ROBINSON CRUSOE
Daniel Defoe
Plot Overview
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.
Character List
Robinson Crusoe - The novel’s protagonist and narrator.
Crusoe begins the novel as a young middle-class man in York in search of a
career. He 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 - A twenty-six-year-old Caribbean native and cannibal
who converts to Protestantism under Crusoe’s tutelage. Friday 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.
The 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.
The 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 - A nonwhite (Arab or black) 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.
The widow - Appearing briefly, but on two separate occasions
in the novel, the widow 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.
Analysis of Major Characters
Robinson Crusoe
While he is no flashy hero or grand epic adventurer, Robinson Crusoe
displays character traits that have won him the approval of generations of
readers. His perseverance in spending months making a canoe, and in practicing
pottery making until he gets it right, is praiseworthy. Additionally, his
resourcefulness in building a home, dairy, grape arbor, country house, and goat
stable from practically nothing is clearly remarkable. The Swiss philosopher
Jean-Jacques Rousseau applauded Crusoe’s do-it-yourself independence, and in
his book on education, Emile, he recommends that children be taught to imitate
Crusoe’s hands-on approach to life. Crusoe’s business instincts are just as
considerable as his survival instincts: he manages to make a fortune in Brazil
despite a twenty-eight-year absence and even leaves his island with a nice
collection of gold. Moreover, Crusoe is never interested in portraying himself
as a hero in his own narration. He does not boast of his courage in quelling
the mutiny, and he is always ready to admit unheroic feelings of fear or panic,
as when he finds the footprint on the beach. Crusoe prefers to depict himself
as an ordinary sensible man, never as an exceptional hero.
But Crusoe’s admirable qualities must be weighed against the flaws in
his character. Crusoe seems incapable of deep feelings, as shown by his cold
account of leaving his family—he worries about the religious consequences of
disobeying his father, but never displays any emotion about leaving. Though he
is generous toward people, as when he gives gifts to his sisters and the
captain, Crusoe reveals very little tender or sincere affection in his dealings
with them. When Crusoe tells us that he has gotten married and that his wife
has died all within the same sentence, his indifference to her seems almost
cruel. Moreover, as an individual personality, Crusoe is rather dull. His
precise and deadpan style of narration works well for recounting the process of
canoe building, but it tends to drain the excitement from events that should be
thrilling. Action-packed scenes like the conquest of the cannibals become quite
humdrum when Crusoe narrates them, giving us a detailed inventory of the
cannibals in list form, for example. His insistence on dating events makes
sense to a point, but it ultimately ends up seeming obsessive and irrelevant
when he tells us the date on which he grinds his tools but neglects to tell us
the date of a very important event like meeting Friday. Perhaps his impulse to
record facts carefully is not a survival skill, but an irritating sign of his
neurosis.
Finally, while not boasting of heroism, Crusoe is nonetheless very
interested in possessions, power, and prestige. When he first calls himself
king of the island it seems jocund, but when he describes the Spaniard as his
subject we must take his royal delusion seriously, since it seems he really
does consider himself king. His teaching Friday to call him “Master,” even
before teaching him the words for “yes” or “no,” seems obnoxious even under the
racist standards of the day, as if Crusoe needs to hear the ego-boosting word
spoken as soon as possible. Overall, Crusoe’s virtues tend to be private: his
industry, resourcefulness, and solitary courage make him an exemplary
individual. But his vices are social, and his urge to subjugate others is
highly objectionable. In bringing both sides together into one complex
character, Defoe gives us a fascinating glimpse into the successes, failures,
and contradictions of modern man.
Friday
Probably the first nonwhite character to be given a realistic,
individualized, and humane portrayal in the English novel, Friday has a huge
literary and cultural importance. If Crusoe represents the first colonial mind
in fiction, then Friday represents not just a Caribbean tribesman, but all the
natives of America, Asia, and Africa who would later be oppressed in the age of
European imperialism. At the moment when Crusoe teaches Friday to call him
“Master” Friday becomes an enduring political symbol of racial injustice in a
modern world critical of imperialist expansion. Recent rewritings of the Crusoe
story, like J. M. Coetzee’s Foe and Michel Tournier’s Friday, emphasize the sad
consequences of Crusoe’s failure to understand Friday and suggest how the tale
might be told very differently from the native’s perspective.
