, holding in the same hand
+which had served as a compress, no longer the plant necessary for her
+cure, but the fruit desirable for her sustenance.
+
+'What,' said Selkirk to himself, 'in an island where this frightful
+monkey has never before been, she has succeeded in finding without
+difficulty the _herba sacra_, that which has restored her to health
+and strength! and I, Selkirk, who have studied at one of the principal
+universities of Scotland, I am vainly sighing for the plant which
+would suffice to render me completely happy! Is instinct then superior
+to reason? To believe this, would be ingratitude to Providence.
+Instinct is necessary, indispensable to animals, because they cannot
+benefit by the traditions of their ancestors. The monkey has consulted
+her instinct, and it has inspired her; if I consult reason, what will
+be her counsel? She will advise me to do like the monkey; to seek the
+herb of which I feel so great a want, or at least to endeavor to
+substitute for it something analogous; to choose, try, and taste, in
+short, to follow the example of Marimonda! I will not fail to do so;
+but it is nature reversed, and, for a man, it is too humiliating to
+see himself reduced to imitate a monkey!'
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+
+The Hammock.--Poison.--Success.--A Calm under the Tropics.--Invasion
+of the Island.--War and Plunder.--The Oasis.--The Spy-Glass.
+--Reconciliation.
+
+Do you see, upon a carpet of fresh verdure, the sandy margin of which
+is bathed by a caressing wave, that hammock suspended to the branches
+of those fine trees? What happy mortal, during the heat of the day, is
+there gently rocked, gently refreshed, by a light sea breeze? It is
+Selkirk; and this hammock is his sail, attached to his tall myrtles by
+strips of goat-skin. Perhaps he is resting after the fatigues of the
+day? No, it is the day of the Lord, and Selkirk now can consecrate the
+Sabbath to repose. With his eyes half closed, he is inhaling,
+undoubtedly, the perfume of his myrtles, the soft fragrance of his
+heliotropes? No, something sweeter still pre-occupies him. Is he
+dreaming of his friends in Scotland, of his first love? He has never
+known friendship, and the beautiful Catherine is far from his memory.
+What is he then doing in his hammock? He is smoking his pipe.
+
+His pipe! Has he a pipe? He has them of all forms, all sizes--made of
+spiral shells of various kinds, of maripa-nuts, of large reeds; all
+set in handles of myrtle, stalks of coarse grain, or the hollow bones
+of birds. In these he is luxurious; he has become a connoisseur; but
+this has not been the difficulty. Before every thing else, tobacco was
+wanting.
+
+In consequence of his encounter with Marimonda, he ransacked the woods
+and meadows, seeking among all plants those which approximated nearest
+to the nature of the nicotiana. As it was necessary to judge by their
+taste, he bit their leaves--chewed them, still in imitation of the
+monkey: but, to his new and profound humiliation, less skilful or less
+fortunate than the latter, he obtained at first no other result than a
+sort of poisoning: one of these plants being poisonous.
+
+For several days he saw himself condemned to absolute repose and a
+spare diet. His mouth, swollen, excoriated, refused all nourishment;
+his throat was burning; his body was covered with an eruption, and his
+languid and trembling limbs scarcely permitted him to drag himself to
+the stream to quench there the thirst by which he was devoured.
+
+He believed himself about to die; and grief then imposing silence on
+pride, with his eyes turned towards the sea, he allowed a
+long-repressed sigh to escape his heart. It was a regret for his
+absent country.
+
+Very soon these alarming symptoms disappeared; his strength returned;
+his water-cresses and wild sorrel completed the cure. Would he have
+dared to ask it of the other productions of his island? He had become
+suspicious of nature; these, at least, he had long known.
+
+Scarcely had he recovered, when the want of tobacco made itself felt
+anew with more force than ever. What to him imports experiment, what
+imports danger? Is it not to procure this precious, indispensable
+herb,--which the world had easily done without for thousands of years?
+
+This time, nevertheless, become more prudent, he no longer addresses
+himself to the sense of taste; but to odor, to that of smell. He has
+resolved to dry the different plants which appear to him most proper
+for the use to which he destines them, and to submit them afterwards
+to a trial by fire. Will not the smoke which escapes from them easily
+enable him to discover the qualities which he requires, since it is in
+smoke that they are to evaporate, if he succeeds in his researches?
+
+Of this grand collection of aromatics, two plants, at last, come off
+victorious. One is the petunia, that charming flower which at present
+decorates all our gardens, whence the enemies of tobacco may one day
+banish it; so it is only with trembling that I here announce its
+relationship to the nicotiana; the other, which, like the petunia,
+grows in profusion in the islands as well as on the continent of
+Southern America, is the herb _coca_, improperly so called, for its
+precious leaves, which are to the natives of Peru and Chili, what the
+_betel_ is for the Indians of Malabar, grow on an elegant shrub.[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: The _erythroxylum coca_.]
+
+These two plants, separately or together, composed, thanks to a slight
+amalgam of chalk, sea-water, and bruised pepper-corns, the most
+delicious tobacco.
+
+Now, half awake, Selkirk smokes, as he busies himself with
+constructing some necessary article, such as a ladder, a stool, a
+basket of rushes, with which he is completing the furniture of his
+house; he smokes while fishing, and while hunting; on his return to
+his dwelling, he lies down at the entrance of his grotto, on his bank
+of turf, re-lights his pipe at his fire, and smokes; at the hour of
+breakfast or of dinner, seated beneath the shade of his mimosa, his
+elbow on the table, his Bible open before him, he smokes still.
+
+Well! notwithstanding these pleasures so long desired, notwithstanding
+this addition to his comfort, notwithstanding his pipe, this vague
+uneasiness sometimes assails him anew.
+
+He ascribes it to enfeebled health; and yet he remains active and
+vigorous; he ascribes it to the powerful odors of certain trees which
+affect his brain. These trees he destroys around him, but his
+uneasiness continues; he ascribes it to his food, the insipidity of
+the fish which he has eaten without salt, since his quarter of pork is
+consumed, and his stores of pickled fish exhausted. In fact, the flesh
+of fish has for some time given him a nausea, occasioned frequent
+indigestions; he renounces it; his stomach recovers its tone; but his
+fits of torpor and melancholy continue.
+
+This state of suffering is most painful at those moments of profound
+calm, common between the tropics, when the birds are silent, when from
+the thickets and burrows issue no murmurs, when the insect seems to
+sleep within the closed corollas of the flowers; when the leaves of
+the mimosa fold themselves; when the tree-tops are not swayed by the
+slightest breath of air, and the sea, motionless, ceases to dash
+against the shore. What an inexpressible weight such a silence adds to
+isolation! And yet it is not an unbroken silence, for then a shrill
+and harsh sound seems to grate upon the ear. It is as if in this
+muteness of nature, one could hear the motion of the earth on its
+axis; then, above his head, in the depths of immensity, the whirling
+of the celestial spheres and myriads of worlds which gravitate in
+space. Thought becomes troubled and exhausted before this overwhelming
+and terrible immobility, and the man who, at such a moment, cannot
+have recourse to his kind, to distract or re-assure him, is
+overpowered with his own insignificance.
+
+Sometimes the solitary calls on himself to break this oppressive and
+painful silence; he articulates a few words aloud, and his voice
+inspires him with fear; it seems formidable and unnatural.
+
+During one of these sinister calms, in which every thing in creation
+seemed to pause, even the heart of man, seated on the shore, not
+having even strength to smoke, Selkirk was vainly awaiting the evening
+breeze; nothing came, but the obscurity of night. The moon, delaying
+her appearance, submitting in her turn to the sluggishness of all
+things, seemed detained below the circle of the horizon by some fatal
+power; the sea was dull, gloomy, and as it were congealed.
+
+Suddenly, though there was not a breath of air, Selkirk saw at his
+right, on a vast but limited tract of ocean, the waves violently
+agitated and foaming. He thought he distinguished a multitude of
+barques and canoes furrowing the surface of the waters; not far from
+Swordfish Beach, the flotilla enters a little cove running up into the
+mountains.
+
+He no longer sees any thing; but he hears a frightful tumult of
+discordant cries.
+
+There is no room for doubt! some Indian tribes, pursued perhaps by new
+conquerors from Europe, have just disembarked on the shore. Wo to him!
+he can hope from them neither pity nor mercy. A cold sweat bathes his
+forehead; he runs to his grotto, takes his gun, puts in his goatskin
+pouch some horns of powder and shot, a piece of smoked meat, not
+forgetting his Bible! and passes the night wandering in the woods, in
+the mountains, a prey to a thousand terrors; hearing without cessation
+the steps of pursuers behind him, and seeing fiery eyes glaring at him
+through the thickets.
+
+At day-break, with a thousand precautions, he returns to his grotto.
+He finds the beach covered with seals.
+
+These were the enemies whose invasion had so alarmed him.
+
+It is now the middle of the month of February, the period of the
+greatest tropical heats, and these amphibia, having left the shores of
+Chili or Peru, are accomplishing one of their periodical migrations.
+They have just taken possession of the island, one of their accustomed
+stations. But the island has now a master.
+
+Where he expected to encounter a peril, Selkirk finds amusement, a
+subject of study, perhaps a resource.
+
+A long time ago he has read, in the narratives of voyagers, singular
+stories concerning these marine animals, these _lions_, these
+_sea-elephants_, flocks of old Neptune, who have their chiefs, their
+pacha; who are acquainted with and practise the discipline of war;
+stationing vigilant sentinels in the spots they occupy, communicating
+to each other a pass-word, and attentive to the _Qui vive_?
+
+He spies them, he watches them, he takes pleasure in examining their
+grotesque forms,--half quadruped, half fish; their feet encased in a
+sort of web, and terminated by crooked claws, with which they creep on
+the earth; their skins, covered with short and glossy hair; their
+round heads and eyes.
+
+He is a witness of their sports, their combats; but very soon their
+frightful roaring and bellowing annoys him, and makes him regret the
+silence of his solitude. Another cause of complaint against them soon
+arises.
+
+One morning, Selkirk finds his fish-pond and bed of water-cresses
+devastated.
+
+Exasperated, he declares war against the invaders: during three days
+he tracks them, pursues them; ten of them fall beneath his balls,
+leaving the shore bathed in their blood. The rest at last take flight,
+and the army of seals, regaining the sea with despairing cries, goes
+to establish itself at the other extremity of the island.
+
+This war has been profitable to the conqueror. With the skin of the
+vanquished he makes himself a new hammock, which permits him to employ
+his sail for other uses; he also makes leather bottles, in which he
+preserves the oil which he extracts in abundance from their fat. Now
+he can have a lamp constantly burning, even by night. He has all the
+comforts of life. Of the hairy skin of the seals, he manufactures a
+broad-brimmed hat, which shields him from the burning rays of the sun.
+He tastes their flesh; it appears to him insipid and nauseous, like
+that of the fish; but the tongue, the heart, seasoned with pepper, are
+for him quite a luxury.
+
+Days, weeks, months roll away in the same toils, the same recreations.
+Whatever he may do to drive it away, this apathetic sadness, this
+sinking of soul, which has already tormented him at different periods,
+becomes with Selkirk more and more frequent; he cannot conquer it as
+he did the seals. His seals, he now regrets. When they were encamped
+on the shore, they at least gave him something to look at, an
+amusement; something lived, moved, near him.
+
+When he finds himself a prey to these fits, which, in his pride, he
+persists in attributing to transient indisposition, he goes to walk in
+the mountains, taking with him only his pipe, his Bible, and his
+spy-glass.
+
+He often pursues his journey as far as the oasis; there, he seats
+himself at the extremity of the little valley, opposite the sea, from
+which his eye can traverse its immense extent. He opens the holy book,
+and closes it immediately; then, his brow reddening, he seizes his
+spy-glass, levels it, and remains entire hours measuring the ocean,
+wave by wave.
+
+What is he looking for there? He seeks a sail, a sail which shall come
+to his island and bear him from his desert, from his _ennui_. His
+_ennui_ he can no longer dissimulate; this is the evil of his
+solitude.
+
+One day, while he was at this spot, the setting sun suddenly
+illuminated a black point, against which the waves seemed to break in
+foam, as against the prow of a ship; his eyes become dim, a tremor
+seizes him. He looks again--keeps his glass for a long time fixed on
+the same object, but the black point does not stir.
+
+'Another illusion!' said he to himself; 'it is a reef, a rock which
+the tide has left bare.'
+
+He wipes the glasses of his spy-glass, he examines again; he seems to
+see the waves whiten and whirl for a large space around this rock.
+
+'Can it be an island? If an island, is it inhabited? I will construct
+a barque, and if God has pity on me I will reach it.'
+
+At this moment he hears footsteps resound on the dry leaves which the
+wind has swept into the little valley. He turns hastily.
+
+It is Marimonda.
+
+Marimonda has no longer her lively and dancing motions; she also seems
+languid, sad. At sight of Selkirk, she makes a movement as if to flee;
+but almost immediately advances a little, and, sorrowful, with bent
+brow, sits down on a bank not far from him.
+
+Has she then remarked that he is without arms?
+
+On his side, Selkirk who had not met her for a long time, seemed to
+have forgotten his former aversion.
+
+At all events, is she not the most intelligent being chance has placed
+near him? He remembers that, in the ship, she obeyed the voice, the
+gesture of the captain, and that her tricks amused the whole crew.
+This resemblance to the human form, which he at first disliked, now
+awakens in him ideas of indulgence and peace. He reproaches himself
+with having treated her so brutally, when the poor animal, who alone
+had accompanied him into exile, at first accosted him with a caress.
+And now she returns, laying aside all ill-will, forgetting even the
+wound which she received from him in an impulse of irritation and
+hatred, of which she was not the object, for which she ought not to be
+responsible.
+
+He therefore makes to her a little sign with the head.
+
+Marimonda replies by winks of the eye and motions of the shoulders,
+which Selkirk thinks not wholly destitute of grace.
+
+He rises and approaches her, saluting her with an amicable gesture.
+
+She awaits him, chattering with her teeth and lips with an expression
+of joy.
+
+Selkirk gently passes his hand over her forehead and neck, calling her
+by name; then he starts for his habitation, and Marimonda follows him.
+The man and the monkey have just been reconciled. Both were tired of
+their isolation.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+
+A Tête-a-tête.--The Monkey's Goblet.--The Palace.--A Removal.--Winter
+under the Tropics--Plans for the Future.--Property.--A burst of
+Laughter.--Misfortune not far off.
+
+Tranquility of mind has returned to our solitary; now, his reveries
+are more pleasant and less prolonged; his walks through the woods, his
+moments of repose during the heat of the day seem more endurable since
+_something_, besides his shadow, keeps him company; he has resumed his
+taste for labor since there is _somebody_ to look at him; speech has
+returned to him since _somebody_ replies to his voice. This
+_somebody_, this _something_, is Marimonda.
+
+Marimonda is now the companion of Selkirk, his friend, his slave; she
+seems to comprehend his slightest gestures and even his _ennui_. To
+amuse him, she resorts to a thousand expedients, a thousand tricks of
+the agility peculiar to her race; she goes, she comes, she runs, she
+leaps, she bounds, she chatters at his side; she tries to people his
+solitude, to make a rustling around him; she brings him his pipes,
+rocks him in his hammock, and, for all these cares, all this
+attention, demands only a caress, which is no longer refused.
+
+She is often a spectator of her master's repasts; sometimes even
+shares them. This was at first a favor, afterwards a habit, as in the
+case of honest countrymen, who, secluded from the world, by degrees
+admit their servants into their intimacy. Selkirk had not to fear the
+importunate, unexpected visit of a neighbor or a curious stranger.
+
+So it is in the open air, on the latticed table, in the shade of his
+great mimosa, that these repasts in common take place; the master
+occupies the bench, the servant humbly seats herself on the stool,
+ready, at the first signal, to leave her place and assist in serving.
+Have we not seen in India, ourang-outangs trained to perform the
+office of domestics? and Marimonda was in nothing inferior in
+intelligence and activity.
+
+She is now fond of the flesh of the goat, of that of the coatis and
+agoutis, for monkeys easily become carnivorous; but the table is also
+sometimes covered with the products of her hunting. If the dessert
+fails, she hastily interrupts her repast, leaves the master to
+continue his alone, buries herself in the surrounding woods, reaches
+in three bounds the tops of the trees, and quickly returns with a
+supply of fruits which he can fearlessly taste, for she knows them.
+
+Selkirk was one day a witness of the singular facility with which she
+could supply her wants.
+
+At the morning repast, seeing him use one of his cocoa-nuts which he
+had fashioned in the form of a cup to drink from; in her instinct of
+imitation, she had attempted to seize the cup in her turn; a look of
+reprimand stopped her short in her attempt. Whether she felt a species
+of humiliation at being forced to quench her thirst in the presence of
+her master, by going to the banks of the stream and lapping there,
+like a vulgar animal; or whether the reprimand had painfully affected
+her, she abstained from drinking and remained for some time quiet and
+dreamy; but at the following repast, with lifted head and sparkling
+eye she resumed her place on the stool, provided with a goblet, a
+goblet belonging to her, lawfully obtained by her, and, with an air of
+triumph presented it to Selkirk, who, wondering, did not hesitate an
+instant to share with the monkey the water contained in his gourd.
+
+This goblet was the ligneous and impermeable capsule, the fruit,
+naturally and deeply hollowed out, of a tree called _quatela_.[1] It
+was thus that the intelligent Marimonda, after having borrowed from
+the numerous vegetables of the island their leaves, to ameliorate her
+sufferings, to heal her wounds; their fruits for her nourishment and
+even for her sports, also found means to obtain the divers utensils
+for house-keeping of which she stood in need.
+
+[Footnote 1: The _lecythis quatela_, of the family of the
+_lecythidées_, created by Professor Richard, and whose singular fruits
+bear, in Peru as well as in Chili, the denomination of _monkey's
+goblets_.]
+
+Charmed with her gentleness, her docility, the affection she seemed to
+bear him, Selkirk grew more and more attached to her. Winter, that is,
+the rainy season which usually lasts in these regions during the
+months of June and July, was approaching; he suffered in anticipation,
+from the idea that during this time his gentle companion would not be
+able to retain her habitual shelter, beneath the foliage of the trees;
+he conceived the project of giving up to her his grotto, and
+constructing for himself a new habitation, spacious and commodious. It
+is thus that our most generous resolutions, whatever we may design to
+do, encountering in their way personal interest, often turn to the
+increase of our own private welfare.
+
+At a little distance from the grotto, but farther inland, on the banks
+of the stream called the _Linnet_, there was a thicket of verdure
+shaded by five myrtles of from fifteen to twenty feet in height, and
+whose stems presented a diameter more than sufficient to insure the
+solidity of the edifice. Four of these myrtles formed an irregular
+square; the fifth arose in the midst, or nearly so; but our architect
+is not very particular. He already sees the principal part of his
+frame; the myrtles will remain in their places, their roots serving as
+a foundation. He removes the shrubs, the plants, the brushwood from
+the thicket, leaving only a heliotrope which, at a later period, may
+twine around his house and at evening shed its perfumes. He has become
+reconciled to its fragrance. He trims the trees, cuts off their tops
+eight feet above the ground, leaving the middle one, which is to
+sustain the roof, a foot higher; for this roof reeds and palm-leaves
+furnish all the materials. The walls, made of a solid network of young
+branches interwoven, and plastered with a mixture of sand, clay, and
+chopped rushes, he takes care not to build quite to the top, but to
+leave between them and the roof a little space, where the air can
+circulate freely through a light trellis formed of branches of the
+blue willow.
+
+Then, having finished his work in less than a fortnight, he
+contemplates it and admires it; Marimonda herself seems to share in
+his admiration, and in her joy climbing up the new building, she
+begins to leap, to dance on the roof of foliage, which bears her, and
+thus gives to Selkirk an additional triumph.
+
+He now proceeds to furnish his palace; he transports thither his bed
+of reeds and his goatskin coverings. How much better will he be
+sheltered here than under the gloomy vault of his grotto! How has he
+been able to content himself so long with such an abode, more suitable
+for a troglodyte or a monkey! He will no longer be obliged to lift up
+his curtain of vines, and to peep through the fans of his palm-trees,
+in order to behold the beneficent rays of the new-born day; they will
+come of themselves to find him and rejoice him at his awakening, as
+the sea-breezes will at evening breathe on him, to refresh him in his
+repose.
+
+Already has the interior of his cabin, of his palace, assumed an
+aspect which charms him; his guns, his hatchets, his spy-glass, his
+instruments of labor, well polished and shining, suspended in racks,
+upon wooden pegs, decorate the walls; upon another partition, his
+assortment of pipes are arranged on a shelf according to their size;
+on his central pillar, he suspends his game-bag, his gourd, his
+tobacco-pouch, and various articles of daily use. As for his iron pot,
+his smoked meat, his stock of skins, and bottles of seal-oil, he
+leaves them under the guardianship of Marimonda in the grotto which he
+will now make his store-house, his kitchen: he will not encumber with
+them his new dwelling.
+
+He now sets himself to prepare new furniture; he will construct a
+small portable table, two wooden seats, one for himself, the other for
+Marimonda, when she comes from her grotto to visit his cabin; for he
+has now a neighborhood. Besides, during the rainy season, they will be
+forced to dine under cover.
+
+The first rains have commenced, gentle, fertilizing rains, falling at
+intervals and lovingly drank in by the earth; Selkirk no longer thinks
+of his table and seats; another project has just taken the place of
+these, and seems to deserve the precedence.
+
+Marimonda has just returned from a tour in the woods, bringing fruits
+of all sorts, among them some which Selkirk has never before seen. He
+tastes them with more care and attention than usual; then, becoming
+thoughtful, with his chin resting on his hand says to himself: 'Why
+should I not make these fruits grow at my door, not far from my
+habitation? Why should I not attempt to improve them by cultivation?
+This is a very simple and very prudent idea which should have occurred
+to me long since; but I was alone, absolutely alone; and one loses
+courage when thinking of self only. A garden, at once an orchard and a
+vegetable garden, will be at least as useful to me as my fish-pond and
+bed of water-cresses; I will make one around my cabin; it will set it
+off and give it a more home-like appearance! Is not the stream placed
+here expressly to traverse it and water it? Afterwards, if God assist
+me, I will raise little kids which will become goats and give me milk,
+butter, cheese! Why have I not thought of this before? It would have
+been too much to have undertaken at once. I shall then have tame
+goats; I will also have Guinea-pigs, agoutis, and coatis. My house
+shall be enlarged, I will have a farm, a dairy! But the time has not
+yet come; let us first prepare the garden. Why has it not been already
+prepared? I am impatient to render the earth productive, fruitful by
+my cares, to walk in the shade of the trees I may plant; it seems to
+me that I shall be at home there, more than any where else!'
+
+You are right, Selkirk; to possess the entire island, is to possess
+nothing; it is simply to have permission to hunt, a right of promenade
+and pasture, which the other inhabitants of the island, quadrupeds or
+birds, can claim as well as yourself. What is property, without the
+power of improvement? Can the earth become the domain of a single
+person, when the true limits of his possessions must always be those
+of the field which affords him subsistence? Envy not then the
+happiness of the rich; they are but the transient holders and
+distributors of the public fortune; we possess, in reality, only that
+which we can ourselves enjoy; the rest escapes us, and contributes to
+the well-being of others.
+
+Selkirk comprehends that his streams, his bank of turf, his fish-pond,
+his bed of water-cresses, his grotto, his cabin, belong to him far
+otherwise than the twelve or fifteen square leagues of his island; to
+his private domain he now intends to add a garden, and this garden,
+this orchard, will be to him an increase of his wealth, since it will
+aid in the satisfaction of his wants.
+
+The humidity with which the earth begins to be penetrated, facilitates
+his labors; he sets himself to the work.
+
+Behold him then, now armed with his hatchet, now with a wooden shovel,
+which he has just manufactured, clearing the ground, digging,
+transplanting young fruit-trees, or sowing the seeds which he is soon
+to see spring up and prosper. Every thing grows rapidly in these
+climates.
+
+When the garden-spot is marked out, dug, sown, planted, not forgetting
+the kitchen vegetables, and especially the _coca_ and
+_petunia-nicotiana_, Selkirk, with his arms folded on his spade,
+thanks God with all his heart,--God who has given him strength to
+finish his work.
+
+He has never felt so happy as when, with his hands behind his back, he
+walks smoking, among his beds, in which nothing has as yet appeared;
+but he already sees, in a dream, his trees covered with blossoms;
+around these blossoms are buzzing numerous swarms of bees; he reflects
+upon the means of compelling them to yield the honey of which they
+have just stolen from him the essence. It is a settled thing, on his
+farm he will have hives! After his bees, still in his dream, come
+flocks of humming-birds to plunder in their turn. The happy possessor
+of the garden will exact no tribute from them, but the pleasure of
+seeing them suspend, by a silken thread, to the leaves of his shrubs,
+the elegant little boat in which they cradle their fragile brood.
+Nothing seems to him more beautiful than his embryo garden; here, he
+is more than the monarch of the island; he is a proprietor!
+
+Thanks to the garden, Selkirk sees with resignation the two long
+months of the rainy season pass away. When the heavy torrents render
+the paths impassable, he consoles himself by thinking that they aid in
+the germination of his seeds, in the rooting of his young plants.
+Sometimes, between two deluges, he can scarcely find time to procure
+himself sufficient game; what matters it! he lives on his provisions:
+he is forcibly detained within; but has he not now good cheer, good
+company, and occupation, during his leisure hours?
+
+It is now that he completes his furniture. His table and his seats
+finished, he undertakes to provide for another want, equally
+indispensable.
+
+Worn out by the weather, and by service, his garments are becoming
+ragged. He must shield himself from the humidity of the air; where
+shall he procure materials? Has he not the choice between seal-skins
+and goat-skins? He gives the preference to the latter, as more
+pliable, and behold him a tailor, cutting with the point of his knife;
+as for thread, it is furnished by the fragment of the sail; and two
+days afterwards, he finds himself flaming in a new suit.
+
+To describe the delirious stupefaction of Marimonda, when she
+perceives her master under this strange costume, would be a thing
+impossible. She finds him almost like herself, clad like her, in a
+hairy suit. Never tired of looking at him, of examining him curiously,
+she leaps, she gambols around him, now rolling at his feet, and
+uttering little cries of joy, now suspended over his head, at the top
+of the central pillar, and turning her wild and restless eyes. When
+she has thus inspected him from head to foot, she runs and crouches in
+a corner, with her face towards the wall, as if to reflect; then,
+whirling about, returns towards him, picks up on the way the garment
+he has just laid aside, looking alternately at this and at the other,
+very anxious to know which of the two really made a part of the
+person.
+
+After having enjoyed for a few moments the surprise and transports of
+his companion, Selkirk takes his Bible and his pipe, and, placing the
+book on the table, bends over it, preparing to read and to meditate.
+But, whether in consequence of her joyous excitement, or whether she
+is emboldened by the species of fraternity which costume establishes
+between them, Marimonda, without hesitation, directs herself to the
+little shelf, chooses from it a pipe in her turn, places it gravely
+between her lips, astonished at not seeing the smoke issue from it in
+a spiral column; and, with an important air, still imitating her
+master, comes to sit opposite him, with her brow inclined, and her
+elbow resting on the table.
+
+Willingly humoring her whim, Selkirk takes the pipe from her hands,
+fills it with his most spicy tobacco, lights it, and restores it to
+her.
+
+Hardly has Marimonda respired the first breath, when suddenly letting
+fall the pipe, overturning the table, emitting the smoke through her
+mouth and nostrils, she disappears, uttering plaintive cries, as if
+she had just tasted burning lava.
+
+At sight of the poor monkey, thus thrown into confusion, Selkirk, for
+the first time since his residence in the island, laughs so loudly,
+that the echo follows the fugitive to the grotto, where she had taken
+refuge, and is prolonged from the grotto to the _Oasis_, from the
+Oasis to the summit of the _Discovery_.
+
+The exile has at last laughed, laughed aloud, and, at the same moment,
+a terrible disaster is taking place without his knowledge; a new war
+is preparing for him, in which his arms will be useless.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+
+A New Invasion.--Selkirk joyfully meets an ancient Enemy.--Combat on
+a Red Cedar.--A Mother and her Little Ones.--The Flock.--Fête in the
+Island; Pacific Combats, Diversions and Swings.--A Sail.--The Burning
+Wood.--Presentiments of Marimonda.
+
+The next morning the sun has scarcely touched the horizon, Selkirk is
+still asleep, when he is awakened by a sort of tickling at his feet.
+Thinking it some caress or trick of Marimonda, risen earlier than
+usual, he half opens his eyes, sees nothing, and places himself again
+in a posture to continue his nap. The same tickling is renewed, but
+with more perseverance, and very soon something sharp and keen
+penetrates to the quick the hard envelope of his heel. The tickling
+has become a bite.
+
+This time wide awake, he raises his head. His cabin is full of rats!
+
+Near him, a company of them are tranquilly engaged in breakfasting on
+his coverings and the rushes of his couch; they are on his table, his
+seats, along his pillow and his walls; they are playing before his
+door, running hither and thither through the crevices of his roof,
+multiplying themselves on his rack and shelf; all biting, gnawing,
+nibbling--some his seal-skin hat, his tobacco-pouch, the bark
+ornaments of his furniture; others the handles of his tools, his
+pipes, his Bible, and even his powder-horn.
+
+Selkirk utters a cry, springs from his couch, and immediately crushes
+two under his heels. The rest take flight.
+
+As he is pursuing these new invaders with the shovel and musket, he
+perceives at a few paces' distance Marimonda, sorrowful and drooping,
+perched on the strong branch of a sapota-tree. By her piteous and
+chilly appearance, her tangled and wet hair, he doubts not but she has
+passed the whole night exposed to the inclemency of the weather. But
+he at first attributes this whim only to her ill-humor the evening
+before.
+
+On perceiving him, Marimonda descends, from her tree, sad, but still
+gentle and caressing, and with gestures of terror, points to the
+grotto. He runs thither.
+
+Here another spectacle of disorder and destruction awaits him; the
+rats are collected in it by thousands; his furs, his provisions of
+fruit and game, his bottles formerly filled with oil, every thing is
+sacked, torn in pieces, afloat; for the water has at last made its way
+through the crevices of the mountain. To put the climax to his
+misfortune, his reserve of powder, notwithstanding its double envelope
+of leather and horn, attacked by the voracious teeth of his
+aggressors, is swimming in the midst of an oily slime.
+
+The solitary now possesses, for the purpose of hunting, for the
+renewal of these provisions so necessary to his life, only the few
+charges contained in his portable powder-horn, and in the barrels of
+his guns. The blow which has just struck him is his ruin! and still
+the hardest trial appointed for him is yet to come.
+
+In penetrating the ground, the rains of winter have driven the rats
+from their holes; hence their invasion of the cabin and the grotto.
+
+Against so many enemies, what can Selkirk do, reduced to his single
+strength?
+
+He succeeds, nevertheless, in killing some; Marimonda herself, armed
+with the branch of a tree, serves as an ally, and aids him in putting
+them to flight; but their combined efforts are ineffectual. An hour
+after, the accursed race are multiplying round him, more numerous and
+more ravenous than ever.
+
+He comprehends then what an error he has committed in the complete
+destruction of the wild cats which peopled the island. With the most
+generous intentions, how often is man mistaken in the object he
+pursues! We think we are ridding us of an enemy, and we are depriving
+ourselves of a protector. God only knows what he does, and he has
+admitted apparent evil, as a principle, into the admirable composition
+of his universe; he suffers the wicked to live. Selkirk had been more
+severe than God, and he repents it. If his poor cats had only been
+exiled, he would hasten to proclaim a general amnesty. Alas! there is
+no amnesty with death. But has he indeed destroyed all? Perhaps some
+still exist in those distant regions which have already served as a
+refuge for that other banished race, the seals.
+
+The rains have ceased; the storms of winter, always accompanied by
+overpowering heat and dense fogs, no longer sadden the island by
+anticipated darkness, or the gloomy mutterings of continual thunder.
+The sun, though _garué_[1] absorbs the remainder of the inundation.
+Followed by Marimonda, Selkirk, for the first time, has ventured to
+the woods and thickets between the hills beyond the shore and the
+False Coquimbo, when a sound, sweeter to his ear than would have been
+the songs of a siren, makes him pause suddenly in ecstasy: it is the
+mewing of a cat.
+
+[Footnote 1: In Peru and Chili, they call _garua_ that mist which
+sometimes, and especially after the rainy season, floats around the
+disk of the sun.]
+
+This cat, strongly built, with a spotted and glossy coat, white nose,
+and brown whiskers, is stationed at a little distance, on a red cedar,
+where she is undoubtedly watching her prey.
+
+She is an old settler escaped from the general massacre; the last of
+the vanquished; perhaps!
+
+Without hesitation, Selkirk clasps the trunk of the tree, climbs it,
+reaches the first branches; Marimonda follows him and quickly goes
+beyond. At the aspect of these two aggressors, like herself clad in
+skin, the cat recoils, ascending; the monkey follows, pursues her from
+branch to branch, quite to the top of the cedar. Struck on the
+shoulder with a blow of the claw, she also recoils, but descending,
+and declaring herself vanquished in the first skirmish, immediately
+gives over the combat, or rather the sport, for she has seen only
+sport in the affair.
+
+Selkirk is not so easily discouraged; this cat he must have, he must
+have her alive; he wishes to make her the guardian of his cabin, his
+protector against the rats. Three times he succeeds in seizing her;
+three times the furious animal, struggling, tears his arms or face. It
+is a terrible, bloody conflict, mingled with exclamations, growlings,
+and frightful mewings. At last Selkirk, forgetting perhaps in the
+ardor of combat the object of victory, seizes her vigorously by the
+skin of the neck, at the risk of strangling her; with the other hand
+he grasps her around the body. The difficulty is now to carry her.
+Fortunately he has his game-bag. With one hand he holds her pressed
+against the fork of the tree; with the other arm he reaches his
+game-bag, opens it; the conquered animal, half dead, has not made,
+during this manoeuvre, a single movement of resistance. But when the
+hunter is about to close it, suddenly rousing herself with a leap,
+distending by a last effort all her muscles at once, she escapes from
+his grasp, and precipitates herself from the top of the cedar, to the
+great terror of Marimonda, then peaceably crouched under the tree,
+whom the cat brushes against in falling, and to the great
+disappointment of Selkirk, who thinks he has the captive in his pouch.
+
+Sliding along the trunk, Selkirk descends quickly to the ground; but
+the enemy has already disappeared, and left no trace. In vain his eyes
+are turned on all sides; he sees nothing, neither his adversary nor
+Marimonda, who has undoubtedly fled under the impression of this last
+terror.
+
+As he is in despair, a whistling familiar to his ear is heard, and at
+two hundred paces distant he perceives, on an eminence of the False
+Coquimbo, his monkey, bent double, in an attitude of contemplation,
+appearing very attentive to what is passing beneath her, and changing
+her posture only to send a repeated summons to her master.
+
+At all hazards he directs himself to this quarter.
+
+What a spectacle awaits him! In a cavity at the foot of the eminence
+where Marimonda is, he finds, crouching, still out of breath with her
+struggle and her race, his fugitive. She is a mother! and six kittens,
+already active, are rolling in the sun around her.
+
+Selkirk, seizing his knife, kills the mother, and carries off the
+little ones.
+
+A short time after, the rats have deserted the shore. But their
+departure, though it prevents the evil they might yet have done, does
+not remedy that already accomplished.
+
+The provisions of the solitary are almost entirely destroyed, and the
+little powder which remains is scarcely sufficient for a reserve which
+he no longer knows where to renew.
+
+The moment at last comes when he possesses no other ammunition than
+the only charge in his gun. This last charge, his last resource, oh!
+how preciously he preserves it to-day. While it is there, he can still
+believe himself armed, still powerful; he has not entirely exhausted
+his resources; it is his last hope. Who knows?--perhaps he may yet
+need it to protect his life in circumstances which he cannot foresee.
+
+But since his gun must remain suspended, inactive, to the walls of his
+cabin, it is time to think of supplying the place of the services it
+has rendered; it is time to realize his dream, and, according to the
+usual course of civilization, to substitute the life of a farmer and
+shepherd for that of a hunter.
+
+Already is his colony augmented by six new guests, domesticated in his
+house; already, on every side, his seeds are peeping out of the ground
+under the most favorable auspices; his young trees, firmly rooted, are
+growing rapidly beneath the double influence of heat and moisture; at
+the axil of some of their leaves, he sees a bud, an earnest of the
+harvest. He must now occupy himself with the means of surprising,
+seizing and retaining the ancestors of his future flock.
+
+Here, patience, address or stratagem can alone avail.
+
+Notwithstanding his natural agility, he does not dream of reaching
+them by pursuit. Since his last hunts, goats and kids keep themselves
+usually in the steep and mountainous parts of the island. To leap from
+rock to rock, to attempt to vie with them in celerity and lightness
+appears to him, with reason, a foolish and impracticable enterprise.
+Later, perhaps,... Who knows?
+
+He manufactures snares, traps; but suspicion is now the order of the
+day around him; each holds himself on the _qui vive_. After long
+waiting without any result, he finds in his snares a coati, some
+little Guinea pigs; here is one resource, undoubtedly, but he aims at
+higher game, and the kids will not allow themselves to be taken by his
+baits.
+
+He remembers then, that in certain parts of America, the hunters, in
+order to seize their prey living, have recourse to the lasso, a long
+cord terminated by a slip-noose, which they know how to throw at great
+distances, and almost always with certainty.
+
+With a thread which he obtains from the fibres of the aloe, with
+narrow strips of skin, closely woven, he composes a lasso more than
+fifty feet long; he tries it; he exercises it now against a tuft of
+leaves detached from a bush, now against some projecting rock;
+afterwards he tries it upon Marimonda, who often enough, by her
+agility and swiftness, puts her master at fault.
+
+In the interval of these preparatory exercises, Selkirk occupies
+himself with the construction of a latticed inclosure, destined to
+contain the flock which he hopes to possess; he makes it large and
+spacious, that his young cattle may bound and sport at their ease;
+high, that they may respect the limits he assigns them. In one corner,
+supported by solid posts, he builds a shed, simply covered with
+branches; that his flock may there be sheltered from the heat of the
+day. The inclosure and the shed, together with his garden, form a new
+addition to his great settlement.
+
+When, his kids shall have become goats, when the epoch of domesticity
+shall have arrived for them, when they shall have contracted habits of
+tameness, when they have learned to recognize his voice, then, and
+then only, will he permit them to wander and browse on the neighboring
+hills, under the direction of a vigilant guardian. This guardian,
+where shall he find? Why may it not be Marimonda? Marimonda, to whose
+intelligence he knows not where to affix bounds!
+
+Dreams, dreams, perhaps! and yet but for dreams, but for those gentle
+phantoms which he creates, and by which he surrounds himself, what
+would sustain the courage of the solitary?
+
+When Selkirk thinks he has acquired skill in the use of the lasso, he
+buries himself among the high mountains situated towards the central
+part of his island. Several days pass amid fruitless attempts, and
+when the delicately-carved foliage of the mimosa announces, by its
+folding, that night is approaching, he regains his cabin, gloomy,
+care-worn, and despairing of the future.
+
+Meanwhile, by his very failures, he has acquired experience. One
+evening, he returns to his dwelling, bringing with him two young kids,
+with scarcely perceptible horns, and reddish skin, varied with large
+brown spots. Marimonda welcomes her new guests, and this evening all
+in the habitation breathes joy and tranquillity.
+
+The week has not rolled away, when the number of Selkirk's goats
+exceeds that of his cats; and he takes pleasure in seeing them leap
+and play together in his inclosure; his mind has recovered its
+serenity.
+
+'Yes,' said he, with pride, 'man can suffice for himself, can depend
+on himself only for subsistence and welfare! Am I not a striking
+proof? Did not all seem lost for me, when an unforeseen catastrophe
+destroyed the remnant of the provision of powder which I owed to the
+pity of that miserable captain? Ah! undoubtedly according to his
+hateful calculations, he had limited the term of my life to the last
+charge which my gun should contain; this last charge is still there!
+Of what use will it be to me? Why do I need it? Are not my resources
+for subsistence more certain and numerous to-day than before? What
+then is wanting? The society of a Stradling and his fellows? God keep
+me from them! The best member of the crew of the brig Swordfish came
+away when I did. I have received from Marimonda more proofs of
+devotion than from all the companions I have had on land and on sea.
+What have I to regret? I am well off here; may God keep me in repose
+and health!'
+
+After this sally, he thought of his hives, which were still wanting,
+and of the methods to be employed to seize a swarm of bees.
+
+A month after, Selkirk, who religiously kept his reckoning on the
+margin of his Bible, resolved to celebrate the New Year. It was now
+the first of January, 1706.
+
+On this day he dined, not in his cabin, nor under his tree, but in the
+middle of the inclosure, surrounded by his family; fruits and good
+cheer were more abundant than usual; Marimonda, as was her custom,
+dined at the same table with himself: the cats shared in the feast;
+the goats roved around, stretching up to gaze with their blue eyes on
+the baskets of fruits, and returning to browse on the grass beneath
+the feet of the guests. Selkirk, as the master of the house, and chief
+of the family, generously distributed the provisions to his young and
+frolicksome republic, and Marimonda assisted him as well as she could,
+in doing the honors.
+
+After the repasts, there were races and combats; the remains of the
+baskets were thrown to the most skilful and the most adroit; then
+came, diversions and swings.
+
+Lying in his hammock, where he smoked his most excellent tobacco in
+his best pipe, Selkirk smilingly contemplated the capricious bounds,
+the riotous sports of his cats and kids, their graceful postures,
+their fraternal combats, in which sheathed claws and the inoffensive
+horn were the only weapons used on either side.
+
+To give more variety to the fête, Marimonda developes all the
+resources of her daring suppleness; she leaps from right to left,
+clearing large spaces with inconceivable dexterity. Attaining the
+summit of a tree, she whistles to attract her master's attention,
+then, with her two fore-paws clasped in her hind ones, she rolls
+herself up like a ball and drops on the ground; the foliage crackles
+beneath her fall, which seems as if it must be mortal; for her, this
+is only sport. Without altering the position of her limbs, she
+suddenly stops in her rapid descent, by means of her prehensile tail,
+that fifth hand, so powerful, with which nature has endowed the
+monkeys of America. Then, suspended by this organ alone, she
+accelerates her motions to and fro with incredible rapidity, quickly
+unwinds her tail from the branch by which she is suspended, and with a
+dart, traversing the air as if winged, alights at a hundred paces
+distance on a vine, which she instantly uses as a swing.
+
+Selkirk is astonished; he applauds the tricks of Marimonda, the sports
+and combats of his other subjects. Meanwhile, his eyes having turned
+towards the sea, his brow is suddenly overclouded. At the expiration
+of a few moments of an uneasy and agitated observation, he utters an
+exclamation, springs from his hammock, runs to his cabin, then to the
+shore, where he prostrates himself with his hands clasped and raised
+towards heaven.
+
+He has just perceived a sail.
+
+Provided with his glass, he seeks the sail upon the waves, he finds
+it. 'It is without doubt a barque,' said he to himself; 'a barque from
+the neighboring island, or some point of the continent!' And looking
+again through his copper tube, he clearly distinguishes three masts
+well rigged, decorated with white sails, which are swelling in the
+east wind, and gilded by the oblique rays of the declining sun.
+
+'It is a brig! The Swordfish, perhaps! Yes, Stradling has prolonged
+his voyage in these regions. The time which he had fixed for my exile
+has rolled away! He is coming to seek me. May he be blessed!'
+
+The movement which the brig made to double the island, had increased
+more and more the hopes of Selkirk, when the Spanish flag, hoisted at
+the stern, suddenly unfolded itself to his eyes.
+
+'The enemy!' exclaimed he; 'woe is me! If they land on this coast,
+whither shall I fly, where conceal myself? In the mountains! Yes, I
+can there succeed in escaping them! But, the wretches! they will
+destroy my cabin, my inclosure, my garden! the fruit of so much
+anxiety and labor!'
+
+And, with palpitating heart, he again watches the manoeuvres of the
+brig. The latter, having tacked several times, as if to get before the
+wind, hastily changed her course and stood out to sea.
+
+Selkirk remains stupefied, overwhelmed. 'These are Spaniards,'
+murmured he, after a moment's hesitation; 'what matters it! Am I now
+their enemy? I am only a colonist, an exile, a deserter from the
+English navy. They owe me protection, assistance, as a Christian. If
+they required it, I would serve on board their vessel! But they have
+gone; what method shall I employ to recall them, to signalize my
+presence?'
+
+There was but one; it was to kindle a large fire on the shore or on
+the hill. He needs hewn wood, and his supplies are exhausted; what is
+to be done?
+
+For an instant, in his disturbed mind, the idea arises to tear the
+lattice-work from his inclosure, the pillars and the roof from his
+shed, to pile them around his cabin, and set fire to the whole.
+
+This idea he quickly repulses, but it suffices to show what passed in
+the inner folds of the heart of this man, who had just now forced
+himself to believe that happiness was yet possible for him.
+
+On farther reflection, he remembers that behind his grotto, on one of
+the first terraces of the mountain, there is a dense thicket, where
+the trees, embarrassed with vines and dry briers, closely interwoven,
+calcined by the burning reflections of the sun on the rock which
+surrounds them, present a collection of dead branches and mouldy
+trunks, scarcely masked by the semblance of vegetation.
+
+Thither he transports all the brands preserved under the ashes of his
+hearth; he makes a pile of them; throws upon it armfuls of chips, bark
+and leaves. The flame soon runs along the bushes which encircle the
+thicket; and, when the sun goes down, an immense column of fire
+illuminates all this part of the island, and throws its light far over
+the ocean.
+
+Standing on the shore, Selkirk passes the night with his eyes fixed on
+the sea, his ear listening attentively to catch the distant sound of a
+vessel; but nothing presents itself to his glance upon the luminous
+and sparkling waves, and amid their dashing he hears no other sound
+but that of the trees and vines crackling in the flames.
+
+At morning all has disappeared. The fire has exhausted itself without
+going beyond its bounds, and the sea, calm and tranquil, shows nothing
+upon its surface but a few flocks of gulls.
+
+A week passes away, during which Selkirk remains thoughtful and
+taciturn; he rarely leaves the shore; he still beholds the sports of
+his cats and his kids, but no longer smiles at them; Marimonda, by way
+of amusing him, renews in his presence her surprising feats, but the
+attention of the master is elsewhere.
+
+Nevertheless, he cannot allow himself time to dream long with
+impunity; his reserve of smoked beef is nearly exhausted; to save it,
+he has again resorted to the shell-fish, which his stomach loathes; to
+the sea-crabs, of which he is tired; he needs other nourishment to
+restore his strength. He shakes off his lethargy, takes his lasso, his
+game-bag. His plan now is, not to hunt the kids, but the goats
+themselves.
+
+As he is about to set out, Marimonda approaches, preparing to
+accompany him. In his present frame of mind, Selkirk wishes to be
+alone, and makes her comprehend, by signs, that she must remain at
+home and watch the flock; but this time, contrary to her custom, she
+does not seem disposed to obey. Notwithstanding his orders, she
+follows him, stops when he turns, recommences to follow him, and, by
+her supplicating looks and expressive gestures, seeks to obtain the
+permission which he persists in refusing. At last Selkirk speaks
+severely, and she submits, still protesting against it by her air of
+sadness and depression. Was this, on her part, caprice or foresight?
+No one has the secret of these inexplicable instincts, which sometimes
+reveal to animals the presence of an invisible enemy, or the approach
+of a disaster.
+
+At evening, Selkirk had not returned! Marimonda passed the night in
+awaiting him, uttering plaintive cries.
+
+On the morrow the morning rolled away, then the day, then the night,
+and the cabin remained deserted, and Marimonda in vain scaled the
+trees and hills in the neighborhood to recover traces of her master.
+
+What had become of him?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+
+The Precipice.--A Dungeon in a Desert Island.--Resignation.--The passing
+Bird.--The browsing Goat.--The bending Tree.--Attempts at Deliverance.
+--Success.--Death of Marimonda.
+
+In that sterile and mountainous quarter of the island to which he has
+given the name of Stradling,--that name, importing to him
+misfortune,--Selkirk, venturing in pursuit of a goat, has fallen from
+a precipice.
+
+Fortunately the cavity is not deep. After a transient swoon,
+recovering his footing, experiencing only a general numbness, and some
+pain caused by the contusions resulting from his fall, he bethinks
+himself of the means of escape.
+
+But a circle of sharp rocks, contracting from the base to the summit,
+forms a tunnel over his head; no crevice, no precipitous ledge,
+interrupts their fatal uniformity. Only around him some platforms of
+sandy earth appear; he digs them with his knife, to form steps. Some
+fragments of roots project here and there through the interstices of
+the stones; he hopes to find a point of support by which to scale
+these abrupt walls. The little solidity of the roots, which give way
+in his grasp; his sufferings, which become more intense at every
+effort; these thousand rocky heads bending at once over him; all tell
+him plainly that it will be impossible for him to emerge from this
+hole--that it is destined to be his tomb.
+
+Poor young sailor, already condemned to isolation, separated from the
+rest of mankind, could he have foreseen that one day his captivity was
+to be still closer! that his steps would be chained, that the sight
+even of his island would be interdicted! and that in this desert,
+where he had neither persecutor nor jailer to fear, he would find a
+prison, a dungeon!
+
+After three days of anguish and tortures, after new and ineffectual
+attempts,--exhausted by fatigue, by thirst, by hunger,--consumed by
+fever, supervened in consequence of all his sufferings of body and
+soul, he resigns himself to his fate; with his foot, he prepares his
+last couch, composed of sand and dried leaves shaken from above by the
+neighboring trees; he lies down, folds his arms, closes his eyes, and
+prepares to die, thinking of his eternal salvation.
+
+Although he tries not to allow himself to be distracted by other
+thoughts, from time to time sounds from the outer world disturb his
+pious meditations. First it is the joyous song of a bird. To these
+vibrating notes another song replies from afar, on a more simple and
+almost plaintive key. It is doubtless the female, who, with a sort of
+modest and repressed tenderness, thus announces her retreat to him who
+calls; then a rapid rustling is heard above the head of the prisoner.
+It is the songster, hastening to rejoin his companion.
+
+Selkirk has never known love. Once perhaps,--in a fit of youth and
+delirium; and it was this false love which tore him from his studies,
+from his country!
+
+Ah! why did he not remain at Largo, with his father? To-day he also
+would have had a companion! In that smiling country where coolness
+dwells, where labor is so easy, life so sweet and calm, the paternal
+roof would have sheltered his happiness! Oh! the joys of his infancy!
+his green and sunny Scotland.
+
+The regrets which arise in his heart he quickly banishes; his dear
+remembrances he sacrifices to God; he weaves them into a fervent
+prayer.
+
+Very soon an approaching bleating rouses him again from his
+abstractions. A goat, with restless eye, has just stretched her head
+over the edge of the precipice, and for an instant fixes on him her
+astonished glance. Then, as if re-assured, defying his powerlessness,
+with a disdainful lip she quietly crops some tufts of grass growing on
+the verge of the tunnel.
+
+On seeing her, Selkirk instinctively lays his hand on the lasso which
+is beside him.
+
+'If I succeed in reaching her, in catching her,' said he, 'her blood
+will quench the thirst which devours me, her flesh will appease my
+hunger. But of what use would it be? Whence can I expect aid and
+succor for my deliverance? This would then only prolong my
+sufferings.'
+
+And, throwing aside the end of the lasso which he has just seized, he
+again folds his arms on his breast, and closes his eyes once more.
+
+I know not what stoical philosopher--Atticus, I believe, a prey to a
+malady which he thought incurable,--had resolved to die of inanition.
+At the expiration of a certain number of days, abstinence had cured
+him, and when his friends, in the number of whom he reckoned Cicero,
+exhorted him to take nourishment, persisting in his first resolution,
+'Of what use is it!' said he also, 'Must I not die sooner or later?
+Why should I then retrace my steps, when I have already travelled more
+than half the road?'
+
+Selkirk had more reason than Atticus to decide thus; besides, his
+friends, where are they, to exhort him to live? Friends!--has he ever
+had any?
+
+Night comes, and with the night a terrific hurricane arises. By the
+glare of the lightning he sees a tree, situated not far from the
+tunnel, bend towards him, almost broken by the violence of the wind.
+
+'Perhaps Providence will send me a method of saving myself!' murmured
+Selkirk; 'should the tree fall on this side, if its branches do not
+crush me, they will serve as steps to aid me to leave this pit! I am
+saved!'
+
+But the tree resists the storm, which passes away, carrying with it
+the last hope of the captive.
+
+Towards the morning of the fourth day his fever has ceased; the
+tortures of hunger and thirst are no longer felt; the complete
+annihilation of his strength is to him a kind of relief; sleep seizes
+him, and with sleep he thinks death must come.
+
+Soon, in his dream, in a hallucination springing undoubtedly from the
+weakness of his brain, plaints, confused and distant groans, reach him
+from different points of the island. These sorrowful cries, almost
+uninterrupted, afterwards approach, and are repeated with increasing
+strength. He awakes, he listens; the bushes around him crackle and
+rustle; even the earth emits a dull sound, as beneath the bounding of
+a goat; the cries are renewed and become more and more distinct, like
+the sobs of a child. Selkirk puts his hand to his forehead. These
+plaints, these sobs, he thinks he recognizes, and, suddenly raising
+himself with a convulsive effort, he exclaims:
+
+'Marimonda!'
+
+And Marimonda runs at her master's voice, changes, on seeing him, her
+cries of distress for cries of joy, leaps and gambols on the edge of
+the cavity, and, quickly finding a way to join him, suspends herself
+by her tail to one of the branches on the verge, and springs to his
+side.
+
+Then contortions, caresses, winks of the eyes, motions of the head,
+whining, whistling, succeed each other; she rolls before him, embraces
+him closely, seeking by every method to supply the place of that
+speech which alone is wanting, and which she almost seems to have.
+Good Marimonda! her humid and shivering skin, her bruised and bleeding
+feet, her in-flamed eyes, plainly tell Selkirk how long she has been
+in search of him, how she has watched, run, to find him, and, not
+finding him, what she has suffered at his absence.
+
+Her first transports over, by his pale complexion, by his dim eye, she
+quickly divines that it is want of food which has reduced him to this
+condition. Swift as a bird she climbs the sides of the tunnel; she
+repeatedly goes and returns, bringing each time fruits and canes full
+of savory and refreshing liquid. It is precisely the usual hour for
+their first repast, and once more they can partake of it together.
+
+Revived by this repast, by the sight of his companion in exile,
+Selkirk recovers his ideas of life and liberty. This abyss, from which
+she ascends with so much facility, who knows but with her aid he may
+be able in his turn to leave it? He remembers his lasso; he puts one
+end of it into Marimonda's hand. It is now necessary that she should
+fix it to some projection of the rock, some strong shrub, which may
+serve as a point of support.
+
+It was perhaps presuming too much on the intelligence which nature has
+bestowed on the race of monkeys. At her master's orders, Marimonda
+would seize the end of the cord, then immediately abandon it, as she
+needed entire freedom of motion to enable her to scale the walls of
+the tunnel.
+
+After several ineffectual attempts, Selkirk, as a last resort, decided
+to encircle Marimonda with the noose of the lasso, and, by a gesture,
+to send her towards those heights where he was so impatient to join
+her.
+
+She departs, dragging after her the chain, of which he holds the other
+extremity: this chain, the only bridge thrown for him between the
+abyss and the port of safety, between life and death!
+
+With what anxiety he observes, studies its oscillations! Several times
+he draws it towards him, and each time, as if in reply to his summons,
+Marimonda suddenly re-appears at the brow of the precipice, preparing
+to re-descend; but he repulses her with his voice and gestures, and
+when these methods are insufficient,--when Marimonda, exhausted with
+lassitude, seated on the verge of the tunnel, persists in remaining
+motionless, he has recourse to projectiles. To compel her to second
+him in his work, the possible realization of which he himself scarcely
+comprehends, he throws at her some fragments of stone detached from
+his rocky wall, and even the remains of that repast for which he is
+indebted to her. Even when she is at a distance, informed by the
+movements of the lasso of the direction she has taken, he pursues her
+still.
+
+Suddenly the cord tightens in his hand. He pulls again, he pulls with
+force; the cord resists! Fire mounts to his brain; his sluggish blood
+is quickened; his heart and temples beat violently; his fever returns,
+but only to restore to him, at this decisive moment, his former vigor.
+He hastily digs new steps in the interstices of the rock; with his
+hands suspending himself to the lasso, assisted by his feet, by his
+knees, sometimes turning, grasping the projecting roots, the angles of
+his wall, he at last reaches the top of the cliff.
+
+Suddenly he feels the lasso stretch, as if about to break; a mist
+passes over his eyes: his head becomes dizzy, the cord escapes his
+grasp. But, by a mechanical movement, he has seized one of the highest
+projections of the tunnel, he holds it, he climbs,--he is saved.
+
+And during this perilous ascension, absorbed in the difficulties of
+the undertaking, attentive to himself alone, staggering, with a
+buzzing sound in his ears, he has not heard a sorrowful, lamentable
+moaning, not far from him.
+
+Dragging hither and thither after her the rope of leather and fibre of
+aloes, Marimonda, rather, doubtless, by chance than by calculation,
+had enlaced it around the trunk of the same tree which the night
+before, during the storm, had agitated its dishevelled branches above
+the deep couch of the dying man. This trunk had served as a point of
+resistance; but, during the tension, the unfortunate monkey, with her
+breast against the tree, had herself been caught in the folds of the
+lasso.
+
+When Selkirk arrives, he finds her extended on the ground, blood and
+foam issuing from her mouth, and her eyes starting from their sockets.
+Kneeling beside her, he loosens the bonds which still detain her.
+Excited by his presence, Marimonda makes an effort to rise, but
+immediately falls back, uttering a new cry of pain.
+
+With his heart full of anguish, taking her in his arms, Selkirk, not
+without a painful effort, not without being obliged to pause on the
+way to recover his strength, carries her to the dwelling on the shore.
+
+This shore he finds deserted and in confusion.
+
+Deprived of their daily nourishment during the prolonged absence of
+their master, the goats have made a passage through the inclosure, by
+gnawing the still green foliage which imprisoned them; the hurricane
+of the night has overthrown the rest. Before leaving, they had ravaged
+the garden, destroyed the promises of the approaching harvest, and
+devoured even the bark of the young trees. The cats have followed the
+goats. Selkirk has before his eyes a spectacle of desolation; his
+props, his trellises, the remains of his orchard, of his inclosure, of
+his shed, a part even of the roof of his cabin, strew the earth in
+confusion around him.
+
+But it is not this which occupies him now. He has prepared for
+Marimonda a bed beside his own; he takes care of her, he watches over
+her, he leaves her only to seek in the woods, or on the mountains, the
+herb which may heal her; he brings all sorts, and by armfuls, that she
+may choose;--does she not know them better than himself?
+
+As she turns away her head, or repulses with the hand those which he
+presents, he thinks he has not yet discovered the one she requires,
+and though still suffering, though himself exhausted by so many
+varying emotions, he re-commences his search, to summon the entire
+island to the assistance of Marimonda. From each of his trees he
+borrows a branch; from his bushes, his rocks, his streams--a plant, a
+fruit, a leaf, a root! For the first time he ventures across the
+_pajonals_--spongy marshes formed by the sea along the cliffs, and
+where, beneath the shade of the mangroves, grow those singular
+vegetables, those gelatinous plants, endowed with vitality and motion.
+At sight of all these remedies, Marimonda closes her eyes, and reopens
+them only to address to her friend a look of gratitude.
+
+The only thing she accepts is the water he offers her, the water which
+he himself holds to her lips in his cocoa-nut cup.
+
+During a whole week, Selkirk remains constantly absorbed in these
+cares, useless cares!--Marimonda cannot be healed! In her breast,
+bruised by the folds of the lasso, exists an important lesion of the
+organs essential to life, and from time to time a gush of blood
+reddens her white teeth.
+
+'What!' said Selkirk to himself, 'she has then accompanied me on this
+corner of earth only to be my victim! To her first caress I replied
+only by brutality; the first shot I fired in this island was directed
+against her. I pursued for a long time, with my thoughtless and stupid
+hatred, the only being who has ever loved me, and who to-day is dying
+for having saved me from that precipice from which I drove her with
+blows of stones! Marimonda, my companion, my friend,--no! thou shalt
+not die! He who sent thee to me as a consolation will not take thee
+away so soon, to leave me a thousand times more alone, more unhappy,
+than ever! God, in clothing thee with a form almost human, has
+undoubtedly given thee a soul almost like ours; the gleam of
+tenderness and intelligence which shines in thine eyes, where could it
+have been lighted, but at that divine fire whence all affection and
+devotion emanate? Well! I will implore Him for thee; and if He refuse
+to hear me, it will be because He has forgotten me, because He has
+entirely forsaken me, and I shall have nothing more to expect from His
+mercy!'
+
+Falling then upon his knees, with his forehead upon the ground, he
+prays God for Marimonda.
+
+Meanwhile, from day to day the poor invalid grows weaker; her eyes
+become dim and glassy; her limbs frightfully emaciated, and her hair
+comes off in large masses.
+
+One evening, exhausted with fatigue, after having wrapped in a
+covering of goat-skin Marimonda, who was in a violent fever, Selkirk
+was preparing to retire to rest; she detained him, and, taking his
+hand in both of hers, cast upon him a gentle and prolonged look, which
+resembled an adieu.
+
+He seated himself beside her on the ground.
+
+Then, without letting go his hand, she leaned her head on her master's
+knee, and fell asleep in this position. Selkirk dares not stir, for
+fear of disturbing her repose. Insensibly sleep seizes him also.
+
+In the morning when he awakes, the sun is illuminating the interior of
+his cabin; Marimonda remains in the same attitude as the evening
+before, but her hands are cold, and a swarm of flies and mosquitoes
+are thrusting their sharp trunks into her eyes and ears.
+
+She is a corpse.
+
+Selkirk raises her, uttering a cry, and, after having cast an angry
+look towards heaven, wipes away two tears that trickle down his
+cheeks.
+
+Thou thoughtest thyself insensible, Selkirk, and behold, thou art
+weeping!--thou, who hast more than once seen, with unmoistened eye,
+men, thy companions, in war or at sea, fall beneath a furious sword,
+or under the fire of batteries! Among the sentiments which honor
+humanity, which elevate it notwithstanding its defects, thou hadst
+preserved at least thy confidence in God and in his mercy, Selkirk,
+and to-day thou doubtest both!
+
+Why dost thou weep? why dost thou distrust God?
+
+Because thy monkey is dead!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+
+Discouragement.--A Discovery.--A Retrospective Glance.--Project of
+Suicide.--The Last Shot.--The Sea Serpent.--The _Porro_.--A Message.
+--Another Solitary.
+
+His provisions are exhausted, and Selkirk thinks not of renewing them;
+his settlement on the shore is destroyed, and he thinks not of
+rebuilding it; the fish-pond, the bed of water-cresses are encroached
+upon by sand and weeds, and he thinks not of repairing them. His mind,
+completely discouraged, recoils before such labors; he has scarcely
+troubled himself to replace the roof of his cabin.
+
+In the midst of his dreams, Selkirk had not counted enough on two
+terrific guests, which must sooner or later come: despair and _ennui_.
+
+Nevertheless, he had read in his Bible this passage: 'As the worm
+gnaweth the garment and rottenness the wood, so doth the weariness of
+solitude gnaw the heart of man.'
+
+One day, as he was descending from the Oasis, where he had dug a tomb
+for Marimonda, he bethought himself of visiting the site of his
+burning wood.
+
+Around him, the earth, blackened by the ravages of the fire, presented
+only a naked, gloomy and desolate picture. To his great surprise,
+beneath the ruins, under coal dust and half-calcined trunks of trees,
+he discovered, elevated several feet above the soil, the partition of
+a wall, some stones quarried out and placed one upon another; in fine,
+the remains of a building, evidently constructed by the hand of man.
+
+Men had then inhabited this island before him! What had become of
+them? This wood, impenetrably choked, stifled with thorny bushes,
+briars and vines, and which he had delivered over to the flames, was
+undoubtedly a garden planted by them, on a sheltered declivity of the
+mountain; the garden which surrounded their habitation, as he had
+himself designed his own to do.
+
+Ah! if he could have but found them in the island, how different would
+have been his fate! But to live alone! to have no companions but his
+own thoughts! amid the dash of waves, the cry of birds, the bleating
+of goats, incessantly to imagine the sound of a human voice, and
+incessantly to experience the torture of being undeceived! What
+elements of happiness has he ever met in this miserable island? When
+he dreamed of creating resources for a long and peaceful future, he
+lied to himself. A life favored by leisure would but crush him the
+oftener beneath the weight of thought, and it is thought which is
+killing him, the thought of isolation!
+
+What import to him the beautiful sights spread out before his eyes?
+The vast extent of sky and earth has repeated to him each day that he
+is lost, forgotten on an obscure point of the globe. The sunrises and
+sunsets, with their magic aspects, this luxuriant tropical vegetation,
+the magnificent and picturesque scenery of his island, awaken in him
+only a feeling of restraint, an uneasiness which he cannot define.
+Perhaps the emotions, so sweet to all, are painful to him only because
+he cannot communicate them, share them with another. It is not the
+noisy life of cities which he asks, not even that of the shore. But,
+at least, a companion, a being to reply to his voice, to be associated
+with his joys, his sorrows. Marimonda! No, he recognizes it now!
+Marimonda could amuse him, but was not sufficient; she inhabited with
+him only the exterior world, she communicated with him only by things
+visible and palpable; her affection for her master, her gentleness,
+her admirable instinct, sometimes succeeded in lessening the distance
+which separated their two natures, but did not wholly fill up the
+interval.
+
+He had exaggerated the intelligence which, besides, increased at the
+expense of her strength, as with all monkeys; for God has not willed
+that an animal should approximate too closely to man; he had overrated
+the sense of her acts, because he needed near him a thinking and
+acting being; but with her, confidences, plans, hopes, communication,
+the exchange of all those intimate and mysterious thoughts which are
+the life of the soul, were they possible? Even her eyes did not see
+like his own; admiration was forbidden to her; admiration, that
+precious faculty, which exists only for man,--and which becomes
+extinct by isolation.
+
+How many others become extinct also!
+
+Self-love, a just self-esteem, that powerful lever which sustains us,
+which elevates us, which compels us to respect in ourselves that
+nobility of race which we derive from God, what becomes of it in
+solitude? For Selkirk, vanity itself has lost its power to stimulate.
+Formerly, when in the presence of his comrades at St. Andrew or of the
+royal fleet, he had signalized himself by feats of address or courage,
+a sentiment of pride or triumph had inspired him. Since his arrival in
+the island, his courage and address have had but too frequent
+opportunities of exercising themselves, but he has been excited only
+by want, by necessity, by a purely personal interest. Besides, can one
+utter an exclamation of triumph, where there is not even an echo to
+repeat it?
+
+After having thus painfully passed in review all of which his exile
+from the world had deprived him, he exclaimed:
+
+'To live alone, what a martyrdom! to live useless to all, what a
+disgrace! What! does no one need me? What! are generosity, devotion,
+even pity, all those noble instincts by which the soul reveals itself,
+for ever interdicted to me? This is death, death premature and
+shameful! Ah! why did I not remain at the foot of that precipice?'
+
+With downcast head, he remained some time overwhelmed with the weight
+of his discouragement; then, suddenly, his brow cleared up, a sinister
+thought crossed his mind; he ran to his cabin, seized his gun. This
+last shot, this last charge of powder and lead, which he has preserved
+so preciously as a final resource, it will serve to put an end to his
+days! Well, is not this the most valuable service he can expect from
+it? He examines the gun; the priming is yet undisturbed; he passes his
+nail over the flint, leans the butt against the ground, takes off the
+thick leather which covers his foot, that he may be able to fire with
+more certainty. But during all these preparations his resolution grows
+weaker; he trembles as he rests the gun against his temples; that
+sentiment of self-preservation, so profoundly implanted in the heart
+of man, re-awakens in him. He hesitates--thrice returning to his first
+resolution, he brings the gun to his forehead; thrice he removes it.
+At last, to drive away this demon of suicide, he fires it in the air.
+
+Scarcely has he thus uselessly thrown away this precious shot before
+he repents. He approaches the shore; it is at the moment when the tide
+is at its lowest ebb; the sun touches the horizon. Selkirk lies down
+on the damp beach:--'When the wave returns,' said he, 'if it be God's
+will, let it take me!'
+
+Slumber comes first. Exhausted with emotion, yielding to the lassitude
+of his mind, he falls asleep. In the middle of the night, suddenly
+awakened by the sound of the advancing wave, he again flees before the
+threat of death; he no longer wishes to die. Once in safety, he turns
+to contemplate that immense sea which, for an instant, he had wished
+might be his tomb.
+
+By the moonlight, he perceives as it were a long and slender chain,
+which, gliding upon the crest of the waves, directs itself towards the
+shore. By its form, by its copper color, by the multiplicity of its
+rings, unfolding in the distance, Selkirk recognizes the sea-serpent,
+that terror of navigators, as he has often heard it described.
+
+The mind of the solitary is a perpetual mirage.
+
+Filled with terror, he flies again; he conceals himself, trembling, in
+the caverns of his mountains; he has become a coward; why should he
+affect a courage he does not feel? No one is looking at him!
+
+The next day, instead of the sea-serpent, he finds on the beach an
+immense cryptogamia, a gigantic alga, of a single piece, divided into
+a thousand cylindrical branches, and much superior to all those he has
+observed in the Straits of Sunda. The rising tide had thrown it on the
+shore.
+
+While he examines it, he sees with surprise all sorts of birds come to
+peck at it; coatis, agoutis, and even rats, come out of their holes,
+boldly carrying away before his eyes fragments, whence issues a thick
+and brown sap. Emboldened by their example, and especially by the
+balsamic odor of the plant, he tastes it. It is sweet and succulent.
+
+This plant is no other than that providential vegetable called by the
+Spaniards _porro_, and which forms so large a part of the nourishment
+of the poor inhabitants of Chili.[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: It is the _Durvilloea utilis_, dedicated to Dumont
+d'Urville, by Bory de St. Vincent, and classed by him in the
+laminariées, an important and valuable family of marine cryptogamia.]
+
+The sea, which had already sent Selkirk seals to furnish him with oil
+and furs in a moment of distress, had just come to his assistance by
+giving him an easily procured aliment for a long time.
+
+Another surprise awaits him.
+
+Between the interlaced branches of his alga, he discovers a little
+bottle, strongly secured with a cork and wax. It contains a fragment
+of parchment, on which are traced some lines in the Spanish language.
+
+Although he is but imperfectly acquainted with this language, though
+the characters are partially effaced or scarcely legible, Selkirk, by
+dint of patience and study, soon deciphers the following words:
+
+'In the name of the Holy Trinity, to you who may read'--(here some
+words were wanting,)--'greeting. My name is Jean Gons--(Gonzalve or
+Gonsales; the rest of the name was illegible.) After having seen my
+two sons, and almost all my fortune, swallowed up in the sea with the
+vessel _Fernand Cortes_, in which I was a passenger, thrown by
+shipwreck on the coasts of the Island of San Ambrosio, near Chili, I
+live here alone and desolate. May God and men come to my aid!'
+
+At the bottom of the parchment, some other characters were
+perceptible, but without form, without connection, and almost entirely
+destroyed by a slight mould which had collected at the bottom of the
+bottle.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+
+The Island San Ambrosio.--Selkirk at last knows what Friendship is.--The
+Raft.--Visits to the Tomb of Marimonda.--The Departure.--The two
+Islands.--Shipwreck.--The Port of Safety.
+
+As he read this, Selkirk was seized with intense pity for the
+unfortunate shipwrecked. What! on this same ocean, undoubtedly on
+these same shores, lives another unhappy being, like himself exiled
+from the world, enduring the same sufferings, subject to the same
+wants, experiencing the same _ennui_, the same anguish as himself!
+this man has confided to the sea his cry of distress, his complaint,
+and the sea, a faithful messenger, has just deposited it at the feet
+of Selkirk!
+
+Suddenly he remembers that rock, that island, discerned by him, on the
+day when at the Oasis, he was reconciled to Marimonda.
+
+That is the island of San Ambrosio; it is there, he does not doubt it
+for an instant, that his new friend lives; yes, his friend! for, from
+this moment he experiences for him an emotion of sympathetic
+affection. He loves him, he is so much to be pitied! Poor father, he
+has lost his sons, he has lost his fortune and the hope of returning
+to his country; and yet there reigns in his letter a tone of dignified
+calmness, of religious resignation which can come only from a noble
+heart. He is a Spaniard and a Roman Catholic; Selkirk is a Scotchman
+and a Presbyterian; what matters it?
+
+To-day his friend demands assistance, and he has resolved to dare all,
+to undertake all to respond to his appeal. Like a lamp deprived of
+air, his mind has revived at this idea, that he can at last be useful
+to others than himself. The inhabitant of San Ambrosio shall be
+indebted to him for an alleviation of his sorrows; for companionship
+in them. What is there visionary about this hope? Had he not already
+conceived the project of preparing a barque to explore that unknown
+coast? God seems to encourage his design, by sending him at once this
+double manna for the body and soul, the _porro_, which will suffice
+for his nourishment, and this writing, which the wave has just
+brought, to impose on him a duty.
+
+He immediately sets himself to the work, and obstacles are powerless
+to chill his generous excitement. Of the vegetable productions of the
+island, the red cedar and myrtle are those which grow of the largest
+size;[1] but yet their trunks are not large enough to serve when
+hollowed out for a barque. Well! he will construct a raft.
+
+[Footnote 1: The _myrtus maximus_ attains 13 metres (a little more
+than 42 feet) in height.]
+
+He fells young trees, cuts off their branches, rolls them to the
+shore, on a platform of sand, which the waves reach at certain
+periods; he fastens them solidly together with a triple net-work of
+plaited leather, cords woven of the fibre of the aloe, supple and
+tough vines; he chooses another with diverging and horizontal roots,
+the habitual direction taken by all the large vegetables of this
+island, the sand of which is covered only by two feet of earth. This
+shall be the mast. He plants it in the middle of the raft, where it is
+kept upright by its roots, knotted and interwoven with the various
+pieces which compose the floor. For a sail, has he not that which was
+left him by the Swordfish? and will not his seal-skin hammock serve as
+a spare sail?
+
+He afterwards constructs a helm, then two strong oars, that he may
+neglect no chance of success. He fastens his structure still more
+firmly by all that remains to him of his nails and bolts, and awaits
+the high tide to launch his skiff upon the sea.
+
+He has never felt calmer, happier, than during the long time occupied
+in these labors; their object has doubled his strength. The moments of
+indispensable repose, he has passed at the Oasis, beside the tomb of
+Marimonda, of that Marimonda, who by her example, opened to him the
+life of devotedness in which he has just engaged. Thence, with his eye
+turned upon that island where dwells the unknown friend from whom he
+has received a summons, he talks to him, encourages him, consoles him;
+he imparts to him his resolution to join him soon, and it seems as if
+the same waves which had brought the message will also undertake to
+transmit the reply.
+
+At present, Selkirk finds some sweetness in pitying evils which are
+not his own; he no longer dreams of wrapping himself in a cloak of
+selfishness; that disdainful heart, hitherto invincibly closed, at
+last experiences friendship, or at least aspires to do so.
+
+At last, the day arrives when the sea, inundating the marshes, bending
+the mangroves, reaches, on the sandy platform, one of the corners of
+his raft.
+
+Selkirk hastens to transport thither his hatchets, his guns, his
+seal-skins and goat-skins, his Bible, his spy-glass, his pipes, his
+ladder, his stools, even his traps; all his riches! it is a complete
+removal.
+
+On taking possession of the island, he had engraved on the bark of
+several trees the date of his arrival; he now inscribes upon them the
+day of his departure. For many months his reckoning has been
+interrupted; to determine the date is impossible; he knows only the
+day of the week.
+
+When the wave had entirely raised his barque, aiding himself with one
+of the long oars to propel it over the rocky bottom, he gained the
+sea. Then, after having adjusted his sail, with his hand on the helm,
+he turned towards his island to address to it an adieu, laden with
+maledictions rather than regrets.
+
+Swelled by a south-east wind, the sail pursues its course towards that
+other land, the object of his new desires. At the expiration of some
+hours, by the aid of his glass, what from the summit of his mountains
+had appeared to him only a dark point, a rock beaten by the waves,
+seems already enlarged, allowing him to see high hills covered with
+verdure. He has not then deceived himself! There exists a habitable
+land,--habitable for two! It has served as a refuge to the shipwrecked
+man, to his friend! Ah! how impatient he is to reach this shore where
+he is to meet him!
+
+Several hours more of a slow but peaceful navigation roll away. He has
+arrived at a distance almost midway between the point of departure and
+that of arrival. Looking alternately at the islands Selkirk and San
+Ambrosio, both illuminated by the sunset, with their indefinite forms,
+their bases buried in the waves, their terraced summits, veiled with a
+light fog, they appear like the reflection of each other. But for the
+discovery which he had previously made of the second, he would have
+believed this was his own island, or rather its image, represented in
+the waters of the sea.
+
+But in proportion as he advances towards his new conquest, it
+increases to his eyes, as if to testify the reality of its existence,
+now by a mountain peak, now by a cape. He had seen only the profile,
+it now presents its face, ready to develope all its graces, all its
+fascinations; while its rival, disdained, abandoned, becomes by
+degrees effaced, and seems to wish to conceal its humiliation beneath
+the wave of the great ocean.
+
+Suddenly, without any apparent jar, without any flaw of wind, on a
+calm sea, the stem of the tree serving as a mast vacillates, bends
+forward, then on one side; the roots, which fasten it to the floor of
+the raft, are wrenched from their hold; the sail, diverging in the
+same direction, still extended, drags it entirely down, and it is
+borne away by the wave.
+
+Struck with astonishment, Selkirk puts his foot on the helm, and
+seizes his oars; but oars are powerless to move so heavy a machine.
+What is to be done?
+
+He who has not been able to endure isolation in the midst of a
+terrestrial paradise, from which he has just voluntarily exiled
+himself, must he then he reduced to have for an asylum, on the
+immensity of the ocean, only a few trunks of trees scarcely lashed
+together?
+
+The situation is frightful, terrific; Selkirk dares not contemplate
+it, lest his reason should give way. He must have a sail; a mast! He
+has his spare sail; for the mast, his only resource is to detach one
+of the timbers which compose the frame-work of his raft. Perhaps this
+will destroy its solidity; but he has no choice.
+
+He takes the best of his hatchets, chooses among the straight stems of
+which his floating dwelling is composed, that which seems most
+suitable; he cuts away with a thousand precautions, the bonds which
+fasten it; he frees it, not without difficulty, from the contact of
+other logs to which it has been attached. But while he devotes himself
+to this task, the raft, obedient to a mysterious motion of the sea,
+has slowly drifted on; the surface is covered with foam, as if
+sub-marine waves are lashing it. Selkirk springs to the helm; the
+tiller breaks in his hands; he seizes the oars, they also break. An
+unknown force hurries him on. He has just fallen into one of those
+rapid currents which, from north to south, traverse the waters of the
+Pacific Ocean.
+
+Borne away in a contrary direction from that which he has hitherto
+pursued, the land of which he had come in search seems to fly before
+him. Whither is he going? Into what regions, into what solitudes of
+the sea is he to be carried, far from islands and continents?
+
+To add to his terror, in these latitudes, where day suddenly succeeds
+to night and night to day, where twilight is unknown, the sun, just
+now shining brightly, suddenly sinks below the horizon.
+
+In the midst of profound darkness, the unhappy man pursues this fatal
+race, leading to inevitable destruction. During a part of this
+terrible night, he hears the frail frame-work which supports him
+cracking beneath his feet. How long must his sufferings last? He knows
+not. At last, jostled by adverse waves, shaken to its centre, the raft
+begins to whirl around, and something heavier than the shock of the
+wave comes repeatedly to give it new and rude blows. The first rays of
+the rising moon, far from calming the terrors of the unhappy mariner,
+increase them. In his dizzy brain, these wan rays which silver the
+surface of the sea, seem so many phantoms coming to be present at his
+last moments. Pale, bent double, with his hair standing upright,
+clinging to some projection of his barque, he in vain attempts to fix
+his glance on certain strange objects which he sees ascending,
+descending, and rolling around him.
+
+They are the trunks of the trees which formed a part of his raft,
+limbs detached from its body, and which, now drawn into the same
+whirlpool, are by their repeated shocks, aiding in his complete
+destruction.
+
+In face of this imminent, implacable death, Selkirk ceases to struggle
+against it. He has now but one resource; the belief in another life.
+The religious instinct, which has already come to his assistance,
+revives with force. Clinging with his hands and feet to these wavering
+timbers, which are almost disjoined, half inundated by the wave, which
+is encroaching more and more upon his last asylum, he directs his
+steps towards the spot where he had deposited his arms and furs; he
+takes from among them his Bible, not to read it, but to clasp it to
+his heart, whose agitation and terror seem to grow calm beneath its
+sacred contact.
+
+He then attempts to absorb his thoughts in God; he blames himself for
+not having been contented with the gifts he had received from Him; he
+might have lived happily in Scotland, or in the royal navy. It is this
+perpetual desire for change, these aspirations after the unknown,
+which have occasioned his ruin.
+
+At this moment, raising his eyes towards heaven, he sees, beneath the
+pale rays of the moon, a mass of rocks rising at a little distance,
+which he immediately recognizes. There is the bay of the Seals, the
+peak of the Discovery. That hollow, lying in the shadow, is the valley
+of the Oasis! As on the first day of his arrival, on one of the
+steepest summits of the mountain, he perceives stationed there,
+immovable, like a sentinel, a goat, between whose delicate limbs
+shines a group of stars, celestial eyes, whose golden lids seem to
+vibrate as if in appeal. It is his island! He does not hesitate;
+suddenly recovering all his energies, he springs from the raft,
+struggles with vigor, with perseverance against the current, triumphs
+over it, and, after prolonged efforts, at last reaches this haven of
+deliverance, this port of safety; he lands, fatigued, exhausted, but
+overcome with joy and gratitude. Profoundly thanking God from his
+heart, he prostrates himself, and kisses with transport the hospitable
+soil of this island,--which, on the morning of the same day, he had
+cursed.
+
+Alas! does not reflection quickly diminish this lively joy at his
+return and safety? From this shipwreck, poor sailor, thou hast saved
+only thyself: thy tools, thy instruments of labor, even thy Bible, are
+a prey to the sea!
+
+It is now, Selkirk, that thou must suffice for thyself! It is the last
+trial to which thou canst be subjected!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+
+The Island of Juan Fernandez.--Encounter in the Mountains.--Discussion.
+--A New Captivity.--A Cannon-shot.--Dampier and Selkirk.--_Mas a Fuera_.
+--News of Stradling.--Confidences.--End of the History of the real
+Robinson Crusoe.--Nebuchadnezzar.
+
+On the 1st of February, 1709, an English vessel, equipped and sent to
+sea by the merchants of Bristol, after having sailed around Cape Horn,
+in company with another vessel belonging to the same expedition,
+touched alone, about the 33d degree of south latitude, at the Island
+of Juan Fernandez, from a hundred and ten to a hundred and twenty
+leagues distant from the coast of Chili.
+
+The second ship was to join her without delay. Symptoms of the scurvy
+had appeared on board, and it was intended to remain here for some
+time, to give the crew opportunity of recovering their health.
+
+Their tents pitched, towards evening several sailors, having ventured
+upon the island, were not a little surprised to see, through the
+obscurity, a strange being, bearing some resemblance to the human
+form, who, at their approach, scaling the mountains, leaping from rock
+to rock, fled with the rapidity of a deer, the lightness of a chamois.
+
+Some doubted whether it was a man, and prepared to fire at him. They
+were prevented by an officer named Dower, who accompanied them.
+
+On their return to their companions, the sailors related what they had
+seen; Dower did not fail to do the same among the officers; and this
+evening, at the encampment on the shore, in the forecastle as well as
+on the quarter-deck, there were narratives and suppositions that would
+'amuse an assembly of Puritans through the whole of Lent,' says the
+account from which we borrow a part of our information.
+
+At this period, tales of the marvellous gained great credence among
+sailors. Not long before, the Spaniards had discovered giants in
+Patagonia; the Portuguese, sirens in the seas of Brazil; the French,
+tritons and satyrs at Martinique; the Dutch, black men, with feet like
+lobsters, beyond Paramaribo.
+
+The strange individual under discussion was unquestionably a satyr, or
+at least one of those four-footed, hairy men, such as the authentic
+James Carter declared he had met with in the northern part of America.
+
+Some, thinking this conclusion too simple, adroitly insinuated that no
+one among the sailors who had met this monster, had noticed in him so
+great a number of paws. Why four paws?--why should he not be a
+monopedous man, a man whose body, terminated by a single leg, cleared,
+with this support alone, considerable distances? Was not the existence
+of the monopedous man attested by modern travellers, and even in
+antiquity and the middle ages, by Pliny and St. Augustine?
+
+Others preferred to imagine in this singular personage the acephalous
+man, the man without a head, named by the grave Baumgarthen as
+existing on the new continent. They had not discovered many legs, but
+neither had they discovered a head; why should he have one?
+
+And the discussion continued, and not a voice was raised to risk this
+judicious observation; if neither head nor limbs have been
+distinguished, it may perhaps be because he has been seen only in the
+dark.
+
+The next day, each wished to be satisfied; a regular hunt was
+organized against this phenomenon; they set out, invaded his retreat,
+pursued him, surrounded him, at last seized him, and the brave sailors
+of Great Britain discovered with stupefaction, in this monopedous,
+acephalous man, in this satyr, this cercopithecus, what? A countryman,
+a Scotchman, a subject of Queen Anne!
+
+It was Selkirk; Selkirk, his hair long and in disorder, his limbs
+encased in fragments of skins, and half deprived of his reason.
+
+His island was Juan Fernandez, so called by the first navigator who
+discovered it; this was Selkirk Island.
+
+When he was conducted before Captain Woodes Rogers, commander of the
+expedition, to the interrogations of the latter, the unfortunate man,
+with downcast look, and agitated with a nervous trembling, replied
+only by repeating mechanically the last syllables of the phrases which
+were addressed to him by the captain.
+
+A little recovered from his agitation, discovering that he had
+Englishmen to deal with, he attempted to pronounce some words; he
+could only mutter a few incoherent and disconnected sentences.
+
+'Solitude and the care of providing for his subsistence,' says Paw,
+'had so occupied his mind, that all rational ideas were effaced from
+it. As savage as the animals, and perhaps more so, he had almost
+entirely forgotten the secret of articulating intelligible sounds.'
+
+Captain Rogers having asked him how long he had been secluded in this
+island, Selkirk remained silent; he nevertheless understood the
+question, for his eyes immediately opened with terror, as if he had
+just measured the long space of time which his exile had lasted. He
+was far from having an exact idea of it; he appreciated it only by the
+sufferings he had endured there, and, looking fixedly at his hands, he
+opened and shut them several times.
+
+Reckoning by the number of his fingers, it was twenty or thirty years,
+and every one at first believed in the accuracy of his calculation, so
+completely did his forehead, furrowed with wrinkles, his skin
+blackened, withered by the sun, his hair whitened at the roots, his
+gray beard, give him the aspect of an old man.
+
+Selkirk was born in 1680; he was then only twenty-nine.
+
+After having replied thus, he turned his head, cast a troubled look on
+the objects which surrounded him; a remembrance seemed to awaken, and,
+uttering a cry, stepping forward, he pointed with his finger to a
+cedar on his left. It was the tree on which, when he left the
+Swordfish, he had inscribed the date of his arrival in the island. The
+officer Dower approached, and, notwithstanding the crumbling of the
+decayed bark, could still read there this inscription:
+
+'Alexander Selkirk--from Largo, Scotland, Oct. 27, 1704.'
+
+His exile from the world had therefore lasted four years and three
+months.
+
+Notwithstanding the interest excited by his misfortunes, by his name,
+his accent, more than by his language, Captain Rogers, an honorable
+and humane man, but of extreme severity on all that appertained to
+discipline, recognized him as a British subject, suspected him to be a
+deserter from the English navy, and gave orders that he should be put
+under guard, pending a definitive decision.
+
+The sailors commissioned to this office did not find it an easy thing
+to guard a prisoner who could climb the trees like a squirrel, and
+outstrip them all in a race. As a precaution, they commenced by
+binding him firmly to the same cedar on which his name was engraved.
+There the unfortunate Selkirk figured as a curious animal, ornamented
+with a label.
+
+Afterwards, more for pastime than through mischief, they tormented him
+with questions, to obtain from him hesitating or almost senseless
+replies, which bewildered him much; then they began to examine, with
+childish surprise, the length of his beard, of his hair and nails; the
+prodigious development of his muscles; his bare feet, so hardened by
+travel, that they seemed to be covered with horn moccasins. Having
+found beneath his goat-skin rags, a knife, whose blade, by dint of use
+and sharpening, was almost reduced to the proportions of that of a
+penknife, they took it away to examine it; but on seeing himself
+deprived of this single weapon, the only relic of his shipwreck, the
+prisoner struggled, uttering wild howls; they restored it to him.
+
+At the hour of repast, Selkirk had, like the rest, his portion of meat
+and biscuit. He ate the biscuit, manifesting great satisfaction; but
+he, who had at first suffered so much from being deprived of salt,
+found in the meat a degree of saltness insupportable. He pointed to
+the stream; one of his guards courteously offered him his gourd,
+containing a mixture of rum and water; he approached it to his lips,
+and immediately threw it away with violence, as if it had burned him.
+
+At evening, he was transported on board.
+
+A few days after he began to acquire a taste for common food; his
+ideas became more definite; speech returned to his lips more freely
+and clearly; but liberty of motion was not yet restored to him, a new
+captivity opened before him, and his irritation at this was presenting
+an obstacle to the complete restoration of his faculties, when God,
+who had so deeply tried him, came to his assistance.
+
+One morning, as the crew of the ship were occupied, some in caulking
+and tarring it, others in gathering edible plants on the island, a
+cannon-shot resounded along the waves. The caulkers climbed up the
+rigging, the provision-hunters ran to the shore, the officers seized
+their spy-glasses, and all together quickly uttered a _huzza_! The
+vessel which had sailed in company with that of Captain Rogers, the
+Duchess, of Bristol, had arrived. This vessel, commanded by William
+Cook, had, for a master-pilot, a man more celebrated in maritime
+annals than the commanders of the expedition themselves;--this was
+Dampier, the indefatigable William Dampier, who, a short time since a
+millionaire, now completely ruined in consequence of foolish
+speculations and prodigalities, had just undertaken a third voyage
+around the world.
+
+Scarcely had he disembarked, when he heard of the great event of the
+day--of the wild man. His name was mentioned, he remembered having
+known an Alexander Selkirk at St. Andrew, at the inn of the Royal
+Salmon. He went to him, interrogated him, recognized him, and, without
+loss of time, after having had his hair and beard cut, and procured
+suitable clothing for him, presented him to Capt. Rogers; he
+introduced him as one of his old comrades, formerly an intrepid and
+distinguished officer in the navy, one of the conquerors of Vigo, who
+had been induced by himself to embark in the Swordfish, partly at his
+expense.
+
+Restored to liberty, supported, revived, by the kind cares of Dampier,
+his old hero, Selkirk felt rejuvenated. His first thought then is for
+that other unfortunate man, still an exile perhaps in his desert
+island. After having informed the old sailor that he had found a
+little bottle, containing a written parchment, he said: 'Dear Captain,
+it would be a meritorious act, and one worthy of you, to co-operate in
+the deliverance of this unhappy man. A boat will suffice for the
+voyage, since the Island of San Ambrosio is so near this. Oh! how
+joyfully would I accompany you in this excursion!'
+
+'My brave hermit,' replied Dampier, shaking his head, 'the neighboring
+island of which you speak is no other than the second in this group,
+named _Mas a Fuera_. As for the other, that San Ambrosio which you
+think so near, if it has not become a floating island since my last
+voyage, if it is still where I left it, under the Tropic of Capricorn,
+to reach it will not be so trifling a matter; besides, your little
+bottle must be a bottle of ink. There is here confusion of place and
+confusion of time; not only is _Mas a Fuera_ not _San Ambrosio_ but
+this latter island, far from being a desert, as your correspondent has
+said, has been inhabited more than twenty years by a multitude of
+madmen, fishermen and pirates, potato-eaters and old sailors, who,
+when I visited them, in 1702, politely received me with gun-shots, and
+whose politeness I returned with cannon-shots. Therefore, my boy, he
+who wrote to you must have been dead when you received his letter.
+What date did it bear?'
+
+'None,' said Selkirk; 'the last lines were effaced;' and he trembled
+at the idea of all the dangers he had run in pursuit of this friend,
+who no longer existed, and of a land which he had never inhabited.
+
+After having satisfied a duty of humanity, that which he had regarded
+as a debt contracted towards a friend, Selkirk, among other inquiries,
+let fall the name of Stradling. This time, it was hatred which asked
+information.
+
+His hatred was destined to be gratified.
+
+In pursuing his voyage, after having coasted along the shores of the
+Straits of Magellan, Stradling, surprised by a frightful hurricane,
+had seen his vessel entirely disabled. Repulsed at five different
+times, now by the tempest, now by the Spaniards, from the ports where
+he attempted to take refuge, he was thrown, near La Plata, on an
+inhospitable shore. Attacked, pillaged by the natives, half of his
+crew having perished, with the remains of his ship he constructed
+another, to which he gave the name of the Cinque Ports, instead of
+that of the Swordfish, which it was no longer worthy to bear. This was
+a large pinnace, on which he had secretly returned to England. For
+several years past, Dampier had not heard of him.
+
+Selkirk thought himself sufficiently avenged; his present happiness
+silenced his past ill-will. He even became reconciled to his island.
+
+Each day he traversed its divers parts, with emotions various as the
+remembrances it awakened. But he was now no longer alone! Arm and arm
+with Dampier, he revisited these places where he had suffered so much,
+and which often resumed for him their enchanting aspects.
+
+His companion was soon informed of his history. When he had related
+what we already know, from his landing to the construction of his
+raft, and to his frightful shipwreck, he at last commenced, not
+without some mortification, the recital of his final miseries, which
+alone could explain the deplorable state in which the English sailors
+had found him.
+
+By the loss of his hatchets, his ladder, his other instruments of
+labor, condemned to inaction, to powerlessness, he had nothing to
+occupy himself with but to provide sustenance. But the sea had taken
+his snares along with the rest. He at first subsisted on herbs, fruits
+and roots; afterwards his stomach rejected these crudities, as it had
+repulsed the fish. Armed with a stick, he had chased the agoutis; for
+want of agoutis, he had eaten rats.
+
+By night, he silently climbed the trees to surprise the female of the
+toucan or blackbird, which he pitilessly stifled over their young
+brood. Meanwhile, at the noise he made among the branches, this winged
+prey almost always escaped him.
+
+He tried to construct a ladder; by the aid of his knife alone, he
+attempted to cut down two tall trees. During this operation his knife
+broke--only a fragment remained. This was for him a great trial.
+
+He thought of making, with reeds and the fibres of the aloe, a net to
+catch birds; but all patient occupation, all continuous labor, had
+become insupportable to him.
+
+That he might escape the gloomy ideas which assailed him more and
+more, it became necessary to avoid repose, to court bodily fatigue.
+
+By continual exercise, his powers of locomotion had developed in
+incredible proportions. His feet had become so hardened that he no
+longer felt the briers or sharp stones. When he grew weary, he slept,
+in whatever place he found himself, and these were his only quiet
+hours.
+
+To chase the agoutis had ceased to be an object worthy of his efforts;
+the kids took their turn, afterwards the goats. He had acquired such
+dexterity of movement, and such strength of muscle, such certainty of
+eye, that to leap from one projection of rock to another, to spring at
+one bound over ravines and deep cavities, was to him but a childish
+sport. In these feats he took pleasure and pride.
+
+Sometimes, in the midst of his flights through space, he would seize a
+bird on the wing.
+
+The goats themselves soon lost their power to struggle against such a
+combatant. Notwithstanding their number, had Selkirk wished it, he
+might have depopulated the island. He was careful not to do this.
+
+If he wished to procure a supply of provisions, he directed his steps
+towards the most elevated peaks of the mountain, marked his game,
+pursued it, caught it by the horns, or felled it by a blow from his
+stick; after which his knife-blade did its office. The goat killed, he
+threw it on his shoulders, and, almost as swiftly as before, regained
+the cavernous grotto or leafy tree, in the shelter of which he could
+this day eat and sleep. He had for a long time forsaken his cabin,
+which was too far distant from his hunting-grounds.
+
+If he had a stock of provision on hand, he still pursued the goats as
+usual, but only for his personal gratification. If he caught one, he
+contented himself with slitting its ear; this was his seal, the mark
+by which he recognized his free flock. During the last years of his
+abode in the island, he had killed or marked thus nearly five
+hundred.[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: Long after his departure from Juan Fernandez, the ship's
+crews, who came there for supplies, or the pirates who took refuge
+there, found goats whose ears had been slit by Selkirk's knife.]
+
+In the natural course of things, as his physical powers increased, his
+intelligence became enfeebled.
+
+Necessity had at first aroused his industry, for all industry awakes
+at the voice of want; but his own had been due rather to his
+recollections than to his ingenuity. He thought himself a creator, he
+was only an imitator.
+
+Whatever may have been said by those who, in the pride of a deceitful
+philosophy, have wished to glorify the power of the solitary man--if
+the latter, supported by certain fortunate circumstances, can remain
+some time in a state hardly endurable, it is not by his own strength,
+but by means which society itself has furnished. This is the
+incontestable truth, from which, in his pride, Selkirk had turned
+away.
+
+Deprived of exercise and of aliment, his thoughts, no longer sustained
+by reading the Holy Book, were day by day lost in a chaos of dreams
+and reveries.
+
+A prey to terrors which he could not explain, he feared darkness, he
+trembled at the slightest sound of the wind among the branches; if it
+blew violently, he thought the trees would be uprooted and crush him;
+if the sea roared, he trembled at the idea of the submersion of his
+entire island.
+
+When he traversed the woods, especially if the heat was great, he
+often heard, distinctly, voices which called him or replied. He caught
+entire phrases; others remained unfinished. These phrases, connected
+neither with his thoughts nor his situation, were strange to him.
+Sometimes he even recognized the voice.
+
+Now it was that of Catherine, scolding her servants; now that of
+Stradling, of Dampier, or one of his college tutors. Once he heard
+thus the voice of one of his classmates whom he least remembered; at
+another time it was that of his old admiral, Rourke, uttering the
+words of command.
+
+If he attempted to raise his own to impose silence on these choruses
+of demons who tormented him, it was only with painful efforts that he
+could succeed in articulating some confused syllables.
+
+He no longer talked, but he still sang; he sang the monotonous and
+mournful airs of his psalms, the words of which he had totally
+forgotten. His memory by degrees became extinct. Sometimes even, he
+lost the sentiment of his identity; then, at least, his state of
+isolation, and the memory of his misfortunes ceased to weigh upon him.
+
+He nevertheless remembered, that about this time, having approached
+Swordfish Beach, attracted by an unusual noise there, he had seen it
+covered with soldiers and sailors, doubtless Spaniards. The idea of
+finding himself among men, had suddenly made his heart beat; but when
+he descended the declivity of the hills in order to join them, several
+shots were fired; the balls whistled about his ears, and, filled with
+terror, he had fled.
+
+Once more he had found himself there, but without intending it, for
+then he could no longer find his way, by the points of the compass,
+through the woods and valleys leading to the shore. Ah! how had his
+ancient abode changed its aspect! How many years had rolled away since
+he lived there! The little gravelled paths, which conducted to the
+grotto and the mimosa, were effaced; the mimosa, its principal
+branches broken, seemed buried beneath its own ruins; of his
+fish-pond, his bed of water-cresses, not a vestige remained; his
+grotto, veiled, hid beneath the thick curtains of vines and
+heliotropes, was no longer visible; his cabin had ceased to
+exist,--overthrown, swept away doubtless, by a hurricane, as his
+inclosure had been. He could discover the spot only by the five
+myrtles, which, disembarrassed of their roof of reeds and their
+plaster walls, had resumed their natural decorations, green and
+glossy, as if the hatchet had never touched them. At their feet tufts
+of briers and other underbrush had grown up, as formerly. The two
+streams, the _Linnet_ and the _Stammerer_, alone had suffered no
+change. The one with its gentle murmur, the other with its silvery
+cascades, after having embraced the lawn, still continued to flow
+towards the sea, where they seemed to have buried, with their waves,
+the memory of all that had passed on their borders.
+
+At sight of his shore, which seemed to have retained no vestige of
+himself, Selkirk remained a few moments, mournful and lost in his
+incoherent thoughts, in the midst of which this was most
+prominent:--Yet alive, already forgotten by the world, I have seen my
+traces disappear, even from this island which I have so long
+inhabited!
+
+A rustling was heard in the foliage; he raised his eyes, expecting to
+see Marimonda swinging on the branch of a tree. Perceiving nothing, he
+remembered that Marimonda reposed at the Oasis; he took the road from
+the mountain which led thither, but when he arrived there, when he was
+before her tomb, covered with tall grass, he had forgotten why he
+came.
+
+One of those unaccountable fits of terror, which were now more
+frequent than formerly, seized him, and he precipitately descended the
+mountain, springing from peak to peak along the rocks.
+
+The religious sentiment, which formerly sustained Selkirk in his
+trials, was not entirely extinct; but it was obscured beneath his
+darkened reason. His religion was only that of fear. When the sea was
+violently agitated, when the storm howled, he prostrated himself with
+clasped hands; but it was no longer God whom he implored; it was the
+angry ocean, the thunder. He sought to disarm the genius of evil. The
+lightning having one day struck, not far from him, a date-palm, he
+worshipped the tree. His perverted faith had at last terminated in
+idolatry.
+
+This was, in substance, what Alexander Selkirk related to William
+Dampier; what solitude had done for this man, still so young, and
+formerly so intelligent; this was what had become of the despiser of
+men, when left to his own reason.
+
+Dampier listened with the most profound attention, interrupting him in
+his narrative only by exclamations of interest or of pity. When he
+ceased to speak, holding out his hand to him, he said:
+
+'My boy, the lesson is a rude one, but let it be profitable to you;
+let it teach you that _ennui_ on board a vessel, even with a
+Stradling, is better than _ennui_ in a desert. Undoubtedly there are
+among us troublesome, wicked people, but fewer wicked than
+crack-brained. Believe, then, in friendship, especially in mine; from
+this day it is yours, on the faith of William Dampier.'
+
+And he opened his arms to the young man, who threw himself into them.
+
+On their return to the vessel, Dampier presented to Selkirk his own
+Bible. The latter seized it with avidity, and, after having turned
+over its leaves as if to find a text which presented itself to his
+mind, read aloud the following passage:
+
+'He was driven from the sons of men; and his heart was made like the
+beasts, and his dwelling was with the wild asses; they fed him with
+grass like oxen, and his body was wet with the dew of heaven.'--DANIEL
+v. 21.
+
+
+
+
+CONCLUSION.
+
+
+Capt. Rogers, in his turn, learned the misfortunes of Selkirk and
+became attached to him; from this moment, the sailors themselves
+showed him great deference; he was known among them by the name of
+_the governor_, and this title clung to him.
+
+To do the honors of his island, the governor one day gave to the crews
+of the two vessels, the spectacle of one of his former hunts. Resuming
+his ancient costume, he returned to the high mountains, where, before
+their eyes, he started a goat, and darting in pursuit of it, over a
+thousand cliffs, sometimes clearing frightful abysses, by means of a
+vine which he seized on his passage,--this method he owed to
+Marimonda,--he succeeded in forcing his game to the hills of the
+shore. Arrived there, exhausted, panting, drawing itself up like a
+stag at bay, the goat stopped short. Selkirk took it living on his
+shoulders, and presented it to Capt. Rogers. Its ear was already slit.
+
+By way of thanks, the captain announced that he might henceforth be
+connected with the expedition, with his old rank of mate, which was
+restored to him. For this favor Selkirk was indebted to the
+solicitations of Dampier.
+
+In the same vessel with Dampier, he made another three years' voyage,
+visited Mexico, California, and the greater part of North America;
+after which, still in company with Dampier, and possessor of a pretty
+fortune, he returned to England, where the recital of his adventures,
+already made public, secured him the most honorable patronage and
+friendship. Among his friends, may be reckoned Steele, the co-laborer,
+the rival of Addison, who consecrated a long chapter to him in his
+publication of the Tatler.
+
+Selkirk did not fail to visit Scotland. Passing through St. Andrew,
+could he help experiencing anew the desire to see his old friend
+pretty Kitty? Once more he appeared before the bar of the Royal
+Salmon. This time, on meeting, Selkirk and Catherine both experienced
+a sentiment of painful surprise. The latter, stouter and fuller than
+ever, fat and red-faced, touched the extreme limit of her fourth and
+last youth; the solitary of Juan Fernandez, with his gray hair, his
+copper complexion, could scarcely recall to the respectable hostess of
+the tavern the elegant pilot of the royal navy, still less the pale
+and blond student, of whom she had been, eighteen years before, the
+first and only love.
+
+'Is it indeed you, my poor Sandy,' said she, with an accent of pity;
+'I thought you were dead.'
+
+'I have been nearly so, indeed, and a long time ago, Kitty. But who
+has told you of me?'
+
+'Alas! It was my husband himself.'
+
+'You are married then, Catherine. So much the better.'
+
+'So much the worse rather, my friend; for, would you believe it, the
+old monster, bent double as he is with age and rheumatism, was bright
+enough to dupe me finely; to dupe me twice. In the first place, by
+making me believe you were dead when you were not. But he well knew,
+the cheat, that if I refused him once, it was because my views were
+turned in your direction.'
+
+Selkirk made a movement which escaped Catherine; she continued:
+
+'His second deception was to arrive here in triumph, in the midst of
+the cries of joy and embraces of the _Sea-Dogs_ and _Old Pilots_. One
+would have thought he had in his pockets all the mines of Guinea and
+Peru. He did not say so, but I thought it could not be otherwise; and
+I married him, since I believed you no longer living. His trick having
+succeeded, he then told me of his shipwreck, his complete ruin. Ah!
+with what a good heart would I have sent him packing! But it was too
+late, and it became necessary that the Royal Salmon, founded by the
+honorable Andrew Felton, should furnish subsistence for two; and this
+is the reason why, Mr. Selkirk, you find me still here, a prisoner in
+my bar, and cursing all the captains who make the tour of the world
+only to come afterwards and impose upon poor and inexperienced young
+girls!'
+
+Selkirk had not at first understood the lamentations of Catherine; but
+a twilight commenced to dawn in his ideas; he divined that his name
+had been used for an act of baseness; and, without being able to
+account for it, he felt the return of an old leaven of spite, an old
+hatred revived.
+
+'Who is your husband? What is his name?' asked he, in a loud voice and
+with a tone of authority.
+
+'Do not grow angry, Sandy? Do not seek a quarrel with him now. What is
+done, is done; I am his wife, do you understand? It is of no use to
+recall the past.'
+
+'And who thinks of recalling it? I simply asked you who he was?'
+
+'You will be prudent; you promise me? Well! do you see him yonder, in
+the second stall, at the same place he formerly occupied? He has just
+poured out some gin to those sailors, and is drinking with them. It is
+he who is standing up with an apron on.'
+
+'Stradling!' exclaimed Selkirk, with sparkling eyes. But at the sight
+of this apron, finding his old captain become a waiter, his hatred and
+projects of vengeance were suddenly extinguished.
+
+Alexander Selkirk returned to England in 1712. The history of his
+captivity in the Island of Juan Fernandez had appeared in the papers;
+several apocryphal relations had been already published, when in 1717,
+Daniel De Foe published his _Robinson Crusoe_.
+
+He is really the same personage; but in this latter version, the
+Island of Juan Fernandez, in spite of distance and geographical
+impossibilities, is peopled with savage Caribs; Marimonda is
+transformed into the simple Friday; history is turned into romance,
+but this romance is elevated to all the dignity of a philosophical
+treatise.
+
+Rendering full justice to the merit of the writer, we must
+nevertheless acknowledge that he has completely altered, in a mental
+view, the physiognomy of his model. Robinson is not a man suffering
+entire isolation; he has a companion, and the savages are incessantly
+making inroads around him. It is the European developing the resources
+of his industry, to contend at once with an unproductive land and the
+dangers created by his enemies.
+
+Selkirk has no enemies to repulse, and he inhabits a fruitful country.
+He needs, before every thing else, the presence of man, one of those
+fraternal affections in which he refuses to believe. His sufferings
+originate in his very solitude. In solitude, Robinson improves and
+perfects himself; Selkirk, at first as full of resources as he, ends
+by becoming discouraged and brutified.
+
+Which of the two is most true to nature?
+
+The first is an ideal being, for in no quarter of the globe has there
+ever been found one analogous to the Robinson of De Foe; the other, on
+the contrary, is to be met with every where, denying the dependence of
+an isolated individual; but this dependence, even in the midst of a
+prodigal nature, if it is not to the honor of man, is to the honor of
+society at large.
+
+Notwithstanding all that has been said, the solitary is a man
+imbruted, vegetating, deprived of his crown. 'Solitude is sweet only
+in the vicinity of great cities.'[1] By an admirable decree of
+Providence, the isolated being is an imperfect being; man is completed
+by man.
+
+[Footnote 1: Bernardin de St. Pierre. Seneca had said: _Miscenda et
+alternanda sunt solitudo et frequentia_.]
+
+Notwithstanding the false maxims of a deceitful philosophy, it is to
+the social state that we owe, from the greatest to the least, the
+courage which animates and sustains us; God has created us to live
+there and to love one another; it is for this reason that selfishness
+is a shameful vice, a crime! It is, so to speak, an infringement of
+one of the great laws of Nature.
+
+
+THE END.
+
+
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+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 11441 ***
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+<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN">
+<html>
+ <head>
+ <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=UTF-8">
+ <title>
+ The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Solitary of Juan Fernandez;
+ or, The Real Robinson Crusoe, by the Author of Picciola.
+ </title>
+ <style type="text/css">
+ <!--
+ .title {float: left; margin-left: 8%; }
+ .title1{float: left; margin-left: 8%; font-size: 2.0em; font-weight:bold;}
+ .title2{float: left; margin-left: 8%; font-size: 1.5em; font-weight:bold;}
+ .title3{float: left; margin-left: 8%; font-size: 1.3em; font-weight:bold;}
+
+ H1,H2,H3 { text-align: center; }
+ hr {text-align: center; width: 50%;}
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+<body>
+<div>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 11441 ***</div>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p class="title">
+ <a name="image-1"></a>
+ <img src="images/cover.jpg" width="42" height="357"
+ alt="The Solitary." >
+</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p class="title1">
+ THE SOLITARY OF<br>
+ JUAN FERNANDEZ;<br><br>
+ OR, THE REAL<br>
+ ROBINSON CRUSOE
+</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p class="title2">
+ BY THE AUTHOR OF PICCIOLA.
+</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p class="title3">
+ TRANSLATED FROM THE FRENCH<br>
+ BY ANNE T. WILBUR.
+</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<h3>
+MDCCCLI.
+</h3>
+
+
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<h2>CONTENTS.</h2>
+
+<p class="toc"><a href="#CHAPTER_I">
+CHAPTER I.</a></p>
+<h4>The Royal Salmon.&mdash;Pretty Kitty.&mdash;Captain Stradling.&mdash;William Dampier.
