The Novels and Miscellaneous Works of Daniel De Foe: Robinson CrusoeD. A. Talboys, 1840 |
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Page 2
... night , and my imagination run upon it all day ; it was uppermost in all my thoughts , and my fancy worked so steadily and strongly upon it , that I talked of it in my sleep ; in short , nothing could remove it out of my mind ; it even ...
... night , and my imagination run upon it all day ; it was uppermost in all my thoughts , and my fancy worked so steadily and strongly upon it , that I talked of it in my sleep ; in short , nothing could remove it out of my mind ; it even ...
Page 15
... night , could see nothing of us . We lay by some time upon this , only driving as the burning ship drove , waiting for daylight ; when on a sudden , to our great terror , though we had reason to expect it , the ship blew up in the air ...
... night , could see nothing of us . We lay by some time upon this , only driving as the burning ship drove , waiting for daylight ; when on a sudden , to our great terror , though we had reason to expect it , the ship blew up in the air ...
Page 17
... time after that again , they were still more agreeably surprised with seeing our lights , and hear- ing the guns , which , as I have said , I caused to be CRUSOE II . C fired all the rest of the night : this set OF ROBINSON CRUSOE . 17.
... time after that again , they were still more agreeably surprised with seeing our lights , and hear- ing the guns , which , as I have said , I caused to be CRUSOE II . C fired all the rest of the night : this set OF ROBINSON CRUSOE . 17.
Page 18
Daniel Defoe. fired all the rest of the night : this set them to work with their oars to keep their boats ahead , at least that we might the sooner come up with them ; and at last , to their inexpressible joy , they found we saw them ...
Daniel Defoe. fired all the rest of the night : this set them to work with their oars to keep their boats ahead , at least that we might the sooner come up with them ; and at last , to their inexpressible joy , they found we saw them ...
Page 31
... night . The youth , who was preserved at the price of his most affectionate mother's life , was not so far gone ; yet he lay in a cabin - bed as one stretched out , with hardly any life left in him ; he had a piece of an old glove in ...
... night . The youth , who was preserved at the price of his most affectionate mother's life , was not so far gone ; yet he lay in a cabin - bed as one stretched out , with hardly any life left in him ; he had a piece of an old glove in ...
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Common terms and phrases
afterwards arms arrows asked Atkins began believe boat boatswain Brazils brought called Cambodia camel canoes captain caravan carry cern China Christian creatures CRUSOE CRUSOE II discourse Dutch ships England English Englishmen fellow fight fire five Friday Friday's father gave give gone governor guns hands hear heard horses hundred idol island killed kind knew land leave lived looked Macao manner mate merchants moidores Moscow murdered Muscovy musket nephew never niards night obliged pagans Pekin pieces pinnace pirates plantation poor Portuguese religion resolved rest river Robinson Crusoe sail savages seems Seignior sent servants ship's shore shot Siberia side sloop Spaniards speak starved stay stood story supercargo talk Tartars tell things thither thought told Tonquin took trees true voyage wife wives woman women wood word wounded