me no less than six-and-twenty years: how long
he might live afterwards I knew not; though I know
they have a notion in the Brasils, that they live
an hundred years; perhaps some of my Polls may be
alive there still, calling after poor Robin Crusoe
to this day; I wish no Englishman the ill luck to
come there and hear them; but if he did, he would
certainly believe it was the devil. My dog was
a very pleasant and loving companion to me for no
less than sixteen years of my time, and then died
of mere old age; as for my cats, they multiplied,
as I have observed, to that degree, that I was obliged
to shoot several of them at first, to keep them from
devouring me, and all I had; but at length, when the
two old ones I brought with me were gone, and after
some time continually driving them from me, and letting
them have no provision with me, they all ran wild
into the woods, except two or three favourites, which
I kept tame, and whose young, when they had any, I
always drowned, and these were part of my family:
besides these, I always kept two or three household
kids about me, which I taught to feed out of my hand;
and I had also more parrots which talked pretty well,
and would all call Robin Crusoe, but none like my first;
nor, indeed, did I take the pains with any of them
that I had done with him: I had also several
tame sea-fowls, whose names I know not, which I caught
upon the shore, and cut their wings; and the little
stakes, which I had planted before my castle wall,
being now grown up to a good thick grove, these fowls
all lived among these low trees, and bred there, which
was very agreeable to me; so that, as I said above,
I began to be very well contented with the life I
led, if it might but have been secured from the dread
of savages.
But it was otherwise directed; and it might not be
amiss for all people who shall meet with my story
to make this just observation from it, viz.
How frequently, in the course of our lives, the evil,
which in itself we seek most to shun, and which, when
we are fallen into, is the most dreadful to us, is
oftentimes the very means or door of our deliverance,
by which alone we can be raised again from the affliction
we are fallen into. I could give many examples
of this in the course of my unaccountable life; but
in nothing was it more particularly remarkable, than
in the circumstances of my last years of solitary residence
in this island.
It was now the mouth of December, as I said above,
in my twenty-third year; and this being the southern
solstice, for winter I cannot call it, was the particular
time of my harvest, and required my being pretty much
abroad in the fields; when going out pretty early in
the morning, even before it was thorough daylight,
I was surprised with seeing a light of some fire upon
the shore, at a distance from me of about two miles,
towards the end of the island, where I had observed
some savages had been, as before; but not on the other
side; but, to my great affliction, it was on my side
of the island.