+&mdash;Reveries and Caprices of Miss Catherine.</h4>
+
+<p class="toc"><a href="#CHAPTER_II">
+CHAPTER II.</a></p>
+
+<h4>Alexander Selkirk.&mdash;The College.&mdash;First Love.&mdash;Eight Years of Absence.
+&mdash;Maritime Combats.&mdash;Return and Departure.&mdash;The Swordfish.</h4>
+
+<p class="toc"><a href="#CHAPTER_III">
+CHAPTER III.</a></p>
+
+<h4>The Tour of the World.&mdash;The Way to manufacture Negroes.&mdash;California.
+&mdash;The Eldorado.&mdash;Revolt of Selkirk.&mdash;The Log-Book.&mdash;Degradation.
+&mdash;A Free Shore.</h4>
+
+<p class="toc"><a href="#CHAPTER_IV">
+CHAPTER IV.</a></p>
+
+<h4>Inspection of the Country.&mdash;Marimonda.&mdash;A City seen through the Fog.
+&mdash;The Sea every where.&mdash;Dialogue with a Toucan.&mdash;The first Shot.
+&mdash;Declaration of War.&mdash;Vengeance.&mdash;A Terrestrial Paradise.</h4>
+
+<p class="toc"><a href="#CHAPTER_V">
+CHAPTER V.</a></p>
+
+<h4>Labors of the Colonist.&mdash;His Study.&mdash;Fishing.&mdash;Administration.
+&mdash;Selkirk Island.&mdash;The New Prometheus.&mdash;What is wanting to Happiness.
+&mdash;Encounter with Marimonda.&mdash;Monologue.</h4>
+
+<p class="toc"><a href="#CHAPTER_VI">
+CHAPTER VI.</a></p>
+
+<h4>The Hammock.&mdash;Poison.&mdash;Success.&mdash;A Calm under the Tropics.&mdash;Invasion
+of the Island.&mdash;War and Plunder.&mdash;The Oasis.&mdash;The Spy-Glass.
+&mdash;Reconciliation.</h4>
+
+<p class="toc"><a href="#CHAPTER_VII">
+CHAPTER VII.</a></p>
+
+<h4>A T&ecirc;te-a-t&ecirc;te.&mdash;The Monkey's Goblet.&mdash;The Palace.&mdash;A Removal.&mdash;Winter
+under the Tropics&mdash;Plans for the Future.&mdash;Property.&mdash;A burst of
+Laughter.&mdash;Misfortune not far off.</h4>
+
+<p class="toc"><a href="#CHAPTER_VIII">
+CHAPTER VIII.</a></p>
+
+<h4>A New Invasion.&mdash;Selkirk joyfully meets an ancient Enemy.&mdash;Combat on
+a Red Cedar.&mdash;A Mother and her Little Ones.&mdash;The Flock.&mdash;F&ecirc;te in the
+Island; Pacific Combats, Diversions and Swings.&mdash;A Sail.&mdash;The Burning
+Wood.&mdash;Presentiments of Marimonda.</h4>
+
+<p class="toc"><a href="#CHAPTER_IX">
+CHAPTER IX.</a></p>
+
+<h4>The Precipice.&mdash;A Dungeon in a Desert Island.&mdash;Resignation.&mdash;The passing
+Bird.&mdash;The browsing Goat.&mdash;The bending Tree.&mdash;Attempts at Deliverance.
+&mdash;Success.&mdash;Death of Marimonda.</h4>
+
+<p class="toc"><a href="#CHAPTER_X">
+CHAPTER X.</a></p>
+
+<h4>Discouragement.&mdash;A Discovery.&mdash;A Retrospective Glance.&mdash;Project of
+Suicide.&mdash;The Last Shot.&mdash;The Sea Serpent.&mdash;The <i>Porro</i>.
+&mdash;A Message.&mdash;Another Solitary.</h4>
+
+<p class="toc"><a href="#CHAPTER_XI">
+CHAPTER XI.</a></p>
+
+<h4>The Island of San Ambrosio.&mdash;Selkirk at last knows what Friendship is.
+&mdash;The Raft.&mdash;Visits to the Tomb of Marimonda.&mdash;The Departure.&mdash;The two
+Islands.&mdash;Shipwreck.&mdash;The Port of Safety.</h4>
+
+<p class="toc"><a href="#CHAPTER_XII">
+CHAPTER XII.</a></p>
+
+<h4>The Island of Juan Fernandez.&mdash;Encounter in the Mountains.&mdash;Discussion.
+&mdash;A New Captivity.&mdash;Cannon-shot.&mdash;Dampier and Selkirk.&mdash;<i>Mas a Fuera</i>.
+&mdash;News of Stradling.&mdash;Confidences.&mdash;End of the History of the real
+Robinson Crusoe.&mdash;Nebuchadnezzar.</h4>
+
+<p class="toc"><a href="#CONCLUSION">
+CONCLUSION.</a></p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p class="toc"><a href="#NEWBOOKS">
+NEW BOOKS.</a></p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<h2>THE SOLITARY OF JUAN FERNANDEZ,<br>
+OR THE REAL ROBINSON CRUSOE.</h2>
+
+
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<h3><a name="CHAPTER_I"></a>CHAPTER I.</h3>
+
+<h4>The Royal Salmon.&mdash;Pretty Kitty.&mdash;Captain Stradling.&mdash;William Dampier.
+&mdash;Reveries and Caprices of Miss Catherine.</h4>
+
+<p>About the commencement of the last century, the little town of St.
+Andrew, the capital of the county of Fife, in Scotland, celebrated then
+for its University, was not less so for its Inn, the Royal Salmon,
+which, built in 1681 by a certain Andrew Felton, had descended as an
+inheritance to his only daughter, Catherine.</p>
+
+<p>This young lady, known throughout the neighborhood under the name of
+pretty Kitty, had contributed not a little, by her personal charms, to
+the success and popularity of the inn. In her early youth, she had been
+a lively and piquant brunette, with black, glossy hair, combed over a
+smooth and prominent forehead, and dark, brilliant eyes, a style of
+beauty much in vogue at that period. Though tall and slender in
+stature, she was, as our ancestors would have said, sufficiently <i>en bon
+point</i>. In fine, Kitty merited her surname, and more than one laird in
+the neighborhood, more than one great nobleman even,&mdash;thanks to the
+familiarity which reigned among the different classes in Scotland,&mdash;had
+figured occasionally among her customers, caring as little what people
+might say as did the brave Duke of Argyle, whom Walter Scott has shown
+as conversing familiarly with his snuff merchant.</p>
+
+<p>At present Catherine Felton is in her second youth. By a process common
+enough, but which at first appears contradictory, her attractions have
+diminished as they developed; her waist has grown thicker, the roses on
+her cheek assumed a deeper vermilion, her voice has acquired the rough
+and hoarse tone of her most faithful customers; the slender young girl
+is transformed into a virago. Fortunately for her, at the commencement
+of the eighteenth century, and especially in Scotland, reputations did
+not vanish as readily as in our days. Notwithstanding her increasing
+size and coarser voice, Catherine still remained pretty Kitty,
+especially in the eyes of those to whom she gave the largest credit.</p>
+
+<p>Besides, if from year to year her beauty waned, a circumstance which
+might tend to diminish the attractions of her establishment, like a
+prudent woman she took care that her stock of ale and usquebaugh should
+also from year to year improve in quality, to preserve the equilibrium.</p>
+
+<p>Undoubtedly the visits of lairds and great noblemen at her bar were less
+frequent than formerly, but all the trades-people in town, all the
+sailors in port, from the Gulf of Tay to the Gulf of Forth, still
+patronized the pretty landlady.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile Catherine was not yet married. The gossips of the town were
+surprised, because she was rich and suitors were plenty; they fluttered
+around her constantly in great numbers, especially when somewhat
+exhilarated with wine. When their gallantry became obtrusive, Kitty was
+careful not to grow angry; she would smile, and lift up her white hand,
+tolerably heavy, till the offenders came to order. Catherine possessed
+in the highest degree the art of restraining without discouraging them,
+and always so as to forward the interests of her establishment.</p>
+
+<p>To maintain the discipline of the tavern, nevertheless, the presence of
+a man was desirable; she understood this. Besides, the condition of an
+old maid did not seem to her at all inviting, and she did not care to
+wait the epoch of a third youth, before making a choice. But what would
+the unsuccessful candidates say? Would not this decision be at the risk
+of kindling a civil war, of provoking perhaps a general desertion? Then,
+too, accustomed as she was to command, the idea of giving herself a
+master alarmed her.</p>
+
+<p>She was vacillating amid all these perplexities, when a certain sailor,
+with cold and reserved manners, whose face bore the mark of a deep sabre
+cut, and who had for some time past, frequented her inn with great
+assiduity, without ever having addressed to her a single word, took her
+aside one fine morning and said:</p>
+
+<p>'Listen to me, Kate, and do not reply hastily. I came here, not like
+many others, attracted by your beautiful eyes, but because I wished to
+obtain recruits for an approaching voyage which I expected to undertake
+at my own risk and peril. I do not know how it has happened, but I now
+think less about sailing; I seem to be stumbling over roots. Right or
+wrong, I imagine that a good little wife, who will fill my glass while I
+am tranquilly smoking my pipe before a blazing fire, may have as many
+charms as the best brig in which one may sometimes perish with hunger
+and thirst. Right or wrong, I imagine to myself again that the prattle
+of two or three little monkeys around me, may be as agreeable as the
+sound of the wind howling through the masts, or of Spanish balls
+whistling about one's ears. All this, Kate, signifies that I mean to
+marry; and who do you suppose has put this pretty whim into my head?
+who, but yourself?'</p>
+
+<p>Catherine uttered an exclamation of surprise, perfectly sincere, for if
+she had expected a declaration, it was certainly not from this quarter.</p>
+
+<p>'Do not reply to me yet,' hastily resumed the sailor; 'he who pronounces
+his decree before he has heard the pleader and maturely reflected on the
+case, is a poor judge. To continue then. You are no longer a child,
+Kate, and I am no longer a young man; you are approaching thirty----'</p>
+
+<p>At these words the pretty Kitty made a gesture of surprise and of
+denial.</p>
+
+<p>'Do not reply to me!' repeated the pitiless sailor. 'You are thirty! I
+have already passed another barrier, but not long since. We are of
+suitable age for each other. The man should always have traversed the
+road before his companion. You are active and genteel; that does very
+well for women. You have always been an honest girl, that is better
+still. As for me, my skin is not so white as yours, but it is the fault
+of a tropic sun. It is possible that I may be a little disfigured by the
+scar on my cheek; but of this scar I am proud; I had the honor of
+receiving it, while boarding a vessel, from the hand of the celebrated
+Jean Bart, who, after having on that occasion lost a fine opportunity of
+being honorably killed, has just suffered himself to die of a stupid
+pleurisy; but it is not of him but of myself that we are now to speak.
+After having fought with Jean Bart, I have made a voyage with our not
+less celebrated William Dampier, whom I may dare call my friend. You may
+therefore understand, Kate, that if you have the reputation of an honest
+girl, I have that of a good sailor. The name of Captain Stradling is
+favorably known upon two oceans, and it will be to your credit, if ever,
+with your arm linked in mine, we walk as man and wife, through any port
+of England or Scotland. I have said. Now, look, reflect; if my
+proposition suits you, I will settle for life on <i>terra firma</i>, and bid
+adieu to the sea; if not, I resume my projected expedition, and it will
+be to you, Kate, that I shall say adieu.'</p>
+
+<p>Catherine opened her mouth to thank him, as was suitable, for his good
+intentions.</p>
+
+<p>'Do not reply to me!' interrupted he again; 'in three days I will come
+to receive your decision.'</p>
+
+<p>And he went out, leaving her amazed at having listened to so long a
+speech from one, who until then, seated motionless in a distant corner
+of the room, had always appeared to her the most rigid and silent of
+seamen.</p>
+
+<p>That very day Catherine has come to a decision concerning the captain;
+she thinks him ugly and disagreeable, coarse and ignorant; he has dared
+to tell her that she is thirty years old, and she will hardly be so at
+St. Valentine's Day, which is six weeks ahead, at least. Besides the
+scar which he has received from the celebrated Jean Bart, his
+countenance has no beauty to boast of: his face is long and pale, his
+temples are furrowed with wrinkles, and his lips thick and heavy; his
+eyebrows, at the top of his forehead, seem to be lost in his hair; his
+eyes are not mates, his nose is one-sided; his form is perhaps still
+worse; he walks after the fashion of a duck. Fie! can such a man be a
+suitable match for the rich landlady of the Royal Salmon, for the
+beautiful Kitty; for her who, among so many admirers and lovers, has had
+but the difficulty of a choice?</p>
+
+<p>The next day towards nightfall, Catherine, seated in her bar, in the
+large leathern arm-chair which served as her throne, with dreamy and
+downcast brow, and chin resting on her hand, was still thinking of
+Captain Stradling, but her ideas had assumed a different aspect from
+those of the evening before.</p>
+
+<p>She was saying to herself: 'If he has thick and heavy lips, it is
+because he is an Englishman; if he walks like a duck, it is because he
+is a sailor; if he has taken me to be thirty years old, that proves
+simply that he is a good physiognomist, and I shall have one painful
+avowal the less to make after marriage. As for his scar, he has a
+thousand reasons to be proud of it, and, upon close examination, it is
+not unbecoming. It would be very difficult for me to choose a husband,
+on account of the discontented suitors who will be left in the lurch;
+but I will relinquish my business, and that will put an end to all
+inconvenience. He is rich, so much for the profit; he is a captain, so
+much for the honor. Come, come, Mistress Stradling will have no reason
+to complain!'</p>
+
+<p>At this moment, Catherine Felton could meditate quite at her ease,
+without fear of being noticed; for the tobacco smoke, three times as
+dense and abundant as usual, enveloped her in an almost opaque cloud.
+There was this evening a grand <i>f&ecirc;te</i> at the tavern of the Royal Salmon.
+The concourse of customers was immense, and this time, it was neither
+the beauty of the hostess, nor the quality of the liquors which had
+attracted them thither.</p>
+
+<p>The serving-men and lasses were going from table to table, multiplying
+themselves to pour out, not only the golden waves of strong beer and
+usquebaugh, but the purple waves of claret and port; all faces were
+smiling, all eyes sparkling, and in the midst of the huzzas and <i>vivas</i>,
+was heard, with triple applause, the name of William Dampier.</p>
+
+<p>This celebrated man, now a corsair, now a skilful seaman, who had just
+discovered so many unknown straits and shores, who had just made the
+tour of the world twice, in an age when the tour of the world did not
+pass, as at present, for a trifling matter; who had published, upon his
+return, a narrative full of novel facts and observations; this pitiless
+and intelligent pirate, who studied the coasts of Peru while he
+pillaged the cities along its shores, and meditated, in the midst of
+tempests, his learned theory of winds and tides, William Dampier, had
+landed, this very day at the little port of St. Andrew.</p>
+
+<p>At the intelligence of his arrival, the whole maritime population of the
+coast was in commotion; the society of the <i>Old Pilots</i>, with that of
+the <i>Sea Dogs</i>, had sent to him deputations, headed by the principal
+ship-owners in the town. Captain Stradling had not failed to be among
+them, happy at the opportunity of once more meeting and embracing his
+former friend. Speeches were made, as if to welcome an admiral, speeches
+in which were passed in review all his noble qualities and the great
+services rendered by him to the marine interest. To these Dampier
+replied with simplicity and conciseness, saying to the orators:</p>
+
+<p>'Gentlemen and dear comrades, you must be hoarse, let us drink!'</p>
+
+<p>This first trait of eccentricity could not fail to enlist universal
+applause.</p>
+
+<p>Commissioned by him to lead the column, Stradling could not do otherwise
+than to take the road to the Royal Salmon. It was on this occasion that
+he appeared there before the expiration of the three days: but he had
+not addressed a word to Catherine, scarcely turned his eyes towards her.
+Nevertheless the circumstances were favorable to his suit.</p>
+
+<p>Then a millionaire, William Dampier had immediately declared his
+intentions to treat at his own expense the whole company and even the
+whole town, if the town would do him the honor to drink with him.
+Catherine at once took him into favor. When she heard him praise his
+friend and companion, the brave Captain Stradling, she felt for the
+latter, not an emotion of tenderness, but a sentiment of respect and
+even of good-will. Dampier, excited by his audience, did not fail, like
+other conquerors by land and sea, to recount some of his great deeds.
+Among others, he recapitulated a certain affair in which he and his
+friend Stradling had captured a Spanish galleon, laden with piastres.
+From this moment the beautiful Kitty became more thoughtful, and began
+to see that the scar was becoming to the face of this good captain.
+After drinking, when Dampier, still escorted by his <i>fidus Achates</i>,
+came to settle his account with the hostess, he chucked her familiarly
+under the chin, as was his custom with landladies in the four quarters
+of the globe. From any one else, the proud Catherine would not have
+suffered such a liberty; to this, she replied only by a graceful
+reverence, and, while the hero and paymaster of the <i>f&ecirc;te</i> shook a
+rouleau of gold upon her counter, she said, hastily bending towards
+Stradling:</p>
+
+<p>'To-morrow!' accompanying this word with an expressive look and her most
+gracious smile.</p>
+
+<p>The enamored Stradling, always impassible, contented himself with
+replying:</p>
+
+<p>'It is well!'</p>
+
+<p>The day following, the third, the important day, that which Catherine
+already regarded as her day of betrothal, early in the morning, she
+dressed herself in her best attire, not doubting the impatience of the
+captain. Before noon, the latter entered the inn and went directly up to
+the landlady.</p>
+
+<p>She received him carelessly and coldly; she was nervous, she had not
+had time for reflection; she did not know what the captain wished; if he
+would let her alone for the present, by and by she would consider.</p>
+
+<p>'Boy! a new pipe and some ale!' exclaimed Stradling, addressing a
+waiter.</p>
+
+<p>And, perfectly calm in appearance, he sauntered to his accustomed place
+at the farther end of the bar-room. However, before leaving the Royal
+Salmon, approaching Catherine, he said:</p>
+
+<p>'Yesterday, by your voice and gesture you said, or almost said, yes; we
+sailors know the signals; to-day it is no, or almost no. Very well, I
+will wait; but reflect, my beauty, we are neither of us young enough to
+lose our time in this foolish game.'</p>
+
+<p>But what had thus unexpectedly changed, from white to black, the good
+intentions of Catherine in the captain's behalf? The presence of a young
+boy whom she had not seen for many years, and towards whom she had,
+until then, felt only a kindly indifference.</p>
+
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<h3><a name="CHAPTER_II"></a>CHAPTER II.</h3>
+<br>
+
+<p>Alexander Selkirk.&mdash;The College.&mdash;First Love.&mdash;Eight Years of Absence.
+&mdash;Maritime Combats.&mdash;Return and Departure.&mdash;The Swordfish.</p>
+
+<p>Alexander Selkirk,&mdash;the name of the principal personage in this
+narrative,&mdash;was born at Largo, in the county of Fife, not far from St.
+Andrew. Entered as a pupil in the university of the town, he at first
+distinguished himself by his aptitude and his intelligence, until the
+day when, hearing of the beauty of the landlady of the Royal Salmon, he
+was seized with an irresistible desire to see her: he saw her, and
+became violently enamored. It was one of those youthful passions,
+springing rather from the effervescence of the age, than from the merit
+of the object; one of those sudden ebullitions to which the young
+recluses of science are sometimes subject, from a prolonged compression
+of the natural and affectionate sentiments.</p>
+
+<p>From this moment, all the words in the Greek and Latin dictionaries, all
+the principles of natural philosophy, mathematics and history, suddenly
+taken by storm, whirled confusedly and pell-mell in the head of Selkirk,
+like the elements of the world in chaos, before the day of creation.</p>
+
+<p>His professors had predicted that at the annual exhibition he would
+obtain six great prizes; he obtained not even a premium.</p>
+
+<p>As a punishment, he was required to remain within the college grounds
+during the vacation. But its gates were not strong enough, nor its walls
+high enough to detain him.</p>
+
+<p>Condemned, for the crime of desertion, to a classic imprisonment, he was
+shut up in a cellar; he escaped through the window; in a garret; he
+descended by the roof.</p>
+
+<p>Then, pronounced incorrigible, he was expelled from the university.</p>
+
+<p>He left it joyous and happy, escaped from the tutor commissioned to
+conduct him to his father, and at last wholly free, his own master, he
+took lodgings in a cabin, not far from the Royal Salmon, and thought
+himself monarch of the universe.</p>
+
+<p>As soon as the doors of the inn were opened, he penetrated there with
+the earliest fogs of morning, with the first beams of day; in the
+evening he was the last to cross the threshold, after the extinction of
+the lights.</p>
+
+<p>All day long, seated at a little table opposite the bar, between a pipe
+and a pewter pot, he watched the movements of Kitty, and followed her
+with admiring eyes.</p>
+
+<p>Catherine was not slow to perceive this new passion; but she was
+accustomed to admiring eyes, and therefore paid but little heed to them.
+She was then at the age of twenty-two, in all the glory of her transient
+royalty; he, scarcely sixteen, was in her eyes a boy, a raw and awkward
+boy, like almost all the other students, and she contented herself with
+now and then bestowing a slight smile upon him, in common with her other
+customers.</p>
+
+<p>But this mechanical smile, this half extinguished spark, did but
+increase the flame, by kindling in the young man's soul a ray of hope.</p>
+
+<p>At this age, passion has not yet an oral language; it is in the heart,
+in the head especially, but not on the lips; one comprehends,
+experiences, dreams, writes of love in prose and verse, but does not
+talk of it. Selkirk had twenty times attempted to confess his affection
+to Catherine; he had as yet succeeded only in a few simple and hasty
+meteorological sentences, on the rain and fine weather. He therefore
+wrote.</p>
+
+<p>Unfortunately, Catherine could not easily read writing; she applied to
+him to interpret his letter. This was a hard task for the poor boy, who,
+with a tremulous and hesitating voice, saw himself forced to stammer
+through all that burning phraseology which seemed to congeal under the
+breath of the reader.</p>
+
+<p>The result however was that Catherine became his friend; she encouraged
+his confidence, and gave him good advice as an elder sister might have
+done. She even called him by the familiar name of Sandy, which was a
+good omen.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile his scanty resources became exhausted; he had no longer means
+to pay for the pot of ale which he consumed daily. The idea of asking
+credit of his beloved, of opening with her an account, which he might
+never have means to pay, was revolting to him. On the other hand, the
+thought of returning home, and asking pardon of his father, was not
+less repugnant to his feelings. He was endowed with one of those haughty
+and imperious natures which recognize their faults, not to repair them,
+but to make of them a starting point, or even a pedestal.</p>
+
+<p>He was rambling about the port, reflecting on his unfortunate situation,
+when he heard mention made of a ship ready to set sail at high tide, and
+which needed a reinforcement of cabin-boys and sailors. This was for him
+an inspiration; he did not hesitate, he hastened to engage. That very
+evening he had gained the open sea, beyond the Isle of May, and, with
+his eyes turned towards the Bay of St. Andrew, was attempting, in vain,
+to recognize among the lights which were yet burning in the city, the
+fortunate lantern which decorated the sacred door of the Royal Salmon.</p>
+
+<p>At present, Alexander Selkirk is twenty-four years old. He has become a
+genuine sailor, and he loves his profession; the sea is now his
+beautiful Kitty. Besides, it is long since he has troubled himself about
+his heart. It is empty, even of friendship, for, among his numerous
+companions, the proud young man has not found one worthy of him. After
+having served two years in the merchant marine, he has entered the navy.
+Thanks to the war kindled in Europe for the Spanish succession, he has
+for a long time cruised with the brave Admiral Rooke along the coasts of
+France; with him, he has fought against the Danish in the Baltic Sea,
+and in 1702, in the capacity of a master pilot, figured honorably in the
+expedition against Cadiz, and in the affair of Vigo. Finally, under the
+command of Admiral Dilkes, he has just taken part in the destruction of
+a French fleet.</p>
+
+<p>But all these expeditions, rather military than maritime, and
+circumscribed in the narrow circle of the seas of Europe, have not
+satisfied the vast desires of the ambitious sailor. He experiences an
+invincible thirst to apply his knowledge, to exercise his intelligence
+on a larger scale; he is impatient for a long voyage, a voyage of
+discovery.</p>
+
+<p>The terrific hurricane of the twenty-seventh of November, 1703, which
+drove the waves of the Thames even into Westminster, Hall, and covered
+London almost entirely with the fragments of broken vessels, appeared to
+Selkirk a favorable occasion for asking his dismissal. He easily
+obtained it. So many sailors had just been thrown out of employment by
+the hurricane.</p>
+
+<p>Once more, the undisciplined scholar found himself free and his own
+master! He profited by this to pay a visit to his birthplace in
+Scotland. His father was dead, but he had some business to regulate
+there.</p>
+
+<p>On reaching Largo he learned the arrival of William Dampier at St.
+Andrew. He set sail for that port immediately.</p>
+
+<p>'Ah!' said he on his way, 'if this brave captain should be about to
+undertake a voyage to the New World, and will let me accompany him, no
+matter in what capacity, all my wishes will be gratified. I thirst to
+see tattooed faces, other trees besides beeches, oaks and firs; other
+shores than those of the Baltic, Mediterranean and Atlantic. Who knows
+whether I may not aid him in the discovery of some new continent, some
+unknown island which shall bear my name!'</p>
+
+<p>And, cradled by the wave in the frail canoe that bore him, he dreamed of
+government, perhaps of royalty, in one of those archipelagoes which he
+imagined to exist in the bosom of the distant Southern seas, long
+afterwards explored by Cook, Bougainville and Vancouver.</p>
+
+<p>Once in port, he hastened to inquire for the dwelling occupied by
+Dampier. The latter was absent; he was in the harbor.</p>
+
+<p>While awaiting his return, our young sailor thought of his old friend
+Catherine, his pretty black-eyed Kitty, and directed his steps towards
+the inn.</p>
+
+<p>He found her already enthroned in her leathern arm-chair, her hair
+neatly braided, with two small curls on her temples; in a toilette which
+the early hour of the morning did not seem to authorize; but it was the
+famous third day, and she was awaiting Stradling.</p>
+
+<p>On seeing Selkirk enter, she exclaimed to the boy, pointing to the
+newly-arrived: 'A pot of ale!'</p>
+
+<p>'No,' cried the young man smiling; 'the ale which I once drank here was
+for me a philter full of bitterness; a glass of whiskey, if you
+please,----' and, pointing to the little table opposite the bar at which
+he was formerly accustomed to place himself, he said:</p>
+
+<p>'Serve me there; I will return to my old habits.'</p>
+
+<p>Catherine looked at him with astonishment.</p>
+
+<p>'Does not pretty Kate recognize me?' said he in a caressing tone,
+approaching her.</p>
+
+<p>'How! Is it possible! is it you, indeed, Sandy?'</p>
+
+<p>'Yes, Alexander Selkirk, formerly a fugitive from the University of St.
+Andrew; recently a master pilot in the royal marine; now, as ever, your
+very humble servant.'</p>
+
+<p>And they shook hands, and examined each other closely, but the
+impression on both sides was far from being the same.</p>
+
+<p>Catherine finds Selkirk much changed, but for the better; time and
+navigation have been favorable to him. He is no longer the raw student
+with embarrassed air, awkward manner, bony frame and dilapidated
+costume; but a stout young man, with a broad chest, active and graceful
+form; though his features are decidedly Scotch, they are handsome; his
+eyes, less brilliant than formerly, are animated with a more attractive
+thoughtfulness, and the naval uniform, which he still wears, sets off
+his person to advantage.</p>
+
+<p>On his part, Selkirk finds Catherine also much changed; the rosy
+complexion, the soft voice, the youthful look, the twenty-two years, all
+are gone. Her form has assumed a superabundant amplitude.</p>
+
+<p>They drop each other's hands and utter a sigh; he, of regret; she, of
+surprise.</p>
+
+<p>Both close their eyes, at the same time; she, with the fear of gazing
+too earnestly; he, to recall the being of his imagination.</p>
+
+<p>However this may be, she is not yet a woman to be despised by a sailor.
+He therefore prolongs his visit: they come to interrogations, to
+confidences.</p>
+
+<p>Catherine acquaints him with the situation of her little business
+affairs; her fortune is improving; she gives him an estimate of it in
+round numbers, as well as of the suitors she has rejected; but she does
+not mention Captain Stradling, whose arrival she yet fears every moment.</p>
+
+<p>Selkirk relates to her his campaigns, his combats against the French,
+against the Danish, the victorious attack of the English ships against
+the great boom of Vigo; but, when she asks him what motive has brought
+him back to St. Andrew, he replies boldly that he came to see her and no
+one else, and says not a word of Captain Dampier, whom he is even now
+impatient to meet.</p>
+
+<p>At last the old friends say adieu.</p>
+
+<p>Then the gallant sailor, with an apparent effort, goes away, not
+forgetting, however, to drink his glass of whiskey.</p>
+
+<p>And this is the reason why, on the third day, Catherine has the vapors;
+this is the reason why, notwithstanding her soft words of the evening
+before and her grand morning toilette, she receives so coldly the
+scarred adversary of the celebrated Jean Bart.</p>
+
+<p>During the whole of the week following, Stradling, Dampier and Selkirk,
+did not fail to meet at the Royal Salmon. Selkirk came to see Dampier;
+Dampier came to see Stradling; Stradling came to see Catherine Felton.</p>
+
+<p>The latter thought the young man already knew the two others, that he
+had sailed with them, and was not surprised at their intimacy.</p>
+
+<p>Sometimes Selkirk, leaving his companions in the midst of their bottles
+and glasses, would describe a tangent towards the counter, and come to
+converse with the pretty hostess. He no longer felt love for her, and
+notwithstanding this, perhaps for this very reason, he now talked
+eloquently.</p>
+
+<p>Kitty blushed, was embarrassed, and poor Captain Stradling, listening
+with all his ears to the narratives of his illustrious friend William
+Dampier, or pre-occupied with his pipe, lost in its cloud, saw
+nothing,&mdash;or seemed to see nothing.</p>
+
+<p>Nevertheless one evening, he went, in his turn, to lean on the counter:</p>
+
+<p>'Kate,' said he, 'when is our marriage to take place?'</p>
+
+<p>'Are you thinking of that still?' replied she, with an air of levity
+which would once have became her better; 'I hoped this fancy had passed
+out of your head.'</p>
+
+<p>'I may then set out on my voyage, Kate?'</p>
+
+<p>'Why not? We will talk of our plans on your return.'</p>
+
+<p>'But I am going to make the tour of the world, as well as my friend
+Dampier. Kate, it is the affair of three years!'</p>
+
+<p>'So much the better! it will give us both time for reflection.'</p>
+
+<p>'It is well!' replied the phlegmatic Englishman, and nothing on his
+polar face betokened an afterthought.</p>
+
+<p>The doors closed, the lights extinguished, Catherine retired to rest the
+happiest woman in the world. She said to herself: 'Alexander loves me,
+and has loved me for eight years! he deserves to be rewarded. He has
+less money than the other, it is a misfortune; but he has more youth and
+grace, that balances it. As to rank, a master pilot of twenty-four is
+as far advanced as a captain of forty. Between Selkirk and myself, if
+the wealth is on my side, on his will be gratitude and little
+attentions. At all events, I prefer a young husband who will whisper
+words of love in my ear, to amusing myself by pouring out drink for my
+lord and master, while he smokes his pipe, with his feet on the brands.
+Was it not thus that icicle, dressed in blue, called Stradling, talked
+to me of the pleasures of marriage? And what a name! But Mistress
+Selkirk!&mdash;that sounds well. In our Scotland, there is the county of
+Selkirk, the town of Selkirk; there is even a great nobleman of this
+name, who is something like minister to our Queen Anne, I believe. Who
+knows? we are perhaps of his family! As for walking about the port
+arm-in-arm with a captain, I am sure my very dear friends and neighbors
+would die with jealousy if I took, instead of this scarred captain, a
+young and handsome man. It is settled. I will marry Alexander; to-morrow
+I will myself announce it to him. I hope he will not die of joy!'</p>
+
+<p>On the morrow she attired herself as on the day of Selkirk's return, in
+her beautiful dress of cloth and silk, with the two little curls upon
+her temples. She thus waited a great part of the day. At last, about
+four o'clock, Selkirk arrives in haste, his face beaming with joy, and a
+gleam of triumph in his eye.</p>
+
+<p>'Has he then,' thought Catherine, 'a presentiment of the happiness in
+store for him?'</p>
+
+<p>'Congratulate me, pretty Kitty,' said the young man, almost out of
+breath; 'I am appointed mate of the brig Swordfish, which I am to join
+at Dunbar.'</p>
+
+<p>'How! you are going?'</p>
+
+<p>'In an hour.'</p>
+
+<p>'For a long time?'</p>
+
+<p>'For three years at least. In a fortnight we set sail for the East
+Indies. It will be a great commercial voyage and a voyage of discovery.
+Unfortunately William Dampier does not accompany us; but he furnishes
+funds to the brave Captain Stradling.'</p>
+
+<p>'Stradling!'</p>
+
+<p>'Yes, it is he who has just engaged me, and with whom I am to sail. Our
+agreement is signed,&mdash;I am mate! I am going to explore the New World!
+Ah! I would not exchange my fate for that of a king. But time presses;
+adieu, Kitty, till I see you again!'</p>
+
+<p>'Three years!' murmured Catherine.</p>
+
+<p>And her curls grew straight beneath the cold perspiration that covered
+her forehead.</p>
+
+
+
+<br><br><hr style="width: 65%;"><br><br>
+<a name="CHAPTER_III"></a><h2>CHAPTER III.</h2>
+<br>
+
+<p>The Tour of the World.&mdash;The Way to manufacture Negroes&mdash;California.
+&mdash;The Eldorado.&mdash;Revolt of Selkirk.&mdash;The Log-Book.&mdash;Degradation.
+&mdash;A Free Shore.</p>
+
+<p>The Swordfish, well provisioned, even with guns and ammunition, left
+Dunbar one morning with a fresh breeze, sailed down the North Sea,
+passed Ireland, France and Spain, the Azores, Canaries, and Cape Verd
+Islands on the coast of Africa, and, after having stopped for a short
+time in the harbors of Guinea and Congo, doubled the Cape of Good Hope,
+amid the traditional tempest.</p>
+
+<p>Entering the Indian Ocean, and passing through the Straits of Sunda, she
+touched at Borneo, and at Java, reached the Southern Sea by the Gulf of
+Siam, passed the Philippine Isles, then, through the vast regions of the
+Pacific Ocean, pursued the route which had been marked out by the
+exploring ship of William Dampier in 1686. Like that, the Swordfish
+remained a few days at the Island of St. Pierre, before launching into
+that immensity where, during nearly two months, wave only succeeded to
+wave; at last she reached the coasts of South America, and cast anchor
+in the Gulf of California.</p>
+
+<p>This gigantic voyage, which seemed as if it must have been attempted
+under the inspiration of science and with the hope of the most important
+discoveries, had been undertaken by Stradling with no object but of
+traffic and even of rapine. These had been the great ends of most of the
+bold enterprises which had preceded. The Spanish and Portuguese, in
+their discoveries of new continents, had thought less of glory than of
+riches; they had conquered the New World only to pillage it; the
+vanquished who escaped extermination, were forced to dig their native
+soil, not to render it more fruitful, but to procure from it, for the
+profit of the vanquisher, the gold it might contain. Among the European
+nations, those who had had no part in the conquest now sought to share
+the spoils. For this the least pretext of war or commerce sufficed.</p>
+
+<p>Stradling availed himself of both these pretences; when he touched at
+the coasts of Guinea and Congo, it was to obtain negroes whom he
+expected to sell in America. At Borneo, the opportunity presented itself
+for an advantageous disposal of the greater part of his black
+merchandize; as he was a man of resources and not at all scrupulous, he
+soon found means to replace them.</p>
+
+<p>In the Straits of Sunda, several barques, manned by negroes and Malays,
+had become entangled in the masses of seaweed which are every where
+floating on the surface of the wave; Stradling encountered them, made
+the rowers enter his ship, and obligingly took the barques in tow, to
+extricate them from their difficulty. But those who ascended the side of
+the Swordfish, descended only to be sold in their turn.</p>
+
+<p>Although he had received an education superior to that of his
+companions, Selkirk shared in the prejudices of his times; he had
+therefore found nothing objectionable in seeing his captain exchange at
+Congo little mirrors, a few glass beads, half a dozen useless guns, and
+some gallons of brandy, for men still young and vigorous, torn from
+their country and their families. Their skin was of another color, their
+heads woolly; this was a profitable traffic, recognized by governments;
+but when he saw Stradling seize the property of others to refill his
+empty hold, he could not control his indignation and boldly expressed
+it:</p>
+
+<p>'It is for their salvation,' replied the captain, without emotion; 'we
+will make Christians of them.'</p>
+
+<p>On approaching the Vermilion Sea, a deep gulf which separates California
+from the American continent, and makes it almost an island, the Malays
+were rubbed with a mixture of tar and dragon's blood, dissolved in a
+caustic oil, to give to their olive skins a deeper shade, and their flat
+noses and silky hair making them pass for Yolof negroes, they were
+exchanged at Cape St. Lucas, along with the rest, for pearls and native
+productions.</p>
+
+<p>The young mate thought this proceeding not less mean and dishonorable
+than the first; he made new observations.</p>
+
+<p>'Nothing now remains to be done, captain,' said he, 'but to shave and
+besmear with tar the monkey you have just bought, and to include it
+among your new race of negroes.'</p>
+
+<p>This time, the captain looked at him askance, and shrugged his shoulders
+without replying.</p>
+
+<p>The storm was beginning to growl in the distance.</p>
+
+<p>It was not without a secret object that, in his course through the
+Southern Sea, Stradling had first of all aimed at California.</p>
+
+<p>He devoted an entire month to cruising along both shores of this almost
+island, and penetrating all the bays of the Vermilion Sea; he hoped to
+find there a passage to an unknown land, then predicted and coveted by
+all navigators. What was this land? The <i>Eldorado</i>!</p>
+
+<p>Although I would hasten over these details of the voyage to arrive at
+the more important events of this history; now that the recent discovery
+of the immense mines of gold buried beneath the hills of California has
+aroused the entire world, that the name alone of <i>Sacramento</i> seems to
+fill with gold the mouth which pronounces it, there is a curious fact,
+perhaps entirely unknown, which I cannot pass over in silence.</p>
+
+<p>After the middle of the sixteenth century, and long before the
+seventeenth, a vague rumor, a confused tradition, had located, in the
+neighborhood of the Vermilion Sea, a famed land, whose rivers rolled
+over gold, and whose mountains rested on golden foundations; the
+treasures of Mexico and Peru were nothing in comparison with those which
+were to be gathered there. An ingot of native gold was talked of, of a
+<i>pepite</i> or eighty pounds weight.</p>
+
+<p>It was a grape from the promised land.</p>
+
+<p>This marvellous country had been named, in advance, <i>Eldorado</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Among the bold Argonauts of these two centuries, there was a contest as
+to who should first raise his flag over this new Colchis, defended, it
+was said, by the Apaches, a terrible, sanguinary and cannibal race, whom
+Cortez himself could not subdue. This land of gold some had located in
+New Biscay or New Mexico; others, in the pretended kingdoms of Sonora
+and Quivira; then, after several ineffectual attempts, the possibility
+of reaching it was denied; learned men, from the various academies of
+Europe, proved that the <i>Eldorado</i> was not a country, but a dream; on
+this subject the Old World laughed at the New; the Argonauts became
+discouraged, and during a century the subject was named only to be
+ridiculed.</p>
+
+<p>And yet, in spite of sceptics and scoffers, the <i>Eldorado</i> existed. It
+existed where tradition had placed it, on the shores of this Vermilion
+Sea, now the Gulf of California. For once, popular opinion had the
+advantage over scientific dissertations and philosophic denials; there,
+where, according to the Dictionary of Alcedo, nothing had been
+discovered but mines of pewter! where Jacques Baegert had indeed
+acknowledged the presence of gold, but <i>in meagre veins</i>; where Raynal
+had named as curiosities only fishes and pearls, declaring, in
+California, <i>the sea richer than the land</i>; where in our own times M.
+Humboldt discovered nothing but cylindrical cacti, on a sandy soil,
+remained buried, as a deposit for future ages, this treasure of the
+world, which seemed to be waiting in order to leave its native soil, the
+moment of falling into the hands of a commercial and industrious people,
+that of the United States.</p>
+
+<p>This <i>Eldorado</i>, Stradling sought in vain; he therefore decided to
+pursue his route along the coast of Mexico, now under the French flag,
+when he found an opportunity for traffic with the natives, colonists or
+savages; now under the English flag, when he wished to exercise his
+trade of corsair, an easy profession, for since the disaster of Vigo,
+the Spanish had abandoned their transatlantic possessions to themselves.</p>
+
+<p>The Spanish soldiery of America then found themselves, in the presence
+of European adventurers, in that state of pusillanimous inferiority in
+which had been, at the period of the conquest, the subjects of the Incas
+and Montezuma before the soldiers of Cortez and Pizarro. The time was
+not already far passed, when a few bands of freebooters, from France,
+England and Holland, had well nigh wrested from his Majesty, the King of
+Spain and the Indies, the most extensive and wealthy of his twenty-two
+hereditary kingdoms.</p>
+
+<p>Stradling was following in the footsteps of these freebooters.</p>
+
+<p>Recently, two little cities on the coast had been put under contribution
+for the supplies of the Swordfish; there had been resistance, a
+threatened attack, a parley, and capitulation; in this affair, the young
+mate had nobly distinguished himself both as a combatant and a
+negotiator, and yet the captain had not deigned to give him a share in
+his distribution of compliments.</p>
+
+<p>Selkirk felt an irritation the more lively that this shore life began to
+be irksome. Not that his conscience disturbed him any more than in the
+treatment of the blacks; he thought it as honorable to war with the
+Spaniards in the New World, as to be beaten by them in the Old; but he
+compared his present chief, Captain Stradling, with his former
+commander, the noble and brave Admiral Rooke; the parallel extended in
+his mind to his old companions in the royal navy, all so frank, so gay,
+so loyal,&mdash;among whom he had yet never found a friend,&mdash;and his new
+companions of to-day, recruited for the most part in the marshy lowlands
+of the merchant marine of Scotland; his thoughts became overshadowed,
+and his desires for independence, which dated from his college life,
+returned in full force.</p>
+
+<p>As much as his duties permitted, he loved to isolate himself from all;
+when he could remain some time alone in his cabin, or gaze upon the sea
+from a retired corner of the deck and watch the ploughing of the vessel,
+then only he was happy.</p>
+
+<p>As if to increase his uneasiness, Stradling became daily more severe and
+more exacting towards his chief officer; he imposed upon him rude labors
+foreign to his station. It seemed as if he were determined to drive him
+to desperation.</p>
+
+<p>He succeeded.</p>
+
+<p>Selkirk protested against such treatment, and recapitulated his subjects
+of complaint. The other paid no more attention than he would have done
+to the buzzing of a fly.</p>
+
+<p>Irritated by this outrageous impassibility, the young man declared that
+there should no longer be any thing in common between them, and that,
+whatever fate might await him, he demanded to be set on shore.</p>
+
+<p>Stradling touched his forehead:</p>
+
+<p>'That is a good idea,' said he, and he turned away.</p>
+
+<p>The next day, they reached the Isthmus of Panama; the persevering
+Selkirk returned to the charge: 'The moment is favorable for ridding
+yourself of me, and me of you,' said he to the captain; 'let the boat
+convey me to the shore; I will cross the Isthmus, reach the Gulf of
+Darien, the North Sea, and return to Scotland, even before the
+Swordfish!'</p>
+
+<p>This time the honest corsair listened attentively, then shaking his head
+and winking his eye, with the smile of a hungry vampire, replied:</p>
+
+<p>'You are then in great haste to be married, comrade.'</p>
+
+<p>It was the first word he had addressed to him relative to Catherine
+during this long voyage, and this word Selkirk had not even understood.</p>
+
+<p>They were about passing Panama: the vessel continuing her voyage,
+Selkirk interposed his authority, ordered the men to put about, take in
+sail and approach the shore.</p>
+
+<p>This Stradling prohibited, uttered a formidable oath, and commanded the
+young man to bring the log-book. When it was brought, he made the
+following entry:</p>
+
+<p>'To-day, Sept. 24th, 1704, Alexander Selkirk, mate of this vessel,
+having mutinied and attempted to desert to the enemy, we have deprived
+him of his title and his office; in case of obstinacy we shall hang him
+to the yard-arm.'</p>
+
+<p>And he read the sentence to the offender.</p>
+
+<p>From this day, the rebel saw himself compelled to serve in the Swordfish
+as a simple sailor, and his subordinates of yesterday, to-day his
+equals, indemnified themselves for the authority he had exercised over
+them, which did not cure him of that native contempt he had always felt
+for mankind.</p>
+
+<p>A month passed away thus, during which the Swordfish several times
+touched the shores of Peru, now to renew her supplies of provisions and
+water, now to exchange with the Indians, nails, hatchets, knives, and
+necklaces of beads, for gold dust, furs, and garments trimmed with
+colored feathers.</p>
+
+<p>During one of these pauses, Selkirk, left on the ship, accosted the
+captain once more. He knew that the remains of some bands of freebooters
+were colonized there, leading a peaceful and agricultural life; this
+fact was known to all. At Coquimbo in Chili, some English and Dutch
+pirates had formed a settlement of this kind, now in the full tide of
+prosperity. Selkirk, who, during an entire month, had not spoken to the
+captain, now demanded, in a voice which he attempted to render calm and
+almost supplicating, to be landed at Coquimbo, from which they were only
+a few days sail.</p>
+
+<p>'You will not this time accuse me of wishing to desert to the enemy;
+they are the English, Scotch, Dutch, our countrymen and allies whom I
+wish to join! Do you still suspect me? Well, do not content yourself
+with setting me on shore; place me in the hands of the chief men of the
+settlement. Will that suit you?'</p>
+
+<p>Stradling winked significantly; but this was all.</p>
+
+<p>'Ah!' resumed the young man with increasing emotion, 'do not think to
+detain me longer on board, to crush me beneath this humiliation! I
+consented to serve under your orders as mate, and you have made me the
+lowest of your sailors; this you had no right to do.'</p>
+
+<p>Stradling took his glass and directed it towards the shore, where his
+people were engaged in trafficking their beads and hardware.</p>
+
+<p>Raising his head and folding his arms:</p>
+
+<p>'Captain,' pursued Selkirk with vehemence, 'some day or other we shall
+return to England, where the laws protect all; there, I shall have the
+right of complaint, and Queen Anne loves to render justice; beware!'</p>
+
+<p>Stradling, still spying, began to whistle <i>God save the Queen</i>; then he
+called his monkey and made it gambol before him.</p>
+
+<p>'I will depart, I will free myself from your presence, and that of your
+worthy companions; I will do so at all events, do you understand!'
+exclaimed Selkirk exasperated, 'I will not endure your infamous
+treatment another week! If you refuse to consent to my demand, I will
+leave without your permission; were the vessel twenty miles from the
+land, and were I to perish twenty times on the way, I will attempt to
+swim ashore. Will you land me at Coquimbo, yes or no? Reply!'</p>
+
+<p>By way of reply, Stradling ordered him to be confined in the hold.</p>
+
+<p>Poor Selkirk! Ah! if pretty Kitty, if the beautiful landlady of the
+Royal Salmon could know all thou hast endured for her sake, how many
+tears would her fine eyes shed over thy fate! But who knows whether she
+will ever hear of thee? Who can tell whether any human being will learn
+the sufferings in reserve for thee?</p>
+
+<p>Poor Selkirk! you who painted to yourself so smiling a picture of this
+grand voyage to America; who hoped to leave, like Dampier, your name to
+some strait, some newly discovered island; you who dreamed of scientific
+walks in vast prairies and under the arches of virgin forests, you have
+shared only in the career of a trafficker and a pirate; of this New
+World, full of marvellous sights, you have seen only the shore, the
+fringe of the mantle, the margin of this last work of God!</p>
+
+<p>Poor Selkirk, must you then return to your cold and foggy Scotland,
+without having contemplated at your ease, beneath the brilliant sun of
+the tropics, one of those Edens overshadowed by the luxuriant verdure of
+palm-trees, bananas, mimosas and gigantic ferns? In your country, the
+bark of the trees is clad with lichens and mosses, and the parasite
+mistletoe suspends itself to the branches, more as a burden than as an
+ornament; here, numerous families of the orchis, with their singular
+forms, showy and variegated blossoms, climb along the knotty stems of
+the tall monarchs of the forests; from their feet spring up, as if to
+enlace them with a magic network, the brilliant passiflora, the vanilla
+with its intoxicating perfume, the banisteria whose roots seem to have
+dived into mines of gold and borrowed from thence the color of its
+petals! Hither the birds of Paradise and Brazilian parrots come to build
+their nests; here the bluebird and the purple-necked wood-pigeon coo and
+sing; here, like swarms of bees, thousands of humming-birds of mingled
+emerald and sapphire, warble and glitter as they suck the nectar from
+the flowers. This was what you hoped to contemplate, poor Selkirk! and
+this joy, like many others, is henceforth forbidden.</p>
+
+<p>In his floating prison, in his submarine cell, his only employment is to
+listen to the dashing of the waves against the ship, or now and then to
+catch a glimpse of the blue sky through the hatchways.</p>
+
+<p>What cares he? He does not complain; he has learned to abhor mankind,
+and he loves to be alone, in company with himself and his own thoughts.</p>
+
+<p>Several days passed in this manner.</p>
+
+<p>One morning he felt the brig slacken its speed; the dashing of the wave
+against the prow diminished, and the Swordfish, suddenly furling its
+sails, after having slightly rocked hither and thither, stopped. They
+had just cast anchor. Where? he knows not.</p>
+
+<p>Soon he hears the rattling of the rope-ladder which serves as a stairway
+to those above who would communicate with his prison. They come, on the
+part of the captain, to seek him.</p>
+
+<p>He finds the latter seated on the deck, surrounded by his principal men.</p>
+
+<p>'Young man,' said Stradling, 'I have been obliged to be severe for the
+sake of an example; but you have been sufficiently punished by the time
+you have passed below there,'&mdash;and he pointed to the ship's hold. 'Now,
+your wish shall be granted. You shall be allowed to land.'</p>
+
+<p>And the rare smile which sometimes hovered on his lips, stole over his
+rigid face.</p>
+
+<p>'So much the better,' replied Selkirk, laconically.</p>
+
+<p>The boat was let down; he entered it, and ten minutes afterwards
+disembarked on a green shore, where the waves, as they broke upon it,
+seemed to murmur softly in his ear the word, <i>liberty</i>!</p>
+
+<p>The boat immediately rejoined the ship, which set sail, coasted along
+Chili and Patagonia, and re-entered the Northern Sea by the Straits of
+Magellan.</p>
+
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<h3>
+<a name="CHAPTER_IV"></a>CHAPTER IV.</h3>
+<br>
+
+<h4>Inspection of the Country.&mdash;Marimonda.&mdash;A City seen through the Fog.
+&mdash;The Sea every where.&mdash;Dialogue with a Toucan.&mdash;The first Shot.
+&mdash;Declaration of War.&mdash;Vengeance.&mdash;A Terrestrial Paradise.</h4>
+
+<p>While watching the departure of the Swordfish, Alexander Selkirk felt
+the same sensation as on that day when he had seen the doors of the
+college of St. Andrew thrown open for his exit; once more he was his own
+master. Now, however, it is at some thousands of miles from his country
+that he must reap the benefits of his independence, and this idea
+embitters his emotions of joy.</p>
+
+<p>But is he not about to find countrymen at Coquimbo? And if their society
+should be unpleasing?&mdash;if their habits, their mode of life, their
+persons, should become objects of antipathy to the misanthropic Selkirk,
+as it is but natural to fear? Well! after all, no engagement binds him
+to them; he will be always free to enter, in the capacity of a sailor,
+the first vessel which may leave for Europe.</p>
+
+<p>Determined to act as shall seem good to him,&mdash;to make some excursions
+into the interior of the continent, if an opportunity presents itself,
+and he will know how to make one,&mdash;he casts a first glance at the land
+of his adoption.</p>
+
+<p>Before him extends a vast shore, studded with groves of trees, covered
+with fine turf and little flowers joyfully unfolding their petals to the
+sun: two streams, having their source at the very base of the opposite
+hills, after having meandered around this immense lawn, unite almost at
+his feet.</p>
+
+<p>He bends down to one of these streams, fills the hollow of his hand with
+water, and tastes it, as a libation, and as a toast to the generous land
+which has just received him; the water is excellent; he plucks a flower,
+and continues his inspection.</p>
+
+<p>On his left rise high mountains, terraced and verdant, excepting at
+their summits, on one of which he perceives a goat, with long horns,
+stationed there immovable like a sentinel, and whose delicate profile is
+clearly defined on the azure of the sky. On the side towards the sea,
+the mountains, bending their gray and naked heads, resemble stone
+giants, watching the movements of the wave which dashes at their feet.</p>
+
+<p>On his right, where the land declines, he sees little valleys linked
+together with charming undulations; but on the mountains at his left, in
+the valleys at his right, among the hills in the distance, his eye
+vainly seeks the vestige of a human habitation.</p>
+
+<p>He sets out in search of one. The boat from which he landed has
+deposited on the shore his effects&mdash;his arms, his nautical instruments,
+his charts, a Bible, and provisions of various kinds. Notwithstanding
+his piratical sentiments, the captain of the Swordfish has not designed
+to precede exile by confiscation. Selkirk takes his gun, his gourd; but,
+unable to carry all his riches, he conceals them behind a stony thicket,
+well defended by the darts of the cactus, and the sword-like leaves of
+the aloe, not caring to have the first comer seize them as his booty.</p>
+
+<p>As he is occupied with this duty, he feels himself suddenly clasped by
+two long hairy arms; he turns his head, it is Marimonda, the captain's
+monkey, a female of the largest species.</p>
+
+<p>How came she there? Selkirk does not know.</p>
+
+<p>Disgusted with her sea-voyages, with the intelligence natural to her
+race, Marimonda has undoubtedly profited by the moment of the boat's
+leaving the ship to conceal herself in it and gain the shore along with
+the prisoner, which she might easily have done, unseen by all, during
+the transporting of the effects and provisions.</p>
+
+<p>However this may be, Selkirk begins by freeing himself from her grasp,
+repulses the monkey and sets out: but the latter perseveres in
+following, and after having, by her most graceful grimaces, sought to
+conciliate him, marches beside him. Not caring to arrive at Coquimbo
+escorted by such a companion, which would give him in a city the
+appearance of a mountebank and showman of monkeys, Selkirk, this time,
+repulses her rudely, not with his hand, but with the butt of his gun.</p>
+
+<p>Struck in the breast by this home thrust, the poor monkey stops, rolls
+up her eyes, moves her lips, and growling confusedly her complaints and
+reproaches, crouches beneath a tuft of the sapota, leaving the man to
+pursue his way alone.</p>
+
+<p>Selkirk has at first directed his steps toward the valleys; after having
+traversed these, he arrives at the margin of a sandy plain, and as far
+as the eye can reach, perceives neither city, village, house, tent nor
+hut, nothing which can indicate the presence of inhabitants.</p>
+
+<p>Nevertheless, a little grove which he has just traversed, seems to have
+recently, in its principal path, passed under the shears of a gardener;
+the foliage presents a certain symmetry; fragments of branches are
+strewed, on the ground, which seem to have been freshly cut; he even
+thinks he sees vestiges of the passage of a flock. On the lawn of the
+shore, he has seen, and still sees around him, trees with tufted heads,
+which must owe this form to art. He continues his researches.</p>
+
+<p>At last, in the distance, beneath a fog which is just beginning to
+dissolve, he perceives a vast mass of white and red houses, some with
+terraced roofs, others covered with thatch; through the humid veil which
+envelopes them, he sees the glistening of the glass in the windows;
+already he hears at his feet the confused noise of cities; murmuring
+voices reply; the measured sound of hammers and of mills even reaches
+his ear.</p>
+
+<p>It is Coquimbo! he cannot doubt it, and shortening his route by a path
+across the hill, he quickens his pace.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile an east wind arises, the fog disappears; when he thinks he has
+reached the suburbs of the city, Selkirk sees before him only an
+irregular assemblage of calcareous stones, crowned with dry herbs, or
+reddish, arid, angular rocks, flattened at their summits, tessellated
+with fragments of silex and mica, on which the sun is just pouring his
+rays; a company of goats, which the mist had condemned to a momentary
+repose, are bounding here and there, startling flocks of clamorous
+black-birds and plaintive sea-gulls; the fearless and yellow-crested
+woodpeckers alone do not stir, but continue to hammer with their sharp
+beaks at some old stunted trees.</p>
+
+<p>The disenchantment is painful for our sailor; the fog has deceived him
+with the semblance of a city, as it has more than once deluded us in the
+midst of plains and woods, by the appearance of an ocean with its white
+waves, its great capes, its bold shores, and its vessels at anchor.</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps Coquimbo is still beyond. Fearing to lose himself if he ventures
+farther in an unknown land, he resolves to explore it first by a look.
+Returning to the shore upon which he had landed, he scales the mountains
+on the north, reaches the first platform, and from thence seeks to
+discover some indications of a city. Nothing! he still ascends, the
+circle enlarges around him, but with no better result. Summoning all his
+courage, through a thousand difficulties, climbing, drawing himself up
+by the arid and abrupt rocks, piled one upon another, he at last attains
+a culminating point of the mountain. He can now embrace with his eye an
+immense horizon, but this immense horizon is the sea! On his right, on
+his left, before him, behind him, every where the sea!</p>
+
+<p>He is not on the continent, but on an island.</p>
+
+<p>This evening, exhausted with fatigue, he lies down in a grotto at the
+foot of the mountain, where he passes a night full of agitation and
+anxiety.</p>
+
+<p>Rising with the sun, his first care, the next morning, is to examine
+his riches and his provisions. He returns to the thicket of cactus and
+aloes.</p>
+
+<p>Besides two guns, two hatchets, a knife, an iron pot, a Bible and
+nautical instruments, all articles belonging to him, he finds there a
+quantity of nails, a large fragment of a sail, several horns of powder
+and shot; a bag of ship biscuit, a salted quarter of pork, a little cask
+of pickled fish, and a dozen cocoa-nuts.</p>
+
+<p>The night before, at sight of these articles, he had supposed a
+sentiment of justice and humanity to exist in the soul of the corsair.
+Just now, he had said to himself that Stradling, deceived by a false
+reckoning of latitude, had landed him on an island, perhaps believing it
+to be a projecting shore of the continent. Now, the abundance of his
+supplies, this biscuit, these salt provisions, these fruits of the
+cocoa, all valueless if he had really landed at Coquimbo, lead him to
+suspect that the vindictive Englishman has designedly chosen the place
+of his exile.</p>
+
+<p>But this exile, is it complete isolation? Is the island inhabited or
+deserted? If it is inhabited, as he still believes he has reason to
+suppose, by whom is it so?</p>
+
+<p>That he may obtain a reply to this double question, he resolves to
+traverse the country in its whole extent. At the very commencement of
+his journey, the immobility of a bird suffices to give to the doubt, on
+which his thoughts vacillate, the appearance almost of a certainty.</p>
+
+<p>This bird is a toucan, of brilliant plumage and monstrous beak. Selkirk
+passes near it, with his eyes fixed on the branch which serves as a
+perch, and the toucan, without stirring, looks at him with a species of
+calm and placid astonishment.</p>
+
+<p>Selkirk stops; he comprehends the mute language of the bird.</p>
+
+<p>'You do not know then what a man is! He is the enemy of every creature
+to whom God has given life, the enemy even of his kind! You have then
+never been threatened by the arms that I bear!'</p>
+
+<p>And with the palm of his hand, striking the butt of his gun, he made the
+hammer click.</p>
+
+<p>At the sound of his voice, as at the noise of the hammer, the bird
+raised its head, manifesting new and redoubled surprise, but without any
+other movement. It seemed to think that the man and the gun were one,
+and that its strange interlocutor possessed two different voices.</p>
+
+<p>At last, by way of reply, it uttered a few shrill and prolonged cries,
+accompanied by the rattling of its two horny mandibles. After which,
+acting the great nobleman, cutting short the audience he has deigned to
+grant, the toucan is silent, turns its head, proudly raises one of its
+wings and busies itself in smoothing, with the point of its large beak,
+its beautiful greenish feathers, variegated with purple.</p>
+
+<p>At some distance from this spot, still following the margin of a wooded
+hill, Selkirk sees other birds, some in their nests, others warbling in
+the shade; all manifesting no more alarm at his presence than did the
+toucan. Crested orioles, hooded bullfinches, alight to pick up little
+grains or insects almost at his feet; humming-birds, variegated
+cotingas, red manaquins flutter before him in the sunbeams, pursuing
+invisible flies; little wood-peckers, black or green, hop around the
+trunks of the trees, stopping a moment to see him pass and then resuming
+their spiral ascent.</p>
+
+<p>The confidence which he inspires is not confined to these winged people.
+Upon a hillock of turf he perceives an animal, with pointed nose, brown
+fur enamelled with red spots, and of the size of a hare; seated on its
+hind paws, longer than those in front, it uses these, after the manner
+of squirrels, to carry to its mouth some nuts of the maripa, which
+constitute its breakfast. It is an
+agouti,<a href="#Footnote_1"><sup>[1]</sup></a> a mother,
+her little ones
+are near. At sight of the stranger they run to her, but quickly
+re-assured, quietly finish their morning repast.</p>
+
+<p>Farther on, coatis,<a href="#Footnote_2"><sup>[2]</sup></a> with
+short ears, and long tails; companies of
+little Guinea pigs; armadillos, a species of hedge-hog without the
+quills, but covered with an armor of scales, more compact and impervious
+than that of the ancient knights of the Middle Ages, arrange themselves
+along the line of his route, as if to pass him in review.</p>
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_1"></a><sup>[1]</sup></p>
+<blockquote> <i>Agouti</i>. An animal of the bigness of a rabbit, with bright
+red hair, and a little tail without hair. He has but two teeth in each
+jaw; holds his meat in his forepaws like a squirrel, and has a very
+remarkable cry: when he is angry, his hair stands on end, and he strikes
+the earth with his hind feet; and when chased, he flies to a hollow
+tree, whence he is expelled by smoke.&mdash;<i>Trevoux</i>.</blockquote>
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_2"></a><sup>[2]</sup></p>
+<blockquote> The <i>coati</i> is a native of Brazil, not unlike the racoon in
+the general form of the body, and, like that animal, it frequently sits
+up on the hinder legs, and in this position carries its food to its
+mouth. If left at liberty in a state of tameness, it will pursue
+poultry, and destroy every living thing that it has strength to conquer.
+When it sleeps it rolls itself into a lump, and remains immovable for
+fifteen hours together. His eyes are small, but full of life; and when
+domesticated, this creature is very playful and amusing. A great
+peculiarity belonging to this animal is the length of his snout, which
+resembles in some particulars the trunk of the elephant, as it is
+movable in every direction. The ears are round, and like those of a rat;
+the forefeet have five toes each. The hair is short and rough on the
+back, and of a blackish color; the tail is marked with rings of black,
+like the wild cat; the rest of the animal is a mixture of black and
+red.</blockquote>
+
+<p>Alas! this general quiet does but deepen in the heart of Selkirk the
+certainty of his isolation.</p>
+
+<p>Nevertheless, yesterday, said he to himself, in this thick wood, did I
+not see alleys trimmed with the shears, trees shaped by the
+pruning-knife?</p>
+
+<p>And the little grove which he visited the evening previous, at that
+instant presents itself before him. He examines the trees; they are
+myrtles of various heights; but among their glossy branches, he in vain
+seeks traces of the pruning-knife or shears; nature alone has thus
+disposed in spheroids or umbels the extremities of this rich vegetation.</p>
+
+<p>The same disappointment awaits him in the underwood. The only pruners
+have been goats, or other animals, daintily cropping the green shoots.</p>
+
+<p>Then only does the complete and terrible certainty of his disaster fall
+on him and crush him. Behold him blotted from the number of men, perhaps
+condemned to die of misery and of hunger! more securely imprisoned, more
+entirely forgotten by the world than the most hardened criminal plunged
+in the lowest depths of the Bastile! He at least, has a jailor!
+Miserable Stradling!</p>
+
+<p>At this moment he hears a noise above his head: it is the monkey.</p>
+
+<p>Marimonda, on her side, has also inspected the island; she has already
+tasted its productions. Whether she is satisfied with her discoveries,
+or whether forgiveness and forgetfulness of injuries are natural to her,
+on perceiving her old companion, wagging her head in token of good-will,
+she descends towards him from the tree on which she is perched.</p>
+
+<p>But Marimonda is the captain's monkey; she has been his property, his
+favorite, his flatterer! In the disposition of mind in which Selkirk
+finds himself, he does not need these thoughts to make him pitiless.
+Marimonda reminds him of Stradling; the monkey shall pay for the man!</p>
+
+<p>He lowers his gun, and fires. The monkey has seen the movement and
+divined his intentions; she has only time to retreat behind her tree,
+which does not prevent her receiving in her side a part of the charge.</p>
+
+<p>This detonation of fire-arms, the first perhaps which has resounded in
+this corner of the earth since the creation of the world, as it is
+prolonged from echo to echo, even to the highest mountains, awakens in
+every part of the island as it were a groan of distress. Instinct, that
+sublime prescience, has revealed to all that a great peril has just been
+born.</p>
+
+<p>To the cries of affright from birds of every species, to the uneasy and
+distant bleating of the goats, succeeds a plaintive moaning, like the
+voice of a wailing infant.</p>
+
+<p>It is Marimonda lamenting over her wound.</p>
+
+<p>At nightfall, after an entire day of walks and explorations, Selkirk is
+returning to his grotto on the shore, when he sees a stone fall at his
+feet, then another.</p>
+
+<p>While he, astonished, is seeking to divine the direction from which this
+invisible battery plays, a little date-stone hits him on the cheek. He
+immediately hears as it were a joyous whistling in the foliage, which is
+agitated at his right, and sees Marimonda leaping from tree to tree,
+using for this movement her feet, her tail, and one hand; for she holds
+the other to her side. It is a compress on her wound.</p>
+
+<p>War is already in the island! Selkirk has a declared enemy here! And
+this island, is it deserted? He has just traversed it in every direction
+without seeing any thing which betokens the existence of a human being.</p>
+
+<p>His disaster is then complete; henceforth not a doubt of it can exist.
+And yet his forehead wears rather the character of hope and fortitude
+than of discouragement; it is more than resignation, it is pride.</p>
+
+<p>He has just visited his empire. The island, irregular in form, is from
+four to five leagues in length; in breadth it is from one and a half to
+two leagues. This abode to which he is condemned, is the most enchanting
+retreat he could have chosen; a luxuriant park cradled upon the waves.</p>
+
+<p>If sometimes, in the mountainous parts, he has encountered sterile and
+rugged rocks, even abysses and precipices, they seem to be placed there
+only as a contrast to the fresh and green valleys which encircle them.
+If he has seen some dark, dense, inaccessible forests, entangled in the
+thousand arms of interwoven vines, he has not discovered a single
+reptile.</p>
+
+<p>Every where, springs of living water, little streams which are lost
+under a thick verdure, or fall in cascades from the summits of the
+hills; every where a luxuriant vegetation; esculent and refreshing
+plants, celery, cresses, sorrel, spring in profusion beneath his feet;
+over his head, and almost within reach of his hand, palm-cabbages, and
+unknown fruits of succulent appearance: on the margin of the shores,
+muscles, periwinkles, shell-fish of every species, crabs crawling in the
+moist sand; beneath the transparent waters, innumerable shoals of fishes
+of all colors, all forms. Will game be wanting here? After what he has
+seen this morning, he will not even need his gun to obtain it. Oh! his
+provision of powder will last him a long time.</p>
+
+<p>What has he to desire more in this terrestrial Paradise? The society of
+men? Why? That he may find a master, a chief, under whose will he must
+bend? Men! but he despises, detests them! Is he not then sufficient for
+himself? Yes! this shall be his glory, his happiness! To live in entire
+liberty, to depend only upon himself, will not this impart to his soul
+true dignity? Besides, this island cannot be so far from the coast, but,
+from time to time, ships, or at least boats must come in sight. This is
+then for him but a transient seclusion; but were he even condemned to
+eternal isolation, this isolation has ceased to terrify him, he accepts
+it! Has he not almost always lived alone, in spirit at least? When he
+was in the depths of the hold, was he not better satisfied with his fate
+than when surrounded by those coarse sailors who composed the worthy
+crew of the Swordfish?</p>
+
+<p>To-day he is no longer the prisoner of Stradling, he is the prisoner of
+God! and this thought reassures him.</p>
+
+<p>A sailor, he has never loved but the sea; well! the sea surrounds him,
+guards him! He has then only thanks to render to God.</p>
+
+<p>Arrived at his grotto, he takes his Bible, opens it; but the sun,
+suddenly sinking below the horizon, permits him to read only this
+passage on which his finger is placed: 'Thou shalt perish in thy pride!'</p>
+
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<h3>
+<a name="CHAPTER_V"></a>CHAPTER V.</h3>
+<br>
+
+<h4>Labors of the Colonist.&mdash;His Study.&mdash;Fishing.&mdash;Administration.
+&mdash;Selkirk Island.&mdash;The New Prometheus.&mdash;What is wanting to Happiness.
+&mdash;Encounter with Marimonda.&mdash;Monologue.</h4>
+
+<p>Three months have passed away.</p>
+
+<p>Thanks to Selkirk, the shore which received him at his disembarkation,
+presents to-day an aspect not only picturesque, but animated. The hand
+of man has made itself felt there.</p>
+
+<p>The bushes and tufts of trees which hid the view of the hills in the
+distance, have been uprooted and cut down; pretty paths, covered with
+gravel, wind over the vast lawn; one in the direction of the valleys at
+the right, another towards the mountains at the left; a third leads to a
+tall mimosa, whose topmost boughs and dense foliage spread out like a
+parasol. A wooden bench, composed of some round sticks, driven into the
+earth, with branches interwoven and covered with bark, surrounds it; a
+rustic table, constructed in the same manner, stands at the foot of the
+tree. This is the study and place of meditation of the exile; here also
+he comes to take his meals, in sight of the sea.</p>
+
+<p>All three paths terminate in the grotto which Selkirk continues to make
+his residence. This grotto he has enlarged, quarried out with his
+hatchet, to make room for himself, his furniture, and provisions. He
+has even attempted to decorate its exterior with a bank of turf, and
+several species of creeping plants, trained to cover its calcareous
+nudity. At the entrance of his habitation, rise two young palm-trees,
+transplanted there by him, to serve as a portico. But nature is not
+always obedient to man; the vines and palm-trees do not prosper in their
+new location, and now the long flexible branches of the one, and the
+broad leaves of the other, droop half withered above the grotto, which
+they disfigure rather than decorate.</p>
+
+<p>By constant care, and with the aid of his streams, Selkirk hopes to be
+able to restore them to life and health. He has imposed on his two
+streams another duty, that of supplying a bed of water-cresses and a
+fish-pond, both provident establishments, the first of which has
+succeeded perfectly. As for the second, his most arduous task has been,
+not to dig the fish-pond, but to people it. For this purpose he has been
+compelled to become a fisherman, to manufacture a net. He has succeeded,
+with some threads from his fragment of a sail, the fibres of his
+cocoa-nuts, and tough reeds, woven in close meshes; unfortunately those
+fine fishes, breams, eels and angel-fish, which show themselves so
+readily through the limpid wave, are not as easy to catch as to see.
+Under the surface, almost at a level with the water, there is a ledge of
+rocks, upon which the net cannot be managed. After several fruitless
+attempts, he is obliged to content himself with the insignificant
+employment of fishing with a line; a nail flattened, sharpened and bent,
+performs the office of a hook. Success ensues, but only with time and
+patience; fortunately the sea-crabs allow themselves to be caught with
+the hand, and the fish-pond does not long remain useless and deserted.</p>
+
+<p>Besides, has not our fortunate Selkirk the resource of hunting? The
+chase he had commenced generously, like a wise monarch, who wages war
+only for the general interest. It is true, that as it happens with most
+wise monarchs, his own private interest is also to be consulted, at
+least he thinks so.</p>
+
+<p>Wild cats existed in the island, destroying young broods, agoutis, and
+other small game; he has almost entirely rid it of these pirates,
+reserving to himself only the right of levying upon his subjects the
+tribute of blood. He has already signalized his administration by acts
+of an entirely different nature.</p>
+
+<p>This king without a people, is ignorant in what part of the great ocean,
+and at what distance from its shores, is situated his nameless kingdom.</p>
+
+<p>Armed with his spy-glass, by the aid of his nautical charts, he attempts
+to ascertain, by the position of the stars, its longitude and latitude.
+He at first believes himself to be in one of the islands forming the
+group of Chiloe; his calculations rectified, he afterwards thinks it the
+Island of Juan Fernandez, then San Ambrosio, or San Felix. Unable to
+determine the location exactly, for want of correct instruments, he
+persuades himself that the country he inhabits has never been surveyed,
+that it is really a land without a name, and he gives it his own; he
+calls it Selkirk Island.</p>
+
+<p>Ambitious youth, thou hast thus realized one of thy brightest dreams!
+Dost thou remember the day when, on the way from Largo to St. Andrew, to
+join William Dampier, thou didst already see thyself the chief of a new
+country, discovered and baptized by thee?</p>
+
+<p>Well! has he not more than discovered this country? He inhabits it, he
+governs it, he reigns in it! Not satisfied with giving his name to the
+island, he soon creates a special nomenclature for its various
+localities. To the shore upon which he landed, he gives the name of
+<i>Swordfish Beach</i>; the pile of white and red rocks, which he saw through
+the fog, is the <i>False Coquimbo</i>; he calls <i>Toucan Forest</i>, the wood
+where he saw that bird for the first time; the <i>Defile of Attack</i>, is
+that where Marimonda assaulted him with stones; upon these arid rocks,
+furrowed by deep ravines and abounding in precipices, he has imposed the
+odious name of <i>Stradling</i>! In his mountains he has the <i>Oasis</i>; it is a
+little shady valley, enlivened by the murmur of a streamlet, and with
+one extremity opening to the sea. There he often goes to watch the game
+and the goats, which come to drink at the brook. Above it rises the
+table-land, with difficulty scaled by him on the day of his arrival, and
+from whence he became convinced that he had landed on an island. This
+table-land, he has named <i>The Discovery</i>.</p>
+
+<p>The two streams which meander over his lawn, and before his grotto, have
+also received names. This, commissioned to feed the fish-pond, and which
+gently warbles through the grass, he calls <i>The Linnet</i>; the other,
+interrupted by little cascades, and whose course is more rapid and
+impetuous, he calls <i>The Stammerer</i>.</p>
+
+<p>He has now destroyed the noxious animals, administered government,
+opened ways of communication, given a name to every part of his island.
+How many great rulers have done no more!</p>
+
+<p>But his labors have not been confined to his fish-pond, his bed of
+water-cresses, his hunting, fishing, building, felling of trees; it has
+become necessary to procure that essential element of civilization, of
+comfort, fire.</p>
+
+<p>What could the opulent proprietor of this enchanting abode do without
+fire? Is it not necessary, if he would open a passage through the dense
+woods? Is it not indispensable to his kitchen? Some of his trees, it is
+true, afford fruits in abundance; but most of these fruits are of a dry
+and woody nature; besides, young and vigorous, easily acquiring an
+appetite by labor and exercise, can he content himself with a dinner
+which is only a dessert? Surrounded with fishes of all colors, with
+feathered and other game, must he then be reduced to dispute with the
+agoutis, their maripa-nuts?</p>
+
+<p>He reflects; armed with a bit of iron, he strikes the flinty rocks of
+the mountains, to elicit from them useless sparks. He then remembers
+that savages obtain fire without flint and matches, by the friction of
+two pieces of dry wood; he tries, but in vain; he exhausts the strength
+of his arms, without being discouraged; he tries each tree, wishing even
+that a thunderbolt might strike the island, if it would leave there a
+trace of burning. At last, almost discouraged, he attacks the
+pimento-myrtle;
+<a href="#Footnote_3"><sup>[1]</sup></a> he recommences
+his customary efforts of rubbing. The
+twigs grow warm with the friction; a little white smoke appears,
+fluttering to and fro between his hands, rapid and trembling with
+emotion. The flame bursts forth! He utters a cry of triumph, and,
+hastily collecting other twigs and dry reeds, he leaps for joy around
+his fire, which, like another Prometheus, he has just stolen, not from
+heaven, but from earth!</p>
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_3"></a><sup>[1]</sup></p>
+<blockquote> <i>Myrtus aromatica</i>; its berries are known under the name of
+Jamaica pepper.</blockquote>
+
+<p>Afterwards, in his gratitude, he runs to the myrtle, embraces it, kisses
+it. An act of folly, perhaps; perhaps an act of gratitude, which
+ascended higher than the topmost branches of the trees, higher than the
+culminating summits of the mountains of the island.</p>
+
+<p>But this fire, must he, each time he may need it, go through the same
+tedious process? Not far from his grotto, in a cavity which a projecting
+rock protects from the sea breeze, he piles up wood and brush, sets fire
+to it, keeps it alive from time to time, by the addition of
+combustibles, and comprehends why, among primitive nations, the earliest
+worship should have been that of fire; why, from Zoroaster to the
+Vestals, the care of preserving it should have been held sacred.</p>
+
+<p>At a later period, in the ordinary course of things, he simplified his
+means of preservation. With some threads and the fat of his game, he
+contrived a lamp; still later, he had oil, and reeds served him for
+wicks.</p>
+
+<p>Dating from this moment, the entire island paid tribute to him; the
+crabs, the eels, the flesh of the agouti, savory like that of the
+rabbit, by turns figured on his table. When he seasoned them with some
+morsels of pork, substituting ship biscuit for bread, his repasts were
+fit for an admiral.</p>
+
+<p>Although the goats had become wild, like the other inhabitants of the
+island, since all had learned the nature of man, and of the thunder,
+which he directed at his will, Selkirk still surprised them within
+gun-shot. Not only was their flesh profitable for food; their horns,
+long and hollow, served to contain powder and other small articles
+necessary to his house-keeping; of their skins he made carpets,
+coverings, and bags to protect his provisions from dampness. He even
+manufactured a game-pouch, which he constantly carried when hunting.</p>
+
+<p>His salt fish, his biscuit, some well smoked quarters of goat's flesh,
+and the productions of his fish-pond, at present constitute a store on
+which he can live for a long time, without any care, but to ameliorate
+his condition.</p>
+
+<p>He is now in possession of all the enjoyments he has coveted, abundance,
+leisure, absolute freedom.</p>
+
+<p>And yet, his brow is sometimes clouded, and an unaccountable uneasiness
+torments him; something seems wanting; his appetite fails, his courage
+grows feeble, his reveries are painfully prolonged. But, by mature
+reflection, he has discovered the cause of the evil.</p>
+
+<p>What is it that is so essential to his happiness? Tobacco.</p>
+
+<p>Our factitious wants often exercise over us a more tyrannical empire,
+than our real ones; it seems as if we clung with more force and tenacity
+to this second nature, because we have ourselves created it; it
+originates in us; the other originates with God, and is common to all!</p>
+
+<p>Selkirk now persuades himself that tobacco alone is wanting to his
+comfort; it is this privation which throws him into these sorrowful
+fits of languor. If Stradling had only given him a good stock of
+tobacco, he would have pardoned all; he no longer feels courage to hate
+him. What to him imports the plenty which surrounds him, if he has no
+tobacco? of what use is his leisure, if he cannot spend it in smoking?
+what avails even this fire, which he has just conquered, if he is
+prevented from lighting his pipe at it?</p>
+
+<p>Careworn and dissatisfied, he was wandering one morning through his
+domains, with his gun on his shoulder, his hatchet at his belt, when he
+perceived something dancing on a point of land, shadowed by tall canes.</p>
+
+<p>It was Marimonda.</p>
+
+<p>At sight of her enemy, she darted lightly and rapidly behind a woody
+hillock. An instant afterwards, he saw her tranquilly seated on the
+topmost branch of a tree, holding in each of her hands fruits which she
+was alternately striking against the branch, and against each other, to
+break their tough envelope.</p>
+
+<p>The sight of Marimonda has always awakened in Selkirk a sentiment of
+repulsion; she not only reminds him of Stradling, but with her withered
+cheeks, projecting jaw, and especially her dancing motion, he now
+imagines that she resembles him; and yet, pausing before her, he
+contemplates her not without a lively emotion of surprise and interest.</p>
+
+<p>He had already encountered her within gun-shot, when engaged in the
+destruction of the wild cats, and had asked himself whether he should
+not reckon her among noxious animals. But then Marimonda, with her hand
+constantly pressed against her side, was with the other seizing various
+herbs, which she tasted, bruised between her teeth, and applied to her
+wound; useless remedies, doubtless, for, grown meagre, her hair dull and
+bristling, she seemed to have but a few days to live, and Selkirk
+thought her not worth a charge of powder and shot.</p>
+
+<p>And here he finds her alert and healthy, holding in the same hand which
+had served as a compress, no longer the plant necessary for her cure,
+but the fruit desirable for her sustenance.</p>
+
+<p>'What,' said Selkirk to himself, 'in an island where this frightful
+monkey has never before been, she has succeeded in finding without
+difficulty the <i>herba sacra</i>, that which has restored her to health and
+strength! and I, Selkirk, who have studied at one of the principal
+universities of Scotland, I am vainly sighing for the plant which would
+suffice to render me completely happy! Is instinct then superior to
+reason? To believe this, would be ingratitude to Providence. Instinct is
+necessary, indispensable to animals, because they cannot benefit by the
+traditions of their ancestors. The monkey has consulted her instinct,
+and it has inspired her; if I consult reason, what will be her counsel?
+She will advise me to do like the monkey; to seek the herb of which I
+feel so great a want, or at least to endeavor to substitute for it
+something analogous; to choose, try, and taste, in short, to follow the
+example of Marimonda! I will not fail to do so; but it is nature
+reversed, and, for a man, it is too humiliating to see himself reduced
+to imitate a monkey!'</p>
+
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<h3>
+<a name="CHAPTER_VI"></a>CHAPTER VI.</h3>
+<br>
+
+<h4>The Hammock.&mdash;Poison.&mdash;Success.&mdash;A Calm under the Tropics.&mdash;Invasion
+of the Island.&mdash;War and Plunder.&mdash;The Oasis.&mdash;The Spy-Glass.
+&mdash;Reconciliation.</h4>
+
+<p>Do you see, upon a carpet of fresh verdure, the sandy margin of which is
+bathed by a caressing wave, that hammock suspended to the branches of
+those fine trees? What happy mortal, during the heat of the day, is
+there gently rocked, gently refreshed, by a light sea breeze? It is
+Selkirk; and this hammock is his sail, attached to his tall myrtles by
+strips of goat-skin. Perhaps he is resting after the fatigues of the
+day? No, it is the day of the Lord, and Selkirk now can consecrate the
+Sabbath to repose. With his eyes half closed, he is inhaling,
+undoubtedly, the perfume of his myrtles, the soft fragrance of his
+heliotropes? No, something sweeter still pre-occupies him. Is he
+dreaming of his friends in Scotland, of his first love? He has never
+known friendship, and the beautiful Catherine is far from his memory.
+What is he then doing in his hammock? He is smoking his pipe.</p>
+
+<p>His pipe! Has he a pipe? He has them of all forms, all sizes&mdash;made of
+spiral shells of various kinds, of maripa-nuts, of large reeds; all set
+in handles of myrtle, stalks of coarse grain, or the hollow bones of
+birds. In these he is luxurious; he has become a connoisseur; but this
+has not been the difficulty. Before every thing else, tobacco was
+wanting.</p>
+
+<p>In consequence of his encounter with Marimonda, he ransacked the woods
+and meadows, seeking among all plants those which approximated nearest
+to the nature of the nicotiana. As it was necessary to judge by their
+taste, he bit their leaves&mdash;chewed them, still in imitation of the
+monkey: but, to his new and profound humiliation, less skilful or less
+fortunate than the latter, he obtained at first no other result than a
+sort of poisoning: one of these plants being poisonous.</p>
+
+<p>For several days he saw himself condemned to absolute repose and a spare
+diet. His mouth, swollen, excoriated, refused all nourishment; his
+throat was burning; his body was covered with an eruption, and his
+languid and trembling limbs scarcely permitted him to drag himself to
+the stream to quench there the thirst by which he was devoured.</p>
+
+<p>He believed himself about to die; and grief then imposing silence on
+pride, with his eyes turned towards the sea, he allowed a long-repressed
+sigh to escape his heart. It was a regret for his absent country.</p>
+
+<p>Very soon these alarming symptoms disappeared; his strength returned;
+his water-cresses and wild sorrel completed the cure. Would he have
+dared to ask it of the other productions of his island? He had become
+suspicious of nature; these, at least, he had long known.</p>
+
+<p>Scarcely had he recovered, when the want of tobacco made itself felt
+anew with more force than ever. What to him imports experiment, what
+imports danger? Is it not to procure this precious, indispensable
+herb,&mdash;which the world had easily done without for thousands of years?</p>
+
+<p>This time, nevertheless, become more prudent, he no longer addresses
+himself to the sense of taste; but to odor, to that of smell. He has
+resolved to dry the different plants which appear to him most proper for
+the use to which he destines them, and to submit them afterwards to a
+trial by fire. Will not the smoke which escapes from them easily enable
+him to discover the qualities which he requires, since it is in smoke
+that they are to evaporate, if he succeeds in his researches?</p>
+
+<p>Of this grand collection of aromatics, two plants, at last, come off
+victorious. One is the petunia, that charming flower which at present
+decorates all our gardens, whence the enemies of tobacco may one day
+banish it; so it is only with trembling that I here announce its
+relationship to the nicotiana; the other, which, like the petunia, grows
+in profusion in the islands as well as on the continent of Southern
+America, is the herb <i>coca</i>, improperly so called, for its precious
+leaves, which are to the natives of Peru and Chili, what the <i>betel</i> is
+for the Indians of Malabar, grow on an elegant shrub.
+<a href="#Footnote_4"><sup>[1]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_4"></a><sup>[1]</sup></p>
+<blockquote>The <i>erythroxylum coca</i>.</blockquote>
+
+<p>These two plants, separately or together, composed, thanks to a slight
+amalgam of chalk, sea-water, and bruised pepper-corns, the most
+delicious tobacco.</p>
+
+<p>Now, half awake, Selkirk smokes, as he busies himself with constructing
+some necessary article, such as a ladder, a stool, a basket of rushes,
+with which he is completing the furniture of his house; he smokes while
+fishing, and while hunting; on his return to his dwelling, he lies down
+at the entrance of his grotto, on his bank of turf, re-lights his pipe
+at his fire, and smokes; at the hour of breakfast or of dinner, seated
+beneath the shade of his mimosa, his elbow on the table, his Bible open
+before him, he smokes still.</p>
+
+<p>Well! notwithstanding these pleasures so long desired, notwithstanding
+this addition to his comfort, notwithstanding his pipe, this vague
+uneasiness sometimes assails him anew.</p>
+
+<p>He ascribes it to enfeebled health; and yet he remains active and
+vigorous; he ascribes it to the powerful odors of certain trees which
+affect his brain. These trees he destroys around him, but his uneasiness
+continues; he ascribes it to his food, the insipidity of the fish which
+he has eaten without salt, since his quarter of pork is consumed, and
+his stores of pickled fish exhausted. In fact, the flesh of fish has for
+some time given him a nausea, occasioned frequent indigestions; he
+renounces it; his stomach recovers its tone; but his fits of torpor and
+melancholy continue.</p>
+
+<p>This state of suffering is most painful at those moments of profound
+calm, common between the tropics, when the birds are silent, when from
+the thickets and burrows issue no murmurs, when the insect seems to
+sleep within the closed corollas of the flowers; when the leaves of the
+mimosa fold themselves; when the tree-tops are not swayed by the
+slightest breath of air, and the sea, motionless, ceases to dash against
+the shore. What an inexpressible weight such a silence adds to
+isolation! And yet it is not an unbroken silence, for then a shrill and
+harsh sound seems to grate upon the ear. It is as if in this muteness of
+nature, one could hear the motion of the earth on its axis; then, above
+his head, in the depths of immensity, the whirling of the celestial
+spheres and myriads of worlds which gravitate in space. Thought becomes
+troubled and exhausted before this overwhelming and terrible immobility,
+and the man who, at such a moment, cannot have recourse to his kind, to
+distract or re-assure him, is overpowered with his own insignificance.</p>
+
+<p>Sometimes the solitary calls on himself to break this oppressive and
+painful silence; he articulates a few words aloud, and his voice
+inspires him with fear; it seems formidable and unnatural.</p>
+
+<p>During one of these sinister calms, in which every thing in creation
+seemed to pause, even the heart of man, seated on the shore, not having
+even strength to smoke, Selkirk was vainly awaiting the evening breeze;
+nothing came, but the obscurity of night. The moon, delaying her
+appearance, submitting in her turn to the sluggishness of all things,
+seemed detained below the circle of the horizon by some fatal power; the
+sea was dull, gloomy, and as it were congealed.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly, though there was not a breath of air, Selkirk saw at his
+right, on a vast but limited tract of ocean, the waves violently
+agitated and foaming. He thought he distinguished a multitude of barques
+and canoes furrowing the surface of the waters; not far from Swordfish
+Beach, the flotilla enters a little cove running up into the mountains.</p>
+
+<p>He no longer sees any thing; but he hears a frightful tumult of
+discordant cries.</p>
+
+<p>There is no room for doubt! some Indian tribes, pursued perhaps by new
+conquerors from Europe, have just disembarked on the shore. Wo to him!
+he can hope from them neither pity nor mercy. A cold sweat bathes his
+forehead; he runs to his grotto, takes his gun, puts in his goatskin
+pouch some horns of powder and shot, a piece of smoked meat, not
+forgetting his Bible! and passes the night wandering in the woods, in
+the mountains, a prey to a thousand terrors; hearing without cessation
+the steps of pursuers behind him, and seeing fiery eyes glaring at him
+through the thickets.</p>
+
+<p>At day-break, with a thousand precautions, he returns to his grotto. He
+finds the beach covered with seals.</p>
+
+<p>These were the enemies whose invasion had so alarmed him.</p>
+
+<p>It is now the middle of the month of February, the period of the
+greatest tropical heats, and these amphibia, having left the shores of
+Chili or Peru, are accomplishing one of their periodical migrations.
+They have just taken possession of the island, one of their accustomed
+stations. But the island has now a master.</p>
+
+<p>Where he expected to encounter a peril, Selkirk finds amusement, a
+subject of study, perhaps a resource.</p>
+
+<p>A long time ago he has read, in the narratives of voyagers, singular
+stories concerning these marine animals, these <i>lions</i>, these
+<i>sea-elephants</i>, flocks of old Neptune, who have their chiefs, their
+pacha; who are acquainted with and practise the discipline of war;
+stationing vigilant sentinels in the spots they occupy, communicating to
+each other a pass-word, and attentive to the <i>Qui vive</i>?</p>
+
+<p>He spies them, he watches them, he takes pleasure in examining their
+grotesque forms,&mdash;half quadruped, half fish; their feet encased in a
+sort of web, and terminated by crooked claws, with which they creep on
+the earth; their skins, covered with short and glossy hair; their round
+heads and eyes.</p>
+
+<p>He is a witness of their sports, their combats; but very soon their
+frightful roaring and bellowing annoys him, and makes him regret the
+silence of his solitude. Another cause of complaint against them soon
+arises.</p>
+
+<p>One morning, Selkirk finds his fish-pond and bed of water-cresses
+devastated.</p>
+
+<p>Exasperated, he declares war against the invaders: during three days he
+tracks them, pursues them; ten of them fall beneath his balls, leaving
+the shore bathed in their blood. The rest at last take flight, and the
+army of seals, regaining the sea with despairing cries, goes to
+establish itself at the other extremity of the island.</p>
+
+<p>This war has been profitable to the conqueror. With the skin of the
+vanquished he makes himself a new hammock, which permits him to employ
+his sail for other uses; he also makes leather bottles, in which he
+preserves the oil which he extracts in abundance from their fat. Now he
+can have a lamp constantly burning, even by night. He has all the
+comforts of life. Of the hairy skin of the seals, he manufactures a
+broad-brimmed hat, which shields him from the burning rays of the sun.
+He tastes their flesh; it appears to him insipid and nauseous, like that
+of the fish; but the tongue, the heart, seasoned with pepper, are for
+him quite a luxury.</p>
+
+<p>Days, weeks, months roll away in the same toils, the same recreations.
+Whatever he may do to drive it away, this apathetic sadness, this
+sinking of soul, which has already tormented him at different periods,
+becomes with Selkirk more and more frequent; he cannot conquer it as he
+did the seals. His seals, he now regrets. When they were encamped on the
+shore, they at least gave him something to look at, an amusement;
+something lived, moved, near him.</p>
+
+<p>When he finds himself a prey to these fits, which, in his pride, he
+persists in attributing to transient indisposition, he goes to walk in
+the mountains, taking with him only his pipe, his Bible, and his
+spy-glass.</p>
+
+<p>He often pursues his journey as far as the oasis; there, he seats
+himself at the extremity of the little valley, opposite the sea, from
+which his eye can traverse its immense extent. He opens the holy book,
+and closes it immediately; then, his brow reddening, he seizes his
+spy-glass, levels it, and remains entire hours measuring the ocean, wave
+by wave.</p>
+
+<p>What is he looking for there? He seeks a sail, a sail which shall come
+to his island and bear him from his desert, from his <i>ennui</i>. His
+<i>ennui</i> he can no longer dissimulate; this is the evil of his solitude.</p>
+
+<p>One day, while he was at this spot, the setting sun suddenly illuminated
+a black point, against which the waves seemed to break in foam, as
+against the prow of a ship; his eyes become dim, a tremor seizes him.
+He looks again&mdash;keeps his glass for a long time fixed on the same
+object, but the black point does not stir.</p>
+
+<p>'Another illusion!' said he to himself; 'it is a reef, a rock which the
+tide has left bare.'</p>
+
+<p>He wipes the glasses of his spy-glass, he examines again; he seems to
+see the waves whiten and whirl for a large space around this rock.</p>
+
+<p>'Can it be an island? If an island, is it inhabited? I will construct a
+barque, and if God has pity on me I will reach it.'</p>
+
+<p>At this moment he hears footsteps resound on the dry leaves which the
+wind has swept into the little valley. He turns hastily.</p>
+
+<p>It is Marimonda.</p>
+
+<p>Marimonda has no longer her lively and dancing motions; she also seems
+languid, sad. At sight of Selkirk, she makes a movement as if to flee;
+but almost immediately advances a little, and, sorrowful, with bent
+brow, sits down on a bank not far from him.</p>
+
+<p>Has she then remarked that he is without arms?</p>
+
+<p>On his side, Selkirk who had not met her for a long time, seemed to have
+forgotten his former aversion.</p>
+
+<p>At all events, is she not the most intelligent being chance has placed
+near him? He remembers that, in the ship, she obeyed the voice, the
+gesture of the captain, and that her tricks amused the whole crew. This
+resemblance to the human form, which he at first disliked, now awakens
+in him ideas of indulgence and peace. He reproaches himself with having
+treated her so brutally, when the poor animal, who alone had accompanied
+him into exile, at first accosted him with a caress. And now she
+returns, laying aside all ill-will, forgetting even the wound which she
+received from him in an impulse of irritation and hatred, of which she
+was not the object, for which she ought not to be responsible.</p>
+
+<p>He therefore makes to her a little sign with the head.</p>
+
+<p>Marimonda replies by winks of the eye and motions of the shoulders,
+which Selkirk thinks not wholly destitute of grace.</p>
+
+<p>He rises and approaches her, saluting her with an amicable gesture.</p>
+
+<p>She awaits him, chattering with her teeth and lips with an expression of
+joy.</p>
+
+<p>Selkirk gently passes his hand over her forehead and neck, calling her
+by name; then he starts for his habitation, and Marimonda follows him.
+The man and the monkey have just been reconciled. Both were tired of
+their isolation.</p>
+
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<h3>
+<a name="CHAPTER_VII"></a>CHAPTER VII.</h3>
+<br>
+
+<h4>A T&ecirc;te-a-t&ecirc;te.&mdash;The Monkey's Goblet.&mdash;The Palace.&mdash;A Removal.&mdash;Winter
+under the Tropics&mdash;Plans for the Future.&mdash;Property.&mdash;A burst of
+Laughter.&mdash;Misfortune not far off.</h4>
+
+<p>Tranquility of mind has returned to our solitary; now, his reveries are
+more pleasant and less prolonged; his walks through the woods, his
+moments of repose during the heat of the day seem more endurable since
+<i>something</i>, besides his shadow, keeps him company; he has resumed his
+taste for labor since there is <i>somebody</i> to look at him; speech has
+returned to him since <i>somebody</i> replies to his voice. This <i>somebody</i>,
+this <i>something</i>, is Marimonda.</p>
+
+<p>Marimonda is now the companion of Selkirk, his friend, his slave; she
+seems to comprehend his slightest gestures and even his <i>ennui</i>. To
+amuse him, she resorts to a thousand expedients, a thousand tricks of
+the agility peculiar to her race; she goes, she comes, she runs, she
+leaps, she bounds, she chatters at his side; she tries to people his
+solitude, to make a rustling around him; she brings him his pipes, rocks
+him in his hammock, and, for all these cares, all this attention,
+demands only a caress, which is no longer refused.</p>
+
+<p>She is often a spectator of her master's repasts; sometimes even shares
+them. This was at first a favor, afterwards a habit, as in the case of
+honest countrymen, who, secluded from the world, by degrees admit their
+servants into their intimacy. Selkirk had not to fear the importunate,
+unexpected visit of a neighbor or a curious stranger.</p>
+
+<p>So it is in the open air, on the latticed table, in the shade of his
+great mimosa, that these repasts in common take place; the master
+occupies the bench, the servant humbly seats herself on the stool,
+ready, at the first signal, to leave her place and assist in serving.
+Have we not seen in India, ourang-outangs trained to perform the office
+of domestics? and Marimonda was in nothing inferior in intelligence and
+activity.</p>
+
+<p>She is now fond of the flesh of the goat, of that of the coatis and
+agoutis, for monkeys easily become carnivorous; but the table is also
+sometimes covered with the products of her hunting. If the dessert
+fails, she hastily interrupts her repast, leaves the master to continue
+his alone, buries herself in the surrounding woods, reaches in three
+bounds the tops of the trees, and quickly returns with a supply of
+fruits which he can fearlessly taste, for she knows them.</p>
+
+<p>Selkirk was one day a witness of the singular facility with which she
+could supply her wants.</p>
+
+<p>At the morning repast, seeing him use one of his cocoa-nuts which he had
+fashioned in the form of a cup to drink from; in her instinct of
+imitation, she had attempted to seize the cup in her turn; a look of
+reprimand stopped her short in her attempt. Whether she felt a species
+of humiliation at being forced to quench her thirst in the presence of
+her master, by going to the banks of the stream and lapping there, like
+a vulgar animal; or whether the reprimand had painfully affected her,
+she abstained from drinking and remained for some time quiet and dreamy;
+but at the following repast, with lifted head and sparkling eye she
+resumed her place on the stool, provided with a goblet, a goblet
+belonging to her, lawfully obtained by her, and, with an air of triumph
+presented it to Selkirk, who, wondering, did not hesitate an instant to
+share with the monkey the water contained in his gourd.</p>
+
+<p>This goblet was the ligneous and impermeable capsule, the fruit,
+naturally and deeply hollowed out, of a tree called <i>quatela</i>.
+<a href="#Footnote_5"><sup>[1]</sup></a> It was
+thus that the intelligent Marimonda, after having borrowed from the
+numerous vegetables of the island their leaves, to ameliorate her
+sufferings, to heal her wounds; their fruits for her nourishment and
+even for her sports, also found means to obtain the divers utensils for
+house-keeping of which she stood in need.</p>
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_5"></a><sup>[1]</sup></p>
+<blockquote> The <i>lecythis quatela</i>, of the family of the <i>lecythid&eacute;es</i>,
+created by Professor Richard, and whose singular fruits bear, in Peru as
+well as in Chili, the denomination of <i>monkey's goblets</i>.</blockquote>
+
+<p>Charmed with her gentleness, her docility, the affection she seemed to
+bear him, Selkirk grew more and more attached to her. Winter, that is,
+the rainy season which usually lasts in these regions during the months
+of June and July, was approaching; he suffered in anticipation, from the
+idea that during this time his gentle companion would not be able to
+retain her habitual shelter, beneath the foliage of the trees; he
+conceived the project of giving up to her his grotto, and constructing
+for himself a new habitation, spacious and commodious. It is thus that
+our most generous resolutions, whatever we may design to do,
+encountering in their way personal interest, often turn to the increase
+of our own private welfare.</p>
+
+<p>At a little distance from the grotto, but farther inland, on the banks
+of the stream called the <i>Linnet</i>, there was a thicket of verdure shaded
+by five myrtles of from fifteen to twenty feet in height, and whose
+stems presented a diameter more than sufficient to insure the solidity
+of the edifice. Four of these myrtles formed an irregular square; the
+fifth arose in the midst, or nearly so; but our architect is not very
+particular. He already sees the principal part of his frame; the myrtles
+will remain in their places, their roots serving as a foundation. He
+removes the shrubs, the plants, the brushwood from the thicket, leaving
+only a heliotrope which, at a later period, may twine around his house
+and at evening shed its perfumes. He has become reconciled to its
+fragrance. He trims the trees, cuts off their tops eight feet above the
+ground, leaving the middle one, which is to sustain the roof, a foot
+higher; for this roof reeds and palm-leaves furnish all the materials.
+The walls, made of a solid network of young branches interwoven, and
+plastered with a mixture of sand, clay, and chopped rushes, he takes
+care not to build quite to the top, but to leave between them and the
+roof a little space, where the air can circulate freely through a light
+trellis formed of branches of the blue willow.</p>
+
+<p>Then, having finished his work in less than a fortnight, he contemplates
+it and admires it; Marimonda herself seems to share in his admiration,
+and in her joy climbing up the new building, she begins to leap, to
+dance on the roof of foliage, which bears her, and thus gives to Selkirk
+an additional triumph.</p>
+
+<p>He now proceeds to furnish his palace; he transports thither his bed of
+reeds and his goatskin coverings. How much better will he be sheltered
+here than under the gloomy vault of his grotto! How has he been able to
+content himself so long with such an abode, more suitable for a
+troglodyte or a monkey! He will no longer be obliged to lift up his
+curtain of vines, and to peep through the fans of his palm-trees, in
+order to behold the beneficent rays of the new-born day; they will come
+of themselves to find him and rejoice him at his awakening, as the
+sea-breezes will at evening breathe on him, to refresh him in his
+repose.</p>
+
+<p>Already has the interior of his cabin, of his palace, assumed an aspect
+which charms him; his guns, his hatchets, his spy-glass, his instruments
+of labor, well polished and shining, suspended in racks, upon wooden
+pegs, decorate the walls; upon another partition, his assortment of
+pipes are arranged on a shelf according to their size; on his central
+pillar, he suspends his game-bag, his gourd, his tobacco-pouch, and
+various articles of daily use. As for his iron pot, his smoked meat, his
+stock of skins, and bottles of seal-oil, he leaves them under the
+guardianship of Marimonda in the grotto which he will now make his
+store-house, his kitchen: he will not encumber with them his new
+dwelling.</p>
+
+<p>He now sets himself to prepare new furniture; he will construct a small
+portable table, two wooden seats, one for himself, the other for
+Marimonda, when she comes from her grotto to visit his cabin; for he has
+now a neighborhood. Besides, during the rainy season, they will be
+forced to dine under cover.</p>
+
+<p>The first rains have commenced, gentle, fertilizing rains, falling at
+intervals and lovingly drank in by the earth; Selkirk no longer thinks
+of his table and seats; another project has just taken the place of
+these, and seems to deserve the precedence.</p>
+
+<p>Marimonda has just returned from a tour in the woods, bringing fruits of
+all sorts, among them some which Selkirk has never before seen. He
+tastes them with more care and attention than usual; then, becoming
+thoughtful, with his chin resting on his hand says to himself: 'Why
+should I not make these fruits grow at my door, not far from my
+habitation? Why should I not attempt to improve them by cultivation?
+This is a very simple and very prudent idea which should have occurred
+to me long since; but I was alone, absolutely alone; and one loses
+courage when thinking of self only. A garden, at once an orchard and a
+vegetable garden, will be at least as useful to me as my fish-pond and
+bed of water-cresses; I will make one around my cabin; it will set it
+off and give it a more home-like appearance! Is not the stream placed
+here expressly to traverse it and water it? Afterwards, if God assist
+me, I will raise little kids which will become goats and give me milk,
+butter, cheese! Why have I not thought of this before? It would have
+been too much to have undertaken at once. I shall then have tame goats;
+I will also have Guinea-pigs, agoutis, and coatis. My house shall be
+enlarged, I will have a farm, a dairy! But the time has not yet come;
+let us first prepare the garden. Why has it not been already prepared? I
+am impatient to render the earth productive, fruitful by my cares, to
+walk in the shade of the trees I may plant; it seems to me that I shall
+be at home there, more than any where else!'</p>
+
+<p>You are right, Selkirk; to possess the entire island, is to possess
+nothing; it is simply to have permission to hunt, a right of promenade
+and pasture, which the other inhabitants of the island, quadrupeds or
+birds, can claim as well as yourself. What is property, without the
+power of improvement? Can the earth become the domain of a single
+person, when the true limits of his possessions must always be those of
+the field which affords him subsistence? Envy not then the happiness of
+the rich; they are but the transient holders and distributors of the
+public fortune; we possess, in reality, only that which we can ourselves
+enjoy; the rest escapes us, and contributes to the well-being of others.</p>
+
+<p>Selkirk comprehends that his streams, his bank of turf, his fish-pond,
+his bed of water-cresses, his grotto, his cabin, belong to him far
+otherwise than the twelve or fifteen square leagues of his island; to
+his private domain he now intends to add a garden, and this garden, this
+orchard, will be to him an increase of his wealth, since it will aid in
+the satisfaction of his wants.</p>
+
+<p>The humidity with which the earth begins to be penetrated, facilitates
+his labors; he sets himself to the work.</p>
+
+<p>Behold him then, now armed with his hatchet, now with a wooden shovel,
+which he has just manufactured, clearing the ground, digging,
+transplanting young fruit-trees, or sowing the seeds which he is soon to
+see spring up and prosper. Every thing grows rapidly in these climates.</p>
+
+<p>When the garden-spot is marked out, dug, sown, planted, not forgetting
+the kitchen vegetables, and especially the <i>coca</i> and <i>petunia-nicotiana</i>,
+Selkirk, with his arms folded on his spade, thanks God with all his
+heart,&mdash;God who has given him strength to finish his work.</p>
+
+<p>He has never felt so happy as when, with his hands behind his back, he
+walks smoking, among his beds, in which nothing has as yet appeared; but
+he already sees, in a dream, his trees covered with blossoms; around
+these blossoms are buzzing numerous swarms of bees; he reflects upon the
+means of compelling them to yield the honey of which they have just
+stolen from him the essence. It is a settled thing, on his farm he will
+have hives! After his bees, still in his dream, come flocks of
+humming-birds to plunder in their turn. The happy possessor of the
+garden will exact no tribute from them, but the pleasure of seeing them
+suspend, by a silken thread, to the leaves of his shrubs, the elegant
+little boat in which they cradle their fragile brood. Nothing seems to
+him more beautiful than his embryo garden; here, he is more than the
+monarch of the island; he is a proprietor!</p>
+
+<p>Thanks to the garden, Selkirk sees with resignation the two long months
+of the rainy season pass away. When the heavy torrents render the paths
+impassable, he consoles himself by thinking that they aid in the
+germination of his seeds, in the rooting of his young plants.
+Sometimes, between two deluges, he can scarcely find time to procure
+himself sufficient game; what matters it! he lives on his provisions: he
+is forcibly detained within; but has he not now good cheer, good
+company, and occupation, during his leisure hours?</p>
+
+<p>It is now that he completes his furniture. His table and his seats
+finished, he undertakes to provide for another want, equally
+indispensable.</p>
+
+<p>Worn out by the weather, and by service, his garments are becoming
+ragged. He must shield himself from the humidity of the air; where shall
+he procure materials? Has he not the choice between seal-skins and
+goat-skins? He gives the preference to the latter, as more pliable, and
+behold him a tailor, cutting with the point of his knife; as for thread,
+it is furnished by the fragment of the sail; and two days afterwards, he
+finds himself flaming in a new suit.</p>
+
+<p>To describe the delirious stupefaction of Marimonda, when she perceives
+her master under this strange costume, would be a thing impossible. She
+finds him almost like herself, clad like her, in a hairy suit. Never
+tired of looking at him, of examining him curiously, she leaps, she
+gambols around him, now rolling at his feet, and uttering little cries
+of joy, now suspended over his head, at the top of the central pillar,
+and turning her wild and restless eyes. When she has thus inspected him
+from head to foot, she runs and crouches in a corner, with her face
+towards the wall, as if to reflect; then, whirling about, returns
+towards him, picks up on the way the garment he has just laid aside,
+looking alternately at this and at the other, very anxious to know which
+of the two really made a part of the person.</p>
+
+<p>After having enjoyed for a few moments the surprise and transports of
+his companion, Selkirk takes his Bible and his pipe, and, placing the
+book on the table, bends over it, preparing to read and to meditate.
+But, whether in consequence of her joyous excitement, or whether she is
+emboldened by the species of fraternity which costume establishes
+between them, Marimonda, without hesitation, directs herself to the
+little shelf, chooses from it a pipe in her turn, places it gravely
+between her lips, astonished at not seeing the smoke issue from it in a
+spiral column; and, with an important air, still imitating her master,
+comes to sit opposite him, with her brow inclined, and her elbow resting
+on the table.</p>
+
+<p>Willingly humoring her whim, Selkirk takes the pipe from her hands,
+fills it with his most spicy tobacco, lights it, and restores it to her.</p>
+
+<p>Hardly has Marimonda respired the first breath, when suddenly letting
+fall the pipe, overturning the table, emitting the smoke through her
+mouth and nostrils, she disappears, uttering plaintive cries, as if she
+had just tasted burning lava.</p>
+
+<p>At sight of the poor monkey, thus thrown into confusion, Selkirk, for
+the first time since his residence in the island, laughs so loudly, that
+the echo follows the fugitive to the grotto, where she had taken refuge,
+and is prolonged from the grotto to the <i>Oasis</i>, from the Oasis to the
+summit of the <i>Discovery</i>.</p>
+
+<p>The exile has at last laughed, laughed aloud, and, at the same moment,
+a terrible disaster is taking place without his knowledge; a new war is
+preparing for him, in which his arms will be useless.</p>
+
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<h3>
+<a name="CHAPTER_VIII"></a>CHAPTER VIII.</h3>
+<br>
+
+<h4>A New Invasion.&mdash;Selkirk joyfully meets an ancient Enemy.&mdash;Combat on
+a Red Cedar.&mdash;A Mother and her Little Ones.&mdash;The Flock.&mdash;F&ecirc;te in the
+Island; Pacific Combats, Diversions and Swings.&mdash;A Sail.&mdash;The Burning
+Wood.&mdash;Presentiments of Marimonda.</h4>
+
+<p>The next morning the sun has scarcely touched the horizon, Selkirk is
+still asleep, when he is awakened by a sort of tickling at his feet.