Aside from his importance to our culture, Friday is a key figure within
the context of the novel. In many ways he is the most vibrant character in
Robinson Crusoe, much more charismatic and colorful than his master. Indeed,
Defoe at times underscores the contrast between Crusoe’s and Friday’s
personalities, as when Friday, in his joyful reunion with his father, exhibits
far more emotion toward his family than Crusoe. Whereas Crusoe never mentions
missing his family or dreams about the happiness of seeing them again, Friday
jumps and sings for joy when he meets his father, and this emotional display
makes us see what is missing from Crusoe’s stodgy heart. Friday’s expression of
loyalty in asking Crusoe to kill him rather than leave him is more heartfelt than
anything Crusoe ever says or does. Friday’s sincere questions to Crusoe about
the devil, which Crusoe answers only indirectly and hesitantly, leave us
wondering whether Crusoe’s knowledge of Christianity is superficial and sketchy
in contrast to Friday’s full understanding of his own god Benamuckee. In short,
Friday’s exuberance and emotional directness often point out the wooden
conventionality of Crusoe’s personality.
Despite Friday’s subjugation, however, Crusoe appreciates Friday much
more than he would a mere servant. Crusoe does not seem to value intimacy with
humans much, but he does say that he loves Friday, which is a remarkable
disclosure. It is the only time Crusoe makes such an admission in the novel,
since he never expresses love for his parents, brothers, sisters, or even his
wife. The mere fact that an Englishman confesses more love for an illiterate
Caribbean ex-cannibal than for his own family suggests the appeal of Friday’s
personality. Crusoe may bring Friday Christianity and clothing, but Friday
brings Crusoe emotional warmth and a vitality of spirit that Crusoe’s own
European heart lacks.
The Portuguese Captain
The Portuguese captain is presented more fully than any other European
in the novel besides Crusoe, more vividly portrayed than Crusoe’s widow friend
or his family members. He appears in the narrative at two very important
junctures in Crusoe’s life. First, it is the Portuguese captain who picks up
Crusoe after the escape from the Moors and takes him to Brazil, where Crusoe establishes
himself as a plantation owner. Twenty-eight years later, it is again the
Portuguese captain who informs Crusoe that his Brazilian investments are
secure, and who arranges the sale of the plantation and the forwarding of the
proceeds to Crusoe. In both cases, the Portuguese captain is the agent of
Crusoe’s extreme good fortune. In this sense, he represents the benefits of
social connections. If the captain had not been located in Lisbon, Crusoe never
would have cashed in on his Brazilian holdings. This assistance from social
contacts contradicts the theme of solitary enterprise that the novel seems to
endorse. Despite Crusoe’s hard individual labor on the island, it is actually
another human being—and not his own resourcefulness—that makes Crusoe wealthy
in the end. Yet it is doubtful whether this insight occurs to Crusoe, despite
his obvious gratitude toward the captain.
Moreover, the Portuguese captain is associated with a wide array of
virtues. He is honest, informing Crusoe of the money he has borrowed against
Crusoe’s investments, and repaying a part of it immediately even though it is
financially difficult for him to do so. He is loyal, honoring his duties toward
Crusoe even after twenty-eight years. Finally, he is extremely generous, paying
Crusoe more than market value for the animal skins and slave boy after picking
Crusoe up at sea, and giving Crusoe handsome gifts when leaving Brazil. All
these virtues make the captain a paragon of human excellence, and they make us
wonder why Defoe includes such a character in the novel. In some ways, the
captain’s goodness makes him the moral counterpart of Friday, since the
European seaman and the Caribbean cannibal mirror each other in benevolence and
devotion to Crusoe. The captain’s goodness thus makes it impossible for us to
make oversimplified oppositions between a morally bankrupt Europe on the one
hand, and innocent noble savages on the other.
Themes, Motifs & Symbols
Themes
Themes are the fundamental and often universal ideas explored in a
literary work.
The Ambivalence of Mastery
Crusoe’s success in mastering his situation, overcoming his obstacles,
and controlling his environment shows the condition of mastery in a positive
light, at least at the beginning of the novel. Crusoe lands in an inhospitable
environment and makes it his home. His taming and domestication of wild goats
and parrots with Crusoe as their master illustrates his newfound control.
Moreover, Crusoe’s mastery over nature makes him a master of his fate and of
himself. Early in the novel, he frequently blames himself for disobeying his
father’s advice or blames the destiny that drove him to sea. But in the later
part of the novel, Crusoe stops viewing himself as a passive victim and strikes
a new note of self-determination. In building a home for himself on the island,
he finds that he is master of his life—he suffers a hard fate and still finds
prosperity.
