Robinson Crusoe is an Englishman from the town of York in the seventeenth century, the youngest son of a merchant of German origin. Encouraged by his father to study law, Crusoe expresses his wish to go to sea instead. His family is against Crusoe going out to sea, and his father explains that it is better to seek a modest, secure life for oneself. Initially, Robinson is committed to obeying his father, but he eventually succumbs to temptation and embarks on a ship bound for London with a friend. When a storm causes the near deaths of Crusoe and his friend, the friend is dissuaded from sea travel, but Crusoe still goes on to set himself up as merchant on a ship leaving London. This trip is financially successful, and Crusoe plans another, leaving his early profits in the care of a friendly widow. The second voyage does not prove as fortunate: the ship is seized by Moorish pirates, and Crusoe is enslaved to a potentate in the North African town of Sallee. While on a fishing expedition, he and a slave boy break free and sail down the African coast. A kindly Portuguese captain picks them up, buys the slave boy from Crusoe, and takes Crusoe to Brazil. In Brazil, Crusoe establishes himself as a plantation owner and soon becomes successful. Eager for slave labor and its economic advantages, he embarks on a slave-gathering expedition to West Africa but ends up shipwrecked off of the coast of Trinidad.
Crusoe soon learns
he is the sole survivor of the expedition and seeks shelter and food for
himself. He returns to the wreck’s remains twelve times to salvage guns,
powder, food, and other items. Onshore, he finds goats he can graze for meat
and builds himself a shelter. He erects a cross that he inscribes with the date
of his arrival, September 1, 1659, and makes a notch every day in order never to lose
track of time. He also keeps a journal of his household activities, noting his
attempts to make candles, his lucky discovery of sprouting grain, and his
construction of a cellar, among other events. In June 1660, he falls ill and hallucinates that an angel visits,
warning him to repent. Drinking tobacco-steeped rum, Crusoe experiences a
religious illumination and realizes that God has delivered him from his earlier
sins. After recovering, Crusoe makes a survey of the area and discovers he is
on an island. He finds a pleasant valley abounding in grapes, where he builds a
shady retreat. Crusoe begins to feel more optimistic about being on the island,
describing himself as its “king.” He trains a pet parrot, takes a goat as a
pet, and develops skills in basket weaving, bread making, and pottery. He cuts
down an enormous cedar tree and builds a huge canoe from its trunk, but he
discovers that he cannot move it to the sea. After building a smaller boat, he
rows around the island but nearly perishes when swept away by a powerful
current. Reaching shore, he hears his parrot calling his name and is thankful
for being saved once again. He spends several years in peace.
One day Crusoe is shocked to discover
a man’s footprint on the beach. He first assumes the footprint is the devil’s,
then decides it must belong to one of the cannibals said to live in the region.
Terrified, he arms himself and remains on the lookout for cannibals. He also
builds an underground cellar in which to herd his goats at night and devises a
way to cook underground. One evening he hears gunshots, and the next day he is
able to see a ship wrecked on his coast. It is empty when he arrives on the
scene to investigate. Crusoe once again thanks Providence for having been
saved. Soon afterward, Crusoe discovers that the shore has been strewn with
human carnage, apparently the remains of a cannibal feast. He is alarmed and
continues to be vigilant. Later Crusoe catches sight of thirty cannibals heading
for shore with their victims. One of the victims is killed. Another one,
waiting to be slaughtered, suddenly breaks free and runs toward Crusoe’s
dwelling. Crusoe protects him, killing one of the pursuers and injuring the
other, whom the victim finally kills. Well-armed, Crusoe defeats most of the
cannibals onshore. The victim vows total submission to Crusoe in gratitude for
his liberation. Crusoe names him Friday, to commemorate the day on which his
life was saved, and takes him as his servant.
Finding Friday cheerful and
intelligent, Crusoe teaches him some English words and some elementary
Christian concepts. Friday, in turn, explains that the cannibals are divided
into distinct nations and that they only eat their enemies. Friday also informs
Crusoe that the cannibals saved the men from the shipwreck Crusoe witnessed
earlier, and that those men, Spaniards, are living nearby. Friday expresses a
longing to return to his people, and Crusoe is upset at the prospect of losing
Friday. Crusoe then entertains the idea of making contact with the Spaniards,
and Friday admits that he would rather die than lose Crusoe. The two build a
boat to visit the cannibals’ land together. Before they have a chance to leave,
they are surprised by the arrival of twenty-one cannibals in canoes. The
cannibals are holding three victims, one of whom is in European dress. Friday
and Crusoe kill most of the cannibals and release the European, a Spaniard.
Friday is overjoyed to discover that another of the rescued victims is his
father. The four men return to Crusoe’s dwelling for food and rest. Crusoe
prepares to welcome them into his community permanently. He sends Friday’s
father and the Spaniard out in a canoe to explore the nearby land.
Eight days later, the sight of an
approaching English ship alarms Friday. Crusoe is suspicious. Friday and Crusoe
watch as eleven men take three captives onshore in a boat. Nine of the men
explore the land, leaving two to guard the captives. Friday and Crusoe
overpower these men and release the captives, one of whom is the captain of the
ship, which has been taken in a mutiny. Shouting to the remaining mutineers
from different points, Friday and Crusoe confuse and tire the men by making
them run from place to place. Eventually they confront the mutineers, telling
them that all may escape with their lives except the ringleader. The men
surrender. Crusoe and the captain pretend that the island is an imperial
territory and that the governor has spared their lives in order to send them
all to England to face justice. Keeping five men as hostages, Crusoe sends the
other men out to seize the ship. When the ship is brought in, Crusoe nearly
faints.
On December 19, 1686, Crusoe boards the
ship to return to England. There, he finds his family is deceased except for
two sisters. His widow friend has kept Crusoe’s money safe, and after traveling
to Lisbon, Crusoe learns from the Portuguese captain that his plantations in
Brazil have been highly profitable. He arranges to sell his Brazilian lands.
Wary of sea travel, Crusoe attempts to return to England by land but is
threatened by bad weather and wild animals in northern Spain. Finally arriving
back in England, Crusoe receives word that the sale of his plantations has been
completed and that he has made a considerable fortune. After donating a portion
to the widow and his sisters, Crusoe is restless and considers returning to
Brazil, but he is dissuaded by the thought that he would have to become
Catholic. He marries, and his wife dies. Crusoe finally departs for the East
Indies as a trader in 1694. He revisits his
island, finding that the Spaniards are governing it well and that it has become
a prosperous colony.
Sources: https://www.sparknotes.com/lit/crusoe/summary/
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