+Thinking it some caress or trick of Marimonda, risen earlier than usual,
+he half opens his eyes, sees nothing, and places himself again in a
+posture to continue his nap. The same tickling is renewed, but with more
+perseverance, and very soon something sharp and keen penetrates to the
+quick the hard envelope of his heel. The tickling has become a bite.</p>
+
+<p>This time wide awake, he raises his head. His cabin is full of rats!</p>
+
+<p>Near him, a company of them are tranquilly engaged in breakfasting on
+his coverings and the rushes of his couch; they are on his table, his
+seats, along his pillow and his walls; they are playing before his door,
+running hither and thither through the crevices of his roof, multiplying
+themselves on his rack and shelf; all biting, gnawing, nibbling&mdash;some
+his seal-skin hat, his tobacco-pouch, the bark ornaments of his
+furniture; others the handles of his tools, his pipes, his Bible, and
+even his powder-horn.</p>
+
+<p>Selkirk utters a cry, springs from his couch, and immediately crushes
+two under his heels. The rest take flight.</p>
+
+<p>As he is pursuing these new invaders with the shovel and musket, he
+perceives at a few paces' distance Marimonda, sorrowful and drooping,
+perched on the strong branch of a sapota-tree. By her piteous and chilly
+appearance, her tangled and wet hair, he doubts not but she has passed
+the whole night exposed to the inclemency of the weather. But he at
+first attributes this whim only to her ill-humor the evening before.</p>
+
+<p>On perceiving him, Marimonda descends, from her tree, sad, but still
+gentle and caressing, and with gestures of terror, points to the grotto.
+He runs thither.</p>
+
+<p>Here another spectacle of disorder and destruction awaits him; the rats
+are collected in it by thousands; his furs, his provisions of fruit and
+game, his bottles formerly filled with oil, every thing is sacked, torn
+in pieces, afloat; for the water has at last made its way through the
+crevices of the mountain. To put the climax to his misfortune, his
+reserve of powder, notwithstanding its double envelope of leather and
+horn, attacked by the voracious teeth of his aggressors, is swimming in
+the midst of an oily slime.</p>
+
+<p>The solitary now possesses, for the purpose of hunting, for the renewal
+of these provisions so necessary to his life, only the few charges
+contained in his portable powder-horn, and in the barrels of his guns.
+The blow which has just struck him is his ruin! and still the hardest
+trial appointed for him is yet to come.</p>
+
+<p>In penetrating the ground, the rains of winter have driven the rats
+from their holes; hence their invasion of the cabin and the grotto.</p>
+
+<p>Against so many enemies, what can Selkirk do, reduced to his single
+strength?</p>
+
+<p>He succeeds, nevertheless, in killing some; Marimonda herself, armed
+with the branch of a tree, serves as an ally, and aids him in putting
+them to flight; but their combined efforts are ineffectual. An hour
+after, the accursed race are multiplying round him, more numerous and
+more ravenous than ever.</p>
+
+<p>He comprehends then what an error he has committed in the complete
+destruction of the wild cats which peopled the island. With the most
+generous intentions, how often is man mistaken in the object he pursues!
+We think we are ridding us of an enemy, and we are depriving ourselves
+of a protector. God only knows what he does, and he has admitted
+apparent evil, as a principle, into the admirable composition of his
+universe; he suffers the wicked to live. Selkirk had been more severe
+than God, and he repents it. If his poor cats had only been exiled, he
+would hasten to proclaim a general amnesty. Alas! there is no amnesty
+with death. But has he indeed destroyed all? Perhaps some still exist in
+those distant regions which have already served as a refuge for that
+other banished race, the seals.</p>
+
+<p>The rains have ceased; the storms of winter, always accompanied by
+overpowering heat and dense fogs, no longer sadden the island by
+anticipated darkness, or the gloomy mutterings of continual thunder. The
+sun, though <i>garu&eacute;</i><a href="#Footnote_6"><sup>[1]</sup></a>
+absorbs the remainder of the inundation.
+Followed by Marimonda, Selkirk, for the first time, has ventured to the
+woods and thickets between the hills beyond the shore and the False
+Coquimbo, when a sound, sweeter to his ear than would have been the
+songs of a siren, makes him pause suddenly in ecstasy: it is the mewing
+of a cat.</p>
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_6"></a><sup>[1]</sup></p>
+<blockquote> In Peru and Chili, they call <i>garua</i> that mist which
+sometimes, and especially after the rainy season, floats around the disk
+of the sun.</blockquote>
+
+<p>This cat, strongly built, with a spotted and glossy coat, white nose,
+and brown whiskers, is stationed at a little distance, on a red cedar,
+where she is undoubtedly watching her prey.</p>
+
+<p>She is an old settler escaped from the general massacre; the last of the
+vanquished; perhaps!</p>
+
+<p>Without hesitation, Selkirk clasps the trunk of the tree, climbs it,
+reaches the first branches; Marimonda follows him and quickly goes
+beyond. At the aspect of these two aggressors, like herself clad in
+skin, the cat recoils, ascending; the monkey follows, pursues her from
+branch to branch, quite to the top of the cedar. Struck on the shoulder
+with a blow of the claw, she also recoils, but descending, and declaring
+herself vanquished in the first skirmish, immediately gives over the
+combat, or rather the sport, for she has seen only sport in the affair.</p>
+
+<p>Selkirk is not so easily discouraged; this cat he must have, he must
+have her alive; he wishes to make her the guardian of his cabin, his
+protector against the rats. Three times he succeeds in seizing her;
+three times the furious animal, struggling, tears his arms or face. It
+is a terrible, bloody conflict, mingled with exclamations, growlings,
+and frightful mewings. At last Selkirk, forgetting perhaps in the ardor
+of combat the object of victory, seizes her vigorously by the skin of
+the neck, at the risk of strangling her; with the other hand he grasps
+her around the body. The difficulty is now to carry her. Fortunately he
+has his game-bag. With one hand he holds her pressed against the fork of
+the tree; with the other arm he reaches his game-bag, opens it; the
+conquered animal, half dead, has not made, during this manoeuvre, a
+single movement of resistance. But when the hunter is about to close it,
+suddenly rousing herself with a leap, distending by a last effort all
+her muscles at once, she escapes from his grasp, and precipitates
+herself from the top of the cedar, to the great terror of Marimonda,
+then peaceably crouched under the tree, whom the cat brushes against in
+falling, and to the great disappointment of Selkirk, who thinks he has
+the captive in his pouch.</p>
+
+<p>Sliding along the trunk, Selkirk descends quickly to the ground; but the
+enemy has already disappeared, and left no trace. In vain his eyes are
+turned on all sides; he sees nothing, neither his adversary nor
+Marimonda, who has undoubtedly fled under the impression of this last
+terror.</p>
+
+<p>As he is in despair, a whistling familiar to his ear is heard, and at
+two hundred paces distant he perceives, on an eminence of the False
+Coquimbo, his monkey, bent double, in an attitude of contemplation,
+appearing very attentive to what is passing beneath her, and changing
+her posture only to send a repeated summons to her master.</p>
+
+<p>At all hazards he directs himself to this quarter.</p>
+
+<p>What a spectacle awaits him! In a cavity at the foot of the eminence
+where Marimonda is, he finds, crouching, still out of breath with her
+struggle and her race, his fugitive. She is a mother! and six kittens,
+already active, are rolling in the sun around her.</p>
+
+<p>Selkirk, seizing his knife, kills the mother, and carries off the little
+ones.</p>
+
+<p>A short time after, the rats have deserted the shore. But their
+departure, though it prevents the evil they might yet have done, does
+not remedy that already accomplished.</p>
+
+<p>The provisions of the solitary are almost entirely destroyed, and the
+little powder which remains is scarcely sufficient for a reserve which
+he no longer knows where to renew.</p>
+
+<p>The moment at last comes when he possesses no other ammunition than the
+only charge in his gun. This last charge, his last resource, oh! how
+preciously he preserves it to-day. While it is there, he can still
+believe himself armed, still powerful; he has not entirely exhausted his
+resources; it is his last hope. Who knows?&mdash;perhaps he may yet need it
+to protect his life in circumstances which he cannot foresee.</p>
+
+<p>But since his gun must remain suspended, inactive, to the walls of his
+cabin, it is time to think of supplying the place of the services it has
+rendered; it is time to realize his dream, and, according to the usual
+course of civilization, to substitute the life of a farmer and shepherd
+for that of a hunter.</p>
+
+<p>Already is his colony augmented by six new guests, domesticated in his
+house; already, on every side, his seeds are peeping out of the ground
+under the most favorable auspices; his young trees, firmly rooted, are
+growing rapidly beneath the double influence of heat and moisture; at
+the axil of some of their leaves, he sees a bud, an earnest of the
+harvest. He must now occupy himself with the means of surprising,
+seizing and retaining the ancestors of his future flock.</p>
+
+<p>Here, patience, address or stratagem can alone avail.</p>
+
+<p>Notwithstanding his natural agility, he does not dream of reaching them
+by pursuit. Since his last hunts, goats and kids keep themselves usually
+in the steep and mountainous parts of the island. To leap from rock to
+rock, to attempt to vie with them in celerity and lightness appears to
+him, with reason, a foolish and impracticable enterprise. Later,
+perhaps,... Who knows?</p>
+
+<p>He manufactures snares, traps; but suspicion is now the order of the day
+around him; each holds himself on the <i>qui vive</i>. After long waiting
+without any result, he finds in his snares a coati, some little Guinea
+pigs; here is one resource, undoubtedly, but he aims at higher game, and
+the kids will not allow themselves to be taken by his baits.</p>
+
+<p>He remembers then, that in certain parts of America, the hunters, in
+order to seize their prey living, have recourse to the lasso, a long
+cord terminated by a slip-noose, which they know how to throw at great
+distances, and almost always with certainty.</p>
+
+<p>With a thread which he obtains from the fibres of the aloe, with narrow
+strips of skin, closely woven, he composes a lasso more than fifty feet
+long; he tries it; he exercises it now against a tuft of leaves
+detached from a bush, now against some projecting rock; afterwards he
+tries it upon Marimonda, who often enough, by her agility and swiftness,
+puts her master at fault.</p>
+
+<p>In the interval of these preparatory exercises, Selkirk occupies himself
+with the construction of a latticed inclosure, destined to contain the
+flock which he hopes to possess; he makes it large and spacious, that
+his young cattle may bound and sport at their ease; high, that they may
+respect the limits he assigns them. In one corner, supported by solid
+posts, he builds a shed, simply covered with branches; that his flock
+may there be sheltered from the heat of the day. The inclosure and the
+shed, together with his garden, form a new addition to his great
+settlement.</p>
+
+<p>When, his kids shall have become goats, when the epoch of domesticity
+shall have arrived for them, when they shall have contracted habits of
+tameness, when they have learned to recognize his voice, then, and then
+only, will he permit them to wander and browse on the neighboring hills,
+under the direction of a vigilant guardian. This guardian, where shall
+he find? Why may it not be Marimonda? Marimonda, to whose intelligence
+he knows not where to affix bounds!</p>
+
+<p>Dreams, dreams, perhaps! and yet but for dreams, but for those gentle
+phantoms which he creates, and by which he surrounds himself, what would
+sustain the courage of the solitary?</p>
+
+<p>When Selkirk thinks he has acquired skill in the use of the lasso, he
+buries himself among the high mountains situated towards the central
+part of his island. Several days pass amid fruitless attempts, and when
+the delicately-carved foliage of the mimosa announces, by its folding,
+that night is approaching, he regains his cabin, gloomy, care-worn, and
+despairing of the future.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile, by his very failures, he has acquired experience. One
+evening, he returns to his dwelling, bringing with him two young kids,
+with scarcely perceptible horns, and reddish skin, varied with large
+brown spots. Marimonda welcomes her new guests, and this evening all in
+the habitation breathes joy and tranquillity.</p>
+
+<p>The week has not rolled away, when the number of Selkirk's goats exceeds
+that of his cats; and he takes pleasure in seeing them leap and play
+together in his inclosure; his mind has recovered its serenity.</p>
+
+<p>'Yes,' said he, with pride, 'man can suffice for himself, can depend on
+himself only for subsistence and welfare! Am I not a striking proof? Did
+not all seem lost for me, when an unforeseen catastrophe destroyed the
+remnant of the provision of powder which I owed to the pity of that
+miserable captain? Ah! undoubtedly according to his hateful
+calculations, he had limited the term of my life to the last charge
+which my gun should contain; this last charge is still there! Of what
+use will it be to me? Why do I need it? Are not my resources for
+subsistence more certain and numerous to-day than before? What then is
+wanting? The society of a Stradling and his fellows? God keep me from
+them! The best member of the crew of the brig Swordfish came away when I
+did. I have received from Marimonda more proofs of devotion than from
+all the companions I have had on land and on sea. What have I to regret?
+I am well off here; may God keep me in repose and health!'</p>
+
+<p>After this sally, he thought of his hives, which were still wanting, and
+of the methods to be employed to seize a swarm of bees.</p>
+
+<p>A month after, Selkirk, who religiously kept his reckoning on the margin
+of his Bible, resolved to celebrate the New Year. It was now the first
+of January, 1706.</p>
+
+<p>On this day he dined, not in his cabin, nor under his tree, but in the
+middle of the inclosure, surrounded by his family; fruits and good cheer
+were more abundant than usual; Marimonda, as was her custom, dined at
+the same table with himself: the cats shared in the feast; the goats
+roved around, stretching up to gaze with their blue eyes on the baskets
+of fruits, and returning to browse on the grass beneath the feet of the
+guests. Selkirk, as the master of the house, and chief of the family,
+generously distributed the provisions to his young and frolicksome
+republic, and Marimonda assisted him as well as she could, in doing the
+honors.</p>
+
+<p>After the repasts, there were races and combats; the remains of the
+baskets were thrown to the most skilful and the most adroit; then came,
+diversions and swings.</p>
+
+<p>Lying in his hammock, where he smoked his most excellent tobacco in his
+best pipe, Selkirk smilingly contemplated the capricious bounds, the
+riotous sports of his cats and kids, their graceful postures, their
+fraternal combats, in which sheathed claws and the inoffensive horn
+were the only weapons used on either side.</p>
+
+<p>To give more variety to the f&ecirc;te, Marimonda developes all the resources
+of her daring suppleness; she leaps from right to left, clearing large
+spaces with inconceivable dexterity. Attaining the summit of a tree, she
+whistles to attract her master's attention, then, with her two fore-paws
+clasped in her hind ones, she rolls herself up like a ball and drops on
+the ground; the foliage crackles beneath her fall, which seems as if it
+must be mortal; for her, this is only sport. Without altering the
+position of her limbs, she suddenly stops in her rapid descent, by means
+of her prehensile tail, that fifth hand, so powerful, with which nature
+has endowed the monkeys of America. Then, suspended by this organ alone,
+she accelerates her motions to and fro with incredible rapidity, quickly
+unwinds her tail from the branch by which she is suspended, and with a
+dart, traversing the air as if winged, alights at a hundred paces
+distance on a vine, which she instantly uses as a swing.</p>
+
+<p>Selkirk is astonished; he applauds the tricks of Marimonda, the sports
+and combats of his other subjects. Meanwhile, his eyes having turned
+towards the sea, his brow is suddenly overclouded. At the expiration of
+a few moments of an uneasy and agitated observation, he utters an
+exclamation, springs from his hammock, runs to his cabin, then to the
+shore, where he prostrates himself with his hands clasped and raised
+towards heaven.</p>
+
+<p>He has just perceived a sail.</p>
+
+<p>Provided with his glass, he seeks the sail upon the waves, he finds it.
+'It is without doubt a barque,' said he to himself; 'a barque from the
+neighboring island, or some point of the continent!' And looking again
+through his copper tube, he clearly distinguishes three masts well
+rigged, decorated with white sails, which are swelling in the east wind,
+and gilded by the oblique rays of the declining sun.</p>
+
+<p>'It is a brig! The Swordfish, perhaps! Yes, Stradling has prolonged his
+voyage in these regions. The time which he had fixed for my exile has
+rolled away! He is coming to seek me. May he be blessed!'</p>
+
+<p>The movement which the brig made to double the island, had increased
+more and more the hopes of Selkirk, when the Spanish flag, hoisted at
+the stern, suddenly unfolded itself to his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>'The enemy!' exclaimed he; 'woe is me! If they land on this coast,
+whither shall I fly, where conceal myself? In the mountains! Yes, I can
+there succeed in escaping them! But, the wretches! they will destroy my
+cabin, my inclosure, my garden! the fruit of so much anxiety and labor!'</p>
+
+<p>And, with palpitating heart, he again watches the manoeuvres of the
+brig. The latter, having tacked several times, as if to get before the
+wind, hastily changed her course and stood out to sea.</p>
+
+<p>Selkirk remains stupefied, overwhelmed. 'These are Spaniards,' murmured
+he, after a moment's hesitation; 'what matters it! Am I now their enemy?
+I am only a colonist, an exile, a deserter from the English navy. They
+owe me protection, assistance, as a Christian. If they required it, I
+would serve on board their vessel! But they have gone; what method
+shall I employ to recall them, to signalize my presence?'</p>
+
+<p>There was but one; it was to kindle a large fire on the shore or on the
+hill. He needs hewn wood, and his supplies are exhausted; what is to be
+done?</p>
+
+<p>For an instant, in his disturbed mind, the idea arises to tear the
+lattice-work from his inclosure, the pillars and the roof from his shed,
+to pile them around his cabin, and set fire to the whole.</p>
+
+<p>This idea he quickly repulses, but it suffices to show what passed in
+the inner folds of the heart of this man, who had just now forced
+himself to believe that happiness was yet possible for him.</p>
+
+<p>On farther reflection, he remembers that behind his grotto, on one of
+the first terraces of the mountain, there is a dense thicket, where the
+trees, embarrassed with vines and dry briers, closely interwoven,
+calcined by the burning reflections of the sun on the rock which
+surrounds them, present a collection of dead branches and mouldy trunks,
+scarcely masked by the semblance of vegetation.</p>
+
+<p>Thither he transports all the brands preserved under the ashes of his
+hearth; he makes a pile of them; throws upon it armfuls of chips, bark
+and leaves. The flame soon runs along the bushes which encircle the
+thicket; and, when the sun goes down, an immense column of fire
+illuminates all this part of the island, and throws its light far over
+the ocean.</p>
+
+<p>Standing on the shore, Selkirk passes the night with his eyes fixed on
+the sea, his ear listening attentively to catch the distant sound of a
+vessel; but nothing presents itself to his glance upon the luminous and
+sparkling waves, and amid their dashing he hears no other sound but
+that of the trees and vines crackling in the flames.</p>
+
+<p>At morning all has disappeared. The fire has exhausted itself without
+going beyond its bounds, and the sea, calm and tranquil, shows nothing
+upon its surface but a few flocks of gulls.</p>
+
+<p>A week passes away, during which Selkirk remains thoughtful and
+taciturn; he rarely leaves the shore; he still beholds the sports of his
+cats and his kids, but no longer smiles at them; Marimonda, by way of
+amusing him, renews in his presence her surprising feats, but the
+attention of the master is elsewhere.</p>
+
+<p>Nevertheless, he cannot allow himself time to dream long with impunity;
+his reserve of smoked beef is nearly exhausted; to save it, he has again
+resorted to the shell-fish, which his stomach loathes; to the sea-crabs,
+of which he is tired; he needs other nourishment to restore his
+strength. He shakes off his lethargy, takes his lasso, his game-bag. His
+plan now is, not to hunt the kids, but the goats themselves.</p>
+
+<p>As he is about to set out, Marimonda approaches, preparing to accompany
+him. In his present frame of mind, Selkirk wishes to be alone, and makes
+her comprehend, by signs, that she must remain at home and watch the
+flock; but this time, contrary to her custom, she does not seem disposed
+to obey. Notwithstanding his orders, she follows him, stops when he
+turns, recommences to follow him, and, by her supplicating looks and
+expressive gestures, seeks to obtain the permission which he persists in
+refusing. At last Selkirk speaks severely, and she submits, still
+protesting against it by her air of sadness and depression. Was this,
+on her part, caprice or foresight? No one has the secret of these
+inexplicable instincts, which sometimes reveal to animals the presence
+of an invisible enemy, or the approach of a disaster.</p>
+
+<p>At evening, Selkirk had not returned! Marimonda passed the night in
+awaiting him, uttering plaintive cries.</p>
+
+<p>On the morrow the morning rolled away, then the day, then the night, and
+the cabin remained deserted, and Marimonda in vain scaled the trees and
+hills in the neighborhood to recover traces of her master.</p>
+
+<p>What had become of him?</p>
+
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<h3>
+<a name="CHAPTER_IX"></a>CHAPTER IX.</h3>
+<br>
+
+<h4>The Precipice.&mdash;A Dungeon in a Desert Island.&mdash;Resignation.&mdash;The passing
+Bird.&mdash;The browsing Goat.&mdash;The bending Tree.&mdash;Attempts at Deliverance.
+&mdash;Success.&mdash;Death of Marimonda.</h4>
+
+<p>In that sterile and mountainous quarter of the island to which he has
+given the name of Stradling,&mdash;that name, importing to him
+misfortune,&mdash;Selkirk, venturing in pursuit of a goat, has fallen from a
+precipice.</p>
+
+<p>Fortunately the cavity is not deep. After a transient swoon, recovering
+his footing, experiencing only a general numbness, and some pain caused
+by the contusions resulting from his fall, he bethinks himself of the
+means of escape.</p>
+
+<p>But a circle of sharp rocks, contracting from the base to the summit,
+forms a tunnel over his head; no crevice, no precipitous ledge,
+interrupts their fatal uniformity. Only around him some platforms of
+sandy earth appear; he digs them with his knife, to form steps. Some
+fragments of roots project here and there through the interstices of the
+stones; he hopes to find a point of support by which to scale these
+abrupt walls. The little solidity of the roots, which give way in his
+grasp; his sufferings, which become more intense at every effort; these
+thousand rocky heads bending at once over him; all tell him plainly that
+it will be impossible for him to emerge from this hole&mdash;that it is
+destined to be his tomb.</p>
+
+<p>Poor young sailor, already condemned to isolation, separated from the
+rest of mankind, could he have foreseen that one day his captivity was
+to be still closer! that his steps would be chained, that the sight even
+of his island would be interdicted! and that in this desert, where he
+had neither persecutor nor jailer to fear, he would find a prison, a
+dungeon!</p>
+
+<p>After three days of anguish and tortures, after new and ineffectual
+attempts,&mdash;exhausted by fatigue, by thirst, by hunger,&mdash;consumed by
+fever, supervened in consequence of all his sufferings of body and soul,
+he resigns himself to his fate; with his foot, he prepares his last
+couch, composed of sand and dried leaves shaken from above by the
+neighboring trees; he lies down, folds his arms, closes his eyes, and
+prepares to die, thinking of his eternal salvation.</p>
+
+<p>Although he tries not to allow himself to be distracted by other
+thoughts, from time to time sounds from the outer world disturb his
+pious meditations. First it is the joyous song of a bird. To these
+vibrating notes another song replies from afar, on a more simple and
+almost plaintive key. It is doubtless the female, who, with a sort of
+modest and repressed tenderness, thus announces her retreat to him who
+calls; then a rapid rustling is heard above the head of the prisoner. It
+is the songster, hastening to rejoin his companion.</p>
+
+<p>Selkirk has never known love. Once perhaps,&mdash;in a fit of youth and
+delirium; and it was this false love which tore him from his studies,
+from his country!</p>
+
+<p>Ah! why did he not remain at Largo, with his father? To-day he also
+would have had a companion! In that smiling country where coolness
+dwells, where labor is so easy, life so sweet and calm, the paternal
+roof would have sheltered his happiness! Oh! the joys of his infancy!
+his green and sunny Scotland.</p>
+
+<p>The regrets which arise in his heart he quickly banishes; his dear
+remembrances he sacrifices to God; he weaves them into a fervent prayer.</p>
+
+<p>Very soon an approaching bleating rouses him again from his
+abstractions. A goat, with restless eye, has just stretched her head
+over the edge of the precipice, and for an instant fixes on him her
+astonished glance. Then, as if re-assured, defying his powerlessness,
+with a disdainful lip she quietly crops some tufts of grass growing on
+the verge of the tunnel.</p>
+
+<p>On seeing her, Selkirk instinctively lays his hand on the lasso which is
+beside him.</p>
+
+<p>'If I succeed in reaching her, in catching her,' said he, 'her blood
+will quench the thirst which devours me, her flesh will appease my
+hunger. But of what use would it be? Whence can I expect aid and succor
+for my deliverance? This would then only prolong my sufferings.'</p>
+
+<p>And, throwing aside the end of the lasso which he has just seized, he
+again folds his arms on his breast, and closes his eyes once more.</p>
+
+<p>I know not what stoical philosopher&mdash;Atticus, I believe, a prey to a
+malady which he thought incurable,&mdash;had resolved to die of inanition. At
+the expiration of a certain number of days, abstinence had cured him,
+and when his friends, in the number of whom he reckoned Cicero,
+exhorted him to take nourishment, persisting in his first resolution,
+'Of what use is it!' said he also, 'Must I not die sooner or later? Why
+should I then retrace my steps, when I have already travelled more than
+half the road?'</p>
+
+<p>Selkirk had more reason than Atticus to decide thus; besides, his
+friends, where are they, to exhort him to live? Friends!&mdash;has he ever
+had any?</p>
+
+<p>Night comes, and with the night a terrific hurricane arises. By the
+glare of the lightning he sees a tree, situated not far from the tunnel,
+bend towards him, almost broken by the violence of the wind.</p>
+
+<p>'Perhaps Providence will send me a method of saving myself!' murmured
+Selkirk; 'should the tree fall on this side, if its branches do not
+crush me, they will serve as steps to aid me to leave this pit! I am
+saved!'</p>
+
+<p>But the tree resists the storm, which passes away, carrying with it the
+last hope of the captive.</p>
+
+<p>Towards the morning of the fourth day his fever has ceased; the tortures
+of hunger and thirst are no longer felt; the complete annihilation of
+his strength is to him a kind of relief; sleep seizes him, and with
+sleep he thinks death must come.</p>
+
+<p>Soon, in his dream, in a hallucination springing undoubtedly from the
+weakness of his brain, plaints, confused and distant groans, reach him
+from different points of the island. These sorrowful cries, almost
+uninterrupted, afterwards approach, and are repeated with increasing
+strength. He awakes, he listens; the bushes around him crackle and
+rustle; even the earth emits a dull sound, as beneath the bounding of a
+goat; the cries are renewed and become more and more distinct, like the
+sobs of a child. Selkirk puts his hand to his forehead. These plaints,
+these sobs, he thinks he recognizes, and, suddenly raising himself with
+a convulsive effort, he exclaims:</p>
+
+<p>'Marimonda!'</p>
+
+<p>And Marimonda runs at her master's voice, changes, on seeing him, her
+cries of distress for cries of joy, leaps and gambols on the edge of the
+cavity, and, quickly finding a way to join him, suspends herself by her
+tail to one of the branches on the verge, and springs to his side.</p>
+
+<p>Then contortions, caresses, winks of the eyes, motions of the head,
+whining, whistling, succeed each other; she rolls before him, embraces
+him closely, seeking by every method to supply the place of that speech
+which alone is wanting, and which she almost seems to have. Good
+Marimonda! her humid and shivering skin, her bruised and bleeding feet,
+her in-flamed eyes, plainly tell Selkirk how long she has been in search
+of him, how she has watched, run, to find him, and, not finding him,
+what she has suffered at his absence.</p>
+
+<p>Her first transports over, by his pale complexion, by his dim eye, she
+quickly divines that it is want of food which has reduced him to this
+condition. Swift as a bird she climbs the sides of the tunnel; she
+repeatedly goes and returns, bringing each time fruits and canes full of
+savory and refreshing liquid. It is precisely the usual hour for their
+first repast, and once more they can partake of it together.</p>
+
+<p>Revived by this repast, by the sight of his companion in exile, Selkirk
+recovers his ideas of life and liberty. This abyss, from which she
+ascends with so much facility, who knows but with her aid he may be able
+in his turn to leave it? He remembers his lasso; he puts one end of it
+into Marimonda's hand. It is now necessary that she should fix it to
+some projection of the rock, some strong shrub, which may serve as a
+point of support.</p>
+
+<p>It was perhaps presuming too much on the intelligence which nature has
+bestowed on the race of monkeys. At her master's orders, Marimonda would
+seize the end of the cord, then immediately abandon it, as she needed
+entire freedom of motion to enable her to scale the walls of the tunnel.</p>
+
+<p>After several ineffectual attempts, Selkirk, as a last resort, decided
+to encircle Marimonda with the noose of the lasso, and, by a gesture, to
+send her towards those heights where he was so impatient to join her.</p>
+
+<p>She departs, dragging after her the chain, of which he holds the other
+extremity: this chain, the only bridge thrown for him between the abyss
+and the port of safety, between life and death!</p>
+
+<p>With what anxiety he observes, studies its oscillations! Several times
+he draws it towards him, and each time, as if in reply to his summons,
+Marimonda suddenly re-appears at the brow of the precipice, preparing to
+re-descend; but he repulses her with his voice and gestures, and when
+these methods are insufficient,&mdash;when Marimonda, exhausted with
+lassitude, seated on the verge of the tunnel, persists in remaining
+motionless, he has recourse to projectiles. To compel her to second him
+in his work, the possible realization of which he himself scarcely
+comprehends, he throws at her some fragments of stone detached from his
+rocky wall, and even the remains of that repast for which he is indebted
+to her. Even when she is at a distance, informed by the movements of the
+lasso of the direction she has taken, he pursues her still.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly the cord tightens in his hand. He pulls again, he pulls with
+force; the cord resists! Fire mounts to his brain; his sluggish blood is
+quickened; his heart and temples beat violently; his fever returns, but
+only to restore to him, at this decisive moment, his former vigor. He
+hastily digs new steps in the interstices of the rock; with his hands
+suspending himself to the lasso, assisted by his feet, by his knees,
+sometimes turning, grasping the projecting roots, the angles of his
+wall, he at last reaches the top of the cliff.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly he feels the lasso stretch, as if about to break; a mist passes
+over his eyes: his head becomes dizzy, the cord escapes his grasp. But,
+by a mechanical movement, he has seized one of the highest projections
+of the tunnel, he holds it, he climbs,&mdash;he is saved.</p>
+
+<p>And during this perilous ascension, absorbed in the difficulties of the
+undertaking, attentive to himself alone, staggering, with a buzzing
+sound in his ears, he has not heard a sorrowful, lamentable moaning, not
+far from him.</p>
+
+<p>Dragging hither and thither after her the rope of leather and fibre of
+aloes, Marimonda, rather, doubtless, by chance than by calculation, had
+enlaced it around the trunk of the same tree which the night before,
+during the storm, had agitated its dishevelled branches above the deep
+couch of the dying man. This trunk had served as a point of resistance;
+but, during the tension, the unfortunate monkey, with her breast against
+the tree, had herself been caught in the folds of the lasso.</p>
+
+<p>When Selkirk arrives, he finds her extended on the ground, blood and
+foam issuing from her mouth, and her eyes starting from their sockets.
+Kneeling beside her, he loosens the bonds which still detain her.
+Excited by his presence, Marimonda makes an effort to rise, but
+immediately falls back, uttering a new cry of pain.</p>
+
+<p>With his heart full of anguish, taking her in his arms, Selkirk, not
+without a painful effort, not without being obliged to pause on the way
+to recover his strength, carries her to the dwelling on the shore.</p>
+
+<p>This shore he finds deserted and in confusion.</p>
+
+<p>Deprived of their daily nourishment during the prolonged absence of
+their master, the goats have made a passage through the inclosure, by
+gnawing the still green foliage which imprisoned them; the hurricane of
+the night has overthrown the rest. Before leaving, they had ravaged the
+garden, destroyed the promises of the approaching harvest, and devoured
+even the bark of the young trees. The cats have followed the goats.
+Selkirk has before his eyes a spectacle of desolation; his props, his
+trellises, the remains of his orchard, of his inclosure, of his shed, a
+part even of the roof of his cabin, strew the earth in confusion around
+him.</p>
+
+<p>But it is not this which occupies him now. He has prepared for Marimonda
+a bed beside his own; he takes care of her, he watches over her, he
+leaves her only to seek in the woods, or on the mountains, the herb
+which may heal her; he brings all sorts, and by armfuls, that she may
+choose;&mdash;does she not know them better than himself?</p>
+
+<p>As she turns away her head, or repulses with the hand those which he
+presents, he thinks he has not yet discovered the one she requires, and
+though still suffering, though himself exhausted by so many varying
+emotions, he re-commences his search, to summon the entire island to the
+assistance of Marimonda. From each of his trees he borrows a branch;
+from his bushes, his rocks, his streams&mdash;a plant, a fruit, a leaf, a
+root! For the first time he ventures across the <i>pajonals</i>&mdash;spongy
+marshes formed by the sea along the cliffs, and where, beneath the shade
+of the mangroves, grow those singular vegetables, those gelatinous
+plants, endowed with vitality and motion. At sight of all these
+remedies, Marimonda closes her eyes, and reopens them only to address to
+her friend a look of gratitude.</p>
+
+<p>The only thing she accepts is the water he offers her, the water which
+he himself holds to her lips in his cocoa-nut cup.</p>
+
+<p>During a whole week, Selkirk remains constantly absorbed in these cares,
+useless cares!&mdash;Marimonda cannot be healed! In her breast, bruised by
+the folds of the lasso, exists an important lesion of the organs
+essential to life, and from time to time a gush of blood reddens her
+white teeth.</p>
+
+<p>'What!' said Selkirk to himself, 'she has then accompanied me on this
+corner of earth only to be my victim! To her first caress I replied
+only by brutality; the first shot I fired in this island was directed
+against her. I pursued for a long time, with my thoughtless and stupid
+hatred, the only being who has ever loved me, and who to-day is dying
+for having saved me from that precipice from which I drove her with
+blows of stones! Marimonda, my companion, my friend,&mdash;no! thou shalt not
+die! He who sent thee to me as a consolation will not take thee away so
+soon, to leave me a thousand times more alone, more unhappy, than ever!
+God, in clothing thee with a form almost human, has undoubtedly given
+thee a soul almost like ours; the gleam of tenderness and intelligence
+which shines in thine eyes, where could it have been lighted, but at
+that divine fire whence all affection and devotion emanate? Well! I will
+implore Him for thee; and if He refuse to hear me, it will be because He
+has forgotten me, because He has entirely forsaken me, and I shall have
+nothing more to expect from His mercy!'</p>
+
+<p>Falling then upon his knees, with his forehead upon the ground, he prays
+God for Marimonda.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile, from day to day the poor invalid grows weaker; her eyes
+become dim and glassy; her limbs frightfully emaciated, and her hair
+comes off in large masses.</p>
+
+<p>One evening, exhausted with fatigue, after having wrapped in a covering
+of goat-skin Marimonda, who was in a violent fever, Selkirk was
+preparing to retire to rest; she detained him, and, taking his hand in
+both of hers, cast upon him a gentle and prolonged look, which resembled
+an adieu.</p>
+
+<p>He seated himself beside her on the ground.</p>
+
+<p>Then, without letting go his hand, she leaned her head on her master's
+knee, and fell asleep in this position. Selkirk dares not stir, for fear
+of disturbing her repose. Insensibly sleep seizes him also.</p>
+
+<p>In the morning when he awakes, the sun is illuminating the interior of
+his cabin; Marimonda remains in the same attitude as the evening before,
+but her hands are cold, and a swarm of flies and mosquitoes are
+thrusting their sharp trunks into her eyes and ears.</p>
+
+<p>She is a corpse.</p>
+
+<p>Selkirk raises her, uttering a cry, and, after having cast an angry look
+towards heaven, wipes away two tears that trickle down his cheeks.</p>
+
+<p>Thou thoughtest thyself insensible, Selkirk, and behold, thou art
+weeping!&mdash;thou, who hast more than once seen, with unmoistened eye, men,
+thy companions, in war or at sea, fall beneath a furious sword, or under
+the fire of batteries! Among the sentiments which honor humanity, which
+elevate it notwithstanding its defects, thou hadst preserved at least
+thy confidence in God and in his mercy, Selkirk, and to-day thou
+doubtest both!</p>
+
+<p>Why dost thou weep? why dost thou distrust God?</p>
+
+<p>Because thy monkey is dead!</p>
+
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<h3>
+<a name="CHAPTER_X"></a>CHAPTER X.</h3>
+<br>
+
+<h4>Discouragement.&mdash;A Discovery.&mdash;A Retrospective Glance.&mdash;Project of
+Suicide.&mdash;The Last Shot.&mdash;The Sea Serpent.&mdash;The <i>Porro</i>.&mdash;A Message.
+&mdash;Another Solitary.</h4>
+
+<p>His provisions are exhausted, and Selkirk thinks not of renewing them;
+his settlement on the shore is destroyed, and he thinks not of
+rebuilding it; the fish-pond, the bed of water-cresses are encroached
+upon by sand and weeds, and he thinks not of repairing them. His mind,
+completely discouraged, recoils before such labors; he has scarcely
+troubled himself to replace the roof of his cabin.</p>
+
+<p>In the midst of his dreams, Selkirk had not counted enough on two
+terrific guests, which must sooner or later come: despair and <i>ennui</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Nevertheless, he had read in his Bible this passage: 'As the worm
+gnaweth the garment and rottenness the wood, so doth the weariness of
+solitude gnaw the heart of man.'</p>
+
+<p>One day, as he was descending from the Oasis, where he had dug a tomb
+for Marimonda, he bethought himself of visiting the site of his burning
+wood.</p>
+
+<p>Around him, the earth, blackened by the ravages of the fire, presented
+only a naked, gloomy and desolate picture. To his great surprise,
+beneath the ruins, under coal dust and half-calcined trunks of trees,
+he discovered, elevated several feet above the soil, the partition of a
+wall, some stones quarried out and placed one upon another; in fine, the
+remains of a building, evidently constructed by the hand of man.</p>
+
+<p>Men had then inhabited this island before him! What had become of them?
+This wood, impenetrably choked, stifled with thorny bushes, briars and
+vines, and which he had delivered over to the flames, was undoubtedly a
+garden planted by them, on a sheltered declivity of the mountain; the
+garden which surrounded their habitation, as he had himself designed his
+own to do.</p>
+
+<p>Ah! if he could have but found them in the island, how different would
+have been his fate! But to live alone! to have no companions but his own
+thoughts! amid the dash of waves, the cry of birds, the bleating of
+goats, incessantly to imagine the sound of a human voice, and
+incessantly to experience the torture of being undeceived! What elements
+of happiness has he ever met in this miserable island? When he dreamed
+of creating resources for a long and peaceful future, he lied to
+himself. A life favored by leisure would but crush him the oftener
+beneath the weight of thought, and it is thought which is killing him,
+the thought of isolation!</p>
+
+<p>What import to him the beautiful sights spread out before his eyes? The
+vast extent of sky and earth has repeated to him each day that he is
+lost, forgotten on an obscure point of the globe. The sunrises and
+sunsets, with their magic aspects, this luxuriant tropical vegetation,
+the magnificent and picturesque scenery of his island, awaken in him
+only a feeling of restraint, an uneasiness which he cannot define.
+Perhaps the emotions, so sweet to all, are painful to him only because
+he cannot communicate them, share them with another. It is not the noisy
+life of cities which he asks, not even that of the shore. But, at least,
+a companion, a being to reply to his voice, to be associated with his
+joys, his sorrows. Marimonda! No, he recognizes it now! Marimonda could
+amuse him, but was not sufficient; she inhabited with him only the
+exterior world, she communicated with him only by things visible and
+palpable; her affection for her master, her gentleness, her admirable
+instinct, sometimes succeeded in lessening the distance which separated
+their two natures, but did not wholly fill up the interval.</p>
+
+<p>He had exaggerated the intelligence which, besides, increased at the
+expense of her strength, as with all monkeys; for God has not willed
+that an animal should approximate too closely to man; he had overrated
+the sense of her acts, because he needed near him a thinking and acting
+being; but with her, confidences, plans, hopes, communication, the
+exchange of all those intimate and mysterious thoughts which are the
+life of the soul, were they possible? Even her eyes did not see like his
+own; admiration was forbidden to her; admiration, that precious faculty,
+which exists only for man,&mdash;and which becomes extinct by isolation.</p>
+
+<p>How many others become extinct also!</p>
+
+<p>Self-love, a just self-esteem, that powerful lever which sustains us,
+which elevates us, which compels us to respect in ourselves that
+nobility of race which we derive from God, what becomes of it in
+solitude? For Selkirk, vanity itself has lost its power to stimulate.
+Formerly, when in the presence of his comrades at St. Andrew or of the
+royal fleet, he had signalized himself by feats of address or courage, a
+sentiment of pride or triumph had inspired him. Since his arrival in the
+island, his courage and address have had but too frequent opportunities
+of exercising themselves, but he has been excited only by want, by
+necessity, by a purely personal interest. Besides, can one utter an
+exclamation of triumph, where there is not even an echo to repeat it?</p>
+
+<p>After having thus painfully passed in review all of which his exile from
+the world had deprived him, he exclaimed:</p>
+
+<p>'To live alone, what a martyrdom! to live useless to all, what a
+disgrace! What! does no one need me? What! are generosity, devotion,
+even pity, all those noble instincts by which the soul reveals itself,
+for ever interdicted to me? This is death, death premature and shameful!
+Ah! why did I not remain at the foot of that precipice?'</p>
+
+<p>With downcast head, he remained some time overwhelmed with the weight of
+his discouragement; then, suddenly, his brow cleared up, a sinister
+thought crossed his mind; he ran to his cabin, seized his gun. This last
+shot, this last charge of powder and lead, which he has preserved so
+preciously as a final resource, it will serve to put an end to his days!
+Well, is not this the most valuable service he can expect from it? He
+examines the gun; the priming is yet undisturbed; he passes his nail
+over the flint, leans the butt against the ground, takes off the thick
+leather which covers his foot, that he may be able to fire with more
+certainty. But during all these preparations his resolution grows
+weaker; he trembles as he rests the gun against his temples; that
+sentiment of self-preservation, so profoundly implanted in the heart of
+man, re-awakens in him. He hesitates&mdash;thrice returning to his first
+resolution, he brings the gun to his forehead; thrice he removes it. At
+last, to drive away this demon of suicide, he fires it in the air.</p>
+
+<p>Scarcely has he thus uselessly thrown away this precious shot before he
+repents. He approaches the shore; it is at the moment when the tide is
+at its lowest ebb; the sun touches the horizon. Selkirk lies down on the
+damp beach:&mdash;'When the wave returns,' said he, 'if it be God's will, let
+it take me!'</p>
+
+<p>Slumber comes first. Exhausted with emotion, yielding to the lassitude
+of his mind, he falls asleep. In the middle of the night, suddenly
+awakened by the sound of the advancing wave, he again flees before the
+threat of death; he no longer wishes to die. Once in safety, he turns to
+contemplate that immense sea which, for an instant, he had wished might
+be his tomb.</p>
+
+<p>By the moonlight, he perceives as it were a long and slender chain,
+which, gliding upon the crest of the waves, directs itself towards the
+shore. By its form, by its copper color, by the multiplicity of its
+rings, unfolding in the distance, Selkirk recognizes the sea-serpent,
+that terror of navigators, as he has often heard it described.</p>
+
+<p>The mind of the solitary is a perpetual mirage.</p>
+
+<p>Filled with terror, he flies again; he conceals himself, trembling, in
+the caverns of his mountains; he has become a coward; why should he
+affect a courage he does not feel? No one is looking at him!</p>
+
+<p>The next day, instead of the sea-serpent, he finds on the beach an
+immense cryptogamia, a gigantic alga, of a single piece, divided into a
+thousand cylindrical branches, and much superior to all those he has
+observed in the Straits of Sunda. The rising tide had thrown it on the
+shore.</p>
+
+<p>While he examines it, he sees with surprise all sorts of birds come to
+peck at it; coatis, agoutis, and even rats, come out of their holes,
+boldly carrying away before his eyes fragments, whence issues a thick
+and brown sap. Emboldened by their example, and especially by the
+balsamic odor of the plant, he tastes it. It is sweet and succulent.</p>
+
+<p>This plant is no other than that providential vegetable called by the
+Spaniards <i>porro</i>, and which forms so large a part of the nourishment of
+the poor inhabitants of
+Chili.<a href="#Footnote_7"><sup>[1]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_7"></a><sup>[1]</sup></p>
+<blockquote> It is the <i>Durvilloea utilis</i>, dedicated to Dumont
+d'Urville, by Bory de St. Vincent, and classed by him in the
+laminari&eacute;es, an important and valuable family of marine cryptogamia.</blockquote>
+
+<p>The sea, which had already sent Selkirk seals to furnish him with oil
+and furs in a moment of distress, had just come to his assistance by
+giving him an easily procured aliment for a long time.</p>
+
+<p>Another surprise awaits him.</p>
+
+<p>Between the interlaced branches of his alga, he discovers a little
+bottle, strongly secured with a cork and wax. It contains a fragment of
+parchment, on which are traced some lines in the Spanish language.</p>
+
+<p>Although he is but imperfectly acquainted with this language, though the
+characters are partially effaced or scarcely legible, Selkirk, by dint
+of patience and study, soon deciphers the following words:</p>
+
+<p>'In the name of the Holy Trinity, to you who may read'&mdash;(here some words
+were wanting,)&mdash;'greeting. My name is Jean Gons&mdash;(Gonzalve or Gonsales;
+the rest of the name was illegible.) After having seen my two sons, and
+almost all my fortune, swallowed up in the sea with the vessel <i>Fernand
+Cortes</i>, in which I was a passenger, thrown by shipwreck on the coasts
+of the Island of San Ambrosio, near Chili, I live here alone and
+desolate. May God and men come to my aid!'</p>
+
+<p>At the bottom of the parchment, some other characters were perceptible,
+but without form, without connection, and almost entirely destroyed by a
+slight mould which had collected at the bottom of the bottle.</p>
+
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<h3>
+<a name="CHAPTER_XI"></a>CHAPTER XI.</h3>
+<br>
+
+<h4>The Island San Ambrosio.&mdash;Selkirk at last knows what Friendship is.&mdash;The
+Raft.&mdash;Visits to the Tomb of Marimonda.&mdash;The Departure.&mdash;The two
+Islands.&mdash;Shipwreck.&mdash;The Port of Safety.</h4>
+
+<p>As he read this, Selkirk was seized with intense pity for the
+unfortunate shipwrecked. What! on this same ocean, undoubtedly on these
+same shores, lives another unhappy being, like himself exiled from the
+world, enduring the same sufferings, subject to the same wants,
+experiencing the same <i>ennui</i>, the same anguish as himself! this man has
+confided to the sea his cry of distress, his complaint, and the sea, a
+faithful messenger, has just deposited it at the feet of Selkirk!</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly he remembers that rock, that island, discerned by him, on the
+day when at the Oasis, he was reconciled to Marimonda.</p>
+
+<p>That is the island of San Ambrosio; it is there, he does not doubt it
+for an instant, that his new friend lives; yes, his friend! for, from
+this moment he experiences for him an emotion of sympathetic affection.
+He loves him, he is so much to be pitied! Poor father, he has lost his
+sons, he has lost his fortune and the hope of returning to his country;
+and yet there reigns in his letter a tone of dignified calmness, of
+religious resignation which can come only from a noble heart. He is a
+Spaniard and a Roman Catholic; Selkirk is a Scotchman and a
+Presbyterian; what matters it?</p>
+
+<p>To-day his friend demands assistance, and he has resolved to dare all,
+to undertake all to respond to his appeal. Like a lamp deprived of air,
+his mind has revived at this idea, that he can at last be useful to
+others than himself. The inhabitant of San Ambrosio shall be indebted to
+him for an alleviation of his sorrows; for companionship in them. What
+is there visionary about this hope? Had he not already conceived the
+project of preparing a barque to explore that unknown coast? God seems
+to encourage his design, by sending him at once this double manna for
+the body and soul, the <i>porro</i>, which will suffice for his nourishment,
+and this writing, which the wave has just brought, to impose on him a
+duty.</p>
+
+<p>He immediately sets himself to the work, and obstacles are powerless to
+chill his generous excitement. Of the vegetable productions of the
+island, the red cedar and myrtle are those which grow of the largest
+size;<a href="#Footnote_8"><sup>[1]</sup></a>
+but yet their trunks are not large enough to serve when
+hollowed out for a barque. Well! he will construct a raft.</p>
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_8"></a><sup>[1]</sup></p>
+<blockquote> The <i>myrtus maximus</i> attains 13 metres (a little more than
+42 feet) in height.]</blockquote>
+
+<p>He fells young trees, cuts off their branches, rolls them to the shore,
+on a platform of sand, which the waves reach at certain periods; he
+fastens them solidly together with a triple net-work of plaited leather,
+cords woven of the fibre of the aloe, supple and tough vines; he
+chooses another with diverging and horizontal roots, the habitual
+direction taken by all the large vegetables of this island, the sand of
+which is covered only by two feet of earth. This shall be the mast. He
+plants it in the middle of the raft, where it is kept upright by its
+roots, knotted and interwoven with the various pieces which compose the
+floor. For a sail, has he not that which was left him by the Swordfish?
+and will not his seal-skin hammock serve as a spare sail?</p>
+
+<p>He afterwards constructs a helm, then two strong oars, that he may
+neglect no chance of success. He fastens his structure still more firmly
+by all that remains to him of his nails and bolts, and awaits the high
+tide to launch his skiff upon the sea.</p>
+
+<p>He has never felt calmer, happier, than during the long time occupied in
+these labors; their object has doubled his strength. The moments of
+indispensable repose, he has passed at the Oasis, beside the tomb of
+Marimonda, of that Marimonda, who by her example, opened to him the life
+of devotedness in which he has just engaged. Thence, with his eye turned
+upon that island where dwells the unknown friend from whom he has
+received a summons, he talks to him, encourages him, consoles him; he
+imparts to him his resolution to join him soon, and it seems as if the
+same waves which had brought the message will also undertake to transmit
+the reply.</p>
+
+<p>At present, Selkirk finds some sweetness in pitying evils which are not
+his own; he no longer dreams of wrapping himself in a cloak of
+selfishness; that disdainful heart, hitherto invincibly closed, at last
+experiences friendship, or at least aspires to do so.</p>
+
+<p>At last, the day arrives when the sea, inundating the marshes, bending
+the mangroves, reaches, on the sandy platform, one of the corners of his
+raft.</p>
+
+<p>Selkirk hastens to transport thither his hatchets, his guns, his
+seal-skins and goat-skins, his Bible, his spy-glass, his pipes, his
+ladder, his stools, even his traps; all his riches! it is a complete
+removal.</p>
+
+<p>On taking possession of the island, he had engraved on the bark of
+several trees the date of his arrival; he now inscribes upon them the
+day of his departure. For many months his reckoning has been
+interrupted; to determine the date is impossible; he knows only the day
+of the week.</p>
+
+<p>When the wave had entirely raised his barque, aiding himself with one of
+the long oars to propel it over the rocky bottom, he gained the sea.
+Then, after having adjusted his sail, with his hand on the helm, he
+turned towards his island to address to it an adieu, laden with
+maledictions rather than regrets.</p>
+
+<p>Swelled by a south-east wind, the sail pursues its course towards that
+other land, the object of his new desires. At the expiration of some
+hours, by the aid of his glass, what from the summit of his mountains
+had appeared to him only a dark point, a rock beaten by the waves, seems
+already enlarged, allowing him to see high hills covered with verdure.
+He has not then deceived himself! There exists a habitable
+land,&mdash;habitable for two! It has served as a refuge to the shipwrecked
+man, to his friend! Ah! how impatient he is to reach this shore where he
+is to meet him!</p>
+
+<p>Several hours more of a slow but peaceful navigation roll away. He has
+arrived at a distance almost midway between the point of departure and
+that of arrival. Looking alternately at the islands Selkirk and San
+Ambrosio, both illuminated by the sunset, with their indefinite forms,
+their bases buried in the waves, their terraced summits, veiled with a
+light fog, they appear like the reflection of each other. But for the
+discovery which he had previously made of the second, he would have
+believed this was his own island, or rather its image, represented in
+the waters of the sea.</p>
+
+<p>But in proportion as he advances towards his new conquest, it increases
+to his eyes, as if to testify the reality of its existence, now by a
+mountain peak, now by a cape. He had seen only the profile, it now
+presents its face, ready to develope all its graces, all its
+fascinations; while its rival, disdained, abandoned, becomes by degrees
+effaced, and seems to wish to conceal its humiliation beneath the wave
+of the great ocean.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly, without any apparent jar, without any flaw of wind, on a calm
+sea, the stem of the tree serving as a mast vacillates, bends forward,
+then on one side; the roots, which fasten it to the floor of the raft,
+are wrenched from their hold; the sail, diverging in the same direction,
+still extended, drags it entirely down, and it is borne away by the
+wave.</p>
+
+<p>Struck with astonishment, Selkirk puts his foot on the helm, and seizes
+his oars; but oars are powerless to move so heavy a machine. What is to
+be done?</p>
+
+<p>He who has not been able to endure isolation in the midst of a
+terrestrial paradise, from which he has just voluntarily exiled
+himself, must he then he reduced to have for an asylum, on the immensity
+of the ocean, only a few trunks of trees scarcely lashed together?</p>
+
+<p>The situation is frightful, terrific; Selkirk dares not contemplate it,
+lest his reason should give way. He must have a sail; a mast! He has his
+spare sail; for the mast, his only resource is to detach one of the
+timbers which compose the frame-work of his raft. Perhaps this will
+destroy its solidity; but he has no choice.</p>
+
+<p>He takes the best of his hatchets, chooses among the straight stems of
+which his floating dwelling is composed, that which seems most suitable;
+he cuts away with a thousand precautions, the bonds which fasten it; he
+frees it, not without difficulty, from the contact of other logs to
+which it has been attached. But while he devotes himself to this task,
+the raft, obedient to a mysterious motion of the sea, has slowly drifted
+on; the surface is covered with foam, as if sub-marine waves are lashing
+it. Selkirk springs to the helm; the tiller breaks in his hands; he
+seizes the oars, they also break. An unknown force hurries him on. He
+has just fallen into one of those rapid currents which, from north to
+south, traverse the waters of the Pacific Ocean.</p>
+
+<p>Borne away in a contrary direction from that which he has hitherto
+pursued, the land of which he had come in search seems to fly before
+him. Whither is he going? Into what regions, into what solitudes of the
+sea is he to be carried, far from islands and continents?</p>
+
+<p>To add to his terror, in these latitudes, where day suddenly succeeds
+to night and night to day, where twilight is unknown, the sun, just now
+shining brightly, suddenly sinks below the horizon.</p>
+
+<p>In the midst of profound darkness, the unhappy man pursues this fatal
+race, leading to inevitable destruction. During a part of this terrible
+night, he hears the frail frame-work which supports him cracking beneath
+his feet. How long must his sufferings last? He knows not. At last,
+jostled by adverse waves, shaken to its centre, the raft begins to whirl
+around, and something heavier than the shock of the wave comes
+repeatedly to give it new and rude blows. The first rays of the rising
+moon, far from calming the terrors of the unhappy mariner, increase
+them. In his dizzy brain, these wan rays which silver the surface of the
+sea, seem so many phantoms coming to be present at his last moments.
+Pale, bent double, with his hair standing upright, clinging to some
+projection of his barque, he in vain attempts to fix his glance on
+certain strange objects which he sees ascending, descending, and rolling
+around him.</p>
+
+<p>They are the trunks of the trees which formed a part of his raft, limbs
+detached from its body, and which, now drawn into the same whirlpool,
+are by their repeated shocks, aiding in his complete destruction.</p>
+
+<p>In face of this imminent, implacable death, Selkirk ceases to struggle
+against it. He has now but one resource; the belief in another life. The
+religious instinct, which has already come to his assistance, revives
+with force. Clinging with his hands and feet to these wavering timbers,
+which are almost disjoined, half inundated by the wave, which is
+encroaching more and more upon his last asylum, he directs his steps
+towards the spot where he had deposited his arms and furs; he takes from
+among them his Bible, not to read it, but to clasp it to his heart,
+whose agitation and terror seem to grow calm beneath its sacred contact.</p>
+
+<p>He then attempts to absorb his thoughts in God; he blames himself for
+not having been contented with the gifts he had received from Him; he
+might have lived happily in Scotland, or in the royal navy. It is this
+perpetual desire for change, these aspirations after the unknown, which
+have occasioned his ruin.</p>
+
+<p>At this moment, raising his eyes towards heaven, he sees, beneath the
+pale rays of the moon, a mass of rocks rising at a little distance,
+which he immediately recognizes. There is the bay of the Seals, the peak
+of the Discovery. That hollow, lying in the shadow, is the valley of the
+Oasis! As on the first day of his arrival, on one of the steepest
+summits of the mountain, he perceives stationed there, immovable, like a
+sentinel, a goat, between whose delicate limbs shines a group of stars,
+celestial eyes, whose golden lids seem to vibrate as if in appeal. It is
+his island! He does not hesitate; suddenly recovering all his energies,
+he springs from the raft, struggles with vigor, with perseverance
+against the current, triumphs over it, and, after prolonged efforts, at
+last reaches this haven of deliverance, this port of safety; he lands,
+fatigued, exhausted, but overcome with joy and gratitude. Profoundly
+thanking God from his heart, he prostrates himself, and kisses with
+transport the hospitable soil of this island,&mdash;which, on the morning of
+the same day, he had cursed.</p>
+
+<p>Alas! does not reflection quickly diminish this lively joy at his
+return and safety? From this shipwreck, poor sailor, thou hast saved
+only thyself: thy tools, thy instruments of labor, even thy Bible, are a
+prey to the sea!</p>
+
+<p>It is now, Selkirk, that thou must suffice for thyself! It is the last
+trial to which thou canst be subjected!</p>
+
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<h3>
+<a name="CHAPTER_XII"></a>CHAPTER XII.</h3>
+<br>
+
+<h4>The Island of Juan Fernandez.&mdash;Encounter in the Mountains.&mdash;Discussion.
+&mdash;A New Captivity.&mdash;A Cannon-shot.&mdash;Dampier and Selkirk.&mdash;<i>Mas a Fuera</i>.
+&mdash;News of Stradling.&mdash;Confidences.&mdash;End of the History of the real
+Robinson Crusoe.&mdash;Nebuchadnezzar.</h4>
+
+<p>On the 1st of February, 1709, an English vessel, equipped and sent to
+sea by the merchants of Bristol, after having sailed around Cape Horn,
+in company with another vessel belonging to the same expedition, touched
+alone, about the 33d degree of south latitude, at the Island of Juan
+Fernandez, from a hundred and ten to a hundred and twenty leagues
+distant from the coast of Chili.</p>
+
+<p>The second ship was to join her without delay. Symptoms of the scurvy
+had appeared on board, and it was intended to remain here for some time,
+to give the crew opportunity of recovering their health.</p>
+
+<p>Their tents pitched, towards evening several sailors, having ventured
+upon the island, were not a little surprised to see, through the
+obscurity, a strange being, bearing some resemblance to the human form,
+who, at their approach, scaling the mountains, leaping from rock to
+rock, fled with the rapidity of a deer, the lightness of a chamois.</p>
+
+<p>Some doubted whether it was a man, and prepared to fire at him. They
+were prevented by an officer named Dower, who accompanied them.</p>
+
+<p>On their return to their companions, the sailors related what they had
+seen; Dower did not fail to do the same among the officers; and this
+evening, at the encampment on the shore, in the forecastle as well as on
+the quarter-deck, there were narratives and suppositions that would
+'amuse an assembly of Puritans through the whole of Lent,' says the
+account from which we borrow a part of our information.</p>
+
+<p>At this period, tales of the marvellous gained great credence among
+sailors. Not long before, the Spaniards had discovered giants in
+Patagonia; the Portuguese, sirens in the seas of Brazil; the French,
+tritons and satyrs at Martinique; the Dutch, black men, with feet like
+lobsters, beyond Paramaribo.</p>
+
+<p>The strange individual under discussion was unquestionably a satyr, or
+at least one of those four-footed, hairy men, such as the authentic
+James Carter declared he had met with in the northern part of America.</p>
+
+<p>Some, thinking this conclusion too simple, adroitly insinuated that no
+one among the sailors who had met this monster, had noticed in him so
+great a number of paws. Why four paws?&mdash;why should he not be a
+monopedous man, a man whose body, terminated by a single leg, cleared,
+with this support alone, considerable distances? Was not the existence
+of the monopedous man attested by modern travellers, and even in
+antiquity and the middle ages, by Pliny and St. Augustine?</p>
+
+<p>Others preferred to imagine in this singular personage the acephalous
+man, the man without a head, named by the grave Baumgarthen as existing
+on the new continent. They had not discovered many legs, but neither had
+they discovered a head; why should he have one?</p>
+
+<p>And the discussion continued, and not a voice was raised to risk this
+judicious observation; if neither head nor limbs have been
+distinguished, it may perhaps be because he has been seen only in the
+dark.</p>
+
+<p>The next day, each wished to be satisfied; a regular hunt was organized
+against this phenomenon; they set out, invaded his retreat, pursued him,
+surrounded him, at last seized him, and the brave sailors of Great
+Britain discovered with stupefaction, in this monopedous, acephalous
+man, in this satyr, this cercopithecus, what? A countryman, a Scotchman,
+a subject of Queen Anne!</p>
+
+<p>It was Selkirk; Selkirk, his hair long and in disorder, his limbs
+encased in fragments of skins, and half deprived of his reason.</p>
+
+<p>His island was Juan Fernandez, so called by the first navigator who
+discovered it; this was Selkirk Island.</p>
+
+<p>When he was conducted before Captain Woodes Rogers, commander of the
+expedition, to the interrogations of the latter, the unfortunate man,
+with downcast look, and agitated with a nervous trembling, replied only
+by repeating mechanically the last syllables of the phrases which were
+addressed to him by the captain.</p>
+
+<p>A little recovered from his agitation, discovering that he had
+Englishmen to deal with, he attempted to pronounce some words; he could
+only mutter a few incoherent and disconnected sentences.</p>
+
+<p>'Solitude and the care of providing for his subsistence,' says Paw, 'had
+so occupied his mind, that all rational ideas were effaced from it. As
+savage as the animals, and perhaps more so, he had almost entirely
+forgotten the secret of articulating intelligible sounds.'</p>
+
+<p>Captain Rogers having asked him how long he had been secluded in this
+island, Selkirk remained silent; he nevertheless understood the
+question, for his eyes immediately opened with terror, as if he had just
+measured the long space of time which his exile had lasted. He was far
+from having an exact idea of it; he appreciated it only by the
+sufferings he had endured there, and, looking fixedly at his hands, he
+opened and shut them several times.</p>
+
+<p>Reckoning by the number of his fingers, it was twenty or thirty years,
+and every one at first believed in the accuracy of his calculation, so
+completely did his forehead, furrowed with wrinkles, his skin blackened,
+withered by the sun, his hair whitened at the roots, his gray beard,
+give him the aspect of an old man.</p>
+
+<p>Selkirk was born in 1680; he was then only twenty-nine.</p>
+
+<p>After having replied thus, he turned his head, cast a troubled look on
+the objects which surrounded him; a remembrance seemed to awaken, and,
+uttering a cry, stepping forward, he pointed with his finger to a cedar
+on his left. It was the tree on which, when he left the Swordfish, he
+had inscribed the date of his arrival in the island. The officer Dower
+approached, and, notwithstanding the crumbling of the decayed bark,
+could still read there this inscription:</p>
+
+<p>'Alexander Selkirk&mdash;from Largo, Scotland, Oct. 27, 1704.'</p>
+
+<p>His exile from the world had therefore lasted four years and three
+months.</p>
+
+<p>Notwithstanding the interest excited by his misfortunes, by his name,
+his accent, more than by his language, Captain Rogers, an honorable and
+humane man, but of extreme severity on all that appertained to
+discipline, recognized him as a British subject, suspected him to be a
+deserter from the English navy, and gave orders that he should be put
+under guard, pending a definitive decision.</p>
+
+<p>The sailors commissioned to this office did not find it an easy thing to
+guard a prisoner who could climb the trees like a squirrel, and outstrip
+them all in a race. As a precaution, they commenced by binding him
+firmly to the same cedar on which his name was engraved. There the
+unfortunate Selkirk figured as a curious animal, ornamented with a
+label.</p>
+
+<p>Afterwards, more for pastime than through mischief, they tormented him
+with questions, to obtain from him hesitating or almost senseless
+replies, which bewildered him much; then they began to examine, with
+childish surprise, the length of his beard, of his hair and nails; the
+prodigious development of his muscles; his bare feet, so hardened by
+travel, that they seemed to be covered with horn moccasins. Having found
+beneath his goat-skin rags, a knife, whose blade, by dint of use and
+sharpening, was almost reduced to the proportions of that of a
+penknife, they took it away to examine it; but on seeing himself
+deprived of this single weapon, the only relic of his shipwreck, the
+prisoner struggled, uttering wild howls; they restored it to him.</p>
+
+<p>At the hour of repast, Selkirk had, like the rest, his portion of meat
+and biscuit. He ate the biscuit, manifesting great satisfaction; but he,
+who had at first suffered so much from being deprived of salt, found in
+the meat a degree of saltness insupportable. He pointed to the stream;
+one of his guards courteously offered him his gourd, containing a
+mixture of rum and water; he approached it to his lips, and immediately
+threw it away with violence, as if it had burned him.</p>
+
+<p>At evening, he was transported on board.</p>
+
+<p>A few days after he began to acquire a taste for common food; his ideas
+became more definite; speech returned to his lips more freely and
+clearly; but liberty of motion was not yet restored to him, a new
+captivity opened before him, and his irritation at this was presenting
+an obstacle to the complete restoration of his faculties, when God, who
+had so deeply tried him, came to his assistance.</p>
+
+<p>One morning, as the crew of the ship were occupied, some in caulking and
+tarring it, others in gathering edible plants on the island, a
+cannon-shot resounded along the waves. The caulkers climbed up the
+rigging, the provision-hunters ran to the shore, the officers seized
+their spy-glasses, and all together quickly uttered a <i>huzza</i>! The
+vessel which had sailed in company with that of Captain Rogers, the
+Duchess, of Bristol, had arrived. This vessel, commanded by William
+Cook, had, for a master-pilot, a man more celebrated in maritime annals
+than the commanders of the expedition themselves;&mdash;this was Dampier, the
+indefatigable William Dampier, who, a short time since a millionaire,
+now completely ruined in consequence of foolish speculations and
+prodigalities, had just undertaken a third voyage around the world.</p>
+
+<p>Scarcely had he disembarked, when he heard of the great event of the
+day&mdash;of the wild man. His name was mentioned, he remembered having known
+an Alexander Selkirk at St. Andrew, at the inn of the Royal Salmon. He
+went to him, interrogated him, recognized him, and, without loss of
+time, after having had his hair and beard cut, and procured suitable
+clothing for him, presented him to Capt. Rogers; he introduced him as
+one of his old comrades, formerly an intrepid and distinguished officer
+in the navy, one of the conquerors of Vigo, who had been induced by
+himself to embark in the Swordfish, partly at his expense.</p>
+
+<p>Restored to liberty, supported, revived, by the kind cares of Dampier,
+his old hero, Selkirk felt rejuvenated. His first thought then is for
+that other unfortunate man, still an exile perhaps in his desert island.
+After having informed the old sailor that he had found a little bottle,
+containing a written parchment, he said: 'Dear Captain, it would be a
+meritorious act, and one worthy of you, to co-operate in the deliverance
+of this unhappy man. A boat will suffice for the voyage, since the
+Island of San Ambrosio is so near this. Oh! how joyfully would I
+accompany you in this excursion!'</p>
+
+<p>'My brave hermit,' replied Dampier, shaking his head, 'the neighboring
+island of which you speak is no other than the second in this group,
+named <i>Mas a Fuera</i>. As for the other, that San Ambrosio which you think
+so near, if it has not become a floating island since my last voyage, if
+it is still where I left it, under the Tropic of Capricorn, to reach it
+will not be so trifling a matter; besides, your little bottle must be a
+bottle of ink. There is here confusion of place and confusion of time;
+not only is <i>Mas a Fuera</i> not <i>San Ambrosio</i> but this latter island, far
+from being a desert, as your correspondent has said, has been inhabited
+more than twenty years by a multitude of madmen, fishermen and pirates,
+potato-eaters and old sailors, who, when I visited them, in 1702,
+politely received me with gun-shots, and whose politeness I returned
+with cannon-shots. Therefore, my boy, he who wrote to you must have been
+dead when you received his letter. What date did it bear?'</p>
+
+<p>'None,' said Selkirk; 'the last lines were effaced;' and he trembled at
+the idea of all the dangers he had run in pursuit of this friend, who no
+longer existed, and of a land which he had never inhabited.</p>
+
+<p>After having satisfied a duty of humanity, that which he had regarded as
+a debt contracted towards a friend, Selkirk, among other inquiries, let
+fall the name of Stradling. This time, it was hatred which asked
+information.</p>
+
+<p>His hatred was destined to be gratified.</p>
+
+<p>In pursuing his voyage, after having coasted along the shores of the
+Straits of Magellan, Stradling, surprised by a frightful hurricane, had
+seen his vessel entirely disabled. Repulsed at five different times,
+now by the tempest, now by the Spaniards, from the ports where he
+attempted to take refuge, he was thrown, near La Plata, on an
+inhospitable shore. Attacked, pillaged by the natives, half of his crew
+having perished, with the remains of his ship he constructed another, to
+which he gave the name of the Cinque Ports, instead of that of the
+Swordfish, which it was no longer worthy to bear. This was a large
+pinnace, on which he had secretly returned to England. For several years
+past, Dampier had not heard of him.</p>
+
+<p>Selkirk thought himself sufficiently avenged; his present happiness
+silenced his past ill-will. He even became reconciled to his island.</p>
+
+<p>Each day he traversed its divers parts, with emotions various as the
+remembrances it awakened. But he was now no longer alone! Arm and arm
+with Dampier, he revisited these places where he had suffered so much,
+and which often resumed for him their enchanting aspects.</p>
+
+<p>His companion was soon informed of his history. When he had related what
+we already know, from his landing to the construction of his raft, and
+to his frightful shipwreck, he at last commenced, not without some
+mortification, the recital of his final miseries, which alone could
+explain the deplorable state in which the English sailors had found him.</p>
+
+<p>By the loss of his hatchets, his ladder, his other instruments of labor,
+condemned to inaction, to powerlessness, he had nothing to occupy
+himself with but to provide sustenance. But the sea had taken his snares
+along with the rest. He at first subsisted on herbs, fruits and roots;
+afterwards his stomach rejected these crudities, as it had repulsed the
+fish. Armed with a stick, he had chased the agoutis; for want of
+agoutis, he had eaten rats.</p>
+
+<p>By night, he silently climbed the trees to surprise the female of the
+toucan or blackbird, which he pitilessly stifled over their young brood.
+Meanwhile, at the noise he made among the branches, this winged prey
+almost always escaped him.</p>
+
+<p>He tried to construct a ladder; by the aid of his knife alone, he
+attempted to cut down two tall trees. During this operation his knife
+broke&mdash;only a fragment remained. This was for him a great trial.</p>
+
+<p>He thought of making, with reeds and the fibres of the aloe, a net to
+catch birds; but all patient occupation, all continuous labor, had
+become insupportable to him.</p>
+
+<p>That he might escape the gloomy ideas which assailed him more and more,
+it became necessary to avoid repose, to court bodily fatigue.</p>
+
+<p>By continual exercise, his powers of locomotion had developed in
+incredible proportions. His feet had become so hardened that he no
+longer felt the briers or sharp stones. When he grew weary, he slept, in
+whatever place he found himself, and these were his only quiet hours.</p>
+
+<p>To chase the agoutis had ceased to be an object worthy of his efforts;
+the kids took their turn, afterwards the goats. He had acquired such
+dexterity of movement, and such strength of muscle, such certainty of
+eye, that to leap from one projection of rock to another, to spring at
+one bound over ravines and deep cavities, was to him but a childish
+sport. In these feats he took pleasure and pride.</p>
+
+<p>Sometimes, in the midst of his flights through space, he would seize a
+bird on the wing.</p>
+
+<p>The goats themselves soon lost their power to struggle against such a
+combatant. Notwithstanding their number, had Selkirk wished it, he might
+have depopulated the island. He was careful not to do this.</p>
+
+<p>If he wished to procure a supply of provisions, he directed his steps
+towards the most elevated peaks of the mountain, marked his game,
+pursued it, caught it by the horns, or felled it by a blow from his
+stick; after which his knife-blade did its office. The goat killed, he
+threw it on his shoulders, and, almost as swiftly as before, regained
+the cavernous grotto or leafy tree, in the shelter of which he could
+this day eat and sleep. He had for a long time forsaken his cabin, which
+was too far distant from his hunting-grounds.</p>
+
+<p>If he had a stock of provision on hand, he still pursued the goats as
+usual, but only for his personal gratification. If he caught one, he
+contented himself with slitting its ear; this was his seal, the mark by
+which he recognized his free flock. During the last years of his abode
+in the island, he had killed or marked thus nearly five
+hundred.<a href="#Footnote_9"><sup>[1]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_9"></a><sup>[1]</sup></p>
+<blockquote> Long after his departure from Juan Fernandez, the ship's
+crews, who came there for supplies, or the pirates who took refuge
+there, found goats whose ears had been slit by Selkirk's knife.</blockquote>
+
+<p>In the natural course of things, as his physical powers increased, his
+intelligence became enfeebled.</p>
+
+<p>Necessity had at first aroused his industry, for all industry awakes at
+the voice of want; but his own had been due rather to his recollections
+than to his ingenuity. He thought himself a creator, he was only an
+imitator.</p>
+
+<p>Whatever may have been said by those who, in the pride of a deceitful
+philosophy, have wished to glorify the power of the solitary man&mdash;if the
+latter, supported by certain fortunate circumstances, can remain some
+time in a state hardly endurable, it is not by his own strength, but by
+means which society itself has furnished. This is the incontestable
+truth, from which, in his pride, Selkirk had turned away.</p>
+
+<p>Deprived of exercise and of aliment, his thoughts, no longer sustained
+by reading the Holy Book, were day by day lost in a chaos of dreams and
+reveries.</p>
+
+<p>A prey to terrors which he could not explain, he feared darkness, he
+trembled at the slightest sound of the wind among the branches; if it
+blew violently, he thought the trees would be uprooted and crush him; if
+the sea roared, he trembled at the idea of the submersion of his entire
+island.</p>
+
+<p>When he traversed the woods, especially if the heat was great, he often
+heard, distinctly, voices which called him or replied. He caught entire
+phrases; others remained unfinished. These phrases, connected neither
+with his thoughts nor his situation, were strange to him. Sometimes he
+even recognized the voice.</p>
+
+<p>Now it was that of Catherine, scolding her servants; now that of
+Stradling, of Dampier, or one of his college tutors. Once he heard thus
+the voice of one of his classmates whom he least remembered; at another
+time it was that of his old admiral, Rourke, uttering the words of
+command.</p>
+
+<p>If he attempted to raise his own to impose silence on these choruses of
+demons who tormented him, it was only with painful efforts that he could
+succeed in articulating some confused syllables.</p>
+
+<p>He no longer talked, but he still sang; he sang the monotonous and
+mournful airs of his psalms, the words of which he had totally
+forgotten. His memory by degrees became extinct. Sometimes even, he lost
+the sentiment of his identity; then, at least, his state of isolation,
+and the memory of his misfortunes ceased to weigh upon him.</p>
+
+<p>He nevertheless remembered, that about this time, having approached
+Swordfish Beach, attracted by an unusual noise there, he had seen it
+covered with soldiers and sailors, doubtless Spaniards. The idea of
+finding himself among men, had suddenly made his heart beat; but when he
+descended the declivity of the hills in order to join them, several
+shots were fired; the balls whistled about his ears, and, filled with
+terror, he had fled.</p>
+
+<p>Once more he had found himself there, but without intending it, for then
+he could no longer find his way, by the points of the compass, through
+the woods and valleys leading to the shore. Ah! how had his ancient
+abode changed its aspect! How many years had rolled away since he lived
+there! The little gravelled paths, which conducted to the grotto and the
+mimosa, were effaced; the mimosa, its principal branches broken, seemed
+buried beneath its own ruins; of his fish-pond, his bed of
+water-cresses, not a vestige remained; his grotto, veiled, hid beneath
+the thick curtains of vines and heliotropes, was no longer visible; his
+cabin had ceased to exist,&mdash;overthrown, swept away doubtless, by a
+hurricane, as his inclosure had been. He could discover the spot only by
+the five myrtles, which, disembarrassed of their roof of reeds and their
+plaster walls, had resumed their natural decorations, green and glossy,
+as if the hatchet had never touched them. At their feet tufts of briers
+and other underbrush had grown up, as formerly. The two streams, the
+<i>Linnet</i> and the <i>Stammerer</i>, alone had suffered no change. The one with
+its gentle murmur, the other with its silvery cascades, after having
+embraced the lawn, still continued to flow towards the sea, where they
+seemed to have buried, with their waves, the memory of all that had
+passed on their borders.</p>
+
+<p>At sight of his shore, which seemed to have retained no vestige of
+himself, Selkirk remained a few moments, mournful and lost in his
+incoherent thoughts, in the midst of which this was most prominent:&mdash;Yet
+alive, already forgotten by the world, I have seen my traces disappear,
+even from this island which I have so long inhabited!</p>
+
+<p>A rustling was heard in the foliage; he raised his eyes, expecting to
+see Marimonda swinging on the branch of a tree. Perceiving nothing, he
+remembered that Marimonda reposed at the Oasis; he took the road from
+the mountain which led thither, but when he arrived there, when he was
+before her tomb, covered with tall grass, he had forgotten why he came.</p>
+
+<p>One of those unaccountable fits of terror, which were now more frequent
+than formerly, seized him, and he precipitately descended the mountain,
+springing from peak to peak along the rocks.</p>
+
+<p>The religious sentiment, which formerly sustained Selkirk in his trials,
+was not entirely extinct; but it was obscured beneath his darkened
+reason. His religion was only that of fear. When the sea was violently
+agitated, when the storm howled, he prostrated himself with clasped
+hands; but it was no longer God whom he implored; it was the angry
+ocean, the thunder. He sought to disarm the genius of evil. The
+lightning having one day struck, not far from him, a date-palm, he
+worshipped the tree. His perverted faith had at last terminated in
+idolatry.</p>
+
+<p>This was, in substance, what Alexander Selkirk related to William
+Dampier; what solitude had done for this man, still so young, and
+formerly so intelligent; this was what had become of the despiser of
+men, when left to his own reason.</p>
+
+<p>Dampier listened with the most profound attention, interrupting him in
+his narrative only by exclamations of interest or of pity. When he
+ceased to speak, holding out his hand to him, he said:</p>
+
+<p>'My boy, the lesson is a rude one, but let it be profitable to you; let
+it teach you that <i>ennui</i> on board a vessel, even with a Stradling, is
+better than <i>ennui</i> in a desert. Undoubtedly there are among us
+troublesome, wicked people, but fewer wicked than crack-brained.
+Believe, then, in friendship, especially in mine; from this day it is
+yours, on the faith of William Dampier.'</p>
+
+<p>And he opened his arms to the young man, who threw himself into them.</p>
+
+<p>On their return to the vessel, Dampier presented to Selkirk his own
+Bible. The latter seized it with avidity, and, after having turned over
+its leaves as if to find a text which presented itself to his mind, read
+aloud the following passage:</p>
+
+<p>'He was driven from the sons of men; and his heart was made like the
+beasts, and his dwelling was with the wild asses; they fed him with
+grass like oxen, and his body was wet with the dew of heaven.'&mdash;DANIEL
+v. 21.</p>
+
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<h3>
+<a name="CONCLUSION"></a>CONCLUSION.</h3>
+<br>
+
+<p>Capt. Rogers, in his turn, learned the misfortunes of Selkirk and became
+attached to him; from this moment, the sailors themselves showed him
+great deference; he was known among them by the name of <i>the governor</i>,
+and this title clung to him.</p>
+
+<p>To do the honors of his island, the governor one day gave to the crews
+of the two vessels, the spectacle of one of his former hunts. Resuming
+his ancient costume, he returned to the high mountains, where, before
+their eyes, he started a goat, and darting in pursuit of it, over a
+thousand cliffs, sometimes clearing frightful abysses, by means of a
+vine which he seized on his passage,&mdash;this method he owed to
+Marimonda,&mdash;he succeeded in forcing his game to the hills of the shore.
+Arrived there, exhausted, panting, drawing itself up like a stag at bay,
+the goat stopped short. Selkirk took it living on his shoulders, and
+presented it to Capt. Rogers. Its ear was already slit.</p>
+
+<p>By way of thanks, the captain announced that he might henceforth be
+connected with the expedition, with his old rank of mate, which was
+restored to him. For this favor Selkirk was indebted to the
+solicitations of Dampier.</p>
+
+<p>In the same vessel with Dampier, he made another three years' voyage,
+visited Mexico, California, and the greater part of North America;
+after which, still in company with Dampier, and possessor of a pretty
+fortune, he returned to England, where the recital of his adventures,
+already made public, secured him the most honorable patronage and
+friendship. Among his friends, may be reckoned Steele, the co-laborer,
+the rival of Addison, who consecrated a long chapter to him in his
+publication of the Tatler.</p>
+
+<p>Selkirk did not fail to visit Scotland. Passing through St. Andrew,
+could he help experiencing anew the desire to see his old friend pretty
+Kitty? Once more he appeared before the bar of the Royal Salmon. This
+time, on meeting, Selkirk and Catherine both experienced a sentiment of
+painful surprise. The latter, stouter and fuller than ever, fat and
+red-faced, touched the extreme limit of her fourth and last youth; the
+solitary of Juan Fernandez, with his gray hair, his copper complexion,
+could scarcely recall to the respectable hostess of the tavern the
+elegant pilot of the royal navy, still less the pale and blond student,
+of whom she had been, eighteen years before, the first and only love.</p>
+
+<p>'Is it indeed you, my poor Sandy,' said she, with an accent of pity; 'I
+thought you were dead.'</p>
+
+<p>'I have been nearly so, indeed, and a long time ago, Kitty. But who has
+told you of me?'</p>
+
+<p>'Alas! It was my husband himself.'</p>
+
+<p>'You are married then, Catherine. So much the better.'</p>
+
+<p>'So much the worse rather, my friend; for, would you believe it, the old
+monster, bent double as he is with age and rheumatism, was bright enough
+to dupe me finely; to dupe me twice. In the first place, by making me
+believe you were dead when you were not. But he well knew, the cheat,
+that if I refused him once, it was because my views were turned in your
+direction.'</p>
+
+<p>Selkirk made a movement which escaped Catherine; she continued:</p>
+
+<p>'His second deception was to arrive here in triumph, in the midst of the
+cries of joy and embraces of the <i>Sea-Dogs</i> and <i>Old Pilots</i>. One would
+have thought he had in his pockets all the mines of Guinea and Peru. He
+did not say so, but I thought it could not be otherwise; and I married
+him, since I believed you no longer living. His trick having succeeded,
+he then told me of his shipwreck, his complete ruin. Ah! with what a
+good heart would I have sent him packing! But it was too late, and it
+became necessary that the Royal Salmon, founded by the honorable Andrew
+Felton, should furnish subsistence for two; and this is the reason why,
+Mr. Selkirk, you find me still here, a prisoner in my bar, and cursing
+all the captains who make the tour of the world only to come afterwards
+and impose upon poor and inexperienced young girls!'</p>
+
+<p>Selkirk had not at first understood the lamentations of Catherine; but a
+twilight commenced to dawn in his ideas; he divined that his name had
+been used for an act of baseness; and, without being able to account for
+it, he felt the return of an old leaven of spite, an old hatred revived.</p>
+
+<p>'Who is your husband? What is his name?' asked he, in a loud voice and
+with a tone of authority.</p>
+
+<p>'Do not grow angry, Sandy? Do not seek a quarrel with him now. What is
+done, is done; I am his wife, do you understand? It is of no use to
+recall the past.'</p>
+
+<p>'And who thinks of recalling it? I simply asked you who he was?'</p>
+
+<p>'You will be prudent; you promise me? Well! do you see him yonder, in
+the second stall, at the same place he formerly occupied? He has just
+poured out some gin to those sailors, and is drinking with them. It is
+he who is standing up with an apron on.'</p>
+
+<p>'Stradling!' exclaimed Selkirk, with sparkling eyes. But at the sight of
+this apron, finding his old captain become a waiter, his hatred and
+projects of vengeance were suddenly extinguished.</p>
+
+<p>Alexander Selkirk returned to England in 1712. The history of his
+captivity in the Island of Juan Fernandez had appeared in the papers;
+several apocryphal relations had been already published, when in 1717,
+Daniel De Foe published his <i>Robinson Crusoe</i>.</p>
+
+<p>He is really the same personage; but in this latter version, the Island
+of Juan Fernandez, in spite of distance and geographical
+impossibilities, is peopled with savage Caribs; Marimonda is transformed
+into the simple Friday; history is turned into romance, but this romance
+is elevated to all the dignity of a philosophical treatise.</p>
+
+<p>Rendering full justice to the merit of the writer, we must nevertheless
+acknowledge that he has completely altered, in a mental view, the
+physiognomy of his model. Robinson is not a man suffering entire
+isolation; he has a companion, and the savages are incessantly making
+inroads around him. It is the European developing the resources of his
+industry, to contend at once with an unproductive land and the dangers
+created by his enemies.</p>
+
+<p>Selkirk has no enemies to repulse, and he inhabits a fruitful country.
+He needs, before every thing else, the presence of man, one of those
+fraternal affections in which he refuses to believe. His sufferings
+originate in his very solitude. In solitude, Robinson improves and
+perfects himself; Selkirk, at first as full of resources as he, ends by
+becoming discouraged and brutified.</p>
+
+<p>Which of the two is most true to nature?</p>
+
+<p>The first is an ideal being, for in no quarter of the globe has there
+ever been found one analogous to the Robinson of De Foe; the other, on
+the contrary, is to be met with every where, denying the dependence of
+an isolated individual; but this dependence, even in the midst of a
+prodigal nature, if it is not to the honor of man, is to the honor of
+society at large.</p>
+
+<p>Notwithstanding all that has been said, the solitary is a man imbruted,
+vegetating, deprived of his crown. 'Solitude is sweet only in the
+vicinity of great
+cities.'<a href="#Footnote_10"><sup>[1]</sup></a>
+By an admirable decree of Providence, the
+isolated being is an imperfect being; man is completed by man.</p>
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_10"></a><sup>[1]</sup></p>
+<blockquote> Bernardin de St. Pierre. Seneca had said: <i>Miscenda et
+alternanda sunt solitudo et frequentia</i>.</blockquote>
+
+<p>Notwithstanding the false maxims of a deceitful philosophy, it is to the
+social state that we owe, from the greatest to the least, the courage
+which animates and sustains us; God has created us to live there and to
+love one another; it is for this reason that selfishness is a shameful
+vice, a crime! It is, so to speak, an infringement of one of the great
+laws of Nature.</p>
+<br>
+
+<p>THE END.</p>
+
+<br><hr style="width: 45%;"><br>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<h3>
+<a name="NEWBOOKS"></a>NEW BOOKS AND NEW EDITIONS</h3>
+
+<center>
+<p>PUBLISHED BY
+TICKNOR, REED, AND FIELDS</p>
+</center>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<h4>HENRY W. LONGFELLOW</h4>
+
+<p>COMPLETE POETICAL WORKS [Transcriber's Note: missing text.]
+the six Volumes mentioned below, and [Tr. Note: missing text.]<br>
+the market. In two volumes, 16mo, $2.00.</p>
+
+<p>In separate Volumes, each [Tr. Note: missing text.] cents.<br>
+VOICES OF THE NIGHT.<br>
+BALLADS AND OTHER POEMS.<br>
+SPANISH STUDENT; A PLAY IN THREE ACTS.<br>
+BELFRY OF BRUGES AND OTHER POEMS.<br>
+EVANGELINE; A TALE OF ACADIE[Tr. Note: missing text.]<br>
+THE SEASIDE AND THE FIRESIDE.<br>
+THE WAIF. A Collection of Poems. Edited by [Tr. Note: missing text.]<br>
+THE ESTRAY. A Collection of Poems. Edited [Tr. Note: missing text.]</p>
+
+<p>MR. LONGFELLOW'S PROSE WORKS<br>
+HYPERION. A Romance.<br>
+In one volume. price $1.00.</p>
+
+<p>OUTRE-MER. A Pilgrimage Beyond the Sea.<br>
+In one volume, 16mo, price $1.00.</p>
+
+<p>KAVANAGH. A Tale. Lately published.
+In one vol., 16mo, price 75 cents.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<h4>NATHANIEL HAWTHORNE'S WRITINGS</h4>
+
+<p>TWICE-TOLD TALES. A New Edition.<br>
+In two vol., 16mo, with Portrait, price $1.50.</p>
+
+<p>THE SCARLET LETTER. A Romance.<br>
+In one vol., 16mo, price 75 cents.</p>
+
+<p>THE HOUSE OF THE SEVEN GABLES.<br>
+In one volume, 16mo, price $1.00.</p>
+
+<p>TRUE STORIES FROM HISTORY AND BIOGRAPHY.<br>
+In one volume, 16mo, with fine Engravings, price 75 cents.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+
+<h4>WHITTIER'S WRITINGS.</h4>
+
+<p>[Transcriber's Note: text too damaged to reconstruct.]</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+
+<h4>[Tr. Note: OLIVER WEND]ELL HOLMES'S WRITINGS.</h4>
+
+<p>[Tr. Note: text too damaged to reconstruct.]</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+
+<h4>ALFRED TENNYSON'S WRITINGS.</h4>
+
+<p>[Tr. Note: text too damaged to reconstruct.]</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+
+<h4>[Tr. Note: THOM]AS DE QUINCEY'S WRITINGS.</h4>
+
+<p>[Tr. Note: text too damaged to reconstruct.]</p>
+
+<p>CONFESSIONS OF AN ENGLISH OPIUM-EATER AND [Tr. Note: missing text]<br>
+In one volume, 16mo, price 75 cents.</p>
+
+<p>BIOGRAPHICAL ESSAYS. In one volume, 16mo, price 75 cents.</p>
+
+<p>MISCELLANEOUS ESSAYS. In one volume, 16mo, price 75 cents.</p>
+
+<p>THE CAESARS. In one volume, 16mo, price 75 cents.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+
+<h4>GRACE GREENWOOD'S WRITINGS.</h4>
+
+<p>GREENWOOD LEAVES. A Collection of Stories and Letters.<br>
+In one volume, 12mo. New Edition, price $1.25.</p>
+
+<p>POEMS.<br>
+In one volume, 16mo, with fine Portrait. Price 75 cents.</p>
+
+<p>HISTORY OF MY PETS. A Book for Children.<br>
+With fine Engravings. Price 50 cents.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+
+<h4>EDWIN P. WHIPPLE'S WRITINGS.</h4>
+
+<p>ESSAYS AND REVIEWS. A New and Revised edition.<br>
+In two volumes, 16mo, price 2.00.</p>
+
+<p>LECTURES ON SUBJECTS CONNECTED WITH LITERATURE AND LIFE.<br>
+In one volume, 16mo, price 63 cents.</p>
+
+<p>WASHINGTON AND THE REVOLUTION.<br>
+In one volume, 16mo, price 20 cents.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+
+<h4>HENRY GILES'S WRITINGS.</h4>
+
+<p>LECTURES, ESSAYS, AND MISCELLANEOUS WRITINGS.<br>
+Two volumes, 16mo, price $1.50.</p>
+
+<p>CHRISTIAN THOUGHT ON LIFE. In Twelve Discourses.<br>
+In one volume, 16mo, price 75 cents.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+
+<h4>WILLIAM MOTHERWELL'S WRITINGS.</h4>
+
+<p>POEMS, NARRATIVE AND LYRICAL. A New Edition, Enlarged.
+In one volume, 16mo, price 75 cents.</p>
+
+<p>POSTHUMOUS POEMS.<br>
+In one volume, 16mo, price 50 cents.</p>
+
+<p>MINSTRELSY, ANCIENT AND MODERN.<br>
+In two vols. 16mo, price $1.50.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+
+<h4>JAMES RUSSELL LOWELL'S WRITINGS.</h4>
+
+<p>COMPLETE POETICAL WORKS. Revised, with Additions.<br>
+In two volumes, 16mo, price $1.50.</p>
+
+<p>THE BIGLOW PAPERS.<br>
+In one vol. 16mo, 50 cents.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+
+<h4>MISCELLANEOUS.</h4>
+
+<p>CHARLES SPRAGUE. POETICAL AND PROSE WRITINGS.<br>
+With fine Portrait. In one volume, 16mo, price 75 cents.</p>
+
+<p>JOHN G. SAXE. HUMOROUS AND SATIRICAL POEMS.<br>
+In one volume, 16mo, price 50 cents.</p>
+
+<p>ROBERT BROWNING. COMPLETE POETICAL WORKS.<br>
+In two volumes, 16mo, price $2.00.</p>
+
+<p>BARRY CORNWALL. ENGLISH SONGS AND OTHER SMALL POEMS.<br>
+Enlarged Edition. In one volume, 16mo, $1.00.</p>
+
+<p>RICHARD MONCKTON MILNES. POEMS OF MANY YEARS.<br>
+In one volume, 16mo, price 75 cents.</p>
+
+<p>GOETHE'S WILHELM MEISTER. Translated by CARLYLE.<br>
+In two volumes, 16mo, price $2.50.</p>
+
+<p>GOETHE'S FAUST. Translated by HAYWARD.<br>
+In one volume, 16mo. New Edition, price 75 cents.</p>
+
+<p>CHARLES SUMNER. ORATIONS AND SPEECHES.<br>
+In two volumes, 16mo, price $2.50.</p>
+
+<p>GEORGE S. HILLARD. THE DANGERS AND DUTIES OF THE MERCANTILE PROFESSION.<br>
+In one volume, 16mo, price 25 cents.</p>
+
+<p>HORACE MANN. A FEW THOUGHTS FOR A YOUNG MAN.<br>
+In one volume, 16mo, price 25 cents.</p>
+
+<p>HENRY T. TUCKERMAN. POEMS.<br>
+In one volume, 16mo, price 75 cents.</p>
+
+<p>PHILLIP JAMES BAILEY. THE ANGEL WORLD AND OTHER POEMS.<br>
+In one volume, 16mo, price 50 cents.</p>
+
+<p>F.W.P. GREENWOOD. SERMONS OF CONSOLATION.<br>
+In one volume, 16mo, price $1.00.</p>
+
+<p>MEMORY AND HOPE. A BOOK OF POEMS, REFERRING TO CHILDHOOD.<br>
+In one volume, 8vo, price [Transcriber's Note: missing text.].00.</p>
+
+<p>REJECTED ADDRESSES. By HORACE and JAMES SMITH.<br>
+In one volume, 16mo, price 50 cents.</p>
+
+<p>WARRENIANA. By the Authors of Rejected Addresses.<br>
+In one volume, 16mo, price 75 cents.</p>
+
+<p>ALDERBROOK. By FANNY FORESTER.<br>
+In two vols. 12mo, price 1.75.</p>
+
+<p>THE BOSTON BOOK. BEING SPECIMENS OF METROPOLITAN LITERATURE.<br>
+In one volume, 12mo, price $1.25.</p>
+
+<p>HEROINES OF THE MISSIONARY ENTERPRISE.<br>
+In one volume, 16mo, price 75 cents.</p>
+
+<p>ANGEL-VOICES; or WORDS OF COUNSEL FOR OVERCOMING THE WORLD.<br>
+In one volume, 18mo, price 38 cents.</p>
+
+<p>THE CONSTITUTION OF MAN. By GEORGE COMBE.<br>
+27th Edition. In one volume, 12mo, price 75 cents.</p>
+
+<p>MEMOIR OF THE BUCKMINSTERS, FATHER AND SON. By Mrs. LEE.<br>
+In one volume, 12mo.</p>
+
+<p>EACH OF THE ABOVE POEMS AND PROSE WRITINGS, MAY BE HAD IN
+VARIOUS STYLES OF HANDSOME BINDING.</p>
+
+<div>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 11441 ***</div>
+</body>
+</html>
+
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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #11441 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/11441)
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Solitary of Juan Fernandez,
+or The Real Robinson Crusoe, by Joseph Xavier Saintine
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Solitary of Juan Fernandez, or The Real Robinson Crusoe
+
+Author: Joseph Xavier Saintine
+
+Release Date: March 4, 2004 [EBook #11441]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SOLITARY OF JUAN FERNANDEZ ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Internet Archive; University of Florida, Children, Andrea
+Ball and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+THE SOLITARY OF JUAN FERNANDEZ;
+
+OR,
+
+THE REAL ROBINSON CRUSOE
+
+
+BY THE AUTHOR OF PICCIOLA.
+
+
+TRANSLATED FROM THE FRENCH
+BY
+ANNE T. WILBUR.
+
+
+
+MDCCCLI.
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+The Royal Salmon.--Pretty Kitty.--Captain Stradling.--William Dampier.
+--Reveries and Caprices of Miss Catherine.
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+Alexander Selkirk.--The College.--First Love.--Eight Years of Absence.
+--Maritime Combats.--Return and Departure.--The Swordfish.
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+The Tour of the World.--The Way to manufacture Negroes.--California.
+--The Eldorado.--Revolt of Selkirk.--The Log-Book.--Degradation.
+--A Free Shore.
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+Inspection of the Country.--Marimonda.--A City seen through the Fog.
+--The Sea every where.--Dialogue with a Toucan.--The first Shot.
+--Declaration of War.--Vengeance.--A Terrestrial Paradise.
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+Labors of the Colonist.--His Study.--Fishing.--Administration.
+--Selkirk Island.--The New Prometheus.--What is wanting to Happiness.
+--Encounter with Marimonda.--Monologue.
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+The Hammock.--Poison.--Success.--A Calm under the Tropics.--Invasion
+of the Island.--War and Plunder.--The Oasis.--The Spy-Glass.
+--Reconciliation.
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+A Tête-a-tête.--The Monkey's Goblet.--The Palace.--A Removal.--Winter
+under the Tropics--Plans for the Future.--Property.--A burst of
+Laughter.--Misfortune not far off.
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+A New Invasion.--Selkirk joyfully meets an ancient Enemy.--Combat on
+a Red Cedar.--A Mother and her Little Ones.--The Flock.--Fête in the
+Island; Pacific Combats, Diversions and Swings.--A Sail.--The Burning
+Wood.--Presentiments of Marimonda.
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+The Precipice.--A Dungeon in a Desert Island.--Resignation.--The passing
+Bird.--The browsing Goat.--The bending Tree.--Attempts at Deliverance.
+--Success.--Death of Marimonda.
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+Discouragement.--A Discovery.--A Retrospective Glance.--Project of
+Suicide.--The Last Shot.--The Sea Serpent.--The _Porro_.
+--A Message.--Another Solitary.
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+The Island of San Ambrosio.--Selkirk at last knows what Friendship is.
+--The Raft.--Visits to the Tomb of Marimonda.--The Departure.--The two
+Islands.--Shipwreck.--The Port of Safety.
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+The Island of Juan Fernandez.--Encounter in the Mountains.--Discussion.
+--A New Captivity.--Cannon-shot.--Dampier and Selkirk.--_Mas a Fuera_.
+--News of Stradling.--Confidences.--End of the History of the real
+Robinson Crusoe.--Nebuchadnezzar.
+
+CONCLUSION.
+
+NEW BOOKS AND NEW EDITIONS. (advertising section)
+
+
+
+
+THE SOLITARY OF JUAN FERNANDEZ,
+
+OR
+
+THE REAL ROBINSON CRUSOE.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+
+The Royal Salmon.--Pretty Kitty.--Captain Stradling.--William Dampier.
+--Reveries and Caprices of Miss Catherine.
+
+About the commencement of the last century, the little town of St.
+Andrew, the capital of the county of Fife, in Scotland, celebrated
+then for its University, was not less so for its Inn, the Royal
+Salmon, which, built in 1681 by a certain Andrew Felton, had descended
+as an inheritance to his only daughter, Catherine.
+
+This young lady, known throughout the neighborhood under the name of
+pretty Kitty, had contributed not a little, by her personal charms,
+to the success and popularity of the inn. In her early youth, she had
+been a lively and piquant brunette, with black, glossy hair, combed
+over a smooth and prominent forehead, and dark, brilliant eyes, a
+style of beauty much in vogue at that period. Though tall and slender
+in stature, she was, as our ancestors would have said, sufficiently
+_en bon point_. In fine, Kitty merited her surname, and more than one
+laird in the neighborhood, more than one great nobleman even,--thanks
+to the familiarity which reigned among the different classes in
+Scotland,--had figured occasionally among her customers, caring as
+little what people might say as did the brave Duke of Argyle, whom
+Walter Scott has shown as conversing familiarly with his snuff
+merchant.
+
+At present Catherine Felton is in her second youth. By a process
+common enough, but which at first appears contradictory, her
+attractions have diminished as they developed; her waist has grown
+thicker, the roses on her cheek assumed a deeper vermilion, her voice
+has acquired the rough and hoarse tone of her most faithful customers;
+the slender young girl is transformed into a virago. Fortunately for
+her, at the commencement of the eighteenth century, and especially
+in Scotland, reputations did not vanish as readily as in our days.
+Notwithstanding her increasing size and coarser voice, Catherine still
+remained pretty Kitty, especially in the eyes of those to whom she
+gave the largest credit.
+
+Besides, if from year to year her beauty waned, a circumstance which
+might tend to diminish the attractions of her establishment, like a
+prudent woman she took care that her stock of ale and usquebaugh
+should also from year to year improve in quality, to preserve the
+equilibrium.
+
+Undoubtedly the visits of lairds and great noblemen at her bar were
+less frequent than formerly, but all the trades-people in town, all
+the sailors in port, from the Gulf of Tay to the Gulf of Forth, still
+patronized the pretty landlady.
+
+Meanwhile Catherine was not yet married. The gossips of the town were
+surprised, because she was rich and suitors were plenty; they
+fluttered around her constantly in great numbers, especially when
+somewhat exhilarated with wine. When their gallantry became obtrusive,
+Kitty was careful not to grow angry; she would smile, and lift up her
+white hand, tolerably heavy, till the offenders came to order.
+Catherine possessed in the highest degree the art of restraining
+without discouraging them, and always so as to forward the interests
+of her establishment.
+
+To maintain the discipline of the tavern, nevertheless, the presence
+of a man was desirable; she understood this. Besides, the condition of
+an old maid did not seem to her at all inviting, and she did not care
+to wait the epoch of a third youth, before making a choice. But what
+would the unsuccessful candidates say? Would not this decision be at
+the risk of kindling a civil war, of provoking perhaps a general
+desertion? Then, too, accustomed as she was to command, the idea of
+giving herself a master alarmed her.
+
+She was vacillating amid all these perplexities, when a certain
+sailor, with cold and reserved manners, whose face bore the mark of
+a deep sabre cut, and who had for some time past, frequented her inn
+with great assiduity, without ever having addressed to her a single
+word, took her aside one fine morning and said:
+
+'Listen to me, Kate, and do not reply hastily. I came here, not like
+many others, attracted by your beautiful eyes, but because I wished
+to obtain recruits for an approaching voyage which I expected to
+undertake at my own risk and peril. I do not know how it has happened,
+but I now think less about sailing; I seem to be stumbling over roots.
+Right or wrong, I imagine that a good little wife, who will fill my
+glass while I am tranquilly smoking my pipe before a blazing fire, may
+have as many charms as the best brig in which one may sometimes perish
+with hunger and thirst. Right or wrong, I imagine to myself again that
+the prattle of two or three little monkeys around me, may be as
+agreeable as the sound of the wind howling through the masts, or of
+Spanish balls whistling about one's ears. All this, Kate, signifies
+that I mean to marry; and who do you suppose has put this pretty whim
+into my head? who, but yourself?'
+
+Catherine uttered an exclamation of surprise, perfectly sincere, for
+if she had expected a declaration, it was certainly not from this
+quarter.
+
+'Do not reply to me yet,' hastily resumed the sailor; 'he who
+pronounces his decree before he has heard the pleader and maturely
+reflected on the case, is a poor judge. To continue then. You are no
+longer a child, Kate, and I am no longer a young man; you are
+approaching thirty----'
+
+At these words the pretty Kitty made a gesture of surprise and of
+denial.
+
+'Do not reply to me!' repeated the pitiless sailor. 'You are thirty!
+I have already passed another barrier, but not long since. We are
+of suitable age for each other. The man should always have traversed
+the road before his companion. You are active and genteel; that does
+very well for women. You have always been an honest girl, that is
+better still. As for me, my skin is not so white as yours, but it is
+the fault of a tropic sun. It is possible that I may be a little
+disfigured by the scar on my cheek; but of this scar I am proud; I had
+the honor of receiving it, while boarding a vessel, from the hand of
+the celebrated Jean Bart, who, after having on that occasion lost a
+fine opportunity of being honorably killed, has just suffered himself
+to die of a stupid pleurisy; but it is not of him but of myself that
+we are now to speak. After having fought with Jean Bart, I have made a
+voyage with our not less celebrated William Dampier, whom I may dare
+call my friend. You may therefore understand, Kate, that if you have
+the reputation of an honest girl, I have that of a good sailor. The
+name of Captain Stradling is favorably known upon two oceans, and it
+will be to your credit, if ever, with your arm linked in mine, we walk
+as man and wife, through any port of England or Scotland. I have said.
+Now, look, reflect; if my proposition suits you, I will settle for
+life on _terra firma_, and bid adieu to the sea; if not, I resume my
+projected expedition, and it will be to you, Kate, that I shall say
+adieu.'
+
+Catherine opened her mouth to thank him, as was suitable, for his good
+intentions.
+
+'Do not reply to me!' interrupted he again; 'in three days I will come
+to receive your decision.'
+
+And he went out, leaving her amazed at having listened to so long a
+speech from one, who until then, seated motionless in a distant corner
+of the room, had always appeared to her the most rigid and silent of
+seamen.
+
+That very day Catherine has come to a decision concerning the captain;
+she thinks him ugly and disagreeable, coarse and ignorant; he has
+dared to tell her that she is thirty years old, and she will hardly be
+so at St. Valentine's Day, which is six weeks ahead, at least. Besides
+the scar which he has received from the celebrated Jean Bart, his
+countenance has no beauty to boast of: his face is long and pale, his
+temples are furrowed with wrinkles, and his lips thick and heavy; his
+eyebrows, at the top of his forehead, seem to be lost in his hair; his
+eyes are not mates, his nose is one-sided; his form is perhaps still
+worse; he walks after the fashion of a duck. Fie! can such a man be a
+suitable match for the rich landlady of the Royal Salmon, for the
+beautiful Kitty; for her who, among so many admirers and lovers, has
+had but the difficulty of a choice?
+
+The next day towards nightfall, Catherine, seated in her bar, in the
+large leathern arm-chair which served as her throne, with dreamy and
+downcast brow, and chin resting on her hand, was still thinking of
+Captain Stradling, but her ideas had assumed a different aspect from
+those of the evening before.
+
+She was saying to herself: 'If he has thick and heavy lips, it is
+because he is an Englishman; if he walks like a duck, it is because he
+is a sailor; if he has taken me to be thirty years old, that proves
+simply that he is a good physiognomist, and I shall have one painful
+avowal the less to make after marriage. As for his scar, he has a
+thousand reasons to be proud of it, and, upon close examination, it is
+not unbecoming. It would be very difficult for me to choose a husband,
+on account of the discontented suitors who will be left in the lurch;
+but I will relinquish my business, and that will put an end to all
+inconvenience. He is rich, so much for the profit; he is a captain, so
+much for the honor. Come, come, Mistress Stradling will have no reason
+to complain!'
+
+At this moment, Catherine Felton could meditate quite at her ease,
+without fear of being noticed; for the tobacco smoke, three times as
+dense and abundant as usual, enveloped her in an almost opaque cloud.
+There was this evening a grand _fête_ at the tavern of the Royal
+Salmon. The concourse of customers was immense, and this time, it was
+neither the beauty of the hostess, nor the quality of the liquors
+which had attracted them thither.
+
+The serving-men and lasses were going from table to table, multiplying
+themselves to pour out, not only the golden waves of strong beer and
+usquebaugh, but the purple waves of claret and port; all faces were
+smiling, all eyes sparkling, and in the midst of the huzzas and
+_vivas_, was heard, with triple applause, the name of William Dampier.
+
+This celebrated man, now a corsair, now a skilful seaman, who had just
+discovered so many unknown straits and shores, who had just made the
+tour of the world twice, in an age when the tour of the world did not
+pass, as at present, for a trifling matter; who had published, upon
+his return, a narrative full of novel facts and observations; this
+pitiless and intelligent pirate, who studied the coasts of Peru while
+he pillaged the cities along its shores, and meditated, in the midst
+of tempests, his learned theory of winds and tides, William Dampier,
+had landed, this very day at the little port of St. Andrew.
+
+At the intelligence of his arrival, the whole maritime population of
+the coast was in commotion; the society of the _Old Pilots_, with
+that of the _Sea Dogs_, had sent to him deputations, headed by the
+principal ship-owners in the town. Captain Stradling had not failed
+to be among them, happy at the opportunity of once more meeting and
+embracing his former friend. Speeches were made, as if to welcome
+an admiral, speeches in which were passed in review all his noble
+qualities and the great services rendered by him to the marine
+interest. To these Dampier replied with simplicity and conciseness,
+saying to the orators:
+
+'Gentlemen and dear comrades, you must be hoarse, let us drink!'
+
+This first trait of eccentricity could not fail to enlist universal
+applause.
+
+Commissioned by him to lead the column, Stradling could not do
+otherwise than to take the road to the Royal Salmon. It was on this
+occasion that he appeared there before the expiration of the three
+days: but he had not addressed a word to Catherine, scarcely turned
+his eyes towards her. Nevertheless the circumstances were favorable to
+his suit.
+
+Then a millionaire, William Dampier had immediately declared his
+intentions to treat at his own expense the whole company and even the
+whole town, if the town would do him the honor to drink with him.
+Catherine at once took him into favor. When she heard him praise his
+friend and companion, the brave Captain Stradling, she felt for the
+latter, not an emotion of tenderness, but a sentiment of respect and
+even of good-will. Dampier, excited by his audience, did not fail,
+like other conquerors by land and sea, to recount some of his great
+deeds. Among others, he recapitulated a certain affair in which he and
+his friend Stradling had captured a Spanish galleon, laden with
+piastres. From this moment the beautiful Kitty became more thoughtful,
+and began to see that the scar was becoming to the face of this good
+captain. After drinking, when Dampier, still escorted by his _fidus
+Achates_, came to settle his account with the hostess, he chucked her
+familiarly under the chin, as was his custom with landladies in the
+four quarters of the globe. From any one else, the proud Catherine
+would not have suffered such a liberty; to this, she replied only by a
+graceful reverence, and, while the hero and paymaster of the _fête_
+shook a rouleau of gold upon her counter, she said, hastily bending
+towards Stradling:
+
+'To-morrow!' accompanying this word with an expressive look and her
+most gracious smile.