But this theme of mastery becomes more complex and less positive after
Friday’s arrival, when the idea of mastery comes to apply more to unfair
relationships between humans. In Chapter XXIII, Crusoe teaches Friday the word
“[m]aster” even before teaching him “yes” and “no,” and indeed he lets him
“know that was to be [Crusoe’s] name.” Crusoe never entertains the idea of
considering Friday a friend or equal—for some reason, superiority comes
instinctively to him. We further question Crusoe’s right to be called
“[m]aster” when he later refers to himself as “king” over the natives and
Europeans, who are his “subjects.” In short, while Crusoe seems praiseworthy in
mastering his fate, the praiseworthiness of his mastery over his fellow humans
is more doubtful. Defoe explores the link between the two in his depiction of
the colonial mind.
The Necessity of Repentance
Crusoe’s experiences constitute not simply an adventure story in which
thrilling things happen, but also a moral tale illustrating the right and wrong
ways to live one’s life. This moral and religious dimension of the tale is
indicated in the Preface, which states that Crusoe’s story is being published
to instruct others in God’s wisdom, and one vital part of this wisdom is the
importance of repenting one’s sins. While it is important to be grateful for
God’s miracles, as Crusoe is when his grain sprouts, it is not enough simply to
express gratitude or even to pray to God, as Crusoe does several times with few
results. Crusoe needs repentance most, as he learns from the fiery angelic
figure that comes to him during a feverish hallucination and says, “Seeing all
these things have not brought thee to repentance, now thou shalt die.” Crusoe
believes that his major sin is his rebellious behavior toward his father, which
he refers to as his “original sin,” akin to Adam and Eve’s first disobedience
of God. This biblical reference also suggests that Crusoe’s exile from
civilization represents Adam and Eve’s expulsion from Eden.
For Crusoe, repentance consists of acknowledging his wretchedness and
his absolute dependence on the Lord. This admission marks a turning point in
Crusoe’s spiritual consciousness, and is almost a born-again experience for
him. After repentance, he complains much less about his sad fate and views the
island more positively. Later, when Crusoe is rescued and his fortune restored,
he compares himself to Job, who also regained divine favor. Ironically, this
view of the necessity of repentance ends up justifying sin: Crusoe may never
have learned to repent if he had never sinfully disobeyed his father in the
first place. Thus, as powerful as the theme of repentance is in the novel, it
is nevertheless complex and ambiguous.
The Importance of Self-Awareness
Crusoe’s arrival on the island does not make him revert to a brute
existence controlled by animal instincts, and, unlike animals, he remains conscious
of himself at all times. Indeed, his island existence actually deepens his
self-awareness as he withdraws from the external social world and turns inward.
The idea that the individual must keep a careful reckoning of the state of his
own soul is a key point in the Presbyterian doctrine that Defoe took seriously
all his life. We see that in his normal day-to-day activities, Crusoe keeps
accounts of himself enthusiastically and in various ways. For example, it is
significant that Crusoe’s makeshift calendar does not simply mark the passing
of days, but instead more egocentrically marks the days he has spent on the
island: it is about him, a sort of self-conscious or autobiographical calendar
with him at its center. Similarly, Crusoe obsessively keeps a journal to record
his daily activities, even when they amount to nothing more than finding a few
pieces of wood on the beach or waiting inside while it rains. Crusoe feels the
importance of staying aware of his situation at all times. We can also sense Crusoe’s
impulse toward self-awareness in the fact that he teaches his parrot to say the
words, “Poor Robin Crusoe. . . . Where have you been?” This sort of
self-examining thought is natural for anyone alone on a desert island, but it
is given a strange intensity when we recall that Crusoe has spent months
teaching the bird to say it back to him. Crusoe teaches nature itself to voice
his own self-awareness.
Motifs
Motifs are recurring structures, contrasts, or literary devices that can
help to develop and inform the text’s major themes.
Counting and Measuring
Crusoe is a careful note-taker whenever numbers and quantities are
involved. He does not simply tell us that his hedge encloses a large space, but
informs us with a surveyor’s precision that the space is “150 yards in length,
and 100 yards in breadth.” He tells us not simply that he spends a long time
making his canoe in Chapter XVI, but that it takes precisely twenty days to
fell the tree and fourteen to remove the branches. It is not just an immense tree,
but is “five foot ten inches in diameter at the lower part . . . and four foot
eleven inches diameter at the end of twenty-two foot.” Furthermore, time is
measured with similar exactitude, as Crusoe’s journal shows. We may often
wonder why Crusoe feels it useful to record that it did not rain on December
26, but for him the necessity of counting out each day is never questioned. All
these examples of counting and measuring underscore Crusoe’s practical,
businesslike character and his hands-on approach to life. But Defoe sometimes
hints at the futility of Crusoe’s measuring—as when the carefully measured
canoe cannot reach water or when his obsessively kept calendar is thrown off by
a day of oversleeping. Defoe may be subtly poking fun at the urge to quantify,
showing us that, in the end, everything Crusoe counts never really adds up to
much and does not save him from isolation.
