书城公版Robinson Crusoe
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第21章

The next Day I made another Voyage;and now having plunder'd the Ship of what was portable and fit to hand out,I began with the Cables;and cutting the great Cable into Pieces,such as I could move,I got two Cables and a Hawser on Shore,with all the Iron Work I could get;and having cut down the Spritsail-yard,and the Missen-yard,and every Thing I could to make a large Raft,I loaded it with all those heavy Goods,and came away:But my good Luck began now to leave me;for this Raft was so unwieldy,and so overloaden,that after I was enter'd the little Cove,where I had landed the rest of my Goods,not being able to guide it so handily as I did the other,it overset,and threw me and all my Cargo into the Water;as for my self it was no great Harm,for I was near the Shore;but as to my Cargo,it was great Part of it lost,especially the Iron,which I expected would have been of great Use to me:However,when the Tide was out,I got most of the Pieces of Cable ashore,and some of the Iron,tho' with infinite Labour;for I was fain to dip for it into the Water,a Work which fatigu'd me very much:After this I went every Day on Board,and brought away what I could get.

I had been now thirteen Days on Shore,and had been eleven Times on Board the Ship;in which Time I had brought away all that one Pair of Hands could well be suppos'd capable to bring,tho' I believe verily,had the calm Weather held,I should have brought away the whole Ship Piece by Piece:But preparing the 12th Time to go on Board,I found the Wind begin to rise;however at low Water I went on Board,and tho' I thought I had rumag'd the Cabbin so effectually,as that nothing more could be found,yet I discover'd a Locker with Drawers in it,in one of which I found two or three Razors,and one Pair of large Sizzers,with some ten or a Dozen of good Knives and Forks;in another I found about Thirty six Pounds value in Money,some European Coin,some Brazil,some Pieces of Eight,some Gold,some Silver.

I smil'd to my self at the Sight of this Money,O Drug Said I aloud,what art thou good for,Thou art not worth to me,no not the taking off of the Ground,one of those Knives is worth all this Heap,I have no Manner of use for thee,e'en remain where thou art,and go to the Bottom as a Creature whose Life is not worth saving. However,upon Second Thoughts,I took it away,and wrapping all this in a Piece of Canvas,I began to think of making another Raft,but while I was preparing this,I found the Sky over-cast,and the Wind began to rise,and in a Quarter of an Hour it blew a fresh Gale from the Shore;it presently occur'd to me,that it was in vain to pretend to make a Raft with the Wind off Shore,and that it was my Business to be gone before the Tide of Flood began,otherwise I might not be able to reach the Shore at all:Accordingly I let my self down into the Water,and swam cross the Channel,which lay between the Ship and the Sands,and even that with Difficulty enough,partly with the Weight of the Things I had about me,and partly the Roughness of the Water,for the Wind rose very hastily,and before it was quite high Water,it blew a Storm.

But I was gotten home to my little Tent,where I lay with all my Wealth about me very secure. It blew very hard all Mat Night,and in the Morning when I look'd out,behold no more Ship was to be seen;I was a little surpriz'd,but recover'd my self with this satisfactory Reflection,viz. That I had lost no time,nor abated no Diligence to get everything out of her that could be useful to me,and that indeed there was little left in her that I was able to bring away if I had had more time.

I now gave over any more Thoughts of the Ship,or of any thing out of her,except what might drive on Shore from her Wreck,as indeed divers Pieces of her afterwards did;but those things were of small use to me.

My Thoughts were now wholly employ'd about securing my self against either Savages,if any should appear,or wild Beasts,if any were in the Island;and I had many Thoughts of the Method how to do this,and what kind of Dwelling to make,whether I should make me a Cave in the Earth,or a Tent upon the Earth:And,in short,I resolv'd upon both,the Manner and Deion of which,it may not be improper to give an Account of.

I soon found the Place I was in was not for my Settlement,particularly because it was upon a low moorish Ground near the Sea,and I believ'd would not be wholesome,and more particularly because there was no fresh Water near it,so I resolv'd to find a more healthy and more convenient Spot of Ground.

I consulted several Things in my Situation which I found would be proper for me,1st. Health,and fresh Water I just now mention'd,2dly. Shelter from the Heat of the Sun,3dly. Security from ravenous Creatures,whether Men or Beasts,4thly. a View to the Sea,that if God sent any Ship in Sight,I might not lose any Advantage for my Deliverance,of which I was not willing to banish all my Expectation yet.

In search of a Place proper for this,I found a little Plain on the Side of a rising Hill;whose Front towards this little Plain,was steep as a House-side,so that nothing could come down upon me from the Top;on the Side of this Rock there was a hollow Place worn a little way in like the Entrance or Door of a Cave,but there was not really any Cave or Way into the Rock at all.

On the Flat of the Green,just before this hollow Place,I resolv'd to pitch my Tent:This Plain was not above an Hundred Yards broad,and about twice as long,and lay like a Green before my Door,and at the End of it descended irregularly every Way down into the Low-grounds by the Sea-side. It was on the N.N.W. Side of the Hill,so that I was shelter'd from the Heat every Day,till it came to a W. and by S. Sun,or thereabouts,which in those Countries is near the Setting.

Before I set up my Tent,I drew a half Circle before the hollow Place,which took in about Ten Yards in its Semi-diameter from the Rock,and Twenty Yards in its Diameter,from its Beginning and Ending.