+
+The enamored Stradling, always impassible, contented himself with
+replying:
+
+'It is well!'
+
+The day following, the third, the important day, that which Catherine
+already regarded as her day of betrothal, early in the morning, she
+dressed herself in her best attire, not doubting the impatience of the
+captain. Before noon, the latter entered the inn and went directly up
+to the landlady.
+
+She received him carelessly and coldly; she was nervous, she had not
+had time for reflection; she did not know what the captain wished; if
+he would let her alone for the present, by and by she would consider.
+
+'Boy! a new pipe and some ale!' exclaimed Stradling, addressing a
+waiter.
+
+And, perfectly calm in appearance, he sauntered to his accustomed
+place at the farther end of the bar-room. However, before leaving the
+Royal Salmon, approaching Catherine, he said:
+
+'Yesterday, by your voice and gesture you said, or almost said, yes;
+we sailors know the signals; to-day it is no, or almost no. Very well,
+I will wait; but reflect, my beauty, we are neither of us young enough
+to lose our time in this foolish game.'
+
+But what had thus unexpectedly changed, from white to black, the good
+intentions of Catherine in the captain's behalf? The presence of a
+young boy whom she had not seen for many years, and towards whom she
+had, until then, felt only a kindly indifference.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+
+Alexander Selkirk.--The College.--First Love.--Eight Years of Absence.
+--Maritime Combats.--Return and Departure.--The Swordfish.
+
+Alexander Selkirk,--the name of the principal personage in this
+narrative,--was born at Largo, in the county of Fife, not far from St.
+Andrew. Entered as a pupil in the university of the town, he at first
+distinguished himself by his aptitude and his intelligence, until the
+day when, hearing of the beauty of the landlady of the Royal Salmon,
+he was seized with an irresistible desire to see her: he saw her, and
+became violently enamored. It was one of those youthful passions,
+springing rather from the effervescence of the age, than from the
+merit of the object; one of those sudden ebullitions to which the
+young recluses of science are sometimes subject, from a prolonged
+compression of the natural and affectionate sentiments.
+
+From this moment, all the words in the Greek and Latin dictionaries,
+all the principles of natural philosophy, mathematics and history,
+suddenly taken by storm, whirled confusedly and pell-mell in the head
+of Selkirk, like the elements of the world in chaos, before the day of
+creation.
+
+His professors had predicted that at the annual exhibition he would
+obtain six great prizes; he obtained not even a premium.
+
+As a punishment, he was required to remain within the college grounds
+during the vacation. But its gates were not strong enough, nor its
+walls high enough to detain him.
+
+Condemned, for the crime of desertion, to a classic imprisonment, he
+was shut up in a cellar; he escaped through the window; in a garret;
+he descended by the roof.
+
+Then, pronounced incorrigible, he was expelled from the university.
+
+He left it joyous and happy, escaped from the tutor commissioned to
+conduct him to his father, and at last wholly free, his own master, he
+took lodgings in a cabin, not far from the Royal Salmon, and thought
+himself monarch of the universe.
+
+As soon as the doors of the inn were opened, he penetrated there with
+the earliest fogs of morning, with the first beams of day; in the
+evening he was the last to cross the threshold, after the extinction
+of the lights.
+
+All day long, seated at a little table opposite the bar, between a
+pipe and a pewter pot, he watched the movements of Kitty, and followed
+her with admiring eyes.
+
+Catherine was not slow to perceive this new passion; but she was
+accustomed to admiring eyes, and therefore paid but little heed to
+them. She was then at the age of twenty-two, in all the glory of her
+transient royalty; he, scarcely sixteen, was in her eyes a boy, a raw
+and awkward boy, like almost all the other students, and she contented
+herself with now and then bestowing a slight smile upon him, in common
+with her other customers.
+
+But this mechanical smile, this half extinguished spark, did but
+increase the flame, by kindling in the young man's soul a ray of hope.
+
+At this age, passion has not yet an oral language; it is in the heart,
+in the head especially, but not on the lips; one comprehends,
+experiences, dreams, writes of love in prose and verse, but does not
+talk of it. Selkirk had twenty times attempted to confess his
+affection to Catherine; he had as yet succeeded only in a few simple
+and hasty meteorological sentences, on the rain and fine weather. He
+therefore wrote.
+
+Unfortunately, Catherine could not easily read writing; she applied to
+him to interpret his letter. This was a hard task for the poor boy,
+who, with a tremulous and hesitating voice, saw himself forced to
+stammer through all that burning phraseology which seemed to congeal
+under the breath of the reader.
+
+The result however was that Catherine became his friend; she
+encouraged his confidence, and gave him good advice as an elder sister
+might have done. She even called him by the familiar name of Sandy,
+which was a good omen.
+
+Meanwhile his scanty resources became exhausted; he had no longer
+means to pay for the pot of ale which he consumed daily. The idea of
+asking credit of his beloved, of opening with her an account, which he
+might never have means to pay, was revolting to him. On the other
+hand, the thought of returning home, and asking pardon of his father,
+was not less repugnant to his feelings. He was endowed with one of
+those haughty and imperious natures which recognize their faults, not
+to repair them, but to make of them a starting point, or even a
+pedestal.
+
+He was rambling about the port, reflecting on his unfortunate
+situation, when he heard mention made of a ship ready to set sail at
+high tide, and which needed a reinforcement of cabin-boys and sailors.
+This was for him an inspiration; he did not hesitate, he hastened to
+engage. That very evening he had gained the open sea, beyond the Isle
+of May, and, with his eyes turned towards the Bay of St. Andrew, was
+attempting, in vain, to recognize among the lights which were yet
+burning in the city, the fortunate lantern which decorated the sacred
+door of the Royal Salmon.
+
+At present, Alexander Selkirk is twenty-four years old. He has become
+a genuine sailor, and he loves his profession; the sea is now his
+beautiful Kitty. Besides, it is long since he has troubled himself
+about his heart. It is empty, even of friendship, for, among his
+numerous companions, the proud young man has not found one worthy of
+him. After having served two years in the merchant marine, he has
+entered the navy. Thanks to the war kindled in Europe for the Spanish
+succession, he has for a long time cruised with the brave Admiral
+Rooke along the coasts of France; with him, he has fought against the
+Danish in the Baltic Sea, and in 1702, in the capacity of a master
+pilot, figured honorably in the expedition against Cadiz, and in the
+affair of Vigo. Finally, under the command of Admiral Dilkes, he has
+just taken part in the destruction of a French fleet.
+
+But all these expeditions, rather military than maritime, and
+circumscribed in the narrow circle of the seas of Europe, have not
+satisfied the vast desires of the ambitious sailor. He experiences an
+invincible thirst to apply his knowledge, to exercise his intelligence
+on a larger scale; he is impatient for a long voyage, a voyage of
+discovery.
+
+The terrific hurricane of the twenty-seventh of November, 1703, which
+drove the waves of the Thames even into Westminster, Hall, and covered
+London almost entirely with the fragments of broken vessels, appeared
+to Selkirk a favorable occasion for asking his dismissal. He easily
+obtained it. So many sailors had just been thrown out of employment by
+the hurricane.
+
+Once more, the undisciplined scholar found himself free and his own
+master! He profited by this to pay a visit to his birthplace in
+Scotland. His father was dead, but he had some business to regulate
+there.
+
+On reaching Largo he learned the arrival of William Dampier at St.
+Andrew. He set sail for that port immediately.
+
+'Ah!' said he on his way, 'if this brave captain should be about to
+undertake a voyage to the New World, and will let me accompany him, no
+matter in what capacity, all my wishes will be gratified. I thirst to
+see tattooed faces, other trees besides beeches, oaks and firs; other
+shores than those of the Baltic, Mediterranean and Atlantic. Who knows
+whether I may not aid him in the discovery of some new continent, some
+unknown island which shall bear my name!'
+
+And, cradled by the wave in the frail canoe that bore him, he dreamed
+of government, perhaps of royalty, in one of those archipelagoes which
+he imagined to exist in the bosom of the distant Southern seas, long
+afterwards explored by Cook, Bougainville and Vancouver.
+
+Once in port, he hastened to inquire for the dwelling occupied by
+Dampier. The latter was absent; he was in the harbor.
+
+While awaiting his return, our young sailor thought of his old friend
+Catherine, his pretty black-eyed Kitty, and directed his steps towards
+the inn.
+
+He found her already enthroned in her leathern arm-chair, her hair
+neatly braided, with two small curls on her temples; in a toilette
+which the early hour of the morning did not seem to authorize; but it
+was the famous third day, and she was awaiting Stradling.
+
+On seeing Selkirk enter, she exclaimed to the boy, pointing to the
+newly-arrived: 'A pot of ale!'
+
+'No,' cried the young man smiling; 'the ale which I once drank here
+was for me a philter full of bitterness; a glass of whiskey, if you
+please,----' and, pointing to the little table opposite the bar at
+which he was formerly accustomed to place himself, he said:
+
+'Serve me there; I will return to my old habits.'
+
+Catherine looked at him with astonishment.
+
+'Does not pretty Kate recognize me?' said he in a caressing tone,
+approaching her.
+
+'How! Is it possible! is it you, indeed, Sandy?'
+
+'Yes, Alexander Selkirk, formerly a fugitive from the University of
+St. Andrew; recently a master pilot in the royal marine; now, as ever,
+your very humble servant.'
+
+And they shook hands, and examined each other closely, but the
+impression on both sides was far from being the same.
+
+Catherine finds Selkirk much changed, but for the better; time and
+navigation have been favorable to him. He is no longer the raw student
+with embarrassed air, awkward manner, bony frame and dilapidated
+costume; but a stout young man, with a broad chest, active and
+graceful form; though his features are decidedly Scotch, they are
+handsome; his eyes, less brilliant than formerly, are animated with a
+more attractive thoughtfulness, and the naval uniform, which he still
+wears, sets off his person to advantage.
+
+On his part, Selkirk finds Catherine also much changed; the rosy
+complexion, the soft voice, the youthful look, the twenty-two years,
+all are gone. Her form has assumed a superabundant amplitude.
+
+They drop each other's hands and utter a sigh; he, of regret; she, of
+surprise.
+
+Both close their eyes, at the same time; she, with the fear of gazing
+too earnestly; he, to recall the being of his imagination.
+
+However this may be, she is not yet a woman to be despised by a
+sailor. He therefore prolongs his visit: they come to interrogations,
+to confidences.
+
+Catherine acquaints him with the situation of her little business
+affairs; her fortune is improving; she gives him an estimate of it in
+round numbers, as well as of the suitors she has rejected; but she
+does not mention Captain Stradling, whose arrival she yet fears every
+moment.
+
+Selkirk relates to her his campaigns, his combats against the French,
+against the Danish, the victorious attack of the English ships against
+the great boom of Vigo; but, when she asks him what motive has brought
+him back to St. Andrew, he replies boldly that he came to see her and
+no one else, and says not a word of Captain Dampier, whom he is even
+now impatient to meet.
+
+At last the old friends say adieu.
+
+Then the gallant sailor, with an apparent effort, goes away, not
+forgetting, however, to drink his glass of whiskey.
+
+And this is the reason why, on the third day, Catherine has the
+vapors; this is the reason why, notwithstanding her soft words of the
+evening before and her grand morning toilette, she receives so coldly
+the scarred adversary of the celebrated Jean Bart.
+
+During the whole of the week following, Stradling, Dampier and
+Selkirk, did not fail to meet at the Royal Salmon. Selkirk came to see
+Dampier; Dampier came to see Stradling; Stradling came to see
+Catherine Felton.
+
+The latter thought the young man already knew the two others, that he
+had sailed with them, and was not surprised at their intimacy.
+
+Sometimes Selkirk, leaving his companions in the midst of their
+bottles and glasses, would describe a tangent towards the counter, and
+come to converse with the pretty hostess. He no longer felt love for
+her, and notwithstanding this, perhaps for this very reason, he now
+talked eloquently.
+
+Kitty blushed, was embarrassed, and poor Captain Stradling, listening
+with all his ears to the narratives of his illustrious friend William
+Dampier, or pre-occupied with his pipe, lost in its cloud, saw
+nothing,--or seemed to see nothing.
+
+Nevertheless one evening, he went, in his turn, to lean on the
+counter:
+
+'Kate,' said he, 'when is our marriage to take place?'
+
+'Are you thinking of that still?' replied she, with an air of levity
+which would once have became her better; 'I hoped this fancy had
+passed out of your head.'
+
+'I may then set out on my voyage, Kate?'
+
+'Why not? We will talk of our plans on your return.'
+
+'But I am going to make the tour of the world, as well as my friend
+Dampier. Kate, it is the affair of three years!'
+
+'So much the better! it will give us both time for reflection.'
+
+'It is well!' replied the phlegmatic Englishman, and nothing on his
+polar face betokened an afterthought.
+
+The doors closed, the lights extinguished, Catherine retired to rest
+the happiest woman in the world. She said to herself: 'Alexander loves
+me, and has loved me for eight years! he deserves to be rewarded. He
+has less money than the other, it is a misfortune; but he has more
+youth and grace, that balances it. As to rank, a master pilot of
+twenty-four is as far advanced as a captain of forty. Between Selkirk
+and myself, if the wealth is on my side, on his will be gratitude and
+little attentions. At all events, I prefer a young husband who will
+whisper words of love in my ear, to amusing myself by pouring out
+drink for my lord and master, while he smokes his pipe, with his feet
+on the brands. Was it not thus that icicle, dressed in blue, called
+Stradling, talked to me of the pleasures of marriage? And what a name!
+But Mistress Selkirk!--that sounds well. In our Scotland, there is the
+county of Selkirk, the town of Selkirk; there is even a great nobleman
+of this name, who is something like minister to our Queen Anne, I
+believe. Who knows? we are perhaps of his family! As for walking about
+the port arm-in-arm with a captain, I am sure my very dear friends and
+neighbors would die with jealousy if I took, instead of this scarred
+captain, a young and handsome man. It is settled. I will marry
+Alexander; to-morrow I will myself announce it to him. I hope he will
+not die of joy!'
+
+On the morrow she attired herself as on the day of Selkirk's return,
+in her beautiful dress of cloth and silk, with the two little curls
+upon her temples. She thus waited a great part of the day. At last,
+about four o'clock, Selkirk arrives in haste, his face beaming with
+joy, and a gleam of triumph in his eye.
+
+'Has he then,' thought Catherine, 'a presentiment of the happiness in
+store for him?'
+
+'Congratulate me, pretty Kitty,' said the young man, almost out of
+breath; 'I am appointed mate of the brig Swordfish, which I am to join
+at Dunbar.'
+
+'How! you are going?'
+
+'In an hour.'
+
+'For a long time?'
+
+'For three years at least. In a fortnight we set sail for the East
+Indies. It will be a great commercial voyage and a voyage of
+discovery. Unfortunately William Dampier does not accompany us; but he
+furnishes funds to the brave Captain Stradling.'
+
+'Stradling!'
+
+'Yes, it is he who has just engaged me, and with whom I am to sail.
+Our agreement is signed,--I am mate! I am going to explore the New
+World! Ah! I would not exchange my fate for that of a king. But time
+presses; adieu, Kitty, till I see you again!'
+
+'Three years!' murmured Catherine.
+
+And her curls grew straight beneath the cold perspiration that covered
+her forehead.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+
+The Tour of the World.--The Way to manufacture Negroes--California.
+--The Eldorado.--Revolt of Selkirk.--The Log-Book.--Degradation.
+--A Free Shore.
+
+The Swordfish, well provisioned, even with guns and ammunition, left
+Dunbar one morning with a fresh breeze, sailed down the North Sea,
+passed Ireland, France and Spain, the Azores, Canaries, and Cape Verd
+Islands on the coast of Africa, and, after having stopped for a short
+time in the harbors of Guinea and Congo, doubled the Cape of Good
+Hope, amid the traditional tempest.
+
+Entering the Indian Ocean, and passing through the Straits of Sunda,
+she touched at Borneo, and at Java, reached the Southern Sea by the
+Gulf of Siam, passed the Philippine Isles, then, through the vast
+regions of the Pacific Ocean, pursued the route which had been marked
+out by the exploring ship of William Dampier in 1686. Like that, the
+Swordfish remained a few days at the Island of St. Pierre, before
+launching into that immensity where, during nearly two months, wave
+only succeeded to wave; at last she reached the coasts of South
+America, and cast anchor in the Gulf of California.
+
+This gigantic voyage, which seemed as if it must have been attempted
+under the inspiration of science and with the hope of the most
+important discoveries, had been undertaken by Stradling with no object
+but of traffic and even of rapine. These had been the great ends of
+most of the bold enterprises which had preceded. The Spanish and
+Portuguese, in their discoveries of new continents, had thought less
+of glory than of riches; they had conquered the New World only to
+pillage it; the vanquished who escaped extermination, were forced to
+dig their native soil, not to render it more fruitful, but to procure
+from it, for the profit of the vanquisher, the gold it might contain.
+Among the European nations, those who had had no part in the conquest
+now sought to share the spoils. For this the least pretext of war or
+commerce sufficed.
+
+Stradling availed himself of both these pretences; when he touched at
+the coasts of Guinea and Congo, it was to obtain negroes whom he
+expected to sell in America. At Borneo, the opportunity presented
+itself for an advantageous disposal of the greater part of his black
+merchandize; as he was a man of resources and not at all scrupulous,
+he soon found means to replace them.
+
+In the Straits of Sunda, several barques, manned by negroes and
+Malays, had become entangled in the masses of seaweed which are every
+where floating on the surface of the wave; Stradling encountered them,
+made the rowers enter his ship, and obligingly took the barques in
+tow, to extricate them from their difficulty. But those who ascended
+the side of the Swordfish, descended only to be sold in their turn.
+
+Although he had received an education superior to that of his
+companions, Selkirk shared in the prejudices of his times; he had
+therefore found nothing objectionable in seeing his captain exchange
+at Congo little mirrors, a few glass beads, half a dozen useless guns,
+and some gallons of brandy, for men still young and vigorous, torn
+from their country and their families. Their skin was of another
+color, their heads woolly; this was a profitable traffic, recognized
+by governments; but when he saw Stradling seize the property of others
+to refill his empty hold, he could not control his indignation and
+boldly expressed it:
+
+'It is for their salvation,' replied the captain, without emotion; 'we
+will make Christians of them.'
+
+On approaching the Vermilion Sea, a deep gulf which separates
+California from the American continent, and makes it almost an island,
+the Malays were rubbed with a mixture of tar and dragon's blood,
+dissolved in a caustic oil, to give to their olive skins a deeper
+shade, and their flat noses and silky hair making them pass for Yolof
+negroes, they were exchanged at Cape St. Lucas, along with the rest,
+for pearls and native productions.
+
+The young mate thought this proceeding not less mean and dishonorable
+than the first; he made new observations.
+
+'Nothing now remains to be done, captain,' said he, 'but to shave and
+besmear with tar the monkey you have just bought, and to include it
+among your new race of negroes.'
+
+This time, the captain looked at him askance, and shrugged his
+shoulders without replying.
+
+The storm was beginning to growl in the distance.
+
+It was not without a secret object that, in his course through the
+Southern Sea, Stradling had first of all aimed at California.
+
+He devoted an entire month to cruising along both shores of this
+almost island, and penetrating all the bays of the Vermilion Sea; he
+hoped to find there a passage to an unknown land, then predicted and
+coveted by all navigators. What was this land? The _Eldorado_!
+
+Although I would hasten over these details of the voyage to arrive at
+the more important events of this history; now that the recent
+discovery of the immense mines of gold buried beneath the hills of
+California has aroused the entire world, that the name alone of
+_Sacramento_ seems to fill with gold the mouth which pronounces it,
+there is a curious fact, perhaps entirely unknown, which I cannot pass
+over in silence.
+
+After the middle of the sixteenth century, and long before the
+seventeenth, a vague rumor, a confused tradition, had located, in the
+neighborhood of the Vermilion Sea, a famed land, whose rivers rolled
+over gold, and whose mountains rested on golden foundations; the
+treasures of Mexico and Peru were nothing in comparison with those
+which were to be gathered there. An ingot of native gold was talked
+of, of a _pepite_ or eighty pounds weight.
+
+It was a grape from the promised land.
+
+This marvellous country had been named, in advance, _Eldorado_.
+
+Among the bold Argonauts of these two centuries, there was a contest
+as to who should first raise his flag over this new Colchis, defended,
+it was said, by the Apaches, a terrible, sanguinary and cannibal race,
+whom Cortez himself could not subdue. This land of gold some had
+located in New Biscay or New Mexico; others, in the pretended kingdoms
+of Sonora and Quivira; then, after several ineffectual attempts, the
+possibility of reaching it was denied; learned men, from the various
+academies of Europe, proved that the _Eldorado_ was not a country, but
+a dream; on this subject the Old World laughed at the New; the
+Argonauts became discouraged, and during a century the subject was
+named only to be ridiculed.
+
+And yet, in spite of sceptics and scoffers, the _Eldorado_ existed. It
+existed where tradition had placed it, on the shores of this Vermilion
+Sea, now the Gulf of California. For once, popular opinion had the
+advantage over scientific dissertations and philosophic denials;
+there, where, according to the Dictionary of Alcedo, nothing had been
+discovered but mines of pewter! where Jacques Baegert had indeed
+acknowledged the presence of gold, but _in meagre veins_; where Raynal
+had named as curiosities only fishes and pearls, declaring, in
+California, _the sea richer than the land_; where in our own times M.
+Humboldt discovered nothing but cylindrical cacti, on a sandy soil,
+remained buried, as a deposit for future ages, this treasure of the
+world, which seemed to be waiting in order to leave its native soil,
+the moment of falling into the hands of a commercial and industrious
+people, that of the United States.
+
+This _Eldorado_, Stradling sought in vain; he therefore decided to
+pursue his route along the coast of Mexico, now under the French flag,
+when he found an opportunity for traffic with the natives, colonists
+or savages; now under the English flag, when he wished to exercise his
+trade of corsair, an easy profession, for since the disaster of Vigo,
+the Spanish had abandoned their transatlantic possessions to
+themselves.
+
+The Spanish soldiery of America then found themselves, in the presence
+of European adventurers, in that state of pusillanimous inferiority in
+which had been, at the period of the conquest, the subjects of the
+Incas and Montezuma before the soldiers of Cortez and Pizarro. The
+time was not already far passed, when a few bands of freebooters, from
+France, England and Holland, had well nigh wrested from his Majesty,
+the King of Spain and the Indies, the most extensive and wealthy of
+his twenty-two hereditary kingdoms.
+
+Stradling was following in the footsteps of these freebooters.
+
+Recently, two little cities on the coast had been put under
+contribution for the supplies of the Swordfish; there had been
+resistance, a threatened attack, a parley, and capitulation; in this
+affair, the young mate had nobly distinguished himself both as a
+combatant and a negotiator, and yet the captain had not deigned to
+give him a share in his distribution of compliments.
+
+Selkirk felt an irritation the more lively that this shore life began
+to be irksome. Not that his conscience disturbed him any more than in
+the treatment of the blacks; he thought it as honorable to war with
+the Spaniards in the New World, as to be beaten by them in the Old;
+but he compared his present chief, Captain Stradling, with his former
+commander, the noble and brave Admiral Rooke; the parallel extended in
+his mind to his old companions in the royal navy, all so frank, so
+gay, so loyal,--among whom he had yet never found a friend,--and his
+new companions of to-day, recruited for the most part in the marshy
+lowlands of the merchant marine of Scotland; his thoughts became
+overshadowed, and his desires for independence, which dated from his
+college life, returned in full force.
+
+As much as his duties permitted, he loved to isolate himself from all;
+when he could remain some time alone in his cabin, or gaze upon the
+sea from a retired corner of the deck and watch the ploughing of the
+vessel, then only he was happy.
+
+As if to increase his uneasiness, Stradling became daily more severe
+and more exacting towards his chief officer; he imposed upon him rude
+labors foreign to his station. It seemed as if he were determined to
+drive him to desperation.
+
+He succeeded.
+
+Selkirk protested against such treatment, and recapitulated his
+subjects of complaint. The other paid no more attention than he would
+have done to the buzzing of a fly.
+
+Irritated by this outrageous impassibility, the young man declared
+that there should no longer be any thing in common between them, and
+that, whatever fate might await him, he demanded to be set on shore.
+
+Stradling touched his forehead:
+
+'That is a good idea,' said he, and he turned away.
+
+The next day, they reached the Isthmus of Panama; the persevering
+Selkirk returned to the charge: 'The moment is favorable for ridding
+yourself of me, and me of you,' said he to the captain; 'let the boat
+convey me to the shore; I will cross the Isthmus, reach the Gulf of
+Darien, the North Sea, and return to Scotland, even before the
+Swordfish!'
+
+This time the honest corsair listened attentively, then shaking his
+head and winking his eye, with the smile of a hungry vampire, replied:
+
+'You are then in great haste to be married, comrade.'
+
+It was the first word he had addressed to him relative to Catherine
+during this long voyage, and this word Selkirk had not even
+understood.
+
+They were about passing Panama: the vessel continuing her voyage,
+Selkirk interposed his authority, ordered the men to put about, take
+in sail and approach the shore.
+
+This Stradling prohibited, uttered a formidable oath, and commanded
+the young man to bring the log-book. When it was brought, he made the
+following entry:
+
+'To-day, Sept. 24th, 1704, Alexander Selkirk, mate of this vessel,
+having mutinied and attempted to desert to the enemy, we have deprived
+him of his title and his office; in case of obstinacy we shall hang
+him to the yard-arm.'
+
+And he read the sentence to the offender.
+
+From this day, the rebel saw himself compelled to serve in the
+Swordfish as a simple sailor, and his subordinates of yesterday,
+to-day his equals, indemnified themselves for the authority he had
+exercised over them, which did not cure him of that native contempt he
+had always felt for mankind.
+
+A month passed away thus, during which the Swordfish several times
+touched the shores of Peru, now to renew her supplies of provisions
+and water, now to exchange with the Indians, nails, hatchets, knives,
+and necklaces of beads, for gold dust, furs, and garments trimmed with
+colored feathers.
+
+During one of these pauses, Selkirk, left on the ship, accosted the
+captain once more. He knew that the remains of some bands of
+freebooters were colonized there, leading a peaceful and agricultural
+life; this fact was known to all. At Coquimbo in Chili, some English
+and Dutch pirates had formed a settlement of this kind, now in the
+full tide of prosperity. Selkirk, who, during an entire month, had not
+spoken to the captain, now demanded, in a voice which he attempted to
+render calm and almost supplicating, to be landed at Coquimbo, from
+which they were only a few days sail.
+
+'You will not this time accuse me of wishing to desert to the enemy;
+they are the English, Scotch, Dutch, our countrymen and allies whom I
+wish to join! Do you still suspect me? Well, do not content yourself
+with setting me on shore; place me in the hands of the chief men of
+the settlement. Will that suit you?'
+
+Stradling winked significantly; but this was all.
+
+'Ah!' resumed the young man with increasing emotion, 'do not think to
+detain me longer on board, to crush me beneath this humiliation! I
+consented to serve under your orders as mate, and you have made me the
+lowest of your sailors; this you had no right to do.'
+
+Stradling took his glass and directed it towards the shore, where his
+people were engaged in trafficking their beads and hardware.
+
+Raising his head and folding his arms:
+
+'Captain,' pursued Selkirk with vehemence, 'some day or other we shall
+return to England, where the laws protect all; there, I shall have the
+right of complaint, and Queen Anne loves to render justice; beware!'
+
+Stradling, still spying, began to whistle _God save the Queen_; then
+he called his monkey and made it gambol before him.
+
+'I will depart, I will free myself from your presence, and that of
+your worthy companions; I will do so at all events, do you
+understand!' exclaimed Selkirk exasperated, 'I will not endure your
+infamous treatment another week! If you refuse to consent to my
+demand, I will leave without your permission; were the vessel twenty
+miles from the land, and were I to perish twenty times on the way, I
+will attempt to swim ashore. Will you land me at Coquimbo, yes or no?
+Reply!'
+
+By way of reply, Stradling ordered him to be confined in the hold.
+
+Poor Selkirk! Ah! if pretty Kitty, if the beautiful landlady of the
+Royal Salmon could know all thou hast endured for her sake, how many
+tears would her fine eyes shed over thy fate! But who knows whether
+she will ever hear of thee? Who can tell whether any human being will
+learn the sufferings in reserve for thee?
+
+Poor Selkirk! you who painted to yourself so smiling a picture of this
+grand voyage to America; who hoped to leave, like Dampier, your name
+to some strait, some newly discovered island; you who dreamed of
+scientific walks in vast prairies and under the arches of virgin
+forests, you have shared only in the career of a trafficker and a
+pirate; of this New World, full of marvellous sights, you have seen
+only the shore, the fringe of the mantle, the margin of this last work
+of God!
+
+Poor Selkirk, must you then return to your cold and foggy Scotland,
+without having contemplated at your ease, beneath the brilliant sun of
+the tropics, one of those Edens overshadowed by the luxuriant verdure
+of palm-trees, bananas, mimosas and gigantic ferns? In your country,
+the bark of the trees is clad with lichens and mosses, and the
+parasite mistletoe suspends itself to the branches, more as a burden
+than as an ornament; here, numerous families of the orchis, with their
+singular forms, showy and variegated blossoms, climb along the knotty
+stems of the tall monarchs of the forests; from their feet spring up,
+as if to enlace them with a magic network, the brilliant passiflora,
+the vanilla with its intoxicating perfume, the banisteria whose roots
+seem to have dived into mines of gold and borrowed from thence the
+color of its petals! Hither the birds of Paradise and Brazilian
+parrots come to build their nests; here the bluebird and the
+purple-necked wood-pigeon coo and sing; here, like swarms of bees,
+thousands of humming-birds of mingled emerald and sapphire, warble and
+glitter as they suck the nectar from the flowers. This was what you
+hoped to contemplate, poor Selkirk! and this joy, like many others, is
+henceforth forbidden.
+
+In his floating prison, in his submarine cell, his only employment is
+to listen to the dashing of the waves against the ship, or now and
+then to catch a glimpse of the blue sky through the hatchways.
+
+What cares he? He does not complain; he has learned to abhor mankind,
+and he loves to be alone, in company with himself and his own
+thoughts.
+
+Several days passed in this manner.
+
+One morning he felt the brig slacken its speed; the dashing of the
+wave against the prow diminished, and the Swordfish, suddenly furling
+its sails, after having slightly rocked hither and thither, stopped.
+They had just cast anchor. Where? he knows not.
+
+Soon he hears the rattling of the rope-ladder which serves as a
+stairway to those above who would communicate with his prison. They
+come, on the part of the captain, to seek him.
+
+He finds the latter seated on the deck, surrounded by his principal
+men.
+
+'Young man,' said Stradling, 'I have been obliged to be severe for the
+sake of an example; but you have been sufficiently punished by the
+time you have passed below there,'--and he pointed to the ship's hold.
+'Now, your wish shall be granted. You shall be allowed to land.'
+
+And the rare smile which sometimes hovered on his lips, stole over his
+rigid face.
+
+'So much the better,' replied Selkirk, laconically.
+
+The boat was let down; he entered it, and ten minutes afterwards
+disembarked on a green shore, where the waves, as they broke upon it,
+seemed to murmur softly in his ear the word, _liberty_!
+
+The boat immediately rejoined the ship, which set sail, coasted along
+Chili and Patagonia, and re-entered the Northern Sea by the Straits of
+Magellan.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+
+Inspection of the Country.--Marimonda.--A City seen through the Fog.
+--The Sea every where.--Dialogue with a Toucan.--The first Shot.
+--Declaration of War.--Vengeance.--A Terrestrial Paradise.
+
+While watching the departure of the Swordfish, Alexander Selkirk felt
+the same sensation as on that day when he had seen the doors of the
+college of St. Andrew thrown open for his exit; once more he was his
+own master. Now, however, it is at some thousands of miles from his
+country that he must reap the benefits of his independence, and this
+idea embitters his emotions of joy.
+
+But is he not about to find countrymen at Coquimbo? And if their
+society should be unpleasing?--if their habits, their mode of life,
+their persons, should become objects of antipathy to the misanthropic
+Selkirk, as it is but natural to fear? Well! after all, no engagement
+binds him to them; he will be always free to enter, in the capacity of
+a sailor, the first vessel which may leave for Europe.
+
+Determined to act as shall seem good to him,--to make some excursions
+into the interior of the continent, if an opportunity presents itself,
+and he will know how to make one,--he casts a first glance at the land
+of his adoption.
+
+Before him extends a vast shore, studded with groves of trees, covered
+with fine turf and little flowers joyfully unfolding their petals to
+the sun: two streams, having their source at the very base of the
+opposite hills, after having meandered around this immense lawn, unite
+almost at his feet.
+
+He bends down to one of these streams, fills the hollow of his hand
+with water, and tastes it, as a libation, and as a toast to the
+generous land which has just received him; the water is excellent; he
+plucks a flower, and continues his inspection.
+
+On his left rise high mountains, terraced and verdant, excepting at
+their summits, on one of which he perceives a goat, with long horns,
+stationed there immovable like a sentinel, and whose delicate profile
+is clearly defined on the azure of the sky. On the side towards the
+sea, the mountains, bending their gray and naked heads, resemble stone
+giants, watching the movements of the wave which dashes at their feet.
+
+On his right, where the land declines, he sees little valleys linked
+together with charming undulations; but on the mountains at his left,
+in the valleys at his right, among the hills in the distance, his eye
+vainly seeks the vestige of a human habitation.
+
+He sets out in search of one. The boat from which he landed has
+deposited on the shore his effects--his arms, his nautical
+instruments, his charts, a Bible, and provisions of various kinds.
+Notwithstanding his piratical sentiments, the captain of the Swordfish
+has not designed to precede exile by confiscation. Selkirk takes his
+gun, his gourd; but, unable to carry all his riches, he conceals them
+behind a stony thicket, well defended by the darts of the cactus, and
+the sword-like leaves of the aloe, not caring to have the first comer
+seize them as his booty.
+
+As he is occupied with this duty, he feels himself suddenly clasped by
+two long hairy arms; he turns his head, it is Marimonda, the captain's
+monkey, a female of the largest species.
+
+How came she there? Selkirk does not know.
+
+Disgusted with her sea-voyages, with the intelligence natural to her
+race, Marimonda has undoubtedly profited by the moment of the boat's
+leaving the ship to conceal herself in it and gain the shore along
+with the prisoner, which she might easily have done, unseen by all,
+during the transporting of the effects and provisions.
+
+However this may be, Selkirk begins by freeing himself from her grasp,
+repulses the monkey and sets out: but the latter perseveres in
+following, and after having, by her most graceful grimaces, sought to
+conciliate him, marches beside him. Not caring to arrive at Coquimbo
+escorted by such a companion, which would give him in a city the
+appearance of a mountebank and showman of monkeys, Selkirk, this time,
+repulses her rudely, not with his hand, but with the butt of his gun.
+
+Struck in the breast by this home thrust, the poor monkey stops, rolls
+up her eyes, moves her lips, and growling confusedly her complaints
+and reproaches, crouches beneath a tuft of the sapota, leaving the man
+to pursue his way alone.
+
+Selkirk has at first directed his steps toward the valleys; after
+having traversed these, he arrives at the margin of a sandy plain, and
+as far as the eye can reach, perceives neither city, village, house,
+tent nor hut, nothing which can indicate the presence of inhabitants.
+
+Nevertheless, a little grove which he has just traversed, seems to
+have recently, in its principal path, passed under the shears of a
+gardener; the foliage presents a certain symmetry; fragments of
+branches are strewed, on the ground, which seem to have been freshly
+cut; he even thinks he sees vestiges of the passage of a flock. On the
+lawn of the shore, he has seen, and still sees around him, trees with
+tufted heads, which must owe this form to art. He continues his
+researches.
+
+At last, in the distance, beneath a fog which is just beginning to
+dissolve, he perceives a vast mass of white and red houses, some with
+terraced roofs, others covered with thatch; through the humid veil
+which envelopes them, he sees the glistening of the glass in the
+windows; already he hears at his feet the confused noise of cities;
+murmuring voices reply; the measured sound of hammers and of mills
+even reaches his ear.
+
+It is Coquimbo! he cannot doubt it, and shortening his route by a path
+across the hill, he quickens his pace.
+
+Meanwhile an east wind arises, the fog disappears; when he thinks he
+has reached the suburbs of the city, Selkirk sees before him only an
+irregular assemblage of calcareous stones, crowned with dry herbs, or
+reddish, arid, angular rocks, flattened at their summits, tessellated
+with fragments of silex and mica, on which the sun is just pouring his
+rays; a company of goats, which the mist had condemned to a momentary
+repose, are bounding here and there, startling flocks of clamorous
+black-birds and plaintive sea-gulls; the fearless and yellow-crested
+woodpeckers alone do not stir, but continue to hammer with their sharp
+beaks at some old stunted trees.
+
+The disenchantment is painful for our sailor; the fog has deceived him
+with the semblance of a city, as it has more than once deluded us in
+the midst of plains and woods, by the appearance of an ocean with its
+white waves, its great capes, its bold shores, and its vessels at
+anchor.
+
+Perhaps Coquimbo is still beyond. Fearing to lose himself if he
+ventures farther in an unknown land, he resolves to explore it first
+by a look. Returning to the shore upon which he had landed, he scales
+the mountains on the north, reaches the first platform, and from
+thence seeks to discover some indications of a city. Nothing! he still
+ascends, the circle enlarges around him, but with no better result.
+Summoning all his courage, through a thousand difficulties, climbing,
+drawing himself up by the arid and abrupt rocks, piled one upon
+another, he at last attains a culminating point of the mountain. He
+can now embrace with his eye an immense horizon, but this immense
+horizon is the sea! On his right, on his left, before him, behind him,
+every where the sea!
+
+He is not on the continent, but on an island.
+
+This evening, exhausted with fatigue, he lies down in a grotto at the
+foot of the mountain, where he passes a night full of agitation and
+anxiety.
+
+Rising with the sun, his first care, the next morning, is to examine
+his riches and his provisions. He returns to the thicket of cactus and
+aloes.
+
+Besides two guns, two hatchets, a knife, an iron pot, a Bible and
+nautical instruments, all articles belonging to him, he finds there a
+quantity of nails, a large fragment of a sail, several horns of powder
+and shot; a bag of ship biscuit, a salted quarter of pork, a little
+cask of pickled fish, and a dozen cocoa-nuts.
+
+The night before, at sight of these articles, he had supposed a
+sentiment of justice and humanity to exist in the soul of the corsair.
+Just now, he had said to himself that Stradling, deceived by a false
+reckoning of latitude, had landed him on an island, perhaps believing
+it to be a projecting shore of the continent. Now, the abundance of
+his supplies, this biscuit, these salt provisions, these fruits of the
+cocoa, all valueless if he had really landed at Coquimbo, lead him to
+suspect that the vindictive Englishman has designedly chosen the place
+of his exile.
+
+But this exile, is it complete isolation? Is the island inhabited or
+deserted? If it is inhabited, as he still believes he has reason to
+suppose, by whom is it so?
+
+That he may obtain a reply to this double question, he resolves to
+traverse the country in its whole extent. At the very commencement of
+his journey, the immobility of a bird suffices to give to the doubt,
+on which his thoughts vacillate, the appearance almost of a certainty.
+
+This bird is a toucan, of brilliant plumage and monstrous beak.
+Selkirk passes near it, with his eyes fixed on the branch which serves
+as a perch, and the toucan, without stirring, looks at him with a
+species of calm and placid astonishment.
+
+Selkirk stops; he comprehends the mute language of the bird.
+
+'You do not know then what a man is! He is the enemy of every creature
+to whom God has given life, the enemy even of his kind! You have then
+never been threatened by the arms that I bear!'
+
+And with the palm of his hand, striking the butt of his gun, he made
+the hammer click.
+
+At the sound of his voice, as at the noise of the hammer, the bird
+raised its head, manifesting new and redoubled surprise, but without
+any other movement. It seemed to think that the man and the gun were
+one, and that its strange interlocutor possessed two different voices.
+
+At last, by way of reply, it uttered a few shrill and prolonged cries,
+accompanied by the rattling of its two horny mandibles. After which,
+acting the great nobleman, cutting short the audience he has deigned
+to grant, the toucan is silent, turns its head, proudly raises one of
+its wings and busies itself in smoothing, with the point of its large
+beak, its beautiful greenish feathers, variegated with purple.
+
+At some distance from this spot, still following the margin of a
+wooded hill, Selkirk sees other birds, some in their nests, others
+warbling in the shade; all manifesting no more alarm at his presence
+than did the toucan. Crested orioles, hooded bullfinches, alight to
+pick up little grains or insects almost at his feet; humming-birds,
+variegated cotingas, red manaquins flutter before him in the sunbeams,
+pursuing invisible flies; little wood-peckers, black or green, hop
+around the trunks of the trees, stopping a moment to see him pass and
+then resuming their spiral ascent.
+
+The confidence which he inspires is not confined to these winged
+people. Upon a hillock of turf he perceives an animal, with pointed
+nose, brown fur enamelled with red spots, and of the size of a hare;
+seated on its hind paws, longer than those in front, it uses these,
+after the manner of squirrels, to carry to its mouth some nuts of the
+maripa, which constitute its breakfast. It is an agouti,[1] a mother,
+her little ones are near. At sight of the stranger they run to her,
+but quickly re-assured, quietly finish their morning repast.
+
+Farther on, coatis,[2] with short ears, and long tails; companies of
+little Guinea pigs; armadillos, a species of hedge-hog without the
+quills, but covered with an armor of scales, more compact and
+impervious than that of the ancient knights of the Middle Ages,
+arrange themselves along the line of his route, as if to pass him in
+review.
+
+[Footnote 1: _Agouti_. An animal of the bigness of a rabbit, with
+bright red hair, and a little tail without hair. He has but two teeth
+in each jaw; holds his meat in his forepaws like a squirrel, and has a
+very remarkable cry: when he is angry, his hair stands on end, and he
+strikes the earth with his hind feet; and when chased, he flies to a
+hollow tree, whence he is expelled by smoke.--_Trevoux_.]
+
+[Footnote 2: The _coati_ is a native of Brazil, not unlike the racoon
+in the general form of the body, and, like that animal, it frequently
+sits up on the hinder legs, and in this position carries its food to
+its mouth. If left at liberty in a state of tameness, it will pursue
+poultry, and destroy every living thing that it has strength to
+conquer. When it sleeps it rolls itself into a lump, and remains
+immovable for fifteen hours together. His eyes are small, but full of
+life; and when domesticated, this creature is very playful and
+amusing. A great peculiarity belonging to this animal is the length of
+his snout, which resembles in some particulars the trunk of the
+elephant, as it is movable in every direction. The ears are round, and
+like those of a rat; the forefeet have five toes each. The hair is
+short and rough on the back, and of a blackish color; the tail is
+marked with rings of black, like the wild cat; the rest of the animal
+is a mixture of black and red.]
+
+Alas! this general quiet does but deepen in the heart of Selkirk the
+certainty of his isolation.
+
+Nevertheless, yesterday, said he to himself, in this thick wood, did I
+not see alleys trimmed with the shears, trees shaped by the
+pruning-knife?
+
+And the little grove which he visited the evening previous, at that
+instant presents itself before him. He examines the trees; they are
+myrtles of various heights; but among their glossy branches, he in
+vain seeks traces of the pruning-knife or shears; nature alone has
+thus disposed in spheroids or umbels the extremities of this rich
+vegetation.
+
+The same disappointment awaits him in the underwood. The only pruners
+have been goats, or other animals, daintily cropping the green shoots.
+
+Then only does the complete and terrible certainty of his disaster
+fall on him and crush him. Behold him blotted from the number of men,
+perhaps condemned to die of misery and of hunger! more securely
+imprisoned, more entirely forgotten by the world than the most
+hardened criminal plunged in the lowest depths of the Bastile! He at
+least, has a jailor! Miserable Stradling!
+
+At this moment he hears a noise above his head: it is the monkey.
+
+Marimonda, on her side, has also inspected the island; she has already
+tasted its productions. Whether she is satisfied with her discoveries,
+or whether forgiveness and forgetfulness of injuries are natural to
+her, on perceiving her old companion, wagging her head in token of
+good-will, she descends towards him from the tree on which she is
+perched.
+
+But Marimonda is the captain's monkey; she has been his property, his
+favorite, his flatterer! In the disposition of mind in which Selkirk
+finds himself, he does not need these thoughts to make him pitiless.
+Marimonda reminds him of Stradling; the monkey shall pay for the man!
+
+He lowers his gun, and fires. The monkey has seen the movement and
+divined his intentions; she has only time to retreat behind her tree,
+which does not prevent her receiving in her side a part of the charge.
+
+This detonation of fire-arms, the first perhaps which has resounded in
+this corner of the earth since the creation of the world, as it is
+prolonged from echo to echo, even to the highest mountains, awakens in
+every part of the island as it were a groan of distress. Instinct,
+that sublime prescience, has revealed to all that a great peril has
+just been born.
+
+To the cries of affright from birds of every species, to the uneasy
+and distant bleating of the goats, succeeds a plaintive moaning, like
+the voice of a wailing infant.
+
+It is Marimonda lamenting over her wound.
+
+At nightfall, after an entire day of walks and explorations, Selkirk
+is returning to his grotto on the shore, when he sees a stone fall at
+his feet, then another.
+
+While he, astonished, is seeking to divine the direction from which
+this invisible battery plays, a little date-stone hits him on the
+cheek. He immediately hears as it were a joyous whistling in the
+foliage, which is agitated at his right, and sees Marimonda leaping
+from tree to tree, using for this movement her feet, her tail, and one
+hand; for she holds the other to her side. It is a compress on her
+wound.
+
+War is already in the island! Selkirk has a declared enemy here! And
+this island, is it deserted? He has just traversed it in every
+direction without seeing any thing which betokens the existence of a
+human being.
+
+His disaster is then complete; henceforth not a doubt of it can exist.
+And yet his forehead wears rather the character of hope and fortitude
+than of discouragement; it is more than resignation, it is pride.
+
+He has just visited his empire. The island, irregular in form, is from
+four to five leagues in length; in breadth it is from one and a half
+to two leagues. This abode to which he is condemned, is the most
+enchanting retreat he could have chosen; a luxuriant park cradled upon
+the waves.
+
+If sometimes, in the mountainous parts, he has encountered sterile and
+rugged rocks, even abysses and precipices, they seem to be placed
+there only as a contrast to the fresh and green valleys which encircle
+them. If he has seen some dark, dense, inaccessible forests, entangled
+in the thousand arms of interwoven vines, he has not discovered a
+single reptile.
+
+Every where, springs of living water, little streams which are lost
+under a thick verdure, or fall in cascades from the summits of the
+hills; every where a luxuriant vegetation; esculent and refreshing
+plants, celery, cresses, sorrel, spring in profusion beneath his feet;
+over his head, and almost within reach of his hand, palm-cabbages, and
+unknown fruits of succulent appearance: on the margin of the shores,
+muscles, periwinkles, shell-fish of every species, crabs crawling in
+the moist sand; beneath the transparent waters, innumerable shoals of
+fishes of all colors, all forms. Will game be wanting here? After what
+he has seen this morning, he will not even need his gun to obtain it.
+Oh! his provision of powder will last him a long time.
+
+What has he to desire more in this terrestrial Paradise? The society
+of men? Why? That he may find a master, a chief, under whose will he
+must bend? Men! but he despises, detests them! Is he not then
+sufficient for himself? Yes! this shall be his glory, his happiness!
+To live in entire liberty, to depend only upon himself, will not this
+impart to his soul true dignity? Besides, this island cannot be so far
+from the coast, but, from time to time, ships, or at least boats must
+come in sight. This is then for him but a transient seclusion; but
+were he even condemned to eternal isolation, this isolation has ceased
+to terrify him, he accepts it! Has he not almost always lived alone,
+in spirit at least? When he was in the depths of the hold, was he not
+better satisfied with his fate than when surrounded by those coarse
+sailors who composed the worthy crew of the Swordfish?
+
+To-day he is no longer the prisoner of Stradling, he is the prisoner
+of God! and this thought reassures him.
+
+A sailor, he has never loved but the sea; well! the sea surrounds him,
+guards him! He has then only thanks to render to God.
+
+Arrived at his grotto, he takes his Bible, opens it; but the sun,
+suddenly sinking below the horizon, permits him to read only this
+passage on which his finger is placed: 'Thou shalt perish in thy
+pride!'
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+
+Labors of the Colonist.--His Study.--Fishing.--Administration.
+--Selkirk Island.--The New Prometheus.--What is wanting to Happiness.
+--Encounter with Marimonda.--Monologue.
+
+Three months have passed away.
+
+Thanks to Selkirk, the shore which received him at his disembarkation,
+presents to-day an aspect not only picturesque, but animated. The hand
+of man has made itself felt there.
+
+The bushes and tufts of trees which hid the view of the hills in the
+distance, have been uprooted and cut down; pretty paths, covered with
+gravel, wind over the vast lawn; one in the direction of the valleys
+at the right, another towards the mountains at the left; a third leads
+to a tall mimosa, whose topmost boughs and dense foliage spread out
+like a parasol. A wooden bench, composed of some round sticks, driven
+into the earth, with branches interwoven and covered with bark,
+surrounds it; a rustic table, constructed in the same manner, stands
+at the foot of the tree. This is the study and place of meditation of
+the exile; here also he comes to take his meals, in sight of the sea.
+
+All three paths terminate in the grotto which Selkirk continues to
+make his residence. This grotto he has enlarged, quarried out with his
+hatchet, to make room for himself, his furniture, and provisions. He
+has even attempted to decorate its exterior with a bank of turf, and
+several species of creeping plants, trained to cover its calcareous
+nudity. At the entrance of his habitation, rise two young palm-trees,
+transplanted there by him, to serve as a portico. But nature is not
+always obedient to man; the vines and palm-trees do not prosper in
+their new location, and now the long flexible branches of the one, and
+the broad leaves of the other, droop half withered above the grotto,
+which they disfigure rather than decorate.
+
+By constant care, and with the aid of his streams, Selkirk hopes to be
+able to restore them to life and health. He has imposed on his two
+streams another duty, that of supplying a bed of water-cresses and a
+fish-pond, both provident establishments, the first of which has
+succeeded perfectly. As for the second, his most arduous task has
+been, not to dig the fish-pond, but to people it. For this purpose he
+has been compelled to become a fisherman, to manufacture a net. He has
+succeeded, with some threads from his fragment of a sail, the fibres
+of his cocoa-nuts, and tough reeds, woven in close meshes;
+unfortunately those fine fishes, breams, eels and angel-fish, which
+show themselves so readily through the limpid wave, are not as easy to
+catch as to see. Under the surface, almost at a level with the water,
+there is a ledge of rocks, upon which the net cannot be managed. After
+several fruitless attempts, he is obliged to content himself with the
+insignificant employment of fishing with a line; a nail flattened,
+sharpened and bent, performs the office of a hook. Success ensues, but
+only with time and patience; fortunately the sea-crabs allow
+themselves to be caught with the hand, and the fish-pond does not long
+remain useless and deserted.
+
+Besides, has not our fortunate Selkirk the resource of hunting? The
+chase he had commenced generously, like a wise monarch, who wages war
+only for the general interest. It is true, that as it happens with
+most wise monarchs, his own private interest is also to be consulted,
+at least he thinks so.
+
+Wild cats existed in the island, destroying young broods, agoutis, and
+other small game; he has almost entirely rid it of these pirates,
+reserving to himself only the right of levying upon his subjects the
+tribute of blood. He has already signalized his administration by acts
+of an entirely different nature.
+
+This king without a people, is ignorant in what part of the great
+ocean, and at what distance from its shores, is situated his nameless
+kingdom.
+
+Armed with his spy-glass, by the aid of his nautical charts, he
+attempts to ascertain, by the position of the stars, its longitude and
+latitude. He at first believes himself to be in one of the islands
+forming the group of Chiloe; his calculations rectified, he afterwards
+thinks it the Island of Juan Fernandez, then San Ambrosio, or San
+Felix. Unable to determine the location exactly, for want of correct
+instruments, he persuades himself that the country he inhabits has
+never been surveyed, that it is really a land without a name, and he
+gives it his own; he calls it Selkirk Island.
+
+Ambitious youth, thou hast thus realized one of thy brightest dreams!
+Dost thou remember the day when, on the way from Largo to St. Andrew,
+to join William Dampier, thou didst already see thyself the chief of a
+new country, discovered and baptized by thee?
+
+Well! has he not more than discovered this country? He inhabits it, he
+governs it, he reigns in it! Not satisfied with giving his name to the
+island, he soon creates a special nomenclature for its various
+localities. To the shore upon which he landed, he gives the name of
+_Swordfish Beach_; the pile of white and red rocks, which he saw
+through the fog, is the _False Coquimbo_; he calls _Toucan Forest_,
+the wood where he saw that bird for the first time; the _Defile of
+Attack_, is that where Marimonda assaulted him with stones; upon these
+arid rocks, furrowed by deep ravines and abounding in precipices, he
+has imposed the odious name of _Stradling_! In his mountains he has
+the _Oasis_; it is a little shady valley, enlivened by the murmur of a
+streamlet, and with one extremity opening to the sea. There he often
+goes to watch the game and the goats, which come to drink at the
+brook. Above it rises the table-land, with difficulty scaled by him on
+the day of his arrival, and from whence he became convinced that he
+had landed on an island. This table-land, he has named _The
+Discovery_.
+
+The two streams which meander over his lawn, and before his grotto,
+have also received names. This, commissioned to feed the fish-pond,
+and which gently warbles through the grass, he calls _The Linnet_; the
+other, interrupted by little cascades, and whose course is more rapid
+and impetuous, he calls _The Stammerer_.
+
+He has now destroyed the noxious animals, administered government,
+opened ways of communication, given a name to every part of his
+island. How many great rulers have done no more!
+
+But his labors have not been confined to his fish-pond, his bed of
+water-cresses, his hunting, fishing, building, felling of trees; it
+has become necessary to procure that essential element of
+civilization, of comfort, fire.
+
+What could the opulent proprietor of this enchanting abode do without
+fire? Is it not necessary, if he would open a passage through the
+dense woods? Is it not indispensable to his kitchen? Some of his
+trees, it is true, afford fruits in abundance; but most of these
+fruits are of a dry and woody nature; besides, young and vigorous,
+easily acquiring an appetite by labor and exercise, can he content
+himself with a dinner which is only a dessert? Surrounded with fishes
+of all colors, with feathered and other game, must he then be reduced
+to dispute with the agoutis, their maripa-nuts?
+
+He reflects; armed with a bit of iron, he strikes the flinty rocks of
+the mountains, to elicit from them useless sparks. He then remembers
+that savages obtain fire without flint and matches, by the friction of
+two pieces of dry wood; he tries, but in vain; he exhausts the
+strength of his arms, without being discouraged; he tries each tree,
+wishing even that a thunderbolt might strike the island, if it would
+leave there a trace of burning. At last, almost discouraged, he
+attacks the pimento-myrtle;[1] he recommences his customary efforts of
+rubbing. The twigs grow warm with the friction; a little white smoke
+appears, fluttering to and fro between his hands, rapid and trembling
+with emotion. The flame bursts forth! He utters a cry of triumph, and,
+hastily collecting other twigs and dry reeds, he leaps for joy around
+his fire, which, like another Prometheus, he has just stolen, not from
+heaven, but from earth!
+
+[Footnote 1: _Myrtus aromatica_; its berries are known under the name
+of Jamaica pepper.]
+
+Afterwards, in his gratitude, he runs to the myrtle, embraces it,
+kisses it. An act of folly, perhaps; perhaps an act of gratitude,
+which ascended higher than the topmost branches of the trees, higher
+than the culminating summits of the mountains of the island.
+
+But this fire, must he, each time he may need it, go through the same
+tedious process? Not far from his grotto, in a cavity which a
+projecting rock protects from the sea breeze, he piles up wood and
+brush, sets fire to it, keeps it alive from time to time, by the
+addition of combustibles, and comprehends why, among primitive
+nations, the earliest worship should have been that of fire; why, from
+Zoroaster to the Vestals, the care of preserving it should have been
+held sacred.
+
+At a later period, in the ordinary course of things, he simplified his
+means of preservation. With some threads and the fat of his game, he
+contrived a lamp; still later, he had oil, and reeds served him for
+wicks.
+
+Dating from this moment, the entire island paid tribute to him; the
+crabs, the eels, the flesh of the agouti, savory like that of the
+rabbit, by turns figured on his table. When he seasoned them with some
+morsels of pork, substituting ship biscuit for bread, his repasts were
+fit for an admiral.
+
+Although the goats had become wild, like the other inhabitants of the
+island, since all had learned the nature of man, and of the thunder,
+which he directed at his will, Selkirk still surprised them within
+gun-shot. Not only was their flesh profitable for food; their horns,
+long and hollow, served to contain powder and other small articles
+necessary to his house-keeping; of their skins he made carpets,
+coverings, and bags to protect his provisions from dampness. He even
+manufactured a game-pouch, which he constantly carried when hunting.
+
+His salt fish, his biscuit, some well smoked quarters of goat's flesh,
+and the productions of his fish-pond, at present constitute a store on
+which he can live for a long time, without any care, but to ameliorate
+his condition.
+
+He is now in possession of all the enjoyments he has coveted,
+abundance, leisure, absolute freedom.
+
+And yet, his brow is sometimes clouded, and an unaccountable
+uneasiness torments him; something seems wanting; his appetite fails,
+his courage grows feeble, his reveries are painfully prolonged. But,
+by mature reflection, he has discovered the cause of the evil.
+
+What is it that is so essential to his happiness? Tobacco.
+
+Our factitious wants often exercise over us a more tyrannical empire,
+than our real ones; it seems as if we clung with more force and
+tenacity to this second nature, because we have ourselves created it;
+it originates in us; the other originates with God, and is common to
+all!
+
+Selkirk now persuades himself that tobacco alone is wanting to his
+comfort; it is this privation which throws him into these sorrowful
+fits of languor. If Stradling had only given him a good stock of
+tobacco, he would have pardoned all; he no longer feels courage to
+hate him. What to him imports the plenty which surrounds him, if he
+has no tobacco? of what use is his leisure, if he cannot spend it in
+smoking? what avails even this fire, which he has just conquered, if
+he is prevented from lighting his pipe at it?
+
+Careworn and dissatisfied, he was wandering one morning through his
+domains, with his gun on his shoulder, his hatchet at his belt, when
+he perceived something dancing on a point of land, shadowed by tall
+canes.
+
+It was Marimonda.
+
+At sight of her enemy, she darted lightly and rapidly behind a woody
+hillock. An instant afterwards, he saw her tranquilly seated on the
+topmost branch of a tree, holding in each of her hands fruits which
+she was alternately striking against the branch, and against each
+other, to break their tough envelope.
+
+The sight of Marimonda has always awakened in Selkirk a sentiment of
+repulsion; she not only reminds him of Stradling, but with her
+withered cheeks, projecting jaw, and especially her dancing motion, he
+now imagines that she resembles him; and yet, pausing before her, he
+contemplates her not without a lively emotion of surprise and
+interest.
+
+He had already encountered her within gun-shot, when engaged in the
+destruction of the wild cats, and had asked himself whether he should
+not reckon her among noxious animals. But then Marimonda, with her
+hand constantly pressed against her side, was with the other seizing
+various herbs, which she tasted, bruised between her teeth, and
+applied to her wound; useless remedies, doubtless, for, grown meagre,
+her hair dull and bristling, she seemed to have but a few days to
+live, and Selkirk thought her not worth a charge of powder and shot.
+
+And here he finds her alert and healthy, holding in the same hand
+which had served as a compress, no longer the plant necessary for her
+cure, but the fruit desirable for her sustenance.
+
+'What,' said Selkirk to himself, 'in an island where this frightful
+monkey has never before been, she has succeeded in finding without
+difficulty the _herba sacra_, that which has restored her to health
+and strength! and I, Selkirk, who have studied at one of the principal
+universities of Scotland, I am vainly sighing for the plant which
+would suffice to render me completely happy! Is instinct then superior
+to reason? To believe this, would be ingratitude to Providence.
+Instinct is necessary, indispensable to animals, because they cannot
+benefit by the traditions of their ancestors. The monkey has consulted
+her instinct, and it has inspired her; if I consult reason, what will
+be her counsel? She will advise me to do like the monkey; to seek the
+herb of which I feel so great a want, or at least to endeavor to
+substitute for it something analogous; to choose, try, and taste, in
+short, to follow the example of Marimonda! I will not fail to do so;
+but it is nature reversed, and, for a man, it is too humiliating to
+see himself reduced to imitate a monkey!'
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+
+The Hammock.--Poison.--Success.--A Calm under the Tropics.--Invasion
+of the Island.--War and Plunder.--The Oasis.--The Spy-Glass.
+--Reconciliation.
+
+Do you see, upon a carpet of fresh verdure, the sandy margin of which
+is bathed by a caressing wave, that hammock suspended to the branches
+of those fine trees? What happy mortal, during the heat of the day, is
+there gently rocked, gently refreshed, by a light sea breeze? It is
+Selkirk; and this hammock is his sail, attached to his tall myrtles by
+strips of goat-skin. Perhaps he is resting after the fatigues of the
+day? No, it is the day of the Lord, and Selkirk now can consecrate the
+Sabbath to repose. With his eyes half closed, he is inhaling,
+undoubtedly, the perfume of his myrtles, the soft fragrance of his
+heliotropes? No, something sweeter still pre-occupies him. Is he
+dreaming of his friends in Scotland, of his first love? He has never
+known friendship, and the beautiful Catherine is far from his memory.
+What is he then doing in his hammock? He is smoking his pipe.
+
+His pipe! Has he a pipe? He has them of all forms, all sizes--made of
+spiral shells of various kinds, of maripa-nuts, of large reeds; all
+set in handles of myrtle, stalks of coarse grain, or the hollow bones
+of birds. In these he is luxurious; he has become a connoisseur; but
+this has not been the difficulty. Before every thing else, tobacco was
+wanting.
+
+In consequence of his encounter with Marimonda, he ransacked the woods
+and meadows, seeking among all plants those which approximated nearest
+to the nature of the nicotiana. As it was necessary to judge by their
+taste, he bit their leaves--chewed them, still in imitation of the
+monkey: but, to his new and profound humiliation, less skilful or less
+fortunate than the latter, he obtained at first no other result than a
+sort of poisoning: one of these plants being poisonous.
+
+For several days he saw himself condemned to absolute repose and a
+spare diet. His mouth, swollen, excoriated, refused all nourishment;
+his throat was burning; his body was covered with an eruption, and his
+languid and trembling limbs scarcely permitted him to drag himself to
+the stream to quench there the thirst by which he was devoured.
+
+He believed himself about to die; and grief then imposing silence on
+pride, with his eyes turned towards the sea, he allowed a
+long-repressed sigh to escape his heart. It was a regret for his
+absent country.
+
+Very soon these alarming symptoms disappeared; his strength returned;
+his water-cresses and wild sorrel completed the cure. Would he have
+dared to ask it of the other productions of his island? He had become
+suspicious of nature; these, at least, he had long known.
+
+Scarcely had he recovered, when the want of tobacco made itself felt
+anew with more force than ever. What to him imports experiment, what
+imports danger? Is it not to procure this precious, indispensable
+herb,--which the world had easily done without for thousands of years?
+
+This time, nevertheless, become more prudent, he no longer addresses
+himself to the sense of taste; but to odor, to that of smell. He has
+resolved to dry the different plants which appear to him most proper
+for the use to which he destines them, and to submit them afterwards
+to a trial by fire. Will not the smoke which escapes from them easily
+enable him to discover the qualities which he requires, since it is in
+smoke that they are to evaporate, if he succeeds in his researches?
+
+Of this grand collection of aromatics, two plants, at last, come off
+victorious. One is the petunia, that charming flower which at present
+decorates all our gardens, whence the enemies of tobacco may one day
+banish it; so it is only with trembling that I here announce its
+relationship to the nicotiana; the other, which, like the petunia,
+grows in profusion in the islands as well as on the continent of
+Southern America, is the herb _coca_, improperly so called, for its
+precious leaves, which are to the natives of Peru and Chili, what the
+_betel_ is for the Indians of Malabar, grow on an elegant shrub.[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: The _erythroxylum coca_.]
+
+These two plants, separately or together, composed, thanks to a slight
+amalgam of chalk, sea-water, and bruised pepper-corns, the most
+delicious tobacco.
+
+Now, half awake, Selkirk smokes, as he busies himself with
+constructing some necessary article, such as a ladder, a stool, a
+basket of rushes, with which he is completing the furniture of his
+house; he smokes while fishing, and while hunting; on his return to
+his dwelling, he lies down at the entrance of his grotto, on his bank
+of turf, re-lights his pipe at his fire, and smokes; at the hour of
+breakfast or of dinner, seated beneath the shade of his mimosa, his
+elbow on the table, his Bible open before him, he smokes still.
+
+Well! notwithstanding these pleasures so long desired, notwithstanding
+this addition to his comfort, notwithstanding his pipe, this vague
+uneasiness sometimes assails him anew.
+
+He ascribes it to enfeebled health; and yet he remains active and
+vigorous; he ascribes it to the powerful odors of certain trees which
+affect his brain. These trees he destroys around him, but his
+uneasiness continues; he ascribes it to his food, the insipidity of
+the fish which he has eaten without salt, since his quarter of pork is
+consumed, and his stores of pickled fish exhausted. In fact, the flesh
+of fish has for some time given him a nausea, occasioned frequent
+indigestions; he renounces it; his stomach recovers its tone; but his
+fits of torpor and melancholy continue.
+
+This state of suffering is most painful at those moments of profound
+calm, common between the tropics, when the birds are silent, when from
+the thickets and burrows issue no murmurs, when the insect seems to
+sleep within the closed corollas of the flowers; when the leaves of
+the mimosa fold themselves; when the tree-tops are not swayed by the
+slightest breath of air, and the sea, motionless, ceases to dash
+against the shore. What an inexpressible weight such a silence adds to
+isolation! And yet it is not an unbroken silence, for then a shrill
+and harsh sound seems to grate upon the ear. It is as if in this
+muteness of nature, one could hear the motion of the earth on its
+axis; then, above his head, in the depths of immensity, the whirling
+of the celestial spheres and myriads of worlds which gravitate in
+space. Thought becomes troubled and exhausted before this overwhelming
+and terrible immobility, and the man who, at such a moment, cannot
+have recourse to his kind, to distract or re-assure him, is
+overpowered with his own insignificance.
+
+Sometimes the solitary calls on himself to break this oppressive and
+painful silence; he articulates a few words aloud, and his voice
+inspires him with fear; it seems formidable and unnatural.
+
+During one of these sinister calms, in which every thing in creation
+seemed to pause, even the heart of man, seated on the shore, not
+having even strength to smoke, Selkirk was vainly awaiting the evening
+breeze; nothing came, but the obscurity of night. The moon, delaying
+her appearance, submitting in her turn to the sluggishness of all
+things, seemed detained below the circle of the horizon by some fatal
+power; the sea was dull, gloomy, and as it were congealed.
+
+Suddenly, though there was not a breath of air, Selkirk saw at his
+right, on a vast but limited tract of ocean, the waves violently
+agitated and foaming. He thought he distinguished a multitude of
+barques and canoes furrowing the surface of the waters; not far from
+Swordfish Beach, the flotilla enters a little cove running up into the
+mountains.
+
+He no longer sees any thing; but he hears a frightful tumult of
+discordant cries.
+
+There is no room for doubt! some Indian tribes, pursued perhaps by new
+conquerors from Europe, have just disembarked on the shore. Wo to him!
+he can hope from them neither pity nor mercy. A cold sweat bathes his
+forehead; he runs to his grotto, takes his gun, puts in his goatskin
+pouch some horns of powder and shot, a piece of smoked meat, not
+forgetting his Bible! and passes the night wandering in the woods, in
+the mountains, a prey to a thousand terrors; hearing without cessation
+the steps of pursuers behind him, and seeing fiery eyes glaring at him
+through the thickets.
+
+At day-break, with a thousand precautions, he returns to his grotto.
+He finds the beach covered with seals.
+
+These were the enemies whose invasion had so alarmed him.
+
+It is now the middle of the month of February, the period of the
+greatest tropical heats, and these amphibia, having left the shores of
+Chili or Peru, are accomplishing one of their periodical migrations.
+They have just taken possession of the island, one of their accustomed
+stations. But the island has now a master.
+
+Where he expected to encounter a peril, Selkirk finds amusement, a
+subject of study, perhaps a resource.
+
+A long time ago he has read, in the narratives of voyagers, singular
+stories concerning these marine animals, these _lions_, these
+_sea-elephants_, flocks of old Neptune, who have their chiefs, their
+pacha; who are acquainted with and practise the discipline of war;
+stationing vigilant sentinels in the spots they occupy, communicating
+to each other a pass-word, and attentive to the _Qui vive_?
+
+He spies them, he watches them, he takes pleasure in examining their
+grotesque forms,--half quadruped, half fish; their feet encased in a
+sort of web, and terminated by crooked claws, with which they creep on
+the earth; their skins, covered with short and glossy hair; their
+round heads and eyes.
+
+He is a witness of their sports, their combats; but very soon their
+frightful roaring and bellowing annoys him, and makes him regret the
+silence of his solitude. Another cause of complaint against them soon
+arises.
+
+One morning, Selkirk finds his fish-pond and bed of water-cresses
+devastated.
+
+Exasperated, he declares war against the invaders: during three days
+he tracks them, pursues them; ten of them fall beneath his balls,
+leaving the shore bathed in their blood. The rest at last take flight,
+and the army of seals, regaining the sea with despairing cries, goes
+to establish itself at the other extremity of the island.
+
+This war has been profitable to the conqueror. With the skin of the
+vanquished he makes himself a new hammock, which permits him to employ
+his sail for other uses; he also makes leather bottles, in which he
+preserves the oil which he extracts in abundance from their fat. Now
+he can have a lamp constantly burning, even by night. He has all the
+comforts of life. Of the hairy skin of the seals, he manufactures a
+broad-brimmed hat, which shields him from the burning rays of the sun.
+He tastes their flesh; it appears to him insipid and nauseous, like
+that of the fish; but the tongue, the heart, seasoned with pepper, are
+for him quite a luxury.
+
+Days, weeks, months roll away in the same toils, the same recreations.
+Whatever he may do to drive it away, this apathetic sadness, this
+sinking of soul, which has already tormented him at different periods,
+becomes with Selkirk more and more frequent; he cannot conquer it as
+he did the seals. His seals, he now regrets. When they were encamped
+on the shore, they at least gave him something to look at, an
+amusement; something lived, moved, near him.
+
+When he finds himself a prey to these fits, which, in his pride, he
+persists in attributing to transient indisposition, he goes to walk in
+the mountains, taking with him only his pipe, his Bible, and his
+spy-glass.
+
+He often pursues his journey as far as the oasis; there, he seats
+himself at the extremity of the little valley, opposite the sea, from
+which his eye can traverse its immense extent. He opens the holy book,
+and closes it immediately; then, his brow reddening, he seizes his
+spy-glass, levels it, and remains entire hours measuring the ocean,
+wave by wave.
+
+What is he looking for there? He seeks a sail, a sail which shall come
+to his island and bear him from his desert, from his _ennui_. His
+_ennui_ he can no longer dissimulate; this is the evil of his
+solitude.
+
+One day, while he was at this spot, the setting sun suddenly
+illuminated a black point, against which the waves seemed to break in
+foam, as against the prow of a ship; his eyes become dim, a tremor
+seizes him. He looks again--keeps his glass for a long time fixed on
+the same object, but the black point does not stir.
+
+'Another illusion!' said he to himself; 'it is a reef, a rock which
+the tide has left bare.'
+
+He wipes the glasses of his spy-glass, he examines again; he seems to
+see the waves whiten and whirl for a large space around this rock.
+
+'Can it be an island? If an island, is it inhabited? I will construct
+a barque, and if God has pity on me I will reach it.'
+
+At this moment he hears footsteps resound on the dry leaves which the
+wind has swept into the little valley. He turns hastily.
+
+It is Marimonda.
+
+Marimonda has no longer her lively and dancing motions; she also seems
+languid, sad. At sight of Selkirk, she makes a movement as if to flee;
+but almost immediately advances a little, and, sorrowful, with bent
+brow, sits down on a bank not far from him.
+
+Has she then remarked that he is without arms?
+
+On his side, Selkirk who had not met her for a long time, seemed to
+have forgotten his former aversion.
+
+At all events, is she not the most intelligent being chance has placed
+near him? He remembers that, in the ship, she obeyed the voice, the
+gesture of the captain, and that her tricks amused the whole crew.
+This resemblance to the human form, which he at first disliked, now
+awakens in him ideas of indulgence and peace. He reproaches himself
+with having treated her so brutally, when the poor animal, who alone
+had accompanied him into exile, at first accosted him with a caress.
+And now she returns, laying aside all ill-will, forgetting even the
+wound which she received from him in an impulse of irritation and
+hatred, of which she was not the object, for which she ought not to be
+responsible.
+
+He therefore makes to her a little sign with the head.
+
+Marimonda replies by winks of the eye and motions of the shoulders,
+which Selkirk thinks not wholly destitute of grace.
+
+He rises and approaches her, saluting her with an amicable gesture.
+
+She awaits him, chattering with her teeth and lips with an expression
+of joy.
+
+Selkirk gently passes his hand over her forehead and neck, calling her
+by name; then he starts for his habitation, and Marimonda follows him.
+The man and the monkey have just been reconciled. Both were tired of
+their isolation.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+
+A Tête-a-tête.--The Monkey's Goblet.--The Palace.--A Removal.--Winter
+under the Tropics--Plans for the Future.--Property.--A burst of
+Laughter.--Misfortune not far off.
+
+Tranquility of mind has returned to our solitary; now, his reveries
+are more pleasant and less prolonged; his walks through the woods, his
+moments of repose during the heat of the day seem more endurable since
+_something_, besides his shadow, keeps him company; he has resumed his
+taste for labor since there is _somebody_ to look at him; speech has
+returned to him since _somebody_ replies to his voice. This
+_somebody_, this _something_, is Marimonda.
+
+Marimonda is now the companion of Selkirk, his friend, his slave; she
+seems to comprehend his slightest gestures and even his _ennui_. To
+amuse him, she resorts to a thousand expedients, a thousand tricks of
+the agility peculiar to her race; she goes, she comes, she runs, she
+leaps, she bounds, she chatters at his side; she tries to people his
+solitude, to make a rustling around him; she brings him his pipes,
+rocks him in his hammock, and, for all these cares, all this
+attention, demands only a caress, which is no longer refused.
+
+She is often a spectator of her master's repasts; sometimes even
+shares them. This was at first a favor, afterwards a habit, as in the
+case of honest countrymen, who, secluded from the world, by degrees
+admit their servants into their intimacy. Selkirk had not to fear the
+importunate, unexpected visit of a neighbor or a curious stranger.
+
+So it is in the open air, on the latticed table, in the shade of his
+great mimosa, that these repasts in common take place; the master
+occupies the bench, the servant humbly seats herself on the stool,
+ready, at the first signal, to leave her place and assist in serving.
+Have we not seen in India, ourang-outangs trained to perform the
+office of domestics? and Marimonda was in nothing inferior in
+intelligence and activity.
+
+She is now fond of the flesh of the goat, of that of the coatis and
+agoutis, for monkeys easily become carnivorous; but the table is also
+sometimes covered with the products of her hunting. If the dessert
+fails, she hastily interrupts her repast, leaves the master to
+continue his alone, buries herself in the surrounding woods, reaches
+in three bounds the tops of the trees, and quickly returns with a
+supply of fruits which he can fearlessly taste, for she knows them.
+
+Selkirk was one day a witness of the singular facility with which she
+could supply her wants.
+
+At the morning repast, seeing him use one of his cocoa-nuts which he
+had fashioned in the form of a cup to drink from; in her instinct of
+imitation, she had attempted to seize the cup in her turn; a look of
+reprimand stopped her short in her attempt. Whether she felt a species
+of humiliation at being forced to quench her thirst in the presence of
+her master, by going to the banks of the stream and lapping there,
+like a vulgar animal; or whether the reprimand had painfully affected
+her, she abstained from drinking and remained for some time quiet and
+dreamy; but at the following repast, with lifted head and sparkling
+eye she resumed her place on the stool, provided with a goblet, a
+goblet belonging to her, lawfully obtained by her, and, with an air of
+triumph presented it to Selkirk, who, wondering, did not hesitate an
+instant to share with the monkey the water contained in his gourd.
+
+This goblet was the ligneous and impermeable capsule, the fruit,
+naturally and deeply hollowed out, of a tree called _quatela_.[1] It
+was thus that the intelligent Marimonda, after having borrowed from
+the numerous vegetables of the island their leaves, to ameliorate her
+sufferings, to heal her wounds; their fruits for her nourishment and
+even for her sports, also found means to obtain the divers utensils
+for house-keeping of which she stood in need.
+
+[Footnote 1: The _lecythis quatela_, of the family of the
+_lecythidées_, created by Professor Richard, and whose singular fruits
+bear, in Peru as well as in Chili, the denomination of _monkey's
+goblets_.]
+
+Charmed with her gentleness, her docility, the affection she seemed to
+bear him, Selkirk grew more and more attached to her. Winter, that is,
+the rainy season which usually lasts in these regions during the
+months of June and July, was approaching; he suffered in anticipation,
+from the idea that during this time his gentle companion would not be
+able to retain her habitual shelter, beneath the foliage of the trees;
+he conceived the project of giving up to her his grotto, and
+constructing for himself a new habitation, spacious and commodious. It
+is thus that our most generous resolutions, whatever we may design to
+do, encountering in their way personal interest, often turn to the
+increase of our own private welfare.
+
+At a little distance from the grotto, but farther inland, on the banks
+of the stream called the _Linnet_, there was a thicket of verdure
+shaded by five myrtles of from fifteen to twenty feet in height, and
+whose stems presented a diameter more than sufficient to insure the
+solidity of the edifice. Four of these myrtles formed an irregular
+square; the fifth arose in the midst, or nearly so; but our architect
+is not very particular. He already sees the principal part of his
+frame; the myrtles will remain in their places, their roots serving as
+a foundation. He removes the shrubs, the plants, the brushwood from
+the thicket, leaving only a heliotrope which, at a later period, may
+twine around his house and at evening shed its perfumes. He has become
+reconciled to its fragrance. He trims the trees, cuts off their tops
+eight feet above the ground, leaving the middle one, which is to
+sustain the roof, a foot higher; for this roof reeds and palm-leaves
+furnish all the materials. The walls, made of a solid network of young
+branches interwoven, and plastered with a mixture of sand, clay, and
+chopped rushes, he takes care not to build quite to the top, but to
+leave between them and the roof a little space, where the air can
+circulate freely through a light trellis formed of branches of the
+blue willow.
+
+Then, having finished his work in less than a fortnight, he
+contemplates it and admires it; Marimonda herself seems to share in
+his admiration, and in her joy climbing up the new building, she
+begins to leap, to dance on the roof of foliage, which bears her, and
+thus gives to Selkirk an additional triumph.
+
+He now proceeds to furnish his palace; he transports thither his bed
+of reeds and his goatskin coverings. How much better will he be
+sheltered here than under the gloomy vault of his grotto! How has he
+been able to content himself so long with such an abode, more suitable
+for a troglodyte or a monkey! He will no longer be obliged to lift up
+his curtain of vines, and to peep through the fans of his palm-trees,
+in order to behold the beneficent rays of the new-born day; they will
+come of themselves to find him and rejoice him at his awakening, as
+the sea-breezes will at evening breathe on him, to refresh him in his
+repose.
+
+Already has the interior of his cabin, of his palace, assumed an
+aspect which charms him; his guns, his hatchets, his spy-glass, his
+instruments of labor, well polished and shining, suspended in racks,
+upon wooden pegs, decorate the walls; upon another partition, his
+assortment of pipes are arranged on a shelf according to their size;
+on his central pillar, he suspends his game-bag, his gourd, his
+tobacco-pouch, and various articles of daily use. As for his iron pot,
+his smoked meat, his stock of skins, and bottles of seal-oil, he
+leaves them under the guardianship of Marimonda in the grotto which he
+will now make his store-house, his kitchen: he will not encumber with
+them his new dwelling.
+
+He now sets himself to prepare new furniture; he will construct a
+small portable table, two wooden seats, one for himself, the other for
+Marimonda, when she comes from her grotto to visit his cabin; for he
+has now a neighborhood. Besides, during the rainy season, they will be
+forced to dine under cover.
+
+The first rains have commenced, gentle, fertilizing rains, falling at
+intervals and lovingly drank in by the earth; Selkirk no longer thinks
+of his table and seats; another project has just taken the place of
+these, and seems to deserve the precedence.
+
+Marimonda has just returned from a tour in the woods, bringing fruits
+of all sorts, among them some which Selkirk has never before seen. He
+tastes them with more care and attention than usual; then, becoming
+thoughtful, with his chin resting on his hand says to himself: 'Why
+should I not make these fruits grow at my door, not far from my
+habitation? Why should I not attempt to improve them by cultivation?
+This is a very simple and very prudent idea which should have occurred
+to me long since; but I was alone, absolutely alone; and one loses
+courage when thinking of self only. A garden, at once an orchard and a
+vegetable garden, will be at least as useful to me as my fish-pond and
+bed of water-cresses; I will make one around my cabin; it will set it
+off and give it a more home-like appearance! Is not the stream placed
+here expressly to traverse it and water it? Afterwards, if God assist
+me, I will raise little kids which will become goats and give me milk,
+butter, cheese! Why have I not thought of this before? It would have
+been too much to have undertaken at once. I shall then have tame
+goats; I will also have Guinea-pigs, agoutis, and coatis. My house
+shall be enlarged, I will have a farm, a dairy! But the time has not
+yet come; let us first prepare the garden. Why has it not been already
+prepared? I am impatient to render the earth productive, fruitful by
+my cares, to walk in the shade of the trees I may plant; it seems to
+me that I shall be at home there, more than any where else!'
+
+You are right, Selkirk; to possess the entire island, is to possess
+nothing; it is simply to have permission to hunt, a right of promenade
+and pasture, which the other inhabitants of the island, quadrupeds or
+birds, can claim as well as yourself. What is property, without the
+power of improvement? Can the earth become the domain of a single
+person, when the true limits of his possessions must always be those
+of the field which affords him subsistence? Envy not then the
+happiness of the rich; they are but the transient holders and
+distributors of the public fortune; we possess, in reality, only that
+which we can ourselves enjoy; the rest escapes us, and contributes to
+the well-being of others.
+
+Selkirk comprehends that his streams, his bank of turf, his fish-pond,
+his bed of water-cresses, his grotto, his cabin, belong to him far
+otherwise than the twelve or fifteen square leagues of his island; to
+his private domain he now intends to add a garden, and this garden,
+this orchard, will be to him an increase of his wealth, since it will
+aid in the satisfaction of his wants.
+
+The humidity with which the earth begins to be penetrated, facilitates
+his labors; he sets himself to the work.
+
+Behold him then, now armed with his hatchet, now with a wooden shovel,
+which he has just manufactured, clearing the ground, digging,
+transplanting young fruit-trees, or sowing the seeds which he is soon
+to see spring up and prosper. Every thing grows rapidly in these
+climates.
+
+When the garden-spot is marked out, dug, sown, planted, not forgetting
+the kitchen vegetables, and especially the _coca_ and
+_petunia-nicotiana_, Selkirk, with his arms folded on his spade,
+thanks God with all his heart,--God who has given him strength to
+finish his work.
+
+He has never felt so happy as when, with his hands behind his back, he
+walks smoking, among his beds, in which nothing has as yet appeared;
+but he already sees, in a dream, his trees covered with blossoms;
+around these blossoms are buzzing numerous swarms of bees; he reflects
+upon the means of compelling them to yield the honey of which they
+have just stolen from him the essence. It is a settled thing, on his
+farm he will have hives! After his bees, still in his dream, come
+flocks of humming-birds to plunder in their turn. The happy possessor
+of the garden will exact no tribute from them, but the pleasure of
+seeing them suspend, by a silken thread, to the leaves of his shrubs,
+the elegant little boat in which they cradle their fragile brood.
+Nothing seems to him more beautiful than his embryo garden; here, he
+is more than the monarch of the island; he is a proprietor!
+
+Thanks to the garden, Selkirk sees with resignation the two long
+months of the rainy season pass away. When the heavy torrents render
+the paths impassable, he consoles himself by thinking that they aid in
+the germination of his seeds, in the rooting of his young plants.
+Sometimes, between two deluges, he can scarcely find time to procure
+himself sufficient game; what matters it! he lives on his provisions:
+he is forcibly detained within; but has he not now good cheer, good
+company, and occupation, during his leisure hours?
+
+It is now that he completes his furniture. His table and his seats
+finished, he undertakes to provide for another want, equally
+indispensable.
+
+Worn out by the weather, and by service, his garments are becoming
+ragged. He must shield himself from the humidity of the air; where
+shall he procure materials? Has he not the choice between seal-skins
+and goat-skins? He gives the preference to the latter, as more
+pliable, and behold him a tailor, cutting with the point of his knife;
+as for thread, it is furnished by the fragment of the sail; and two
+days afterwards, he finds himself flaming in a new suit.
+
+To describe the delirious stupefaction of Marimonda, when she
+perceives her master under this strange costume, would be a thing
+impossible. She finds him almost like herself, clad like her, in a
+hairy suit. Never tired of looking at him, of examining him curiously,
+she leaps, she gambols around him, now rolling at his feet, and
+uttering little cries of joy, now suspended over his head, at the top
+of the central pillar, and turning her wild and restless eyes. When
+she has thus inspected him from head to foot, she runs and crouches in
+a corner, with her face towards the wall, as if to reflect; then,
+whirling about, returns towards him, picks up on the way the garment
+he has just laid aside, looking alternately at this and at the other,
+very anxious to know which of the two really made a part of the
+person.
+
+After having enjoyed for a few moments the surprise and transports of
+his companion, Selkirk takes his Bible and his pipe, and, placing the
+book on the table, bends over it, preparing to read and to meditate.
+But, whether in consequence of her joyous excitement, or whether she
+is emboldened by the species of fraternity which costume establishes
+between them, Marimonda, without hesitation, directs herself to the
+little shelf, chooses from it a pipe in her turn, places it gravely
+between her lips, astonished at not seeing the smoke issue from it in
+a spiral column; and, with an important air, still imitating her
+master, comes to sit opposite him, with her brow inclined, and her
+elbow resting on the table.
+
+Willingly humoring her whim, Selkirk takes the pipe from her hands,
+fills it with his most spicy tobacco, lights it, and restores it to
+her.
+
+Hardly has Marimonda respired the first breath, when suddenly letting
+fall the pipe, overturning the table, emitting the smoke through her
+mouth and nostrils, she disappears, uttering plaintive cries, as if
+she had just tasted burning lava.
+
+At sight of the poor monkey, thus thrown into confusion, Selkirk, for
+the first time since his residence in the island, laughs so loudly,
+that the echo follows the fugitive to the grotto, where she had taken
+refuge, and is prolonged from the grotto to the _Oasis_, from the
+Oasis to the summit of the _Discovery_.
+
+The exile has at last laughed, laughed aloud, and, at the same moment,
+a terrible disaster is taking place without his knowledge; a new war
+is preparing for him, in which his arms will be useless.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+
+A New Invasion.--Selkirk joyfully meets an ancient Enemy.--Combat on
+a Red Cedar.--A Mother and her Little Ones.--The Flock.--Fête in the
+Island; Pacific Combats, Diversions and Swings.--A Sail.--The Burning
+Wood.--Presentiments of Marimonda.
+
+The next morning the sun has scarcely touched the horizon, Selkirk is
+still asleep, when he is awakened by a sort of tickling at his feet.
+Thinking it some caress or trick of Marimonda, risen earlier than
+usual, he half opens his eyes, sees nothing, and places himself again
+in a posture to continue his nap. The same tickling is renewed, but
+with more perseverance, and very soon something sharp and keen
+penetrates to the quick the hard envelope of his heel. The tickling
+has become a bite.
+
+This time wide awake, he raises his head. His cabin is full of rats!
+
+Near him, a company of them are tranquilly engaged in breakfasting on
+his coverings and the rushes of his couch; they are on his table, his
+seats, along his pillow and his walls; they are playing before his
+door, running hither and thither through the crevices of his roof,
+multiplying themselves on his rack and shelf; all biting, gnawing,
+nibbling--some his seal-skin hat, his tobacco-pouch, the bark
+ornaments of his furniture; others the handles of his tools, his
+pipes, his Bible, and even his powder-horn.
+
+Selkirk utters a cry, springs from his couch, and immediately crushes
+two under his heels. The rest take flight.
+
+As he is pursuing these new invaders with the shovel and musket, he
+perceives at a few paces' distance Marimonda, sorrowful and drooping,
+perched on the strong branch of a sapota-tree. By her piteous and
+chilly appearance, her tangled and wet hair, he doubts not but she has
+passed the whole night exposed to the inclemency of the weather. But
+he at first attributes this whim only to her ill-humor the evening
+before.
+
+On perceiving him, Marimonda descends, from her tree, sad, but still
+gentle and caressing, and with gestures of terror, points to the
+grotto. He runs thither.
+
+Here another spectacle of disorder and destruction awaits him; the
+rats are collected in it by thousands; his furs, his provisions of
+fruit and game, his bottles formerly filled with oil, every thing is
+sacked, torn in pieces, afloat; for the water has at last made its way
+through the crevices of the mountain. To put the climax to his
+misfortune, his reserve of powder, notwithstanding its double envelope
+of leather and horn, attacked by the voracious teeth of his
+aggressors, is swimming in the midst of an oily slime.
+
+The solitary now possesses, for the purpose of hunting, for the
+renewal of these provisions so necessary to his life, only the few
+charges contained in his portable powder-horn, and in the barrels of
+his guns. The blow which has just struck him is his ruin! and still
+the hardest trial appointed for him is yet to come.
+
+In penetrating the ground, the rains of winter have driven the rats
+from their holes; hence their invasion of the cabin and the grotto.
+
+Against so many enemies, what can Selkirk do, reduced to his single
+strength?
+
+He succeeds, nevertheless, in killing some; Marimonda herself, armed
+with the branch of a tree, serves as an ally, and aids him in putting
+them to flight; but their combined efforts are ineffectual. An hour
+after, the accursed race are multiplying round him, more numerous and
+more ravenous than ever.
+
+He comprehends then what an error he has committed in the complete
+destruction of the wild cats which peopled the island. With the most
+generous intentions, how often is man mistaken in the object he
+pursues! We think we are ridding us of an enemy, and we are depriving
+ourselves of a protector. God only knows what he does, and he has
+admitted apparent evil, as a principle, into the admirable composition
+of his universe; he suffers the wicked to live. Selkirk had been more
+severe than God, and he repents it. If his poor cats had only been
+exiled, he would hasten to proclaim a general amnesty. Alas! there is
+no amnesty with death. But has he indeed destroyed all? Perhaps some
+still exist in those distant regions which have already served as a
+refuge for that other banished race, the seals.
+
+The rains have ceased; the storms of winter, always accompanied by
+overpowering heat and dense fogs, no longer sadden the island by
+anticipated darkness, or the gloomy mutterings of continual thunder.
+The sun, though _garué_[1] absorbs the remainder of the inundation.
+Followed by Marimonda, Selkirk, for the first time, has ventured to
+the woods and thickets between the hills beyond the shore and the
+False Coquimbo, when a sound, sweeter to his ear than would have been
+the songs of a siren, makes him pause suddenly in ecstasy: it is the
+mewing of a cat.
+
+[Footnote 1: In Peru and Chili, they call _garua_ that mist which
+sometimes, and especially after the rainy season, floats around the
+disk of the sun.]
+
+This cat, strongly built, with a spotted and glossy coat, white nose,
+and brown whiskers, is stationed at a little distance, on a red cedar,
+where she is undoubtedly watching her prey.
+
+She is an old settler escaped from the general massacre; the last of
+the vanquished; perhaps!
+
+Without hesitation, Selkirk clasps the trunk of the tree, climbs it,
+reaches the first branches; Marimonda follows him and quickly goes
+beyond. At the aspect of these two aggressors, like herself clad in
+skin, the cat recoils, ascending; the monkey follows, pursues her from
+branch to branch, quite to the top of the cedar. Struck on the
+shoulder with a blow of the claw, she also recoils, but descending,
+and declaring herself vanquished in the first skirmish, immediately
+gives over the combat, or rather the sport, for she has seen only
+sport in the affair.
+
+Selkirk is not so easily discouraged; this cat he must have, he must
+have her alive; he wishes to make her the guardian of his cabin, his
+protector against the rats. Three times he succeeds in seizing her;
+three times the furious animal, struggling, tears his arms or face. It
+is a terrible, bloody conflict, mingled with exclamations, growlings,
+and frightful mewings. At last Selkirk, forgetting perhaps in the
+ardor of combat the object of victory, seizes her vigorously by the
+skin of the neck, at the risk of strangling her; with the other hand
+he grasps her around the body. The difficulty is now to carry her.
+Fortunately he has his game-bag. With one hand he holds her pressed
+against the fork of the tree; with the other arm he reaches his
+game-bag, opens it; the conquered animal, half dead, has not made,
+during this manoeuvre, a single movement of resistance. But when the
+hunter is about to close it, suddenly rousing herself with a leap,
+distending by a last effort all her muscles at once, she escapes from
+his grasp, and precipitates herself from the top of the cedar, to the
+great terror of Marimonda, then peaceably crouched under the tree,
+whom the cat brushes against in falling, and to the great
+disappointment of Selkirk, who thinks he has the captive in his pouch.
+
+Sliding along the trunk, Selkirk descends quickly to the ground; but
+the enemy has already disappeared, and left no trace. In vain his eyes
+are turned on all sides; he sees nothing, neither his adversary nor
+Marimonda, who has undoubtedly fled under the impression of this last
+terror.
+
+As he is in despair, a whistling familiar to his ear is heard, and at
+two hundred paces distant he perceives, on an eminence of the False
+Coquimbo, his monkey, bent double, in an attitude of contemplation,
+appearing very attentive to what is passing beneath her, and changing
+her posture only to send a repeated summons to her master.
+
+At all hazards he directs himself to this quarter.
+
+What a spectacle awaits him! In a cavity at the foot of the eminence
+where Marimonda is, he finds, crouching, still out of breath with her
+struggle and her race, his fugitive. She is a mother! and six kittens,
+already active, are rolling in the sun around her.
+
+Selkirk, seizing his knife, kills the mother, and carries off the
+little ones.
+
+A short time after, the rats have deserted the shore. But their
+departure, though it prevents the evil they might yet have done, does
+not remedy that already accomplished.
+
+The provisions of the solitary are almost entirely destroyed, and the
+little powder which remains is scarcely sufficient for a reserve which
+he no longer knows where to renew.
+
+The moment at last comes when he possesses no other ammunition than
+the only charge in his gun. This last charge, his last resource, oh!
+how preciously he preserves it to-day. While it is there, he can still
+believe himself armed, still powerful; he has not entirely exhausted
+his resources; it is his last hope. Who knows?--perhaps he may yet
+need it to protect his life in circumstances which he cannot foresee.
+
+But since his gun must remain suspended, inactive, to the walls of his
+cabin, it is time to think of supplying the place of the services it
+has rendered; it is time to realize his dream, and, according to the
+usual course of civilization, to substitute the life of a farmer and
+shepherd for that of a hunter.
+
+Already is his colony augmented by six new guests, domesticated in his
+house; already, on every side, his seeds are peeping out of the ground
+under the most favorable auspices; his young trees, firmly rooted, are
+growing rapidly beneath the double influence of heat and moisture; at
+the axil of some of their leaves, he sees a bud, an earnest of the
+harvest. He must now occupy himself with the means of surprising,
+seizing and retaining the ancestors of his future flock.
+
+Here, patience, address or stratagem can alone avail.
+
+Notwithstanding his natural agility, he does not dream of reaching
+them by pursuit. Since his last hunts, goats and kids keep themselves
+usually in the steep and mountainous parts of the island. To leap from
+rock to rock, to attempt to vie with them in celerity and lightness
+appears to him, with reason, a foolish and impracticable enterprise.
+Later, perhaps,... Who knows?
+
+He manufactures snares, traps; but suspicion is now the order of the
+day around him; each holds himself on the _qui vive_. After long
+waiting without any result, he finds in his snares a coati, some
+little Guinea pigs; here is one resource, undoubtedly, but he aims at
+higher game, and the kids will not allow themselves to be taken by his
+baits.
+
+He remembers then, that in certain parts of America, the hunters, in
+order to seize their prey living, have recourse to the lasso, a long
+cord terminated by a slip-noose, which they know how to throw at great
+distances, and almost always with certainty.
+
+With a thread which he obtains from the fibres of the aloe, with
+narrow strips of skin, closely woven, he composes a lasso more than
+fifty feet long; he tries it; he exercises it now against a tuft of
+leaves detached from a bush, now against some projecting rock;
+afterwards he tries it upon Marimonda, who often enough, by her
+agility and swiftness, puts her master at fault.
+
+In the interval of these preparatory exercises, Selkirk occupies
+himself with the construction of a latticed inclosure, destined to
+contain the flock which he hopes to possess; he makes it large and
+spacious, that his young cattle may bound and sport at their ease;
+high, that they may respect the limits he assigns them. In one corner,
+supported by solid posts, he builds a shed, simply covered with
+branches; that his flock may there be sheltered from the heat of the
+day. The inclosure and the shed, together with his garden, form a new
+addition to his great settlement.
+
+When, his kids shall have become goats, when the epoch of domesticity
+shall have arrived for them, when they shall have contracted habits of
+tameness, when they have learned to recognize his voice, then, and
+then only, will he permit them to wander and browse on the neighboring
+hills, under the direction of a vigilant guardian. This guardian,
+where shall he find? Why may it not be Marimonda? Marimonda, to whose
+intelligence he knows not where to affix bounds!
+
+Dreams, dreams, perhaps! and yet but for dreams, but for those gentle
+phantoms which he creates, and by which he surrounds himself, what
+would sustain the courage of the solitary?
+
+When Selkirk thinks he has acquired skill in the use of the lasso, he
+buries himself among the high mountains situated towards the central
+part of his island. Several days pass amid fruitless attempts, and
+when the delicately-carved foliage of the mimosa announces, by its
+folding, that night is approaching, he regains his cabin, gloomy,
+care-worn, and despairing of the future.
+
+Meanwhile, by his very failures, he has acquired experience. One
+evening, he returns to his dwelling, bringing with him two young kids,
+with scarcely perceptible horns, and reddish skin, varied with large
+brown spots. Marimonda welcomes her new guests, and this evening all
+in the habitation breathes joy and tranquillity.
+
+The week has not rolled away, when the number of Selkirk's goats
+exceeds that of his cats; and he takes pleasure in seeing them leap
+and play together in his inclosure; his mind has recovered its
+serenity.
+
+'Yes,' said he, with pride, 'man can suffice for himself, can depend
+on himself only for subsistence and welfare! Am I not a striking
+proof? Did not all seem lost for me, when an unforeseen catastrophe
+destroyed the remnant of the provision of powder which I owed to the
+pity of that miserable captain? Ah! undoubtedly according to his
+hateful calculations, he had limited the term of my life to the last
+charge which my gun should contain; this last charge is still there!
+Of what use will it be to me? Why do I need it? Are not my resources
+for subsistence more certain and numerous to-day than before? What
+then is wanting? The society of a Stradling and his fellows? God keep
+me from them! The best member of the crew of the brig Swordfish came
+away when I did. I have received from Marimonda more proofs of
+devotion than from all the companions I have had on land and on sea.
+What have I to regret? I am well off here; may God keep me in repose
+and health!'
+
+After this sally, he thought of his hives, which were still wanting,
+and of the methods to be employed to seize a swarm of bees.
+
+A month after, Selkirk, who religiously kept his reckoning on the
+margin of his Bible, resolved to celebrate the New Year. It was now
+the first of January, 1706.
+
+On this day he dined, not in his cabin, nor under his tree, but in the
+middle of the inclosure, surrounded by his family; fruits and good
+cheer were more abundant than usual; Marimonda, as was her custom,
+dined at the same table with himself: the cats shared in the feast;
+the goats roved around, stretching up to gaze with their blue eyes on
+the baskets of fruits, and returning to browse on the grass beneath
+the feet of the guests. Selkirk, as the master of the house, and chief
+of the family, generously distributed the provisions to his young and
+frolicksome republic, and Marimonda assisted him as well as she could,
+in doing the honors.
+
+After the repasts, there were races and combats; the remains of the
+baskets were thrown to the most skilful and the most adroit; then
+came, diversions and swings.
+
+Lying in his hammock, where he smoked his most excellent tobacco in
+his best pipe, Selkirk smilingly contemplated the capricious bounds,
+the riotous sports of his cats and kids, their graceful postures,
+their fraternal combats, in which sheathed claws and the inoffensive
+horn were the only weapons used on either side.
+
+To give more variety to the fête, Marimonda developes all the
+resources of her daring suppleness; she leaps from right to left,
+clearing large spaces with inconceivable dexterity. Attaining the
+summit of a tree, she whistles to attract her master's attention,
+then, with her two fore-paws clasped in her hind ones, she rolls
+herself up like a ball and drops on the ground; the foliage crackles
+beneath her fall, which seems as if it must be mortal; for her, this
+is only sport. Without altering the position of her limbs, she
+suddenly stops in her rapid descent, by means of her prehensile tail,
+that fifth hand, so powerful, with which nature has endowed the
+monkeys of America. Then, suspended by this organ alone, she
+accelerates her motions to and fro with incredible rapidity, quickly
+unwinds her tail from the branch by which she is suspended, and with a
+dart, traversing the air as if winged, alights at a hundred paces
+distance on a vine, which she instantly uses as a swing.
+
+Selkirk is astonished; he applauds the tricks of Marimonda, the sports
+and combats of his other subjects. Meanwhile, his eyes having turned
+towards the sea, his brow is suddenly overclouded. At the expiration
+of a few moments of an uneasy and agitated observation, he utters an
+exclamation, springs from his hammock, runs to his cabin, then to the
+shore, where he prostrates himself with his hands clasped and raised
+towards heaven.
+
+He has just perceived a sail.
+
+Provided with his glass, he seeks the sail upon the waves, he finds
+it. 'It is without doubt a barque,' said he to himself; 'a barque from
+the neighboring island, or some point of the continent!' And looking
+again through his copper tube, he clearly distinguishes three masts
+well rigged, decorated with white sails, which are swelling in the
+east wind, and gilded by the oblique rays of the declining sun.
+
+'It is a brig! The Swordfish, perhaps! Yes, Stradling has prolonged
+his voyage in these regions. The time which he had fixed for my exile
+has rolled away! He is coming to seek me. May he be blessed!'
+
+The movement which the brig made to double the island, had increased
+more and more the hopes of Selkirk, when the Spanish flag, hoisted at
+the stern, suddenly unfolded itself to his eyes.
+
+'The enemy!' exclaimed he; 'woe is me! If they land on this coast,
+whither shall I fly, where conceal myself? In the mountains! Yes, I
+can there succeed in escaping them! But, the wretches! they will
+destroy my cabin, my inclosure, my garden! the fruit of so much
+anxiety and labor!'
+
+And, with palpitating heart, he again watches the manoeuvres of the
+brig. The latter, having tacked several times, as if to get before the
+wind, hastily changed her course and stood out to sea.
+
+Selkirk remains stupefied, overwhelmed. 'These are Spaniards,'
+murmured he, after a moment's hesitation; 'what matters it! Am I now
+their enemy? I am only a colonist, an exile, a deserter from the
+English navy. They owe me protection, assistance, as a Christian. If
+they required it, I would serve on board their vessel! But they have
+gone; what method shall I employ to recall them, to signalize my
+presence?'
+
+There was but one; it was to kindle a large fire on the shore or on
+the hill. He needs hewn wood, and his supplies are exhausted; what is
+to be done?
+
+For an instant, in his disturbed mind, the idea arises to tear the
+lattice-work from his inclosure, the pillars and the roof from his
+shed, to pile them around his cabin, and set fire to the whole.
+
+This idea he quickly repulses, but it suffices to show what passed in
+the inner folds of the heart of this man, who had just now forced
+himself to believe that happiness was yet possible for him.
+
+On farther reflection, he remembers that behind his grotto, on one of
+the first terraces of the mountain, there is a dense thicket, where
+the trees, embarrassed with vines and dry briers, closely interwoven,
+calcined by the burning reflections of the sun on the rock which
+surrounds them, present a collection of dead branches and mouldy
+trunks, scarcely masked by the semblance of vegetation.
+
+Thither he transports all the brands preserved under the ashes of his
+hearth; he makes a pile of them; throws upon it armfuls of chips, bark
+and leaves. The flame soon runs along the bushes which encircle the
+thicket; and, when the sun goes down, an immense column of fire
+illuminates all this part of the island, and throws its light far over
+the ocean.
+
+Standing on the shore, Selkirk passes the night with his eyes fixed on
+the sea, his ear listening attentively to catch the distant sound of a
+vessel; but nothing presents itself to his glance upon the luminous
+and sparkling waves, and amid their dashing he hears no other sound
+but that of the trees and vines crackling in the flames.
+
+At morning all has disappeared. The fire has exhausted itself without
+going beyond its bounds, and the sea, calm and tranquil, shows nothing
+upon its surface but a few flocks of gulls.
+
+A week passes away, during which Selkirk remains thoughtful and
+taciturn; he rarely leaves the shore; he still beholds the sports of
+his cats and his kids, but no longer smiles at them; Marimonda, by way
+of amusing him, renews in his presence her surprising feats, but the
+attention of the master is elsewhere.
+
+Nevertheless, he cannot allow himself time to dream long with
+impunity; his reserve of smoked beef is nearly exhausted; to save it,
+he has again resorted to the shell-fish, which his stomach loathes; to
+the sea-crabs, of which he is tired; he needs other nourishment to
+restore his strength. He shakes off his lethargy, takes his lasso, his
+game-bag. His plan now is, not to hunt the kids, but the goats
+themselves.
+
+As he is about to set out, Marimonda approaches, preparing to
+accompany him. In his present frame of mind, Selkirk wishes to be
+alone, and makes her comprehend, by signs, that she must remain at
+home and watch the flock; but this time, contrary to her custom, she
+does not seem disposed to obey. Notwithstanding his orders, she
+follows him, stops when he turns, recommences to follow him, and, by
+her supplicating looks and expressive gestures, seeks to obtain the
+permission which he persists in refusing. At last Selkirk speaks
+severely, and she submits, still protesting against it by her air of
+sadness and depression. Was this, on her part, caprice or foresight?
+No one has the secret of these inexplicable instincts, which sometimes
+reveal to animals the presence of an invisible enemy, or the approach
+of a disaster.
+
+At evening, Selkirk had not returned! Marimonda passed the night in
+awaiting him, uttering plaintive cries.
+
+On the morrow the morning rolled away, then the day, then the night,
+and the cabin remained deserted, and Marimonda in vain scaled the
+trees and hills in the neighborhood to recover traces of her master.
+
+What had become of him?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+
+The Precipice.--A Dungeon in a Desert Island.--Resignation.--The passing
+Bird.--The browsing Goat.--The bending Tree.--Attempts at Deliverance.
+--Success.--Death of Marimonda.
+
+In that sterile and mountainous quarter of the island to which he has
+given the name of Stradling,--that name, importing to him
+misfortune,--Selkirk, venturing in pursuit of a goat, has fallen from
+a precipice.
+
+Fortunately the cavity is not deep. After a transient swoon,
+recovering his footing, experiencing only a general numbness, and some
+pain caused by the contusions resulting from his fall, he bethinks
+himself of the means of escape.
+
+But a circle of sharp rocks, contracting from the base to the summit,
+forms a tunnel over his head; no crevice, no precipitous ledge,
+interrupts their fatal uniformity. Only around him some platforms of
+sandy earth appear; he digs them with his knife, to form steps. Some
+fragments of roots project here and there through the interstices of
+the stones; he hopes to find a point of support by which to scale
+these abrupt walls. The little solidity of the roots, which give way
+in his grasp; his sufferings, which become more intense at every
+effort; these thousand rocky heads bending at once over him; all tell
+him plainly that it will be impossible for him to emerge from this
+hole--that it is destined to be his tomb.
+
+Poor young sailor, already condemned to isolation, separated from the
+rest of mankind, could he have foreseen that one day his captivity was
+to be still closer! that his steps would be chained, that the sight
+even of his island would be interdicted! and that in this desert,
+where he had neither persecutor nor jailer to fear, he would find a
+prison, a dungeon!
+
+After three days of anguish and tortures, after new and ineffectual
+attempts,--exhausted by fatigue, by thirst, by hunger,--consumed by
+fever, supervened in consequence of all his sufferings of body and
+soul, he resigns himself to his fate; with his foot, he prepares his
+last couch, composed of sand and dried leaves shaken from above by the
+neighboring trees; he lies down, folds his arms, closes his eyes, and
+prepares to die, thinking of his eternal salvation.
+
+Although he tries not to allow himself to be distracted by other
+thoughts, from time to time sounds from the outer world disturb his
+pious meditations. First it is the joyous song of a bird. To these
+vibrating notes another song replies from afar, on a more simple and
+almost plaintive key. It is doubtless the female, who, with a sort of
+modest and repressed tenderness, thus announces her retreat to him who
+calls; then a rapid rustling is heard above the head of the prisoner.
+It is the songster, hastening to rejoin his companion.
+
+Selkirk has never known love. Once perhaps,--in a fit of youth and
+delirium; and it was this false love which tore him from his studies,
+from his country!
+
+Ah! why did he not remain at Largo, with his father? To-day he also
+would have had a companion! In that smiling country where coolness
+dwells, where labor is so easy, life so sweet and calm, the paternal
+roof would have sheltered his happiness! Oh! the joys of his infancy!
+his green and sunny Scotland.
+
+The regrets which arise in his heart he quickly banishes; his dear
+remembrances he sacrifices to God; he weaves them into a fervent
+prayer.
+
+Very soon an approaching bleating rouses him again from his
+abstractions. A goat, with restless eye, has just stretched her head
+over the edge of the precipice, and for an instant fixes on him her
+astonished glance. Then, as if re-assured, defying his powerlessness,
+with a disdainful lip she quietly crops some tufts of grass growing on
+the verge of the tunnel.
+
+On seeing her, Selkirk instinctively lays his hand on the lasso which
+is beside him.
+
+'If I succeed in reaching her, in catching her,' said he, 'her blood
+will quench the thirst which devours me, her flesh will appease my
+hunger. But of what use would it be? Whence can I expect aid and
+succor for my deliverance? This would then only prolong my
+sufferings.'
+
+And, throwing aside the end of the lasso which he has just seized, he
+again folds his arms on his breast, and closes his eyes once more.
+
+I know not what stoical philosopher--Atticus, I believe, a prey to a
+malady which he thought incurable,--had resolved to die of inanition.
+At the expiration of a certain number of days, abstinence had cured
+him, and when his friends, in the number of whom he reckoned Cicero,
+exhorted him to take nourishment, persisting in his first resolution,
+'Of what use is it!' said he also, 'Must I not die sooner or later?
+Why should I then retrace my steps, when I have already travelled more
+than half the road?'
+
+Selkirk had more reason than Atticus to decide thus; besides, his
+friends, where are they, to exhort him to live? Friends!--has he ever
+had any?
