The Novels and Miscellaneous Works of Daniel De Foe: Robinson CrusoeD. A. Talboys, 1840 |
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Page 3
... trees , saw my old Spaniard , Friday's father , and the reprobate sailors whom I left upon the island ; nay , I fancied I talked with them , and looked at them so steadily , though I was broad awake , as at persons just before me ; and ...
... trees , saw my old Spaniard , Friday's father , and the reprobate sailors whom I left upon the island ; nay , I fancied I talked with them , and looked at them so steadily , though I was broad awake , as at persons just before me ; and ...
Page 37
... tree , and lay down by him ; then stood and looked at him as any one would look at a strange picture , for a quarter of an hour together ; then lay down upon the ground , and stroked his legs , and kissed them , and then got up again ...
... tree , and lay down by him ; then stood and looked at him as any one would look at a strange picture , for a quarter of an hour together ; then lay down upon the ground , and stroked his legs , and kissed them , and then got up again ...
Page 38
... trees , and placed them in such a posture , so thick and close to one another , in ten years time they were grown so big , that , in short , the place was inaccessible , except by such windings and blind ways as they themselves only who ...
... trees , and placed them in such a posture , so thick and close to one another , in ten years time they were grown so big , that , in short , the place was inaccessible , except by such windings and blind ways as they themselves only who ...
Page 52
... trees which the poor men had planted ; pulled up the enclosure they had made to secure their cattle and their corn ; and , in a word , sacked and plundered everything , as completely as a herd of Tartars would have done . The two men ...
... trees which the poor men had planted ; pulled up the enclosure they had made to secure their cattle and their corn ; and , in a word , sacked and plundered everything , as completely as a herd of Tartars would have done . The two men ...
Page 56
... trees in the room of those pulled up , dig up the land again for planting corn , where they had spoiled it ; and , in a word , to restore everything in the same state as they found it , as near as they could ; for entirely it could not ...
... trees in the room of those pulled up , dig up the land again for planting corn , where they had spoiled it ; and , in a word , to restore everything in the same state as they found it , as near as they could ; for entirely it could not ...
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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