Eating
One of Crusoe’s first concerns after his shipwreck is his food supply.
Even while he is still wet from the sea in Chapter V, he frets about not having
“anything to eat or drink to comfort me.” He soon provides himself with food,
and indeed each new edible item marks a new stage in his mastery of the island,
so that his food supply becomes a symbol of his survival. His securing of goat
meat staves off immediate starvation, and his discovery of grain is viewed as a
miracle, like manna from heaven. His cultivation of raisins, almost a luxury
food for Crusoe, marks a new comfortable period in his island existence. In a
way, these images of eating convey Crusoe’s ability to integrate the island
into his life, just as food is integrated into the body to let the organism
grow and prosper. But no sooner does Crusoe master the art of eating than he
begins to fear being eaten himself. The cannibals transform Crusoe from the
consumer into a potential object to be consumed. Life for Crusoe always
illustrates this eat or be eaten philosophy, since even back in Europe he is
threatened by man-eating wolves. Eating is an image of existence itself, just
as being eaten signifies death for Crusoe.
Ordeals at Sea
Crusoe’s encounters with water in the novel are often associated not
simply with hardship, but with a kind of symbolic ordeal, or test of character.
First, the storm off the coast of Yarmouth frightens Crusoe’s friend away from
a life at sea, but does not deter Crusoe. Then, in his first trading voyage, he
proves himself a capable merchant, and in his second one, he shows he is able
to survive enslavement. His escape from his Moorish master and his successful
encounter with the Africans both occur at sea. Most significantly, Crusoe
survives his shipwreck after a lengthy immersion in water. But the sea remains
a source of danger and fear even later, when the cannibals arrive in canoes. The
Spanish shipwreck reminds Crusoe of the destructive power of water and of his
own good fortune in surviving it. All the life-testing water imagery in the
novel has subtle associations with the rite of baptism, by which Christians
prove their faith and enter a new life saved by Christ.
Symbols
Symbols are objects, characters, figures, or colors used to represent
abstract ideas or concepts.
The Footprint
Crusoe’s shocking discovery of a single footprint on the sand in Chapter
XVIII is one of the most famous moments in the novel, and it symbolizes our
hero’s conflicted feelings about human companionship. Crusoe has earlier
confessed how much he misses companionship, yet the evidence of a man on his
island sends him into a panic. Immediately he interprets the footprint
negatively, as the print of the devil or of an aggressor. He never for a moment
entertains hope that it could belong to an angel or another European who could
rescue or befriend him. This instinctively negative and fearful attitude toward
others makes us consider the possibility that Crusoe may not want to return to
human society after all, and that the isolation he is experiencing may actually
be his ideal state.
The Cross
Concerned that he will “lose [his] reckoning of time” in Chapter VII,
Crusoe marks the passing of days “with [his] knife upon a large post, in
capital letters, and making it into a great cross . . . set[s] it up on the
shore where [he] first landed. . . .” The large size and capital letters show
us how important this cross is to Crusoe as a timekeeping device and thus also
as a way of relating himself to the larger social world where dates and
calendars still matter. But the cross is also a symbol of his own new existence
on the island, just as the Christian cross is a symbol of the Christian’s new
life in Christ after baptism, an immersion in water like Crusoe’s shipwreck
experience. Yet Crusoe’s large cross seems somewhat blasphemous in making no
reference to Christ. Instead, it is a memorial to Crusoe himself, underscoring
how completely he has become the center of his own life.
Crusoe’s Bower
On a scouting tour around the island, Crusoe discovers a delightful
valley in which he decides to build a country retreat or “bower” in Chapter
XII. This bower contrasts sharply with Crusoe’s first residence, since it is
built not for the practical purpose of shelter or storage, but simply for
pleasure: “because I was so enamoured of the place.” Crusoe is no longer
focused solely on survival, which by this point in the novel is more or less
secure. Now, for the first time since his arrival, he thinks in terms of
“pleasantness.” Thus, the bower symbolizes a radical improvement in Crusoe’s
attitude toward his time on the island. Island life is no longer necessarily a
disaster to suffer through, but may be an opportunity for enjoyment—just as,
for the Presbyterian, life may be enjoyed only after hard work has been
finished and repentance achieved.
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