+
+Night comes, and with the night a terrific hurricane arises. By the
+glare of the lightning he sees a tree, situated not far from the
+tunnel, bend towards him, almost broken by the violence of the wind.
+
+'Perhaps Providence will send me a method of saving myself!' murmured
+Selkirk; 'should the tree fall on this side, if its branches do not
+crush me, they will serve as steps to aid me to leave this pit! I am
+saved!'
+
+But the tree resists the storm, which passes away, carrying with it
+the last hope of the captive.
+
+Towards the morning of the fourth day his fever has ceased; the
+tortures of hunger and thirst are no longer felt; the complete
+annihilation of his strength is to him a kind of relief; sleep seizes
+him, and with sleep he thinks death must come.
+
+Soon, in his dream, in a hallucination springing undoubtedly from the
+weakness of his brain, plaints, confused and distant groans, reach him
+from different points of the island. These sorrowful cries, almost
+uninterrupted, afterwards approach, and are repeated with increasing
+strength. He awakes, he listens; the bushes around him crackle and
+rustle; even the earth emits a dull sound, as beneath the bounding of
+a goat; the cries are renewed and become more and more distinct, like
+the sobs of a child. Selkirk puts his hand to his forehead. These
+plaints, these sobs, he thinks he recognizes, and, suddenly raising
+himself with a convulsive effort, he exclaims:
+
+'Marimonda!'
+
+And Marimonda runs at her master's voice, changes, on seeing him, her
+cries of distress for cries of joy, leaps and gambols on the edge of
+the cavity, and, quickly finding a way to join him, suspends herself
+by her tail to one of the branches on the verge, and springs to his
+side.
+
+Then contortions, caresses, winks of the eyes, motions of the head,
+whining, whistling, succeed each other; she rolls before him, embraces
+him closely, seeking by every method to supply the place of that
+speech which alone is wanting, and which she almost seems to have.
+Good Marimonda! her humid and shivering skin, her bruised and bleeding
+feet, her in-flamed eyes, plainly tell Selkirk how long she has been
+in search of him, how she has watched, run, to find him, and, not
+finding him, what she has suffered at his absence.
+
+Her first transports over, by his pale complexion, by his dim eye, she
+quickly divines that it is want of food which has reduced him to this
+condition. Swift as a bird she climbs the sides of the tunnel; she
+repeatedly goes and returns, bringing each time fruits and canes full
+of savory and refreshing liquid. It is precisely the usual hour for
+their first repast, and once more they can partake of it together.
+
+Revived by this repast, by the sight of his companion in exile,
+Selkirk recovers his ideas of life and liberty. This abyss, from which
+she ascends with so much facility, who knows but with her aid he may
+be able in his turn to leave it? He remembers his lasso; he puts one
+end of it into Marimonda's hand. It is now necessary that she should
+fix it to some projection of the rock, some strong shrub, which may
+serve as a point of support.
+
+It was perhaps presuming too much on the intelligence which nature has
+bestowed on the race of monkeys. At her master's orders, Marimonda
+would seize the end of the cord, then immediately abandon it, as she
+needed entire freedom of motion to enable her to scale the walls of
+the tunnel.
+
+After several ineffectual attempts, Selkirk, as a last resort, decided
+to encircle Marimonda with the noose of the lasso, and, by a gesture,
+to send her towards those heights where he was so impatient to join
+her.
+
+She departs, dragging after her the chain, of which he holds the other
+extremity: this chain, the only bridge thrown for him between the
+abyss and the port of safety, between life and death!
+
+With what anxiety he observes, studies its oscillations! Several times
+he draws it towards him, and each time, as if in reply to his summons,
+Marimonda suddenly re-appears at the brow of the precipice, preparing
+to re-descend; but he repulses her with his voice and gestures, and
+when these methods are insufficient,--when Marimonda, exhausted with
+lassitude, seated on the verge of the tunnel, persists in remaining
+motionless, he has recourse to projectiles. To compel her to second
+him in his work, the possible realization of which he himself scarcely
+comprehends, he throws at her some fragments of stone detached from
+his rocky wall, and even the remains of that repast for which he is
+indebted to her. Even when she is at a distance, informed by the
+movements of the lasso of the direction she has taken, he pursues her
+still.
+
+Suddenly the cord tightens in his hand. He pulls again, he pulls with
+force; the cord resists! Fire mounts to his brain; his sluggish blood
+is quickened; his heart and temples beat violently; his fever returns,
+but only to restore to him, at this decisive moment, his former vigor.
+He hastily digs new steps in the interstices of the rock; with his
+hands suspending himself to the lasso, assisted by his feet, by his
+knees, sometimes turning, grasping the projecting roots, the angles of
+his wall, he at last reaches the top of the cliff.
+
+Suddenly he feels the lasso stretch, as if about to break; a mist
+passes over his eyes: his head becomes dizzy, the cord escapes his
+grasp. But, by a mechanical movement, he has seized one of the highest
+projections of the tunnel, he holds it, he climbs,--he is saved.
+
+And during this perilous ascension, absorbed in the difficulties of
+the undertaking, attentive to himself alone, staggering, with a
+buzzing sound in his ears, he has not heard a sorrowful, lamentable
+moaning, not far from him.
+
+Dragging hither and thither after her the rope of leather and fibre of
+aloes, Marimonda, rather, doubtless, by chance than by calculation,
+had enlaced it around the trunk of the same tree which the night
+before, during the storm, had agitated its dishevelled branches above
+the deep couch of the dying man. This trunk had served as a point of
+resistance; but, during the tension, the unfortunate monkey, with her
+breast against the tree, had herself been caught in the folds of the
+lasso.
+
+When Selkirk arrives, he finds her extended on the ground, blood and
+foam issuing from her mouth, and her eyes starting from their sockets.
+Kneeling beside her, he loosens the bonds which still detain her.
+Excited by his presence, Marimonda makes an effort to rise, but
+immediately falls back, uttering a new cry of pain.
+
+With his heart full of anguish, taking her in his arms, Selkirk, not
+without a painful effort, not without being obliged to pause on the
+way to recover his strength, carries her to the dwelling on the shore.
+
+This shore he finds deserted and in confusion.
+
+Deprived of their daily nourishment during the prolonged absence of
+their master, the goats have made a passage through the inclosure, by
+gnawing the still green foliage which imprisoned them; the hurricane
+of the night has overthrown the rest. Before leaving, they had ravaged
+the garden, destroyed the promises of the approaching harvest, and
+devoured even the bark of the young trees. The cats have followed the
+goats. Selkirk has before his eyes a spectacle of desolation; his
+props, his trellises, the remains of his orchard, of his inclosure, of
+his shed, a part even of the roof of his cabin, strew the earth in
+confusion around him.
+
+But it is not this which occupies him now. He has prepared for
+Marimonda a bed beside his own; he takes care of her, he watches over
+her, he leaves her only to seek in the woods, or on the mountains, the
+herb which may heal her; he brings all sorts, and by armfuls, that she
+may choose;--does she not know them better than himself?
+
+As she turns away her head, or repulses with the hand those which he
+presents, he thinks he has not yet discovered the one she requires,
+and though still suffering, though himself exhausted by so many
+varying emotions, he re-commences his search, to summon the entire
+island to the assistance of Marimonda. From each of his trees he
+borrows a branch; from his bushes, his rocks, his streams--a plant, a
+fruit, a leaf, a root! For the first time he ventures across the
+_pajonals_--spongy marshes formed by the sea along the cliffs, and
+where, beneath the shade of the mangroves, grow those singular
+vegetables, those gelatinous plants, endowed with vitality and motion.
+At sight of all these remedies, Marimonda closes her eyes, and reopens
+them only to address to her friend a look of gratitude.
+
+The only thing she accepts is the water he offers her, the water which
+he himself holds to her lips in his cocoa-nut cup.
+
+During a whole week, Selkirk remains constantly absorbed in these
+cares, useless cares!--Marimonda cannot be healed! In her breast,
+bruised by the folds of the lasso, exists an important lesion of the
+organs essential to life, and from time to time a gush of blood
+reddens her white teeth.
+
+'What!' said Selkirk to himself, 'she has then accompanied me on this
+corner of earth only to be my victim! To her first caress I replied
+only by brutality; the first shot I fired in this island was directed
+against her. I pursued for a long time, with my thoughtless and stupid
+hatred, the only being who has ever loved me, and who to-day is dying
+for having saved me from that precipice from which I drove her with
+blows of stones! Marimonda, my companion, my friend,--no! thou shalt
+not die! He who sent thee to me as a consolation will not take thee
+away so soon, to leave me a thousand times more alone, more unhappy,
+than ever! God, in clothing thee with a form almost human, has
+undoubtedly given thee a soul almost like ours; the gleam of
+tenderness and intelligence which shines in thine eyes, where could it
+have been lighted, but at that divine fire whence all affection and
+devotion emanate? Well! I will implore Him for thee; and if He refuse
+to hear me, it will be because He has forgotten me, because He has
+entirely forsaken me, and I shall have nothing more to expect from His
+mercy!'
+
+Falling then upon his knees, with his forehead upon the ground, he
+prays God for Marimonda.
+
+Meanwhile, from day to day the poor invalid grows weaker; her eyes
+become dim and glassy; her limbs frightfully emaciated, and her hair
+comes off in large masses.
+
+One evening, exhausted with fatigue, after having wrapped in a
+covering of goat-skin Marimonda, who was in a violent fever, Selkirk
+was preparing to retire to rest; she detained him, and, taking his
+hand in both of hers, cast upon him a gentle and prolonged look, which
+resembled an adieu.
+
+He seated himself beside her on the ground.
+
+Then, without letting go his hand, she leaned her head on her master's
+knee, and fell asleep in this position. Selkirk dares not stir, for
+fear of disturbing her repose. Insensibly sleep seizes him also.
+
+In the morning when he awakes, the sun is illuminating the interior of
+his cabin; Marimonda remains in the same attitude as the evening
+before, but her hands are cold, and a swarm of flies and mosquitoes
+are thrusting their sharp trunks into her eyes and ears.
+
+She is a corpse.
+
+Selkirk raises her, uttering a cry, and, after having cast an angry
+look towards heaven, wipes away two tears that trickle down his
+cheeks.
+
+Thou thoughtest thyself insensible, Selkirk, and behold, thou art
+weeping!--thou, who hast more than once seen, with unmoistened eye,
+men, thy companions, in war or at sea, fall beneath a furious sword,
+or under the fire of batteries! Among the sentiments which honor
+humanity, which elevate it notwithstanding its defects, thou hadst
+preserved at least thy confidence in God and in his mercy, Selkirk,
+and to-day thou doubtest both!
+
+Why dost thou weep? why dost thou distrust God?
+
+Because thy monkey is dead!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+
+Discouragement.--A Discovery.--A Retrospective Glance.--Project of
+Suicide.--The Last Shot.--The Sea Serpent.--The _Porro_.--A Message.
+--Another Solitary.
+
+His provisions are exhausted, and Selkirk thinks not of renewing them;
+his settlement on the shore is destroyed, and he thinks not of
+rebuilding it; the fish-pond, the bed of water-cresses are encroached
+upon by sand and weeds, and he thinks not of repairing them. His mind,
+completely discouraged, recoils before such labors; he has scarcely
+troubled himself to replace the roof of his cabin.
+
+In the midst of his dreams, Selkirk had not counted enough on two
+terrific guests, which must sooner or later come: despair and _ennui_.
+
+Nevertheless, he had read in his Bible this passage: 'As the worm
+gnaweth the garment and rottenness the wood, so doth the weariness of
+solitude gnaw the heart of man.'
+
+One day, as he was descending from the Oasis, where he had dug a tomb
+for Marimonda, he bethought himself of visiting the site of his
+burning wood.
+
+Around him, the earth, blackened by the ravages of the fire, presented
+only a naked, gloomy and desolate picture. To his great surprise,
+beneath the ruins, under coal dust and half-calcined trunks of trees,
+he discovered, elevated several feet above the soil, the partition of
+a wall, some stones quarried out and placed one upon another; in fine,
+the remains of a building, evidently constructed by the hand of man.
+
+Men had then inhabited this island before him! What had become of
+them? This wood, impenetrably choked, stifled with thorny bushes,
+briars and vines, and which he had delivered over to the flames, was
+undoubtedly a garden planted by them, on a sheltered declivity of the
+mountain; the garden which surrounded their habitation, as he had
+himself designed his own to do.
+
+Ah! if he could have but found them in the island, how different would
+have been his fate! But to live alone! to have no companions but his
+own thoughts! amid the dash of waves, the cry of birds, the bleating
+of goats, incessantly to imagine the sound of a human voice, and
+incessantly to experience the torture of being undeceived! What
+elements of happiness has he ever met in this miserable island? When
+he dreamed of creating resources for a long and peaceful future, he
+lied to himself. A life favored by leisure would but crush him the
+oftener beneath the weight of thought, and it is thought which is
+killing him, the thought of isolation!
+
+What import to him the beautiful sights spread out before his eyes?
+The vast extent of sky and earth has repeated to him each day that he
+is lost, forgotten on an obscure point of the globe. The sunrises and
+sunsets, with their magic aspects, this luxuriant tropical vegetation,
+the magnificent and picturesque scenery of his island, awaken in him
+only a feeling of restraint, an uneasiness which he cannot define.
+Perhaps the emotions, so sweet to all, are painful to him only because
+he cannot communicate them, share them with another. It is not the
+noisy life of cities which he asks, not even that of the shore. But,
+at least, a companion, a being to reply to his voice, to be associated
+with his joys, his sorrows. Marimonda! No, he recognizes it now!
+Marimonda could amuse him, but was not sufficient; she inhabited with
+him only the exterior world, she communicated with him only by things
+visible and palpable; her affection for her master, her gentleness,
+her admirable instinct, sometimes succeeded in lessening the distance
+which separated their two natures, but did not wholly fill up the
+interval.
+
+He had exaggerated the intelligence which, besides, increased at the
+expense of her strength, as with all monkeys; for God has not willed
+that an animal should approximate too closely to man; he had overrated
+the sense of her acts, because he needed near him a thinking and
+acting being; but with her, confidences, plans, hopes, communication,
+the exchange of all those intimate and mysterious thoughts which are
+the life of the soul, were they possible? Even her eyes did not see
+like his own; admiration was forbidden to her; admiration, that
+precious faculty, which exists only for man,--and which becomes
+extinct by isolation.
+
+How many others become extinct also!
+
+Self-love, a just self-esteem, that powerful lever which sustains us,
+which elevates us, which compels us to respect in ourselves that
+nobility of race which we derive from God, what becomes of it in
+solitude? For Selkirk, vanity itself has lost its power to stimulate.
+Formerly, when in the presence of his comrades at St. Andrew or of the
+royal fleet, he had signalized himself by feats of address or courage,
+a sentiment of pride or triumph had inspired him. Since his arrival in
+the island, his courage and address have had but too frequent
+opportunities of exercising themselves, but he has been excited only
+by want, by necessity, by a purely personal interest. Besides, can one
+utter an exclamation of triumph, where there is not even an echo to
+repeat it?
+
+After having thus painfully passed in review all of which his exile
+from the world had deprived him, he exclaimed:
+
+'To live alone, what a martyrdom! to live useless to all, what a
+disgrace! What! does no one need me? What! are generosity, devotion,
+even pity, all those noble instincts by which the soul reveals itself,
+for ever interdicted to me? This is death, death premature and
+shameful! Ah! why did I not remain at the foot of that precipice?'
+
+With downcast head, he remained some time overwhelmed with the weight
+of his discouragement; then, suddenly, his brow cleared up, a sinister
+thought crossed his mind; he ran to his cabin, seized his gun. This
+last shot, this last charge of powder and lead, which he has preserved
+so preciously as a final resource, it will serve to put an end to his
+days! Well, is not this the most valuable service he can expect from
+it? He examines the gun; the priming is yet undisturbed; he passes his
+nail over the flint, leans the butt against the ground, takes off the
+thick leather which covers his foot, that he may be able to fire with
+more certainty. But during all these preparations his resolution grows
+weaker; he trembles as he rests the gun against his temples; that
+sentiment of self-preservation, so profoundly implanted in the heart
+of man, re-awakens in him. He hesitates--thrice returning to his first
+resolution, he brings the gun to his forehead; thrice he removes it.
+At last, to drive away this demon of suicide, he fires it in the air.
+
+Scarcely has he thus uselessly thrown away this precious shot before
+he repents. He approaches the shore; it is at the moment when the tide
+is at its lowest ebb; the sun touches the horizon. Selkirk lies down
+on the damp beach:--'When the wave returns,' said he, 'if it be God's
+will, let it take me!'
+
+Slumber comes first. Exhausted with emotion, yielding to the lassitude
+of his mind, he falls asleep. In the middle of the night, suddenly
+awakened by the sound of the advancing wave, he again flees before the
+threat of death; he no longer wishes to die. Once in safety, he turns
+to contemplate that immense sea which, for an instant, he had wished
+might be his tomb.
+
+By the moonlight, he perceives as it were a long and slender chain,
+which, gliding upon the crest of the waves, directs itself towards the
+shore. By its form, by its copper color, by the multiplicity of its
+rings, unfolding in the distance, Selkirk recognizes the sea-serpent,
+that terror of navigators, as he has often heard it described.
+
+The mind of the solitary is a perpetual mirage.
+
+Filled with terror, he flies again; he conceals himself, trembling, in
+the caverns of his mountains; he has become a coward; why should he
+affect a courage he does not feel? No one is looking at him!
+
+The next day, instead of the sea-serpent, he finds on the beach an
+immense cryptogamia, a gigantic alga, of a single piece, divided into
+a thousand cylindrical branches, and much superior to all those he has
+observed in the Straits of Sunda. The rising tide had thrown it on the
+shore.
+
+While he examines it, he sees with surprise all sorts of birds come to
+peck at it; coatis, agoutis, and even rats, come out of their holes,
+boldly carrying away before his eyes fragments, whence issues a thick
+and brown sap. Emboldened by their example, and especially by the
+balsamic odor of the plant, he tastes it. It is sweet and succulent.
+
+This plant is no other than that providential vegetable called by the
+Spaniards _porro_, and which forms so large a part of the nourishment
+of the poor inhabitants of Chili.[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: It is the _Durvilloea utilis_, dedicated to Dumont
+d'Urville, by Bory de St. Vincent, and classed by him in the
+laminariées, an important and valuable family of marine cryptogamia.]
+
+The sea, which had already sent Selkirk seals to furnish him with oil
+and furs in a moment of distress, had just come to his assistance by
+giving him an easily procured aliment for a long time.
+
+Another surprise awaits him.
+
+Between the interlaced branches of his alga, he discovers a little
+bottle, strongly secured with a cork and wax. It contains a fragment
+of parchment, on which are traced some lines in the Spanish language.
+
+Although he is but imperfectly acquainted with this language, though
+the characters are partially effaced or scarcely legible, Selkirk, by
+dint of patience and study, soon deciphers the following words:
+
+'In the name of the Holy Trinity, to you who may read'--(here some
+words were wanting,)--'greeting. My name is Jean Gons--(Gonzalve or
+Gonsales; the rest of the name was illegible.) After having seen my
+two sons, and almost all my fortune, swallowed up in the sea with the
+vessel _Fernand Cortes_, in which I was a passenger, thrown by
+shipwreck on the coasts of the Island of San Ambrosio, near Chili, I
+live here alone and desolate. May God and men come to my aid!'
+
+At the bottom of the parchment, some other characters were
+perceptible, but without form, without connection, and almost entirely
+destroyed by a slight mould which had collected at the bottom of the
+bottle.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+
+The Island San Ambrosio.--Selkirk at last knows what Friendship is.--The
+Raft.--Visits to the Tomb of Marimonda.--The Departure.--The two
+Islands.--Shipwreck.--The Port of Safety.
+
+As he read this, Selkirk was seized with intense pity for the
+unfortunate shipwrecked. What! on this same ocean, undoubtedly on
+these same shores, lives another unhappy being, like himself exiled
+from the world, enduring the same sufferings, subject to the same
+wants, experiencing the same _ennui_, the same anguish as himself!
+this man has confided to the sea his cry of distress, his complaint,
+and the sea, a faithful messenger, has just deposited it at the feet
+of Selkirk!
+
+Suddenly he remembers that rock, that island, discerned by him, on the
+day when at the Oasis, he was reconciled to Marimonda.
+
+That is the island of San Ambrosio; it is there, he does not doubt it
+for an instant, that his new friend lives; yes, his friend! for, from
+this moment he experiences for him an emotion of sympathetic
+affection. He loves him, he is so much to be pitied! Poor father, he
+has lost his sons, he has lost his fortune and the hope of returning
+to his country; and yet there reigns in his letter a tone of dignified
+calmness, of religious resignation which can come only from a noble
+heart. He is a Spaniard and a Roman Catholic; Selkirk is a Scotchman
+and a Presbyterian; what matters it?
+
+To-day his friend demands assistance, and he has resolved to dare all,
+to undertake all to respond to his appeal. Like a lamp deprived of
+air, his mind has revived at this idea, that he can at last be useful
+to others than himself. The inhabitant of San Ambrosio shall be
+indebted to him for an alleviation of his sorrows; for companionship
+in them. What is there visionary about this hope? Had he not already
+conceived the project of preparing a barque to explore that unknown
+coast? God seems to encourage his design, by sending him at once this
+double manna for the body and soul, the _porro_, which will suffice
+for his nourishment, and this writing, which the wave has just
+brought, to impose on him a duty.
+
+He immediately sets himself to the work, and obstacles are powerless
+to chill his generous excitement. Of the vegetable productions of the
+island, the red cedar and myrtle are those which grow of the largest
+size;[1] but yet their trunks are not large enough to serve when
+hollowed out for a barque. Well! he will construct a raft.
+
+[Footnote 1: The _myrtus maximus_ attains 13 metres (a little more
+than 42 feet) in height.]
+
+He fells young trees, cuts off their branches, rolls them to the
+shore, on a platform of sand, which the waves reach at certain
+periods; he fastens them solidly together with a triple net-work of
+plaited leather, cords woven of the fibre of the aloe, supple and
+tough vines; he chooses another with diverging and horizontal roots,
+the habitual direction taken by all the large vegetables of this
+island, the sand of which is covered only by two feet of earth. This
+shall be the mast. He plants it in the middle of the raft, where it is
+kept upright by its roots, knotted and interwoven with the various
+pieces which compose the floor. For a sail, has he not that which was
+left him by the Swordfish? and will not his seal-skin hammock serve as
+a spare sail?
+
+He afterwards constructs a helm, then two strong oars, that he may
+neglect no chance of success. He fastens his structure still more
+firmly by all that remains to him of his nails and bolts, and awaits
+the high tide to launch his skiff upon the sea.
+
+He has never felt calmer, happier, than during the long time occupied
+in these labors; their object has doubled his strength. The moments of
+indispensable repose, he has passed at the Oasis, beside the tomb of
+Marimonda, of that Marimonda, who by her example, opened to him the
+life of devotedness in which he has just engaged. Thence, with his eye
+turned upon that island where dwells the unknown friend from whom he
+has received a summons, he talks to him, encourages him, consoles him;
+he imparts to him his resolution to join him soon, and it seems as if
+the same waves which had brought the message will also undertake to
+transmit the reply.
+
+At present, Selkirk finds some sweetness in pitying evils which are
+not his own; he no longer dreams of wrapping himself in a cloak of
+selfishness; that disdainful heart, hitherto invincibly closed, at
+last experiences friendship, or at least aspires to do so.
+
+At last, the day arrives when the sea, inundating the marshes, bending
+the mangroves, reaches, on the sandy platform, one of the corners of
+his raft.
+
+Selkirk hastens to transport thither his hatchets, his guns, his
+seal-skins and goat-skins, his Bible, his spy-glass, his pipes, his
+ladder, his stools, even his traps; all his riches! it is a complete
+removal.
+
+On taking possession of the island, he had engraved on the bark of
+several trees the date of his arrival; he now inscribes upon them the
+day of his departure. For many months his reckoning has been
+interrupted; to determine the date is impossible; he knows only the
+day of the week.
+
+When the wave had entirely raised his barque, aiding himself with one
+of the long oars to propel it over the rocky bottom, he gained the
+sea. Then, after having adjusted his sail, with his hand on the helm,
+he turned towards his island to address to it an adieu, laden with
+maledictions rather than regrets.
+
+Swelled by a south-east wind, the sail pursues its course towards that
+other land, the object of his new desires. At the expiration of some
+hours, by the aid of his glass, what from the summit of his mountains
+had appeared to him only a dark point, a rock beaten by the waves,
+seems already enlarged, allowing him to see high hills covered with
+verdure. He has not then deceived himself! There exists a habitable
+land,--habitable for two! It has served as a refuge to the shipwrecked
+man, to his friend! Ah! how impatient he is to reach this shore where
+he is to meet him!
+
+Several hours more of a slow but peaceful navigation roll away. He has
+arrived at a distance almost midway between the point of departure and
+that of arrival. Looking alternately at the islands Selkirk and San
+Ambrosio, both illuminated by the sunset, with their indefinite forms,
+their bases buried in the waves, their terraced summits, veiled with a
+light fog, they appear like the reflection of each other. But for the
+discovery which he had previously made of the second, he would have
+believed this was his own island, or rather its image, represented in
+the waters of the sea.
+
+But in proportion as he advances towards his new conquest, it
+increases to his eyes, as if to testify the reality of its existence,
+now by a mountain peak, now by a cape. He had seen only the profile,
+it now presents its face, ready to develope all its graces, all its
+fascinations; while its rival, disdained, abandoned, becomes by
+degrees effaced, and seems to wish to conceal its humiliation beneath
+the wave of the great ocean.
+
+Suddenly, without any apparent jar, without any flaw of wind, on a
+calm sea, the stem of the tree serving as a mast vacillates, bends
+forward, then on one side; the roots, which fasten it to the floor of
+the raft, are wrenched from their hold; the sail, diverging in the
+same direction, still extended, drags it entirely down, and it is
+borne away by the wave.
+
+Struck with astonishment, Selkirk puts his foot on the helm, and
+seizes his oars; but oars are powerless to move so heavy a machine.
+What is to be done?
+
+He who has not been able to endure isolation in the midst of a
+terrestrial paradise, from which he has just voluntarily exiled
+himself, must he then he reduced to have for an asylum, on the
+immensity of the ocean, only a few trunks of trees scarcely lashed
+together?
+
+The situation is frightful, terrific; Selkirk dares not contemplate
+it, lest his reason should give way. He must have a sail; a mast! He
+has his spare sail; for the mast, his only resource is to detach one
+of the timbers which compose the frame-work of his raft. Perhaps this
+will destroy its solidity; but he has no choice.
+
+He takes the best of his hatchets, chooses among the straight stems of
+which his floating dwelling is composed, that which seems most
+suitable; he cuts away with a thousand precautions, the bonds which
+fasten it; he frees it, not without difficulty, from the contact of
+other logs to which it has been attached. But while he devotes himself
+to this task, the raft, obedient to a mysterious motion of the sea,
+has slowly drifted on; the surface is covered with foam, as if
+sub-marine waves are lashing it. Selkirk springs to the helm; the
+tiller breaks in his hands; he seizes the oars, they also break. An
+unknown force hurries him on. He has just fallen into one of those
+rapid currents which, from north to south, traverse the waters of the
+Pacific Ocean.
+
+Borne away in a contrary direction from that which he has hitherto
+pursued, the land of which he had come in search seems to fly before
+him. Whither is he going? Into what regions, into what solitudes of
+the sea is he to be carried, far from islands and continents?
+
+To add to his terror, in these latitudes, where day suddenly succeeds
+to night and night to day, where twilight is unknown, the sun, just
+now shining brightly, suddenly sinks below the horizon.
+
+In the midst of profound darkness, the unhappy man pursues this fatal
+race, leading to inevitable destruction. During a part of this
+terrible night, he hears the frail frame-work which supports him
+cracking beneath his feet. How long must his sufferings last? He knows
+not. At last, jostled by adverse waves, shaken to its centre, the raft
+begins to whirl around, and something heavier than the shock of the
+wave comes repeatedly to give it new and rude blows. The first rays of
+the rising moon, far from calming the terrors of the unhappy mariner,
+increase them. In his dizzy brain, these wan rays which silver the
+surface of the sea, seem so many phantoms coming to be present at his
+last moments. Pale, bent double, with his hair standing upright,
+clinging to some projection of his barque, he in vain attempts to fix
+his glance on certain strange objects which he sees ascending,
+descending, and rolling around him.
+
+They are the trunks of the trees which formed a part of his raft,
+limbs detached from its body, and which, now drawn into the same
+whirlpool, are by their repeated shocks, aiding in his complete
+destruction.
+
+In face of this imminent, implacable death, Selkirk ceases to struggle
+against it. He has now but one resource; the belief in another life.
+The religious instinct, which has already come to his assistance,
+revives with force. Clinging with his hands and feet to these wavering
+timbers, which are almost disjoined, half inundated by the wave, which
+is encroaching more and more upon his last asylum, he directs his
+steps towards the spot where he had deposited his arms and furs; he
+takes from among them his Bible, not to read it, but to clasp it to
+his heart, whose agitation and terror seem to grow calm beneath its
+sacred contact.
+
+He then attempts to absorb his thoughts in God; he blames himself for
+not having been contented with the gifts he had received from Him; he
+might have lived happily in Scotland, or in the royal navy. It is this
+perpetual desire for change, these aspirations after the unknown,
+which have occasioned his ruin.
+
+At this moment, raising his eyes towards heaven, he sees, beneath the
+pale rays of the moon, a mass of rocks rising at a little distance,
+which he immediately recognizes. There is the bay of the Seals, the
+peak of the Discovery. That hollow, lying in the shadow, is the valley
+of the Oasis! As on the first day of his arrival, on one of the
+steepest summits of the mountain, he perceives stationed there,
+immovable, like a sentinel, a goat, between whose delicate limbs
+shines a group of stars, celestial eyes, whose golden lids seem to
+vibrate as if in appeal. It is his island! He does not hesitate;
+suddenly recovering all his energies, he springs from the raft,
+struggles with vigor, with perseverance against the current, triumphs
+over it, and, after prolonged efforts, at last reaches this haven of
+deliverance, this port of safety; he lands, fatigued, exhausted, but
+overcome with joy and gratitude. Profoundly thanking God from his
+heart, he prostrates himself, and kisses with transport the hospitable
+soil of this island,--which, on the morning of the same day, he had
+cursed.
+
+Alas! does not reflection quickly diminish this lively joy at his
+return and safety? From this shipwreck, poor sailor, thou hast saved
+only thyself: thy tools, thy instruments of labor, even thy Bible, are
+a prey to the sea!
+
+It is now, Selkirk, that thou must suffice for thyself! It is the last
+trial to which thou canst be subjected!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+
+The Island of Juan Fernandez.--Encounter in the Mountains.--Discussion.
+--A New Captivity.--A Cannon-shot.--Dampier and Selkirk.--_Mas a Fuera_.
+--News of Stradling.--Confidences.--End of the History of the real
+Robinson Crusoe.--Nebuchadnezzar.
+
+On the 1st of February, 1709, an English vessel, equipped and sent to
+sea by the merchants of Bristol, after having sailed around Cape Horn,
+in company with another vessel belonging to the same expedition,
+touched alone, about the 33d degree of south latitude, at the Island
+of Juan Fernandez, from a hundred and ten to a hundred and twenty
+leagues distant from the coast of Chili.
+
+The second ship was to join her without delay. Symptoms of the scurvy
+had appeared on board, and it was intended to remain here for some
+time, to give the crew opportunity of recovering their health.
+
+Their tents pitched, towards evening several sailors, having ventured
+upon the island, were not a little surprised to see, through the
+obscurity, a strange being, bearing some resemblance to the human
+form, who, at their approach, scaling the mountains, leaping from rock
+to rock, fled with the rapidity of a deer, the lightness of a chamois.
+
+Some doubted whether it was a man, and prepared to fire at him. They
+were prevented by an officer named Dower, who accompanied them.
+
+On their return to their companions, the sailors related what they had
+seen; Dower did not fail to do the same among the officers; and this
+evening, at the encampment on the shore, in the forecastle as well as
+on the quarter-deck, there were narratives and suppositions that would
+'amuse an assembly of Puritans through the whole of Lent,' says the
+account from which we borrow a part of our information.
+
+At this period, tales of the marvellous gained great credence among
+sailors. Not long before, the Spaniards had discovered giants in
+Patagonia; the Portuguese, sirens in the seas of Brazil; the French,
+tritons and satyrs at Martinique; the Dutch, black men, with feet like
+lobsters, beyond Paramaribo.
+
+The strange individual under discussion was unquestionably a satyr, or
+at least one of those four-footed, hairy men, such as the authentic
+James Carter declared he had met with in the northern part of America.
+
+Some, thinking this conclusion too simple, adroitly insinuated that no
+one among the sailors who had met this monster, had noticed in him so
+great a number of paws. Why four paws?--why should he not be a
+monopedous man, a man whose body, terminated by a single leg, cleared,
+with this support alone, considerable distances? Was not the existence
+of the monopedous man attested by modern travellers, and even in
+antiquity and the middle ages, by Pliny and St. Augustine?
+
+Others preferred to imagine in this singular personage the acephalous
+man, the man without a head, named by the grave Baumgarthen as
+existing on the new continent. They had not discovered many legs, but
+neither had they discovered a head; why should he have one?
+
+And the discussion continued, and not a voice was raised to risk this
+judicious observation; if neither head nor limbs have been
+distinguished, it may perhaps be because he has been seen only in the
+dark.
+
+The next day, each wished to be satisfied; a regular hunt was
+organized against this phenomenon; they set out, invaded his retreat,
+pursued him, surrounded him, at last seized him, and the brave sailors
+of Great Britain discovered with stupefaction, in this monopedous,
+acephalous man, in this satyr, this cercopithecus, what? A countryman,
+a Scotchman, a subject of Queen Anne!
+
+It was Selkirk; Selkirk, his hair long and in disorder, his limbs
+encased in fragments of skins, and half deprived of his reason.
+
+His island was Juan Fernandez, so called by the first navigator who
+discovered it; this was Selkirk Island.
+
+When he was conducted before Captain Woodes Rogers, commander of the
+expedition, to the interrogations of the latter, the unfortunate man,
+with downcast look, and agitated with a nervous trembling, replied
+only by repeating mechanically the last syllables of the phrases which
+were addressed to him by the captain.
+
+A little recovered from his agitation, discovering that he had
+Englishmen to deal with, he attempted to pronounce some words; he
+could only mutter a few incoherent and disconnected sentences.
+
+'Solitude and the care of providing for his subsistence,' says Paw,
+'had so occupied his mind, that all rational ideas were effaced from
+it. As savage as the animals, and perhaps more so, he had almost
+entirely forgotten the secret of articulating intelligible sounds.'
+
+Captain Rogers having asked him how long he had been secluded in this
+island, Selkirk remained silent; he nevertheless understood the
+question, for his eyes immediately opened with terror, as if he had
+just measured the long space of time which his exile had lasted. He
+was far from having an exact idea of it; he appreciated it only by the
+sufferings he had endured there, and, looking fixedly at his hands, he
+opened and shut them several times.
+
+Reckoning by the number of his fingers, it was twenty or thirty years,
+and every one at first believed in the accuracy of his calculation, so
+completely did his forehead, furrowed with wrinkles, his skin
+blackened, withered by the sun, his hair whitened at the roots, his
+gray beard, give him the aspect of an old man.
+
+Selkirk was born in 1680; he was then only twenty-nine.
+
+After having replied thus, he turned his head, cast a troubled look on
+the objects which surrounded him; a remembrance seemed to awaken, and,
+uttering a cry, stepping forward, he pointed with his finger to a
+cedar on his left. It was the tree on which, when he left the
+Swordfish, he had inscribed the date of his arrival in the island. The
+officer Dower approached, and, notwithstanding the crumbling of the
+decayed bark, could still read there this inscription:
+
+'Alexander Selkirk--from Largo, Scotland, Oct. 27, 1704.'
+
+His exile from the world had therefore lasted four years and three
+months.
+
+Notwithstanding the interest excited by his misfortunes, by his name,
+his accent, more than by his language, Captain Rogers, an honorable
+and humane man, but of extreme severity on all that appertained to
+discipline, recognized him as a British subject, suspected him to be a
+deserter from the English navy, and gave orders that he should be put
+under guard, pending a definitive decision.
+
+The sailors commissioned to this office did not find it an easy thing
+to guard a prisoner who could climb the trees like a squirrel, and
+outstrip them all in a race. As a precaution, they commenced by
+binding him firmly to the same cedar on which his name was engraved.
+There the unfortunate Selkirk figured as a curious animal, ornamented
+with a label.
+
+Afterwards, more for pastime than through mischief, they tormented him
+with questions, to obtain from him hesitating or almost senseless
+replies, which bewildered him much; then they began to examine, with
+childish surprise, the length of his beard, of his hair and nails; the
+prodigious development of his muscles; his bare feet, so hardened by
+travel, that they seemed to be covered with horn moccasins. Having
+found beneath his goat-skin rags, a knife, whose blade, by dint of use
+and sharpening, was almost reduced to the proportions of that of a
+penknife, they took it away to examine it; but on seeing himself
+deprived of this single weapon, the only relic of his shipwreck, the
+prisoner struggled, uttering wild howls; they restored it to him.
+
+At the hour of repast, Selkirk had, like the rest, his portion of meat
+and biscuit. He ate the biscuit, manifesting great satisfaction; but
+he, who had at first suffered so much from being deprived of salt,
+found in the meat a degree of saltness insupportable. He pointed to
+the stream; one of his guards courteously offered him his gourd,
+containing a mixture of rum and water; he approached it to his lips,
+and immediately threw it away with violence, as if it had burned him.
+
+At evening, he was transported on board.
+
+A few days after he began to acquire a taste for common food; his
+ideas became more definite; speech returned to his lips more freely
+and clearly; but liberty of motion was not yet restored to him, a new
+captivity opened before him, and his irritation at this was presenting
+an obstacle to the complete restoration of his faculties, when God,
+who had so deeply tried him, came to his assistance.
+
+One morning, as the crew of the ship were occupied, some in caulking
+and tarring it, others in gathering edible plants on the island, a
+cannon-shot resounded along the waves. The caulkers climbed up the
+rigging, the provision-hunters ran to the shore, the officers seized
+their spy-glasses, and all together quickly uttered a _huzza_! The
+vessel which had sailed in company with that of Captain Rogers, the
+Duchess, of Bristol, had arrived. This vessel, commanded by William
+Cook, had, for a master-pilot, a man more celebrated in maritime
+annals than the commanders of the expedition themselves;--this was
+Dampier, the indefatigable William Dampier, who, a short time since a
+millionaire, now completely ruined in consequence of foolish
+speculations and prodigalities, had just undertaken a third voyage
+around the world.
+
+Scarcely had he disembarked, when he heard of the great event of the
+day--of the wild man. His name was mentioned, he remembered having
+known an Alexander Selkirk at St. Andrew, at the inn of the Royal
+Salmon. He went to him, interrogated him, recognized him, and, without
+loss of time, after having had his hair and beard cut, and procured
+suitable clothing for him, presented him to Capt. Rogers; he
+introduced him as one of his old comrades, formerly an intrepid and
+distinguished officer in the navy, one of the conquerors of Vigo, who
+had been induced by himself to embark in the Swordfish, partly at his
+expense.
+
+Restored to liberty, supported, revived, by the kind cares of Dampier,
+his old hero, Selkirk felt rejuvenated. His first thought then is for
+that other unfortunate man, still an exile perhaps in his desert
+island. After having informed the old sailor that he had found a
+little bottle, containing a written parchment, he said: 'Dear Captain,
+it would be a meritorious act, and one worthy of you, to co-operate in
+the deliverance of this unhappy man. A boat will suffice for the
+voyage, since the Island of San Ambrosio is so near this. Oh! how
+joyfully would I accompany you in this excursion!'
+
+'My brave hermit,' replied Dampier, shaking his head, 'the neighboring
+island of which you speak is no other than the second in this group,
+named _Mas a Fuera_. As for the other, that San Ambrosio which you
+think so near, if it has not become a floating island since my last
+voyage, if it is still where I left it, under the Tropic of Capricorn,
+to reach it will not be so trifling a matter; besides, your little
+bottle must be a bottle of ink. There is here confusion of place and
+confusion of time; not only is _Mas a Fuera_ not _San Ambrosio_ but
+this latter island, far from being a desert, as your correspondent has
+said, has been inhabited more than twenty years by a multitude of
+madmen, fishermen and pirates, potato-eaters and old sailors, who,
+when I visited them, in 1702, politely received me with gun-shots, and
+whose politeness I returned with cannon-shots. Therefore, my boy, he
+who wrote to you must have been dead when you received his letter.
+What date did it bear?'
+
+'None,' said Selkirk; 'the last lines were effaced;' and he trembled
+at the idea of all the dangers he had run in pursuit of this friend,
+who no longer existed, and of a land which he had never inhabited.
+
+After having satisfied a duty of humanity, that which he had regarded
+as a debt contracted towards a friend, Selkirk, among other inquiries,
+let fall the name of Stradling. This time, it was hatred which asked
+information.
+
+His hatred was destined to be gratified.
+
+In pursuing his voyage, after having coasted along the shores of the
+Straits of Magellan, Stradling, surprised by a frightful hurricane,
+had seen his vessel entirely disabled. Repulsed at five different
+times, now by the tempest, now by the Spaniards, from the ports where
+he attempted to take refuge, he was thrown, near La Plata, on an
+inhospitable shore. Attacked, pillaged by the natives, half of his
+crew having perished, with the remains of his ship he constructed
+another, to which he gave the name of the Cinque Ports, instead of
+that of the Swordfish, which it was no longer worthy to bear. This was
+a large pinnace, on which he had secretly returned to England. For
+several years past, Dampier had not heard of him.
+
+Selkirk thought himself sufficiently avenged; his present happiness
+silenced his past ill-will. He even became reconciled to his island.
+
+Each day he traversed its divers parts, with emotions various as the
+remembrances it awakened. But he was now no longer alone! Arm and arm
+with Dampier, he revisited these places where he had suffered so much,
+and which often resumed for him their enchanting aspects.
+
+His companion was soon informed of his history. When he had related
+what we already know, from his landing to the construction of his
+raft, and to his frightful shipwreck, he at last commenced, not
+without some mortification, the recital of his final miseries, which
+alone could explain the deplorable state in which the English sailors
+had found him.
+
+By the loss of his hatchets, his ladder, his other instruments of
+labor, condemned to inaction, to powerlessness, he had nothing to
+occupy himself with but to provide sustenance. But the sea had taken
+his snares along with the rest. He at first subsisted on herbs, fruits
+and roots; afterwards his stomach rejected these crudities, as it had
+repulsed the fish. Armed with a stick, he had chased the agoutis; for
+want of agoutis, he had eaten rats.
+
+By night, he silently climbed the trees to surprise the female of the
+toucan or blackbird, which he pitilessly stifled over their young
+brood. Meanwhile, at the noise he made among the branches, this winged
+prey almost always escaped him.
+
+He tried to construct a ladder; by the aid of his knife alone, he
+attempted to cut down two tall trees. During this operation his knife
+broke--only a fragment remained. This was for him a great trial.
+
+He thought of making, with reeds and the fibres of the aloe, a net to
+catch birds; but all patient occupation, all continuous labor, had
+become insupportable to him.
+
+That he might escape the gloomy ideas which assailed him more and
+more, it became necessary to avoid repose, to court bodily fatigue.
+
+By continual exercise, his powers of locomotion had developed in
+incredible proportions. His feet had become so hardened that he no
+longer felt the briers or sharp stones. When he grew weary, he slept,
+in whatever place he found himself, and these were his only quiet
+hours.
+
+To chase the agoutis had ceased to be an object worthy of his efforts;
+the kids took their turn, afterwards the goats. He had acquired such
+dexterity of movement, and such strength of muscle, such certainty of
+eye, that to leap from one projection of rock to another, to spring at
+one bound over ravines and deep cavities, was to him but a childish
+sport. In these feats he took pleasure and pride.
+
+Sometimes, in the midst of his flights through space, he would seize a
+bird on the wing.
+
+The goats themselves soon lost their power to struggle against such a
+combatant. Notwithstanding their number, had Selkirk wished it, he
+might have depopulated the island. He was careful not to do this.
+
+If he wished to procure a supply of provisions, he directed his steps
+towards the most elevated peaks of the mountain, marked his game,
+pursued it, caught it by the horns, or felled it by a blow from his
+stick; after which his knife-blade did its office. The goat killed, he
+threw it on his shoulders, and, almost as swiftly as before, regained
+the cavernous grotto or leafy tree, in the shelter of which he could
+this day eat and sleep. He had for a long time forsaken his cabin,
+which was too far distant from his hunting-grounds.
+
+If he had a stock of provision on hand, he still pursued the goats as
+usual, but only for his personal gratification. If he caught one, he
+contented himself with slitting its ear; this was his seal, the mark
+by which he recognized his free flock. During the last years of his
+abode in the island, he had killed or marked thus nearly five
+hundred.[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: Long after his departure from Juan Fernandez, the ship's
+crews, who came there for supplies, or the pirates who took refuge
+there, found goats whose ears had been slit by Selkirk's knife.]
+
+In the natural course of things, as his physical powers increased, his
+intelligence became enfeebled.
+
+Necessity had at first aroused his industry, for all industry awakes
+at the voice of want; but his own had been due rather to his
+recollections than to his ingenuity. He thought himself a creator, he
+was only an imitator.
+
+Whatever may have been said by those who, in the pride of a deceitful
+philosophy, have wished to glorify the power of the solitary man--if
+the latter, supported by certain fortunate circumstances, can remain
+some time in a state hardly endurable, it is not by his own strength,
+but by means which society itself has furnished. This is the
+incontestable truth, from which, in his pride, Selkirk had turned
+away.
+
+Deprived of exercise and of aliment, his thoughts, no longer sustained
+by reading the Holy Book, were day by day lost in a chaos of dreams
+and reveries.
+
+A prey to terrors which he could not explain, he feared darkness, he
+trembled at the slightest sound of the wind among the branches; if it
+blew violently, he thought the trees would be uprooted and crush him;
+if the sea roared, he trembled at the idea of the submersion of his
+entire island.
+
+When he traversed the woods, especially if the heat was great, he
+often heard, distinctly, voices which called him or replied. He caught
+entire phrases; others remained unfinished. These phrases, connected
+neither with his thoughts nor his situation, were strange to him.
+Sometimes he even recognized the voice.
+
+Now it was that of Catherine, scolding her servants; now that of
+Stradling, of Dampier, or one of his college tutors. Once he heard
+thus the voice of one of his classmates whom he least remembered; at
+another time it was that of his old admiral, Rourke, uttering the
+words of command.
+
+If he attempted to raise his own to impose silence on these choruses
+of demons who tormented him, it was only with painful efforts that he
+could succeed in articulating some confused syllables.
+
+He no longer talked, but he still sang; he sang the monotonous and
+mournful airs of his psalms, the words of which he had totally
+forgotten. His memory by degrees became extinct. Sometimes even, he
+lost the sentiment of his identity; then, at least, his state of
+isolation, and the memory of his misfortunes ceased to weigh upon him.
+
+He nevertheless remembered, that about this time, having approached
+Swordfish Beach, attracted by an unusual noise there, he had seen it
+covered with soldiers and sailors, doubtless Spaniards. The idea of
+finding himself among men, had suddenly made his heart beat; but when
+he descended the declivity of the hills in order to join them, several
+shots were fired; the balls whistled about his ears, and, filled with
+terror, he had fled.
+
+Once more he had found himself there, but without intending it, for
+then he could no longer find his way, by the points of the compass,
+through the woods and valleys leading to the shore. Ah! how had his
+ancient abode changed its aspect! How many years had rolled away since
+he lived there! The little gravelled paths, which conducted to the
+grotto and the mimosa, were effaced; the mimosa, its principal
+branches broken, seemed buried beneath its own ruins; of his
+fish-pond, his bed of water-cresses, not a vestige remained; his
+grotto, veiled, hid beneath the thick curtains of vines and
+heliotropes, was no longer visible; his cabin had ceased to
+exist,--overthrown, swept away doubtless, by a hurricane, as his
+inclosure had been. He could discover the spot only by the five
+myrtles, which, disembarrassed of their roof of reeds and their
+plaster walls, had resumed their natural decorations, green and
+glossy, as if the hatchet had never touched them. At their feet tufts
+of briers and other underbrush had grown up, as formerly. The two
+streams, the _Linnet_ and the _Stammerer_, alone had suffered no
+change. The one with its gentle murmur, the other with its silvery
+cascades, after having embraced the lawn, still continued to flow
+towards the sea, where they seemed to have buried, with their waves,
+the memory of all that had passed on their borders.
+
+At sight of his shore, which seemed to have retained no vestige of
+himself, Selkirk remained a few moments, mournful and lost in his
+incoherent thoughts, in the midst of which this was most
+prominent:--Yet alive, already forgotten by the world, I have seen my
+traces disappear, even from this island which I have so long
+inhabited!
+
+A rustling was heard in the foliage; he raised his eyes, expecting to
+see Marimonda swinging on the branch of a tree. Perceiving nothing, he
+remembered that Marimonda reposed at the Oasis; he took the road from
+the mountain which led thither, but when he arrived there, when he was
+before her tomb, covered with tall grass, he had forgotten why he
+came.
+
+One of those unaccountable fits of terror, which were now more
+frequent than formerly, seized him, and he precipitately descended the
+mountain, springing from peak to peak along the rocks.
+
+The religious sentiment, which formerly sustained Selkirk in his
+trials, was not entirely extinct; but it was obscured beneath his
+darkened reason. His religion was only that of fear. When the sea was
+violently agitated, when the storm howled, he prostrated himself with
+clasped hands; but it was no longer God whom he implored; it was the
+angry ocean, the thunder. He sought to disarm the genius of evil. The
+lightning having one day struck, not far from him, a date-palm, he
+worshipped the tree. His perverted faith had at last terminated in
+idolatry.
+
+This was, in substance, what Alexander Selkirk related to William
+Dampier; what solitude had done for this man, still so young, and
+formerly so intelligent; this was what had become of the despiser of
+men, when left to his own reason.
+
+Dampier listened with the most profound attention, interrupting him in
+his narrative only by exclamations of interest or of pity. When he
+ceased to speak, holding out his hand to him, he said:
+
+'My boy, the lesson is a rude one, but let it be profitable to you;
+let it teach you that _ennui_ on board a vessel, even with a
+Stradling, is better than _ennui_ in a desert. Undoubtedly there are
+among us troublesome, wicked people, but fewer wicked than
+crack-brained. Believe, then, in friendship, especially in mine; from
+this day it is yours, on the faith of William Dampier.'
+
+And he opened his arms to the young man, who threw himself into them.
+
+On their return to the vessel, Dampier presented to Selkirk his own
+Bible. The latter seized it with avidity, and, after having turned
+over its leaves as if to find a text which presented itself to his
+mind, read aloud the following passage:
+
+'He was driven from the sons of men; and his heart was made like the
+beasts, and his dwelling was with the wild asses; they fed him with
+grass like oxen, and his body was wet with the dew of heaven.'--DANIEL
+v. 21.
+
+
+
+
+CONCLUSION.
+
+
+Capt. Rogers, in his turn, learned the misfortunes of Selkirk and
+became attached to him; from this moment, the sailors themselves
+showed him great deference; he was known among them by the name of
+_the governor_, and this title clung to him.
+
+To do the honors of his island, the governor one day gave to the crews
+of the two vessels, the spectacle of one of his former hunts. Resuming
+his ancient costume, he returned to the high mountains, where, before
+their eyes, he started a goat, and darting in pursuit of it, over a
+thousand cliffs, sometimes clearing frightful abysses, by means of a
+vine which he seized on his passage,--this method he owed to
+Marimonda,--he succeeded in forcing his game to the hills of the
+shore. Arrived there, exhausted, panting, drawing itself up like a
+stag at bay, the goat stopped short. Selkirk took it living on his
+shoulders, and presented it to Capt. Rogers. Its ear was already slit.
+
+By way of thanks, the captain announced that he might henceforth be
+connected with the expedition, with his old rank of mate, which was
+restored to him. For this favor Selkirk was indebted to the
+solicitations of Dampier.
+
+In the same vessel with Dampier, he made another three years' voyage,
+visited Mexico, California, and the greater part of North America;
+after which, still in company with Dampier, and possessor of a pretty
+fortune, he returned to England, where the recital of his adventures,
+already made public, secured him the most honorable patronage and
+friendship. Among his friends, may be reckoned Steele, the co-laborer,
+the rival of Addison, who consecrated a long chapter to him in his
+publication of the Tatler.
+
+Selkirk did not fail to visit Scotland. Passing through St. Andrew,
+could he help experiencing anew the desire to see his old friend
+pretty Kitty? Once more he appeared before the bar of the Royal
+Salmon. This time, on meeting, Selkirk and Catherine both experienced
+a sentiment of painful surprise. The latter, stouter and fuller than
+ever, fat and red-faced, touched the extreme limit of her fourth and
+last youth; the solitary of Juan Fernandez, with his gray hair, his
+copper complexion, could scarcely recall to the respectable hostess of
+the tavern the elegant pilot of the royal navy, still less the pale
+and blond student, of whom she had been, eighteen years before, the
+first and only love.
+
+'Is it indeed you, my poor Sandy,' said she, with an accent of pity;
+'I thought you were dead.'
+
+'I have been nearly so, indeed, and a long time ago, Kitty. But who
+has told you of me?'
+
+'Alas! It was my husband himself.'
+
+'You are married then, Catherine. So much the better.'
+
+'So much the worse rather, my friend; for, would you believe it, the
+old monster, bent double as he is with age and rheumatism, was bright
+enough to dupe me finely; to dupe me twice. In the first place, by
+making me believe you were dead when you were not. But he well knew,
+the cheat, that if I refused him once, it was because my views were
+turned in your direction.'
+
+Selkirk made a movement which escaped Catherine; she continued:
+
+'His second deception was to arrive here in triumph, in the midst of
+the cries of joy and embraces of the _Sea-Dogs_ and _Old Pilots_. One
+would have thought he had in his pockets all the mines of Guinea and
+Peru. He did not say so, but I thought it could not be otherwise; and
+I married him, since I believed you no longer living. His trick having
+succeeded, he then told me of his shipwreck, his complete ruin. Ah!
+with what a good heart would I have sent him packing! But it was too
+late, and it became necessary that the Royal Salmon, founded by the
+honorable Andrew Felton, should furnish subsistence for two; and this
+is the reason why, Mr. Selkirk, you find me still here, a prisoner in
+my bar, and cursing all the captains who make the tour of the world
+only to come afterwards and impose upon poor and inexperienced young
+girls!'
+
+Selkirk had not at first understood the lamentations of Catherine; but
+a twilight commenced to dawn in his ideas; he divined that his name
+had been used for an act of baseness; and, without being able to
+account for it, he felt the return of an old leaven of spite, an old
+hatred revived.
+
+'Who is your husband? What is his name?' asked he, in a loud voice and
+with a tone of authority.
+
+'Do not grow angry, Sandy? Do not seek a quarrel with him now. What is
+done, is done; I am his wife, do you understand? It is of no use to
+recall the past.'
+
+'And who thinks of recalling it? I simply asked you who he was?'
+
+'You will be prudent; you promise me? Well! do you see him yonder, in
+the second stall, at the same place he formerly occupied? He has just
+poured out some gin to those sailors, and is drinking with them. It is
+he who is standing up with an apron on.'
+
+'Stradling!' exclaimed Selkirk, with sparkling eyes. But at the sight
+of this apron, finding his old captain become a waiter, his hatred and
+projects of vengeance were suddenly extinguished.
+
+Alexander Selkirk returned to England in 1712. The history of his
+captivity in the Island of Juan Fernandez had appeared in the papers;
+several apocryphal relations had been already published, when in 1717,
+Daniel De Foe published his _Robinson Crusoe_.
+
+He is really the same personage; but in this latter version, the
+Island of Juan Fernandez, in spite of distance and geographical
+impossibilities, is peopled with savage Caribs; Marimonda is
+transformed into the simple Friday; history is turned into romance,
+but this romance is elevated to all the dignity of a philosophical
+treatise.
+
+Rendering full justice to the merit of the writer, we must
+nevertheless acknowledge that he has completely altered, in a mental
+view, the physiognomy of his model. Robinson is not a man suffering
+entire isolation; he has a companion, and the savages are incessantly
+making inroads around him. It is the European developing the resources
+of his industry, to contend at once with an unproductive land and the
+dangers created by his enemies.
+
+Selkirk has no enemies to repulse, and he inhabits a fruitful country.
+He needs, before every thing else, the presence of man, one of those
+fraternal affections in which he refuses to believe. His sufferings
+originate in his very solitude. In solitude, Robinson improves and
+perfects himself; Selkirk, at first as full of resources as he, ends
+by becoming discouraged and brutified.
+
+Which of the two is most true to nature?
+
+The first is an ideal being, for in no quarter of the globe has there
+ever been found one analogous to the Robinson of De Foe; the other, on
+the contrary, is to be met with every where, denying the dependence of
+an isolated individual; but this dependence, even in the midst of a
+prodigal nature, if it is not to the honor of man, is to the honor of
+society at large.
+
+Notwithstanding all that has been said, the solitary is a man
+imbruted, vegetating, deprived of his crown. 'Solitude is sweet only
+in the vicinity of great cities.'[1] By an admirable decree of
+Providence, the isolated being is an imperfect being; man is completed
+by man.
+
+[Footnote 1: Bernardin de St. Pierre. Seneca had said: _Miscenda et
+alternanda sunt solitudo et frequentia_.]
+
+Notwithstanding the false maxims of a deceitful philosophy, it is to
+the social state that we owe, from the greatest to the least, the
+courage which animates and sustains us; God has created us to live
+there and to love one another; it is for this reason that selfishness
+is a shameful vice, a crime! It is, so to speak, an infringement of
+one of the great laws of Nature.
+
+
+THE END.
+
+
+
+
+NEW BOOKS AND NEW EDITIONS
+
+PUBLISHED BY TICKNOR, REED, AND FIELDS
+
+ * * * * *
+
+HENRY W. LONGFELLOW
+
+COMPLETE POETICAL WORKS [Transcriber's Note: missing text.] the six
+Volumes mentioned below, and [Tr. Note: missing text.] the market. In two
+volumes, 16mo, $2.00
+
+In separate Volumes, each [Tr. Note: missing text.] cents. VOICES OF THE
+NIGHT. BALLADS AND OTHER POEMS. SPANISH STUDENT; A PLAY IN THREE ACTS.
+BELFRY OF BRUGES AND OTHER POEMS. EVANGELINE; A TALE OF ACADIE[Tr. Note:
+missing text.] THE SEASIDE AND THE FIRESIDE. THE WAIF. A Collection of
+Poems. Edited by [Tr. Note: missing text] THE ESTRAY. A Collection of
+Poems. Edited [Tr. Note: missing text]
+
+MR. LONGFELLOW'S PROSE WORKS HYPERION. A Romance. In one volume. price
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+
+
+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Solitary of Juan Fernandez, or The Real
+Robinson Crusoe, by Joseph Xavier Saintine
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Solitary of Juan Fernandez, or The Real Robinson Crusoe
+
+Author: Joseph Xavier Saintine
+
+Release Date: March 4, 2004 [EBook #11441]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SOLITARY OF JUAN FERNANDEZ ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Internet Archive; University of Florida, Children, Andrea
+Ball and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p class="title">
+ <a name="image-1"></a>
+ <img src="images/cover.jpg" width="42" height="357"
+ alt="The Solitary." >
+</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p class="title1">
+ THE SOLITARY OF<br>
+ JUAN FERNANDEZ;<br><br>
+ OR, THE REAL<br>
+ ROBINSON CRUSOE
+</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p class="title2">
+ BY THE AUTHOR OF PICCIOLA.
+</p>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p class="title3">
+ TRANSLATED FROM THE FRENCH<br>
+ BY ANNE T. WILBUR.
+</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<h3>
+MDCCCLI.
+</h3>
+
+
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<h2>CONTENTS.</h2>
+
+<p class="toc"><a href="#CHAPTER_I">
+CHAPTER I.</a></p>
+<h4>The Royal Salmon.&mdash;Pretty Kitty.&mdash;Captain Stradling.&mdash;William Dampier.
+&mdash;Reveries and Caprices of Miss Catherine.</h4>
+
+<p class="toc"><a href="#CHAPTER_II">
+CHAPTER II.</a></p>
+
+<h4>Alexander Selkirk.&mdash;The College.&mdash;First Love.&mdash;Eight Years of Absence.
+&mdash;Maritime Combats.&mdash;Return and Departure.&mdash;The Swordfish.</h4>
+
+<p class="toc"><a href="#CHAPTER_III">
+CHAPTER III.</a></p>
+
+<h4>The Tour of the World.&mdash;The Way to manufacture Negroes.&mdash;California.
+&mdash;The Eldorado.&mdash;Revolt of Selkirk.&mdash;The Log-Book.&mdash;Degradation.
+&mdash;A Free Shore.</h4>
+
+<p class="toc"><a href="#CHAPTER_IV">
+CHAPTER IV.</a></p>
+
+<h4>Inspection of the Country.&mdash;Marimonda.&mdash;A City seen through the Fog.
+&mdash;The Sea every where.&mdash;Dialogue with a Toucan.&mdash;The first Shot.
+&mdash;Declaration of War.&mdash;Vengeance.&mdash;A Terrestrial Paradise.</h4>
+
+<p class="toc"><a href="#CHAPTER_V">
+CHAPTER V.</a></p>
+
+<h4>Labors of the Colonist.&mdash;His Study.&mdash;Fishing.&mdash;Administration.
+&mdash;Selkirk Island.&mdash;The New Prometheus.&mdash;What is wanting to Happiness.
+&mdash;Encounter with Marimonda.&mdash;Monologue.</h4>
+
+<p class="toc"><a href="#CHAPTER_VI">
+CHAPTER VI.</a></p>
+
+<h4>The Hammock.&mdash;Poison.&mdash;Success.&mdash;A Calm under the Tropics.&mdash;Invasion
+of the Island.&mdash;War and Plunder.&mdash;The Oasis.&mdash;The Spy-Glass.
+&mdash;Reconciliation.</h4>
+
+<p class="toc"><a href="#CHAPTER_VII">
+CHAPTER VII.</a></p>
+
+<h4>A T&ecirc;te-a-t&ecirc;te.&mdash;The Monkey's Goblet.&mdash;The Palace.&mdash;A Removal.&mdash;Winter
+under the Tropics&mdash;Plans for the Future.&mdash;Property.&mdash;A burst of
+Laughter.&mdash;Misfortune not far off.</h4>
+
+<p class="toc"><a href="#CHAPTER_VIII">
+CHAPTER VIII.</a></p>
+
+<h4>A New Invasion.&mdash;Selkirk joyfully meets an ancient Enemy.&mdash;Combat on
+a Red Cedar.&mdash;A Mother and her Little Ones.&mdash;The Flock.&mdash;F&ecirc;te in the
+Island; Pacific Combats, Diversions and Swings.&mdash;A Sail.&mdash;The Burning
+Wood.&mdash;Presentiments of Marimonda.</h4>
+
+<p class="toc"><a href="#CHAPTER_IX">
+CHAPTER IX.</a></p>
+
+<h4>The Precipice.&mdash;A Dungeon in a Desert Island.&mdash;Resignation.&mdash;The passing
+Bird.&mdash;The browsing Goat.&mdash;The bending Tree.&mdash;Attempts at Deliverance.
+&mdash;Success.&mdash;Death of Marimonda.</h4>
+
+<p class="toc"><a href="#CHAPTER_X">
+CHAPTER X.</a></p>
+
+<h4>Discouragement.&mdash;A Discovery.&mdash;A Retrospective Glance.&mdash;Project of
+Suicide.&mdash;The Last Shot.&mdash;The Sea Serpent.&mdash;The <i>Porro</i>.
+&mdash;A Message.&mdash;Another Solitary.</h4>
+
+<p class="toc"><a href="#CHAPTER_XI">
+CHAPTER XI.</a></p>
+
+<h4>The Island of San Ambrosio.&mdash;Selkirk at last knows what Friendship is.
+&mdash;The Raft.&mdash;Visits to the Tomb of Marimonda.&mdash;The Departure.&mdash;The two
+Islands.&mdash;Shipwreck.&mdash;The Port of Safety.</h4>
+
+<p class="toc"><a href="#CHAPTER_XII">
+CHAPTER XII.</a></p>
+
+<h4>The Island of Juan Fernandez.&mdash;Encounter in the Mountains.&mdash;Discussion.
+&mdash;A New Captivity.&mdash;Cannon-shot.&mdash;Dampier and Selkirk.&mdash;<i>Mas a Fuera</i>.
+&mdash;News of Stradling.&mdash;Confidences.&mdash;End of the History of the real
+Robinson Crusoe.&mdash;Nebuchadnezzar.</h4>
+
+<p class="toc"><a href="#CONCLUSION">
+CONCLUSION.</a></p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p class="toc"><a href="#NEWBOOKS">
+NEW BOOKS.</a></p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<h2>THE SOLITARY OF JUAN FERNANDEZ,<br>
+OR THE REAL ROBINSON CRUSOE.</h2>
+
+
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<h3><a name="CHAPTER_I"></a>CHAPTER I.</h3>
+
+<h4>The Royal Salmon.&mdash;Pretty Kitty.&mdash;Captain Stradling.&mdash;William Dampier.
+&mdash;Reveries and Caprices of Miss Catherine.</h4>
+
+<p>About the commencement of the last century, the little town of St.
+Andrew, the capital of the county of Fife, in Scotland, celebrated then
+for its University, was not less so for its Inn, the Royal Salmon,
+which, built in 1681 by a certain Andrew Felton, had descended as an
+inheritance to his only daughter, Catherine.</p>
+
+<p>This young lady, known throughout the neighborhood under the name of
+pretty Kitty, had contributed not a little, by her personal charms, to
+the success and popularity of the inn. In her early youth, she had been
+a lively and piquant brunette, with black, glossy hair, combed over a
+smooth and prominent forehead, and dark, brilliant eyes, a style of
+beauty much in vogue at that period. Though tall and slender in
+stature, she was, as our ancestors would have said, sufficiently <i>en bon
+point</i>. In fine, Kitty merited her surname, and more than one laird in
+the neighborhood, more than one great nobleman even,&mdash;thanks to the
+familiarity which reigned among the different classes in Scotland,&mdash;had
+figured occasionally among her customers, caring as little what people
+might say as did the brave Duke of Argyle, whom Walter Scott has shown
+as conversing familiarly with his snuff merchant.</p>
+
+<p>At present Catherine Felton is in her second youth. By a process common
+enough, but which at first appears contradictory, her attractions have
+diminished as they developed; her waist has grown thicker, the roses on
+her cheek assumed a deeper vermilion, her voice has acquired the rough
+and hoarse tone of her most faithful customers; the slender young girl
+is transformed into a virago. Fortunately for her, at the commencement
+of the eighteenth century, and especially in Scotland, reputations did
+not vanish as readily as in our days. Notwithstanding her increasing
+size and coarser voice, Catherine still remained pretty Kitty,
+especially in the eyes of those to whom she gave the largest credit.</p>
+
+<p>Besides, if from year to year her beauty waned, a circumstance which
+might tend to diminish the attractions of her establishment, like a
+prudent woman she took care that her stock of ale and usquebaugh should
+also from year to year improve in quality, to preserve the equilibrium.</p>
+
+<p>Undoubtedly the visits of lairds and great noblemen at her bar were less
+frequent than formerly, but all the trades-people in town, all the
+sailors in port, from the Gulf of Tay to the Gulf of Forth, still
+patronized the pretty landlady.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile Catherine was not yet married. The gossips of the town were
+surprised, because she was rich and suitors were plenty; they fluttered
+around her constantly in great numbers, especially when somewhat
+exhilarated with wine. When their gallantry became obtrusive, Kitty was
+careful not to grow angry; she would smile, and lift up her white hand,
+tolerably heavy, till the offenders came to order. Catherine possessed
+in the highest degree the art of restraining without discouraging them,
+and always so as to forward the interests of her establishment.</p>
+
+<p>To maintain the discipline of the tavern, nevertheless, the presence of
+a man was desirable; she understood this. Besides, the condition of an
+old maid did not seem to her at all inviting, and she did not care to
+wait the epoch of a third youth, before making a choice. But what would
+the unsuccessful candidates say? Would not this decision be at the risk
+of kindling a civil war, of provoking perhaps a general desertion? Then,
+too, accustomed as she was to command, the idea of giving herself a
+master alarmed her.</p>
+
+<p>She was vacillating amid all these perplexities, when a certain sailor,
+with cold and reserved manners, whose face bore the mark of a deep sabre
+cut, and who had for some time past, frequented her inn with great
+assiduity, without ever having addressed to her a single word, took her
+aside one fine morning and said:</p>
+
+<p>'Listen to me, Kate, and do not reply hastily. I came here, not like
+many others, attracted by your beautiful eyes, but because I wished to
+obtain recruits for an approaching voyage which I expected to undertake
+at my own risk and peril. I do not know how it has happened, but I now
+think less about sailing; I seem to be stumbling over roots. Right or
+wrong, I imagine that a good little wife, who will fill my glass while I
+am tranquilly smoking my pipe before a blazing fire, may have as many
+charms as the best brig in which one may sometimes perish with hunger
+and thirst. Right or wrong, I imagine to myself again that the prattle
+of two or three little monkeys around me, may be as agreeable as the
+sound of the wind howling through the masts, or of Spanish balls
+whistling about one's ears. All this, Kate, signifies that I mean to
+marry; and who do you suppose has put this pretty whim into my head?
+who, but yourself?'</p>
+
+<p>Catherine uttered an exclamation of surprise, perfectly sincere, for if
+she had expected a declaration, it was certainly not from this quarter.</p>
+
+<p>'Do not reply to me yet,' hastily resumed the sailor; 'he who pronounces
+his decree before he has heard the pleader and maturely reflected on the
+case, is a poor judge. To continue then. You are no longer a child,
+Kate, and I am no longer a young man; you are approaching thirty----'</p>
+
+<p>At these words the pretty Kitty made a gesture of surprise and of
+denial.</p>
+
+<p>'Do not reply to me!' repeated the pitiless sailor. 'You are thirty! I
+have already passed another barrier, but not long since. We are of
+suitable age for each other. The man should always have traversed the
+road before his companion. You are active and genteel; that does very
+well for women. You have always been an honest girl, that is better
+still. As for me, my skin is not so white as yours, but it is the fault
+of a tropic sun. It is possible that I may be a little disfigured by the
+scar on my cheek; but of this scar I am proud; I had the honor of
+receiving it, while boarding a vessel, from the hand of the celebrated
+Jean Bart, who, after having on that occasion lost a fine opportunity of
+being honorably killed, has just suffered himself to die of a stupid
+pleurisy; but it is not of him but of myself that we are now to speak.
+After having fought with Jean Bart, I have made a voyage with our not
+less celebrated William Dampier, whom I may dare call my friend. You may
+therefore understand, Kate, that if you have the reputation of an honest
+girl, I have that of a good sailor. The name of Captain Stradling is
+favorably known upon two oceans, and it will be to your credit, if ever,
+with your arm linked in mine, we walk as man and wife, through any port
+of England or Scotland. I have said. Now, look, reflect; if my
+proposition suits you, I will settle for life on <i>terra firma</i>, and bid
+adieu to the sea; if not, I resume my projected expedition, and it will
+be to you, Kate, that I shall say adieu.'</p>
+
+<p>Catherine opened her mouth to thank him, as was suitable, for his good
+intentions.</p>
+
+<p>'Do not reply to me!' interrupted he again; 'in three days I will come
+to receive your decision.'</p>
+
+<p>And he went out, leaving her amazed at having listened to so long a
+speech from one, who until then, seated motionless in a distant corner
+of the room, had always appeared to her the most rigid and silent of
+seamen.</p>
+
+<p>That very day Catherine has come to a decision concerning the captain;
+she thinks him ugly and disagreeable, coarse and ignorant; he has dared
+to tell her that she is thirty years old, and she will hardly be so at
+St. Valentine's Day, which is six weeks ahead, at least. Besides the
+scar which he has received from the celebrated Jean Bart, his
+countenance has no beauty to boast of: his face is long and pale, his
+temples are furrowed with wrinkles, and his lips thick and heavy; his
+eyebrows, at the top of his forehead, seem to be lost in his hair; his
+eyes are not mates, his nose is one-sided; his form is perhaps still
+worse; he walks after the fashion of a duck. Fie! can such a man be a
+suitable match for the rich landlady of the Royal Salmon, for the
+beautiful Kitty; for her who, among so many admirers and lovers, has had
+but the difficulty of a choice?</p>
+
+<p>The next day towards nightfall, Catherine, seated in her bar, in the
+large leathern arm-chair which served as her throne, with dreamy and
+downcast brow, and chin resting on her hand, was still thinking of
+Captain Stradling, but her ideas had assumed a different aspect from
+those of the evening before.</p>
+
+<p>She was saying to herself: 'If he has thick and heavy lips, it is
+because he is an Englishman; if he walks like a duck, it is because he
+is a sailor; if he has taken me to be thirty years old, that proves
+simply that he is a good physiognomist, and I shall have one painful
+avowal the less to make after marriage. As for his scar, he has a
+thousand reasons to be proud of it, and, upon close examination, it is
+not unbecoming. It would be very difficult for me to choose a husband,
+on account of the discontented suitors who will be left in the lurch;
+but I will relinquish my business, and that will put an end to all
+inconvenience. He is rich, so much for the profit; he is a captain, so
+much for the honor. Come, come, Mistress Stradling will have no reason
+to complain!'</p>
+
+<p>At this moment, Catherine Felton could meditate quite at her ease,
+without fear of being noticed; for the tobacco smoke, three times as
+dense and abundant as usual, enveloped her in an almost opaque cloud.
+There was this evening a grand <i>f&ecirc;te</i> at the tavern of the Royal Salmon.
+The concourse of customers was immense, and this time, it was neither
+the beauty of the hostess, nor the quality of the liquors which had
+attracted them thither.</p>
+
+<p>The serving-men and lasses were going from table to table, multiplying
+themselves to pour out, not only the golden waves of strong beer and
+usquebaugh, but the purple waves of claret and port; all faces were
+smiling, all eyes sparkling, and in the midst of the huzzas and <i>vivas</i>,
+was heard, with triple applause, the name of William Dampier.</p>
+
+<p>This celebrated man, now a corsair, now a skilful seaman, who had just
+discovered so many unknown straits and shores, who had just made the
+tour of the world twice, in an age when the tour of the world did not
+pass, as at present, for a trifling matter; who had published, upon his
+return, a narrative full of novel facts and observations; this pitiless
+and intelligent pirate, who studied the coasts of Peru while he
+pillaged the cities along its shores, and meditated, in the midst of
+tempests, his learned theory of winds and tides, William Dampier, had
+landed, this very day at the little port of St. Andrew.</p>
+
+<p>At the intelligence of his arrival, the whole maritime population of the
+coast was in commotion; the society of the <i>Old Pilots</i>, with that of
+the <i>Sea Dogs</i>, had sent to him deputations, headed by the principal
+ship-owners in the town. Captain Stradling had not failed to be among
+them, happy at the opportunity of once more meeting and embracing his
+former friend. Speeches were made, as if to welcome an admiral, speeches
+in which were passed in review all his noble qualities and the great
+services rendered by him to the marine interest. To these Dampier
+replied with simplicity and conciseness, saying to the orators:</p>
+
+<p>'Gentlemen and dear comrades, you must be hoarse, let us drink!'</p>
+
+<p>This first trait of eccentricity could not fail to enlist universal
+applause.</p>
+
+<p>Commissioned by him to lead the column, Stradling could not do otherwise
+than to take the road to the Royal Salmon. It was on this occasion that
+he appeared there before the expiration of the three days: but he had
+not addressed a word to Catherine, scarcely turned his eyes towards her.
+Nevertheless the circumstances were favorable to his suit.</p>
+
+<p>Then a millionaire, William Dampier had immediately declared his
+intentions to treat at his own expense the whole company and even the
+whole town, if the town would do him the honor to drink with him.
+Catherine at once took him into favor. When she heard him praise his
+friend and companion, the brave Captain Stradling, she felt for the
+latter, not an emotion of tenderness, but a sentiment of respect and
+even of good-will. Dampier, excited by his audience, did not fail, like
+other conquerors by land and sea, to recount some of his great deeds.
+Among others, he recapitulated a certain affair in which he and his
+friend Stradling had captured a Spanish galleon, laden with piastres.
+From this moment the beautiful Kitty became more thoughtful, and began
+to see that the scar was becoming to the face of this good captain.
+After drinking, when Dampier, still escorted by his <i>fidus Achates</i>,
+came to settle his account with the hostess, he chucked her familiarly
+under the chin, as was his custom with landladies in the four quarters
+of the globe. From any one else, the proud Catherine would not have
+suffered such a liberty; to this, she replied only by a graceful
+reverence, and, while the hero and paymaster of the <i>f&ecirc;te</i> shook a
+rouleau of gold upon her counter, she said, hastily bending towards
+Stradling:</p>
+
+<p>'To-morrow!' accompanying this word with an expressive look and her most
+gracious smile.</p>
+
+<p>The enamored Stradling, always impassible, contented himself with
+replying:</p>
+
+<p>'It is well!'</p>
+
+<p>The day following, the third, the important day, that which Catherine
+already regarded as her day of betrothal, early in the morning, she
+dressed herself in her best attire, not doubting the impatience of the
+captain. Before noon, the latter entered the inn and went directly up to
+the landlady.</p>
+
+<p>She received him carelessly and coldly; she was nervous, she had not
+had time for reflection; she did not know what the captain wished; if he
+would let her alone for the present, by and by she would consider.</p>
+
+<p>'Boy! a new pipe and some ale!' exclaimed Stradling, addressing a
+waiter.</p>
+
+<p>And, perfectly calm in appearance, he sauntered to his accustomed place
+at the farther end of the bar-room. However, before leaving the Royal
+Salmon, approaching Catherine, he said:</p>
+
+<p>'Yesterday, by your voice and gesture you said, or almost said, yes; we
+sailors know the signals; to-day it is no, or almost no. Very well, I
+will wait; but reflect, my beauty, we are neither of us young enough to
+lose our time in this foolish game.'</p>
+
+<p>But what had thus unexpectedly changed, from white to black, the good
+intentions of Catherine in the captain's behalf? The presence of a young
+boy whom she had not seen for many years, and towards whom she had,
+until then, felt only a kindly indifference.</p>
+
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<h3><a name="CHAPTER_II"></a>CHAPTER II.</h3>
+<br>
+
+<p>Alexander Selkirk.&mdash;The College.&mdash;First Love.&mdash;Eight Years of Absence.
+&mdash;Maritime Combats.&mdash;Return and Departure.&mdash;The Swordfish.</p>
+
+<p>Alexander Selkirk,&mdash;the name of the principal personage in this
+narrative,&mdash;was born at Largo, in the county of Fife, not far from St.
+Andrew. Entered as a pupil in the university of the town, he at first
+distinguished himself by his aptitude and his intelligence, until the
+day when, hearing of the beauty of the landlady of the Royal Salmon, he
+was seized with an irresistible desire to see her: he saw her, and
+became violently enamored. It was one of those youthful passions,
+springing rather from the effervescence of the age, than from the merit
+of the object; one of those sudden ebullitions to which the young
+recluses of science are sometimes subject, from a prolonged compression
+of the natural and affectionate sentiments.</p>
+
+<p>From this moment, all the words in the Greek and Latin dictionaries, all
+the principles of natural philosophy, mathematics and history, suddenly
+taken by storm, whirled confusedly and pell-mell in the head of Selkirk,
+like the elements of the world in chaos, before the day of creation.</p>
+
+<p>His professors had predicted that at the annual exhibition he would
+obtain six great prizes; he obtained not even a premium.</p>
+
+<p>As a punishment, he was required to remain within the college grounds
+during the vacation. But its gates were not strong enough, nor its walls
+high enough to detain him.</p>
+
+<p>Condemned, for the crime of desertion, to a classic imprisonment, he was
+shut up in a cellar; he escaped through the window; in a garret; he
+descended by the roof.</p>
+
+<p>Then, pronounced incorrigible, he was expelled from the university.</p>
+
+<p>He left it joyous and happy, escaped from the tutor commissioned to
+conduct him to his father, and at last wholly free, his own master, he
+took lodgings in a cabin, not far from the Royal Salmon, and thought
+himself monarch of the universe.</p>
+
+<p>As soon as the doors of the inn were opened, he penetrated there with
+the earliest fogs of morning, with the first beams of day; in the
+evening he was the last to cross the threshold, after the extinction of
+the lights.</p>
+
+<p>All day long, seated at a little table opposite the bar, between a pipe
+and a pewter pot, he watched the movements of Kitty, and followed her
+with admiring eyes.</p>
+
+<p>Catherine was not slow to perceive this new passion; but she was
+accustomed to admiring eyes, and therefore paid but little heed to them.
+She was then at the age of twenty-two, in all the glory of her transient
+royalty; he, scarcely sixteen, was in her eyes a boy, a raw and awkward
+boy, like almost all the other students, and she contented herself with
+now and then bestowing a slight smile upon him, in common with her other
+customers.</p>
+
+<p>But this mechanical smile, this half extinguished spark, did but
+increase the flame, by kindling in the young man's soul a ray of hope.</p>
+
+<p>At this age, passion has not yet an oral language; it is in the heart,
+in the head especially, but not on the lips; one comprehends,
+experiences, dreams, writes of love in prose and verse, but does not
+talk of it. Selkirk had twenty times attempted to confess his affection
+to Catherine; he had as yet succeeded only in a few simple and hasty
+meteorological sentences, on the rain and fine weather. He therefore
+wrote.</p>
+
+<p>Unfortunately, Catherine could not easily read writing; she applied to
+him to interpret his letter. This was a hard task for the poor boy, who,
+with a tremulous and hesitating voice, saw himself forced to stammer
+through all that burning phraseology which seemed to congeal under the
+breath of the reader.</p>
+
+<p>The result however was that Catherine became his friend; she encouraged
+his confidence, and gave him good advice as an elder sister might have
+done. She even called him by the familiar name of Sandy, which was a
+good omen.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile his scanty resources became exhausted; he had no longer means
+to pay for the pot of ale which he consumed daily. The idea of asking
+credit of his beloved, of opening with her an account, which he might
+never have means to pay, was revolting to him. On the other hand, the
+thought of returning home, and asking pardon of his father, was not
+less repugnant to his feelings. He was endowed with one of those haughty
+and imperious natures which recognize their faults, not to repair them,
+but to make of them a starting point, or even a pedestal.</p>
+
+<p>He was rambling about the port, reflecting on his unfortunate situation,
+when he heard mention made of a ship ready to set sail at high tide, and
+which needed a reinforcement of cabin-boys and sailors. This was for him
+an inspiration; he did not hesitate, he hastened to engage. That very
+evening he had gained the open sea, beyond the Isle of May, and, with
+his eyes turned towards the Bay of St. Andrew, was attempting, in vain,
+to recognize among the lights which were yet burning in the city, the
+fortunate lantern which decorated the sacred door of the Royal Salmon.</p>
+
+<p>At present, Alexander Selkirk is twenty-four years old. He has become a
+genuine sailor, and he loves his profession; the sea is now his
+beautiful Kitty. Besides, it is long since he has troubled himself about
+his heart. It is empty, even of friendship, for, among his numerous
+companions, the proud young man has not found one worthy of him. After
+having served two years in the merchant marine, he has entered the navy.
+Thanks to the war kindled in Europe for the Spanish succession, he has
+for a long time cruised with the brave Admiral Rooke along the coasts of
+France; with him, he has fought against the Danish in the Baltic Sea,
+and in 1702, in the capacity of a master pilot, figured honorably in the
+expedition against Cadiz, and in the affair of Vigo. Finally, under the
+command of Admiral Dilkes, he has just taken part in the destruction of
+a French fleet.</p>
+
+<p>But all these expeditions, rather military than maritime, and
+circumscribed in the narrow circle of the seas of Europe, have not
+satisfied the vast desires of the ambitious sailor. He experiences an
+invincible thirst to apply his knowledge, to exercise his intelligence
+on a larger scale; he is impatient for a long voyage, a voyage of
+discovery.</p>
+
+<p>The terrific hurricane of the twenty-seventh of November, 1703, which
+drove the waves of the Thames even into Westminster, Hall, and covered
+London almost entirely with the fragments of broken vessels, appeared to
+Selkirk a favorable occasion for asking his dismissal. He easily
+obtained it. So many sailors had just been thrown out of employment by
+the hurricane.</p>
+
+<p>Once more, the undisciplined scholar found himself free and his own
+master! He profited by this to pay a visit to his birthplace in
+Scotland. His father was dead, but he had some business to regulate
+there.</p>
+
+<p>On reaching Largo he learned the arrival of William Dampier at St.
+Andrew. He set sail for that port immediately.</p>
+
+<p>'Ah!' said he on his way, 'if this brave captain should be about to
+undertake a voyage to the New World, and will let me accompany him, no
+matter in what capacity, all my wishes will be gratified. I thirst to
+see tattooed faces, other trees besides beeches, oaks and firs; other
+shores than those of the Baltic, Mediterranean and Atlantic. Who knows
+whether I may not aid him in the discovery of some new continent, some
+unknown island which shall bear my name!'</p>
+
+<p>And, cradled by the wave in the frail canoe that bore him, he dreamed of
+government, perhaps of royalty, in one of those archipelagoes which he
+imagined to exist in the bosom of the distant Southern seas, long
+afterwards explored by Cook, Bougainville and Vancouver.</p>
+
+<p>Once in port, he hastened to inquire for the dwelling occupied by
+Dampier. The latter was absent; he was in the harbor.</p>
+
+<p>While awaiting his return, our young sailor thought of his old friend
+Catherine, his pretty black-eyed Kitty, and directed his steps towards
+the inn.</p>
+
+<p>He found her already enthroned in her leathern arm-chair, her hair
+neatly braided, with two small curls on her temples; in a toilette which
+the early hour of the morning did not seem to authorize; but it was the
+famous third day, and she was awaiting Stradling.</p>
+
+<p>On seeing Selkirk enter, she exclaimed to the boy, pointing to the
+newly-arrived: 'A pot of ale!'</p>
+
+<p>'No,' cried the young man smiling; 'the ale which I once drank here was
+for me a philter full of bitterness; a glass of whiskey, if you
+please,----' and, pointing to the little table opposite the bar at which
+he was formerly accustomed to place himself, he said:</p>
+
+<p>'Serve me there; I will return to my old habits.'</p>
+
+<p>Catherine looked at him with astonishment.</p>
+
+<p>'Does not pretty Kate recognize me?' said he in a caressing tone,
+approaching her.</p>
+
+<p>'How! Is it possible! is it you, indeed, Sandy?'</p>
+
+<p>'Yes, Alexander Selkirk, formerly a fugitive from the University of St.
+Andrew; recently a master pilot in the royal marine; now, as ever, your
+very humble servant.'</p>
+
+<p>And they shook hands, and examined each other closely, but the
+impression on both sides was far from being the same.</p>
+
+<p>Catherine finds Selkirk much changed, but for the better; time and
+navigation have been favorable to him. He is no longer the raw student
+with embarrassed air, awkward manner, bony frame and dilapidated
+costume; but a stout young man, with a broad chest, active and graceful
+form; though his features are decidedly Scotch, they are handsome; his
+eyes, less brilliant than formerly, are animated with a more attractive
+thoughtfulness, and the naval uniform, which he still wears, sets off
+his person to advantage.</p>
+
+<p>On his part, Selkirk finds Catherine also much changed; the rosy
+complexion, the soft voice, the youthful look, the twenty-two years, all
+are gone. Her form has assumed a superabundant amplitude.</p>
+
+<p>They drop each other's hands and utter a sigh; he, of regret; she, of
+surprise.</p>
+
+<p>Both close their eyes, at the same time; she, with the fear of gazing
+too earnestly; he, to recall the being of his imagination.</p>
+
+<p>However this may be, she is not yet a woman to be despised by a sailor.
+He therefore prolongs his visit: they come to interrogations, to
+confidences.</p>
+
+<p>Catherine acquaints him with the situation of her little business
+affairs; her fortune is improving; she gives him an estimate of it in
+round numbers, as well as of the suitors she has rejected; but she does
+not mention Captain Stradling, whose arrival she yet fears every moment.</p>
+
+<p>Selkirk relates to her his campaigns, his combats against the French,
+against the Danish, the victorious attack of the English ships against
+the great boom of Vigo; but, when she asks him what motive has brought
+him back to St. Andrew, he replies boldly that he came to see her and no
+one else, and says not a word of Captain Dampier, whom he is even now
+impatient to meet.</p>
+
+<p>At last the old friends say adieu.</p>
+
+<p>Then the gallant sailor, with an apparent effort, goes away, not
+forgetting, however, to drink his glass of whiskey.</p>
+
+<p>And this is the reason why, on the third day, Catherine has the vapors;
+this is the reason why, notwithstanding her soft words of the evening
+before and her grand morning toilette, she receives so coldly the
+scarred adversary of the celebrated Jean Bart.</p>
+
+<p>During the whole of the week following, Stradling, Dampier and Selkirk,
+did not fail to meet at the Royal Salmon. Selkirk came to see Dampier;
+Dampier came to see Stradling; Stradling came to see Catherine Felton.</p>
+
+<p>The latter thought the young man already knew the two others, that he
+had sailed with them, and was not surprised at their intimacy.</p>
+
+<p>Sometimes Selkirk, leaving his companions in the midst of their bottles
+and glasses, would describe a tangent towards the counter, and come to
+converse with the pretty hostess. He no longer felt love for her, and
+notwithstanding this, perhaps for this very reason, he now talked
+eloquently.</p>
+
+<p>Kitty blushed, was embarrassed, and poor Captain Stradling, listening
+with all his ears to the narratives of his illustrious friend William
+Dampier, or pre-occupied with his pipe, lost in its cloud, saw
+nothing,&mdash;or seemed to see nothing.</p>
+
+<p>Nevertheless one evening, he went, in his turn, to lean on the counter:</p>
+
+<p>'Kate,' said he, 'when is our marriage to take place?'</p>
+
+<p>'Are you thinking of that still?' replied she, with an air of levity
+which would once have became her better; 'I hoped this fancy had passed
+out of your head.'</p>
+
+<p>'I may then set out on my voyage, Kate?'</p>
+
+<p>'Why not? We will talk of our plans on your return.'</p>
+
+<p>'But I am going to make the tour of the world, as well as my friend
+Dampier. Kate, it is the affair of three years!'</p>
+
+<p>'So much the better! it will give us both time for reflection.'</p>
+
+<p>'It is well!' replied the phlegmatic Englishman, and nothing on his
+polar face betokened an afterthought.</p>
+
+<p>The doors closed, the lights extinguished, Catherine retired to rest the
+happiest woman in the world. She said to herself: 'Alexander loves me,
+and has loved me for eight years! he deserves to be rewarded. He has
+less money than the other, it is a misfortune; but he has more youth and
+grace, that balances it. As to rank, a master pilot of twenty-four is
+as far advanced as a captain of forty. Between Selkirk and myself, if
+the wealth is on my side, on his will be gratitude and little
+attentions. At all events, I prefer a young husband who will whisper
+words of love in my ear, to amusing myself by pouring out drink for my
+lord and master, while he smokes his pipe, with his feet on the brands.
+Was it not thus that icicle, dressed in blue, called Stradling, talked
+to me of the pleasures of marriage? And what a name! But Mistress
+Selkirk!&mdash;that sounds well. In our Scotland, there is the county of
+Selkirk, the town of Selkirk; there is even a great nobleman of this
+name, who is something like minister to our Queen Anne, I believe. Who
+knows? we are perhaps of his family! As for walking about the port
+arm-in-arm with a captain, I am sure my very dear friends and neighbors
+would die with jealousy if I took, instead of this scarred captain, a
+young and handsome man. It is settled. I will marry Alexander; to-morrow
+I will myself announce it to him. I hope he will not die of joy!'</p>
+
+<p>On the morrow she attired herself as on the day of Selkirk's return, in
+her beautiful dress of cloth and silk, with the two little curls upon
+her temples. She thus waited a great part of the day. At last, about
+four o'clock, Selkirk arrives in haste, his face beaming with joy, and a
+gleam of triumph in his eye.</p>
+
+<p>'Has he then,' thought Catherine, 'a presentiment of the happiness in
+store for him?'</p>
+
+<p>'Congratulate me, pretty Kitty,' said the young man, almost out of
+breath; 'I am appointed mate of the brig Swordfish, which I am to join
+at Dunbar.'</p>
+
+<p>'How! you are going?'</p>
+
+<p>'In an hour.'</p>
+
+<p>'For a long time?'</p>
+
+<p>'For three years at least. In a fortnight we set sail for the East
+Indies. It will be a great commercial voyage and a voyage of discovery.
+Unfortunately William Dampier does not accompany us; but he furnishes
+funds to the brave Captain Stradling.'</p>
+
+<p>'Stradling!'</p>
+
+<p>'Yes, it is he who has just engaged me, and with whom I am to sail. Our
+agreement is signed,&mdash;I am mate! I am going to explore the New World!
+Ah! I would not exchange my fate for that of a king. But time presses;
+adieu, Kitty, till I see you again!'</p>
+
+<p>'Three years!' murmured Catherine.</p>
+
+<p>And her curls grew straight beneath the cold perspiration that covered
+her forehead.</p>
+
+
+
+<br><br><hr style="width: 65%;"><br><br>
+<a name="CHAPTER_III"></a><h2>CHAPTER III.</h2>
+<br>
+
+<p>The Tour of the World.&mdash;The Way to manufacture Negroes&mdash;California.
+&mdash;The Eldorado.&mdash;Revolt of Selkirk.&mdash;The Log-Book.&mdash;Degradation.
+&mdash;A Free Shore.</p>
+
+<p>The Swordfish, well provisioned, even with guns and ammunition, left
+Dunbar one morning with a fresh breeze, sailed down the North Sea,
+passed Ireland, France and Spain, the Azores, Canaries, and Cape Verd
+Islands on the coast of Africa, and, after having stopped for a short
+time in the harbors of Guinea and Congo, doubled the Cape of Good Hope,
+amid the traditional tempest.</p>
+
+<p>Entering the Indian Ocean, and passing through the Straits of Sunda, she
+touched at Borneo, and at Java, reached the Southern Sea by the Gulf of
+Siam, passed the Philippine Isles, then, through the vast regions of the
+Pacific Ocean, pursued the route which had been marked out by the
+exploring ship of William Dampier in 1686. Like that, the Swordfish
+remained a few days at the Island of St. Pierre, before launching into
+that immensity where, during nearly two months, wave only succeeded to
+wave; at last she reached the coasts of South America, and cast anchor
+in the Gulf of California.</p>
+
+<p>This gigantic voyage, which seemed as if it must have been attempted
+under the inspiration of science and with the hope of the most important
+discoveries, had been undertaken by Stradling with no object but of
+traffic and even of rapine. These had been the great ends of most of the
+bold enterprises which had preceded. The Spanish and Portuguese, in
+their discoveries of new continents, had thought less of glory than of
+riches; they had conquered the New World only to pillage it; the
+vanquished who escaped extermination, were forced to dig their native
+soil, not to render it more fruitful, but to procure from it, for the
+profit of the vanquisher, the gold it might contain. Among the European
+nations, those who had had no part in the conquest now sought to share
+the spoils. For this the least pretext of war or commerce sufficed.</p>
+
+<p>Stradling availed himself of both these pretences; when he touched at
+the coasts of Guinea and Congo, it was to obtain negroes whom he
+expected to sell in America. At Borneo, the opportunity presented itself
+for an advantageous disposal of the greater part of his black
+merchandize; as he was a man of resources and not at all scrupulous, he
+soon found means to replace them.</p>
+
+<p>In the Straits of Sunda, several barques, manned by negroes and Malays,
+had become entangled in the masses of seaweed which are every where
+floating on the surface of the wave; Stradling encountered them, made
+the rowers enter his ship, and obligingly took the barques in tow, to
+extricate them from their difficulty. But those who ascended the side of
+the Swordfish, descended only to be sold in their turn.</p>
+
+<p>Although he had received an education superior to that of his
+companions, Selkirk shared in the prejudices of his times; he had
+therefore found nothing objectionable in seeing his captain exchange at
+Congo little mirrors, a few glass beads, half a dozen useless guns, and
+some gallons of brandy, for men still young and vigorous, torn from
+their country and their families. Their skin was of another color, their
+heads woolly; this was a profitable traffic, recognized by governments;
+but when he saw Stradling seize the property of others to refill his
+empty hold, he could not control his indignation and boldly expressed
+it:</p>
+
+<p>'It is for their salvation,' replied the captain, without emotion; 'we
+will make Christians of them.'</p>
+
+<p>On approaching the Vermilion Sea, a deep gulf which separates California
+from the American continent, and makes it almost an island, the Malays
+were rubbed with a mixture of tar and dragon's blood, dissolved in a
+caustic oil, to give to their olive skins a deeper shade, and their flat
+noses and silky hair making them pass for Yolof negroes, they were
+exchanged at Cape St. Lucas, along with the rest, for pearls and native
+productions.</p>
+
+<p>The young mate thought this proceeding not less mean and dishonorable
+than the first; he made new observations.</p>
+
+<p>'Nothing now remains to be done, captain,' said he, 'but to shave and
+besmear with tar the monkey you have just bought, and to include it
+among your new race of negroes.'</p>
+
+<p>This time, the captain looked at him askance, and shrugged his shoulders
+without replying.</p>
+
+<p>The storm was beginning to growl in the distance.</p>
+
+<p>It was not without a secret object that, in his course through the
+Southern Sea, Stradling had first of all aimed at California.</p>
+
+<p>He devoted an entire month to cruising along both shores of this almost
+island, and penetrating all the bays of the Vermilion Sea; he hoped to
+find there a passage to an unknown land, then predicted and coveted by
+all navigators. What was this land? The <i>Eldorado</i>!</p>
+
+<p>Although I would hasten over these details of the voyage to arrive at
+the more important events of this history; now that the recent discovery
+of the immense mines of gold buried beneath the hills of California has
+aroused the entire world, that the name alone of <i>Sacramento</i> seems to
+fill with gold the mouth which pronounces it, there is a curious fact,
+perhaps entirely unknown, which I cannot pass over in silence.</p>
+
+<p>After the middle of the sixteenth century, and long before the
+seventeenth, a vague rumor, a confused tradition, had located, in the
+neighborhood of the Vermilion Sea, a famed land, whose rivers rolled
+over gold, and whose mountains rested on golden foundations; the
+treasures of Mexico and Peru were nothing in comparison with those which
+were to be gathered there. An ingot of native gold was talked of, of a
+<i>pepite</i> or eighty pounds weight.</p>
+
+<p>It was a grape from the promised land.</p>
+
+<p>This marvellous country had been named, in advance, <i>Eldorado</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Among the bold Argonauts of these two centuries, there was a contest as
+to who should first raise his flag over this new Colchis, defended, it
+was said, by the Apaches, a terrible, sanguinary and cannibal race, whom
+Cortez himself could not subdue. This land of gold some had located in
+New Biscay or New Mexico; others, in the pretended kingdoms of Sonora
+and Quivira; then, after several ineffectual attempts, the possibility
+of reaching it was denied; learned men, from the various academies of
+Europe, proved that the <i>Eldorado</i> was not a country, but a dream; on
+this subject the Old World laughed at the New; the Argonauts became
+discouraged, and during a century the subject was named only to be
+ridiculed.</p>
+
+<p>And yet, in spite of sceptics and scoffers, the <i>Eldorado</i> existed. It
+existed where tradition had placed it, on the shores of this Vermilion
+Sea, now the Gulf of California. For once, popular opinion had the
+advantage over scientific dissertations and philosophic denials; there,
+where, according to the Dictionary of Alcedo, nothing had been
+discovered but mines of pewter! where Jacques Baegert had indeed
+acknowledged the presence of gold, but <i>in meagre veins</i>; where Raynal
+had named as curiosities only fishes and pearls, declaring, in
+California, <i>the sea richer than the land</i>; where in our own times M.
+Humboldt discovered nothing but cylindrical cacti, on a sandy soil,
+remained buried, as a deposit for future ages, this treasure of the
+world, which seemed to be waiting in order to leave its native soil, the
+moment of falling into the hands of a commercial and industrious people,
+that of the United States.</p>
+
+<p>This <i>Eldorado</i>, Stradling sought in vain; he therefore decided to
+pursue his route along the coast of Mexico, now under the French flag,
+when he found an opportunity for traffic with the natives, colonists or
+savages; now under the English flag, when he wished to exercise his
+trade of corsair, an easy profession, for since the disaster of Vigo,
+the Spanish had abandoned their transatlantic possessions to themselves.</p>
+
+<p>The Spanish soldiery of America then found themselves, in the presence
+of European adventurers, in that state of pusillanimous inferiority in
+which had been, at the period of the conquest, the subjects of the Incas
+and Montezuma before the soldiers of Cortez and Pizarro. The time was
+not already far passed, when a few bands of freebooters, from France,
+England and Holland, had well nigh wrested from his Majesty, the King of
+Spain and the Indies, the most extensive and wealthy of his twenty-two
+hereditary kingdoms.</p>
+
+<p>Stradling was following in the footsteps of these freebooters.</p>
+
+<p>Recently, two little cities on the coast had been put under contribution
+for the supplies of the Swordfish; there had been resistance, a
+threatened attack, a parley, and capitulation; in this affair, the young
+mate had nobly distinguished himself both as a combatant and a
+negotiator, and yet the captain had not deigned to give him a share in
+his distribution of compliments.</p>
+
+<p>Selkirk felt an irritation the more lively that this shore life began to
+be irksome. Not that his conscience disturbed him any more than in the
+treatment of the blacks; he thought it as honorable to war with the
+Spaniards in the New World, as to be beaten by them in the Old; but he
+compared his present chief, Captain Stradling, with his former
+commander, the noble and brave Admiral Rooke; the parallel extended in
+his mind to his old companions in the royal navy, all so frank, so gay,
+so loyal,&mdash;among whom he had yet never found a friend,&mdash;and his new
+companions of to-day, recruited for the most part in the marshy lowlands
+of the merchant marine of Scotland; his thoughts became overshadowed,
+and his desires for independence, which dated from his college life,
+returned in full force.</p>
+
+<p>As much as his duties permitted, he loved to isolate himself from all;
+when he could remain some time alone in his cabin, or gaze upon the sea
+from a retired corner of the deck and watch the ploughing of the vessel,
+then only he was happy.</p>
+
+<p>As if to increase his uneasiness, Stradling became daily more severe and
+more exacting towards his chief officer; he imposed upon him rude labors
+foreign to his station. It seemed as if he were determined to drive him
+to desperation.</p>
+
+<p>He succeeded.</p>
+
+<p>Selkirk protested against such treatment, and recapitulated his subjects
+of complaint. The other paid no more attention than he would have done
+to the buzzing of a fly.</p>
+
+<p>Irritated by this outrageous impassibility, the young man declared that
+there should no longer be any thing in common between them, and that,
+whatever fate might await him, he demanded to be set on shore.</p>
+
+<p>Stradling touched his forehead:</p>
+
+<p>'That is a good idea,' said he, and he turned away.</p>
+
+<p>The next day, they reached the Isthmus of Panama; the persevering
+Selkirk returned to the charge: 'The moment is favorable for ridding
+yourself of me, and me of you,' said he to the captain; 'let the boat
+convey me to the shore; I will cross the Isthmus, reach the Gulf of
+Darien, the North Sea, and return to Scotland, even before the
+Swordfish!'</p>
+
+<p>This time the honest corsair listened attentively, then shaking his head
+and winking his eye, with the smile of a hungry vampire, replied:</p>
+
+<p>'You are then in great haste to be married, comrade.'</p>
+
+<p>It was the first word he had addressed to him relative to Catherine
+during this long voyage, and this word Selkirk had not even understood.</p>
+
+<p>They were about passing Panama: the vessel continuing her voyage,
+Selkirk interposed his authority, ordered the men to put about, take in
+sail and approach the shore.</p>
+
+<p>This Stradling prohibited, uttered a formidable oath, and commanded the
+young man to bring the log-book. When it was brought, he made the
+following entry:</p>
+
+<p>'To-day, Sept. 24th, 1704, Alexander Selkirk, mate of this vessel,
+having mutinied and attempted to desert to the enemy, we have deprived
+him of his title and his office; in case of obstinacy we shall hang him
+to the yard-arm.'</p>
+
+<p>And he read the sentence to the offender.</p>
+
+<p>From this day, the rebel saw himself compelled to serve in the Swordfish
+as a simple sailor, and his subordinates of yesterday, to-day his
+equals, indemnified themselves for the authority he had exercised over
+them, which did not cure him of that native contempt he had always felt
+for mankind.</p>
+
+<p>A month passed away thus, during which the Swordfish several times
+touched the shores of Peru, now to renew her supplies of provisions and
+water, now to exchange with the Indians, nails, hatchets, knives, and
+necklaces of beads, for gold dust, furs, and garments trimmed with
+colored feathers.</p>
+
+<p>During one of these pauses, Selkirk, left on the ship, accosted the
+captain once more. He knew that the remains of some bands of freebooters
+were colonized there, leading a peaceful and agricultural life; this
+fact was known to all. At Coquimbo in Chili, some English and Dutch
+pirates had formed a settlement of this kind, now in the full tide of
+prosperity. Selkirk, who, during an entire month, had not spoken to the
+captain, now demanded, in a voice which he attempted to render calm and
+almost supplicating, to be landed at Coquimbo, from which they were only
+a few days sail.</p>
+
+<p>'You will not this time accuse me of wishing to desert to the enemy;
+they are the English, Scotch, Dutch, our countrymen and allies whom I
+wish to join! Do you still suspect me? Well, do not content yourself
+with setting me on shore; place me in the hands of the chief men of the
+settlement. Will that suit you?'</p>
+
+<p>Stradling winked significantly; but this was all.</p>
+
+<p>'Ah!' resumed the young man with increasing emotion, 'do not think to
+detain me longer on board, to crush me beneath this humiliation! I
+consented to serve under your orders as mate, and you have made me the
+lowest of your sailors; this you had no right to do.'</p>
+
+<p>Stradling took his glass and directed it towards the shore, where his
+people were engaged in trafficking their beads and hardware.</p>
+
+<p>Raising his head and folding his arms:</p>
+
+<p>'Captain,' pursued Selkirk with vehemence, 'some day or other we shall
+return to England, where the laws protect all; there, I shall have the
+right of complaint, and Queen Anne loves to render justice; beware!'</p>
+
+<p>Stradling, still spying, began to whistle <i>God save the Queen</i>; then he
+called his monkey and made it gambol before him.</p>
+
+<p>'I will depart, I will free myself from your presence, and that of your
+worthy companions; I will do so at all events, do you understand!'
+exclaimed Selkirk exasperated, 'I will not endure your infamous
+treatment another week! If you refuse to consent to my demand, I will
+leave without your permission; were the vessel twenty miles from the
+land, and were I to perish twenty times on the way, I will attempt to
+swim ashore. Will you land me at Coquimbo, yes or no? Reply!'</p>
+
+<p>By way of reply, Stradling ordered him to be confined in the hold.</p>
+
+<p>Poor Selkirk! Ah! if pretty Kitty, if the beautiful landlady of the
+Royal Salmon could know all thou hast endured for her sake, how many
+tears would her fine eyes shed over thy fate! But who knows whether she
+will ever hear of thee? Who can tell whether any human being will learn
+the sufferings in reserve for thee?</p>
+
+<p>Poor Selkirk! you who painted to yourself so smiling a picture of this
+grand voyage to America; who hoped to leave, like Dampier, your name to
+some strait, some newly discovered island; you who dreamed of scientific
+walks in vast prairies and under the arches of virgin forests, you have
+shared only in the career of a trafficker and a pirate; of this New
+World, full of marvellous sights, you have seen only the shore, the
+fringe of the mantle, the margin of this last work of God!</p>
+
+<p>Poor Selkirk, must you then return to your cold and foggy Scotland,
+without having contemplated at your ease, beneath the brilliant sun of
+the tropics, one of those Edens overshadowed by the luxuriant verdure of
+palm-trees, bananas, mimosas and gigantic ferns? In your country, the
+bark of the trees is clad with lichens and mosses, and the parasite
+mistletoe suspends itself to the branches, more as a burden than as an
+ornament; here, numerous families of the orchis, with their singular
+forms, showy and variegated blossoms, climb along the knotty stems of
+the tall monarchs of the forests; from their feet spring up, as if to
+enlace them with a magic network, the brilliant passiflora, the vanilla
+with its intoxicating perfume, the banisteria whose roots seem to have
+dived into mines of gold and borrowed from thence the color of its
+petals! Hither the birds of Paradise and Brazilian parrots come to build
+their nests; here the bluebird and the purple-necked wood-pigeon coo and
+sing; here, like swarms of bees, thousands of humming-birds of mingled
+emerald and sapphire, warble and glitter as they suck the nectar from
+the flowers. This was what you hoped to contemplate, poor Selkirk! and
+this joy, like many others, is henceforth forbidden.</p>
+
+<p>In his floating prison, in his submarine cell, his only employment is to
+listen to the dashing of the waves against the ship, or now and then to
+catch a glimpse of the blue sky through the hatchways.</p>
+
+<p>What cares he? He does not complain; he has learned to abhor mankind,
+and he loves to be alone, in company with himself and his own thoughts.</p>
+
+<p>Several days passed in this manner.</p>
+
+<p>One morning he felt the brig slacken its speed; the dashing of the wave
+against the prow diminished, and the Swordfish, suddenly furling its
+sails, after having slightly rocked hither and thither, stopped. They
+had just cast anchor. Where? he knows not.</p>
+
+<p>Soon he hears the rattling of the rope-ladder which serves as a stairway
+to those above who would communicate with his prison. They come, on the
+part of the captain, to seek him.</p>
+
+<p>He finds the latter seated on the deck, surrounded by his principal men.</p>
+
+<p>'Young man,' said Stradling, 'I have been obliged to be severe for the
+sake of an example; but you have been sufficiently punished by the time
+you have passed below there,'&mdash;and he pointed to the ship's hold. 'Now,
+your wish shall be granted. You shall be allowed to land.'</p>
+
+<p>And the rare smile which sometimes hovered on his lips, stole over his
+rigid face.</p>
+
+<p>'So much the better,' replied Selkirk, laconically.</p>
+
+<p>The boat was let down; he entered it, and ten minutes afterwards
+disembarked on a green shore, where the waves, as they broke upon it,
+seemed to murmur softly in his ear the word, <i>liberty</i>!</p>
+
+<p>The boat immediately rejoined the ship, which set sail, coasted along
+Chili and Patagonia, and re-entered the Northern Sea by the Straits of
+Magellan.</p>
+
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<h3>
+<a name="CHAPTER_IV"></a>CHAPTER IV.</h3>
+<br>
+
+<h4>Inspection of the Country.&mdash;Marimonda.&mdash;A City seen through the Fog.
+&mdash;The Sea every where.&mdash;Dialogue with a Toucan.&mdash;The first Shot.
