Characterization
Robinson Crusoe
Robinson Crusoe is the protagonist and narrator
of the novel. Crusoe begins the novel as a young middle-class man in York in
search of a career. His father recommends the law, but Crusoe yearns for a life
at sea, and his subsequent rebellion and decision to become a merchant is the
starting point for the whole adventure that follows. His vague but recurring
feelings of guilt over his disobedience color the first part of the first half
of the story and show us how deep Crusoe’s religious fear is. Crusoe is steady
and plodding in everything he does, and his perseverance ensures his survival
through storms, enslavement, and a twenty-eight-year isolation on a desert
island.
Friday
Friday is a twenty-six-year-old
Caribbean native and cannibal. He becomes Crusoe’s servant after Crusoe saves
his life when Friday is about to be eaten by other cannibals. Friday never
appears to resist or resent his new servitude, and he may sincerely view it as
appropriate compensation for having his life saved. But, whatever Friday’s
response may be, his servitude has become a symbol of imperialist oppression
throughout the modern world. Friday’s overall charisma works against the
emotional deadness that many readers find in Crusoe.
Portuguese Captain
The sea captain, who picks up
Crusoe and the slave boy Xury from their boat after they escape from their
Moorish captors and float down the African coast. The Portuguese captain takes
Crusoe to Brazil and thus inaugurates Crusoe’s new life as plantation owner.
The Portuguese captain is never named—unlike Xury, for example—and his
anonymity suggests a certain uninteresting blandness in his role in the novel.
He is polite, personable, and extremely generous to Crusoe, buying the animal
skins and the slave boy from Crusoe at well over market value. He is loyal as
well, taking care of Crusoe’s Brazilian investments even after a twenty-eight-year
absence. His role in Crusoe’s life is crucial, since he both arranges for
Crusoe’s new career as a plantation owner and helps Crusoe cash in on the
profits later.
Spaniard
Spaniard one of the men from the
Spanish ship that is wrecked off Crusoe’s island, and whose crew is rescued by
the cannibals and taken to a neighboring island. The Spaniard is doomed to be
eaten as a ritual victim of the cannibals when Crusoe saves him. In exchange,
he becomes a new “subject” in Crusoe’s “kingdom,” at least according to Crusoe.
The Spaniard is never fleshed out much as a character in Crusoe’s narrative, an
example of the odd impersonal attitude often notable in Crusoe.
Xury is a nonwhite slave boy
only briefly introduced during the period of Crusoe’s enslavement in Sallee.
When Crusoe escapes with two other slaves in a boat, he forces one to swim to
shore, but keeps Xury on board, showing a certain trust toward the boy. Xury
never betrays that trust. Nevertheless, when the Portuguese captain eventually
picks them up, Crusoe sells Xury to the captain. Xury’s sale shows us the
racist double standards sometimes apparent in Crusoe’s behavior.
She appears
briefly, but on two separate occasions in the novel and keeps Crusoe’s 200 pounds safe in England throughout all his
thirty-five years of journeying. She returns it loyally to Crusoe upon his
return to England and, like the Portuguese captain and Friday, reminds us of
the goodwill and trustworthiness of which humans can be capable, whether
European or not.
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