+&mdash;Declaration of War.&mdash;Vengeance.&mdash;A Terrestrial Paradise.</h4>
+
+<p>While watching the departure of the Swordfish, Alexander Selkirk felt
+the same sensation as on that day when he had seen the doors of the
+college of St. Andrew thrown open for his exit; once more he was his own
+master. Now, however, it is at some thousands of miles from his country
+that he must reap the benefits of his independence, and this idea
+embitters his emotions of joy.</p>
+
+<p>But is he not about to find countrymen at Coquimbo? And if their society
+should be unpleasing?&mdash;if their habits, their mode of life, their
+persons, should become objects of antipathy to the misanthropic Selkirk,
+as it is but natural to fear? Well! after all, no engagement binds him
+to them; he will be always free to enter, in the capacity of a sailor,
+the first vessel which may leave for Europe.</p>
+
+<p>Determined to act as shall seem good to him,&mdash;to make some excursions
+into the interior of the continent, if an opportunity presents itself,
+and he will know how to make one,&mdash;he casts a first glance at the land
+of his adoption.</p>
+
+<p>Before him extends a vast shore, studded with groves of trees, covered
+with fine turf and little flowers joyfully unfolding their petals to the
+sun: two streams, having their source at the very base of the opposite
+hills, after having meandered around this immense lawn, unite almost at
+his feet.</p>
+
+<p>He bends down to one of these streams, fills the hollow of his hand with
+water, and tastes it, as a libation, and as a toast to the generous land
+which has just received him; the water is excellent; he plucks a flower,
+and continues his inspection.</p>
+
+<p>On his left rise high mountains, terraced and verdant, excepting at
+their summits, on one of which he perceives a goat, with long horns,
+stationed there immovable like a sentinel, and whose delicate profile is
+clearly defined on the azure of the sky. On the side towards the sea,
+the mountains, bending their gray and naked heads, resemble stone
+giants, watching the movements of the wave which dashes at their feet.</p>
+
+<p>On his right, where the land declines, he sees little valleys linked
+together with charming undulations; but on the mountains at his left, in
+the valleys at his right, among the hills in the distance, his eye
+vainly seeks the vestige of a human habitation.</p>
+
+<p>He sets out in search of one. The boat from which he landed has
+deposited on the shore his effects&mdash;his arms, his nautical instruments,
+his charts, a Bible, and provisions of various kinds. Notwithstanding
+his piratical sentiments, the captain of the Swordfish has not designed
+to precede exile by confiscation. Selkirk takes his gun, his gourd; but,
+unable to carry all his riches, he conceals them behind a stony thicket,
+well defended by the darts of the cactus, and the sword-like leaves of
+the aloe, not caring to have the first comer seize them as his booty.</p>
+
+<p>As he is occupied with this duty, he feels himself suddenly clasped by
+two long hairy arms; he turns his head, it is Marimonda, the captain's
+monkey, a female of the largest species.</p>
+
+<p>How came she there? Selkirk does not know.</p>
+
+<p>Disgusted with her sea-voyages, with the intelligence natural to her
+race, Marimonda has undoubtedly profited by the moment of the boat's
+leaving the ship to conceal herself in it and gain the shore along with
+the prisoner, which she might easily have done, unseen by all, during
+the transporting of the effects and provisions.</p>
+
+<p>However this may be, Selkirk begins by freeing himself from her grasp,
+repulses the monkey and sets out: but the latter perseveres in
+following, and after having, by her most graceful grimaces, sought to
+conciliate him, marches beside him. Not caring to arrive at Coquimbo
+escorted by such a companion, which would give him in a city the
+appearance of a mountebank and showman of monkeys, Selkirk, this time,
+repulses her rudely, not with his hand, but with the butt of his gun.</p>
+
+<p>Struck in the breast by this home thrust, the poor monkey stops, rolls
+up her eyes, moves her lips, and growling confusedly her complaints and
+reproaches, crouches beneath a tuft of the sapota, leaving the man to
+pursue his way alone.</p>
+
+<p>Selkirk has at first directed his steps toward the valleys; after having
+traversed these, he arrives at the margin of a sandy plain, and as far
+as the eye can reach, perceives neither city, village, house, tent nor
+hut, nothing which can indicate the presence of inhabitants.</p>
+
+<p>Nevertheless, a little grove which he has just traversed, seems to have
+recently, in its principal path, passed under the shears of a gardener;
+the foliage presents a certain symmetry; fragments of branches are
+strewed, on the ground, which seem to have been freshly cut; he even
+thinks he sees vestiges of the passage of a flock. On the lawn of the
+shore, he has seen, and still sees around him, trees with tufted heads,
+which must owe this form to art. He continues his researches.</p>
+
+<p>At last, in the distance, beneath a fog which is just beginning to
+dissolve, he perceives a vast mass of white and red houses, some with
+terraced roofs, others covered with thatch; through the humid veil which
+envelopes them, he sees the glistening of the glass in the windows;
+already he hears at his feet the confused noise of cities; murmuring
+voices reply; the measured sound of hammers and of mills even reaches
+his ear.</p>
+
+<p>It is Coquimbo! he cannot doubt it, and shortening his route by a path
+across the hill, he quickens his pace.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile an east wind arises, the fog disappears; when he thinks he has
+reached the suburbs of the city, Selkirk sees before him only an
+irregular assemblage of calcareous stones, crowned with dry herbs, or
+reddish, arid, angular rocks, flattened at their summits, tessellated
+with fragments of silex and mica, on which the sun is just pouring his
+rays; a company of goats, which the mist had condemned to a momentary
+repose, are bounding here and there, startling flocks of clamorous
+black-birds and plaintive sea-gulls; the fearless and yellow-crested
+woodpeckers alone do not stir, but continue to hammer with their sharp
+beaks at some old stunted trees.</p>
+
+<p>The disenchantment is painful for our sailor; the fog has deceived him
+with the semblance of a city, as it has more than once deluded us in the
+midst of plains and woods, by the appearance of an ocean with its white
+waves, its great capes, its bold shores, and its vessels at anchor.</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps Coquimbo is still beyond. Fearing to lose himself if he ventures
+farther in an unknown land, he resolves to explore it first by a look.
+Returning to the shore upon which he had landed, he scales the mountains
+on the north, reaches the first platform, and from thence seeks to
+discover some indications of a city. Nothing! he still ascends, the
+circle enlarges around him, but with no better result. Summoning all his
+courage, through a thousand difficulties, climbing, drawing himself up
+by the arid and abrupt rocks, piled one upon another, he at last attains
+a culminating point of the mountain. He can now embrace with his eye an
+immense horizon, but this immense horizon is the sea! On his right, on
+his left, before him, behind him, every where the sea!</p>
+
+<p>He is not on the continent, but on an island.</p>
+
+<p>This evening, exhausted with fatigue, he lies down in a grotto at the
+foot of the mountain, where he passes a night full of agitation and
+anxiety.</p>
+
+<p>Rising with the sun, his first care, the next morning, is to examine
+his riches and his provisions. He returns to the thicket of cactus and
+aloes.</p>
+
+<p>Besides two guns, two hatchets, a knife, an iron pot, a Bible and
+nautical instruments, all articles belonging to him, he finds there a
+quantity of nails, a large fragment of a sail, several horns of powder
+and shot; a bag of ship biscuit, a salted quarter of pork, a little cask
+of pickled fish, and a dozen cocoa-nuts.</p>
+
+<p>The night before, at sight of these articles, he had supposed a
+sentiment of justice and humanity to exist in the soul of the corsair.
+Just now, he had said to himself that Stradling, deceived by a false
+reckoning of latitude, had landed him on an island, perhaps believing it
+to be a projecting shore of the continent. Now, the abundance of his
+supplies, this biscuit, these salt provisions, these fruits of the
+cocoa, all valueless if he had really landed at Coquimbo, lead him to
+suspect that the vindictive Englishman has designedly chosen the place
+of his exile.</p>
+
+<p>But this exile, is it complete isolation? Is the island inhabited or
+deserted? If it is inhabited, as he still believes he has reason to
+suppose, by whom is it so?</p>
+
+<p>That he may obtain a reply to this double question, he resolves to
+traverse the country in its whole extent. At the very commencement of
+his journey, the immobility of a bird suffices to give to the doubt, on
+which his thoughts vacillate, the appearance almost of a certainty.</p>
+
+<p>This bird is a toucan, of brilliant plumage and monstrous beak. Selkirk
+passes near it, with his eyes fixed on the branch which serves as a
+perch, and the toucan, without stirring, looks at him with a species of
+calm and placid astonishment.</p>
+
+<p>Selkirk stops; he comprehends the mute language of the bird.</p>
+
+<p>'You do not know then what a man is! He is the enemy of every creature
+to whom God has given life, the enemy even of his kind! You have then
+never been threatened by the arms that I bear!'</p>
+
+<p>And with the palm of his hand, striking the butt of his gun, he made the
+hammer click.</p>
+
+<p>At the sound of his voice, as at the noise of the hammer, the bird
+raised its head, manifesting new and redoubled surprise, but without any
+other movement. It seemed to think that the man and the gun were one,
+and that its strange interlocutor possessed two different voices.</p>
+
+<p>At last, by way of reply, it uttered a few shrill and prolonged cries,
+accompanied by the rattling of its two horny mandibles. After which,
+acting the great nobleman, cutting short the audience he has deigned to
+grant, the toucan is silent, turns its head, proudly raises one of its
+wings and busies itself in smoothing, with the point of its large beak,
+its beautiful greenish feathers, variegated with purple.</p>
+
+<p>At some distance from this spot, still following the margin of a wooded
+hill, Selkirk sees other birds, some in their nests, others warbling in
+the shade; all manifesting no more alarm at his presence than did the
+toucan. Crested orioles, hooded bullfinches, alight to pick up little
+grains or insects almost at his feet; humming-birds, variegated
+cotingas, red manaquins flutter before him in the sunbeams, pursuing
+invisible flies; little wood-peckers, black or green, hop around the
+trunks of the trees, stopping a moment to see him pass and then resuming
+their spiral ascent.</p>
+
+<p>The confidence which he inspires is not confined to these winged people.
+Upon a hillock of turf he perceives an animal, with pointed nose, brown
+fur enamelled with red spots, and of the size of a hare; seated on its
+hind paws, longer than those in front, it uses these, after the manner
+of squirrels, to carry to its mouth some nuts of the maripa, which
+constitute its breakfast. It is an
+agouti,<a href="#Footnote_1"><sup>[1]</sup></a> a mother,
+her little ones
+are near. At sight of the stranger they run to her, but quickly
+re-assured, quietly finish their morning repast.</p>
+
+<p>Farther on, coatis,<a href="#Footnote_2"><sup>[2]</sup></a> with
+short ears, and long tails; companies of
+little Guinea pigs; armadillos, a species of hedge-hog without the
+quills, but covered with an armor of scales, more compact and impervious
+than that of the ancient knights of the Middle Ages, arrange themselves
+along the line of his route, as if to pass him in review.</p>
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_1"></a><sup>[1]</sup></p>
+<blockquote> <i>Agouti</i>. An animal of the bigness of a rabbit, with bright
+red hair, and a little tail without hair. He has but two teeth in each
+jaw; holds his meat in his forepaws like a squirrel, and has a very
+remarkable cry: when he is angry, his hair stands on end, and he strikes
+the earth with his hind feet; and when chased, he flies to a hollow
+tree, whence he is expelled by smoke.&mdash;<i>Trevoux</i>.</blockquote>
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_2"></a><sup>[2]</sup></p>
+<blockquote> The <i>coati</i> is a native of Brazil, not unlike the racoon in
+the general form of the body, and, like that animal, it frequently sits
+up on the hinder legs, and in this position carries its food to its
+mouth. If left at liberty in a state of tameness, it will pursue
+poultry, and destroy every living thing that it has strength to conquer.
+When it sleeps it rolls itself into a lump, and remains immovable for
+fifteen hours together. His eyes are small, but full of life; and when
+domesticated, this creature is very playful and amusing. A great
+peculiarity belonging to this animal is the length of his snout, which
+resembles in some particulars the trunk of the elephant, as it is
+movable in every direction. The ears are round, and like those of a rat;
+the forefeet have five toes each. The hair is short and rough on the
+back, and of a blackish color; the tail is marked with rings of black,
+like the wild cat; the rest of the animal is a mixture of black and
+red.</blockquote>
+
+<p>Alas! this general quiet does but deepen in the heart of Selkirk the
+certainty of his isolation.</p>
+
+<p>Nevertheless, yesterday, said he to himself, in this thick wood, did I
+not see alleys trimmed with the shears, trees shaped by the
+pruning-knife?</p>
+
+<p>And the little grove which he visited the evening previous, at that
+instant presents itself before him. He examines the trees; they are
+myrtles of various heights; but among their glossy branches, he in vain
+seeks traces of the pruning-knife or shears; nature alone has thus
+disposed in spheroids or umbels the extremities of this rich vegetation.</p>
+
+<p>The same disappointment awaits him in the underwood. The only pruners
+have been goats, or other animals, daintily cropping the green shoots.</p>
+
+<p>Then only does the complete and terrible certainty of his disaster fall
+on him and crush him. Behold him blotted from the number of men, perhaps
+condemned to die of misery and of hunger! more securely imprisoned, more
+entirely forgotten by the world than the most hardened criminal plunged
+in the lowest depths of the Bastile! He at least, has a jailor!
+Miserable Stradling!</p>
+
+<p>At this moment he hears a noise above his head: it is the monkey.</p>
+
+<p>Marimonda, on her side, has also inspected the island; she has already
+tasted its productions. Whether she is satisfied with her discoveries,
+or whether forgiveness and forgetfulness of injuries are natural to her,
+on perceiving her old companion, wagging her head in token of good-will,
+she descends towards him from the tree on which she is perched.</p>
+
+<p>But Marimonda is the captain's monkey; she has been his property, his
+favorite, his flatterer! In the disposition of mind in which Selkirk
+finds himself, he does not need these thoughts to make him pitiless.
+Marimonda reminds him of Stradling; the monkey shall pay for the man!</p>
+
+<p>He lowers his gun, and fires. The monkey has seen the movement and
+divined his intentions; she has only time to retreat behind her tree,
+which does not prevent her receiving in her side a part of the charge.</p>
+
+<p>This detonation of fire-arms, the first perhaps which has resounded in
+this corner of the earth since the creation of the world, as it is
+prolonged from echo to echo, even to the highest mountains, awakens in
+every part of the island as it were a groan of distress. Instinct, that
+sublime prescience, has revealed to all that a great peril has just been
+born.</p>
+
+<p>To the cries of affright from birds of every species, to the uneasy and
+distant bleating of the goats, succeeds a plaintive moaning, like the
+voice of a wailing infant.</p>
+
+<p>It is Marimonda lamenting over her wound.</p>
+
+<p>At nightfall, after an entire day of walks and explorations, Selkirk is
+returning to his grotto on the shore, when he sees a stone fall at his
+feet, then another.</p>
+
+<p>While he, astonished, is seeking to divine the direction from which this
+invisible battery plays, a little date-stone hits him on the cheek. He
+immediately hears as it were a joyous whistling in the foliage, which is
+agitated at his right, and sees Marimonda leaping from tree to tree,
+using for this movement her feet, her tail, and one hand; for she holds
+the other to her side. It is a compress on her wound.</p>
+
+<p>War is already in the island! Selkirk has a declared enemy here! And
+this island, is it deserted? He has just traversed it in every direction
+without seeing any thing which betokens the existence of a human being.</p>
+
+<p>His disaster is then complete; henceforth not a doubt of it can exist.
+And yet his forehead wears rather the character of hope and fortitude
+than of discouragement; it is more than resignation, it is pride.</p>
+
+<p>He has just visited his empire. The island, irregular in form, is from
+four to five leagues in length; in breadth it is from one and a half to
+two leagues. This abode to which he is condemned, is the most enchanting
+retreat he could have chosen; a luxuriant park cradled upon the waves.</p>
+
+<p>If sometimes, in the mountainous parts, he has encountered sterile and
+rugged rocks, even abysses and precipices, they seem to be placed there
+only as a contrast to the fresh and green valleys which encircle them.
+If he has seen some dark, dense, inaccessible forests, entangled in the
+thousand arms of interwoven vines, he has not discovered a single
+reptile.</p>
+
+<p>Every where, springs of living water, little streams which are lost
+under a thick verdure, or fall in cascades from the summits of the
+hills; every where a luxuriant vegetation; esculent and refreshing
+plants, celery, cresses, sorrel, spring in profusion beneath his feet;
+over his head, and almost within reach of his hand, palm-cabbages, and
+unknown fruits of succulent appearance: on the margin of the shores,
+muscles, periwinkles, shell-fish of every species, crabs crawling in the
+moist sand; beneath the transparent waters, innumerable shoals of fishes
+of all colors, all forms. Will game be wanting here? After what he has
+seen this morning, he will not even need his gun to obtain it. Oh! his
+provision of powder will last him a long time.</p>
+
+<p>What has he to desire more in this terrestrial Paradise? The society of
+men? Why? That he may find a master, a chief, under whose will he must
+bend? Men! but he despises, detests them! Is he not then sufficient for
+himself? Yes! this shall be his glory, his happiness! To live in entire
+liberty, to depend only upon himself, will not this impart to his soul
+true dignity? Besides, this island cannot be so far from the coast, but,
+from time to time, ships, or at least boats must come in sight. This is
+then for him but a transient seclusion; but were he even condemned to
+eternal isolation, this isolation has ceased to terrify him, he accepts
+it! Has he not almost always lived alone, in spirit at least? When he
+was in the depths of the hold, was he not better satisfied with his fate
+than when surrounded by those coarse sailors who composed the worthy
+crew of the Swordfish?</p>
+
+<p>To-day he is no longer the prisoner of Stradling, he is the prisoner of
+God! and this thought reassures him.</p>
+
+<p>A sailor, he has never loved but the sea; well! the sea surrounds him,
+guards him! He has then only thanks to render to God.</p>
+
+<p>Arrived at his grotto, he takes his Bible, opens it; but the sun,
+suddenly sinking below the horizon, permits him to read only this
+passage on which his finger is placed: 'Thou shalt perish in thy pride!'</p>
+
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<h3>
+<a name="CHAPTER_V"></a>CHAPTER V.</h3>
+<br>
+
+<h4>Labors of the Colonist.&mdash;His Study.&mdash;Fishing.&mdash;Administration.
+&mdash;Selkirk Island.&mdash;The New Prometheus.&mdash;What is wanting to Happiness.
+&mdash;Encounter with Marimonda.&mdash;Monologue.</h4>
+
+<p>Three months have passed away.</p>
+
+<p>Thanks to Selkirk, the shore which received him at his disembarkation,
+presents to-day an aspect not only picturesque, but animated. The hand
+of man has made itself felt there.</p>
+
+<p>The bushes and tufts of trees which hid the view of the hills in the
+distance, have been uprooted and cut down; pretty paths, covered with
+gravel, wind over the vast lawn; one in the direction of the valleys at
+the right, another towards the mountains at the left; a third leads to a
+tall mimosa, whose topmost boughs and dense foliage spread out like a
+parasol. A wooden bench, composed of some round sticks, driven into the
+earth, with branches interwoven and covered with bark, surrounds it; a
+rustic table, constructed in the same manner, stands at the foot of the
+tree. This is the study and place of meditation of the exile; here also
+he comes to take his meals, in sight of the sea.</p>
+
+<p>All three paths terminate in the grotto which Selkirk continues to make
+his residence. This grotto he has enlarged, quarried out with his
+hatchet, to make room for himself, his furniture, and provisions. He
+has even attempted to decorate its exterior with a bank of turf, and
+several species of creeping plants, trained to cover its calcareous
+nudity. At the entrance of his habitation, rise two young palm-trees,
+transplanted there by him, to serve as a portico. But nature is not
+always obedient to man; the vines and palm-trees do not prosper in their
+new location, and now the long flexible branches of the one, and the
+broad leaves of the other, droop half withered above the grotto, which
+they disfigure rather than decorate.</p>
+
+<p>By constant care, and with the aid of his streams, Selkirk hopes to be
+able to restore them to life and health. He has imposed on his two
+streams another duty, that of supplying a bed of water-cresses and a
+fish-pond, both provident establishments, the first of which has
+succeeded perfectly. As for the second, his most arduous task has been,
+not to dig the fish-pond, but to people it. For this purpose he has been
+compelled to become a fisherman, to manufacture a net. He has succeeded,
+with some threads from his fragment of a sail, the fibres of his
+cocoa-nuts, and tough reeds, woven in close meshes; unfortunately those
+fine fishes, breams, eels and angel-fish, which show themselves so
+readily through the limpid wave, are not as easy to catch as to see.
+Under the surface, almost at a level with the water, there is a ledge of
+rocks, upon which the net cannot be managed. After several fruitless
+attempts, he is obliged to content himself with the insignificant
+employment of fishing with a line; a nail flattened, sharpened and bent,
+performs the office of a hook. Success ensues, but only with time and
+patience; fortunately the sea-crabs allow themselves to be caught with
+the hand, and the fish-pond does not long remain useless and deserted.</p>
+
+<p>Besides, has not our fortunate Selkirk the resource of hunting? The
+chase he had commenced generously, like a wise monarch, who wages war
+only for the general interest. It is true, that as it happens with most
+wise monarchs, his own private interest is also to be consulted, at
+least he thinks so.</p>
+
+<p>Wild cats existed in the island, destroying young broods, agoutis, and
+other small game; he has almost entirely rid it of these pirates,
+reserving to himself only the right of levying upon his subjects the
+tribute of blood. He has already signalized his administration by acts
+of an entirely different nature.</p>
+
+<p>This king without a people, is ignorant in what part of the great ocean,
+and at what distance from its shores, is situated his nameless kingdom.</p>
+
+<p>Armed with his spy-glass, by the aid of his nautical charts, he attempts
+to ascertain, by the position of the stars, its longitude and latitude.
+He at first believes himself to be in one of the islands forming the
+group of Chiloe; his calculations rectified, he afterwards thinks it the
+Island of Juan Fernandez, then San Ambrosio, or San Felix. Unable to
+determine the location exactly, for want of correct instruments, he
+persuades himself that the country he inhabits has never been surveyed,
+that it is really a land without a name, and he gives it his own; he
+calls it Selkirk Island.</p>
+
+<p>Ambitious youth, thou hast thus realized one of thy brightest dreams!
+Dost thou remember the day when, on the way from Largo to St. Andrew, to
+join William Dampier, thou didst already see thyself the chief of a new
+country, discovered and baptized by thee?</p>
+
+<p>Well! has he not more than discovered this country? He inhabits it, he
+governs it, he reigns in it! Not satisfied with giving his name to the
+island, he soon creates a special nomenclature for its various
+localities. To the shore upon which he landed, he gives the name of
+<i>Swordfish Beach</i>; the pile of white and red rocks, which he saw through
+the fog, is the <i>False Coquimbo</i>; he calls <i>Toucan Forest</i>, the wood
+where he saw that bird for the first time; the <i>Defile of Attack</i>, is
+that where Marimonda assaulted him with stones; upon these arid rocks,
+furrowed by deep ravines and abounding in precipices, he has imposed the
+odious name of <i>Stradling</i>! In his mountains he has the <i>Oasis</i>; it is a
+little shady valley, enlivened by the murmur of a streamlet, and with
+one extremity opening to the sea. There he often goes to watch the game
+and the goats, which come to drink at the brook. Above it rises the
+table-land, with difficulty scaled by him on the day of his arrival, and
+from whence he became convinced that he had landed on an island. This
+table-land, he has named <i>The Discovery</i>.</p>
+
+<p>The two streams which meander over his lawn, and before his grotto, have
+also received names. This, commissioned to feed the fish-pond, and which
+gently warbles through the grass, he calls <i>The Linnet</i>; the other,
+interrupted by little cascades, and whose course is more rapid and
+impetuous, he calls <i>The Stammerer</i>.</p>
+
+<p>He has now destroyed the noxious animals, administered government,
+opened ways of communication, given a name to every part of his island.
+How many great rulers have done no more!</p>
+
+<p>But his labors have not been confined to his fish-pond, his bed of
+water-cresses, his hunting, fishing, building, felling of trees; it has
+become necessary to procure that essential element of civilization, of
+comfort, fire.</p>
+
+<p>What could the opulent proprietor of this enchanting abode do without
+fire? Is it not necessary, if he would open a passage through the dense
+woods? Is it not indispensable to his kitchen? Some of his trees, it is
+true, afford fruits in abundance; but most of these fruits are of a dry
+and woody nature; besides, young and vigorous, easily acquiring an
+appetite by labor and exercise, can he content himself with a dinner
+which is only a dessert? Surrounded with fishes of all colors, with
+feathered and other game, must he then be reduced to dispute with the
+agoutis, their maripa-nuts?</p>
+
+<p>He reflects; armed with a bit of iron, he strikes the flinty rocks of
+the mountains, to elicit from them useless sparks. He then remembers
+that savages obtain fire without flint and matches, by the friction of
+two pieces of dry wood; he tries, but in vain; he exhausts the strength
+of his arms, without being discouraged; he tries each tree, wishing even
+that a thunderbolt might strike the island, if it would leave there a
+trace of burning. At last, almost discouraged, he attacks the
+pimento-myrtle;
+<a href="#Footnote_3"><sup>[1]</sup></a> he recommences
+his customary efforts of rubbing. The
+twigs grow warm with the friction; a little white smoke appears,
+fluttering to and fro between his hands, rapid and trembling with
+emotion. The flame bursts forth! He utters a cry of triumph, and,
+hastily collecting other twigs and dry reeds, he leaps for joy around
+his fire, which, like another Prometheus, he has just stolen, not from
+heaven, but from earth!</p>
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_3"></a><sup>[1]</sup></p>
+<blockquote> <i>Myrtus aromatica</i>; its berries are known under the name of
+Jamaica pepper.</blockquote>
+
+<p>Afterwards, in his gratitude, he runs to the myrtle, embraces it, kisses
+it. An act of folly, perhaps; perhaps an act of gratitude, which
+ascended higher than the topmost branches of the trees, higher than the
+culminating summits of the mountains of the island.</p>
+
+<p>But this fire, must he, each time he may need it, go through the same
+tedious process? Not far from his grotto, in a cavity which a projecting
+rock protects from the sea breeze, he piles up wood and brush, sets fire
+to it, keeps it alive from time to time, by the addition of
+combustibles, and comprehends why, among primitive nations, the earliest
+worship should have been that of fire; why, from Zoroaster to the
+Vestals, the care of preserving it should have been held sacred.</p>
+
+<p>At a later period, in the ordinary course of things, he simplified his
+means of preservation. With some threads and the fat of his game, he
+contrived a lamp; still later, he had oil, and reeds served him for
+wicks.</p>
+
+<p>Dating from this moment, the entire island paid tribute to him; the
+crabs, the eels, the flesh of the agouti, savory like that of the
+rabbit, by turns figured on his table. When he seasoned them with some
+morsels of pork, substituting ship biscuit for bread, his repasts were
+fit for an admiral.</p>
+
+<p>Although the goats had become wild, like the other inhabitants of the
+island, since all had learned the nature of man, and of the thunder,
+which he directed at his will, Selkirk still surprised them within
+gun-shot. Not only was their flesh profitable for food; their horns,
+long and hollow, served to contain powder and other small articles
+necessary to his house-keeping; of their skins he made carpets,
+coverings, and bags to protect his provisions from dampness. He even
+manufactured a game-pouch, which he constantly carried when hunting.</p>
+
+<p>His salt fish, his biscuit, some well smoked quarters of goat's flesh,
+and the productions of his fish-pond, at present constitute a store on
+which he can live for a long time, without any care, but to ameliorate
+his condition.</p>
+
+<p>He is now in possession of all the enjoyments he has coveted, abundance,
+leisure, absolute freedom.</p>
+
+<p>And yet, his brow is sometimes clouded, and an unaccountable uneasiness
+torments him; something seems wanting; his appetite fails, his courage
+grows feeble, his reveries are painfully prolonged. But, by mature
+reflection, he has discovered the cause of the evil.</p>
+
+<p>What is it that is so essential to his happiness? Tobacco.</p>
+
+<p>Our factitious wants often exercise over us a more tyrannical empire,
+than our real ones; it seems as if we clung with more force and tenacity
+to this second nature, because we have ourselves created it; it
+originates in us; the other originates with God, and is common to all!</p>
+
+<p>Selkirk now persuades himself that tobacco alone is wanting to his
+comfort; it is this privation which throws him into these sorrowful
+fits of languor. If Stradling had only given him a good stock of
+tobacco, he would have pardoned all; he no longer feels courage to hate
+him. What to him imports the plenty which surrounds him, if he has no
+tobacco? of what use is his leisure, if he cannot spend it in smoking?
+what avails even this fire, which he has just conquered, if he is
+prevented from lighting his pipe at it?</p>
+
+<p>Careworn and dissatisfied, he was wandering one morning through his
+domains, with his gun on his shoulder, his hatchet at his belt, when he
+perceived something dancing on a point of land, shadowed by tall canes.</p>
+
+<p>It was Marimonda.</p>
+
+<p>At sight of her enemy, she darted lightly and rapidly behind a woody
+hillock. An instant afterwards, he saw her tranquilly seated on the
+topmost branch of a tree, holding in each of her hands fruits which she
+was alternately striking against the branch, and against each other, to
+break their tough envelope.</p>
+
+<p>The sight of Marimonda has always awakened in Selkirk a sentiment of
+repulsion; she not only reminds him of Stradling, but with her withered
+cheeks, projecting jaw, and especially her dancing motion, he now
+imagines that she resembles him; and yet, pausing before her, he
+contemplates her not without a lively emotion of surprise and interest.</p>
+
+<p>He had already encountered her within gun-shot, when engaged in the
+destruction of the wild cats, and had asked himself whether he should
+not reckon her among noxious animals. But then Marimonda, with her hand
+constantly pressed against her side, was with the other seizing various
+herbs, which she tasted, bruised between her teeth, and applied to her
+wound; useless remedies, doubtless, for, grown meagre, her hair dull and
+bristling, she seemed to have but a few days to live, and Selkirk
+thought her not worth a charge of powder and shot.</p>
+
+<p>And here he finds her alert and healthy, holding in the same hand which
+had served as a compress, no longer the plant necessary for her cure,
+but the fruit desirable for her sustenance.</p>
+
+<p>'What,' said Selkirk to himself, 'in an island where this frightful
+monkey has never before been, she has succeeded in finding without
+difficulty the <i>herba sacra</i>, that which has restored her to health and
+strength! and I, Selkirk, who have studied at one of the principal
+universities of Scotland, I am vainly sighing for the plant which would
+suffice to render me completely happy! Is instinct then superior to
+reason? To believe this, would be ingratitude to Providence. Instinct is
+necessary, indispensable to animals, because they cannot benefit by the
+traditions of their ancestors. The monkey has consulted her instinct,
+and it has inspired her; if I consult reason, what will be her counsel?
+She will advise me to do like the monkey; to seek the herb of which I
+feel so great a want, or at least to endeavor to substitute for it
+something analogous; to choose, try, and taste, in short, to follow the
+example of Marimonda! I will not fail to do so; but it is nature
+reversed, and, for a man, it is too humiliating to see himself reduced
+to imitate a monkey!'</p>
+
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<h3>
+<a name="CHAPTER_VI"></a>CHAPTER VI.</h3>
+<br>
+
+<h4>The Hammock.&mdash;Poison.&mdash;Success.&mdash;A Calm under the Tropics.&mdash;Invasion
+of the Island.&mdash;War and Plunder.&mdash;The Oasis.&mdash;The Spy-Glass.
+&mdash;Reconciliation.</h4>
+
+<p>Do you see, upon a carpet of fresh verdure, the sandy margin of which is
+bathed by a caressing wave, that hammock suspended to the branches of
+those fine trees? What happy mortal, during the heat of the day, is
+there gently rocked, gently refreshed, by a light sea breeze? It is
+Selkirk; and this hammock is his sail, attached to his tall myrtles by
+strips of goat-skin. Perhaps he is resting after the fatigues of the
+day? No, it is the day of the Lord, and Selkirk now can consecrate the
+Sabbath to repose. With his eyes half closed, he is inhaling,
+undoubtedly, the perfume of his myrtles, the soft fragrance of his
+heliotropes? No, something sweeter still pre-occupies him. Is he
+dreaming of his friends in Scotland, of his first love? He has never
+known friendship, and the beautiful Catherine is far from his memory.
+What is he then doing in his hammock? He is smoking his pipe.</p>
+
+<p>His pipe! Has he a pipe? He has them of all forms, all sizes&mdash;made of
+spiral shells of various kinds, of maripa-nuts, of large reeds; all set
+in handles of myrtle, stalks of coarse grain, or the hollow bones of
+birds. In these he is luxurious; he has become a connoisseur; but this
+has not been the difficulty. Before every thing else, tobacco was
+wanting.</p>
+
+<p>In consequence of his encounter with Marimonda, he ransacked the woods
+and meadows, seeking among all plants those which approximated nearest
+to the nature of the nicotiana. As it was necessary to judge by their
+taste, he bit their leaves&mdash;chewed them, still in imitation of the
+monkey: but, to his new and profound humiliation, less skilful or less
+fortunate than the latter, he obtained at first no other result than a
+sort of poisoning: one of these plants being poisonous.</p>
+
+<p>For several days he saw himself condemned to absolute repose and a spare
+diet. His mouth, swollen, excoriated, refused all nourishment; his
+throat was burning; his body was covered with an eruption, and his
+languid and trembling limbs scarcely permitted him to drag himself to
+the stream to quench there the thirst by which he was devoured.</p>
+
+<p>He believed himself about to die; and grief then imposing silence on
+pride, with his eyes turned towards the sea, he allowed a long-repressed
+sigh to escape his heart. It was a regret for his absent country.</p>
+
+<p>Very soon these alarming symptoms disappeared; his strength returned;
+his water-cresses and wild sorrel completed the cure. Would he have
+dared to ask it of the other productions of his island? He had become
+suspicious of nature; these, at least, he had long known.</p>
+
+<p>Scarcely had he recovered, when the want of tobacco made itself felt
+anew with more force than ever. What to him imports experiment, what
+imports danger? Is it not to procure this precious, indispensable
+herb,&mdash;which the world had easily done without for thousands of years?</p>
+
+<p>This time, nevertheless, become more prudent, he no longer addresses
+himself to the sense of taste; but to odor, to that of smell. He has
+resolved to dry the different plants which appear to him most proper for
+the use to which he destines them, and to submit them afterwards to a
+trial by fire. Will not the smoke which escapes from them easily enable
+him to discover the qualities which he requires, since it is in smoke
+that they are to evaporate, if he succeeds in his researches?</p>
+
+<p>Of this grand collection of aromatics, two plants, at last, come off
+victorious. One is the petunia, that charming flower which at present
+decorates all our gardens, whence the enemies of tobacco may one day
+banish it; so it is only with trembling that I here announce its
+relationship to the nicotiana; the other, which, like the petunia, grows
+in profusion in the islands as well as on the continent of Southern
+America, is the herb <i>coca</i>, improperly so called, for its precious
+leaves, which are to the natives of Peru and Chili, what the <i>betel</i> is
+for the Indians of Malabar, grow on an elegant shrub.
+<a href="#Footnote_4"><sup>[1]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_4"></a><sup>[1]</sup></p>
+<blockquote>The <i>erythroxylum coca</i>.</blockquote>
+
+<p>These two plants, separately or together, composed, thanks to a slight
+amalgam of chalk, sea-water, and bruised pepper-corns, the most
+delicious tobacco.</p>
+
+<p>Now, half awake, Selkirk smokes, as he busies himself with constructing
+some necessary article, such as a ladder, a stool, a basket of rushes,
+with which he is completing the furniture of his house; he smokes while
+fishing, and while hunting; on his return to his dwelling, he lies down
+at the entrance of his grotto, on his bank of turf, re-lights his pipe
+at his fire, and smokes; at the hour of breakfast or of dinner, seated
+beneath the shade of his mimosa, his elbow on the table, his Bible open
+before him, he smokes still.</p>
+
+<p>Well! notwithstanding these pleasures so long desired, notwithstanding
+this addition to his comfort, notwithstanding his pipe, this vague
+uneasiness sometimes assails him anew.</p>
+
+<p>He ascribes it to enfeebled health; and yet he remains active and
+vigorous; he ascribes it to the powerful odors of certain trees which
+affect his brain. These trees he destroys around him, but his uneasiness
+continues; he ascribes it to his food, the insipidity of the fish which
+he has eaten without salt, since his quarter of pork is consumed, and
+his stores of pickled fish exhausted. In fact, the flesh of fish has for
+some time given him a nausea, occasioned frequent indigestions; he
+renounces it; his stomach recovers its tone; but his fits of torpor and
+melancholy continue.</p>
+
+<p>This state of suffering is most painful at those moments of profound
+calm, common between the tropics, when the birds are silent, when from
+the thickets and burrows issue no murmurs, when the insect seems to
+sleep within the closed corollas of the flowers; when the leaves of the
+mimosa fold themselves; when the tree-tops are not swayed by the
+slightest breath of air, and the sea, motionless, ceases to dash against
+the shore. What an inexpressible weight such a silence adds to
+isolation! And yet it is not an unbroken silence, for then a shrill and
+harsh sound seems to grate upon the ear. It is as if in this muteness of
+nature, one could hear the motion of the earth on its axis; then, above
+his head, in the depths of immensity, the whirling of the celestial
+spheres and myriads of worlds which gravitate in space. Thought becomes
+troubled and exhausted before this overwhelming and terrible immobility,
+and the man who, at such a moment, cannot have recourse to his kind, to
+distract or re-assure him, is overpowered with his own insignificance.</p>
+
+<p>Sometimes the solitary calls on himself to break this oppressive and
+painful silence; he articulates a few words aloud, and his voice
+inspires him with fear; it seems formidable and unnatural.</p>
+
+<p>During one of these sinister calms, in which every thing in creation
+seemed to pause, even the heart of man, seated on the shore, not having
+even strength to smoke, Selkirk was vainly awaiting the evening breeze;
+nothing came, but the obscurity of night. The moon, delaying her
+appearance, submitting in her turn to the sluggishness of all things,
+seemed detained below the circle of the horizon by some fatal power; the
+sea was dull, gloomy, and as it were congealed.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly, though there was not a breath of air, Selkirk saw at his
+right, on a vast but limited tract of ocean, the waves violently
+agitated and foaming. He thought he distinguished a multitude of barques
+and canoes furrowing the surface of the waters; not far from Swordfish
+Beach, the flotilla enters a little cove running up into the mountains.</p>
+
+<p>He no longer sees any thing; but he hears a frightful tumult of
+discordant cries.</p>
+
+<p>There is no room for doubt! some Indian tribes, pursued perhaps by new
+conquerors from Europe, have just disembarked on the shore. Wo to him!
+he can hope from them neither pity nor mercy. A cold sweat bathes his
+forehead; he runs to his grotto, takes his gun, puts in his goatskin
+pouch some horns of powder and shot, a piece of smoked meat, not
+forgetting his Bible! and passes the night wandering in the woods, in
+the mountains, a prey to a thousand terrors; hearing without cessation
+the steps of pursuers behind him, and seeing fiery eyes glaring at him
+through the thickets.</p>
+
+<p>At day-break, with a thousand precautions, he returns to his grotto. He
+finds the beach covered with seals.</p>
+
+<p>These were the enemies whose invasion had so alarmed him.</p>
+
+<p>It is now the middle of the month of February, the period of the
+greatest tropical heats, and these amphibia, having left the shores of
+Chili or Peru, are accomplishing one of their periodical migrations.
+They have just taken possession of the island, one of their accustomed
+stations. But the island has now a master.</p>
+
+<p>Where he expected to encounter a peril, Selkirk finds amusement, a
+subject of study, perhaps a resource.</p>
+
+<p>A long time ago he has read, in the narratives of voyagers, singular
+stories concerning these marine animals, these <i>lions</i>, these
+<i>sea-elephants</i>, flocks of old Neptune, who have their chiefs, their
+pacha; who are acquainted with and practise the discipline of war;
+stationing vigilant sentinels in the spots they occupy, communicating to
+each other a pass-word, and attentive to the <i>Qui vive</i>?</p>
+
+<p>He spies them, he watches them, he takes pleasure in examining their
+grotesque forms,&mdash;half quadruped, half fish; their feet encased in a
+sort of web, and terminated by crooked claws, with which they creep on
+the earth; their skins, covered with short and glossy hair; their round
+heads and eyes.</p>
+
+<p>He is a witness of their sports, their combats; but very soon their
+frightful roaring and bellowing annoys him, and makes him regret the
+silence of his solitude. Another cause of complaint against them soon
+arises.</p>
+
+<p>One morning, Selkirk finds his fish-pond and bed of water-cresses
+devastated.</p>
+
+<p>Exasperated, he declares war against the invaders: during three days he
+tracks them, pursues them; ten of them fall beneath his balls, leaving
+the shore bathed in their blood. The rest at last take flight, and the
+army of seals, regaining the sea with despairing cries, goes to
+establish itself at the other extremity of the island.</p>
+
+<p>This war has been profitable to the conqueror. With the skin of the
+vanquished he makes himself a new hammock, which permits him to employ
+his sail for other uses; he also makes leather bottles, in which he
+preserves the oil which he extracts in abundance from their fat. Now he
+can have a lamp constantly burning, even by night. He has all the
+comforts of life. Of the hairy skin of the seals, he manufactures a
+broad-brimmed hat, which shields him from the burning rays of the sun.
+He tastes their flesh; it appears to him insipid and nauseous, like that
+of the fish; but the tongue, the heart, seasoned with pepper, are for
+him quite a luxury.</p>
+
+<p>Days, weeks, months roll away in the same toils, the same recreations.
+Whatever he may do to drive it away, this apathetic sadness, this
+sinking of soul, which has already tormented him at different periods,
+becomes with Selkirk more and more frequent; he cannot conquer it as he
+did the seals. His seals, he now regrets. When they were encamped on the
+shore, they at least gave him something to look at, an amusement;
+something lived, moved, near him.</p>
+
+<p>When he finds himself a prey to these fits, which, in his pride, he
+persists in attributing to transient indisposition, he goes to walk in
+the mountains, taking with him only his pipe, his Bible, and his
+spy-glass.</p>
+
+<p>He often pursues his journey as far as the oasis; there, he seats
+himself at the extremity of the little valley, opposite the sea, from
+which his eye can traverse its immense extent. He opens the holy book,
+and closes it immediately; then, his brow reddening, he seizes his
+spy-glass, levels it, and remains entire hours measuring the ocean, wave
+by wave.</p>
+
+<p>What is he looking for there? He seeks a sail, a sail which shall come
+to his island and bear him from his desert, from his <i>ennui</i>. His
+<i>ennui</i> he can no longer dissimulate; this is the evil of his solitude.</p>
+
+<p>One day, while he was at this spot, the setting sun suddenly illuminated
+a black point, against which the waves seemed to break in foam, as
+against the prow of a ship; his eyes become dim, a tremor seizes him.
+He looks again&mdash;keeps his glass for a long time fixed on the same
+object, but the black point does not stir.</p>
+
+<p>'Another illusion!' said he to himself; 'it is a reef, a rock which the
+tide has left bare.'</p>
+
+<p>He wipes the glasses of his spy-glass, he examines again; he seems to
+see the waves whiten and whirl for a large space around this rock.</p>
+
+<p>'Can it be an island? If an island, is it inhabited? I will construct a
+barque, and if God has pity on me I will reach it.'</p>
+
+<p>At this moment he hears footsteps resound on the dry leaves which the
+wind has swept into the little valley. He turns hastily.</p>
+
+<p>It is Marimonda.</p>
+
+<p>Marimonda has no longer her lively and dancing motions; she also seems
+languid, sad. At sight of Selkirk, she makes a movement as if to flee;
+but almost immediately advances a little, and, sorrowful, with bent
+brow, sits down on a bank not far from him.</p>
+
+<p>Has she then remarked that he is without arms?</p>
+
+<p>On his side, Selkirk who had not met her for a long time, seemed to have
+forgotten his former aversion.</p>
+
+<p>At all events, is she not the most intelligent being chance has placed
+near him? He remembers that, in the ship, she obeyed the voice, the
+gesture of the captain, and that her tricks amused the whole crew. This
+resemblance to the human form, which he at first disliked, now awakens
+in him ideas of indulgence and peace. He reproaches himself with having
+treated her so brutally, when the poor animal, who alone had accompanied
+him into exile, at first accosted him with a caress. And now she
+returns, laying aside all ill-will, forgetting even the wound which she
+received from him in an impulse of irritation and hatred, of which she
+was not the object, for which she ought not to be responsible.</p>
+
+<p>He therefore makes to her a little sign with the head.</p>
+
+<p>Marimonda replies by winks of the eye and motions of the shoulders,
+which Selkirk thinks not wholly destitute of grace.</p>
+
+<p>He rises and approaches her, saluting her with an amicable gesture.</p>
+
+<p>She awaits him, chattering with her teeth and lips with an expression of
+joy.</p>
+
+<p>Selkirk gently passes his hand over her forehead and neck, calling her
+by name; then he starts for his habitation, and Marimonda follows him.
+The man and the monkey have just been reconciled. Both were tired of
+their isolation.</p>
+
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<h3>
+<a name="CHAPTER_VII"></a>CHAPTER VII.</h3>
+<br>
+
+<h4>A T&ecirc;te-a-t&ecirc;te.&mdash;The Monkey's Goblet.&mdash;The Palace.&mdash;A Removal.&mdash;Winter
+under the Tropics&mdash;Plans for the Future.&mdash;Property.&mdash;A burst of
+Laughter.&mdash;Misfortune not far off.</h4>
+
+<p>Tranquility of mind has returned to our solitary; now, his reveries are
+more pleasant and less prolonged; his walks through the woods, his
+moments of repose during the heat of the day seem more endurable since
+<i>something</i>, besides his shadow, keeps him company; he has resumed his
+taste for labor since there is <i>somebody</i> to look at him; speech has
+returned to him since <i>somebody</i> replies to his voice. This <i>somebody</i>,
+this <i>something</i>, is Marimonda.</p>
+
+<p>Marimonda is now the companion of Selkirk, his friend, his slave; she
+seems to comprehend his slightest gestures and even his <i>ennui</i>. To
+amuse him, she resorts to a thousand expedients, a thousand tricks of
+the agility peculiar to her race; she goes, she comes, she runs, she
+leaps, she bounds, she chatters at his side; she tries to people his
+solitude, to make a rustling around him; she brings him his pipes, rocks
+him in his hammock, and, for all these cares, all this attention,
+demands only a caress, which is no longer refused.</p>
+
+<p>She is often a spectator of her master's repasts; sometimes even shares
+them. This was at first a favor, afterwards a habit, as in the case of
+honest countrymen, who, secluded from the world, by degrees admit their
+servants into their intimacy. Selkirk had not to fear the importunate,
+unexpected visit of a neighbor or a curious stranger.</p>
+
+<p>So it is in the open air, on the latticed table, in the shade of his
+great mimosa, that these repasts in common take place; the master
+occupies the bench, the servant humbly seats herself on the stool,
+ready, at the first signal, to leave her place and assist in serving.
+Have we not seen in India, ourang-outangs trained to perform the office
+of domestics? and Marimonda was in nothing inferior in intelligence and
+activity.</p>
+
+<p>She is now fond of the flesh of the goat, of that of the coatis and
+agoutis, for monkeys easily become carnivorous; but the table is also
+sometimes covered with the products of her hunting. If the dessert
+fails, she hastily interrupts her repast, leaves the master to continue
+his alone, buries herself in the surrounding woods, reaches in three
+bounds the tops of the trees, and quickly returns with a supply of
+fruits which he can fearlessly taste, for she knows them.</p>
+
+<p>Selkirk was one day a witness of the singular facility with which she
+could supply her wants.</p>
+
+<p>At the morning repast, seeing him use one of his cocoa-nuts which he had
+fashioned in the form of a cup to drink from; in her instinct of
+imitation, she had attempted to seize the cup in her turn; a look of
+reprimand stopped her short in her attempt. Whether she felt a species
+of humiliation at being forced to quench her thirst in the presence of
+her master, by going to the banks of the stream and lapping there, like
+a vulgar animal; or whether the reprimand had painfully affected her,
+she abstained from drinking and remained for some time quiet and dreamy;
+but at the following repast, with lifted head and sparkling eye she
+resumed her place on the stool, provided with a goblet, a goblet
+belonging to her, lawfully obtained by her, and, with an air of triumph
+presented it to Selkirk, who, wondering, did not hesitate an instant to
+share with the monkey the water contained in his gourd.</p>
+
+<p>This goblet was the ligneous and impermeable capsule, the fruit,
+naturally and deeply hollowed out, of a tree called <i>quatela</i>.
+<a href="#Footnote_5"><sup>[1]</sup></a> It was
+thus that the intelligent Marimonda, after having borrowed from the
+numerous vegetables of the island their leaves, to ameliorate her
+sufferings, to heal her wounds; their fruits for her nourishment and
+even for her sports, also found means to obtain the divers utensils for
+house-keeping of which she stood in need.</p>
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_5"></a><sup>[1]</sup></p>
+<blockquote> The <i>lecythis quatela</i>, of the family of the <i>lecythid&eacute;es</i>,
+created by Professor Richard, and whose singular fruits bear, in Peru as
+well as in Chili, the denomination of <i>monkey's goblets</i>.</blockquote>
+
+<p>Charmed with her gentleness, her docility, the affection she seemed to
+bear him, Selkirk grew more and more attached to her. Winter, that is,
+the rainy season which usually lasts in these regions during the months
+of June and July, was approaching; he suffered in anticipation, from the
+idea that during this time his gentle companion would not be able to
+retain her habitual shelter, beneath the foliage of the trees; he
+conceived the project of giving up to her his grotto, and constructing
+for himself a new habitation, spacious and commodious. It is thus that
+our most generous resolutions, whatever we may design to do,
+encountering in their way personal interest, often turn to the increase
+of our own private welfare.</p>
+
+<p>At a little distance from the grotto, but farther inland, on the banks
+of the stream called the <i>Linnet</i>, there was a thicket of verdure shaded
+by five myrtles of from fifteen to twenty feet in height, and whose
+stems presented a diameter more than sufficient to insure the solidity
+of the edifice. Four of these myrtles formed an irregular square; the
+fifth arose in the midst, or nearly so; but our architect is not very
+particular. He already sees the principal part of his frame; the myrtles
+will remain in their places, their roots serving as a foundation. He
+removes the shrubs, the plants, the brushwood from the thicket, leaving
+only a heliotrope which, at a later period, may twine around his house
+and at evening shed its perfumes. He has become reconciled to its
+fragrance. He trims the trees, cuts off their tops eight feet above the
+ground, leaving the middle one, which is to sustain the roof, a foot
+higher; for this roof reeds and palm-leaves furnish all the materials.
+The walls, made of a solid network of young branches interwoven, and
+plastered with a mixture of sand, clay, and chopped rushes, he takes
+care not to build quite to the top, but to leave between them and the
+roof a little space, where the air can circulate freely through a light
+trellis formed of branches of the blue willow.</p>
+
+<p>Then, having finished his work in less than a fortnight, he contemplates
+it and admires it; Marimonda herself seems to share in his admiration,
+and in her joy climbing up the new building, she begins to leap, to
+dance on the roof of foliage, which bears her, and thus gives to Selkirk
+an additional triumph.</p>
+
+<p>He now proceeds to furnish his palace; he transports thither his bed of
+reeds and his goatskin coverings. How much better will he be sheltered
+here than under the gloomy vault of his grotto! How has he been able to
+content himself so long with such an abode, more suitable for a
+troglodyte or a monkey! He will no longer be obliged to lift up his
+curtain of vines, and to peep through the fans of his palm-trees, in
+order to behold the beneficent rays of the new-born day; they will come
+of themselves to find him and rejoice him at his awakening, as the
+sea-breezes will at evening breathe on him, to refresh him in his
+repose.</p>
+
+<p>Already has the interior of his cabin, of his palace, assumed an aspect
+which charms him; his guns, his hatchets, his spy-glass, his instruments
+of labor, well polished and shining, suspended in racks, upon wooden
+pegs, decorate the walls; upon another partition, his assortment of
+pipes are arranged on a shelf according to their size; on his central
+pillar, he suspends his game-bag, his gourd, his tobacco-pouch, and
+various articles of daily use. As for his iron pot, his smoked meat, his
+stock of skins, and bottles of seal-oil, he leaves them under the
+guardianship of Marimonda in the grotto which he will now make his
+store-house, his kitchen: he will not encumber with them his new
+dwelling.</p>
+
+<p>He now sets himself to prepare new furniture; he will construct a small
+portable table, two wooden seats, one for himself, the other for
+Marimonda, when she comes from her grotto to visit his cabin; for he has
+now a neighborhood. Besides, during the rainy season, they will be
+forced to dine under cover.</p>
+
+<p>The first rains have commenced, gentle, fertilizing rains, falling at
+intervals and lovingly drank in by the earth; Selkirk no longer thinks
+of his table and seats; another project has just taken the place of
+these, and seems to deserve the precedence.</p>
+
+<p>Marimonda has just returned from a tour in the woods, bringing fruits of
+all sorts, among them some which Selkirk has never before seen. He
+tastes them with more care and attention than usual; then, becoming
+thoughtful, with his chin resting on his hand says to himself: 'Why
+should I not make these fruits grow at my door, not far from my
+habitation? Why should I not attempt to improve them by cultivation?
+This is a very simple and very prudent idea which should have occurred
+to me long since; but I was alone, absolutely alone; and one loses
+courage when thinking of self only. A garden, at once an orchard and a
+vegetable garden, will be at least as useful to me as my fish-pond and
+bed of water-cresses; I will make one around my cabin; it will set it
+off and give it a more home-like appearance! Is not the stream placed
+here expressly to traverse it and water it? Afterwards, if God assist
+me, I will raise little kids which will become goats and give me milk,
+butter, cheese! Why have I not thought of this before? It would have
+been too much to have undertaken at once. I shall then have tame goats;
+I will also have Guinea-pigs, agoutis, and coatis. My house shall be
+enlarged, I will have a farm, a dairy! But the time has not yet come;
+let us first prepare the garden. Why has it not been already prepared? I
+am impatient to render the earth productive, fruitful by my cares, to
+walk in the shade of the trees I may plant; it seems to me that I shall
+be at home there, more than any where else!'</p>
+
+<p>You are right, Selkirk; to possess the entire island, is to possess
+nothing; it is simply to have permission to hunt, a right of promenade
+and pasture, which the other inhabitants of the island, quadrupeds or
+birds, can claim as well as yourself. What is property, without the
+power of improvement? Can the earth become the domain of a single
+person, when the true limits of his possessions must always be those of
+the field which affords him subsistence? Envy not then the happiness of
+the rich; they are but the transient holders and distributors of the
+public fortune; we possess, in reality, only that which we can ourselves
+enjoy; the rest escapes us, and contributes to the well-being of others.</p>
+
+<p>Selkirk comprehends that his streams, his bank of turf, his fish-pond,
+his bed of water-cresses, his grotto, his cabin, belong to him far
+otherwise than the twelve or fifteen square leagues of his island; to
+his private domain he now intends to add a garden, and this garden, this
+orchard, will be to him an increase of his wealth, since it will aid in
+the satisfaction of his wants.</p>
+
+<p>The humidity with which the earth begins to be penetrated, facilitates
+his labors; he sets himself to the work.</p>
+
+<p>Behold him then, now armed with his hatchet, now with a wooden shovel,
+which he has just manufactured, clearing the ground, digging,
+transplanting young fruit-trees, or sowing the seeds which he is soon to
+see spring up and prosper. Every thing grows rapidly in these climates.</p>
+
+<p>When the garden-spot is marked out, dug, sown, planted, not forgetting
+the kitchen vegetables, and especially the <i>coca</i> and <i>petunia-nicotiana</i>,
+Selkirk, with his arms folded on his spade, thanks God with all his
+heart,&mdash;God who has given him strength to finish his work.</p>
+
+<p>He has never felt so happy as when, with his hands behind his back, he
+walks smoking, among his beds, in which nothing has as yet appeared; but
+he already sees, in a dream, his trees covered with blossoms; around
+these blossoms are buzzing numerous swarms of bees; he reflects upon the
+means of compelling them to yield the honey of which they have just
+stolen from him the essence. It is a settled thing, on his farm he will
+have hives! After his bees, still in his dream, come flocks of
+humming-birds to plunder in their turn. The happy possessor of the
+garden will exact no tribute from them, but the pleasure of seeing them
+suspend, by a silken thread, to the leaves of his shrubs, the elegant
+little boat in which they cradle their fragile brood. Nothing seems to
+him more beautiful than his embryo garden; here, he is more than the
+monarch of the island; he is a proprietor!</p>
+
+<p>Thanks to the garden, Selkirk sees with resignation the two long months
+of the rainy season pass away. When the heavy torrents render the paths
+impassable, he consoles himself by thinking that they aid in the
+germination of his seeds, in the rooting of his young plants.
+Sometimes, between two deluges, he can scarcely find time to procure
+himself sufficient game; what matters it! he lives on his provisions: he
+is forcibly detained within; but has he not now good cheer, good
+company, and occupation, during his leisure hours?</p>
+
+<p>It is now that he completes his furniture. His table and his seats
+finished, he undertakes to provide for another want, equally
+indispensable.</p>
+
+<p>Worn out by the weather, and by service, his garments are becoming
+ragged. He must shield himself from the humidity of the air; where shall
+he procure materials? Has he not the choice between seal-skins and
+goat-skins? He gives the preference to the latter, as more pliable, and
+behold him a tailor, cutting with the point of his knife; as for thread,
+it is furnished by the fragment of the sail; and two days afterwards, he
+finds himself flaming in a new suit.</p>
+
+<p>To describe the delirious stupefaction of Marimonda, when she perceives
+her master under this strange costume, would be a thing impossible. She
+finds him almost like herself, clad like her, in a hairy suit. Never
+tired of looking at him, of examining him curiously, she leaps, she
+gambols around him, now rolling at his feet, and uttering little cries
+of joy, now suspended over his head, at the top of the central pillar,
+and turning her wild and restless eyes. When she has thus inspected him
+from head to foot, she runs and crouches in a corner, with her face
+towards the wall, as if to reflect; then, whirling about, returns
+towards him, picks up on the way the garment he has just laid aside,
+looking alternately at this and at the other, very anxious to know which
+of the two really made a part of the person.</p>
+
+<p>After having enjoyed for a few moments the surprise and transports of
+his companion, Selkirk takes his Bible and his pipe, and, placing the
+book on the table, bends over it, preparing to read and to meditate.
+But, whether in consequence of her joyous excitement, or whether she is
+emboldened by the species of fraternity which costume establishes
+between them, Marimonda, without hesitation, directs herself to the
+little shelf, chooses from it a pipe in her turn, places it gravely
+between her lips, astonished at not seeing the smoke issue from it in a
+spiral column; and, with an important air, still imitating her master,
+comes to sit opposite him, with her brow inclined, and her elbow resting
+on the table.</p>
+
+<p>Willingly humoring her whim, Selkirk takes the pipe from her hands,
+fills it with his most spicy tobacco, lights it, and restores it to her.</p>
+
+<p>Hardly has Marimonda respired the first breath, when suddenly letting
+fall the pipe, overturning the table, emitting the smoke through her
+mouth and nostrils, she disappears, uttering plaintive cries, as if she
+had just tasted burning lava.</p>
+
+<p>At sight of the poor monkey, thus thrown into confusion, Selkirk, for
+the first time since his residence in the island, laughs so loudly, that
+the echo follows the fugitive to the grotto, where she had taken refuge,
+and is prolonged from the grotto to the <i>Oasis</i>, from the Oasis to the
+summit of the <i>Discovery</i>.</p>
+
+<p>The exile has at last laughed, laughed aloud, and, at the same moment,
+a terrible disaster is taking place without his knowledge; a new war is
+preparing for him, in which his arms will be useless.</p>
+
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<h3>
+<a name="CHAPTER_VIII"></a>CHAPTER VIII.</h3>
+<br>
+
+<h4>A New Invasion.&mdash;Selkirk joyfully meets an ancient Enemy.&mdash;Combat on
+a Red Cedar.&mdash;A Mother and her Little Ones.&mdash;The Flock.&mdash;F&ecirc;te in the
+Island; Pacific Combats, Diversions and Swings.&mdash;A Sail.&mdash;The Burning
+Wood.&mdash;Presentiments of Marimonda.</h4>
+
+<p>The next morning the sun has scarcely touched the horizon, Selkirk is
+still asleep, when he is awakened by a sort of tickling at his feet.
+Thinking it some caress or trick of Marimonda, risen earlier than usual,
+he half opens his eyes, sees nothing, and places himself again in a
+posture to continue his nap. The same tickling is renewed, but with more
+perseverance, and very soon something sharp and keen penetrates to the
+quick the hard envelope of his heel. The tickling has become a bite.</p>
+
+<p>This time wide awake, he raises his head. His cabin is full of rats!</p>
+
+<p>Near him, a company of them are tranquilly engaged in breakfasting on
+his coverings and the rushes of his couch; they are on his table, his
+seats, along his pillow and his walls; they are playing before his door,
+running hither and thither through the crevices of his roof, multiplying
+themselves on his rack and shelf; all biting, gnawing, nibbling&mdash;some
+his seal-skin hat, his tobacco-pouch, the bark ornaments of his
+furniture; others the handles of his tools, his pipes, his Bible, and
+even his powder-horn.</p>
+
+<p>Selkirk utters a cry, springs from his couch, and immediately crushes
+two under his heels. The rest take flight.</p>
+
+<p>As he is pursuing these new invaders with the shovel and musket, he
+perceives at a few paces' distance Marimonda, sorrowful and drooping,
+perched on the strong branch of a sapota-tree. By her piteous and chilly
+appearance, her tangled and wet hair, he doubts not but she has passed
+the whole night exposed to the inclemency of the weather. But he at
+first attributes this whim only to her ill-humor the evening before.</p>
+
+<p>On perceiving him, Marimonda descends, from her tree, sad, but still
+gentle and caressing, and with gestures of terror, points to the grotto.
+He runs thither.</p>
+
+<p>Here another spectacle of disorder and destruction awaits him; the rats
+are collected in it by thousands; his furs, his provisions of fruit and
+game, his bottles formerly filled with oil, every thing is sacked, torn
+in pieces, afloat; for the water has at last made its way through the
+crevices of the mountain. To put the climax to his misfortune, his
+reserve of powder, notwithstanding its double envelope of leather and
+horn, attacked by the voracious teeth of his aggressors, is swimming in
+the midst of an oily slime.</p>
+
+<p>The solitary now possesses, for the purpose of hunting, for the renewal
+of these provisions so necessary to his life, only the few charges
+contained in his portable powder-horn, and in the barrels of his guns.
+The blow which has just struck him is his ruin! and still the hardest
+trial appointed for him is yet to come.</p>
+
+<p>In penetrating the ground, the rains of winter have driven the rats
+from their holes; hence their invasion of the cabin and the grotto.</p>
+
+<p>Against so many enemies, what can Selkirk do, reduced to his single
+strength?</p>
+
+<p>He succeeds, nevertheless, in killing some; Marimonda herself, armed
+with the branch of a tree, serves as an ally, and aids him in putting
+them to flight; but their combined efforts are ineffectual. An hour
+after, the accursed race are multiplying round him, more numerous and
+more ravenous than ever.</p>
+
+<p>He comprehends then what an error he has committed in the complete
+destruction of the wild cats which peopled the island. With the most
+generous intentions, how often is man mistaken in the object he pursues!
+We think we are ridding us of an enemy, and we are depriving ourselves
+of a protector. God only knows what he does, and he has admitted
+apparent evil, as a principle, into the admirable composition of his
+universe; he suffers the wicked to live. Selkirk had been more severe
+than God, and he repents it. If his poor cats had only been exiled, he
+would hasten to proclaim a general amnesty. Alas! there is no amnesty
+with death. But has he indeed destroyed all? Perhaps some still exist in
+those distant regions which have already served as a refuge for that
+other banished race, the seals.</p>
+
+<p>The rains have ceased; the storms of winter, always accompanied by
+overpowering heat and dense fogs, no longer sadden the island by
+anticipated darkness, or the gloomy mutterings of continual thunder. The
+sun, though <i>garu&eacute;</i><a href="#Footnote_6"><sup>[1]</sup></a>
+absorbs the remainder of the inundation.
+Followed by Marimonda, Selkirk, for the first time, has ventured to the
+woods and thickets between the hills beyond the shore and the False
+Coquimbo, when a sound, sweeter to his ear than would have been the
+songs of a siren, makes him pause suddenly in ecstasy: it is the mewing
+of a cat.</p>
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_6"></a><sup>[1]</sup></p>
+<blockquote> In Peru and Chili, they call <i>garua</i> that mist which
+sometimes, and especially after the rainy season, floats around the disk
+of the sun.</blockquote>
+
+<p>This cat, strongly built, with a spotted and glossy coat, white nose,
+and brown whiskers, is stationed at a little distance, on a red cedar,
+where she is undoubtedly watching her prey.</p>
+
+<p>She is an old settler escaped from the general massacre; the last of the
+vanquished; perhaps!</p>
+
+<p>Without hesitation, Selkirk clasps the trunk of the tree, climbs it,
+reaches the first branches; Marimonda follows him and quickly goes
+beyond. At the aspect of these two aggressors, like herself clad in
+skin, the cat recoils, ascending; the monkey follows, pursues her from
+branch to branch, quite to the top of the cedar. Struck on the shoulder
+with a blow of the claw, she also recoils, but descending, and declaring
+herself vanquished in the first skirmish, immediately gives over the
+combat, or rather the sport, for she has seen only sport in the affair.</p>
+
+<p>Selkirk is not so easily discouraged; this cat he must have, he must
+have her alive; he wishes to make her the guardian of his cabin, his
+protector against the rats. Three times he succeeds in seizing her;
+three times the furious animal, struggling, tears his arms or face. It
+is a terrible, bloody conflict, mingled with exclamations, growlings,
+and frightful mewings. At last Selkirk, forgetting perhaps in the ardor
+of combat the object of victory, seizes her vigorously by the skin of
+the neck, at the risk of strangling her; with the other hand he grasps
+her around the body. The difficulty is now to carry her. Fortunately he
+has his game-bag. With one hand he holds her pressed against the fork of
+the tree; with the other arm he reaches his game-bag, opens it; the
+conquered animal, half dead, has not made, during this manoeuvre, a
+single movement of resistance. But when the hunter is about to close it,
+suddenly rousing herself with a leap, distending by a last effort all
+her muscles at once, she escapes from his grasp, and precipitates
+herself from the top of the cedar, to the great terror of Marimonda,
+then peaceably crouched under the tree, whom the cat brushes against in
+falling, and to the great disappointment of Selkirk, who thinks he has
+the captive in his pouch.</p>
+
+<p>Sliding along the trunk, Selkirk descends quickly to the ground; but the
+enemy has already disappeared, and left no trace. In vain his eyes are
+turned on all sides; he sees nothing, neither his adversary nor
+Marimonda, who has undoubtedly fled under the impression of this last
+terror.</p>
+
+<p>As he is in despair, a whistling familiar to his ear is heard, and at
+two hundred paces distant he perceives, on an eminence of the False
+Coquimbo, his monkey, bent double, in an attitude of contemplation,
+appearing very attentive to what is passing beneath her, and changing
+her posture only to send a repeated summons to her master.</p>
+
+<p>At all hazards he directs himself to this quarter.</p>
+
+<p>What a spectacle awaits him! In a cavity at the foot of the eminence
+where Marimonda is, he finds, crouching, still out of breath with her
+struggle and her race, his fugitive. She is a mother! and six kittens,
+already active, are rolling in the sun around her.</p>
+
+<p>Selkirk, seizing his knife, kills the mother, and carries off the little
+ones.</p>
+
+<p>A short time after, the rats have deserted the shore. But their
+departure, though it prevents the evil they might yet have done, does
+not remedy that already accomplished.</p>
+
+<p>The provisions of the solitary are almost entirely destroyed, and the
+little powder which remains is scarcely sufficient for a reserve which
+he no longer knows where to renew.</p>
+
+<p>The moment at last comes when he possesses no other ammunition than the
+only charge in his gun. This last charge, his last resource, oh! how
+preciously he preserves it to-day. While it is there, he can still
+believe himself armed, still powerful; he has not entirely exhausted his
+resources; it is his last hope. Who knows?&mdash;perhaps he may yet need it
+to protect his life in circumstances which he cannot foresee.</p>
+
+<p>But since his gun must remain suspended, inactive, to the walls of his
+cabin, it is time to think of supplying the place of the services it has
+rendered; it is time to realize his dream, and, according to the usual
+course of civilization, to substitute the life of a farmer and shepherd
+for that of a hunter.</p>
+
+<p>Already is his colony augmented by six new guests, domesticated in his
+house; already, on every side, his seeds are peeping out of the ground
+under the most favorable auspices; his young trees, firmly rooted, are
+growing rapidly beneath the double influence of heat and moisture; at
+the axil of some of their leaves, he sees a bud, an earnest of the
+harvest. He must now occupy himself with the means of surprising,
+seizing and retaining the ancestors of his future flock.</p>
+
+<p>Here, patience, address or stratagem can alone avail.</p>
+
+<p>Notwithstanding his natural agility, he does not dream of reaching them
+by pursuit. Since his last hunts, goats and kids keep themselves usually
+in the steep and mountainous parts of the island. To leap from rock to
+rock, to attempt to vie with them in celerity and lightness appears to
+him, with reason, a foolish and impracticable enterprise. Later,
+perhaps,... Who knows?</p>
+
+<p>He manufactures snares, traps; but suspicion is now the order of the day
+around him; each holds himself on the <i>qui vive</i>. After long waiting
+without any result, he finds in his snares a coati, some little Guinea
+pigs; here is one resource, undoubtedly, but he aims at higher game, and
+the kids will not allow themselves to be taken by his baits.</p>
+
+<p>He remembers then, that in certain parts of America, the hunters, in
+order to seize their prey living, have recourse to the lasso, a long
+cord terminated by a slip-noose, which they know how to throw at great
+distances, and almost always with certainty.</p>
+
+<p>With a thread which he obtains from the fibres of the aloe, with narrow
+strips of skin, closely woven, he composes a lasso more than fifty feet
+long; he tries it; he exercises it now against a tuft of leaves
+detached from a bush, now against some projecting rock; afterwards he
+tries it upon Marimonda, who often enough, by her agility and swiftness,
+puts her master at fault.</p>
+
+<p>In the interval of these preparatory exercises, Selkirk occupies himself
+with the construction of a latticed inclosure, destined to contain the
+flock which he hopes to possess; he makes it large and spacious, that
+his young cattle may bound and sport at their ease; high, that they may
+respect the limits he assigns them. In one corner, supported by solid
+posts, he builds a shed, simply covered with branches; that his flock
+may there be sheltered from the heat of the day. The inclosure and the
+shed, together with his garden, form a new addition to his great
+settlement.</p>
+
+<p>When, his kids shall have become goats, when the epoch of domesticity
+shall have arrived for them, when they shall have contracted habits of
+tameness, when they have learned to recognize his voice, then, and then
+only, will he permit them to wander and browse on the neighboring hills,
+under the direction of a vigilant guardian. This guardian, where shall
+he find? Why may it not be Marimonda? Marimonda, to whose intelligence
+he knows not where to affix bounds!</p>
+
+<p>Dreams, dreams, perhaps! and yet but for dreams, but for those gentle
+phantoms which he creates, and by which he surrounds himself, what would
+sustain the courage of the solitary?</p>
+
+<p>When Selkirk thinks he has acquired skill in the use of the lasso, he
+buries himself among the high mountains situated towards the central
+part of his island. Several days pass amid fruitless attempts, and when
+the delicately-carved foliage of the mimosa announces, by its folding,
+that night is approaching, he regains his cabin, gloomy, care-worn, and
+despairing of the future.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile, by his very failures, he has acquired experience. One
+evening, he returns to his dwelling, bringing with him two young kids,
+with scarcely perceptible horns, and reddish skin, varied with large
+brown spots. Marimonda welcomes her new guests, and this evening all in
+the habitation breathes joy and tranquillity.</p>
+
+<p>The week has not rolled away, when the number of Selkirk's goats exceeds
+that of his cats; and he takes pleasure in seeing them leap and play
+together in his inclosure; his mind has recovered its serenity.</p>
+
+<p>'Yes,' said he, with pride, 'man can suffice for himself, can depend on
+himself only for subsistence and welfare! Am I not a striking proof? Did
+not all seem lost for me, when an unforeseen catastrophe destroyed the
+remnant of the provision of powder which I owed to the pity of that
+miserable captain? Ah! undoubtedly according to his hateful
+calculations, he had limited the term of my life to the last charge
+which my gun should contain; this last charge is still there! Of what
+use will it be to me? Why do I need it? Are not my resources for
+subsistence more certain and numerous to-day than before? What then is
+wanting? The society of a Stradling and his fellows? God keep me from
+them! The best member of the crew of the brig Swordfish came away when I
+did. I have received from Marimonda more proofs of devotion than from
+all the companions I have had on land and on sea. What have I to regret?
+I am well off here; may God keep me in repose and health!'</p>
+
+<p>After this sally, he thought of his hives, which were still wanting, and
+of the methods to be employed to seize a swarm of bees.</p>
+
+<p>A month after, Selkirk, who religiously kept his reckoning on the margin
+of his Bible, resolved to celebrate the New Year. It was now the first
+of January, 1706.</p>
+
+<p>On this day he dined, not in his cabin, nor under his tree, but in the
+middle of the inclosure, surrounded by his family; fruits and good cheer
+were more abundant than usual; Marimonda, as was her custom, dined at
+the same table with himself: the cats shared in the feast; the goats
+roved around, stretching up to gaze with their blue eyes on the baskets
+of fruits, and returning to browse on the grass beneath the feet of the
+guests. Selkirk, as the master of the house, and chief of the family,
+generously distributed the provisions to his young and frolicksome
+republic, and Marimonda assisted him as well as she could, in doing the
+honors.</p>
+
+<p>After the repasts, there were races and combats; the remains of the
+baskets were thrown to the most skilful and the most adroit; then came,
+diversions and swings.</p>
+
+<p>Lying in his hammock, where he smoked his most excellent tobacco in his
+best pipe, Selkirk smilingly contemplated the capricious bounds, the
+riotous sports of his cats and kids, their graceful postures, their
+fraternal combats, in which sheathed claws and the inoffensive horn
+were the only weapons used on either side.</p>
+
+<p>To give more variety to the f&ecirc;te, Marimonda developes all the resources
+of her daring suppleness; she leaps from right to left, clearing large
+spaces with inconceivable dexterity. Attaining the summit of a tree, she
+whistles to attract her master's attention, then, with her two fore-paws
+clasped in her hind ones, she rolls herself up like a ball and drops on
+the ground; the foliage crackles beneath her fall, which seems as if it
+must be mortal; for her, this is only sport. Without altering the
+position of her limbs, she suddenly stops in her rapid descent, by means
+of her prehensile tail, that fifth hand, so powerful, with which nature
+has endowed the monkeys of America. Then, suspended by this organ alone,
+she accelerates her motions to and fro with incredible rapidity, quickly
+unwinds her tail from the branch by which she is suspended, and with a
+dart, traversing the air as if winged, alights at a hundred paces
+distance on a vine, which she instantly uses as a swing.</p>
+
+<p>Selkirk is astonished; he applauds the tricks of Marimonda, the sports
+and combats of his other subjects. Meanwhile, his eyes having turned
+towards the sea, his brow is suddenly overclouded. At the expiration of
+a few moments of an uneasy and agitated observation, he utters an
+exclamation, springs from his hammock, runs to his cabin, then to the
+shore, where he prostrates himself with his hands clasped and raised
+towards heaven.</p>
+
+<p>He has just perceived a sail.</p>
+
+<p>Provided with his glass, he seeks the sail upon the waves, he finds it.
+'It is without doubt a barque,' said he to himself; 'a barque from the
+neighboring island, or some point of the continent!' And looking again
+through his copper tube, he clearly distinguishes three masts well
+rigged, decorated with white sails, which are swelling in the east wind,
+and gilded by the oblique rays of the declining sun.</p>
+
+<p>'It is a brig! The Swordfish, perhaps! Yes, Stradling has prolonged his
+voyage in these regions. The time which he had fixed for my exile has
+rolled away! He is coming to seek me. May he be blessed!'</p>
+
+<p>The movement which the brig made to double the island, had increased
+more and more the hopes of Selkirk, when the Spanish flag, hoisted at
+the stern, suddenly unfolded itself to his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>'The enemy!' exclaimed he; 'woe is me! If they land on this coast,
+whither shall I fly, where conceal myself? In the mountains! Yes, I can
+there succeed in escaping them! But, the wretches! they will destroy my
+cabin, my inclosure, my garden! the fruit of so much anxiety and labor!'</p>
+
+<p>And, with palpitating heart, he again watches the manoeuvres of the
+brig. The latter, having tacked several times, as if to get before the
+wind, hastily changed her course and stood out to sea.</p>
+
+<p>Selkirk remains stupefied, overwhelmed. 'These are Spaniards,' murmured
+he, after a moment's hesitation; 'what matters it! Am I now their enemy?
+I am only a colonist, an exile, a deserter from the English navy. They
+owe me protection, assistance, as a Christian. If they required it, I
+would serve on board their vessel! But they have gone; what method
+shall I employ to recall them, to signalize my presence?'</p>
+
+<p>There was but one; it was to kindle a large fire on the shore or on the
+hill. He needs hewn wood, and his supplies are exhausted; what is to be
+done?</p>
+
+<p>For an instant, in his disturbed mind, the idea arises to tear the
+lattice-work from his inclosure, the pillars and the roof from his shed,
+to pile them around his cabin, and set fire to the whole.</p>
+
+<p>This idea he quickly repulses, but it suffices to show what passed in
+the inner folds of the heart of this man, who had just now forced
+himself to believe that happiness was yet possible for him.</p>
+
+<p>On farther reflection, he remembers that behind his grotto, on one of
+the first terraces of the mountain, there is a dense thicket, where the
+trees, embarrassed with vines and dry briers, closely interwoven,
+calcined by the burning reflections of the sun on the rock which
+surrounds them, present a collection of dead branches and mouldy trunks,
+scarcely masked by the semblance of vegetation.</p>
+
+<p>Thither he transports all the brands preserved under the ashes of his
+hearth; he makes a pile of them; throws upon it armfuls of chips, bark
+and leaves. The flame soon runs along the bushes which encircle the
+thicket; and, when the sun goes down, an immense column of fire
+illuminates all this part of the island, and throws its light far over
+the ocean.</p>
+
+<p>Standing on the shore, Selkirk passes the night with his eyes fixed on
+the sea, his ear listening attentively to catch the distant sound of a
+vessel; but nothing presents itself to his glance upon the luminous and
+sparkling waves, and amid their dashing he hears no other sound but
+that of the trees and vines crackling in the flames.</p>
+
+<p>At morning all has disappeared. The fire has exhausted itself without
+going beyond its bounds, and the sea, calm and tranquil, shows nothing
+upon its surface but a few flocks of gulls.</p>
+
+<p>A week passes away, during which Selkirk remains thoughtful and
+taciturn; he rarely leaves the shore; he still beholds the sports of his
+cats and his kids, but no longer smiles at them; Marimonda, by way of
+amusing him, renews in his presence her surprising feats, but the
+attention of the master is elsewhere.</p>
+
+<p>Nevertheless, he cannot allow himself time to dream long with impunity;
+his reserve of smoked beef is nearly exhausted; to save it, he has again
+resorted to the shell-fish, which his stomach loathes; to the sea-crabs,
+of which he is tired; he needs other nourishment to restore his
+strength. He shakes off his lethargy, takes his lasso, his game-bag. His
+plan now is, not to hunt the kids, but the goats themselves.</p>
+
+<p>As he is about to set out, Marimonda approaches, preparing to accompany
+him. In his present frame of mind, Selkirk wishes to be alone, and makes
+her comprehend, by signs, that she must remain at home and watch the
+flock; but this time, contrary to her custom, she does not seem disposed
+to obey. Notwithstanding his orders, she follows him, stops when he
+turns, recommences to follow him, and, by her supplicating looks and
+expressive gestures, seeks to obtain the permission which he persists in
+refusing. At last Selkirk speaks severely, and she submits, still
+protesting against it by her air of sadness and depression. Was this,
+on her part, caprice or foresight? No one has the secret of these
+inexplicable instincts, which sometimes reveal to animals the presence
+of an invisible enemy, or the approach of a disaster.</p>
+
+<p>At evening, Selkirk had not returned! Marimonda passed the night in
+awaiting him, uttering plaintive cries.</p>
+
+<p>On the morrow the morning rolled away, then the day, then the night, and
+the cabin remained deserted, and Marimonda in vain scaled the trees and
+hills in the neighborhood to recover traces of her master.</p>
+
+<p>What had become of him?</p>
+
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<h3>
+<a name="CHAPTER_IX"></a>CHAPTER IX.</h3>
+<br>
+
+<h4>The Precipice.&mdash;A Dungeon in a Desert Island.&mdash;Resignation.&mdash;The passing
+Bird.&mdash;The browsing Goat.&mdash;The bending Tree.&mdash;Attempts at Deliverance.
+&mdash;Success.&mdash;Death of Marimonda.</h4>
+
+<p>In that sterile and mountainous quarter of the island to which he has
+given the name of Stradling,&mdash;that name, importing to him
+misfortune,&mdash;Selkirk, venturing in pursuit of a goat, has fallen from a
+precipice.</p>
+
+<p>Fortunately the cavity is not deep. After a transient swoon, recovering
+his footing, experiencing only a general numbness, and some pain caused
+by the contusions resulting from his fall, he bethinks himself of the
+means of escape.</p>
+
+<p>But a circle of sharp rocks, contracting from the base to the summit,
+forms a tunnel over his head; no crevice, no precipitous ledge,
+interrupts their fatal uniformity. Only around him some platforms of
+sandy earth appear; he digs them with his knife, to form steps. Some
+fragments of roots project here and there through the interstices of the
+stones; he hopes to find a point of support by which to scale these
+abrupt walls. The little solidity of the roots, which give way in his
+grasp; his sufferings, which become more intense at every effort; these
+thousand rocky heads bending at once over him; all tell him plainly that
+it will be impossible for him to emerge from this hole&mdash;that it is
+destined to be his tomb.</p>
+
+<p>Poor young sailor, already condemned to isolation, separated from the
+rest of mankind, could he have foreseen that one day his captivity was
+to be still closer! that his steps would be chained, that the sight even
+of his island would be interdicted! and that in this desert, where he
+had neither persecutor nor jailer to fear, he would find a prison, a
+dungeon!</p>
+
+<p>After three days of anguish and tortures, after new and ineffectual
+attempts,&mdash;exhausted by fatigue, by thirst, by hunger,&mdash;consumed by
+fever, supervened in consequence of all his sufferings of body and soul,
+he resigns himself to his fate; with his foot, he prepares his last
+couch, composed of sand and dried leaves shaken from above by the
+neighboring trees; he lies down, folds his arms, closes his eyes, and
+prepares to die, thinking of his eternal salvation.</p>
+
+<p>Although he tries not to allow himself to be distracted by other
+thoughts, from time to time sounds from the outer world disturb his
+pious meditations. First it is the joyous song of a bird. To these
+vibrating notes another song replies from afar, on a more simple and
+almost plaintive key. It is doubtless the female, who, with a sort of
+modest and repressed tenderness, thus announces her retreat to him who
+calls; then a rapid rustling is heard above the head of the prisoner. It
+is the songster, hastening to rejoin his companion.</p>
+
+<p>Selkirk has never known love. Once perhaps,&mdash;in a fit of youth and
+delirium; and it was this false love which tore him from his studies,
+from his country!</p>
+
+<p>Ah! why did he not remain at Largo, with his father? To-day he also
+would have had a companion! In that smiling country where coolness
+dwells, where labor is so easy, life so sweet and calm, the paternal
+roof would have sheltered his happiness! Oh! the joys of his infancy!
+his green and sunny Scotland.</p>
+
+<p>The regrets which arise in his heart he quickly banishes; his dear
+remembrances he sacrifices to God; he weaves them into a fervent prayer.</p>
+
+<p>Very soon an approaching bleating rouses him again from his
+abstractions. A goat, with restless eye, has just stretched her head
+over the edge of the precipice, and for an instant fixes on him her
+astonished glance. Then, as if re-assured, defying his powerlessness,
+with a disdainful lip she quietly crops some tufts of grass growing on
+the verge of the tunnel.</p>
+
+<p>On seeing her, Selkirk instinctively lays his hand on the lasso which is
+beside him.</p>
+
+<p>'If I succeed in reaching her, in catching her,' said he, 'her blood
+will quench the thirst which devours me, her flesh will appease my
+hunger. But of what use would it be? Whence can I expect aid and succor
+for my deliverance? This would then only prolong my sufferings.'</p>
+
+<p>And, throwing aside the end of the lasso which he has just seized, he
+again folds his arms on his breast, and closes his eyes once more.</p>
+
+<p>I know not what stoical philosopher&mdash;Atticus, I believe, a prey to a
+malady which he thought incurable,&mdash;had resolved to die of inanition. At
+the expiration of a certain number of days, abstinence had cured him,
+and when his friends, in the number of whom he reckoned Cicero,
+exhorted him to take nourishment, persisting in his first resolution,
+'Of what use is it!' said he also, 'Must I not die sooner or later? Why
+should I then retrace my steps, when I have already travelled more than
+half the road?'</p>
+
+<p>Selkirk had more reason than Atticus to decide thus; besides, his
+friends, where are they, to exhort him to live? Friends!&mdash;has he ever
+had any?</p>
+
+<p>Night comes, and with the night a terrific hurricane arises. By the
+glare of the lightning he sees a tree, situated not far from the tunnel,
+bend towards him, almost broken by the violence of the wind.</p>
+
+<p>'Perhaps Providence will send me a method of saving myself!' murmured
+Selkirk; 'should the tree fall on this side, if its branches do not
+crush me, they will serve as steps to aid me to leave this pit! I am
+saved!'</p>
+
+<p>But the tree resists the storm, which passes away, carrying with it the
+last hope of the captive.</p>
+
+<p>Towards the morning of the fourth day his fever has ceased; the tortures
+of hunger and thirst are no longer felt; the complete annihilation of
+his strength is to him a kind of relief; sleep seizes him, and with
+sleep he thinks death must come.</p>
+
+<p>Soon, in his dream, in a hallucination springing undoubtedly from the
+weakness of his brain, plaints, confused and distant groans, reach him
+from different points of the island. These sorrowful cries, almost
+uninterrupted, afterwards approach, and are repeated with increasing
+strength. He awakes, he listens; the bushes around him crackle and
+rustle; even the earth emits a dull sound, as beneath the bounding of a
+goat; the cries are renewed and become more and more distinct, like the
+sobs of a child. Selkirk puts his hand to his forehead. These plaints,
+these sobs, he thinks he recognizes, and, suddenly raising himself with
+a convulsive effort, he exclaims:</p>
+
+<p>'Marimonda!'</p>
+
+<p>And Marimonda runs at her master's voice, changes, on seeing him, her
+cries of distress for cries of joy, leaps and gambols on the edge of the
+cavity, and, quickly finding a way to join him, suspends herself by her
+tail to one of the branches on the verge, and springs to his side.</p>
+
+<p>Then contortions, caresses, winks of the eyes, motions of the head,
+whining, whistling, succeed each other; she rolls before him, embraces
+him closely, seeking by every method to supply the place of that speech
+which alone is wanting, and which she almost seems to have. Good
+Marimonda! her humid and shivering skin, her bruised and bleeding feet,
+her in-flamed eyes, plainly tell Selkirk how long she has been in search
+of him, how she has watched, run, to find him, and, not finding him,
+what she has suffered at his absence.</p>
+
+<p>Her first transports over, by his pale complexion, by his dim eye, she
+quickly divines that it is want of food which has reduced him to this
+condition. Swift as a bird she climbs the sides of the tunnel; she
+repeatedly goes and returns, bringing each time fruits and canes full of
+savory and refreshing liquid. It is precisely the usual hour for their
+first repast, and once more they can partake of it together.</p>
+
+<p>Revived by this repast, by the sight of his companion in exile, Selkirk
+recovers his ideas of life and liberty. This abyss, from which she
+ascends with so much facility, who knows but with her aid he may be able
+in his turn to leave it? He remembers his lasso; he puts one end of it
+into Marimonda's hand. It is now necessary that she should fix it to
+some projection of the rock, some strong shrub, which may serve as a
+point of support.</p>
+
+<p>It was perhaps presuming too much on the intelligence which nature has
+bestowed on the race of monkeys. At her master's orders, Marimonda would
+seize the end of the cord, then immediately abandon it, as she needed
+entire freedom of motion to enable her to scale the walls of the tunnel.</p>
+
+<p>After several ineffectual attempts, Selkirk, as a last resort, decided
+to encircle Marimonda with the noose of the lasso, and, by a gesture, to
+send her towards those heights where he was so impatient to join her.</p>
+
+<p>She departs, dragging after her the chain, of which he holds the other
+extremity: this chain, the only bridge thrown for him between the abyss
+and the port of safety, between life and death!</p>
+
+<p>With what anxiety he observes, studies its oscillations! Several times
+he draws it towards him, and each time, as if in reply to his summons,
+Marimonda suddenly re-appears at the brow of the precipice, preparing to
+re-descend; but he repulses her with his voice and gestures, and when
+these methods are insufficient,&mdash;when Marimonda, exhausted with
+lassitude, seated on the verge of the tunnel, persists in remaining
+motionless, he has recourse to projectiles. To compel her to second him
+in his work, the possible realization of which he himself scarcely
+comprehends, he throws at her some fragments of stone detached from his
+rocky wall, and even the remains of that repast for which he is indebted
+to her. Even when she is at a distance, informed by the movements of the
+lasso of the direction she has taken, he pursues her still.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly the cord tightens in his hand. He pulls again, he pulls with
+force; the cord resists! Fire mounts to his brain; his sluggish blood is
+quickened; his heart and temples beat violently; his fever returns, but
+only to restore to him, at this decisive moment, his former vigor. He
+hastily digs new steps in the interstices of the rock; with his hands
+suspending himself to the lasso, assisted by his feet, by his knees,
+sometimes turning, grasping the projecting roots, the angles of his
+wall, he at last reaches the top of the cliff.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly he feels the lasso stretch, as if about to break; a mist passes
+over his eyes: his head becomes dizzy, the cord escapes his grasp. But,
+by a mechanical movement, he has seized one of the highest projections
+of the tunnel, he holds it, he climbs,&mdash;he is saved.</p>
+
+<p>And during this perilous ascension, absorbed in the difficulties of the
+undertaking, attentive to himself alone, staggering, with a buzzing
+sound in his ears, he has not heard a sorrowful, lamentable moaning, not
+far from him.</p>
+
+<p>Dragging hither and thither after her the rope of leather and fibre of
+aloes, Marimonda, rather, doubtless, by chance than by calculation, had
+enlaced it around the trunk of the same tree which the night before,
+during the storm, had agitated its dishevelled branches above the deep
+couch of the dying man. This trunk had served as a point of resistance;
+but, during the tension, the unfortunate monkey, with her breast against
+the tree, had herself been caught in the folds of the lasso.</p>
+
+<p>When Selkirk arrives, he finds her extended on the ground, blood and
+foam issuing from her mouth, and her eyes starting from their sockets.
+Kneeling beside her, he loosens the bonds which still detain her.
+Excited by his presence, Marimonda makes an effort to rise, but
+immediately falls back, uttering a new cry of pain.</p>
+
+<p>With his heart full of anguish, taking her in his arms, Selkirk, not
+without a painful effort, not without being obliged to pause on the way
+to recover his strength, carries her to the dwelling on the shore.</p>
+
+<p>This shore he finds deserted and in confusion.</p>
+
+<p>Deprived of their daily nourishment during the prolonged absence of
+their master, the goats have made a passage through the inclosure, by
+gnawing the still green foliage which imprisoned them; the hurricane of
+the night has overthrown the rest. Before leaving, they had ravaged the
+garden, destroyed the promises of the approaching harvest, and devoured
+even the bark of the young trees. The cats have followed the goats.
+Selkirk has before his eyes a spectacle of desolation; his props, his
+trellises, the remains of his orchard, of his inclosure, of his shed, a
+part even of the roof of his cabin, strew the earth in confusion around
+him.</p>
+
+<p>But it is not this which occupies him now. He has prepared for Marimonda
+a bed beside his own; he takes care of her, he watches over her, he
+leaves her only to seek in the woods, or on the mountains, the herb
+which may heal her; he brings all sorts, and by armfuls, that she may
+choose;&mdash;does she not know them better than himself?</p>
+
+<p>As she turns away her head, or repulses with the hand those which he
+presents, he thinks he has not yet discovered the one she requires, and
+though still suffering, though himself exhausted by so many varying
+emotions, he re-commences his search, to summon the entire island to the
+assistance of Marimonda. From each of his trees he borrows a branch;
+from his bushes, his rocks, his streams&mdash;a plant, a fruit, a leaf, a
+root! For the first time he ventures across the <i>pajonals</i>&mdash;spongy
+marshes formed by the sea along the cliffs, and where, beneath the shade
+of the mangroves, grow those singular vegetables, those gelatinous
+plants, endowed with vitality and motion. At sight of all these
+remedies, Marimonda closes her eyes, and reopens them only to address to
+her friend a look of gratitude.</p>
+
+<p>The only thing she accepts is the water he offers her, the water which
+he himself holds to her lips in his cocoa-nut cup.</p>
+
+<p>During a whole week, Selkirk remains constantly absorbed in these cares,
+useless cares!&mdash;Marimonda cannot be healed! In her breast, bruised by
+the folds of the lasso, exists an important lesion of the organs
+essential to life, and from time to time a gush of blood reddens her
+white teeth.</p>
+
+<p>'What!' said Selkirk to himself, 'she has then accompanied me on this
+corner of earth only to be my victim! To her first caress I replied
+only by brutality; the first shot I fired in this island was directed
+against her. I pursued for a long time, with my thoughtless and stupid
+hatred, the only being who has ever loved me, and who to-day is dying
+for having saved me from that precipice from which I drove her with
+blows of stones! Marimonda, my companion, my friend,&mdash;no! thou shalt not
+die! He who sent thee to me as a consolation will not take thee away so
+soon, to leave me a thousand times more alone, more unhappy, than ever!
+God, in clothing thee with a form almost human, has undoubtedly given
+thee a soul almost like ours; the gleam of tenderness and intelligence
+which shines in thine eyes, where could it have been lighted, but at
+that divine fire whence all affection and devotion emanate? Well! I will
+implore Him for thee; and if He refuse to hear me, it will be because He
+has forgotten me, because He has entirely forsaken me, and I shall have
+nothing more to expect from His mercy!'</p>
+
+<p>Falling then upon his knees, with his forehead upon the ground, he prays
+God for Marimonda.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile, from day to day the poor invalid grows weaker; her eyes
+become dim and glassy; her limbs frightfully emaciated, and her hair
+comes off in large masses.</p>
+
+<p>One evening, exhausted with fatigue, after having wrapped in a covering
+of goat-skin Marimonda, who was in a violent fever, Selkirk was
+preparing to retire to rest; she detained him, and, taking his hand in
+both of hers, cast upon him a gentle and prolonged look, which resembled
+an adieu.</p>
+
+<p>He seated himself beside her on the ground.</p>
+
+<p>Then, without letting go his hand, she leaned her head on her master's
+knee, and fell asleep in this position. Selkirk dares not stir, for fear
+of disturbing her repose. Insensibly sleep seizes him also.</p>
+
+<p>In the morning when he awakes, the sun is illuminating the interior of
+his cabin; Marimonda remains in the same attitude as the evening before,
+but her hands are cold, and a swarm of flies and mosquitoes are
+thrusting their sharp trunks into her eyes and ears.</p>
+
+<p>She is a corpse.</p>
+
+<p>Selkirk raises her, uttering a cry, and, after having cast an angry look
+towards heaven, wipes away two tears that trickle down his cheeks.</p>
+
+<p>Thou thoughtest thyself insensible, Selkirk, and behold, thou art
+weeping!&mdash;thou, who hast more than once seen, with unmoistened eye, men,
+thy companions, in war or at sea, fall beneath a furious sword, or under
+the fire of batteries! Among the sentiments which honor humanity, which
+elevate it notwithstanding its defects, thou hadst preserved at least
+thy confidence in God and in his mercy, Selkirk, and to-day thou
+doubtest both!</p>
+
+<p>Why dost thou weep? why dost thou distrust God?</p>
+
+<p>Because thy monkey is dead!</p>
+
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<h3>
+<a name="CHAPTER_X"></a>CHAPTER X.</h3>
+<br>
+
+<h4>Discouragement.&mdash;A Discovery.&mdash;A Retrospective Glance.&mdash;Project of
+Suicide.&mdash;The Last Shot.&mdash;The Sea Serpent.&mdash;The <i>Porro</i>.&mdash;A Message.
+&mdash;Another Solitary.</h4>
+
+<p>His provisions are exhausted, and Selkirk thinks not of renewing them;
+his settlement on the shore is destroyed, and he thinks not of
+rebuilding it; the fish-pond, the bed of water-cresses are encroached
+upon by sand and weeds, and he thinks not of repairing them. His mind,
+completely discouraged, recoils before such labors; he has scarcely
+troubled himself to replace the roof of his cabin.</p>
+
+<p>In the midst of his dreams, Selkirk had not counted enough on two
+terrific guests, which must sooner or later come: despair and <i>ennui</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Nevertheless, he had read in his Bible this passage: 'As the worm
+gnaweth the garment and rottenness the wood, so doth the weariness of
+solitude gnaw the heart of man.'</p>
+
+<p>One day, as he was descending from the Oasis, where he had dug a tomb
+for Marimonda, he bethought himself of visiting the site of his burning
+wood.</p>
+
+<p>Around him, the earth, blackened by the ravages of the fire, presented
+only a naked, gloomy and desolate picture. To his great surprise,
+beneath the ruins, under coal dust and half-calcined trunks of trees,
+he discovered, elevated several feet above the soil, the partition of a
+wall, some stones quarried out and placed one upon another; in fine, the
+remains of a building, evidently constructed by the hand of man.</p>
+
+<p>Men had then inhabited this island before him! What had become of them?
+This wood, impenetrably choked, stifled with thorny bushes, briars and
+vines, and which he had delivered over to the flames, was undoubtedly a
+garden planted by them, on a sheltered declivity of the mountain; the
+garden which surrounded their habitation, as he had himself designed his
+own to do.</p>
+
+<p>Ah! if he could have but found them in the island, how different would
+have been his fate! But to live alone! to have no companions but his own
+thoughts! amid the dash of waves, the cry of birds, the bleating of
+goats, incessantly to imagine the sound of a human voice, and
+incessantly to experience the torture of being undeceived! What elements
+of happiness has he ever met in this miserable island? When he dreamed
+of creating resources for a long and peaceful future, he lied to
+himself. A life favored by leisure would but crush him the oftener
+beneath the weight of thought, and it is thought which is killing him,
+the thought of isolation!</p>
+
+<p>What import to him the beautiful sights spread out before his eyes? The
+vast extent of sky and earth has repeated to him each day that he is
+lost, forgotten on an obscure point of the globe. The sunrises and
+sunsets, with their magic aspects, this luxuriant tropical vegetation,
+the magnificent and picturesque scenery of his island, awaken in him
+only a feeling of restraint, an uneasiness which he cannot define.
+Perhaps the emotions, so sweet to all, are painful to him only because
+he cannot communicate them, share them with another. It is not the noisy
+life of cities which he asks, not even that of the shore. But, at least,
+a companion, a being to reply to his voice, to be associated with his
+joys, his sorrows. Marimonda! No, he recognizes it now! Marimonda could
+amuse him, but was not sufficient; she inhabited with him only the
+exterior world, she communicated with him only by things visible and
+palpable; her affection for her master, her gentleness, her admirable
+instinct, sometimes succeeded in lessening the distance which separated
+their two natures, but did not wholly fill up the interval.</p>
+
+<p>He had exaggerated the intelligence which, besides, increased at the
+expense of her strength, as with all monkeys; for God has not willed
+that an animal should approximate too closely to man; he had overrated
+the sense of her acts, because he needed near him a thinking and acting
+being; but with her, confidences, plans, hopes, communication, the
+exchange of all those intimate and mysterious thoughts which are the
+life of the soul, were they possible? Even her eyes did not see like his
+own; admiration was forbidden to her; admiration, that precious faculty,
+which exists only for man,&mdash;and which becomes extinct by isolation.</p>
+
+<p>How many others become extinct also!</p>
+
+<p>Self-love, a just self-esteem, that powerful lever which sustains us,
+which elevates us, which compels us to respect in ourselves that
+nobility of race which we derive from God, what becomes of it in
+solitude? For Selkirk, vanity itself has lost its power to stimulate.
+Formerly, when in the presence of his comrades at St. Andrew or of the
+royal fleet, he had signalized himself by feats of address or courage, a
+sentiment of pride or triumph had inspired him. Since his arrival in the
+island, his courage and address have had but too frequent opportunities
+of exercising themselves, but he has been excited only by want, by
+necessity, by a purely personal interest. Besides, can one utter an
+exclamation of triumph, where there is not even an echo to repeat it?</p>
+
+<p>After having thus painfully passed in review all of which his exile from
+the world had deprived him, he exclaimed:</p>
+
+<p>'To live alone, what a martyrdom! to live useless to all, what a
+disgrace! What! does no one need me? What! are generosity, devotion,
+even pity, all those noble instincts by which the soul reveals itself,
+for ever interdicted to me? This is death, death premature and shameful!
+Ah! why did I not remain at the foot of that precipice?'</p>
+
+<p>With downcast head, he remained some time overwhelmed with the weight of
+his discouragement; then, suddenly, his brow cleared up, a sinister
+thought crossed his mind; he ran to his cabin, seized his gun. This last
+shot, this last charge of powder and lead, which he has preserved so
+preciously as a final resource, it will serve to put an end to his days!
+Well, is not this the most valuable service he can expect from it? He
+examines the gun; the priming is yet undisturbed; he passes his nail
+over the flint, leans the butt against the ground, takes off the thick
+leather which covers his foot, that he may be able to fire with more
+certainty. But during all these preparations his resolution grows
+weaker; he trembles as he rests the gun against his temples; that
+sentiment of self-preservation, so profoundly implanted in the heart of
+man, re-awakens in him. He hesitates&mdash;thrice returning to his first
+resolution, he brings the gun to his forehead; thrice he removes it. At
+last, to drive away this demon of suicide, he fires it in the air.</p>
+
+<p>Scarcely has he thus uselessly thrown away this precious shot before he
+repents. He approaches the shore; it is at the moment when the tide is
+at its lowest ebb; the sun touches the horizon. Selkirk lies down on the
+damp beach:&mdash;'When the wave returns,' said he, 'if it be God's will, let
+it take me!'</p>
+
+<p>Slumber comes first. Exhausted with emotion, yielding to the lassitude
+of his mind, he falls asleep. In the middle of the night, suddenly
+awakened by the sound of the advancing wave, he again flees before the
+threat of death; he no longer wishes to die. Once in safety, he turns to
+contemplate that immense sea which, for an instant, he had wished might
+be his tomb.</p>
+
+<p>By the moonlight, he perceives as it were a long and slender chain,
+which, gliding upon the crest of the waves, directs itself towards the
+shore. By its form, by its copper color, by the multiplicity of its
+rings, unfolding in the distance, Selkirk recognizes the sea-serpent,
+that terror of navigators, as he has often heard it described.</p>
+
+<p>The mind of the solitary is a perpetual mirage.</p>
+
+<p>Filled with terror, he flies again; he conceals himself, trembling, in
+the caverns of his mountains; he has become a coward; why should he
+affect a courage he does not feel? No one is looking at him!</p>
+
+<p>The next day, instead of the sea-serpent, he finds on the beach an
+immense cryptogamia, a gigantic alga, of a single piece, divided into a
+thousand cylindrical branches, and much superior to all those he has
+observed in the Straits of Sunda. The rising tide had thrown it on the
+shore.</p>
+
+<p>While he examines it, he sees with surprise all sorts of birds come to
+peck at it; coatis, agoutis, and even rats, come out of their holes,
+boldly carrying away before his eyes fragments, whence issues a thick
+and brown sap. Emboldened by their example, and especially by the
+balsamic odor of the plant, he tastes it. It is sweet and succulent.</p>
+
+<p>This plant is no other than that providential vegetable called by the
+Spaniards <i>porro</i>, and which forms so large a part of the nourishment of
+the poor inhabitants of
+Chili.<a href="#Footnote_7"><sup>[1]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_7"></a><sup>[1]</sup></p>
+<blockquote> It is the <i>Durvilloea utilis</i>, dedicated to Dumont
+d'Urville, by Bory de St. Vincent, and classed by him in the
+laminari&eacute;es, an important and valuable family of marine cryptogamia.</blockquote>
+
+<p>The sea, which had already sent Selkirk seals to furnish him with oil
+and furs in a moment of distress, had just come to his assistance by
+giving him an easily procured aliment for a long time.</p>
+
+<p>Another surprise awaits him.</p>
+
+<p>Between the interlaced branches of his alga, he discovers a little
+bottle, strongly secured with a cork and wax. It contains a fragment of
+parchment, on which are traced some lines in the Spanish language.</p>
+
+<p>Although he is but imperfectly acquainted with this language, though the
+characters are partially effaced or scarcely legible, Selkirk, by dint
+of patience and study, soon deciphers the following words:</p>
+
+<p>'In the name of the Holy Trinity, to you who may read'&mdash;(here some words
+were wanting,)&mdash;'greeting. My name is Jean Gons&mdash;(Gonzalve or Gonsales;
+the rest of the name was illegible.) After having seen my two sons, and
+almost all my fortune, swallowed up in the sea with the vessel <i>Fernand
+Cortes</i>, in which I was a passenger, thrown by shipwreck on the coasts
+of the Island of San Ambrosio, near Chili, I live here alone and
+desolate. May God and men come to my aid!'</p>
+
+<p>At the bottom of the parchment, some other characters were perceptible,
+but without form, without connection, and almost entirely destroyed by a
+slight mould which had collected at the bottom of the bottle.</p>
+
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<h3>
+<a name="CHAPTER_XI"></a>CHAPTER XI.</h3>
+<br>
+
+<h4>The Island San Ambrosio.&mdash;Selkirk at last knows what Friendship is.&mdash;The
+Raft.&mdash;Visits to the Tomb of Marimonda.&mdash;The Departure.&mdash;The two
+Islands.&mdash;Shipwreck.&mdash;The Port of Safety.</h4>
+
+<p>As he read this, Selkirk was seized with intense pity for the
+unfortunate shipwrecked. What! on this same ocean, undoubtedly on these
+same shores, lives another unhappy being, like himself exiled from the
+world, enduring the same sufferings, subject to the same wants,
+experiencing the same <i>ennui</i>, the same anguish as himself! this man has
+confided to the sea his cry of distress, his complaint, and the sea, a
+faithful messenger, has just deposited it at the feet of Selkirk!</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly he remembers that rock, that island, discerned by him, on the
+day when at the Oasis, he was reconciled to Marimonda.</p>
+
+<p>That is the island of San Ambrosio; it is there, he does not doubt it
+for an instant, that his new friend lives; yes, his friend! for, from
+this moment he experiences for him an emotion of sympathetic affection.
+He loves him, he is so much to be pitied! Poor father, he has lost his
+sons, he has lost his fortune and the hope of returning to his country;
+and yet there reigns in his letter a tone of dignified calmness, of
+religious resignation which can come only from a noble heart. He is a
+Spaniard and a Roman Catholic; Selkirk is a Scotchman and a
+Presbyterian; what matters it?</p>
+
+<p>To-day his friend demands assistance, and he has resolved to dare all,
+to undertake all to respond to his appeal. Like a lamp deprived of air,
+his mind has revived at this idea, that he can at last be useful to
+others than himself. The inhabitant of San Ambrosio shall be indebted to
+him for an alleviation of his sorrows; for companionship in them. What
+is there visionary about this hope? Had he not already conceived the
+project of preparing a barque to explore that unknown coast? God seems
+to encourage his design, by sending him at once this double manna for
+the body and soul, the <i>porro</i>, which will suffice for his nourishment,
+and this writing, which the wave has just brought, to impose on him a
+duty.</p>
+
+<p>He immediately sets himself to the work, and obstacles are powerless to
+chill his generous excitement. Of the vegetable productions of the
+island, the red cedar and myrtle are those which grow of the largest
+size;<a href="#Footnote_8"><sup>[1]</sup></a>
+but yet their trunks are not large enough to serve when
+hollowed out for a barque. Well! he will construct a raft.</p>
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_8"></a><sup>[1]</sup></p>
+<blockquote> The <i>myrtus maximus</i> attains 13 metres (a little more than
+42 feet) in height.]</blockquote>
+
+<p>He fells young trees, cuts off their branches, rolls them to the shore,
+on a platform of sand, which the waves reach at certain periods; he
+fastens them solidly together with a triple net-work of plaited leather,
+cords woven of the fibre of the aloe, supple and tough vines; he
+chooses another with diverging and horizontal roots, the habitual
+direction taken by all the large vegetables of this island, the sand of
+which is covered only by two feet of earth. This shall be the mast. He
+plants it in the middle of the raft, where it is kept upright by its
+roots, knotted and interwoven with the various pieces which compose the
+floor. For a sail, has he not that which was left him by the Swordfish?
+and will not his seal-skin hammock serve as a spare sail?</p>
+
+<p>He afterwards constructs a helm, then two strong oars, that he may
+neglect no chance of success. He fastens his structure still more firmly
+by all that remains to him of his nails and bolts, and awaits the high
+tide to launch his skiff upon the sea.</p>
+
+<p>He has never felt calmer, happier, than during the long time occupied in
+these labors; their object has doubled his strength. The moments of
+indispensable repose, he has passed at the Oasis, beside the tomb of
+Marimonda, of that Marimonda, who by her example, opened to him the life
+of devotedness in which he has just engaged. Thence, with his eye turned
+upon that island where dwells the unknown friend from whom he has
+received a summons, he talks to him, encourages him, consoles him; he
+imparts to him his resolution to join him soon, and it seems as if the
+same waves which had brought the message will also undertake to transmit
+the reply.</p>
+
+<p>At present, Selkirk finds some sweetness in pitying evils which are not
+his own; he no longer dreams of wrapping himself in a cloak of
+selfishness; that disdainful heart, hitherto invincibly closed, at last
+experiences friendship, or at least aspires to do so.</p>
+
+<p>At last, the day arrives when the sea, inundating the marshes, bending
+the mangroves, reaches, on the sandy platform, one of the corners of his
+raft.</p>
+
+<p>Selkirk hastens to transport thither his hatchets, his guns, his
+seal-skins and goat-skins, his Bible, his spy-glass, his pipes, his
+ladder, his stools, even his traps; all his riches! it is a complete
+removal.</p>
+
+<p>On taking possession of the island, he had engraved on the bark of
+several trees the date of his arrival; he now inscribes upon them the
+day of his departure. For many months his reckoning has been
+interrupted; to determine the date is impossible; he knows only the day
+of the week.</p>
+
+<p>When the wave had entirely raised his barque, aiding himself with one of
+the long oars to propel it over the rocky bottom, he gained the sea.
+Then, after having adjusted his sail, with his hand on the helm, he
+turned towards his island to address to it an adieu, laden with
+maledictions rather than regrets.</p>
+
+<p>Swelled by a south-east wind, the sail pursues its course towards that
+other land, the object of his new desires. At the expiration of some
+hours, by the aid of his glass, what from the summit of his mountains
+had appeared to him only a dark point, a rock beaten by the waves, seems
+already enlarged, allowing him to see high hills covered with verdure.
+He has not then deceived himself! There exists a habitable
+land,&mdash;habitable for two! It has served as a refuge to the shipwrecked
+man, to his friend! Ah! how impatient he is to reach this shore where he
+is to meet him!</p>
+
+<p>Several hours more of a slow but peaceful navigation roll away. He has
+arrived at a distance almost midway between the point of departure and
+that of arrival. Looking alternately at the islands Selkirk and San
+Ambrosio, both illuminated by the sunset, with their indefinite forms,
+their bases buried in the waves, their terraced summits, veiled with a
+light fog, they appear like the reflection of each other. But for the
+discovery which he had previously made of the second, he would have
+believed this was his own island, or rather its image, represented in
+the waters of the sea.</p>
+
+<p>But in proportion as he advances towards his new conquest, it increases
+to his eyes, as if to testify the reality of its existence, now by a
+mountain peak, now by a cape. He had seen only the profile, it now
+presents its face, ready to develope all its graces, all its
+fascinations; while its rival, disdained, abandoned, becomes by degrees
+effaced, and seems to wish to conceal its humiliation beneath the wave
+of the great ocean.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly, without any apparent jar, without any flaw of wind, on a calm
+sea, the stem of the tree serving as a mast vacillates, bends forward,
+then on one side; the roots, which fasten it to the floor of the raft,
+are wrenched from their hold; the sail, diverging in the same direction,
+still extended, drags it entirely down, and it is borne away by the
+wave.</p>
+
+<p>Struck with astonishment, Selkirk puts his foot on the helm, and seizes
+his oars; but oars are powerless to move so heavy a machine. What is to
+be done?</p>
+
+<p>He who has not been able to endure isolation in the midst of a
+terrestrial paradise, from which he has just voluntarily exiled
+himself, must he then he reduced to have for an asylum, on the immensity
+of the ocean, only a few trunks of trees scarcely lashed together?</p>
+
+<p>The situation is frightful, terrific; Selkirk dares not contemplate it,
+lest his reason should give way. He must have a sail; a mast! He has his
+spare sail; for the mast, his only resource is to detach one of the
+timbers which compose the frame-work of his raft. Perhaps this will
+destroy its solidity; but he has no choice.</p>
+
+<p>He takes the best of his hatchets, chooses among the straight stems of
+which his floating dwelling is composed, that which seems most suitable;
+he cuts away with a thousand precautions, the bonds which fasten it; he
+frees it, not without difficulty, from the contact of other logs to
+which it has been attached. But while he devotes himself to this task,
+the raft, obedient to a mysterious motion of the sea, has slowly drifted
+on; the surface is covered with foam, as if sub-marine waves are lashing
+it. Selkirk springs to the helm; the tiller breaks in his hands; he
+seizes the oars, they also break. An unknown force hurries him on. He
+has just fallen into one of those rapid currents which, from north to
+south, traverse the waters of the Pacific Ocean.</p>
+
+<p>Borne away in a contrary direction from that which he has hitherto
+pursued, the land of which he had come in search seems to fly before
+him. Whither is he going? Into what regions, into what solitudes of the
+sea is he to be carried, far from islands and continents?</p>
+
+<p>To add to his terror, in these latitudes, where day suddenly succeeds
+to night and night to day, where twilight is unknown, the sun, just now
+shining brightly, suddenly sinks below the horizon.</p>
+
+<p>In the midst of profound darkness, the unhappy man pursues this fatal
+race, leading to inevitable destruction. During a part of this terrible
+night, he hears the frail frame-work which supports him cracking beneath
+his feet. How long must his sufferings last? He knows not. At last,
+jostled by adverse waves, shaken to its centre, the raft begins to whirl
+around, and something heavier than the shock of the wave comes
+repeatedly to give it new and rude blows. The first rays of the rising
+moon, far from calming the terrors of the unhappy mariner, increase
+them. In his dizzy brain, these wan rays which silver the surface of the
+sea, seem so many phantoms coming to be present at his last moments.
+Pale, bent double, with his hair standing upright, clinging to some
+projection of his barque, he in vain attempts to fix his glance on
+certain strange objects which he sees ascending, descending, and rolling
+around him.</p>
+
+<p>They are the trunks of the trees which formed a part of his raft, limbs
+detached from its body, and which, now drawn into the same whirlpool,
+are by their repeated shocks, aiding in his complete destruction.</p>
+
+<p>In face of this imminent, implacable death, Selkirk ceases to struggle
+against it. He has now but one resource; the belief in another life. The
+religious instinct, which has already come to his assistance, revives
+with force. Clinging with his hands and feet to these wavering timbers,
+which are almost disjoined, half inundated by the wave, which is
+encroaching more and more upon his last asylum, he directs his steps
+towards the spot where he had deposited his arms and furs; he takes from
+among them his Bible, not to read it, but to clasp it to his heart,
+whose agitation and terror seem to grow calm beneath its sacred contact.</p>
+
+<p>He then attempts to absorb his thoughts in God; he blames himself for
+not having been contented with the gifts he had received from Him; he
+might have lived happily in Scotland, or in the royal navy. It is this
+perpetual desire for change, these aspirations after the unknown, which
+have occasioned his ruin.</p>
+
+<p>At this moment, raising his eyes towards heaven, he sees, beneath the
+pale rays of the moon, a mass of rocks rising at a little distance,
+which he immediately recognizes. There is the bay of the Seals, the peak
+of the Discovery. That hollow, lying in the shadow, is the valley of the
+Oasis! As on the first day of his arrival, on one of the steepest
+summits of the mountain, he perceives stationed there, immovable, like a
+sentinel, a goat, between whose delicate limbs shines a group of stars,
+celestial eyes, whose golden lids seem to vibrate as if in appeal. It is
+his island! He does not hesitate; suddenly recovering all his energies,
+he springs from the raft, struggles with vigor, with perseverance
+against the current, triumphs over it, and, after prolonged efforts, at
+last reaches this haven of deliverance, this port of safety; he lands,
+fatigued, exhausted, but overcome with joy and gratitude. Profoundly
+thanking God from his heart, he prostrates himself, and kisses with
+transport the hospitable soil of this island,&mdash;which, on the morning of
+the same day, he had cursed.</p>
+
+<p>Alas! does not reflection quickly diminish this lively joy at his
+return and safety? From this shipwreck, poor sailor, thou hast saved
+only thyself: thy tools, thy instruments of labor, even thy Bible, are a
+prey to the sea!</p>
+
+<p>It is now, Selkirk, that thou must suffice for thyself! It is the last
+trial to which thou canst be subjected!</p>
+
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<h3>
+<a name="CHAPTER_XII"></a>CHAPTER XII.</h3>
+<br>
+
+<h4>The Island of Juan Fernandez.&mdash;Encounter in the Mountains.&mdash;Discussion.
+&mdash;A New Captivity.&mdash;A Cannon-shot.&mdash;Dampier and Selkirk.&mdash;<i>Mas a Fuera</i>.
+&mdash;News of Stradling.&mdash;Confidences.&mdash;End of the History of the real
+Robinson Crusoe.&mdash;Nebuchadnezzar.</h4>
+
+<p>On the 1st of February, 1709, an English vessel, equipped and sent to
+sea by the merchants of Bristol, after having sailed around Cape Horn,
+in company with another vessel belonging to the same expedition, touched
+alone, about the 33d degree of south latitude, at the Island of Juan
+Fernandez, from a hundred and ten to a hundred and twenty leagues
+distant from the coast of Chili.</p>
+
+<p>The second ship was to join her without delay. Symptoms of the scurvy
+had appeared on board, and it was intended to remain here for some time,
+to give the crew opportunity of recovering their health.</p>
+
+<p>Their tents pitched, towards evening several sailors, having ventured
+upon the island, were not a little surprised to see, through the
+obscurity, a strange being, bearing some resemblance to the human form,
+who, at their approach, scaling the mountains, leaping from rock to
+rock, fled with the rapidity of a deer, the lightness of a chamois.</p>
+
+<p>Some doubted whether it was a man, and prepared to fire at him. They
+were prevented by an officer named Dower, who accompanied them.</p>
+
+<p>On their return to their companions, the sailors related what they had
+seen; Dower did not fail to do the same among the officers; and this
+evening, at the encampment on the shore, in the forecastle as well as on
+the quarter-deck, there were narratives and suppositions that would
+'amuse an assembly of Puritans through the whole of Lent,' says the
+account from which we borrow a part of our information.</p>
+
+<p>At this period, tales of the marvellous gained great credence among
+sailors. Not long before, the Spaniards had discovered giants in
+Patagonia; the Portuguese, sirens in the seas of Brazil; the French,
+tritons and satyrs at Martinique; the Dutch, black men, with feet like
+lobsters, beyond Paramaribo.</p>
+
+<p>The strange individual under discussion was unquestionably a satyr, or
+at least one of those four-footed, hairy men, such as the authentic
+James Carter declared he had met with in the northern part of America.</p>
+
+<p>Some, thinking this conclusion too simple, adroitly insinuated that no
+one among the sailors who had met this monster, had noticed in him so
+great a number of paws. Why four paws?&mdash;why should he not be a
+monopedous man, a man whose body, terminated by a single leg, cleared,
+with this support alone, considerable distances? Was not the existence
+of the monopedous man attested by modern travellers, and even in
+antiquity and the middle ages, by Pliny and St. Augustine?</p>
+
+<p>Others preferred to imagine in this singular personage the acephalous
+man, the man without a head, named by the grave Baumgarthen as existing
+on the new continent. They had not discovered many legs, but neither had
+they discovered a head; why should he have one?</p>
+
+<p>And the discussion continued, and not a voice was raised to risk this
+judicious observation; if neither head nor limbs have been
+distinguished, it may perhaps be because he has been seen only in the
+dark.</p>
+
+<p>The next day, each wished to be satisfied; a regular hunt was organized
+against this phenomenon; they set out, invaded his retreat, pursued him,
+surrounded him, at last seized him, and the brave sailors of Great
+Britain discovered with stupefaction, in this monopedous, acephalous
+man, in this satyr, this cercopithecus, what? A countryman, a Scotchman,
+a subject of Queen Anne!</p>
+
+<p>It was Selkirk; Selkirk, his hair long and in disorder, his limbs
+encased in fragments of skins, and half deprived of his reason.</p>
+
+<p>His island was Juan Fernandez, so called by the first navigator who
+discovered it; this was Selkirk Island.</p>
+
+<p>When he was conducted before Captain Woodes Rogers, commander of the
+expedition, to the interrogations of the latter, the unfortunate man,
+with downcast look, and agitated with a nervous trembling, replied only
+by repeating mechanically the last syllables of the phrases which were
+addressed to him by the captain.</p>
+
+<p>A little recovered from his agitation, discovering that he had
+Englishmen to deal with, he attempted to pronounce some words; he could
+only mutter a few incoherent and disconnected sentences.</p>
+
+<p>'Solitude and the care of providing for his subsistence,' says Paw, 'had
+so occupied his mind, that all rational ideas were effaced from it. As
+savage as the animals, and perhaps more so, he had almost entirely
+forgotten the secret of articulating intelligible sounds.'</p>
+
+<p>Captain Rogers having asked him how long he had been secluded in this
+island, Selkirk remained silent; he nevertheless understood the
+question, for his eyes immediately opened with terror, as if he had just
+measured the long space of time which his exile had lasted. He was far
+from having an exact idea of it; he appreciated it only by the
+sufferings he had endured there, and, looking fixedly at his hands, he
+opened and shut them several times.</p>
+
+<p>Reckoning by the number of his fingers, it was twenty or thirty years,
+and every one at first believed in the accuracy of his calculation, so
+completely did his forehead, furrowed with wrinkles, his skin blackened,
+withered by the sun, his hair whitened at the roots, his gray beard,
+give him the aspect of an old man.</p>
+
+<p>Selkirk was born in 1680; he was then only twenty-nine.</p>
+
+<p>After having replied thus, he turned his head, cast a troubled look on
+the objects which surrounded him; a remembrance seemed to awaken, and,
+uttering a cry, stepping forward, he pointed with his finger to a cedar
+on his left. It was the tree on which, when he left the Swordfish, he
+had inscribed the date of his arrival in the island. The officer Dower
+approached, and, notwithstanding the crumbling of the decayed bark,
+could still read there this inscription:</p>
+
+<p>'Alexander Selkirk&mdash;from Largo, Scotland, Oct. 27, 1704.'</p>
+
+<p>His exile from the world had therefore lasted four years and three
+months.</p>
+
+<p>Notwithstanding the interest excited by his misfortunes, by his name,
+his accent, more than by his language, Captain Rogers, an honorable and
+humane man, but of extreme severity on all that appertained to
+discipline, recognized him as a British subject, suspected him to be a
+deserter from the English navy, and gave orders that he should be put
+under guard, pending a definitive decision.</p>
+
+<p>The sailors commissioned to this office did not find it an easy thing to
+guard a prisoner who could climb the trees like a squirrel, and outstrip
+them all in a race. As a precaution, they commenced by binding him
+firmly to the same cedar on which his name was engraved. There the
+unfortunate Selkirk figured as a curious animal, ornamented with a
+label.</p>
+
+<p>Afterwards, more for pastime than through mischief, they tormented him
+with questions, to obtain from him hesitating or almost senseless
+replies, which bewildered him much; then they began to examine, with
+childish surprise, the length of his beard, of his hair and nails; the
+prodigious development of his muscles; his bare feet, so hardened by
+travel, that they seemed to be covered with horn moccasins. Having found
+beneath his goat-skin rags, a knife, whose blade, by dint of use and
+sharpening, was almost reduced to the proportions of that of a
+penknife, they took it away to examine it; but on seeing himself
+deprived of this single weapon, the only relic of his shipwreck, the
+prisoner struggled, uttering wild howls; they restored it to him.</p>
+
+<p>At the hour of repast, Selkirk had, like the rest, his portion of meat
+and biscuit. He ate the biscuit, manifesting great satisfaction; but he,
+who had at first suffered so much from being deprived of salt, found in
+the meat a degree of saltness insupportable. He pointed to the stream;
+one of his guards courteously offered him his gourd, containing a
+mixture of rum and water; he approached it to his lips, and immediately
+threw it away with violence, as if it had burned him.</p>
+
+<p>At evening, he was transported on board.</p>
+
+<p>A few days after he began to acquire a taste for common food; his ideas
+became more definite; speech returned to his lips more freely and
+clearly; but liberty of motion was not yet restored to him, a new
+captivity opened before him, and his irritation at this was presenting
+an obstacle to the complete restoration of his faculties, when God, who
+had so deeply tried him, came to his assistance.</p>
+
+<p>One morning, as the crew of the ship were occupied, some in caulking and
+tarring it, others in gathering edible plants on the island, a
+cannon-shot resounded along the waves. The caulkers climbed up the
+rigging, the provision-hunters ran to the shore, the officers seized
+their spy-glasses, and all together quickly uttered a <i>huzza</i>! The
+vessel which had sailed in company with that of Captain Rogers, the
+Duchess, of Bristol, had arrived. This vessel, commanded by William
+Cook, had, for a master-pilot, a man more celebrated in maritime annals
+than the commanders of the expedition themselves;&mdash;this was Dampier, the
+indefatigable William Dampier, who, a short time since a millionaire,
+now completely ruined in consequence of foolish speculations and
+prodigalities, had just undertaken a third voyage around the world.</p>
+
+<p>Scarcely had he disembarked, when he heard of the great event of the
+day&mdash;of the wild man. His name was mentioned, he remembered having known
+an Alexander Selkirk at St. Andrew, at the inn of the Royal Salmon. He
+went to him, interrogated him, recognized him, and, without loss of
+time, after having had his hair and beard cut, and procured suitable
+clothing for him, presented him to Capt. Rogers; he introduced him as
+one of his old comrades, formerly an intrepid and distinguished officer
+in the navy, one of the conquerors of Vigo, who had been induced by
+himself to embark in the Swordfish, partly at his expense.</p>
+
+<p>Restored to liberty, supported, revived, by the kind cares of Dampier,
+his old hero, Selkirk felt rejuvenated. His first thought then is for
+that other unfortunate man, still an exile perhaps in his desert island.
+After having informed the old sailor that he had found a little bottle,
+containing a written parchment, he said: 'Dear Captain, it would be a
+meritorious act, and one worthy of you, to co-operate in the deliverance
+of this unhappy man. A boat will suffice for the voyage, since the
+Island of San Ambrosio is so near this. Oh! how joyfully would I
+accompany you in this excursion!'</p>
+
+<p>'My brave hermit,' replied Dampier, shaking his head, 'the neighboring
+island of which you speak is no other than the second in this group,
+named <i>Mas a Fuera</i>. As for the other, that San Ambrosio which you think
+so near, if it has not become a floating island since my last voyage, if
+it is still where I left it, under the Tropic of Capricorn, to reach it
+will not be so trifling a matter; besides, your little bottle must be a
+bottle of ink. There is here confusion of place and confusion of time;
+not only is <i>Mas a Fuera</i> not <i>San Ambrosio</i> but this latter island, far
+from being a desert, as your correspondent has said, has been inhabited
+more than twenty years by a multitude of madmen, fishermen and pirates,
+potato-eaters and old sailors, who, when I visited them, in 1702,
+politely received me with gun-shots, and whose politeness I returned
+with cannon-shots. Therefore, my boy, he who wrote to you must have been
+dead when you received his letter. What date did it bear?'</p>
+
+<p>'None,' said Selkirk; 'the last lines were effaced;' and he trembled at
+the idea of all the dangers he had run in pursuit of this friend, who no
+longer existed, and of a land which he had never inhabited.</p>
+
+<p>After having satisfied a duty of humanity, that which he had regarded as
+a debt contracted towards a friend, Selkirk, among other inquiries, let
+fall the name of Stradling. This time, it was hatred which asked
+information.</p>
+
+<p>His hatred was destined to be gratified.</p>
+
+<p>In pursuing his voyage, after having coasted along the shores of the
+Straits of Magellan, Stradling, surprised by a frightful hurricane, had
+seen his vessel entirely disabled. Repulsed at five different times,
+now by the tempest, now by the Spaniards, from the ports where he
+attempted to take refuge, he was thrown, near La Plata, on an
+inhospitable shore. Attacked, pillaged by the natives, half of his crew
+having perished, with the remains of his ship he constructed another, to
+which he gave the name of the Cinque Ports, instead of that of the
+Swordfish, which it was no longer worthy to bear. This was a large
+pinnace, on which he had secretly returned to England. For several years
+past, Dampier had not heard of him.</p>
+
+<p>Selkirk thought himself sufficiently avenged; his present happiness
+silenced his past ill-will. He even became reconciled to his island.</p>
+
+<p>Each day he traversed its divers parts, with emotions various as the
+remembrances it awakened. But he was now no longer alone! Arm and arm
+with Dampier, he revisited these places where he had suffered so much,
+and which often resumed for him their enchanting aspects.</p>
+
+<p>His companion was soon informed of his history. When he had related what
+we already know, from his landing to the construction of his raft, and
+to his frightful shipwreck, he at last commenced, not without some
+mortification, the recital of his final miseries, which alone could
+explain the deplorable state in which the English sailors had found him.</p>
+
+<p>By the loss of his hatchets, his ladder, his other instruments of labor,
+condemned to inaction, to powerlessness, he had nothing to occupy
+himself with but to provide sustenance. But the sea had taken his snares
+along with the rest. He at first subsisted on herbs, fruits and roots;
+afterwards his stomach rejected these crudities, as it had repulsed the
+fish. Armed with a stick, he had chased the agoutis; for want of
+agoutis, he had eaten rats.</p>
+
+<p>By night, he silently climbed the trees to surprise the female of the
+toucan or blackbird, which he pitilessly stifled over their young brood.
+Meanwhile, at the noise he made among the branches, this winged prey
+almost always escaped him.</p>
+
+<p>He tried to construct a ladder; by the aid of his knife alone, he
+attempted to cut down two tall trees. During this operation his knife
+broke&mdash;only a fragment remained. This was for him a great trial.</p>
+
+<p>He thought of making, with reeds and the fibres of the aloe, a net to
+catch birds; but all patient occupation, all continuous labor, had
+become insupportable to him.</p>
+
+<p>That he might escape the gloomy ideas which assailed him more and more,
+it became necessary to avoid repose, to court bodily fatigue.</p>
+
+<p>By continual exercise, his powers of locomotion had developed in
+incredible proportions. His feet had become so hardened that he no
+longer felt the briers or sharp stones. When he grew weary, he slept, in
+whatever place he found himself, and these were his only quiet hours.</p>
+
+<p>To chase the agoutis had ceased to be an object worthy of his efforts;
+the kids took their turn, afterwards the goats. He had acquired such
+dexterity of movement, and such strength of muscle, such certainty of
+eye, that to leap from one projection of rock to another, to spring at
+one bound over ravines and deep cavities, was to him but a childish
+sport. In these feats he took pleasure and pride.</p>
+
+<p>Sometimes, in the midst of his flights through space, he would seize a
+bird on the wing.</p>
+
+<p>The goats themselves soon lost their power to struggle against such a
+combatant. Notwithstanding their number, had Selkirk wished it, he might
+have depopulated the island. He was careful not to do this.</p>
+
+<p>If he wished to procure a supply of provisions, he directed his steps
+towards the most elevated peaks of the mountain, marked his game,
+pursued it, caught it by the horns, or felled it by a blow from his
+stick; after which his knife-blade did its office. The goat killed, he
+threw it on his shoulders, and, almost as swiftly as before, regained
+the cavernous grotto or leafy tree, in the shelter of which he could
+this day eat and sleep. He had for a long time forsaken his cabin, which
+was too far distant from his hunting-grounds.</p>
+
+<p>If he had a stock of provision on hand, he still pursued the goats as
+usual, but only for his personal gratification. If he caught one, he
+contented himself with slitting its ear; this was his seal, the mark by
+which he recognized his free flock. During the last years of his abode
+in the island, he had killed or marked thus nearly five
+hundred.<a href="#Footnote_9"><sup>[1]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_9"></a><sup>[1]</sup></p>
+<blockquote> Long after his departure from Juan Fernandez, the ship's
+crews, who came there for supplies, or the pirates who took refuge
+there, found goats whose ears had been slit by Selkirk's knife.</blockquote>
+
+<p>In the natural course of things, as his physical powers increased, his
+intelligence became enfeebled.</p>
+
+<p>Necessity had at first aroused his industry, for all industry awakes at
+the voice of want; but his own had been due rather to his recollections
+than to his ingenuity. He thought himself a creator, he was only an
+imitator.</p>
+
+<p>Whatever may have been said by those who, in the pride of a deceitful
+philosophy, have wished to glorify the power of the solitary man&mdash;if the
+latter, supported by certain fortunate circumstances, can remain some
+time in a state hardly endurable, it is not by his own strength, but by
+means which society itself has furnished. This is the incontestable
+truth, from which, in his pride, Selkirk had turned away.</p>
+
+<p>Deprived of exercise and of aliment, his thoughts, no longer sustained
+by reading the Holy Book, were day by day lost in a chaos of dreams and
+reveries.</p>
+
+<p>A prey to terrors which he could not explain, he feared darkness, he
+trembled at the slightest sound of the wind among the branches; if it
+blew violently, he thought the trees would be uprooted and crush him; if
+the sea roared, he trembled at the idea of the submersion of his entire
+island.</p>
+
+<p>When he traversed the woods, especially if the heat was great, he often
+heard, distinctly, voices which called him or replied. He caught entire
+phrases; others remained unfinished. These phrases, connected neither
+with his thoughts nor his situation, were strange to him. Sometimes he
+even recognized the voice.</p>
+
+<p>Now it was that of Catherine, scolding her servants; now that of
+Stradling, of Dampier, or one of his college tutors. Once he heard thus
+the voice of one of his classmates whom he least remembered; at another
+time it was that of his old admiral, Rourke, uttering the words of
+command.</p>
+
+<p>If he attempted to raise his own to impose silence on these choruses of
+demons who tormented him, it was only with painful efforts that he could
+succeed in articulating some confused syllables.</p>
+
+<p>He no longer talked, but he still sang; he sang the monotonous and
+mournful airs of his psalms, the words of which he had totally
+forgotten. His memory by degrees became extinct. Sometimes even, he lost
+the sentiment of his identity; then, at least, his state of isolation,
+and the memory of his misfortunes ceased to weigh upon him.</p>
+
+<p>He nevertheless remembered, that about this time, having approached
+Swordfish Beach, attracted by an unusual noise there, he had seen it
+covered with soldiers and sailors, doubtless Spaniards. The idea of
+finding himself among men, had suddenly made his heart beat; but when he
+descended the declivity of the hills in order to join them, several
+shots were fired; the balls whistled about his ears, and, filled with
+terror, he had fled.</p>
+
+<p>Once more he had found himself there, but without intending it, for then
+he could no longer find his way, by the points of the compass, through
+the woods and valleys leading to the shore. Ah! how had his ancient
+abode changed its aspect! How many years had rolled away since he lived
+there! The little gravelled paths, which conducted to the grotto and the
+mimosa, were effaced; the mimosa, its principal branches broken, seemed
+buried beneath its own ruins; of his fish-pond, his bed of
+water-cresses, not a vestige remained; his grotto, veiled, hid beneath
+the thick curtains of vines and heliotropes, was no longer visible; his
+cabin had ceased to exist,&mdash;overthrown, swept away doubtless, by a
+hurricane, as his inclosure had been. He could discover the spot only by
+the five myrtles, which, disembarrassed of their roof of reeds and their
+plaster walls, had resumed their natural decorations, green and glossy,
+as if the hatchet had never touched them. At their feet tufts of briers
+and other underbrush had grown up, as formerly. The two streams, the
+<i>Linnet</i> and the <i>Stammerer</i>, alone had suffered no change. The one with
+its gentle murmur, the other with its silvery cascades, after having
+embraced the lawn, still continued to flow towards the sea, where they
+seemed to have buried, with their waves, the memory of all that had
+passed on their borders.</p>
+
+<p>At sight of his shore, which seemed to have retained no vestige of
+himself, Selkirk remained a few moments, mournful and lost in his
+incoherent thoughts, in the midst of which this was most prominent:&mdash;Yet
+alive, already forgotten by the world, I have seen my traces disappear,
+even from this island which I have so long inhabited!</p>
+
+<p>A rustling was heard in the foliage; he raised his eyes, expecting to
+see Marimonda swinging on the branch of a tree. Perceiving nothing, he
+remembered that Marimonda reposed at the Oasis; he took the road from
+the mountain which led thither, but when he arrived there, when he was
+before her tomb, covered with tall grass, he had forgotten why he came.</p>
+
+<p>One of those unaccountable fits of terror, which were now more frequent
+than formerly, seized him, and he precipitately descended the mountain,
+springing from peak to peak along the rocks.</p>
+
+<p>The religious sentiment, which formerly sustained Selkirk in his trials,
+was not entirely extinct; but it was obscured beneath his darkened
+reason. His religion was only that of fear. When the sea was violently
+agitated, when the storm howled, he prostrated himself with clasped
+hands; but it was no longer God whom he implored; it was the angry
+ocean, the thunder. He sought to disarm the genius of evil. The
+lightning having one day struck, not far from him, a date-palm, he
+worshipped the tree. His perverted faith had at last terminated in
+idolatry.</p>
+
+<p>This was, in substance, what Alexander Selkirk related to William
+Dampier; what solitude had done for this man, still so young, and
+formerly so intelligent; this was what had become of the despiser of
+men, when left to his own reason.</p>
+
+<p>Dampier listened with the most profound attention, interrupting him in
+his narrative only by exclamations of interest or of pity. When he
+ceased to speak, holding out his hand to him, he said:</p>
+
+<p>'My boy, the lesson is a rude one, but let it be profitable to you; let
+it teach you that <i>ennui</i> on board a vessel, even with a Stradling, is
+better than <i>ennui</i> in a desert. Undoubtedly there are among us
+troublesome, wicked people, but fewer wicked than crack-brained.
+Believe, then, in friendship, especially in mine; from this day it is
+yours, on the faith of William Dampier.'</p>
+
+<p>And he opened his arms to the young man, who threw himself into them.</p>
+
+<p>On their return to the vessel, Dampier presented to Selkirk his own
+Bible. The latter seized it with avidity, and, after having turned over
+its leaves as if to find a text which presented itself to his mind, read
+aloud the following passage:</p>
+
+<p>'He was driven from the sons of men; and his heart was made like the
+beasts, and his dwelling was with the wild asses; they fed him with
+grass like oxen, and his body was wet with the dew of heaven.'&mdash;DANIEL
+v. 21.</p>
+
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<h3>
+<a name="CONCLUSION"></a>CONCLUSION.</h3>
+<br>
+
+<p>Capt. Rogers, in his turn, learned the misfortunes of Selkirk and became
+attached to him; from this moment, the sailors themselves showed him
+great deference; he was known among them by the name of <i>the governor</i>,
+and this title clung to him.</p>
+
+<p>To do the honors of his island, the governor one day gave to the crews
+of the two vessels, the spectacle of one of his former hunts. Resuming
+his ancient costume, he returned to the high mountains, where, before
+their eyes, he started a goat, and darting in pursuit of it, over a
+thousand cliffs, sometimes clearing frightful abysses, by means of a
+vine which he seized on his passage,&mdash;this method he owed to
+Marimonda,&mdash;he succeeded in forcing his game to the hills of the shore.
+Arrived there, exhausted, panting, drawing itself up like a stag at bay,
+the goat stopped short. Selkirk took it living on his shoulders, and
+presented it to Capt. Rogers. Its ear was already slit.</p>
+
+<p>By way of thanks, the captain announced that he might henceforth be
+connected with the expedition, with his old rank of mate, which was
+restored to him. For this favor Selkirk was indebted to the
+solicitations of Dampier.</p>
+
+<p>In the same vessel with Dampier, he made another three years' voyage,
+visited Mexico, California, and the greater part of North America;
+after which, still in company with Dampier, and possessor of a pretty
+fortune, he returned to England, where the recital of his adventures,
+already made public, secured him the most honorable patronage and
+friendship. Among his friends, may be reckoned Steele, the co-laborer,
+the rival of Addison, who consecrated a long chapter to him in his
+publication of the Tatler.</p>
+
+<p>Selkirk did not fail to visit Scotland. Passing through St. Andrew,
+could he help experiencing anew the desire to see his old friend pretty
+Kitty? Once more he appeared before the bar of the Royal Salmon. This
+time, on meeting, Selkirk and Catherine both experienced a sentiment of
+painful surprise. The latter, stouter and fuller than ever, fat and
+red-faced, touched the extreme limit of her fourth and last youth; the
+solitary of Juan Fernandez, with his gray hair, his copper complexion,
+could scarcely recall to the respectable hostess of the tavern the
+elegant pilot of the royal navy, still less the pale and blond student,
+of whom she had been, eighteen years before, the first and only love.</p>
+
+<p>'Is it indeed you, my poor Sandy,' said she, with an accent of pity; 'I
+thought you were dead.'</p>
+
+<p>'I have been nearly so, indeed, and a long time ago, Kitty. But who has
+told you of me?'</p>
+
+<p>'Alas! It was my husband himself.'</p>
+
+<p>'You are married then, Catherine. So much the better.'</p>
+
+<p>'So much the worse rather, my friend; for, would you believe it, the old
+monster, bent double as he is with age and rheumatism, was bright enough
+to dupe me finely; to dupe me twice. In the first place, by making me
+believe you were dead when you were not. But he well knew, the cheat,
+that if I refused him once, it was because my views were turned in your
+direction.'</p>
+
+<p>Selkirk made a movement which escaped Catherine; she continued:</p>
+
+<p>'His second deception was to arrive here in triumph, in the midst of the
+cries of joy and embraces of the <i>Sea-Dogs</i> and <i>Old Pilots</i>. One would
+have thought he had in his pockets all the mines of Guinea and Peru. He
+did not say so, but I thought it could not be otherwise; and I married
+him, since I believed you no longer living. His trick having succeeded,
+he then told me of his shipwreck, his complete ruin. Ah! with what a
+good heart would I have sent him packing! But it was too late, and it
+became necessary that the Royal Salmon, founded by the honorable Andrew
+Felton, should furnish subsistence for two; and this is the reason why,
+Mr. Selkirk, you find me still here, a prisoner in my bar, and cursing
+all the captains who make the tour of the world only to come afterwards
+and impose upon poor and inexperienced young girls!'</p>
+
+<p>Selkirk had not at first understood the lamentations of Catherine; but a
+twilight commenced to dawn in his ideas; he divined that his name had
+been used for an act of baseness; and, without being able to account for
+it, he felt the return of an old leaven of spite, an old hatred revived.</p>
+
+<p>'Who is your husband? What is his name?' asked he, in a loud voice and
+with a tone of authority.</p>
+
+<p>'Do not grow angry, Sandy? Do not seek a quarrel with him now. What is
+done, is done; I am his wife, do you understand? It is of no use to
+recall the past.'</p>
+
+<p>'And who thinks of recalling it? I simply asked you who he was?'</p>
+
+<p>'You will be prudent; you promise me? Well! do you see him yonder, in
+the second stall, at the same place he formerly occupied? He has just
+poured out some gin to those sailors, and is drinking with them. It is
+he who is standing up with an apron on.'</p>
+
+<p>'Stradling!' exclaimed Selkirk, with sparkling eyes. But at the sight of
+this apron, finding his old captain become a waiter, his hatred and
+projects of vengeance were suddenly extinguished.</p>
+
+<p>Alexander Selkirk returned to England in 1712. The history of his
+captivity in the Island of Juan Fernandez had appeared in the papers;
+several apocryphal relations had been already published, when in 1717,
+Daniel De Foe published his <i>Robinson Crusoe</i>.</p>
+
+<p>He is really the same personage; but in this latter version, the Island
+of Juan Fernandez, in spite of distance and geographical
+impossibilities, is peopled with savage Caribs; Marimonda is transformed
+into the simple Friday; history is turned into romance, but this romance
+is elevated to all the dignity of a philosophical treatise.</p>
+
+<p>Rendering full justice to the merit of the writer, we must nevertheless
+acknowledge that he has completely altered, in a mental view, the
+physiognomy of his model. Robinson is not a man suffering entire
+isolation; he has a companion, and the savages are incessantly making
+inroads around him. It is the European developing the resources of his
+industry, to contend at once with an unproductive land and the dangers
+created by his enemies.</p>
+
+<p>Selkirk has no enemies to repulse, and he inhabits a fruitful country.
+He needs, before every thing else, the presence of man, one of those
+fraternal affections in which he refuses to believe. His sufferings
+originate in his very solitude. In solitude, Robinson improves and
+perfects himself; Selkirk, at first as full of resources as he, ends by
+becoming discouraged and brutified.</p>
+
+<p>Which of the two is most true to nature?</p>
+
+<p>The first is an ideal being, for in no quarter of the globe has there
+ever been found one analogous to the Robinson of De Foe; the other, on
+the contrary, is to be met with every where, denying the dependence of
+an isolated individual; but this dependence, even in the midst of a
+prodigal nature, if it is not to the honor of man, is to the honor of
+society at large.</p>
+
+<p>Notwithstanding all that has been said, the solitary is a man imbruted,
+vegetating, deprived of his crown. 'Solitude is sweet only in the
+vicinity of great
+cities.'<a href="#Footnote_10"><sup>[1]</sup></a>
+By an admirable decree of Providence, the
+isolated being is an imperfect being; man is completed by man.</p>
+
+<p><a name="Footnote_10"></a><sup>[1]</sup></p>
+<blockquote> Bernardin de St. Pierre. Seneca had said: <i>Miscenda et
+alternanda sunt solitudo et frequentia</i>.</blockquote>
+
+<p>Notwithstanding the false maxims of a deceitful philosophy, it is to the
+social state that we owe, from the greatest to the least, the courage
+which animates and sustains us; God has created us to live there and to
+love one another; it is for this reason that selfishness is a shameful
+vice, a crime! It is, so to speak, an infringement of one of the great
+laws of Nature.</p>
+<br>
+
+<p>THE END.</p>
+
+<br><hr style="width: 45%;"><br>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<h3>
+<a name="NEWBOOKS"></a>NEW BOOKS AND NEW EDITIONS</h3>
+
+<center>
+<p>PUBLISHED BY
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+
+<h4>HENRY W. LONGFELLOW</h4>
+
+<p>COMPLETE POETICAL WORKS [Transcriber's Note: missing text.]
+the six Volumes mentioned below, and [Tr. Note: missing text.]<br>
+the market. In two volumes, 16mo, $2.00.</p>
+
+<p>In separate Volumes, each [Tr. Note: missing text.] cents.<br>
+VOICES OF THE NIGHT.<br>
+BALLADS AND OTHER POEMS.<br>
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+BELFRY OF BRUGES AND OTHER POEMS.<br>
+EVANGELINE; A TALE OF ACADIE[Tr. Note: missing text.]<br>
+THE SEASIDE AND THE FIRESIDE.<br>
+THE WAIF. A Collection of Poems. Edited by [Tr. Note: missing text.]<br>
+THE ESTRAY. A Collection of Poems. Edited [Tr. Note: missing text.]</p>
+
+<p>MR. LONGFELLOW'S PROSE WORKS<br>
+HYPERION. A Romance.<br>
+In one volume. price $1.00.</p>
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+In two vol., 16mo, with Portrait, price $1.50.</p>
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+
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+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+
+<h4>[Tr. Note: OLIVER WEND]ELL HOLMES'S WRITINGS.</h4>
+
+<p>[Tr. Note: text too damaged to reconstruct.]</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+
+<h4>ALFRED TENNYSON'S WRITINGS.</h4>
+
+<p>[Tr. Note: text too damaged to reconstruct.]</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+
+<h4>[Tr. Note: THOM]AS DE QUINCEY'S WRITINGS.</h4>
+
+<p>[Tr. Note: text too damaged to reconstruct.]</p>
+
+<p>CONFESSIONS OF AN ENGLISH OPIUM-EATER AND [Tr. Note: missing text]<br>
+In one volume, 16mo, price 75 cents.</p>
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+
+<p>GREENWOOD LEAVES. A Collection of Stories and Letters.<br>
+In one volume, 12mo. New Edition, price $1.25.</p>
+
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+
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+With fine Engravings. Price 50 cents.</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
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+
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+In one volume, 16mo, price 75 cents.</p>
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+In one volume, 8vo, price [Transcriber's Note: missing text.].00.</p>
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+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Solitary of Juan Fernandez, or The
+Real Robinson Crusoe, by Joseph Xavier Saintine
+
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Solitary of Juan Fernandez,
+or The Real Robinson Crusoe, by Joseph Xavier Saintine
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Solitary of Juan Fernandez, or The Real Robinson Crusoe
+
+Author: Joseph Xavier Saintine
+
+Release Date: March 4, 2004 [EBook #11441]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SOLITARY OF JUAN FERNANDEZ ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Internet Archive; University of Florida, Children, Andrea
+Ball and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+THE SOLITARY OF JUAN FERNANDEZ;
+
+OR,
+
+THE REAL ROBINSON CRUSOE
+
+
+BY THE AUTHOR OF PICCIOLA.
+
+
+TRANSLATED FROM THE FRENCH
+BY
+ANNE T. WILBUR.
+
+
+
+MDCCCLI.
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+The Royal Salmon.--Pretty Kitty.--Captain Stradling.--William Dampier.
+--Reveries and Caprices of Miss Catherine.
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+Alexander Selkirk.--The College.--First Love.--Eight Years of Absence.
+--Maritime Combats.--Return and Departure.--The Swordfish.
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+The Tour of the World.--The Way to manufacture Negroes.--California.
+--The Eldorado.--Revolt of Selkirk.--The Log-Book.--Degradation.
+--A Free Shore.
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+Inspection of the Country.--Marimonda.--A City seen through the Fog.
+--The Sea every where.--Dialogue with a Toucan.--The first Shot.
+--Declaration of War.--Vengeance.--A Terrestrial Paradise.
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+Labors of the Colonist.--His Study.--Fishing.--Administration.
+--Selkirk Island.--The New Prometheus.--What is wanting to Happiness.
+--Encounter with Marimonda.--Monologue.
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+The Hammock.--Poison.--Success.--A Calm under the Tropics.--Invasion
+of the Island.--War and Plunder.--The Oasis.--The Spy-Glass.
+--Reconciliation.
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+A Tete-a-tete.--The Monkey's Goblet.--The Palace.--A Removal.--Winter
+under the Tropics--Plans for the Future.--Property.--A burst of
+Laughter.--Misfortune not far off.
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+A New Invasion.--Selkirk joyfully meets an ancient Enemy.--Combat on
+a Red Cedar.--A Mother and her Little Ones.--The Flock.--Fete in the
+Island; Pacific Combats, Diversions and Swings.--A Sail.--The Burning
+Wood.--Presentiments of Marimonda.
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+The Precipice.--A Dungeon in a Desert Island.--Resignation.--The passing
+Bird.--The browsing Goat.--The bending Tree.--Attempts at Deliverance.
+--Success.--Death of Marimonda.
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+Discouragement.--A Discovery.--A Retrospective Glance.--Project of
+Suicide.--The Last Shot.--The Sea Serpent.--The _Porro_.
+--A Message.--Another Solitary.
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+The Island of San Ambrosio.--Selkirk at last knows what Friendship is.
+--The Raft.--Visits to the Tomb of Marimonda.--The Departure.--The two
+Islands.--Shipwreck.--The Port of Safety.
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+The Island of Juan Fernandez.--Encounter in the Mountains.--Discussion.
+--A New Captivity.--Cannon-shot.--Dampier and Selkirk.--_Mas a Fuera_.
+--News of Stradling.--Confidences.--End of the History of the real
+Robinson Crusoe.--Nebuchadnezzar.
+
+CONCLUSION.
+
+NEW BOOKS AND NEW EDITIONS. (advertising section)
+
+
+
+
+THE SOLITARY OF JUAN FERNANDEZ,
+
+OR
+
+THE REAL ROBINSON CRUSOE.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+
+The Royal Salmon.--Pretty Kitty.--Captain Stradling.--William Dampier.
+--Reveries and Caprices of Miss Catherine.
+
+About the commencement of the last century, the little town of St.
+Andrew, the capital of the county of Fife, in Scotland, celebrated
+then for its University, was not less so for its Inn, the Royal
+Salmon, which, built in 1681 by a certain Andrew Felton, had descended
+as an inheritance to his only daughter, Catherine.
+
+This young lady, known throughout the neighborhood under the name of
+pretty Kitty, had contributed not a little, by her personal charms,
+to the success and popularity of the inn. In her early youth, she had
+been a lively and piquant brunette, with black, glossy hair, combed
+over a smooth and prominent forehead, and dark, brilliant eyes, a
+style of beauty much in vogue at that period. Though tall and slender
+in stature, she was, as our ancestors would have said, sufficiently
+_en bon point_. In fine, Kitty merited her surname, and more than one
+laird in the neighborhood, more than one great nobleman even,--thanks
+to the familiarity which reigned among the different classes in
+Scotland,--had figured occasionally among her customers, caring as
+little what people might say as did the brave Duke of Argyle, whom
+Walter Scott has shown as conversing familiarly with his snuff
+merchant.
+
+At present Catherine Felton is in her second youth. By a process
+common enough, but which at first appears contradictory, her
+attractions have diminished as they developed; her waist has grown
+thicker, the roses on her cheek assumed a deeper vermilion, her voice
+has acquired the rough and hoarse tone of her most faithful customers;
+the slender young girl is transformed into a virago. Fortunately for
+her, at the commencement of the eighteenth century, and especially
+in Scotland, reputations did not vanish as readily as in our days.
+Notwithstanding her increasing size and coarser voice, Catherine still
+remained pretty Kitty, especially in the eyes of those to whom she
+gave the largest credit.
+
+Besides, if from year to year her beauty waned, a circumstance which
+might tend to diminish the attractions of her establishment, like a
+prudent woman she took care that her stock of ale and usquebaugh
+should also from year to year improve in quality, to preserve the
+equilibrium.
+
+Undoubtedly the visits of lairds and great noblemen at her bar were
+less frequent than formerly, but all the trades-people in town, all
+the sailors in port, from the Gulf of Tay to the Gulf of Forth, still
+patronized the pretty landlady.
+
+Meanwhile Catherine was not yet married. The gossips of the town were
+surprised, because she was rich and suitors were plenty; they
+fluttered around her constantly in great numbers, especially when
+somewhat exhilarated with wine. When their gallantry became obtrusive,
+Kitty was careful not to grow angry; she would smile, and lift up her
+white hand, tolerably heavy, till the offenders came to order.
+Catherine possessed in the highest degree the art of restraining
+without discouraging them, and always so as to forward the interests
+of her establishment.
+
+To maintain the discipline of the tavern, nevertheless, the presence
+of a man was desirable; she understood this. Besides, the condition of
+an old maid did not seem to her at all inviting, and she did not care
+to wait the epoch of a third youth, before making a choice. But what
+would the unsuccessful candidates say? Would not this decision be at
+the risk of kindling a civil war, of provoking perhaps a general
+desertion? Then, too, accustomed as she was to command, the idea of
+giving herself a master alarmed her.
+
+She was vacillating amid all these perplexities, when a certain
+sailor, with cold and reserved manners, whose face bore the mark of
+a deep sabre cut, and who had for some time past, frequented her inn
+with great assiduity, without ever having addressed to her a single
+word, took her aside one fine morning and said:
+
+'Listen to me, Kate, and do not reply hastily. I came here, not like
+many others, attracted by your beautiful eyes, but because I wished
+to obtain recruits for an approaching voyage which I expected to
+undertake at my own risk and peril. I do not know how it has happened,
+but I now think less about sailing; I seem to be stumbling over roots.
+Right or wrong, I imagine that a good little wife, who will fill my
+glass while I am tranquilly smoking my pipe before a blazing fire, may
+have as many charms as the best brig in which one may sometimes perish
+with hunger and thirst. Right or wrong, I imagine to myself again that
+the prattle of two or three little monkeys around me, may be as
+agreeable as the sound of the wind howling through the masts, or of
+Spanish balls whistling about one's ears. All this, Kate, signifies
+that I mean to marry; and who do you suppose has put this pretty whim
+into my head? who, but yourself?'
+
+Catherine uttered an exclamation of surprise, perfectly sincere, for
+if she had expected a declaration, it was certainly not from this
+quarter.
+
+'Do not reply to me yet,' hastily resumed the sailor; 'he who
+pronounces his decree before he has heard the pleader and maturely
+reflected on the case, is a poor judge. To continue then. You are no
+longer a child, Kate, and I am no longer a young man; you are
+approaching thirty----'
+
+At these words the pretty Kitty made a gesture of surprise and of
+denial.
+
+'Do not reply to me!' repeated the pitiless sailor. 'You are thirty!
+I have already passed another barrier, but not long since. We are
+of suitable age for each other. The man should always have traversed
+the road before his companion. You are active and genteel; that does
+very well for women. You have always been an honest girl, that is
+better still. As for me, my skin is not so white as yours, but it is
+the fault of a tropic sun. It is possible that I may be a little
+disfigured by the scar on my cheek; but of this scar I am proud; I had
+the honor of receiving it, while boarding a vessel, from the hand of
+the celebrated Jean Bart, who, after having on that occasion lost a
+fine opportunity of being honorably killed, has just suffered himself
+to die of a stupid pleurisy; but it is not of him but of myself that
+we are now to speak. After having fought with Jean Bart, I have made a
+voyage with our not less celebrated William Dampier, whom I may dare
+call my friend. You may therefore understand, Kate, that if you have
+the reputation of an honest girl, I have that of a good sailor. The
+name of Captain Stradling is favorably known upon two oceans, and it
+will be to your credit, if ever, with your arm linked in mine, we walk
+as man and wife, through any port of England or Scotland. I have said.
+Now, look, reflect; if my proposition suits you, I will settle for
+life on _terra firma_, and bid adieu to the sea; if not, I resume my
+projected expedition, and it will be to you, Kate, that I shall say
+adieu.'
+
+Catherine opened her mouth to thank him, as was suitable, for his good
+intentions.
+
+'Do not reply to me!' interrupted he again; 'in three days I will come
+to receive your decision.'
+
+And he went out, leaving her amazed at having listened to so long a
+speech from one, who until then, seated motionless in a distant corner
+of the room, had always appeared to her the most rigid and silent of
+seamen.
+
+That very day Catherine has come to a decision concerning the captain;
+she thinks him ugly and disagreeable, coarse and ignorant; he has
+dared to tell her that she is thirty years old, and she will hardly be
+so at St. Valentine's Day, which is six weeks ahead, at least. Besides
+the scar which he has received from the celebrated Jean Bart, his
+countenance has no beauty to boast of: his face is long and pale, his
+temples are furrowed with wrinkles, and his lips thick and heavy; his
+eyebrows, at the top of his forehead, seem to be lost in his hair; his
+eyes are not mates, his nose is one-sided; his form is perhaps still
+worse; he walks after the fashion of a duck. Fie! can such a man be a
+suitable match for the rich landlady of the Royal Salmon, for the
+beautiful Kitty; for her who, among so many admirers and lovers, has
+had but the difficulty of a choice?
+
+The next day towards nightfall, Catherine, seated in her bar, in the
+large leathern arm-chair which served as her throne, with dreamy and
+downcast brow, and chin resting on her hand, was still thinking of
+Captain Stradling, but her ideas had assumed a different aspect from
+those of the evening before.
+
+She was saying to herself: 'If he has thick and heavy lips, it is
+because he is an Englishman; if he walks like a duck, it is because he
+is a sailor; if he has taken me to be thirty years old, that proves
+simply that he is a good physiognomist, and I shall have one painful
+avowal the less to make after marriage. As for his scar, he has a
+thousand reasons to be proud of it, and, upon close examination, it is
+not unbecoming. It would be very difficult for me to choose a husband,
+on account of the discontented suitors who will be left in the lurch;
+but I will relinquish my business, and that will put an end to all
+inconvenience. He is rich, so much for the profit; he is a captain, so
+much for the honor. Come, come, Mistress Stradling will have no reason
+to complain!'
+
+At this moment, Catherine Felton could meditate quite at her ease,
+without fear of being noticed; for the tobacco smoke, three times as
+dense and abundant as usual, enveloped her in an almost opaque cloud.
+There was this evening a grand _fete_ at the tavern of the Royal
+Salmon. The concourse of customers was immense, and this time, it was
+neither the beauty of the hostess, nor the quality of the liquors
+which had attracted them thither.
+
+The serving-men and lasses were going from table to table, multiplying
+themselves to pour out, not only the golden waves of strong beer and
+usquebaugh, but the purple waves of claret and port; all faces were
+smiling, all eyes sparkling, and in the midst of the huzzas and
+_vivas_, was heard, with triple applause, the name of William Dampier.
+
+This celebrated man, now a corsair, now a skilful seaman, who had just
+discovered so many unknown straits and shores, who had just made the
+tour of the world twice, in an age when the tour of the world did not
+pass, as at present, for a trifling matter; who had published, upon
+his return, a narrative full of novel facts and observations; this
+pitiless and intelligent pirate, who studied the coasts of Peru while
+he pillaged the cities along its shores, and meditated, in the midst
+of tempests, his learned theory of winds and tides, William Dampier,
+had landed, this very day at the little port of St. Andrew.
+
+At the intelligence of his arrival, the whole maritime population of
+the coast was in commotion; the society of the _Old Pilots_, with
+that of the _Sea Dogs_, had sent to him deputations, headed by the
+principal ship-owners in the town. Captain Stradling had not failed
+to be among them, happy at the opportunity of once more meeting and
+embracing his former friend. Speeches were made, as if to welcome
+an admiral, speeches in which were passed in review all his noble
+qualities and the great services rendered by him to the marine
+interest. To these Dampier replied with simplicity and conciseness,
+saying to the orators:
+
+'Gentlemen and dear comrades, you must be hoarse, let us drink!'
+
+This first trait of eccentricity could not fail to enlist universal
+applause.
+
+Commissioned by him to lead the column, Stradling could not do
+otherwise than to take the road to the Royal Salmon. It was on this
+occasion that he appeared there before the expiration of the three
+days: but he had not addressed a word to Catherine, scarcely turned
+his eyes towards her. Nevertheless the circumstances were favorable to
+his suit.
+
+Then a millionaire, William Dampier had immediately declared his
+intentions to treat at his own expense the whole company and even the
+whole town, if the town would do him the honor to drink with him.
+Catherine at once took him into favor. When she heard him praise his
+friend and companion, the brave Captain Stradling, she felt for the
+latter, not an emotion of tenderness, but a sentiment of respect and
+even of good-will. Dampier, excited by his audience, did not fail,
+like other conquerors by land and sea, to recount some of his great
+deeds. Among others, he recapitulated a certain affair in which he and
+his friend Stradling had captured a Spanish galleon, laden with
+piastres. From this moment the beautiful Kitty became more thoughtful,
+and began to see that the scar was becoming to the face of this good
+captain. After drinking, when Dampier, still escorted by his _fidus
+Achates_, came to settle his account with the hostess, he chucked her
+familiarly under the chin, as was his custom with landladies in the
+four quarters of the globe. From any one else, the proud Catherine
+would not have suffered such a liberty; to this, she replied only by a
+graceful reverence, and, while the hero and paymaster of the _fete_
+shook a rouleau of gold upon her counter, she said, hastily bending
+towards Stradling:
+
+'To-morrow!' accompanying this word with an expressive look and her
+most gracious smile.
+
+The enamored Stradling, always impassible, contented himself with
+replying:
+
+'It is well!'
+
+The day following, the third, the important day, that which Catherine
+already regarded as her day of betrothal, early in the morning, she
+dressed herself in her best attire, not doubting the impatience of the
+captain. Before noon, the latter entered the inn and went directly up
+to the landlady.
+
+She received him carelessly and coldly; she was nervous, she had not
+had time for reflection; she did not know what the captain wished; if
+he would let her alone for the present, by and by she would consider.
+
+'Boy! a new pipe and some ale!' exclaimed Stradling, addressing a
+waiter.
+
+And, perfectly calm in appearance, he sauntered to his accustomed
+place at the farther end of the bar-room. However, before leaving the
+Royal Salmon, approaching Catherine, he said:
+
+'Yesterday, by your voice and gesture you said, or almost said, yes;
+we sailors know the signals; to-day it is no, or almost no. Very well,
+I will wait; but reflect, my beauty, we are neither of us young enough
+to lose our time in this foolish game.'
+
+But what had thus unexpectedly changed, from white to black, the good
+intentions of Catherine in the captain's behalf? The presence of a
+young boy whom she had not seen for many years, and towards whom she
+had, until then, felt only a kindly indifference.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+
+Alexander Selkirk.--The College.--First Love.--Eight Years of Absence.
+--Maritime Combats.--Return and Departure.--The Swordfish.
+
+Alexander Selkirk,--the name of the principal personage in this
+narrative,--was born at Largo, in the county of Fife, not far from St.
+Andrew. Entered as a pupil in the university of the town, he at first
+distinguished himself by his aptitude and his intelligence, until the
+day when, hearing of the beauty of the landlady of the Royal Salmon,
+he was seized with an irresistible desire to see her: he saw her, and
+became violently enamored. It was one of those youthful passions,
+springing rather from the effervescence of the age, than from the
+merit of the object; one of those sudden ebullitions to which the
+young recluses of science are sometimes subject, from a prolonged
+compression of the natural and affectionate sentiments.
+
+From this moment, all the words in the Greek and Latin dictionaries,
+all the principles of natural philosophy, mathematics and history,
+suddenly taken by storm, whirled confusedly and pell-mell in the head
+of Selkirk, like the elements of the world in chaos, before the day of
+creation.
+
+His professors had predicted that at the annual exhibition he would
+obtain six great prizes; he obtained not even a premium.
+
+As a punishment, he was required to remain within the college grounds
+during the vacation. But its gates were not strong enough, nor its
+walls high enough to detain him.
+
+Condemned, for the crime of desertion, to a classic imprisonment, he
+was shut up in a cellar; he escaped through the window; in a garret;
+he descended by the roof.
+
+Then, pronounced incorrigible, he was expelled from the university.
+
+He left it joyous and happy, escaped from the tutor commissioned to
+conduct him to his father, and at last wholly free, his own master, he
+took lodgings in a cabin, not far from the Royal Salmon, and thought
+himself monarch of the universe.
+
+As soon as the doors of the inn were opened, he penetrated there with
+the earliest fogs of morning, with the first beams of day; in the
+evening he was the last to cross the threshold, after the extinction
+of the lights.
+
+All day long, seated at a little table opposite the bar, between a
+pipe and a pewter pot, he watched the movements of Kitty, and followed
+her with admiring eyes.
+
+Catherine was not slow to perceive this new passion; but she was
+accustomed to admiring eyes, and therefore paid but little heed to
+them. She was then at the age of twenty-two, in all the glory of her
+transient royalty; he, scarcely sixteen, was in her eyes a boy, a raw
+and awkward boy, like almost all the other students, and she contented
+herself with now and then bestowing a slight smile upon him, in common
+with her other customers.
+
+But this mechanical smile, this half extinguished spark, did but
+increase the flame, by kindling in the young man's soul a ray of hope.
+
+At this age, passion has not yet an oral language; it is in the heart,
+in the head especially, but not on the lips; one comprehends,
+experiences, dreams, writes of love in prose and verse, but does not
+talk of it. Selkirk had twenty times attempted to confess his
+affection to Catherine; he had as yet succeeded only in a few simple
+and hasty meteorological sentences, on the rain and fine weather. He
+therefore wrote.
+
+Unfortunately, Catherine could not easily read writing; she applied to
+him to interpret his letter. This was a hard task for the poor boy,
+who, with a tremulous and hesitating voice, saw himself forced to
+stammer through all that burning phraseology which seemed to congeal
+under the breath of the reader.
+
+The result however was that Catherine became his friend; she
+encouraged his confidence, and gave him good advice as an elder sister
+might have done. She even called him by the familiar name of Sandy,
+which was a good omen.
+
+Meanwhile his scanty resources became exhausted; he had no longer
+means to pay for the pot of ale which he consumed daily. The idea of
+asking credit of his beloved, of opening with her an account, which he
+might never have means to pay, was revolting to him. On the other
+hand, the thought of returning home, and asking pardon of his father,
+was not less repugnant to his feelings. He was endowed with one of
+those haughty and imperious natures which recognize their faults, not
+to repair them, but to make of them a starting point, or even a
+pedestal.
+
+He was rambling about the port, reflecting on his unfortunate
+situation, when he heard mention made of a ship ready to set sail at
+high tide, and which needed a reinforcement of cabin-boys and sailors.
+This was for him an inspiration; he did not hesitate, he hastened to
+engage. That very evening he had gained the open sea, beyond the Isle
+of May, and, with his eyes turned towards the Bay of St. Andrew, was
+attempting, in vain, to recognize among the lights which were yet
+burning in the city, the fortunate lantern which decorated the sacred
+door of the Royal Salmon.
+
+At present, Alexander Selkirk is twenty-four years old. He has become
+a genuine sailor, and he loves his profession; the sea is now his
+beautiful Kitty. Besides, it is long since he has troubled himself
+about his heart. It is empty, even of friendship, for, among his
+numerous companions, the proud young man has not found one worthy of
+him. After having served two years in the merchant marine, he has
+entered the navy. Thanks to the war kindled in Europe for the Spanish
+succession, he has for a long time cruised with the brave Admiral
+Rooke along the coasts of France; with him, he has fought against the
+Danish in the Baltic Sea, and in 1702, in the capacity of a master
+pilot, figured honorably in the expedition against Cadiz, and in the
+affair of Vigo. Finally, under the command of Admiral Dilkes, he has
+just taken part in the destruction of a French fleet.
+
+But all these expeditions, rather military than maritime, and
+circumscribed in the narrow circle of the seas of Europe, have not
+satisfied the vast desires of the ambitious sailor. He experiences an
+invincible thirst to apply his knowledge, to exercise his intelligence
+on a larger scale; he is impatient for a long voyage, a voyage of
+discovery.
+
+The terrific hurricane of the twenty-seventh of November, 1703, which
+drove the waves of the Thames even into Westminster, Hall, and covered
+London almost entirely with the fragments of broken vessels, appeared
+to Selkirk a favorable occasion for asking his dismissal. He easily
+obtained it. So many sailors had just been thrown out of employment by
+the hurricane.
+
+Once more, the undisciplined scholar found himself free and his own
+master! He profited by this to pay a visit to his birthplace in
+Scotland. His father was dead, but he had some business to regulate
+there.
+
+On reaching Largo he learned the arrival of William Dampier at St.
+Andrew. He set sail for that port immediately.
+
+'Ah!' said he on his way, 'if this brave captain should be about to
+undertake a voyage to the New World, and will let me accompany him, no
+matter in what capacity, all my wishes will be gratified. I thirst to
+see tattooed faces, other trees besides beeches, oaks and firs; other
+shores than those of the Baltic, Mediterranean and Atlantic. Who knows
+whether I may not aid him in the discovery of some new continent, some
+unknown island which shall bear my name!'
+
+And, cradled by the wave in the frail canoe that bore him, he dreamed
+of government, perhaps of royalty, in one of those archipelagoes which
+he imagined to exist in the bosom of the distant Southern seas, long
+afterwards explored by Cook, Bougainville and Vancouver.
+
+Once in port, he hastened to inquire for the dwelling occupied by
+Dampier. The latter was absent; he was in the harbor.
+
+While awaiting his return, our young sailor thought of his old friend
+Catherine, his pretty black-eyed Kitty, and directed his steps towards
+the inn.
+
+He found her already enthroned in her leathern arm-chair, her hair
+neatly braided, with two small curls on her temples; in a toilette
+which the early hour of the morning did not seem to authorize; but it
+was the famous third day, and she was awaiting Stradling.
+
+On seeing Selkirk enter, she exclaimed to the boy, pointing to the
+newly-arrived: 'A pot of ale!'
+
+'No,' cried the young man smiling; 'the ale which I once drank here
+was for me a philter full of bitterness; a glass of whiskey, if you
+please,----' and, pointing to the little table opposite the bar at
+which he was formerly accustomed to place himself, he said:
+
+'Serve me there; I will return to my old habits.'
+
+Catherine looked at him with astonishment.
+
+'Does not pretty Kate recognize me?' said he in a caressing tone,
+approaching her.
+
+'How! Is it possible! is it you, indeed, Sandy?'
+
+'Yes, Alexander Selkirk, formerly a fugitive from the University of
+St. Andrew; recently a master pilot in the royal marine; now, as ever,
+your very humble servant.'
+
+And they shook hands, and examined each other closely, but the
+impression on both sides was far from being the same.
+
+Catherine finds Selkirk much changed, but for the better; time and
+navigation have been favorable to him. He is no longer the raw student
+with embarrassed air, awkward manner, bony frame and dilapidated
+costume; but a stout young man, with a broad chest, active and
+graceful form; though his features are decidedly Scotch, they are
+handsome; his eyes, less brilliant than formerly, are animated with a
+more attractive thoughtfulness, and the naval uniform, which he still
+wears, sets off his person to advantage.
+
+On his part, Selkirk finds Catherine also much changed; the rosy
+complexion, the soft voice, the youthful look, the twenty-two years,
+all are gone. Her form has assumed a superabundant amplitude.
+
+They drop each other's hands and utter a sigh; he, of regret; she, of
+surprise.
+
+Both close their eyes, at the same time; she, with the fear of gazing
+too earnestly; he, to recall the being of his imagination.
+
+However this may be, she is not yet a woman to be despised by a
+sailor. He therefore prolongs his visit: they come to interrogations,
+to confidences.
+
+Catherine acquaints him with the situation of her little business
+affairs; her fortune is improving; she gives him an estimate of it in
+round numbers, as well as of the suitors she has rejected; but she
+does not mention Captain Stradling, whose arrival she yet fears every
+moment.
+
+Selkirk relates to her his campaigns, his combats against the French,
+against the Danish, the victorious attack of the English ships against
+the great boom of Vigo; but, when she asks him what motive has brought
+him back to St. Andrew, he replies boldly that he came to see her and
+no one else, and says not a word of Captain Dampier, whom he is even
+now impatient to meet.
+
+At last the old friends say adieu.
+
+Then the gallant sailor, with an apparent effort, goes away, not
+forgetting, however, to drink his glass of whiskey.
+
+And this is the reason why, on the third day, Catherine has the
+vapors; this is the reason why, notwithstanding her soft words of the
+evening before and her grand morning toilette, she receives so coldly
+the scarred adversary of the celebrated Jean Bart.
+
+During the whole of the week following, Stradling, Dampier and
+Selkirk, did not fail to meet at the Royal Salmon. Selkirk came to see
+Dampier; Dampier came to see Stradling; Stradling came to see
+Catherine Felton.
+
+The latter thought the young man already knew the two others, that he
+had sailed with them, and was not surprised at their intimacy.
+
+Sometimes Selkirk, leaving his companions in the midst of their
+bottles and glasses, would describe a tangent towards the counter, and
+come to converse with the pretty hostess. He no longer felt love for
+her, and notwithstanding this, perhaps for this very reason, he now
+talked eloquently.
+
+Kitty blushed, was embarrassed, and poor Captain Stradling, listening
+with all his ears to the narratives of his illustrious friend William
+Dampier, or pre-occupied with his pipe, lost in its cloud, saw
+nothing,--or seemed to see nothing.
+
+Nevertheless one evening, he went, in his turn, to lean on the
+counter:
+
+'Kate,' said he, 'when is our marriage to take place?'
+
+'Are you thinking of that still?' replied she, with an air of levity
+which would once have became her better; 'I hoped this fancy had
+passed out of your head.'
+
+'I may then set out on my voyage, Kate?'
+
+'Why not? We will talk of our plans on your return.'
+
+'But I am going to make the tour of the world, as well as my friend
+Dampier. Kate, it is the affair of three years!'
+
+'So much the better! it will give us both time for reflection.'
+
+'It is well!' replied the phlegmatic Englishman, and nothing on his
+polar face betokened an afterthought.
+
+The doors closed, the lights extinguished, Catherine retired to rest
+the happiest woman in the world. She said to herself: 'Alexander loves
+me, and has loved me for eight years! he deserves to be rewarded. He
+has less money than the other, it is a misfortune; but he has more
+youth and grace, that balances it. As to rank, a master pilot of
+twenty-four is as far advanced as a captain of forty. Between Selkirk
+and myself, if the wealth is on my side, on his will be gratitude and
+little attentions. At all events, I prefer a young husband who will
+whisper words of love in my ear, to amusing myself by pouring out
+drink for my lord and master, while he smokes his pipe, with his feet
+on the brands. Was it not thus that icicle, dressed in blue, called
+Stradling, talked to me of the pleasures of marriage? And what a name!
+But Mistress Selkirk!--that sounds well. In our Scotland, there is the
+county of Selkirk, the town of Selkirk; there is even a great nobleman
+of this name, who is something like minister to our Queen Anne, I
+believe. Who knows? we are perhaps of his family! As for walking about
+the port arm-in-arm with a captain, I am sure my very dear friends and
+neighbors would die with jealousy if I took, instead of this scarred
+captain, a young and handsome man. It is settled. I will marry
+Alexander; to-morrow I will myself announce it to him. I hope he will
+not die of joy!'
+
+On the morrow she attired herself as on the day of Selkirk's return,
+in her beautiful dress of cloth and silk, with the two little curls
+upon her temples. She thus waited a great part of the day. At last,
+about four o'clock, Selkirk arrives in haste, his face beaming with
+joy, and a gleam of triumph in his eye.
+
+'Has he then,' thought Catherine, 'a presentiment of the happiness in
+store for him?'
+
+'Congratulate me, pretty Kitty,' said the young man, almost out of
+breath; 'I am appointed mate of the brig Swordfish, which I am to join
+at Dunbar.'
+
+'How! you are going?'
+
+'In an hour.'
+
+'For a long time?'
+
+'For three years at least. In a fortnight we set sail for the East
+Indies. It will be a great commercial voyage and a voyage of
+discovery. Unfortunately William Dampier does not accompany us; but he
+furnishes funds to the brave Captain Stradling.'
+
+'Stradling!'
+
+'Yes, it is he who has just engaged me, and with whom I am to sail.
+Our agreement is signed,--I am mate! I am going to explore the New
+World! Ah! I would not exchange my fate for that of a king. But time
+presses; adieu, Kitty, till I see you again!'
+
+'Three years!' murmured Catherine.
+
+And her curls grew straight beneath the cold perspiration that covered
+her forehead.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+
+The Tour of the World.--The Way to manufacture Negroes--California.
+--The Eldorado.--Revolt of Selkirk.--The Log-Book.--Degradation.
+--A Free Shore.
+
+The Swordfish, well provisioned, even with guns and ammunition, left
+Dunbar one morning with a fresh breeze, sailed down the North Sea,
+passed Ireland, France and Spain, the Azores, Canaries, and Cape Verd
+Islands on the coast of Africa, and, after having stopped for a short
+time in the harbors of Guinea and Congo, doubled the Cape of Good
+Hope, amid the traditional tempest.
+
+Entering the Indian Ocean, and passing through the Straits of Sunda,
+she touched at Borneo, and at Java, reached the Southern Sea by the
+Gulf of Siam, passed the Philippine Isles, then, through the vast
+regions of the Pacific Ocean, pursued the route which had been marked
+out by the exploring ship of William Dampier in 1686. Like that, the
+Swordfish remained a few days at the Island of St. Pierre, before
+launching into that immensity where, during nearly two months, wave
+only succeeded to wave; at last she reached the coasts of South
+America, and cast anchor in the Gulf of California.
+
+This gigantic voyage, which seemed as if it must have been attempted
+under the inspiration of science and with the hope of the most
+important discoveries, had been undertaken by Stradling with no object
+but of traffic and even of rapine. These had been the great ends of
+most of the bold enterprises which had preceded. The Spanish and
+Portuguese, in their discoveries of new continents, had thought less
+of glory than of riches; they had conquered the New World only to
+pillage it; the vanquished who escaped extermination, were forced to
+dig their native soil, not to render it more fruitful, but to procure
+from it, for the profit of the vanquisher, the gold it might contain.
+Among the European nations, those who had had no part in the conquest
+now sought to share the spoils. For this the least pretext of war or
+commerce sufficed.
+
+Stradling availed himself of both these pretences; when he touched at
+the coasts of Guinea and Congo, it was to obtain negroes whom he
+expected to sell in America. At Borneo, the opportunity presented
+itself for an advantageous disposal of the greater part of his black
+merchandize; as he was a man of resources and not at all scrupulous,
+he soon found means to replace them.
+
+In the Straits of Sunda, several barques, manned by negroes and
+Malays, had become entangled in the masses of seaweed which are every
+where floating on the surface of the wave; Stradling encountered them,
+made the rowers enter his ship, and obligingly took the barques in
+tow, to extricate them from their difficulty. But those who ascended
+the side of the Swordfish, descended only to be sold in their turn.
+
+Although he had received an education superior to that of his
+companions, Selkirk shared in the prejudices of his times; he had
+therefore found nothing objectionable in seeing his captain exchange
+at Congo little mirrors, a few glass beads, half a dozen useless guns,
+and some gallons of brandy, for men still young and vigorous, torn
+from their country and their families. Their skin was of another
+color, their heads woolly; this was a profitable traffic, recognized
+by governments; but when he saw Stradling seize the property of others
+to refill his empty hold, he could not control his indignation and
+boldly expressed it:
+
+'It is for their salvation,' replied the captain, without emotion; 'we
+will make Christians of them.'
+
+On approaching the Vermilion Sea, a deep gulf which separates
+California from the American continent, and makes it almost an island,
+the Malays were rubbed with a mixture of tar and dragon's blood,
+dissolved in a caustic oil, to give to their olive skins a deeper
+shade, and their flat noses and silky hair making them pass for Yolof
+negroes, they were exchanged at Cape St. Lucas, along with the rest,
+for pearls and native productions.
+
+The young mate thought this proceeding not less mean and dishonorable
+than the first; he made new observations.
+
+'Nothing now remains to be done, captain,' said he, 'but to shave and
+besmear with tar the monkey you have just bought, and to include it
+among your new race of negroes.'
+
+This time, the captain looked at him askance, and shrugged his
+shoulders without replying.
+
+The storm was beginning to growl in the distance.
+
+It was not without a secret object that, in his course through the
+Southern Sea, Stradling had first of all aimed at California.
+
+He devoted an entire month to cruising along both shores of this
+almost island, and penetrating all the bays of the Vermilion Sea; he
+hoped to find there a passage to an unknown land, then predicted and
+coveted by all navigators. What was this land? The _Eldorado_!
+
+Although I would hasten over these details of the voyage to arrive at
+the more important events of this history; now that the recent
+discovery of the immense mines of gold buried beneath the hills of
+California has aroused the entire world, that the name alone of
+_Sacramento_ seems to fill with gold the mouth which pronounces it,
+there is a curious fact, perhaps entirely unknown, which I cannot pass
+over in silence.
+
+After the middle of the sixteenth century, and long before the
+seventeenth, a vague rumor, a confused tradition, had located, in the
+neighborhood of the Vermilion Sea, a famed land, whose rivers rolled
+over gold, and whose mountains rested on golden foundations; the
+treasures of Mexico and Peru were nothing in comparison with those
+which were to be gathered there. An ingot of native gold was talked
+of, of a _pepite_ or eighty pounds weight.
+
+It was a grape from the promised land.
+
+This marvellous country had been named, in advance, _Eldorado_.
+
+Among the bold Argonauts of these two centuries, there was a contest
+as to who should first raise his flag over this new Colchis, defended,
+it was said, by the Apaches, a terrible, sanguinary and cannibal race,
+whom Cortez himself could not subdue. This land of gold some had
+located in New Biscay or New Mexico; others, in the pretended kingdoms
+of Sonora and Quivira; then, after several ineffectual attempts, the
+possibility of reaching it was denied; learned men, from the various
+academies of Europe, proved that the _Eldorado_ was not a country, but
+a dream; on this subject the Old World laughed at the New; the
+Argonauts became discouraged, and during a century the subject was
+named only to be ridiculed.
+
+And yet, in spite of sceptics and scoffers, the _Eldorado_ existed. It
+existed where tradition had placed it, on the shores of this Vermilion
+Sea, now the Gulf of California. For once, popular opinion had the
+advantage over scientific dissertations and philosophic denials;
+there, where, according to the Dictionary of Alcedo, nothing had been
+discovered but mines of pewter! where Jacques Baegert had indeed
+acknowledged the presence of gold, but _in meagre veins_; where Raynal
+had named as curiosities only fishes and pearls, declaring, in
+California, _the sea richer than the land_; where in our own times M.
+Humboldt discovered nothing but cylindrical cacti, on a sandy soil,
+remained buried, as a deposit for future ages, this treasure of the
+world, which seemed to be waiting in order to leave its native soil,
+the moment of falling into the hands of a commercial and industrious
+people, that of the United States.
+
+This _Eldorado_, Stradling sought in vain; he therefore decided to
+pursue his route along the coast of Mexico, now under the French flag,
+when he found an opportunity for traffic with the natives, colonists
+or savages; now under the English flag, when he wished to exercise his
+trade of corsair, an easy profession, for since the disaster of Vigo,
+the Spanish had abandoned their transatlantic possessions to
+themselves.
+
+The Spanish soldiery of America then found themselves, in the presence
+of European adventurers, in that state of pusillanimous inferiority in
+which had been, at the period of the conquest, the subjects of the
+Incas and Montezuma before the soldiers of Cortez and Pizarro. The
+time was not already far passed, when a few bands of freebooters, from
+France, England and Holland, had well nigh wrested from his Majesty,
+the King of Spain and the Indies, the most extensive and wealthy of
+his twenty-two hereditary kingdoms.
+
+Stradling was following in the footsteps of these freebooters.
+
+Recently, two little cities on the coast had been put under
+contribution for the supplies of the Swordfish; there had been
+resistance, a threatened attack, a parley, and capitulation; in this
+affair, the young mate had nobly distinguished himself both as a
+combatant and a negotiator, and yet the captain had not deigned to
+give him a share in his distribution of compliments.
+
+Selkirk felt an irritation the more lively that this shore life began
+to be irksome. Not that his conscience disturbed him any more than in
+the treatment of the blacks; he thought it as honorable to war with
+the Spaniards in the New World, as to be beaten by them in the Old;
+but he compared his present chief, Captain Stradling, with his former
+commander, the noble and brave Admiral Rooke; the parallel extended in
+his mind to his old companions in the royal navy, all so frank, so
+gay, so loyal,--among whom he had yet never found a friend,--and his
+new companions of to-day, recruited for the most part in the marshy
+lowlands of the merchant marine of Scotland; his thoughts became
+overshadowed, and his desires for independence, which dated from his
+college life, returned in full force.
+
+As much as his duties permitted, he loved to isolate himself from all;
+when he could remain some time alone in his cabin, or gaze upon the
+sea from a retired corner of the deck and watch the ploughing of the
+vessel, then only he was happy.
+
+As if to increase his uneasiness, Stradling became daily more severe
+and more exacting towards his chief officer; he imposed upon him rude
+labors foreign to his station. It seemed as if he were determined to
+drive him to desperation.
+
+He succeeded.
+
+Selkirk protested against such treatment, and recapitulated his
+subjects of complaint. The other paid no more attention than he would
+have done to the buzzing of a fly.
+
+Irritated by this outrageous impassibility, the young man declared
+that there should no longer be any thing in common between them, and
+that, whatever fate might await him, he demanded to be set on shore.
+
+Stradling touched his forehead:
+
+'That is a good idea,' said he, and he turned away.
+
+The next day, they reached the Isthmus of Panama; the persevering
+Selkirk returned to the charge: 'The moment is favorable for ridding
+yourself of me, and me of you,' said he to the captain; 'let the boat
+convey me to the shore; I will cross the Isthmus, reach the Gulf of
+Darien, the North Sea, and return to Scotland, even before the
+Swordfish!'
+
+This time the honest corsair listened attentively, then shaking his
+head and winking his eye, with the smile of a hungry vampire, replied:
+
+'You are then in great haste to be married, comrade.'
+
+It was the first word he had addressed to him relative to Catherine
+during this long voyage, and this word Selkirk had not even
+understood.
+
+They were about passing Panama: the vessel continuing her voyage,
+Selkirk interposed his authority, ordered the men to put about, take
+in sail and approach the shore.
+
+This Stradling prohibited, uttered a formidable oath, and commanded
+the young man to bring the log-book. When it was brought, he made the
+following entry:
+
+'To-day, Sept. 24th, 1704, Alexander Selkirk, mate of this vessel,
+having mutinied and attempted to desert to the enemy, we have deprived
+him of his title and his office; in case of obstinacy we shall hang
+him to the yard-arm.'
+
+And he read the sentence to the offender.
+
+From this day, the rebel saw himself compelled to serve in the
+Swordfish as a simple sailor, and his subordinates of yesterday,
+to-day his equals, indemnified themselves for the authority he had
+exercised over them, which did not cure him of that native contempt he
+had always felt for mankind.
+
+A month passed away thus, during which the Swordfish several times
+touched the shores of Peru, now to renew her supplies of provisions
+and water, now to exchange with the Indians, nails, hatchets, knives,
+and necklaces of beads, for gold dust, furs, and garments trimmed with
+colored feathers.
+
+During one of these pauses, Selkirk, left on the ship, accosted the
+captain once more. He knew that the remains of some bands of
+freebooters were colonized there, leading a peaceful and agricultural
+life; this fact was known to all. At Coquimbo in Chili, some English
+and Dutch pirates had formed a settlement of this kind, now in the
+full tide of prosperity. Selkirk, who, during an entire month, had not
+spoken to the captain, now demanded, in a voice which he attempted to
+render calm and almost supplicating, to be landed at Coquimbo, from
+which they were only a few days sail.
+
+'You will not this time accuse me of wishing to desert to the enemy;
+they are the English, Scotch, Dutch, our countrymen and allies whom I
+wish to join! Do you still suspect me? Well, do not content yourself
+with setting me on shore; place me in the hands of the chief men of
+the settlement. Will that suit you?'
+
+Stradling winked significantly; but this was all.
+
+'Ah!' resumed the young man with increasing emotion, 'do not think to
+detain me longer on board, to crush me beneath this humiliation! I
+consented to serve under your orders as mate, and you have made me the
+lowest of your sailors; this you had no right to do.'
+
+Stradling took his glass and directed it towards the shore, where his
+people were engaged in trafficking their beads and hardware.
+
+Raising his head and folding his arms:
+
+'Captain,' pursued Selkirk with vehemence, 'some day or other we shall
+return to England, where the laws protect all; there, I shall have the
+right of complaint, and Queen Anne loves to render justice; beware!'
+
+Stradling, still spying, began to whistle _God save the Queen_; then
+he called his monkey and made it gambol before him.
+
+'I will depart, I will free myself from your presence, and that of
+your worthy companions; I will do so at all events, do you
+understand!' exclaimed Selkirk exasperated, 'I will not endure your
+infamous treatment another week! If you refuse to consent to my
+demand, I will leave without your permission; were the vessel twenty
+miles from the land, and were I to perish twenty times on the way, I
+will attempt to swim ashore. Will you land me at Coquimbo, yes or no?
+Reply!'
+
+By way of reply, Stradling ordered him to be confined in the hold.
+
+Poor Selkirk! Ah! if pretty Kitty, if the beautiful landlady of the
+Royal Salmon could know all thou hast endured for her sake, how many
+tears would her fine eyes shed over thy fate! But who knows whether
+she will ever hear of thee? Who can tell whether any human being will
+learn the sufferings in reserve for thee?
+
+Poor Selkirk! you who painted to yourself so smiling a picture of this
+grand voyage to America; who hoped to leave, like Dampier, your name
+to some strait, some newly discovered island; you who dreamed of
+scientific walks in vast prairies and under the arches of virgin
+forests, you have shared only in the career of a trafficker and a
+pirate; of this New World, full of marvellous sights, you have seen
+only the shore, the fringe of the mantle, the margin of this last work
+of God!
+
+Poor Selkirk, must you then return to your cold and foggy Scotland,
+without having contemplated at your ease, beneath the brilliant sun of
+the tropics, one of those Edens overshadowed by the luxuriant verdure
+of palm-trees, bananas, mimosas and gigantic ferns? In your country,
+the bark of the trees is clad with lichens and mosses, and the
+parasite mistletoe suspends itself to the branches, more as a burden
+than as an ornament; here, numerous families of the orchis, with their
+singular forms, showy and variegated blossoms, climb along the knotty
+stems of the tall monarchs of the forests; from their feet spring up,
+as if to enlace them with a magic network, the brilliant passiflora,
+the vanilla with its intoxicating perfume, the banisteria whose roots
+seem to have dived into mines of gold and borrowed from thence the
+color of its petals! Hither the birds of Paradise and Brazilian
+parrots come to build their nests; here the bluebird and the
+purple-necked wood-pigeon coo and sing; here, like swarms of bees,
+thousands of humming-birds of mingled emerald and sapphire, warble and
+glitter as they suck the nectar from the flowers. This was what you
+hoped to contemplate, poor Selkirk! and this joy, like many others, is
+henceforth forbidden.
+
+In his floating prison, in his submarine cell, his only employment is
+to listen to the dashing of the waves against the ship, or now and
+then to catch a glimpse of the blue sky through the hatchways.
+
+What cares he? He does not complain; he has learned to abhor mankind,
+and he loves to be alone, in company with himself and his own
+thoughts.
+
+Several days passed in this manner.
+
+One morning he felt the brig slacken its speed; the dashing of the
+wave against the prow diminished, and the Swordfish, suddenly furling
+its sails, after having slightly rocked hither and thither, stopped.
+They had just cast anchor. Where? he knows not.
+
+Soon he hears the rattling of the rope-ladder which serves as a
+stairway to those above who would communicate with his prison. They
+come, on the part of the captain, to seek him.
+
+He finds the latter seated on the deck, surrounded by his principal
+men.
+
+'Young man,' said Stradling, 'I have been obliged to be severe for the
+sake of an example; but you have been sufficiently punished by the
+time you have passed below there,'--and he pointed to the ship's hold.
+'Now, your wish shall be granted. You shall be allowed to land.'
+
+And the rare smile which sometimes hovered on his lips, stole over his
+rigid face.
+
+'So much the better,' replied Selkirk, laconically.
+
+The boat was let down; he entered it, and ten minutes afterwards
+disembarked on a green shore, where the waves, as they broke upon it,
+seemed to murmur softly in his ear the word, _liberty_!
+
+The boat immediately rejoined the ship, which set sail, coasted along
+Chili and Patagonia, and re-entered the Northern Sea by the Straits of
+Magellan.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+
+Inspection of the Country.--Marimonda.--A City seen through the Fog.
+--The Sea every where.--Dialogue with a Toucan.--The first Shot.
+--Declaration of War.--Vengeance.--A Terrestrial Paradise.
+
+While watching the departure of the Swordfish, Alexander Selkirk felt
+the same sensation as on that day when he had seen the doors of the
+college of St. Andrew thrown open for his exit; once more he was his
+own master. Now, however, it is at some thousands of miles from his
+country that he must reap the benefits of his independence, and this
+idea embitters his emotions of joy.
+
+But is he not about to find countrymen at Coquimbo? And if their
+society should be unpleasing?--if their habits, their mode of life,
+their persons, should become objects of antipathy to the misanthropic
+Selkirk, as it is but natural to fear? Well! after all, no engagement
+binds him to them; he will be always free to enter, in the capacity of
+a sailor, the first vessel which may leave for Europe.
+
+Determined to act as shall seem good to him,--to make some excursions
+into the interior of the continent, if an opportunity presents itself,
+and he will know how to make one,--he casts a first glance at the land
+of his adoption.
+
+Before him extends a vast shore, studded with groves of trees, covered
+with fine turf and little flowers joyfully unfolding their petals to
+the sun: two streams, having their source at the very base of the
+opposite hills, after having meandered around this immense lawn, unite
+almost at his feet.
+
+He bends down to one of these streams, fills the hollow of his hand
+with water, and tastes it, as a libation, and as a toast to the
+generous land which has just received him; the water is excellent; he
+plucks a flower, and continues his inspection.
+
+On his left rise high mountains, terraced and verdant, excepting at
+their summits, on one of which he perceives a goat, with long horns,
+stationed there immovable like a sentinel, and whose delicate profile
+is clearly defined on the azure of the sky. On the side towards the
+sea, the mountains, bending their gray and naked heads, resemble stone
+giants, watching the movements of the wave which dashes at their feet.
+
+On his right, where the land declines, he sees little valleys linked
+together with charming undulations; but on the mountains at his left,
+in the valleys at his right, among the hills in the distance, his eye
+vainly seeks the vestige of a human habitation.
+
+He sets out in search of one. The boat from which he landed has
+deposited on the shore his effects--his arms, his nautical
+instruments, his charts, a Bible, and provisions of various kinds.
+Notwithstanding his piratical sentiments, the captain of the Swordfish
+has not designed to precede exile by confiscation. Selkirk takes his
+gun, his gourd; but, unable to carry all his riches, he conceals them
+behind a stony thicket, well defended by the darts of the cactus, and
+the sword-like leaves of the aloe, not caring to have the first comer
+seize them as his booty.
+
+As he is occupied with this duty, he feels himself suddenly clasped by
+two long hairy arms; he turns his head, it is Marimonda, the captain's
+monkey, a female of the largest species.
+
+How came she there? Selkirk does not know.
+
+Disgusted with her sea-voyages, with the intelligence natural to her
+race, Marimonda has undoubtedly profited by the moment of the boat's
+leaving the ship to conceal herself in it and gain the shore along
+with the prisoner, which she might easily have done, unseen by all,
+during the transporting of the effects and provisions.
+
+However this may be, Selkirk begins by freeing himself from her grasp,
+repulses the monkey and sets out: but the latter perseveres in
+following, and after having, by her most graceful grimaces, sought to
+conciliate him, marches beside him. Not caring to arrive at Coquimbo
+escorted by such a companion, which would give him in a city the
+appearance of a mountebank and showman of monkeys, Selkirk, this time,
+repulses her rudely, not with his hand, but with the butt of his gun.
+
+Struck in the breast by this home thrust, the poor monkey stops, rolls
+up her eyes, moves her lips, and growling confusedly her complaints
+and reproaches, crouches beneath a tuft of the sapota, leaving the man
+to pursue his way alone.
+
+Selkirk has at first directed his steps toward the valleys; after
+having traversed these, he arrives at the margin of a sandy plain, and
+as far as the eye can reach, perceives neither city, village, house,
+tent nor hut, nothing which can indicate the presence of inhabitants.
+
+Nevertheless, a little grove which he has just traversed, seems to
+have recently, in its principal path, passed under the shears of a
+gardener; the foliage presents a certain symmetry; fragments of
+branches are strewed, on the ground, which seem to have been freshly
+cut; he even thinks he sees vestiges of the passage of a flock. On the
+lawn of the shore, he has seen, and still sees around him, trees with
+tufted heads, which must owe this form to art. He continues his
+researches.
+
+At last, in the distance, beneath a fog which is just beginning to
+dissolve, he perceives a vast mass of white and red houses, some with
+terraced roofs, others covered with thatch; through the humid veil
+which envelopes them, he sees the glistening of the glass in the
+windows; already he hears at his feet the confused noise of cities;
+murmuring voices reply; the measured sound of hammers and of mills
+even reaches his ear.
+
+It is Coquimbo! he cannot doubt it, and shortening his route by a path
+across the hill, he quickens his pace.
+
+Meanwhile an east wind arises, the fog disappears; when he thinks he
+has reached the suburbs of the city, Selkirk sees before him only an
+irregular assemblage of calcareous stones, crowned with dry herbs, or
+reddish, arid, angular rocks, flattened at their summits, tessellated
+with fragments of silex and mica, on which the sun is just pouring his
+rays; a company of goats, which the mist had condemned to a momentary
+repose, are bounding here and there, startling flocks of clamorous
+black-birds and plaintive sea-gulls; the fearless and yellow-crested
+woodpeckers alone do not stir, but continue to hammer with their sharp
+beaks at some old stunted trees.
+
+The disenchantment is painful for our sailor; the fog has deceived him
+with the semblance of a city, as it has more than once deluded us in
+the midst of plains and woods, by the appearance of an ocean with its
+white waves, its great capes, its bold shores, and its vessels at
+anchor.
+
+Perhaps Coquimbo is still beyond. Fearing to lose himself if he
+ventures farther in an unknown land, he resolves to explore it first
+by a look. Returning to the shore upon which he had landed, he scales
+the mountains on the north, reaches the first platform, and from
+thence seeks to discover some indications of a city. Nothing! he still
+ascends, the circle enlarges around him, but with no better result.
+Summoning all his courage, through a thousand difficulties, climbing,
+drawing himself up by the arid and abrupt rocks, piled one upon
+another, he at last attains a culminating point of the mountain. He
+can now embrace with his eye an immense horizon, but this immense
+horizon is the sea! On his right, on his left, before him, behind him,
+every where the sea!
+
+He is not on the continent, but on an island.
+
+This evening, exhausted with fatigue, he lies down in a grotto at the
+foot of the mountain, where he passes a night full of agitation and
+anxiety.
+
+Rising with the sun, his first care, the next morning, is to examine
+his riches and his provisions. He returns to the thicket of cactus and
+aloes.
+
+Besides two guns, two hatchets, a knife, an iron pot, a Bible and
+nautical instruments, all articles belonging to him, he finds there a
+quantity of nails, a large fragment of a sail, several horns of powder
+and shot; a bag of ship biscuit, a salted quarter of pork, a little
+cask of pickled fish, and a dozen cocoa-nuts.
+
+The night before, at sight of these articles, he had supposed a
+sentiment of justice and humanity to exist in the soul of the corsair.
+Just now, he had said to himself that Stradling, deceived by a false
+reckoning of latitude, had landed him on an island, perhaps believing
+it to be a projecting shore of the continent. Now, the abundance of
+his supplies, this biscuit, these salt provisions, these fruits of the
+cocoa, all valueless if he had really landed at Coquimbo, lead him to
+suspect that the vindictive Englishman has designedly chosen the place
+of his exile.
+
+But this exile, is it complete isolation? Is the island inhabited or
+deserted? If it is inhabited, as he still believes he has reason to
+suppose, by whom is it so?
+
+That he may obtain a reply to this double question, he resolves to
+traverse the country in its whole extent. At the very commencement of
+his journey, the immobility of a bird suffices to give to the doubt,
+on which his thoughts vacillate, the appearance almost of a certainty.
+
+This bird is a toucan, of brilliant plumage and monstrous beak.
+Selkirk passes near it, with his eyes fixed on the branch which serves
+as a perch, and the toucan, without stirring, looks at him with a
+species of calm and placid astonishment.
+
+Selkirk stops; he comprehends the mute language of the bird.
+
+'You do not know then what a man is! He is the enemy of every creature
+to whom God has given life, the enemy even of his kind! You have then
+never been threatened by the arms that I bear!'
+
+And with the palm of his hand, striking the butt of his gun, he made
+the hammer click.
+
+At the sound of his voice, as at the noise of the hammer, the bird
+raised its head, manifesting new and redoubled surprise, but without
+any other movement. It seemed to think that the man and the gun were
+one, and that its strange interlocutor possessed two different voices.
+
+At last, by way of reply, it uttered a few shrill and prolonged cries,
+accompanied by the rattling of its two horny mandibles. After which,
+acting the great nobleman, cutting short the audience he has deigned
+to grant, the toucan is silent, turns its head, proudly raises one of
+its wings and busies itself in smoothing, with the point of its large
+beak, its beautiful greenish feathers, variegated with purple.
+
+At some distance from this spot, still following the margin of a
+wooded hill, Selkirk sees other birds, some in their nests, others
+warbling in the shade; all manifesting no more alarm at his presence
+than did the toucan. Crested orioles, hooded bullfinches, alight to
+pick up little grains or insects almost at his feet; humming-birds,
+variegated cotingas, red manaquins flutter before him in the sunbeams,
+pursuing invisible flies; little wood-peckers, black or green, hop
+around the trunks of the trees, stopping a moment to see him pass and
+then resuming their spiral ascent.
+
+The confidence which he inspires is not confined to these winged
+people. Upon a hillock of turf he perceives an animal, with pointed
+nose, brown fur enamelled with red spots, and of the size of a hare;
+seated on its hind paws, longer than those in front, it uses these,
+after the manner of squirrels, to carry to its mouth some nuts of the
+maripa, which constitute its breakfast. It is an agouti,[1] a mother,
+her little ones are near. At sight of the stranger they run to her,
+but quickly re-assured, quietly finish their morning repast.
+
+Farther on, coatis,[2] with short ears, and long tails; companies of
+little Guinea pigs; armadillos, a species of hedge-hog without the
+quills, but covered with an armor of scales, more compact and
+impervious than that of the ancient knights of the Middle Ages,
+arrange themselves along the line of his route, as if to pass him in
+review.
+
+[Footnote 1: _Agouti_. An animal of the bigness of a rabbit, with
+bright red hair, and a little tail without hair. He has but two teeth
+in each jaw; holds his meat in his forepaws like a squirrel, and has a
+very remarkable cry: when he is angry, his hair stands on end, and he
+strikes the earth with his hind feet; and when chased, he flies to a
+hollow tree, whence he is expelled by smoke.--_Trevoux_.]
+
+[Footnote 2: The _coati_ is a native of Brazil, not unlike the racoon
+in the general form of the body, and, like that animal, it frequently
+sits up on the hinder legs, and in this position carries its food to
+its mouth. If left at liberty in a state of tameness, it will pursue
+poultry, and destroy every living thing that it has strength to
+conquer. When it sleeps it rolls itself into a lump, and remains
+immovable for fifteen hours together. His eyes are small, but full of
+life; and when domesticated, this creature is very playful and
+amusing. A great peculiarity belonging to this animal is the length of
+his snout, which resembles in some particulars the trunk of the
+elephant, as it is movable in every direction. The ears are round, and
+like those of a rat; the forefeet have five toes each. The hair is
+short and rough on the back, and of a blackish color; the tail is
+marked with rings of black, like the wild cat; the rest of the animal
+is a mixture of black and red.]
+
+Alas! this general quiet does but deepen in the heart of Selkirk the
+certainty of his isolation.
+
+Nevertheless, yesterday, said he to himself, in this thick wood, did I
+not see alleys trimmed with the shears, trees shaped by the
+pruning-knife?
+
+And the little grove which he visited the evening previous, at that
+instant presents itself before him. He examines the trees; they are
+myrtles of various heights; but among their glossy branches, he in
+vain seeks traces of the pruning-knife or shears; nature alone has
+thus disposed in spheroids or umbels the extremities of this rich
+vegetation.
+
+The same disappointment awaits him in the underwood. The only pruners
+have been goats, or other animals, daintily cropping the green shoots.
+
+Then only does the complete and terrible certainty of his disaster
+fall on him and crush him. Behold him blotted from the number of men,
+perhaps condemned to die of misery and of hunger! more securely
+imprisoned, more entirely forgotten by the world than the most
+hardened criminal plunged in the lowest depths of the Bastile! He at
+least, has a jailor! Miserable Stradling!
+
+At this moment he hears a noise above his head: it is the monkey.
+
+Marimonda, on her side, has also inspected the island; she has already
+tasted its productions. Whether she is satisfied with her discoveries,
+or whether forgiveness and forgetfulness of injuries are natural to
+her, on perceiving her old companion, wagging her head in token of
+good-will, she descends towards him from the tree on which she is
+perched.
+
+But Marimonda is the captain's monkey; she has been his property, his
+favorite, his flatterer! In the disposition of mind in which Selkirk
+finds himself, he does not need these thoughts to make him pitiless.
+Marimonda reminds him of Stradling; the monkey shall pay for the man!
+
+He lowers his gun, and fires. The monkey has seen the movement and
+divined his intentions; she has only time to retreat behind her tree,
+which does not prevent her receiving in her side a part of the charge.
+
+This detonation of fire-arms, the first perhaps which has resounded in
+this corner of the earth since the creation of the world, as it is
+prolonged from echo to echo, even to the highest mountains, awakens in
+every part of the island as it were a groan of distress. Instinct,
+that sublime prescience, has revealed to all that a great peril has
+just been born.
+
+To the cries of affright from birds of every species, to the uneasy
+and distant bleating of the goats, succeeds a plaintive moaning, like
+the voice of a wailing infant.
+
+It is Marimonda lamenting over her wound.
+
+At nightfall, after an entire day of walks and explorations, Selkirk
+is returning to his grotto on the shore, when he sees a stone fall at
+his feet, then another.
+
+While he, astonished, is seeking to divine the direction from which
+this invisible battery plays, a little date-stone hits him on the
+cheek. He immediately hears as it were a joyous whistling in the
+foliage, which is agitated at his right, and sees Marimonda leaping
+from tree to tree, using for this movement her feet, her tail, and one
+hand; for she holds the other to her side. It is a compress on her
+wound.
+
+War is already in the island! Selkirk has a declared enemy here! And
+this island, is it deserted? He has just traversed it in every
+direction without seeing any thing which betokens the existence of a
+human being.
+
+His disaster is then complete; henceforth not a doubt of it can exist.
+And yet his forehead wears rather the character of hope and fortitude
+than of discouragement; it is more than resignation, it is pride.
+
+He has just visited his empire. The island, irregular in form, is from
+four to five leagues in length; in breadth it is from one and a half
+to two leagues. This abode to which he is condemned, is the most
+enchanting retreat he could have chosen; a luxuriant park cradled upon
+the waves.
+
+If sometimes, in the mountainous parts, he has encountered sterile and
+rugged rocks, even abysses and precipices, they seem to be placed
+there only as a contrast to the fresh and green valleys which encircle
+them. If he has seen some dark, dense, inaccessible forests, entangled
+in the thousand arms of interwoven vines, he has not discovered a
+single reptile.
+
+Every where, springs of living water, little streams which are lost
+under a thick verdure, or fall in cascades from the summits of the
+hills; every where a luxuriant vegetation; esculent and refreshing
+plants, celery, cresses, sorrel, spring in profusion beneath his feet;
+over his head, and almost within reach of his hand, palm-cabbages, and
+unknown fruits of succulent appearance: on the margin of the shores,
+muscles, periwinkles, shell-fish of every species, crabs crawling in
+the moist sand; beneath the transparent waters, innumerable shoals of
+fishes of all colors, all forms. Will game be wanting here? After what
+he has seen this morning, he will not even need his gun to obtain it.
+Oh! his provision of powder will last him a long time.
+
+What has he to desire more in this terrestrial Paradise? The society
+of men? Why? That he may find a master, a chief, under whose will he
+must bend? Men! but he despises, detests them! Is he not then
+sufficient for himself? Yes! this shall be his glory, his happiness!
+To live in entire liberty, to depend only upon himself, will not this
+impart to his soul true dignity? Besides, this island cannot be so far
+from the coast, but, from time to time, ships, or at least boats must
+come in sight. This is then for him but a transient seclusion; but
+were he even condemned to eternal isolation, this isolation has ceased
+to terrify him, he accepts it! Has he not almost always lived alone,
+in spirit at least? When he was in the depths of the hold, was he not
+better satisfied with his fate than when surrounded by those coarse
+sailors who composed the worthy crew of the Swordfish?
+
+To-day he is no longer the prisoner of Stradling, he is the prisoner
+of God! and this thought reassures him.
+
+A sailor, he has never loved but the sea; well! the sea surrounds him,
+guards him! He has then only thanks to render to God.
+
+Arrived at his grotto, he takes his Bible, opens it; but the sun,
+suddenly sinking below the horizon, permits him to read only this
+passage on which his finger is placed: 'Thou shalt perish in thy
+pride!'
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+
+Labors of the Colonist.--His Study.--Fishing.--Administration.
+--Selkirk Island.--The New Prometheus.--What is wanting to Happiness.
+--Encounter with Marimonda.--Monologue.
+
+Three months have passed away.
+
+Thanks to Selkirk, the shore which received him at his disembarkation,
+presents to-day an aspect not only picturesque, but animated. The hand
+of man has made itself felt there.
+
+The bushes and tufts of trees which hid the view of the hills in the
+distance, have been uprooted and cut down; pretty paths, covered with
+gravel, wind over the vast lawn; one in the direction of the valleys
+at the right, another towards the mountains at the left; a third leads
+to a tall mimosa, whose topmost boughs and dense foliage spread out
+like a parasol. A wooden bench, composed of some round sticks, driven
+into the earth, with branches interwoven and covered with bark,
+surrounds it; a rustic table, constructed in the same manner, stands
+at the foot of the tree. This is the study and place of meditation of
+the exile; here also he comes to take his meals, in sight of the sea.
+
+All three paths terminate in the grotto which Selkirk continues to
+make his residence. This grotto he has enlarged, quarried out with his
+hatchet, to make room for himself, his furniture, and provisions. He
+has even attempted to decorate its exterior with a bank of turf, and
+several species of creeping plants, trained to cover its calcareous
+nudity. At the entrance of his habitation, rise two young palm-trees,
+transplanted there by him, to serve as a portico. But nature is not
+always obedient to man; the vines and palm-trees do not prosper in
+their new location, and now the long flexible branches of the one, and
+the broad leaves of the other, droop half withered above the grotto,
+which they disfigure rather than decorate.
+
+By constant care, and with the aid of his streams, Selkirk hopes to be
+able to restore them to life and health. He has imposed on his two
+streams another duty, that of supplying a bed of water-cresses and a
+fish-pond, both provident establishments, the first of which has
+succeeded perfectly. As for the second, his most arduous task has
+been, not to dig the fish-pond, but to people it. For this purpose he
+has been compelled to become a fisherman, to manufacture a net. He has
+succeeded, with some threads from his fragment of a sail, the fibres
+of his cocoa-nuts, and tough reeds, woven in close meshes;
+unfortunately those fine fishes, breams, eels and angel-fish, which
+show themselves so readily through the limpid wave, are not as easy to
+catch as to see. Under the surface, almost at a level with the water,
+there is a ledge of rocks, upon which the net cannot be managed. After
+several fruitless attempts, he is obliged to content himself with the
+insignificant employment of fishing with a line; a nail flattened,
+sharpened and bent, performs the office of a hook. Success ensues, but
+only with time and patience; fortunately the sea-crabs allow
+themselves to be caught with the hand, and the fish-pond does not long
+remain useless and deserted.
+
+Besides, has not our fortunate Selkirk the resource of hunting? The
+chase he had commenced generously, like a wise monarch, who wages war
+only for the general interest. It is true, that as it happens with
+most wise monarchs, his own private interest is also to be consulted,
+at least he thinks so.
+
+Wild cats existed in the island, destroying young broods, agoutis, and
+other small game; he has almost entirely rid it of these pirates,
+reserving to himself only the right of levying upon his subjects the
+tribute of blood. He has already signalized his administration by acts
+of an entirely different nature.
+
+This king without a people, is ignorant in what part of the great
+ocean, and at what distance from its shores, is situated his nameless
+kingdom.
+
+Armed with his spy-glass, by the aid of his nautical charts, he
+attempts to ascertain, by the position of the stars, its longitude and
+latitude. He at first believes himself to be in one of the islands
+forming the group of Chiloe; his calculations rectified, he afterwards
+thinks it the Island of Juan Fernandez, then San Ambrosio, or San
+Felix. Unable to determine the location exactly, for want of correct
+instruments, he persuades himself that the country he inhabits has
+never been surveyed, that it is really a land without a name, and he
+gives it his own; he calls it Selkirk Island.
+
+Ambitious youth, thou hast thus realized one of thy brightest dreams!
+Dost thou remember the day when, on the way from Largo to St. Andrew,
+to join William Dampier, thou didst already see thyself the chief of a
+new country, discovered and baptized by thee?
+
+Well! has he not more than discovered this country? He inhabits it, he
+governs it, he reigns in it! Not satisfied with giving his name to the
+island, he soon creates a special nomenclature for its various
+localities. To the shore upon which he landed, he gives the name of
+_Swordfish Beach_; the pile of white and red rocks, which he saw
+through the fog, is the _False Coquimbo_; he calls _Toucan Forest_,
+the wood where he saw that bird for the first time; the _Defile of
+Attack_, is that where Marimonda assaulted him with stones; upon these
+arid rocks, furrowed by deep ravines and abounding in precipices, he
+has imposed the odious name of _Stradling_! In his mountains he has
+the _Oasis_; it is a little shady valley, enlivened by the murmur of a
+streamlet, and with one extremity opening to the sea. There he often
+goes to watch the game and the goats, which come to drink at the
+brook. Above it rises the table-land, with difficulty scaled by him on
+the day of his arrival, and from whence he became convinced that he
+had landed on an island. This table-land, he has named _The
+Discovery_.
+
+The two streams which meander over his lawn, and before his grotto,
+have also received names. This, commissioned to feed the fish-pond,
+and which gently warbles through the grass, he calls _The Linnet_; the
+other, interrupted by little cascades, and whose course is more rapid
+and impetuous, he calls _The Stammerer_.
+
+He has now destroyed the noxious animals, administered government,
+opened ways of communication, given a name to every part of his
+island. How many great rulers have done no more!
+
+But his labors have not been confined to his fish-pond, his bed of
+water-cresses, his hunting, fishing, building, felling of trees; it
+has become necessary to procure that essential element of
+civilization, of comfort, fire.
+
+What could the opulent proprietor of this enchanting abode do without
+fire? Is it not necessary, if he would open a passage through the
+dense woods? Is it not indispensable to his kitchen? Some of his
+trees, it is true, afford fruits in abundance; but most of these
+fruits are of a dry and woody nature; besides, young and vigorous,
+easily acquiring an appetite by labor and exercise, can he content
+himself with a dinner which is only a dessert? Surrounded with fishes
+of all colors, with feathered and other game, must he then be reduced
+to dispute with the agoutis, their maripa-nuts?
+
+He reflects; armed with a bit of iron, he strikes the flinty rocks of
+the mountains, to elicit from them useless sparks. He then remembers
+that savages obtain fire without flint and matches, by the friction of
+two pieces of dry wood; he tries, but in vain; he exhausts the
+strength of his arms, without being discouraged; he tries each tree,
+wishing even that a thunderbolt might strike the island, if it would
+leave there a trace of burning. At last, almost discouraged, he
+attacks the pimento-myrtle;[1] he recommences his customary efforts of
+rubbing. The twigs grow warm with the friction; a little white smoke
+appears, fluttering to and fro between his hands, rapid and trembling
+with emotion. The flame bursts forth! He utters a cry of triumph, and,
+hastily collecting other twigs and dry reeds, he leaps for joy around
+his fire, which, like another Prometheus, he has just stolen, not from
+heaven, but from earth!
+
+[Footnote 1: _Myrtus aromatica_; its berries are known under the name
+of Jamaica pepper.]
+
+Afterwards, in his gratitude, he runs to the myrtle, embraces it,
+kisses it. An act of folly, perhaps; perhaps an act of gratitude,
+which ascended higher than the topmost branches of the trees, higher
+than the culminating summits of the mountains of the island.
+
+But this fire, must he, each time he may need it, go through the same
+tedious process? Not far from his grotto, in a cavity which a
+projecting rock protects from the sea breeze, he piles up wood and
+brush, sets fire to it, keeps it alive from time to time, by the
+addition of combustibles, and comprehends why, among primitive
+nations, the earliest worship should have been that of fire; why, from
+Zoroaster to the Vestals, the care of preserving it should have been
+held sacred.
+
+At a later period, in the ordinary course of things, he simplified his
+means of preservation. With some threads and the fat of his game, he
+contrived a lamp; still later, he had oil, and reeds served him for
+wicks.
+
+Dating from this moment, the entire island paid tribute to him; the
+crabs, the eels, the flesh of the agouti, savory like that of the
+rabbit, by turns figured on his table. When he seasoned them with some
+morsels of pork, substituting ship biscuit for bread, his repasts were
+fit for an admiral.
+
+Although the goats had become wild, like the other inhabitants of the
+island, since all had learned the nature of man, and of the thunder,
+which he directed at his will, Selkirk still surprised them within
+gun-shot. Not only was their flesh profitable for food; their horns,
+long and hollow, served to contain powder and other small articles
+necessary to his house-keeping; of their skins he made carpets,
+coverings, and bags to protect his provisions from dampness. He even
+manufactured a game-pouch, which he constantly carried when hunting.
+
+His salt fish, his biscuit, some well smoked quarters of goat's flesh,
+and the productions of his fish-pond, at present constitute a store on
+which he can live for a long time, without any care, but to ameliorate
+his condition.
+
+He is now in possession of all the enjoyments he has coveted,
+abundance, leisure, absolute freedom.
+
+And yet, his brow is sometimes clouded, and an unaccountable
+uneasiness torments him; something seems wanting; his appetite fails,
+his courage grows feeble, his reveries are painfully prolonged. But,
+by mature reflection, he has discovered the cause of the evil.
+
+What is it that is so essential to his happiness? Tobacco.
+
+Our factitious wants often exercise over us a more tyrannical empire,
+than our real ones; it seems as if we clung with more force and
+tenacity to this second nature, because we have ourselves created it;
+it originates in us; the other originates with God, and is common to
+all!
+
+Selkirk now persuades himself that tobacco alone is wanting to his
+comfort; it is this privation which throws him into these sorrowful
+fits of languor. If Stradling had only given him a good stock of
+tobacco, he would have pardoned all; he no longer feels courage to
+hate him. What to him imports the plenty which surrounds him, if he
+has no tobacco? of what use is his leisure, if he cannot spend it in
+smoking? what avails even this fire, which he has just conquered, if
+he is prevented from lighting his pipe at it?
+
+Careworn and dissatisfied, he was wandering one morning through his
+domains, with his gun on his shoulder, his hatchet at his belt, when
+he perceived something dancing on a point of land, shadowed by tall
+canes.
+
+It was Marimonda.
+
+At sight of her enemy, she darted lightly and rapidly behind a woody
+hillock. An instant afterwards, he saw her tranquilly seated on the
+topmost branch of a tree, holding in each of her hands fruits which
+she was alternately striking against the branch, and against each
+other, to break their tough envelope.
+
+The sight of Marimonda has always awakened in Selkirk a sentiment of
+repulsion; she not only reminds him of Stradling, but with her
+withered cheeks, projecting jaw, and especially her dancing motion, he
+now imagines that she resembles him; and yet, pausing before her, he
+contemplates her not without a lively emotion of surprise and
+interest.
+
+He had already encountered her within gun-shot, when engaged in the
+destruction of the wild cats, and had asked himself whether he should
+not reckon her among noxious animals. But then Marimonda, with her
+hand constantly pressed against her side, was with the other seizing
+various herbs, which she tasted, bruised between her teeth, and
+applied to her wound; useless remedies, doubtless, for, grown meagre,
+her hair dull and bristling, she seemed to have but a few days to
+live, and Selkirk thought her not worth a charge of powder and shot.
+
+And here he finds her alert and healthy, holding in the same hand
+which had served as a compress, no longer the plant necessary for her
+cure, but the fruit desirable for her sustenance.
+
+'What,' said Selkirk to himself, 'in an island where this frightful
+monkey has never before been, she has succeeded in finding without
+difficulty the _herba sacra_, that which has restored her to health
+and strength! and I, Selkirk, who have studied at one of the principal
+universities of Scotland, I am vainly sighing for the plant which
+would suffice to render me completely happy! Is instinct then superior
+to reason? To believe this, would be ingratitude to Providence.
+Instinct is necessary, indispensable to animals, because they cannot
+benefit by the traditions of their ancestors. The monkey has consulted
+her instinct, and it has inspired her; if I consult reason, what will
+be her counsel? She will advise me to do like the monkey; to seek the
+herb of which I feel so great a want, or at least to endeavor to
+substitute for it something analogous; to choose, try, and taste, in
+short, to follow the example of Marimonda! I will not fail to do so;
+but it is nature reversed, and, for a man, it is too humiliating to
+see himself reduced to imitate a monkey!'
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+
+The Hammock.--Poison.--Success.--A Calm under the Tropics.--Invasion
+of the Island.--War and Plunder.--The Oasis.--The Spy-Glass.
+--Reconciliation.
+
+Do you see, upon a carpet of fresh verdure, the sandy margin of which
+is bathed by a caressing wave, that hammock suspended to the branches
+of those fine trees? What happy mortal, during the heat of the day, is
+there gently rocked, gently refreshed, by a light sea breeze? It is
+Selkirk; and this hammock is his sail, attached to his tall myrtles by
+strips of goat-skin. Perhaps he is resting after the fatigues of the
+day? No, it is the day of the Lord, and Selkirk now can consecrate the
+Sabbath to repose. With his eyes half closed, he is inhaling,
+undoubtedly, the perfume of his myrtles, the soft fragrance of his
+heliotropes? No, something sweeter still pre-occupies him. Is he
+dreaming of his friends in Scotland, of his first love? He has never
+known friendship, and the beautiful Catherine is far from his memory.
+What is he then doing in his hammock? He is smoking his pipe.
+
+His pipe! Has he a pipe? He has them of all forms, all sizes--made of
+spiral shells of various kinds, of maripa-nuts, of large reeds; all
+set in handles of myrtle, stalks of coarse grain, or the hollow bones
+of birds. In these he is luxurious; he has become a connoisseur; but
+this has not been the difficulty. Before every thing else, tobacco was
+wanting.
+
+In consequence of his encounter with Marimonda, he ransacked the woods
+and meadows, seeking among all plants those which approximated nearest
+to the nature of the nicotiana. As it was necessary to judge by their
+taste, he bit their leaves--chewed them, still in imitation of the
+monkey: but, to his new and profound humiliation, less skilful or less
+fortunate than the latter, he obtained at first no other result than a
+sort of poisoning: one of these plants being poisonous.
+
+For several days he saw himself condemned to absolute repose and a
+spare diet. His mouth, swollen, excoriated, refused all nourishment;
+his throat was burning; his body was covered with an eruption, and his
+languid and trembling limbs scarcely permitted him to drag himself to
+the stream to quench there the thirst by which he was devoured.
+
+He believed himself about to die; and grief then imposing silence on
+pride, with his eyes turned towards the sea, he allowed a
+long-repressed sigh to escape his heart. It was a regret for his
+absent country.
+
+Very soon these alarming symptoms disappeared; his strength returned;
+his water-cresses and wild sorrel completed the cure. Would he have
+dared to ask it of the other productions of his island? He had become
+suspicious of nature; these, at least, he had long known.
+
+Scarcely had he recovered, when the want of tobacco made itself felt
+anew with more force than ever. What to him imports experiment, what
+imports danger? Is it not to procure this precious, indispensable
+herb,--which the world had easily done without for thousands of years?
+
+This time, nevertheless, become more prudent, he no longer addresses
+himself to the sense of taste; but to odor, to that of smell. He has
+resolved to dry the different plants which appear to him most proper
+for the use to which he destines them, and to submit them afterwards
+to a trial by fire. Will not the smoke which escapes from them easily
+enable him to discover the qualities which he requires, since it is in
+smoke that they are to evaporate, if he succeeds in his researches?
+
+Of this grand collection of aromatics, two plants, at last, come off
+victorious. One is the petunia, that charming flower which at present
+decorates all our gardens, whence the enemies of tobacco may one day
+banish it; so it is only with trembling that I here announce its
+relationship to the nicotiana; the other, which, like the petunia,
+grows in profusion in the islands as well as on the continent of
+Southern America, is the herb _coca_, improperly so called, for its
+precious leaves, which are to the natives of Peru and Chili, what the
+_betel_ is for the Indians of Malabar, grow on an elegant shrub.[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: The _erythroxylum coca_.]
+
+These two plants, separately or together, composed, thanks to a slight
+amalgam of chalk, sea-water, and bruised pepper-corns, the most
+delicious tobacco.
+
+Now, half awake, Selkirk smokes, as he busies himself with
+constructing some necessary article, such as a ladder, a stool, a
+basket of rushes, with which he is completing the furniture of his
+house; he smokes while fishing, and while hunting; on his return to
+his dwelling, he lies down at the entrance of his grotto, on his bank
+of turf, re-lights his pipe at his fire, and smokes; at the hour of
+breakfast or of dinner, seated beneath the shade of his mimosa, his
+elbow on the table, his Bible open before him, he smokes still.
+
+Well! notwithstanding these pleasures so long desired, notwithstanding
+this addition to his comfort, notwithstanding his pipe, this vague
+uneasiness sometimes assails him anew.
+
+He ascribes it to enfeebled health; and yet he remains active and
+vigorous; he ascribes it to the powerful odors of certain trees which
+affect his brain. These trees he destroys around him, but his
+uneasiness continues; he ascribes it to his food, the insipidity of
+the fish which he has eaten without salt, since his quarter of pork is
+consumed, and his stores of pickled fish exhausted. In fact, the flesh
+of fish has for some time given him a nausea, occasioned frequent
+indigestions; he renounces it; his stomach recovers its tone; but his
+fits of torpor and melancholy continue.
+
+This state of suffering is most painful at those moments of profound
+calm, common between the tropics, when the birds are silent, when from
+the thickets and burrows issue no murmurs, when the insect seems to
+sleep within the closed corollas of the flowers; when the leaves of
+the mimosa fold themselves; when the tree-tops are not swayed by the
+slightest breath of air, and the sea, motionless, ceases to dash
+against the shore. What an inexpressible weight such a silence adds to
+isolation! And yet it is not an unbroken silence, for then a shrill
+and harsh sound seems to grate upon the ear. It is as if in this
+muteness of nature, one could hear the motion of the earth on its
+axis; then, above his head, in the depths of immensity, the whirling
+of the celestial spheres and myriads of worlds which gravitate in
+space. Thought becomes troubled and exhausted before this overwhelming
+and terrible immobility, and the man who, at such a moment, cannot
+have recourse to his kind, to distract or re-assure him, is
+overpowered with his own insignificance.
+
+Sometimes the solitary calls on himself to break this oppressive and
+painful silence; he articulates a few words aloud, and his voice
+inspires him with fear; it seems formidable and unnatural.
+
+During one of these sinister calms, in which every thing in creation
+seemed to pause, even the heart of man, seated on the shore, not
+having even strength to smoke, Selkirk was vainly awaiting the evening
+breeze; nothing came, but the obscurity of night. The moon, delaying
+her appearance, submitting in her turn to the sluggishness of all
+things, seemed detained below the circle of the horizon by some fatal
+power; the sea was dull, gloomy, and as it were congealed.
+
+Suddenly, though there was not a breath of air, Selkirk saw at his
+right, on a vast but limited tract of ocean, the waves violently
+agitated and foaming. He thought he distinguished a multitude of
+barques and canoes furrowing the surface of the waters; not far from
+Swordfish Beach, the flotilla enters a little cove running up into the
+mountains.
+
+He no longer sees any thing; but he hears a frightful tumult of
+discordant cries.
+
+There is no room for doubt! some Indian tribes, pursued perhaps by new
+conquerors from Europe, have just disembarked on the shore. Wo to him!
+he can hope from them neither pity nor mercy. A cold sweat bathes his
+forehead; he runs to his grotto, takes his gun, puts in his goatskin
+pouch some horns of powder and shot, a piece of smoked meat, not
+forgetting his Bible! and passes the night wandering in the woods, in
+the mountains, a prey to a thousand terrors; hearing without cessation
+the steps of pursuers behind him, and seeing fiery eyes glaring at him
+through the thickets.
+
+At day-break, with a thousand precautions, he returns to his grotto.
+He finds the beach covered with seals.
+
+These were the enemies whose invasion had so alarmed him.
+
+It is now the middle of the month of February, the period of the
+greatest tropical heats, and these amphibia, having left the shores of
+Chili or Peru, are accomplishing one of their periodical migrations.
+They have just taken possession of the island, one of their accustomed
+stations. But the island has now a master.
+
+Where he expected to encounter a peril, Selkirk finds amusement, a
+subject of study, perhaps a resource.
+
+A long time ago he has read, in the narratives of voyagers, singular
+stories concerning these marine animals, these _lions_, these
+_sea-elephants_, flocks of old Neptune, who have their chiefs, their
+pacha; who are acquainted with and practise the discipline of war;
+stationing vigilant sentinels in the spots they occupy, communicating
+to each other a pass-word, and attentive to the _Qui vive_?
+
+He spies them, he watches them, he takes pleasure in examining their
+grotesque forms,--half quadruped, half fish; their feet encased in a
+sort of web, and terminated by crooked claws, with which they creep on
+the earth; their skins, covered with short and glossy hair; their
+round heads and eyes.
+
+He is a witness of their sports, their combats; but very soon their
+frightful roaring and bellowing annoys him, and makes him regret the
+silence of his solitude. Another cause of complaint against them soon
+arises.
+
+One morning, Selkirk finds his fish-pond and bed of water-cresses
+devastated.
+
+Exasperated, he declares war against the invaders: during three days
+he tracks them, pursues them; ten of them fall beneath his balls,
+leaving the shore bathed in their blood. The rest at last take flight,
+and the army of seals, regaining the sea with despairing cries, goes
+to establish itself at the other extremity of the island.
+
+This war has been profitable to the conqueror. With the skin of the
+vanquished he makes himself a new hammock, which permits him to employ
+his sail for other uses; he also makes leather bottles, in which he
+preserves the oil which he extracts in abundance from their fat. Now
+he can have a lamp constantly burning, even by night. He has all the
+comforts of life. Of the hairy skin of the seals, he manufactures a
+broad-brimmed hat, which shields him from the burning rays of the sun.
+He tastes their flesh; it appears to him insipid and nauseous, like
+that of the fish; but the tongue, the heart, seasoned with pepper, are
+for him quite a luxury.
+
+Days, weeks, months roll away in the same toils, the same recreations.
+Whatever he may do to drive it away, this apathetic sadness, this
+sinking of soul, which has already tormented him at different periods,
+becomes with Selkirk more and more frequent; he cannot conquer it as
+he did the seals. His seals, he now regrets. When they were encamped
+on the shore, they at least gave him something to look at, an
+amusement; something lived, moved, near him.
+
+When he finds himself a prey to these fits, which, in his pride, he
+persists in attributing to transient indisposition, he goes to walk in
+the mountains, taking with him only his pipe, his Bible, and his
+spy-glass.
+
+He often pursues his journey as far as the oasis; there, he seats
+himself at the extremity of the little valley, opposite the sea, from
+which his eye can traverse its immense extent. He opens the holy book,
+and closes it immediately; then, his brow reddening, he seizes his
+spy-glass, levels it, and remains entire hours measuring the ocean,
+wave by wave.
+
+What is he looking for there? He seeks a sail, a sail which shall come
+to his island and bear him from his desert, from his _ennui_. His
+_ennui_ he can no longer dissimulate; this is the evil of his
+solitude.
+
+One day, while he was at this spot, the setting sun suddenly
+illuminated a black point, against which the waves seemed to break in
+foam, as against the prow of a ship; his eyes become dim, a tremor
+seizes him. He looks again--keeps his glass for a long time fixed on
+the same object, but the black point does not stir.
+
+'Another illusion!' said he to himself; 'it is a reef, a rock which
+the tide has left bare.'
+
+He wipes the glasses of his spy-glass, he examines again; he seems to
+see the waves whiten and whirl for a large space around this rock.
+
+'Can it be an island? If an island, is it inhabited? I will construct
+a barque, and if God has pity on me I will reach it.'
+
+At this moment he hears footsteps resound on the dry leaves which the
+wind has swept into the little valley. He turns hastily.
+
+It is Marimonda.
+
+Marimonda has no longer her lively and dancing motions; she also seems
+languid, sad. At sight of Selkirk, she makes a movement as if to flee;
+but almost immediately advances a little, and, sorrowful, with bent
+brow, sits down on a bank not far from him.
+
+Has she then remarked that he is without arms?
+
+On his side, Selkirk who had not met her for a long time, seemed to
+have forgotten his former aversion.
+
+At all events, is she not the most intelligent being chance has placed
+near him? He remembers that, in the ship, she obeyed the voice, the
+gesture of the captain, and that her tricks amused the whole crew.
+This resemblance to the human form, which he at first disliked, now
+awakens in him ideas of indulgence and peace. He reproaches himself
+with having treated her so brutally, when the poor animal, who alone
+had accompanied him into exile, at first accosted him with a caress.
+And now she returns, laying aside all ill-will, forgetting even the
+wound which she received from him in an impulse of irritation and
+hatred, of which she was not the object, for which she ought not to be
+responsible.
+
+He therefore makes to her a little sign with the head.
+
+Marimonda replies by winks of the eye and motions of the shoulders,
+which Selkirk thinks not wholly destitute of grace.
+
+He rises and approaches her, saluting her with an amicable gesture.
+
+She awaits him, chattering with her teeth and lips with an expression
+of joy.
+
+Selkirk gently passes his hand over her forehead and neck, calling her
+by name; then he starts for his habitation, and Marimonda follows him.
+The man and the monkey have just been reconciled. Both were tired of
+their isolation.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+
+A Tete-a-tete.--The Monkey's Goblet.--The Palace.--A Removal.--Winter
+under the Tropics--Plans for the Future.--Property.--A burst of
+Laughter.--Misfortune not far off.
+
+Tranquility of mind has returned to our solitary; now, his reveries
+are more pleasant and less prolonged; his walks through the woods, his
+moments of repose during the heat of the day seem more endurable since
+_something_, besides his shadow, keeps him company; he has resumed his
+taste for labor since there is _somebody_ to look at him; speech has
+returned to him since _somebody_ replies to his voice. This
+_somebody_, this _something_, is Marimonda.
+
+Marimonda is now the companion of Selkirk, his friend, his slave; she
+seems to comprehend his slightest gestures and even his _ennui_. To
+amuse him, she resorts to a thousand expedients, a thousand tricks of
+the agility peculiar to her race; she goes, she comes, she runs, she
+leaps, she bounds, she chatters at his side; she tries to people his
+solitude, to make a rustling around him; she brings him his pipes,
+rocks him in his hammock, and, for all these cares, all this
+attention, demands only a caress, which is no longer refused.
+
+She is often a spectator of her master's repasts; sometimes even
+shares them. This was at first a favor, afterwards a habit, as in the
+case of honest countrymen, who, secluded from the world, by degrees
+admit their servants into their intimacy. Selkirk had not to fear the
+importunate, unexpected visit of a neighbor or a curious stranger.
+
+So it is in the open air, on the latticed table, in the shade of his
+great mimosa, that these repasts in common take place; the master
+occupies the bench, the servant humbly seats herself on the stool,
+ready, at the first signal, to leave her place and assist in serving.
+Have we not seen in India, ourang-outangs trained to perform the
+office of domestics? and Marimonda was in nothing inferior in
+intelligence and activity.
+
+She is now fond of the flesh of the goat, of that of the coatis and
+agoutis, for monkeys easily become carnivorous; but the table is also
+sometimes covered with the products of her hunting. If the dessert
+fails, she hastily interrupts her repast, leaves the master to
+continue his alone, buries herself in the surrounding woods, reaches
+in three bounds the tops of the trees, and quickly returns with a
+supply of fruits which he can fearlessly taste, for she knows them.
+
+Selkirk was one day a witness of the singular facility with which she
+could supply her wants.
+
+At the morning repast, seeing him use one of his cocoa-nuts which he
+had fashioned in the form of a cup to drink from; in her instinct of
+imitation, she had attempted to seize the cup in her turn; a look of
+reprimand stopped her short in her attempt. Whether she felt a species
+of humiliation at being forced to quench her thirst in the presence of
+her master, by going to the banks of the stream and lapping there,
+like a vulgar animal; or whether the reprimand had painfully affected
+her, she abstained from drinking and remained for some time quiet and
+dreamy; but at the following repast, with lifted head and sparkling
+eye she resumed her place on the stool, provided with a goblet, a
+goblet belonging to her, lawfully obtained by her, and, with an air of
+triumph presented it to Selkirk, who, wondering, did not hesitate an
+instant to share with the monkey the water contained in his gourd.
+
+This goblet was the ligneous and impermeable capsule, the fruit,
+naturally and deeply hollowed out, of a tree called _quatela_.[1] It
+was thus that the intelligent Marimonda, after having borrowed from
+the numerous vegetables of the island their leaves, to ameliorate her
+sufferings, to heal her wounds; their fruits for her nourishment and
+even for her sports, also found means to obtain the divers utensils
+for house-keeping of which she stood in need.
+
+[Footnote 1: The _lecythis quatela_, of the family of the
+_lecythidees_, created by Professor Richard, and whose singular fruits
+bear, in Peru as well as in Chili, the denomination of _monkey's
+goblets_.]
+
+Charmed with her gentleness, her docility, the affection she seemed to
+bear him, Selkirk grew more and more attached to her. Winter, that is,
+the rainy season which usually lasts in these regions during the
+months of June and July, was approaching; he suffered in anticipation,
+from the idea that during this time his gentle companion would not be
+able to retain her habitual shelter, beneath the foliage of the trees;
+he conceived the project of giving up to her his grotto, and
+constructing for himself a new habitation, spacious and commodious. It
+is thus that our most generous resolutions, whatever we may design to
+do, encountering in their way personal interest, often turn to the
+increase of our own private welfare.
+
+At a little distance from the grotto, but farther inland, on the banks
+of the stream called the _Linnet_, there was a thicket of verdure
+shaded by five myrtles of from fifteen to twenty feet in height, and
+whose stems presented a diameter more than sufficient to insure the
+solidity of the edifice. Four of these myrtles formed an irregular
+square; the fifth arose in the midst, or nearly so; but our architect
+is not very particular. He already sees the principal part of his
+frame; the myrtles will remain in their places, their roots serving as
+a foundation. He removes the shrubs, the plants, the brushwood from
+the thicket, leaving only a heliotrope which, at a later period, may
+twine around his house and at evening shed its perfumes. He has become
+reconciled to its fragrance. He trims the trees, cuts off their tops
+eight feet above the ground, leaving the middle one, which is to
+sustain the roof, a foot higher; for this roof reeds and palm-leaves
+furnish all the materials. The walls, made of a solid network of young
+branches interwoven, and plastered with a mixture of sand, clay, and
+chopped rushes, he takes care not to build quite to the top, but to
+leave between them and the roof a little space, where the air can
+circulate freely through a light trellis formed of branches of the
+blue willow.
+
+Then, having finished his work in less than a fortnight, he
+contemplates it and admires it; Marimonda herself seems to share in
+his admiration, and in her joy climbing up the new building, she
+begins to leap, to dance on the roof of foliage, which bears her, and
+thus gives to Selkirk an additional triumph.
+
+He now proceeds to furnish his palace; he transports thither his bed
+of reeds and his goatskin coverings. How much better will he be
+sheltered here than under the gloomy vault of his grotto! How has he
+been able to content himself so long with such an abode, more suitable
+for a troglodyte or a monkey! He will no longer be obliged to lift up
+his curtain of vines, and to peep through the fans of his palm-trees,
+in order to behold the beneficent rays of the new-born day; they will
+come of themselves to find him and rejoice him at his awakening, as
+the sea-breezes will at evening breathe on him, to refresh him in his
+repose.
+
+Already has the interior of his cabin, of his palace, assumed an
+aspect which charms him; his guns, his hatchets, his spy-glass, his
+instruments of labor, well polished and shining, suspended in racks,
+upon wooden pegs, decorate the walls; upon another partition, his
+assortment of pipes are arranged on a shelf according to their size;
+on his central pillar, he suspends his game-bag, his gourd, his
+tobacco-pouch, and various articles of daily use. As for his iron pot,
+his smoked meat, his stock of skins, and bottles of seal-oil, he
+leaves them under the guardianship of Marimonda in the grotto which he
+will now make his store-house, his kitchen: he will not encumber with
+them his new dwelling.
+
+He now sets himself to prepare new furniture; he will construct a
+small portable table, two wooden seats, one for himself, the other for
+Marimonda, when she comes from her grotto to visit his cabin; for he
+has now a neighborhood. Besides, during the rainy season, they will be
+forced to dine under cover.
+
+The first rains have commenced, gentle, fertilizing rains, falling at
+intervals and lovingly drank in by the earth; Selkirk no longer thinks
+of his table and seats; another project has just taken the place of
+these, and seems to deserve the precedence.
+
+Marimonda has just returned from a tour in the woods, bringing fruits
+of all sorts, among them some which Selkirk has never before seen. He
+tastes them with more care and attention than usual; then, becoming
+thoughtful, with his chin resting on his hand says to himself: 'Why
+should I not make these fruits grow at my door, not far from my
+habitation? Why should I not attempt to improve them by cultivation?
+This is a very simple and very prudent idea which should have occurred
+to me long since; but I was alone, absolutely alone; and one loses
+courage when thinking of self only. A garden, at once an orchard and a
+vegetable garden, will be at least as useful to me as my fish-pond and
+bed of water-cresses; I will make one around my cabin; it will set it
+off and give it a more home-like appearance! Is not the stream placed
+here expressly to traverse it and water it? Afterwards, if God assist
+me, I will raise little kids which will become goats and give me milk,
+butter, cheese! Why have I not thought of this before? It would have
+been too much to have undertaken at once. I shall then have tame
+goats; I will also have Guinea-pigs, agoutis, and coatis. My house
+shall be enlarged, I will have a farm, a dairy! But the time has not
+yet come; let us first prepare the garden. Why has it not been already
+prepared? I am impatient to render the earth productive, fruitful by
+my cares, to walk in the shade of the trees I may plant; it seems to
+me that I shall be at home there, more than any where else!'
+
+You are right, Selkirk; to possess the entire island, is to possess
+nothing; it is simply to have permission to hunt, a right of promenade
+and pasture, which the other inhabitants of the island, quadrupeds or
+birds, can claim as well as yourself. What is property, without the
+power of improvement? Can the earth become the domain of a single
+person, when the true limits of his possessions must always be those
+of the field which affords him subsistence? Envy not then the
+happiness of the rich; they are but the transient holders and
+distributors of the public fortune; we possess, in reality, only that
+which we can ourselves enjoy; the rest escapes us, and contributes to
+the well-being of others.
+
+Selkirk comprehends that his streams, his bank of turf, his fish-pond,
+his bed of water-cresses, his grotto, his cabin, belong to him far
+otherwise than the twelve or fifteen square leagues of his island; to
+his private domain he now intends to add a garden, and this garden,
+this orchard, will be to him an increase of his wealth, since it will
+aid in the satisfaction of his wants.
+
+The humidity with which the earth begins to be penetrated, facilitates
+his labors; he sets himself to the work.
+
+Behold him then, now armed with his hatchet, now with a wooden shovel,
+which he has just manufactured, clearing the ground, digging,
+transplanting young fruit-trees, or sowing the seeds which he is soon
+to see spring up and prosper. Every thing grows rapidly in these
+climates.
+
+When the garden-spot is marked out, dug, sown, planted, not forgetting
+the kitchen vegetables, and especially the _coca_ and
+_petunia-nicotiana_, Selkirk, with his arms folded on his spade,
+thanks God with all his heart,--God who has given him strength to
+finish his work.
+
+He has never felt so happy as when, with his hands behind his back, he
+walks smoking, among his beds, in which nothing has as yet appeared;
+but he already sees, in a dream, his trees covered with blossoms;
+around these blossoms are buzzing numerous swarms of bees; he reflects
+upon the means of compelling them to yield the honey of which they
+have just stolen from him the essence. It is a settled thing, on his
+farm he will have hives! After his bees, still in his dream, come
+flocks of humming-birds to plunder in their turn. The happy possessor
+of the garden will exact no tribute from them, but the pleasure of
+seeing them suspend, by a silken thread, to the leaves of his shrubs,
+the elegant little boat in which they cradle their fragile brood.
+Nothing seems to him more beautiful than his embryo garden; here, he
+is more than the monarch of the island; he is a proprietor!
+
+Thanks to the garden, Selkirk sees with resignation the two long
+months of the rainy season pass away. When the heavy torrents render
+the paths impassable, he consoles himself by thinking that they aid in
+the germination of his seeds, in the rooting of his young plants.
+Sometimes, between two deluges, he can scarcely find time to procure
+himself sufficient game; what matters it! he lives on his provisions:
+he is forcibly detained within; but has he not now good cheer, good
+company, and occupation, during his leisure hours?
+
+It is now that he completes his furniture. His table and his seats
+finished, he undertakes to provide for another want, equally
+indispensable.
+
+Worn out by the weather, and by service, his garments are becoming
+ragged. He must shield himself from the humidity of the air; where
+shall he procure materials? Has he not the choice between seal-skins
+and goat-skins? He gives the preference to the latter, as more
+pliable, and behold him a tailor, cutting with the point of his knife;
+as for thread, it is furnished by the fragment of the sail; and two
+days afterwards, he finds himself flaming in a new suit.
+
+To describe the delirious stupefaction of Marimonda, when she
+perceives her master under this strange costume, would be a thing
+impossible. She finds him almost like herself, clad like her, in a
+hairy suit. Never tired of looking at him, of examining him curiously,
+she leaps, she gambols around him, now rolling at his feet, and
+uttering little cries of joy, now suspended over his head, at the top
+of the central pillar, and turning her wild and restless eyes. When
+she has thus inspected him from head to foot, she runs and crouches in
+a corner, with her face towards the wall, as if to reflect; then,
+whirling about, returns towards him, picks up on the way the garment
+he has just laid aside, looking alternately at this and at the other,
+very anxious to know which of the two really made a part of the
+person.
+
+After having enjoyed for a few moments the surprise and transports of
+his companion, Selkirk takes his Bible and his pipe, and, placing the
+book on the table, bends over it, preparing to read and to meditate.
+But, whether in consequence of her joyous excitement, or whether she
+is emboldened by the species of fraternity which costume establishes
+between them, Marimonda, without hesitation, directs herself to the
+little shelf, chooses from it a pipe in her turn, places it gravely
+between her lips, astonished at not seeing the smoke issue from it in
+a spiral column; and, with an important air, still imitating her
+master, comes to sit opposite him, with her brow inclined, and her
+elbow resting on the table.
+
+Willingly humoring her whim, Selkirk takes the pipe from her hands,
+fills it with his most spicy tobacco, lights it, and restores it to
+her.
+
+Hardly has Marimonda respired the first breath, when suddenly letting
+fall the pipe, overturning the table, emitting the smoke through her
+mouth and nostrils, she disappears, uttering plaintive cries, as if
+she had just tasted burning lava.
+
+At sight of the poor monkey, thus thrown into confusion, Selkirk, for
+the first time since his residence in the island, laughs so loudly,
+that the echo follows the fugitive to the grotto, where she had taken
+refuge, and is prolonged from the grotto to the _Oasis_, from the
+Oasis to the summit of the _Discovery_.
+
+The exile has at last laughed, laughed aloud, and, at the same moment,
+a terrible disaster is taking place without his knowledge; a new war
+is preparing for him, in which his arms will be useless.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+
+A New Invasion.--Selkirk joyfully meets an ancient Enemy.--Combat on
+a Red Cedar.--A Mother and her Little Ones.--The Flock.--Fete in the
+Island; Pacific Combats, Diversions and Swings.--A Sail.--The Burning
+Wood.--Presentiments of Marimonda.
+
+The next morning the sun has scarcely touched the horizon, Selkirk is
+still asleep, when he is awakened by a sort of tickling at his feet.
+Thinking it some caress or trick of Marimonda, risen earlier than
+usual, he half opens his eyes, sees nothing, and places himself again
+in a posture to continue his nap. The same tickling is renewed, but
+with more perseverance, and very soon something sharp and keen
+penetrates to the quick the hard envelope of his heel. The tickling
+has become a bite.
+
+This time wide awake, he raises his head. His cabin is full of rats!
+
+Near him, a company of them are tranquilly engaged in breakfasting on
+his coverings and the rushes of his couch; they are on his table, his
+seats, along his pillow and his walls; they are playing before his
+door, running hither and thither through the crevices of his roof,
+multiplying themselves on his rack and shelf; all biting, gnawing,
+nibbling--some his seal-skin hat, his tobacco-pouch, the bark
+ornaments of his furniture; others the handles of his tools, his
+pipes, his Bible, and even his powder-horn.
+
+Selkirk utters a cry, springs from his couch, and immediately crushes
+two under his heels. The rest take flight.
+
+As he is pursuing these new invaders with the shovel and musket, he
+perceives at a few paces' distance Marimonda, sorrowful and drooping,
+perched on the strong branch of a sapota-tree. By her piteous and
+chilly appearance, her tangled and wet hair, he doubts not but she has
+passed the whole night exposed to the inclemency of the weather. But
+he at first attributes this whim only to her ill-humor the evening
+before.
+
+On perceiving him, Marimonda descends, from her tree, sad, but still
+gentle and caressing, and with gestures of terror, points to the
+grotto. He runs thither.
+
+Here another spectacle of disorder and destruction awaits him; the
+rats are collected in it by thousands; his furs, his provisions of
+fruit and game, his bottles formerly filled with oil, every thing is
+sacked, torn in pieces, afloat; for the water has at last made its way
+through the crevices of the mountain. To put the climax to his
+misfortune, his reserve of powder, notwithstanding its double envelope
+of leather and horn, attacked by the voracious teeth of his
+aggressors, is swimming in the midst of an oily slime.
+
+The solitary now possesses, for the purpose of hunting, for the
+renewal of these provisions so necessary to his life, only the few
+charges contained in his portable powder-horn, and in the barrels of
+his guns. The blow which has just struck him is his ruin! and still
+the hardest trial appointed for him is yet to come.
+
+In penetrating the ground, the rains of winter have driven the rats
+from their holes; hence their invasion of the cabin and the grotto.
+
+Against so many enemies, what can Selkirk do, reduced to his single
+strength?
+
+He succeeds, nevertheless, in killing some; Marimonda herself, armed
+with the branch of a tree, serves as an ally, and aids him in putting
+them to flight; but their combined efforts are ineffectual. An hour
+after, the accursed race are multiplying round him, more numerous and
+more ravenous than ever.
+
+He comprehends then what an error he has committed in the complete
+destruction of the wild cats which peopled the island. With the most
+generous intentions, how often is man mistaken in the object he
+pursues! We think we are ridding us of an enemy, and we are depriving
+ourselves of a protector. God only knows what he does, and he has
+admitted apparent evil, as a principle, into the admirable composition
+of his universe; he suffers the wicked to live. Selkirk had been more
+severe than God, and he repents it. If his poor cats had only been
+exiled, he would hasten to proclaim a general amnesty. Alas! there is
+no amnesty with death. But has he indeed destroyed all? Perhaps some
+still exist in those distant regions which have already served as a
+refuge for that other banished race, the seals.
+
+The rains have ceased; the storms of winter, always accompanied by
+overpowering heat and dense fogs, no longer sadden the island by
+anticipated darkness, or the gloomy mutterings of continual thunder.
+The sun, though _garue_[1] absorbs the remainder of the inundation.
+Followed by Marimonda, Selkirk, for the first time, has ventured to
+the woods and thickets between the hills beyond the shore and the
+False Coquimbo, when a sound, sweeter to his ear than would have been
+the songs of a siren, makes him pause suddenly in ecstasy: it is the
+mewing of a cat.
+
+[Footnote 1: In Peru and Chili, they call _garua_ that mist which
+sometimes, and especially after the rainy season, floats around the
+disk of the sun.]
+
+This cat, strongly built, with a spotted and glossy coat, white nose,
+and brown whiskers, is stationed at a little distance, on a red cedar,
+where she is undoubtedly watching her prey.
+
+She is an old settler escaped from the general massacre; the last of
+the vanquished; perhaps!
+
+Without hesitation, Selkirk clasps the trunk of the tree, climbs it,
+reaches the first branches; Marimonda follows him and quickly goes
+beyond. At the aspect of these two aggressors, like herself clad in
+skin, the cat recoils, ascending; the monkey follows, pursues her from
+branch to branch, quite to the top of the cedar. Struck on the
+shoulder with a blow of the claw, she also recoils, but descending,
+and declaring herself vanquished in the first skirmish, immediately
+gives over the combat, or rather the sport, for she has seen only
+sport in the affair.
+
+Selkirk is not so easily discouraged; this cat he must have, he must
+have her alive; he wishes to make her the guardian of his cabin, his
+protector against the rats. Three times he succeeds in seizing her;
+three times the furious animal, struggling, tears his arms or face. It
+is a terrible, bloody conflict, mingled with exclamations, growlings,
+and frightful mewings. At last Selkirk, forgetting perhaps in the
+ardor of combat the object of victory, seizes her vigorously by the
+skin of the neck, at the risk of strangling her; with the other hand
+he grasps her around the body. The difficulty is now to carry her.
+Fortunately he has his game-bag. With one hand he holds her pressed
+against the fork of the tree; with the other arm he reaches his
+game-bag, opens it; the conquered animal, half dead, has not made,
+during this manoeuvre, a single movement of resistance. But when the
+hunter is about to close it, suddenly rousing herself with a leap,
+distending by a last effort all her muscles at once, she escapes from
+his grasp, and precipitates herself from the top of the cedar, to the
+great terror of Marimonda, then peaceably crouched under the tree,
+whom the cat brushes against in falling, and to the great
+disappointment of Selkirk, who thinks he has the captive in his pouch.
+
+Sliding along the trunk, Selkirk descends quickly to the ground; but
+the enemy has already disappeared, and left no trace. In vain his eyes
+are turned on all sides; he sees nothing, neither his adversary nor
+Marimonda, who has undoubtedly fled under the impression of this last
+terror.
+
+As he is in despair, a whistling familiar to his ear is heard, and at
+two hundred paces distant he perceives, on an eminence of the False
+Coquimbo, his monkey, bent double, in an attitude of contemplation,
+appearing very attentive to what is passing beneath her, and changing
+her posture only to send a repeated summons to her master.
+
+At all hazards he directs himself to this quarter.
+
+What a spectacle awaits him! In a cavity at the foot of the eminence
+where Marimonda is, he finds, crouching, still out of breath with her
+struggle and her race, his fugitive. She is a mother! and six kittens,
+already active, are rolling in the sun around her.
+
+Selkirk, seizing his knife, kills the mother, and carries off the
+little ones.
+
+A short time after, the rats have deserted the shore. But their
+departure, though it prevents the evil they might yet have done, does
+not remedy that already accomplished.
+
+The provisions of the solitary are almost entirely destroyed, and the
+little powder which remains is scarcely sufficient for a reserve which
+he no longer knows where to renew.
+
+The moment at last comes when he possesses no other ammunition than
+the only charge in his gun. This last charge, his last resource, oh!
+how preciously he preserves it to-day. While it is there, he can still
+believe himself armed, still powerful; he has not entirely exhausted
+his resources; it is his last hope. Who knows?--perhaps he may yet
+need it to protect his life in circumstances which he cannot foresee.
+
+But since his gun must remain suspended, inactive, to the walls of his
+cabin, it is time to think of supplying the place of the services it
+has rendered; it is time to realize his dream, and, according to the
+usual course of civilization, to substitute the life of a farmer and
+shepherd for that of a hunter.
+
+Already is his colony augmented by six new guests, domesticated in his
+house; already, on every side, his seeds are peeping out of the ground
+under the most favorable auspices; his young trees, firmly rooted, are
+growing rapidly beneath the double influence of heat and moisture; at
+the axil of some of their leaves, he sees a bud, an earnest of the
+harvest. He must now occupy himself with the means of surprising,
+seizing and retaining the ancestors of his future flock.
+
+Here, patience, address or stratagem can alone avail.
+
+Notwithstanding his natural agility, he does not dream of reaching
+them by pursuit. Since his last hunts, goats and kids keep themselves
+usually in the steep and mountainous parts of the island. To leap from
+rock to rock, to attempt to vie with them in celerity and lightness
+appears to him, with reason, a foolish and impracticable enterprise.
+Later, perhaps,... Who knows?
+
+He manufactures snares, traps; but suspicion is now the order of the
+day around him; each holds himself on the _qui vive_. After long
+waiting without any result, he finds in his snares a coati, some
+little Guinea pigs; here is one resource, undoubtedly, but he aims at
+higher game, and the kids will not allow themselves to be taken by his
+baits.
+
+He remembers then, that in certain parts of America, the hunters, in
+order to seize their prey living, have recourse to the lasso, a long
+cord terminated by a slip-noose, which they know how to throw at great
+distances, and almost always with certainty.
+
+With a thread which he obtains from the fibres of the aloe, with
+narrow strips of skin, closely woven, he composes a lasso more than
+fifty feet long; he tries it; he exercises it now against a tuft of
+leaves detached from a bush, now against some projecting rock;
+afterwards he tries it upon Marimonda, who often enough, by her
+agility and swiftness, puts her master at fault.
+
+In the interval of these preparatory exercises, Selkirk occupies
+himself with the construction of a latticed inclosure, destined to
+contain the flock which he hopes to possess; he makes it large and
+spacious, that his young cattle may bound and sport at their ease;
+high, that they may respect the limits he assigns them. In one corner,
+supported by solid posts, he builds a shed, simply covered with
+branches; that his flock may there be sheltered from the heat of the
+day. The inclosure and the shed, together with his garden, form a new
+addition to his great settlement.
+
+When, his kids shall have become goats, when the epoch of domesticity
+shall have arrived for them, when they shall have contracted habits of
+tameness, when they have learned to recognize his voice, then, and
+then only, will he permit them to wander and browse on the neighboring
+hills, under the direction of a vigilant guardian. This guardian,
+where shall he find? Why may it not be Marimonda? Marimonda, to whose
+intelligence he knows not where to affix bounds!
+
+Dreams, dreams, perhaps! and yet but for dreams, but for those gentle
+phantoms which he creates, and by which he surrounds himself, what
+would sustain the courage of the solitary?
+
+When Selkirk thinks he has acquired skill in the use of the lasso, he
+buries himself among the high mountains situated towards the central
+part of his island. Several days pass amid fruitless attempts, and
+when the delicately-carved foliage of the mimosa announces, by its
+folding, that night is approaching, he regains his cabin, gloomy,
+care-worn, and despairing of the future.
+
+Meanwhile, by his very failures, he has acquired experience. One
+evening, he returns to his dwelling, bringing with him two young kids,
+with scarcely perceptible horns, and reddish skin, varied with large
+brown spots. Marimonda welcomes her new guests, and this evening all
+in the habitation breathes joy and tranquillity.
+
+The week has not rolled away, when the number of Selkirk's goats
+exceeds that of his cats; and he takes pleasure in seeing them leap
+and play together in his inclosure; his mind has recovered its
+serenity.
+
+'Yes,' said he, with pride, 'man can suffice for himself, can depend
+on himself only for subsistence and welfare! Am I not a striking
+proof? Did not all seem lost for me, when an unforeseen catastrophe
+destroyed the remnant of the provision of powder which I owed to the
+pity of that miserable captain? Ah! undoubtedly according to his
+hateful calculations, he had limited the term of my life to the last
+charge which my gun should contain; this last charge is still there!
+Of what use will it be to me? Why do I need it? Are not my resources
+for subsistence more certain and numerous to-day than before? What
+then is wanting? The society of a Stradling and his fellows? God keep
+me from them! The best member of the crew of the brig Swordfish came
+away when I did. I have received from Marimonda more proofs of
+devotion than from all the companions I have had on land and on sea.
+What have I to regret? I am well off here; may God keep me in repose
+and health!'
+
+After this sally, he thought of his hives, which were still wanting,
+and of the methods to be employed to seize a swarm of bees.
+
+A month after, Selkirk, who religiously kept his reckoning on the
+margin of his Bible, resolved to celebrate the New Year. It was now
+the first of January, 1706.
+
+On this day he dined, not in his cabin, nor under his tree, but in the
+middle of the inclosure, surrounded by his family; fruits and good
+cheer were more abundant than usual; Marimonda, as was her custom,
+dined at the same table with himself: the cats shared in the feast;
+the goats roved around, stretching up to gaze with their blue eyes on
+the baskets of fruits, and returning to browse on the grass beneath
+the feet of the guests. Selkirk, as the master of the house, and chief
+of the family, generously distributed the provisions to his young and
+frolicksome republic, and Marimonda assisted him as well as she could,
+in doing the honors.
+
+After the repasts, there were races and combats; the remains of the
+baskets were thrown to the most skilful and the most adroit; then
+came, diversions and swings.
+
+Lying in his hammock, where he smoked his most excellent tobacco in
+his best pipe, Selkirk smilingly contemplated the capricious bounds,
+the riotous sports of his cats and kids, their graceful postures,
+their fraternal combats, in which sheathed claws and the inoffensive
+horn were the only weapons used on either side.
+
+To give more variety to the fete, Marimonda developes all the
+resources of her daring suppleness; she leaps from right to left,
+clearing large spaces with inconceivable dexterity. Attaining the
+summit of a tree, she whistles to attract her master's attention,
+then, with her two fore-paws clasped in her hind ones, she rolls
+herself up like a ball and drops on the ground; the foliage crackles
+beneath her fall, which seems as if it must be mortal; for her, this
+is only sport. Without altering the position of her limbs, she
+suddenly stops in her rapid descent, by means of her prehensile tail,
+that fifth hand, so powerful, with which nature has endowed the
+monkeys of America. Then, suspended by this organ alone, she
+accelerates her motions to and fro with incredible rapidity, quickly
+unwinds her tail from the branch by which she is suspended, and with a
+dart, traversing the air as if winged, alights at a hundred paces
+distance on a vine, which she instantly uses as a swing.
+
+Selkirk is astonished; he applauds the tricks of Marimonda, the sports
+and combats of his other subjects. Meanwhile, his eyes having turned
+towards the sea, his brow is suddenly overclouded. At the expiration
+of a few moments of an uneasy and agitated observation, he utters an
+exclamation, springs from his hammock, runs to his cabin, then to the
+shore, where he prostrates himself with his hands clasped and raised
+towards heaven.
+
+He has just perceived a sail.
+
+Provided with his glass, he seeks the sail upon the waves, he finds
+it. 'It is without doubt a barque,' said he to himself; 'a barque from
+the neighboring island, or some point of the continent!' And looking
+again through his copper tube, he clearly distinguishes three masts
+well rigged, decorated with white sails, which are swelling in the
+east wind, and gilded by the oblique rays of the declining sun.
+
+'It is a brig! The Swordfish, perhaps! Yes, Stradling has prolonged
+his voyage in these regions. The time which he had fixed for my exile
+has rolled away! He is coming to seek me. May he be blessed!'
+
+The movement which the brig made to double the island, had increased
+more and more the hopes of Selkirk, when the Spanish flag, hoisted at
+the stern, suddenly unfolded itself to his eyes.
+
+'The enemy!' exclaimed he; 'woe is me! If they land on this coast,
+whither shall I fly, where conceal myself? In the mountains! Yes, I
+can there succeed in escaping them! But, the wretches! they will
+destroy my cabin, my inclosure, my garden! the fruit of so much
+anxiety and labor!'
+
+And, with palpitating heart, he again watches the manoeuvres of the
+brig. The latter, having tacked several times, as if to get before the
+wind, hastily changed her course and stood out to sea.
+
+Selkirk remains stupefied, overwhelmed. 'These are Spaniards,'
+murmured he, after a moment's hesitation; 'what matters it! Am I now
+their enemy? I am only a colonist, an exile, a deserter from the
+English navy. They owe me protection, assistance, as a Christian. If
+they required it, I would serve on board their vessel! But they have
+gone; what method shall I employ to recall them, to signalize my
+presence?'
+
+There was but one; it was to kindle a large fire on the shore or on
+the hill. He needs hewn wood, and his supplies are exhausted; what is
+to be done?
+
+For an instant, in his disturbed mind, the idea arises to tear the
+lattice-work from his inclosure, the pillars and the roof from his
+shed, to pile them around his cabin, and set fire to the whole.
+
+This idea he quickly repulses, but it suffices to show what passed in
+the inner folds of the heart of this man, who had just now forced
+himself to believe that happiness was yet possible for him.
+
+On farther reflection, he remembers that behind his grotto, on one of
+the first terraces of the mountain, there is a dense thicket, where
+the trees, embarrassed with vines and dry briers, closely interwoven,
+calcined by the burning reflections of the sun on the rock which
+surrounds them, present a collection of dead branches and mouldy
+trunks, scarcely masked by the semblance of vegetation.
+
+Thither he transports all the brands preserved under the ashes of his
+hearth; he makes a pile of them; throws upon it armfuls of chips, bark
+and leaves. The flame soon runs along the bushes which encircle the
+thicket; and, when the sun goes down, an immense column of fire
+illuminates all this part of the island, and throws its light far over
+the ocean.
+
+Standing on the shore, Selkirk passes the night with his eyes fixed on
+the sea, his ear listening attentively to catch the distant sound of a
+vessel; but nothing presents itself to his glance upon the luminous
+and sparkling waves, and amid their dashing he hears no other sound
+but that of the trees and vines crackling in the flames.
+
+At morning all has disappeared. The fire has exhausted itself without
+going beyond its bounds, and the sea, calm and tranquil, shows nothing
+upon its surface but a few flocks of gulls.
+
+A week passes away, during which Selkirk remains thoughtful and
+taciturn; he rarely leaves the shore; he still beholds the sports of
+his cats and his kids, but no longer smiles at them; Marimonda, by way
+of amusing him, renews in his presence her surprising feats, but the
+attention of the master is elsewhere.
+
+Nevertheless, he cannot allow himself time to dream long with
+impunity; his reserve of smoked beef is nearly exhausted; to save it,
+he has again resorted to the shell-fish, which his stomach loathes; to
+the sea-crabs, of which he is tired; he needs other nourishment to
+restore his strength. He shakes off his lethargy, takes his lasso, his
+game-bag. His plan now is, not to hunt the kids, but the goats
+themselves.
+
+As he is about to set out, Marimonda approaches, preparing to
+accompany him. In his present frame of mind, Selkirk wishes to be
+alone, and makes her comprehend, by signs, that she must remain at
+home and watch the flock; but this time, contrary to her custom, she
+does not seem disposed to obey. Notwithstanding his orders, she
+follows him, stops when he turns, recommences to follow him, and, by
+her supplicating looks and expressive gestures, seeks to obtain the
+permission which he persists in refusing. At last Selkirk speaks
+severely, and she submits, still protesting against it by her air of
+sadness and depression. Was this, on her part, caprice or foresight?
+No one has the secret of these inexplicable instincts, which sometimes
+reveal to animals the presence of an invisible enemy, or the approach
+of a disaster.
+
+At evening, Selkirk had not returned! Marimonda passed the night in
+awaiting him, uttering plaintive cries.
+
+On the morrow the morning rolled away, then the day, then the night,
+and the cabin remained deserted, and Marimonda in vain scaled the
+trees and hills in the neighborhood to recover traces of her master.
+
+What had become of him?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+
+The Precipice.--A Dungeon in a Desert Island.--Resignation.--The passing
+Bird.--The browsing Goat.--The bending Tree.--Attempts at Deliverance.
+--Success.--Death of Marimonda.
+
+In that sterile and mountainous quarter of the island to which he has
+given the name of Stradling,--that name, importing to him
+misfortune,--Selkirk, venturing in pursuit of a goat, has fallen from
+a precipice.
+
+Fortunately the cavity is not deep. After a transient swoon,
+recovering his footing, experiencing only a general numbness, and some
+pain caused by the contusions resulting from his fall, he bethinks
+himself of the means of escape.
+
+But a circle of sharp rocks, contracting from the base to the summit,
+forms a tunnel over his head; no crevice, no precipitous ledge,
+interrupts their fatal uniformity. Only around him some platforms of
+sandy earth appear; he digs them with his knife, to form steps. Some
+fragments of roots project here and there through the interstices of
+the stones; he hopes to find a point of support by which to scale
+these abrupt walls. The little solidity of the roots, which give way
+in his grasp; his sufferings, which become more intense at every
+effort; these thousand rocky heads bending at once over him; all tell
+him plainly that it will be impossible for him to emerge from this
+hole--that it is destined to be his tomb.
+
+Poor young sailor, already condemned to isolation, separated from the
+rest of mankind, could he have foreseen that one day his captivity was
+to be still closer! that his steps would be chained, that the sight
+even of his island would be interdicted! and that in this desert,
+where he had neither persecutor nor jailer to fear, he would find a
+prison, a dungeon!
+
+After three days of anguish and tortures, after new and ineffectual
+attempts,--exhausted by fatigue, by thirst, by hunger,--consumed by
+fever, supervened in consequence of all his sufferings of body and
+soul, he resigns himself to his fate; with his foot, he prepares his
+last couch, composed of sand and dried leaves shaken from above by the
+neighboring trees; he lies down, folds his arms, closes his eyes, and
+prepares to die, thinking of his eternal salvation.
+
+Although he tries not to allow himself to be distracted by other
+thoughts, from time to time sounds from the outer world disturb his
+pious meditations. First it is the joyous song of a bird. To these
+vibrating notes another song replies from afar, on a more simple and
+almost plaintive key. It is doubtless the female, who, with a sort of
+modest and repressed tenderness, thus announces her retreat to him who
+calls; then a rapid rustling is heard above the head of the prisoner.
+It is the songster, hastening to rejoin his companion.
+
+Selkirk has never known love. Once perhaps,--in a fit of youth and
+delirium; and it was this false love which tore him from his studies,
+from his country!
+
+Ah! why did he not remain at Largo, with his father? To-day he also
+would have had a companion! In that smiling country where coolness
+dwells, where labor is so easy, life so sweet and calm, the paternal
+roof would have sheltered his happiness! Oh! the joys of his infancy!
+his green and sunny Scotland.
+
+The regrets which arise in his heart he quickly banishes; his dear
+remembrances he sacrifices to God; he weaves them into a fervent
+prayer.
+
+Very soon an approaching bleating rouses him again from his
+abstractions. A goat, with restless eye, has just stretched her head
+over the edge of the precipice, and for an instant fixes on him her
+astonished glance. Then, as if re-assured, defying his powerlessness,
+with a disdainful lip she quietly crops some tufts of grass growing on
+the verge of the tunnel.
+
+On seeing her, Selkirk instinctively lays his hand on the lasso which
+is beside him.
+
+'If I succeed in reaching her, in catching her,' said he, 'her blood
+will quench the thirst which devours me, her flesh will appease my
+hunger. But of what use would it be? Whence can I expect aid and
+succor for my deliverance? This would then only prolong my
+sufferings.'
+
+And, throwing aside the end of the lasso which he has just seized, he
+again folds his arms on his breast, and closes his eyes once more.
+
+I know not what stoical philosopher--Atticus, I believe, a prey to a
+malady which he thought incurable,--had resolved to die of inanition.
+At the expiration of a certain number of days, abstinence had cured
+him, and when his friends, in the number of whom he reckoned Cicero,
+exhorted him to take nourishment, persisting in his first resolution,
+'Of what use is it!' said he also, 'Must I not die sooner or later?
+Why should I then retrace my steps, when I have already travelled more
+than half the road?'
+
+Selkirk had more reason than Atticus to decide thus; besides, his
+friends, where are they, to exhort him to live? Friends!--has he ever
+had any?
+
+Night comes, and with the night a terrific hurricane arises. By the
+glare of the lightning he sees a tree, situated not far from the
+tunnel, bend towards him, almost broken by the violence of the wind.
+
+'Perhaps Providence will send me a method of saving myself!' murmured
+Selkirk; 'should the tree fall on this side, if its branches do not
+crush me, they will serve as steps to aid me to leave this pit! I am
+saved!'
+
+But the tree resists the storm, which passes away, carrying with it
+the last hope of the captive.
+
+Towards the morning of the fourth day his fever has ceased; the
+tortures of hunger and thirst are no longer felt; the complete
+annihilation of his strength is to him a kind of relief; sleep seizes
+him, and with sleep he thinks death must come.
+
+Soon, in his dream, in a hallucination springing undoubtedly from the
+weakness of his brain, plaints, confused and distant groans, reach him
+from different points of the island. These sorrowful cries, almost
+uninterrupted, afterwards approach, and are repeated with increasing
+strength. He awakes, he listens; the bushes around him crackle and
+rustle; even the earth emits a dull sound, as beneath the bounding of
+a goat; the cries are renewed and become more and more distinct, like
+the sobs of a child. Selkirk puts his hand to his forehead. These
+plaints, these sobs, he thinks he recognizes, and, suddenly raising
+himself with a convulsive effort, he exclaims:
+
+'Marimonda!'
+
+And Marimonda runs at her master's voice, changes, on seeing him, her
+cries of distress for cries of joy, leaps and gambols on the edge of
+the cavity, and, quickly finding a way to join him, suspends herself
+by her tail to one of the branches on the verge, and springs to his
+side.
+
+Then contortions, caresses, winks of the eyes, motions of the head,
+whining, whistling, succeed each other; she rolls before him, embraces
+him closely, seeking by every method to supply the place of that
+speech which alone is wanting, and which she almost seems to have.
+Good Marimonda! her humid and shivering skin, her bruised and bleeding
+feet, her in-flamed eyes, plainly tell Selkirk how long she has been
+in search of him, how she has watched, run, to find him, and, not
+finding him, what she has suffered at his absence.
+
+Her first transports over, by his pale complexion, by his dim eye, she
+quickly divines that it is want of food which has reduced him to this
+condition. Swift as a bird she climbs the sides of the tunnel; she
+repeatedly goes and returns, bringing each time fruits and canes full
+of savory and refreshing liquid. It is precisely the usual hour for
+their first repast, and once more they can partake of it together.
+
+Revived by this repast, by the sight of his companion in exile,
+Selkirk recovers his ideas of life and liberty. This abyss, from which
+she ascends with so much facility, who knows but with her aid he may
+be able in his turn to leave it? He remembers his lasso; he puts one
+end of it into Marimonda's hand. It is now necessary that she should
+fix it to some projection of the rock, some strong shrub, which may
+serve as a point of support.
+
+It was perhaps presuming too much on the intelligence which nature has
+bestowed on the race of monkeys. At her master's orders, Marimonda
+would seize the end of the cord, then immediately abandon it, as she
+needed entire freedom of motion to enable her to scale the walls of
+the tunnel.
+
+After several ineffectual attempts, Selkirk, as a last resort, decided
+to encircle Marimonda with the noose of the lasso, and, by a gesture,
+to send her towards those heights where he was so impatient to join
+her.
+
+She departs, dragging after her the chain, of which he holds the other
+extremity: this chain, the only bridge thrown for him between the
+abyss and the port of safety, between life and death!
+
+With what anxiety he observes, studies its oscillations! Several times
+he draws it towards him, and each time, as if in reply to his summons,
+Marimonda suddenly re-appears at the brow of the precipice, preparing
+to re-descend; but he repulses her with his voice and gestures, and
+when these methods are insufficient,--when Marimonda, exhausted with
+lassitude, seated on the verge of the tunnel, persists in remaining
+motionless, he has recourse to projectiles. To compel her to second
+him in his work, the possible realization of which he himself scarcely
+comprehends, he throws at her some fragments of stone detached from
+his rocky wall, and even the remains of that repast for which he is
+indebted to her. Even when she is at a distance, informed by the
+movements of the lasso of the direction she has taken, he pursues her
+still.
+
+Suddenly the cord tightens in his hand. He pulls again, he pulls with
+force; the cord resists! Fire mounts to his brain; his sluggish blood
+is quickened; his heart and temples beat violently; his fever returns,
+but only to restore to him, at this decisive moment, his former vigor.
+He hastily digs new steps in the interstices of the rock; with his
+hands suspending himself to the lasso, assisted by his feet, by his
+knees, sometimes turning, grasping the projecting roots, the angles of
+his wall, he at last reaches the top of the cliff.
+
+Suddenly he feels the lasso stretch, as if about to break; a mist
+passes over his eyes: his head becomes dizzy, the cord escapes his
+grasp. But, by a mechanical movement, he has seized one of the highest
+projections of the tunnel, he holds it, he climbs,--he is saved.
+
+And during this perilous ascension, absorbed in the difficulties of
+the undertaking, attentive to himself alone, staggering, with a
+buzzing sound in his ears, he has not heard a sorrowful, lamentable
+moaning, not far from him.
+
+Dragging hither and thither after her the rope of leather and fibre of
+aloes, Marimonda, rather, doubtless, by chance than by calculation,
+had enlaced it around the trunk of the same tree which the night
+before, during the storm, had agitated its dishevelled branches above
+the deep couch of the dying man. This trunk had served as a point of
+resistance; but, during the tension, the unfortunate monkey, with her
+breast against the tree, had herself been caught in the folds of the
+lasso.
+
+When Selkirk arrives, he finds her extended on the ground, blood and
+foam issuing from her mouth, and her eyes starting from their sockets.
+Kneeling beside her, he loosens the bonds which still detain her.
+Excited by his presence, Marimonda makes an effort to rise, but
+immediately falls back, uttering a new cry of pain.
+
+With his heart full of anguish, taking her in his arms, Selkirk, not
+without a painful effort, not without being obliged to pause on the
+way to recover his strength, carries her to the dwelling on the shore.
+
+This shore he finds deserted and in confusion.
+
+Deprived of their daily nourishment during the prolonged absence of
+their master, the goats have made a passage through the inclosure, by
+gnawing the still green foliage which imprisoned them; the hurricane
+of the night has overthrown the rest. Before leaving, they had ravaged
+the garden, destroyed the promises of the approaching harvest, and
+devoured even the bark of the young trees. The cats have followed the
+goats. Selkirk has before his eyes a spectacle of desolation; his
+props, his trellises, the remains of his orchard, of his inclosure, of
+his shed, a part even of the roof of his cabin, strew the earth in
+confusion around him.
+
+But it is not this which occupies him now. He has prepared for
+Marimonda a bed beside his own; he takes care of her, he watches over
+her, he leaves her only to seek in the woods, or on the mountains, the
+herb which may heal her; he brings all sorts, and by armfuls, that she
+may choose;--does she not know them better than himself?
+
+As she turns away her head, or repulses with the hand those which he
+presents, he thinks he has not yet discovered the one she requires,
+and though still suffering, though himself exhausted by so many
+varying emotions, he re-commences his search, to summon the entire
+island to the assistance of Marimonda. From each of his trees he
+borrows a branch; from his bushes, his rocks, his streams--a plant, a
+fruit, a leaf, a root! For the first time he ventures across the
+_pajonals_--spongy marshes formed by the sea along the cliffs, and
+where, beneath the shade of the mangroves, grow those singular
+vegetables, those gelatinous plants, endowed with vitality and motion.
+At sight of all these remedies, Marimonda closes her eyes, and reopens
+them only to address to her friend a look of gratitude.
+
+The only thing she accepts is the water he offers her, the water which
+he himself holds to her lips in his cocoa-nut cup.
+
+During a whole week, Selkirk remains constantly absorbed in these
+cares, useless cares!--Marimonda cannot be healed! In her breast,
+bruised by the folds of the lasso, exists an important lesion of the
+organs essential to life, and from time to time a gush of blood
+reddens her white teeth.
+
+'What!' said Selkirk to himself, 'she has then accompanied me on this
+corner of earth only to be my victim! To her first caress I replied
+only by brutality; the first shot I fired in this island was directed
+against her. I pursued for a long time, with my thoughtless and stupid
+hatred, the only being who has ever loved me, and who to-day is dying
+for having saved me from that precipice from which I drove her with
+blows of stones! Marimonda, my companion, my friend,--no! thou shalt
+not die! He who sent thee to me as a consolation will not take thee
+away so soon, to leave me a thousand times more alone, more unhappy,
+than ever! God, in clothing thee with a form almost human, has
+undoubtedly given thee a soul almost like ours; the gleam of
+tenderness and intelligence which shines in thine eyes, where could it
+have been lighted, but at that divine fire whence all affection and
+devotion emanate? Well! I will implore Him for thee; and if He refuse
+to hear me, it will be because He has forgotten me, because He has
+entirely forsaken me, and I shall have nothing more to expect from His
+mercy!'
+
+Falling then upon his knees, with his forehead upon the ground, he
+prays God for Marimonda.
+
+Meanwhile, from day to day the poor invalid grows weaker; her eyes
+become dim and glassy; her limbs frightfully emaciated, and her hair
+comes off in large masses.
+
+One evening, exhausted with fatigue, after having wrapped in a
+covering of goat-skin Marimonda, who was in a violent fever, Selkirk
+was preparing to retire to rest; she detained him, and, taking his
+hand in both of hers, cast upon him a gentle and prolonged look, which
+resembled an adieu.
+
+He seated himself beside her on the ground.
+
+Then, without letting go his hand, she leaned her head on her master's
+knee, and fell asleep in this position. Selkirk dares not stir, for
+fear of disturbing her repose. Insensibly sleep seizes him also.
+
+In the morning when he awakes, the sun is illuminating the interior of
+his cabin; Marimonda remains in the same attitude as the evening
+before, but her hands are cold, and a swarm of flies and mosquitoes
+are thrusting their sharp trunks into her eyes and ears.
+
+She is a corpse.
+
+Selkirk raises her, uttering a cry, and, after having cast an angry
+look towards heaven, wipes away two tears that trickle down his
+cheeks.
+
+Thou thoughtest thyself insensible, Selkirk, and behold, thou art
+weeping!--thou, who hast more than once seen, with unmoistened eye,
+men, thy companions, in war or at sea, fall beneath a furious sword,
+or under the fire of batteries! Among the sentiments which honor
+humanity, which elevate it notwithstanding its defects, thou hadst
+preserved at least thy confidence in God and in his mercy, Selkirk,
+and to-day thou doubtest both!
+
+Why dost thou weep? why dost thou distrust God?
+
+Because thy monkey is dead!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+
+Discouragement.--A Discovery.--A Retrospective Glance.--Project of
+Suicide.--The Last Shot.--The Sea Serpent.--The _Porro_.--A Message.
+--Another Solitary.
+
+His provisions are exhausted, and Selkirk thinks not of renewing them;
+his settlement on the shore is destroyed, and he thinks not of
+rebuilding it; the fish-pond, the bed of water-cresses are encroached
+upon by sand and weeds, and he thinks not of repairing them. His mind,
+completely discouraged, recoils before such labors; he has scarcely
+troubled himself to replace the roof of his cabin.
+
+In the midst of his dreams, Selkirk had not counted enough on two
+terrific guests, which must sooner or later come: despair and _ennui_.
+
+Nevertheless, he had read in his Bible this passage: 'As the worm
+gnaweth the garment and rottenness the wood, so doth the weariness of
+solitude gnaw the heart of man.'
+
+One day, as he was descending from the Oasis, where he had dug a tomb
+for Marimonda, he bethought himself of visiting the site of his
+burning wood.
+
+Around him, the earth, blackened by the ravages of the fire, presented
+only a naked, gloomy and desolate picture. To his great surprise,
+beneath the ruins, under coal dust and half-calcined trunks of trees,
+he discovered, elevated several feet above the soil, the partition of
+a wall, some stones quarried out and placed one upon another; in fine,
+the remains of a building, evidently constructed by the hand of man.
+
+Men had then inhabited this island before him! What had become of
+them? This wood, impenetrably choked, stifled with thorny bushes,
+briars and vines, and which he had delivered over to the flames, was
+undoubtedly a garden planted by them, on a sheltered declivity of the
+mountain; the garden which surrounded their habitation, as he had
+himself designed his own to do.
+
+Ah! if he could have but found them in the island, how different would
+have been his fate! But to live alone! to have no companions but his
+own thoughts! amid the dash of waves, the cry of birds, the bleating
+of goats, incessantly to imagine the sound of a human voice, and
+incessantly to experience the torture of being undeceived! What
+elements of happiness has he ever met in this miserable island? When
+he dreamed of creating resources for a long and peaceful future, he
+lied to himself. A life favored by leisure would but crush him the
+oftener beneath the weight of thought, and it is thought which is
+killing him, the thought of isolation!
+
+What import to him the beautiful sights spread out before his eyes?
+The vast extent of sky and earth has repeated to him each day that he
+is lost, forgotten on an obscure point of the globe. The sunrises and
+sunsets, with their magic aspects, this luxuriant tropical vegetation,
+the magnificent and picturesque scenery of his island, awaken in him
+only a feeling of restraint, an uneasiness which he cannot define.
+Perhaps the emotions, so sweet to all, are painful to him only because
+he cannot communicate them, share them with another. It is not the
+noisy life of cities which he asks, not even that of the shore. But,
+at least, a companion, a being to reply to his voice, to be associated
+with his joys, his sorrows. Marimonda! No, he recognizes it now!
+Marimonda could amuse him, but was not sufficient; she inhabited with
+him only the exterior world, she communicated with him only by things
+visible and palpable; her affection for her master, her gentleness,
+her admirable instinct, sometimes succeeded in lessening the distance
+which separated their two natures, but did not wholly fill up the
+interval.
+
+He had exaggerated the intelligence which, besides, increased at the
+expense of her strength, as with all monkeys; for God has not willed
+that an animal should approximate too closely to man; he had overrated
+the sense of her acts, because he needed near him a thinking and
+acting being; but with her, confidences, plans, hopes, communication,
+the exchange of all those intimate and mysterious thoughts which are
+the life of the soul, were they possible? Even her eyes did not see
+like his own; admiration was forbidden to her; admiration, that
+precious faculty, which exists only for man,--and which becomes
+extinct by isolation.
+
+How many others become extinct also!
+
+Self-love, a just self-esteem, that powerful lever which sustains us,
+which elevates us, which compels us to respect in ourselves that
+nobility of race which we derive from God, what becomes of it in
+solitude? For Selkirk, vanity itself has lost its power to stimulate.
+Formerly, when in the presence of his comrades at St. Andrew or of the
+royal fleet, he had signalized himself by feats of address or courage,
+a sentiment of pride or triumph had inspired him. Since his arrival in
+the island, his courage and address have had but too frequent
+opportunities of exercising themselves, but he has been excited only
+by want, by necessity, by a purely personal interest. Besides, can one
+utter an exclamation of triumph, where there is not even an echo to
+repeat it?
+
+After having thus painfully passed in review all of which his exile
+from the world had deprived him, he exclaimed:
+
+'To live alone, what a martyrdom! to live useless to all, what a
+disgrace! What! does no one need me? What! are generosity, devotion,
+even pity, all those noble instincts by which the soul reveals itself,
+for ever interdicted to me? This is death, death premature and
+shameful! Ah! why did I not remain at the foot of that precipice?'
+
+With downcast head, he remained some time overwhelmed with the weight
+of his discouragement; then, suddenly, his brow cleared up, a sinister
+thought crossed his mind; he ran to his cabin, seized his gun. This
+last shot, this last charge of powder and lead, which he has preserved
+so preciously as a final resource, it will serve to put an end to his
+days! Well, is not this the most valuable service he can expect from
+it? He examines the gun; the priming is yet undisturbed; he passes his
+nail over the flint, leans the butt against the ground, takes off the
+thick leather which covers his foot, that he may be able to fire with
+more certainty. But during all these preparations his resolution grows
+weaker; he trembles as he rests the gun against his temples; that
+sentiment of self-preservation, so profoundly implanted in the heart
+of man, re-awakens in him. He hesitates--thrice returning to his first
+resolution, he brings the gun to his forehead; thrice he removes it.
+At last, to drive away this demon of suicide, he fires it in the air.
+
+Scarcely has he thus uselessly thrown away this precious shot before
+he repents. He approaches the shore; it is at the moment when the tide
+is at its lowest ebb; the sun touches the horizon. Selkirk lies down
+on the damp beach:--'When the wave returns,' said he, 'if it be God's
+will, let it take me!'
+
+Slumber comes first. Exhausted with emotion, yielding to the lassitude
+of his mind, he falls asleep. In the middle of the night, suddenly
+awakened by the sound of the advancing wave, he again flees before the
+threat of death; he no longer wishes to die. Once in safety, he turns
+to contemplate that immense sea which, for an instant, he had wished
+might be his tomb.
+
+By the moonlight, he perceives as it were a long and slender chain,
+which, gliding upon the crest of the waves, directs itself towards the
+shore. By its form, by its copper color, by the multiplicity of its
+rings, unfolding in the distance, Selkirk recognizes the sea-serpent,
+that terror of navigators, as he has often heard it described.
+
+The mind of the solitary is a perpetual mirage.
+
+Filled with terror, he flies again; he conceals himself, trembling, in
+the caverns of his mountains; he has become a coward; why should he
+affect a courage he does not feel? No one is looking at him!
+
+The next day, instead of the sea-serpent, he finds on the beach an
+immense cryptogamia, a gigantic alga, of a single piece, divided into
+a thousand cylindrical branches, and much superior to all those he has
+observed in the Straits of Sunda. The rising tide had thrown it on the
+shore.
+
+While he examines it, he sees with surprise all sorts of birds come to
+peck at it; coatis, agoutis, and even rats, come out of their holes,
+boldly carrying away before his eyes fragments, whence issues a thick
+and brown sap. Emboldened by their example, and especially by the
+balsamic odor of the plant, he tastes it. It is sweet and succulent.
+
+This plant is no other than that providential vegetable called by the
+Spaniards _porro_, and which forms so large a part of the nourishment
+of the poor inhabitants of Chili.[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: It is the _Durvilloea utilis_, dedicated to Dumont
+d'Urville, by Bory de St. Vincent, and classed by him in the
+laminariees, an important and valuable family of marine cryptogamia.]
+
+The sea, which had already sent Selkirk seals to furnish him with oil
+and furs in a moment of distress, had just come to his assistance by
+giving him an easily procured aliment for a long time.
+
+Another surprise awaits him.
+
+Between the interlaced branches of his alga, he discovers a little
+bottle, strongly secured with a cork and wax. It contains a fragment
+of parchment, on which are traced some lines in the Spanish language.
+
+Although he is but imperfectly acquainted with this language, though
+the characters are partially effaced or scarcely legible, Selkirk, by
+dint of patience and study, soon deciphers the following words:
+
+'In the name of the Holy Trinity, to you who may read'--(here some
+words were wanting,)--'greeting. My name is Jean Gons--(Gonzalve or
+Gonsales; the rest of the name was illegible.) After having seen my
+two sons, and almost all my fortune, swallowed up in the sea with the
+vessel _Fernand Cortes_, in which I was a passenger, thrown by
+shipwreck on the coasts of the Island of San Ambrosio, near Chili, I
+live here alone and desolate. May God and men come to my aid!'
+
+At the bottom of the parchment, some other characters were
+perceptible, but without form, without connection, and almost entirely
+destroyed by a slight mould which had collected at the bottom of the
+bottle.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+
+The Island San Ambrosio.--Selkirk at last knows what Friendship is.--The
+Raft.--Visits to the Tomb of Marimonda.--The Departure.--The two
+Islands.--Shipwreck.--The Port of Safety.
+
+As he read this, Selkirk was seized with intense pity for the
+unfortunate shipwrecked. What! on this same ocean, undoubtedly on
+these same shores, lives another unhappy being, like himself exiled
+from the world, enduring the same sufferings, subject to the same
+wants, experiencing the same _ennui_, the same anguish as himself!
+this man has confided to the sea his cry of distress, his complaint,
+and the sea, a faithful messenger, has just deposited it at the feet
+of Selkirk!
+
+Suddenly he remembers that rock, that island, discerned by him, on the
+day when at the Oasis, he was reconciled to Marimonda.
+
+That is the island of San Ambrosio; it is there, he does not doubt it
+for an instant, that his new friend lives; yes, his friend! for, from
+this moment he experiences for him an emotion of sympathetic
+affection. He loves him, he is so much to be pitied! Poor father, he
+has lost his sons, he has lost his fortune and the hope of returning
+to his country; and yet there reigns in his letter a tone of dignified
+calmness, of religious resignation which can come only from a noble
+heart. He is a Spaniard and a Roman Catholic; Selkirk is a Scotchman
+and a Presbyterian; what matters it?
+
+To-day his friend demands assistance, and he has resolved to dare all,
+to undertake all to respond to his appeal. Like a lamp deprived of
+air, his mind has revived at this idea, that he can at last be useful
+to others than himself. The inhabitant of San Ambrosio shall be
+indebted to him for an alleviation of his sorrows; for companionship
+in them. What is there visionary about this hope? Had he not already
+conceived the project of preparing a barque to explore that unknown
+coast? God seems to encourage his design, by sending him at once this
+double manna for the body and soul, the _porro_, which will suffice
+for his nourishment, and this writing, which the wave has just
+brought, to impose on him a duty.
+
+He immediately sets himself to the work, and obstacles are powerless
+to chill his generous excitement. Of the vegetable productions of the
+island, the red cedar and myrtle are those which grow of the largest
+size;[1] but yet their trunks are not large enough to serve when
+hollowed out for a barque. Well! he will construct a raft.
+
+[Footnote 1: The _myrtus maximus_ attains 13 metres (a little more
+than 42 feet) in height.]
+
+He fells young trees, cuts off their branches, rolls them to the
+shore, on a platform of sand, which the waves reach at certain
+periods; he fastens them solidly together with a triple net-work of
+plaited leather, cords woven of the fibre of the aloe, supple and
+tough vines; he chooses another with diverging and horizontal roots,
+the habitual direction taken by all the large vegetables of this
+island, the sand of which is covered only by two feet of earth. This
+shall be the mast. He plants it in the middle of the raft, where it is
+kept upright by its roots, knotted and interwoven with the various
+pieces which compose the floor. For a sail, has he not that which was
+left him by the Swordfish? and will not his seal-skin hammock serve as
+a spare sail?
+
+He afterwards constructs a helm, then two strong oars, that he may
+neglect no chance of success. He fastens his structure still more
+firmly by all that remains to him of his nails and bolts, and awaits
+the high tide to launch his skiff upon the sea.
+
+He has never felt calmer, happier, than during the long time occupied
+in these labors; their object has doubled his strength. The moments of
+indispensable repose, he has passed at the Oasis, beside the tomb of
+Marimonda, of that Marimonda, who by her example, opened to him the
+life of devotedness in which he has just engaged. Thence, with his eye
+turned upon that island where dwells the unknown friend from whom he
+has received a summons, he talks to him, encourages him, consoles him;
+he imparts to him his resolution to join him soon, and it seems as if
+the same waves which had brought the message will also undertake to
+transmit the reply.
+
+At present, Selkirk finds some sweetness in pitying evils which are
+not his own; he no longer dreams of wrapping himself in a cloak of
+selfishness; that disdainful heart, hitherto invincibly closed, at
+last experiences friendship, or at least aspires to do so.
+
+At last, the day arrives when the sea, inundating the marshes, bending
+the mangroves, reaches, on the sandy platform, one of the corners of
+his raft.
+
+Selkirk hastens to transport thither his hatchets, his guns, his
+seal-skins and goat-skins, his Bible, his spy-glass, his pipes, his
+ladder, his stools, even his traps; all his riches! it is a complete
+removal.
+
+On taking possession of the island, he had engraved on the bark of
+several trees the date of his arrival; he now inscribes upon them the
+day of his departure. For many months his reckoning has been
+interrupted; to determine the date is impossible; he knows only the
+day of the week.
+
+When the wave had entirely raised his barque, aiding himself with one
+of the long oars to propel it over the rocky bottom, he gained the
+sea. Then, after having adjusted his sail, with his hand on the helm,
+he turned towards his island to address to it an adieu, laden with
+maledictions rather than regrets.
+
+Swelled by a south-east wind, the sail pursues its course towards that
+other land, the object of his new desires. At the expiration of some
+hours, by the aid of his glass, what from the summit of his mountains
+had appeared to him only a dark point, a rock beaten by the waves,
+seems already enlarged, allowing him to see high hills covered with
+verdure. He has not then deceived himself! There exists a habitable
+land,--habitable for two! It has served as a refuge to the shipwrecked
+man, to his friend! Ah! how impatient he is to reach this shore where
+he is to meet him!
+
+Several hours more of a slow but peaceful navigation roll away. He has
+arrived at a distance almost midway between the point of departure and
+that of arrival. Looking alternately at the islands Selkirk and San
+Ambrosio, both illuminated by the sunset, with their indefinite forms,
+their bases buried in the waves, their terraced summits, veiled with a
+light fog, they appear like the reflection of each other. But for the
+discovery which he had previously made of the second, he would have
+believed this was his own island, or rather its image, represented in
+the waters of the sea.
+
+But in proportion as he advances towards his new conquest, it
+increases to his eyes, as if to testify the reality of its existence,
+now by a mountain peak, now by a cape. He had seen only the profile,
+it now presents its face, ready to develope all its graces, all its
+fascinations; while its rival, disdained, abandoned, becomes by
+degrees effaced, and seems to wish to conceal its humiliation beneath
+the wave of the great ocean.
+
+Suddenly, without any apparent jar, without any flaw of wind, on a
+calm sea, the stem of the tree serving as a mast vacillates, bends
+forward, then on one side; the roots, which fasten it to the floor of
+the raft, are wrenched from their hold; the sail, diverging in the
+same direction, still extended, drags it entirely down, and it is
+borne away by the wave.
+
+Struck with astonishment, Selkirk puts his foot on the helm, and
+seizes his oars; but oars are powerless to move so heavy a machine.
+What is to be done?
+
+He who has not been able to endure isolation in the midst of a
+terrestrial paradise, from which he has just voluntarily exiled
+himself, must he then he reduced to have for an asylum, on the
+immensity of the ocean, only a few trunks of trees scarcely lashed
+together?
+
+The situation is frightful, terrific; Selkirk dares not contemplate
+it, lest his reason should give way. He must have a sail; a mast! He
+has his spare sail; for the mast, his only resource is to detach one
+of the timbers which compose the frame-work of his raft. Perhaps this
+will destroy its solidity; but he has no choice.
+
+He takes the best of his hatchets, chooses among the straight stems of
+which his floating dwelling is composed, that which seems most
+suitable; he cuts away with a thousand precautions, the bonds which
+fasten it; he frees it, not without difficulty, from the contact of
+other logs to which it has been attached. But while he devotes himself
+to this task, the raft, obedient to a mysterious motion of the sea,
+has slowly drifted on; the surface is covered with foam, as if
+sub-marine waves are lashing it. Selkirk springs to the helm; the
+tiller breaks in his hands; he seizes the oars, they also break. An
+unknown force hurries him on. He has just fallen into one of those
+rapid currents which, from north to south, traverse the waters of the
+Pacific Ocean.
+
+Borne away in a contrary direction from that which he has hitherto
+pursued, the land of which he had come in search seems to fly before
+him. Whither is he going? Into what regions, into what solitudes of
+the sea is he to be carried, far from islands and continents?
+
+To add to his terror, in these latitudes, where day suddenly succeeds
+to night and night to day, where twilight is unknown, the sun, just
+now shining brightly, suddenly sinks below the horizon.
+
+In the midst of profound darkness, the unhappy man pursues this fatal
+race, leading to inevitable destruction. During a part of this
+terrible night, he hears the frail frame-work which supports him
+cracking beneath his feet. How long must his sufferings last? He knows
+not. At last, jostled by adverse waves, shaken to its centre, the raft
+begins to whirl around, and something heavier than the shock of the
+wave comes repeatedly to give it new and rude blows. The first rays of
+the rising moon, far from calming the terrors of the unhappy mariner,
+increase them. In his dizzy brain, these wan rays which silver the
+surface of the sea, seem so many phantoms coming to be present at his
+last moments. Pale, bent double, with his hair standing upright,
+clinging to some projection of his barque, he in vain attempts to fix
+his glance on certain strange objects which he sees ascending,
+descending, and rolling around him.
+
+They are the trunks of the trees which formed a part of his raft,
+limbs detached from its body, and which, now drawn into the same
+whirlpool, are by their repeated shocks, aiding in his complete
+destruction.
+
+In face of this imminent, implacable death, Selkirk ceases to struggle
+against it. He has now but one resource; the belief in another life.
+The religious instinct, which has already come to his assistance,
+revives with force. Clinging with his hands and feet to these wavering
+timbers, which are almost disjoined, half inundated by the wave, which
+is encroaching more and more upon his last asylum, he directs his
+steps towards the spot where he had deposited his arms and furs; he
+takes from among them his Bible, not to read it, but to clasp it to
+his heart, whose agitation and terror seem to grow calm beneath its
+sacred contact.
+
+He then attempts to absorb his thoughts in God; he blames himself for
+not having been contented with the gifts he had received from Him; he
+might have lived happily in Scotland, or in the royal navy. It is this
+perpetual desire for change, these aspirations after the unknown,
+which have occasioned his ruin.
+
+At this moment, raising his eyes towards heaven, he sees, beneath the
+pale rays of the moon, a mass of rocks rising at a little distance,
+which he immediately recognizes. There is the bay of the Seals, the
+peak of the Discovery. That hollow, lying in the shadow, is the valley
+of the Oasis! As on the first day of his arrival, on one of the
+steepest summits of the mountain, he perceives stationed there,
+immovable, like a sentinel, a goat, between whose delicate limbs
+shines a group of stars, celestial eyes, whose golden lids seem to
+vibrate as if in appeal. It is his island! He does not hesitate;
+suddenly recovering all his energies, he springs from the raft,
+struggles with vigor, with perseverance against the current, triumphs
+over it, and, after prolonged efforts, at last reaches this haven of
+deliverance, this port of safety; he lands, fatigued, exhausted, but
+overcome with joy and gratitude. Profoundly thanking God from his
+heart, he prostrates himself, and kisses with transport the hospitable
+soil of this island,--which, on the morning of the same day, he had
+cursed.
+
+Alas! does not reflection quickly diminish this lively joy at his
+return and safety? From this shipwreck, poor sailor, thou hast saved
+only thyself: thy tools, thy instruments of labor, even thy Bible, are
+a prey to the sea!
+
+It is now, Selkirk, that thou must suffice for thyself! It is the last
+trial to which thou canst be subjected!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+
+The Island of Juan Fernandez.--Encounter in the Mountains.--Discussion.
+--A New Captivity.--A Cannon-shot.--Dampier and Selkirk.--_Mas a Fuera_.
+--News of Stradling.--Confidences.--End of the History of the real
+Robinson Crusoe.--Nebuchadnezzar.
+
+On the 1st of February, 1709, an English vessel, equipped and sent to
+sea by the merchants of Bristol, after having sailed around Cape Horn,
+in company with another vessel belonging to the same expedition,
+touched alone, about the 33d degree of south latitude, at the Island
+of Juan Fernandez, from a hundred and ten to a hundred and twenty
+leagues distant from the coast of Chili.
+
+The second ship was to join her without delay. Symptoms of the scurvy
+had appeared on board, and it was intended to remain here for some
+time, to give the crew opportunity of recovering their health.
+
+Their tents pitched, towards evening several sailors, having ventured
+upon the island, were not a little surprised to see, through the
+obscurity, a strange being, bearing some resemblance to the human
+form, who, at their approach, scaling the mountains, leaping from rock
+to rock, fled with the rapidity of a deer, the lightness of a chamois.
+
+Some doubted whether it was a man, and prepared to fire at him. They
+were prevented by an officer named Dower, who accompanied them.
+
+On their return to their companions, the sailors related what they had
+seen; Dower did not fail to do the same among the officers; and this
+evening, at the encampment on the shore, in the forecastle as well as
+on the quarter-deck, there were narratives and suppositions that would
+'amuse an assembly of Puritans through the whole of Lent,' says the
+account from which we borrow a part of our information.
+
+At this period, tales of the marvellous gained great credence among
+sailors. Not long before, the Spaniards had discovered giants in
+Patagonia; the Portuguese, sirens in the seas of Brazil; the French,
+tritons and satyrs at Martinique; the Dutch, black men, with feet like
+lobsters, beyond Paramaribo.
+
+The strange individual under discussion was unquestionably a satyr, or
+at least one of those four-footed, hairy men, such as the authentic
+James Carter declared he had met with in the northern part of America.
+
+Some, thinking this conclusion too simple, adroitly insinuated that no
+one among the sailors who had met this monster, had noticed in him so
+great a number of paws. Why four paws?--why should he not be a
+monopedous man, a man whose body, terminated by a single leg, cleared,
+with this support alone, considerable distances? Was not the existence
+of the monopedous man attested by modern travellers, and even in
+antiquity and the middle ages, by Pliny and St. Augustine?
+
+Others preferred to imagine in this singular personage the acephalous
+man, the man without a head, named by the grave Baumgarthen as
+existing on the new continent. They had not discovered many legs, but
+neither had they discovered a head; why should he have one?
+
+And the discussion continued, and not a voice was raised to risk this
+judicious observation; if neither head nor limbs have been
+distinguished, it may perhaps be because he has been seen only in the
+dark.
+
+The next day, each wished to be satisfied; a regular hunt was
+organized against this phenomenon; they set out, invaded his retreat,
+pursued him, surrounded him, at last seized him, and the brave sailors
+of Great Britain discovered with stupefaction, in this monopedous,
+acephalous man, in this satyr, this cercopithecus, what? A countryman,
+a Scotchman, a subject of Queen Anne!
+
+It was Selkirk; Selkirk, his hair long and in disorder, his limbs
+encased in fragments of skins, and half deprived of his reason.
+
+His island was Juan Fernandez, so called by the first navigator who
+discovered it; this was Selkirk Island.
+
+When he was conducted before Captain Woodes Rogers, commander of the
+expedition, to the interrogations of the latter, the unfortunate man,
+with downcast look, and agitated with a nervous trembling, replied
+only by repeating mechanically the last syllables of the phrases which
+were addressed to him by the captain.
+
+A little recovered from his agitation, discovering that he had
+Englishmen to deal with, he attempted to pronounce some words; he
+could only mutter a few incoherent and disconnected sentences.
+
+'Solitude and the care of providing for his subsistence,' says Paw,
+'had so occupied his mind, that all rational ideas were effaced from
+it. As savage as the animals, and perhaps more so, he had almost
+entirely forgotten the secret of articulating intelligible sounds.'
+
+Captain Rogers having asked him how long he had been secluded in this
+island, Selkirk remained silent; he nevertheless understood the
+question, for his eyes immediately opened with terror, as if he had
+just measured the long space of time which his exile had lasted. He
+was far from having an exact idea of it; he appreciated it only by the
+sufferings he had endured there, and, looking fixedly at his hands, he
+opened and shut them several times.
+
+Reckoning by the number of his fingers, it was twenty or thirty years,
+and every one at first believed in the accuracy of his calculation, so
+completely did his forehead, furrowed with wrinkles, his skin
+blackened, withered by the sun, his hair whitened at the roots, his
+gray beard, give him the aspect of an old man.
+
+Selkirk was born in 1680; he was then only twenty-nine.
+
+After having replied thus, he turned his head, cast a troubled look on
+the objects which surrounded him; a remembrance seemed to awaken, and,
+uttering a cry, stepping forward, he pointed with his finger to a
+cedar on his left. It was the tree on which, when he left the
+Swordfish, he had inscribed the date of his arrival in the island. The
+officer Dower approached, and, notwithstanding the crumbling of the
+decayed bark, could still read there this inscription:
+
+'Alexander Selkirk--from Largo, Scotland, Oct. 27, 1704.'
+
+His exile from the world had therefore lasted four years and three
+months.
+
+Notwithstanding the interest excited by his misfortunes, by his name,
+his accent, more than by his language, Captain Rogers, an honorable
+and humane man, but of extreme severity on all that appertained to
+discipline, recognized him as a British subject, suspected him to be a
+deserter from the English navy, and gave orders that he should be put
+under guard, pending a definitive decision.
+
+The sailors commissioned to this office did not find it an easy thing
+to guard a prisoner who could climb the trees like a squirrel, and
+outstrip them all in a race. As a precaution, they commenced by
+binding him firmly to the same cedar on which his name was engraved.
+There the unfortunate Selkirk figured as a curious animal, ornamented
+with a label.
+
+Afterwards, more for pastime than through mischief, they tormented him
+with questions, to obtain from him hesitating or almost senseless
+replies, which bewildered him much; then they began to examine, with
+childish surprise, the length of his beard, of his hair and nails; the
+prodigious development of his muscles; his bare feet, so hardened by
+travel, that they seemed to be covered with horn moccasins. Having
+found beneath his goat-skin rags, a knife, whose blade, by dint of use
+and sharpening, was almost reduced to the proportions of that of a
+penknife, they took it away to examine it; but on seeing himself
+deprived of this single weapon, the only relic of his shipwreck, the
+prisoner struggled, uttering wild howls; they restored it to him.
+
+At the hour of repast, Selkirk had, like the rest, his portion of meat
+and biscuit. He ate the biscuit, manifesting great satisfaction; but
+he, who had at first suffered so much from being deprived of salt,
+found in the meat a degree of saltness insupportable. He pointed to
+the stream; one of his guards courteously offered him his gourd,
+containing a mixture of rum and water; he approached it to his lips,
+and immediately threw it away with violence, as if it had burned him.
+
+At evening, he was transported on board.
+
+A few days after he began to acquire a taste for common food; his
+ideas became more definite; speech returned to his lips more freely
+and clearly; but liberty of motion was not yet restored to him, a new
+captivity opened before him, and his irritation at this was presenting
+an obstacle to the complete restoration of his faculties, when God,
+who had so deeply tried him, came to his assistance.
+
+One morning, as the crew of the ship were occupied, some in caulking
+and tarring it, others in gathering edible plants on the island, a
+cannon-shot resounded along the waves. The caulkers climbed up the
+rigging, the provision-hunters ran to the shore, the officers seized
+their spy-glasses, and all together quickly uttered a _huzza_! The
+vessel which had sailed in company with that of Captain Rogers, the
+Duchess, of Bristol, had arrived. This vessel, commanded by William
+Cook, had, for a master-pilot, a man more celebrated in maritime
+annals than the commanders of the expedition themselves;--this was
+Dampier, the indefatigable William Dampier, who, a short time since a
+millionaire, now completely ruined in consequence of foolish
+speculations and prodigalities, had just undertaken a third voyage
+around the world.
+
+Scarcely had he disembarked, when he heard of the great event of the
+day--of the wild man. His name was mentioned, he remembered having
+known an Alexander Selkirk at St. Andrew, at the inn of the Royal
+Salmon. He went to him, interrogated him, recognized him, and, without
+loss of time, after having had his hair and beard cut, and procured
+suitable clothing for him, presented him to Capt. Rogers; he
+introduced him as one of his old comrades, formerly an intrepid and
+distinguished officer in the navy, one of the conquerors of Vigo, who
+had been induced by himself to embark in the Swordfish, partly at his
+expense.
+
+Restored to liberty, supported, revived, by the kind cares of Dampier,
+his old hero, Selkirk felt rejuvenated. His first thought then is for
+that other unfortunate man, still an exile perhaps in his desert
+island. After having informed the old sailor that he had found a
+little bottle, containing a written parchment, he said: 'Dear Captain,
+it would be a meritorious act, and one worthy of you, to co-operate in
+the deliverance of this unhappy man. A boat will suffice for the
+voyage, since the Island of San Ambrosio is so near this. Oh! how
+joyfully would I accompany you in this excursion!'
+
+'My brave hermit,' replied Dampier, shaking his head, 'the neighboring
+island of which you speak is no other than the second in this group,
+named _Mas a Fuera_. As for the other, that San Ambrosio which you
+think so near, if it has not become a floating island since my last
+voyage, if it is still where I left it, under the Tropic of Capricorn,
+to reach it will not be so trifling a matter; besides, your little
+bottle must be a bottle of ink. There is here confusion of place and
+confusion of time; not only is _Mas a Fuera_ not _San Ambrosio_ but
+this latter island, far from being a desert, as your correspondent has
+said, has been inhabited more than twenty years by a multitude of
+madmen, fishermen and pirates, potato-eaters and old sailors, who,
+when I visited them, in 1702, politely received me with gun-shots, and
+whose politeness I returned with cannon-shots. Therefore, my boy, he
+who wrote to you must have been dead when you received his letter.
+What date did it bear?'
+
+'None,' said Selkirk; 'the last lines were effaced;' and he trembled
+at the idea of all the dangers he had run in pursuit of this friend,
+who no longer existed, and of a land which he had never inhabited.
+
+After having satisfied a duty of humanity, that which he had regarded
+as a debt contracted towards a friend, Selkirk, among other inquiries,
+let fall the name of Stradling. This time, it was hatred which asked
+information.
+
+His hatred was destined to be gratified.
+
+In pursuing his voyage, after having coasted along the shores of the
+Straits of Magellan, Stradling, surprised by a frightful hurricane,
+had seen his vessel entirely disabled. Repulsed at five different
+times, now by the tempest, now by the Spaniards, from the ports where
+he attempted to take refuge, he was thrown, near La Plata, on an
+inhospitable shore. Attacked, pillaged by the natives, half of his
+crew having perished, with the remains of his ship he constructed
+another, to which he gave the name of the Cinque Ports, instead of
+that of the Swordfish, which it was no longer worthy to bear. This was
+a large pinnace, on which he had secretly returned to England. For
+several years past, Dampier had not heard of him.
+
+Selkirk thought himself sufficiently avenged; his present happiness
+silenced his past ill-will. He even became reconciled to his island.
+
+Each day he traversed its divers parts, with emotions various as the
+remembrances it awakened. But he was now no longer alone! Arm and arm
+with Dampier, he revisited these places where he had suffered so much,
+and which often resumed for him their enchanting aspects.
+
+His companion was soon informed of his history. When he had related
+what we already know, from his landing to the construction of his
+raft, and to his frightful shipwreck, he at last commenced, not
+without some mortification, the recital of his final miseries, which
+alone could explain the deplorable state in which the English sailors
+had found him.
+
+By the loss of his hatchets, his ladder, his other instruments of
+labor, condemned to inaction, to powerlessness, he had nothing to
+occupy himself with but to provide sustenance. But the sea had taken
+his snares along with the rest. He at first subsisted on herbs, fruits
+and roots; afterwards his stomach rejected these crudities, as it had
+repulsed the fish. Armed with a stick, he had chased the agoutis; for
+want of agoutis, he had eaten rats.
+
+By night, he silently climbed the trees to surprise the female of the
+toucan or blackbird, which he pitilessly stifled over their young
+brood. Meanwhile, at the noise he made among the branches, this winged
+prey almost always escaped him.
+
+He tried to construct a ladder; by the aid of his knife alone, he
+attempted to cut down two tall trees. During this operation his knife
+broke--only a fragment remained. This was for him a great trial.
+
+He thought of making, with reeds and the fibres of the aloe, a net to
+catch birds; but all patient occupation, all continuous labor, had
+become insupportable to him.
+
+That he might escape the gloomy ideas which assailed him more and
+more, it became necessary to avoid repose, to court bodily fatigue.
+
+By continual exercise, his powers of locomotion had developed in
+incredible proportions. His feet had become so hardened that he no
+longer felt the briers or sharp stones. When he grew weary, he slept,
+in whatever place he found himself, and these were his only quiet
+hours.
+
+To chase the agoutis had ceased to be an object worthy of his efforts;
+the kids took their turn, afterwards the goats. He had acquired such
+dexterity of movement, and such strength of muscle, such certainty of
+eye, that to leap from one projection of rock to another, to spring at
+one bound over ravines and deep cavities, was to him but a childish
+sport. In these feats he took pleasure and pride.
+
+Sometimes, in the midst of his flights through space, he would seize a
+bird on the wing.
+
+The goats themselves soon lost their power to struggle against such a
+combatant. Notwithstanding their number, had Selkirk wished it, he
+might have depopulated the island. He was careful not to do this.
+
+If he wished to procure a supply of provisions, he directed his steps
+towards the most elevated peaks of the mountain, marked his game,
+pursued it, caught it by the horns, or felled it by a blow from his
+stick; after which his knife-blade did its office. The goat killed, he
+threw it on his shoulders, and, almost as swiftly as before, regained
+the cavernous grotto or leafy tree, in the shelter of which he could
+this day eat and sleep. He had for a long time forsaken his cabin,
+which was too far distant from his hunting-grounds.
+
+If he had a stock of provision on hand, he still pursued the goats as
+usual, but only for his personal gratification. If he caught one, he
+contented himself with slitting its ear; this was his seal, the mark
+by which he recognized his free flock. During the last years of his
+abode in the island, he had killed or marked thus nearly five
+hundred.[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: Long after his departure from Juan Fernandez, the ship's
+crews, who came there for supplies, or the pirates who took refuge
+there, found goats whose ears had been slit by Selkirk's knife.]
+
+In the natural course of things, as his physical powers increased, his
+intelligence became enfeebled.
+
+Necessity had at first aroused his industry, for all industry awakes
+at the voice of want; but his own had been due rather to his
+recollections than to his ingenuity. He thought himself a creator, he
+was only an imitator.
+
+Whatever may have been said by those who, in the pride of a deceitful
+philosophy, have wished to glorify the power of the solitary man--if
+the latter, supported by certain fortunate circumstances, can remain
+some time in a state hardly endurable, it is not by his own strength,
+but by means which society itself has furnished. This is the
+incontestable truth, from which, in his pride, Selkirk had turned
+away.
+
+Deprived of exercise and of aliment, his thoughts, no longer sustained
+by reading the Holy Book, were day by day lost in a chaos of dreams
+and reveries.
+
+A prey to terrors which he could not explain, he feared darkness, he
+trembled at the slightest sound of the wind among the branches; if it
+blew violently, he thought the trees would be uprooted and crush him;
+if the sea roared, he trembled at the idea of the submersion of his
+entire island.
+
+When he traversed the woods, especially if the heat was great, he
+often heard, distinctly, voices which called him or replied. He caught
+entire phrases; others remained unfinished. These phrases, connected
+neither with his thoughts nor his situation, were strange to him.
+Sometimes he even recognized the voice.
+
+Now it was that of Catherine, scolding her servants; now that of
+Stradling, of Dampier, or one of his college tutors. Once he heard
+thus the voice of one of his classmates whom he least remembered; at
+another time it was that of his old admiral, Rourke, uttering the
+words of command.
+
+If he attempted to raise his own to impose silence on these choruses
+of demons who tormented him, it was only with painful efforts that he
+could succeed in articulating some confused syllables.
+
+He no longer talked, but he still sang; he sang the monotonous and
+mournful airs of his psalms, the words of which he had totally
+forgotten. His memory by degrees became extinct. Sometimes even, he
+lost the sentiment of his identity; then, at least, his state of
+isolation, and the memory of his misfortunes ceased to weigh upon him.
+
+He nevertheless remembered, that about this time, having approached
+Swordfish Beach, attracted by an unusual noise there, he had seen it
+covered with soldiers and sailors, doubtless Spaniards. The idea of
+finding himself among men, had suddenly made his heart beat; but when
+he descended the declivity of the hills in order to join them, several
+shots were fired; the balls whistled about his ears, and, filled with
+terror, he had fled.
+
+Once more he had found himself there, but without intending it, for
+then he could no longer find his way, by the points of the compass,
+through the woods and valleys leading to the shore. Ah! how had his
+ancient abode changed its aspect! How many years had rolled away since
+he lived there! The little gravelled paths, which conducted to the
+grotto and the mimosa, were effaced; the mimosa, its principal
+branches broken, seemed buried beneath its own ruins; of his
+fish-pond, his bed of water-cresses, not a vestige remained; his
+grotto, veiled, hid beneath the thick curtains of vines and
+heliotropes, was no longer visible; his cabin had ceased to
+exist,--overthrown, swept away doubtless, by a hurricane, as his
+inclosure had been. He could discover the spot only by the five
+myrtles, which, disembarrassed of their roof of reeds and their
+plaster walls, had resumed their natural decorations, green and
+glossy, as if the hatchet had never touched them. At their feet tufts
+of briers and other underbrush had grown up, as formerly. The two
+streams, the _Linnet_ and the _Stammerer_, alone had suffered no
+change. The one with its gentle murmur, the other with its silvery
+cascades, after having embraced the lawn, still continued to flow
+towards the sea, where they seemed to have buried, with their waves,
+the memory of all that had passed on their borders.
+
+At sight of his shore, which seemed to have retained no vestige of
+himself, Selkirk remained a few moments, mournful and lost in his
+incoherent thoughts, in the midst of which this was most
+prominent:--Yet alive, already forgotten by the world, I have seen my
+traces disappear, even from this island which I have so long
+inhabited!
+
+A rustling was heard in the foliage; he raised his eyes, expecting to
+see Marimonda swinging on the branch of a tree. Perceiving nothing, he
+remembered that Marimonda reposed at the Oasis; he took the road from
+the mountain which led thither, but when he arrived there, when he was
+before her tomb, covered with tall grass, he had forgotten why he
+came.
+
+One of those unaccountable fits of terror, which were now more
+frequent than formerly, seized him, and he precipitately descended the
+mountain, springing from peak to peak along the rocks.
+
+The religious sentiment, which formerly sustained Selkirk in his
+trials, was not entirely extinct; but it was obscured beneath his
+darkened reason. His religion was only that of fear. When the sea was
+violently agitated, when the storm howled, he prostrated himself with
+clasped hands; but it was no longer God whom he implored; it was the
+angry ocean, the thunder. He sought to disarm the genius of evil. The
+lightning having one day struck, not far from him, a date-palm, he
+worshipped the tree. His perverted faith had at last terminated in
+idolatry.
+
+This was, in substance, what Alexander Selkirk related to William
+Dampier; what solitude had done for this man, still so young, and
+formerly so intelligent; this was what had become of the despiser of
+men, when left to his own reason.
+
+Dampier listened with the most profound attention, interrupting him in
+his narrative only by exclamations of interest or of pity. When he
+ceased to speak, holding out his hand to him, he said:
+
+'My boy, the lesson is a rude one, but let it be profitable to you;
+let it teach you that _ennui_ on board a vessel, even with a
+Stradling, is better than _ennui_ in a desert. Undoubtedly there are
+among us troublesome, wicked people, but fewer wicked than
+crack-brained. Believe, then, in friendship, especially in mine; from
+this day it is yours, on the faith of William Dampier.'
+
+And he opened his arms to the young man, who threw himself into them.
+
+On their return to the vessel, Dampier presented to Selkirk his own
+Bible. The latter seized it with avidity, and, after having turned
+over its leaves as if to find a text which presented itself to his
+mind, read aloud the following passage:
+
+'He was driven from the sons of men; and his heart was made like the
+beasts, and his dwelling was with the wild asses; they fed him with
+grass like oxen, and his body was wet with the dew of heaven.'--DANIEL
+v. 21.
+
+
+
+
+CONCLUSION.
+
+
+Capt. Rogers, in his turn, learned the misfortunes of Selkirk and
+became attached to him; from this moment, the sailors themselves
+showed him great deference; he was known among them by the name of
+_the governor_, and this title clung to him.
+
+To do the honors of his island, the governor one day gave to the crews
+of the two vessels, the spectacle of one of his former hunts. Resuming
+his ancient costume, he returned to the high mountains, where, before
+their eyes, he started a goat, and darting in pursuit of it, over a
+thousand cliffs, sometimes clearing frightful abysses, by means of a
+vine which he seized on his passage,--this method he owed to
+Marimonda,--he succeeded in forcing his game to the hills of the
+shore. Arrived there, exhausted, panting, drawing itself up like a
+stag at bay, the goat stopped short. Selkirk took it living on his
+shoulders, and presented it to Capt. Rogers. Its ear was already slit.
+
+By way of thanks, the captain announced that he might henceforth be
+connected with the expedition, with his old rank of mate, which was
+restored to him. For this favor Selkirk was indebted to the
+solicitations of Dampier.
+
+In the same vessel with Dampier, he made another three years' voyage,
+visited Mexico, California, and the greater part of North America;
+after which, still in company with Dampier, and possessor of a pretty
+fortune, he returned to England, where the recital of his adventures,
+already made public, secured him the most honorable patronage and
+friendship. Among his friends, may be reckoned Steele, the co-laborer,
+the rival of Addison, who consecrated a long chapter to him in his
+publication of the Tatler.
+
+Selkirk did not fail to visit Scotland. Passing through St. Andrew,
+could he help experiencing anew the desire to see his old friend
+pretty Kitty? Once more he appeared before the bar of the Royal
+Salmon. This time, on meeting, Selkirk and Catherine both experienced
+a sentiment of painful surprise. The latter, stouter and fuller than
+ever, fat and red-faced, touched the extreme limit of her fourth and
+last youth; the solitary of Juan Fernandez, with his gray hair, his
+copper complexion, could scarcely recall to the respectable hostess of
+the tavern the elegant pilot of the royal navy, still less the pale
+and blond student, of whom she had been, eighteen years before, the
+first and only love.
+
+'Is it indeed you, my poor Sandy,' said she, with an accent of pity;
+'I thought you were dead.'
+
+'I have been nearly so, indeed, and a long time ago, Kitty. But who
+has told you of me?'
+
+'Alas! It was my husband himself.'
+
+'You are married then, Catherine. So much the better.'
+
+'So much the worse rather, my friend; for, would you believe it, the
+old monster, bent double as he is with age and rheumatism, was bright
+enough to dupe me finely; to dupe me twice. In the first place, by
+making me believe you were dead when you were not. But he well knew,
+the cheat, that if I refused him once, it was because my views were
+turned in your direction.'
+
+Selkirk made a movement which escaped Catherine; she continued:
+
+'His second deception was to arrive here in triumph, in the midst of
+the cries of joy and embraces of the _Sea-Dogs_ and _Old Pilots_. One
+would have thought he had in his pockets all the mines of Guinea and
+Peru. He did not say so, but I thought it could not be otherwise; and
+I married him, since I believed you no longer living. His trick having
+succeeded, he then told me of his shipwreck, his complete ruin. Ah!
+with what a good heart would I have sent him packing! But it was too
+late, and it became necessary that the Royal Salmon, founded by the
+honorable Andrew Felton, should furnish subsistence for two; and this
+is the reason why, Mr. Selkirk, you find me still here, a prisoner in
+my bar, and cursing all the captains who make the tour of the world
+only to come afterwards and impose upon poor and inexperienced young
+girls!'
+
+Selkirk had not at first understood the lamentations of Catherine; but
+a twilight commenced to dawn in his ideas; he divined that his name
+had been used for an act of baseness; and, without being able to
+account for it, he felt the return of an old leaven of spite, an old
+hatred revived.
+
+'Who is your husband? What is his name?' asked he, in a loud voice and
+with a tone of authority.
+
+'Do not grow angry, Sandy? Do not seek a quarrel with him now. What is
+done, is done; I am his wife, do you understand? It is of no use to
+recall the past.'
+
+'And who thinks of recalling it? I simply asked you who he was?'
+
+'You will be prudent; you promise me? Well! do you see him yonder, in
+the second stall, at the same place he formerly occupied? He has just
+poured out some gin to those sailors, and is drinking with them. It is
+he who is standing up with an apron on.'
+
+'Stradling!' exclaimed Selkirk, with sparkling eyes. But at the sight
+of this apron, finding his old captain become a waiter, his hatred and
+projects of vengeance were suddenly extinguished.
+
+Alexander Selkirk returned to England in 1712. The history of his
+captivity in the Island of Juan Fernandez had appeared in the papers;
+several apocryphal relations had been already published, when in 1717,
+Daniel De Foe published his _Robinson Crusoe_.
+
+He is really the same personage; but in this latter version, the
+Island of Juan Fernandez, in spite of distance and geographical
+impossibilities, is peopled with savage Caribs; Marimonda is
+transformed into the simple Friday; history is turned into romance,
+but this romance is elevated to all the dignity of a philosophical
+treatise.
+
+Rendering full justice to the merit of the writer, we must
+nevertheless acknowledge that he has completely altered, in a mental
+view, the physiognomy of his model. Robinson is not a man suffering
+entire isolation; he has a companion, and the savages are incessantly
+making inroads around him. It is the European developing the resources
+of his industry, to contend at once with an unproductive land and the
+dangers created by his enemies.
+
+Selkirk has no enemies to repulse, and he inhabits a fruitful country.
+He needs, before every thing else, the presence of man, one of those
+fraternal affections in which he refuses to believe. His sufferings
+originate in his very solitude. In solitude, Robinson improves and
+perfects himself; Selkirk, at first as full of resources as he, ends
+by becoming discouraged and brutified.
+
+Which of the two is most true to nature?
+
+The first is an ideal being, for in no quarter of the globe has there
+ever been found one analogous to the Robinson of De Foe; the other, on
+the contrary, is to be met with every where, denying the dependence of
+an isolated individual; but this dependence, even in the midst of a
+prodigal nature, if it is not to the honor of man, is to the honor of
+society at large.
+
+Notwithstanding all that has been said, the solitary is a man
+imbruted, vegetating, deprived of his crown. 'Solitude is sweet only
+in the vicinity of great cities.'[1] By an admirable decree of
+Providence, the isolated being is an imperfect being; man is completed
+by man.
+
+[Footnote 1: Bernardin de St. Pierre. Seneca had said: _Miscenda et
+alternanda sunt solitudo et frequentia_.]
+
+Notwithstanding the false maxims of a deceitful philosophy, it is to
+the social state that we owe, from the greatest to the least, the
+courage which animates and sustains us; God has created us to live
+there and to love one another; it is for this reason that selfishness
+is a shameful vice, a crime! It is, so to speak, an infringement of
+one of the great laws of Nature.
+
+
+THE END.
+
+
+
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