Robinson Crusoe is one of the earliest examples of a realistic novel in the English language It tells the story of a young Englishman called Robinson Crusoe, who dreams of becoming a sailor and travelling the world When his father refuses to let him go to sea, he runs away. After several misadettes, he ends up in Brazil and becomes rich. Soon, he decides to take a trip to Africa to buy some slaves, but his ship in hat by a storm and he ends up alone on a desert island With a fer supplies from the shipwreck he builds a house, a boat and a new life One day. Crusoe encounters people on the island He discovers that they are natives from a nearby land with some prisoners He even helps a poner escape who eventually becomes his servant and close friend. He names him Friday. after the day of the week they met, and teaches him to use his tools and speak English. After many years, a European ship comes to the island and Crusoe is finally rescued Crusoe and Friday make a deal with the captain of the ship and he takes them back to Europe. After 27 years, he returns home to England
1. Why did Crusoe na away from home
2. Where was Crusoe going when his ship was wrecked and why?
Where did he end up?
4 Who is Friday
5. How long did he stay on the island? 6 What do you know about the author of the novel
Books about voyages and new discoveries were extremely popular in the 1st quarter of the 18th century. A true story that was described in one of the magazines attracted Defoe's attention. It was about Alexander Selkirk, a Scottish sailor, who had quarrelled with his captain and was put ashore on a desert island near South America where he lived quite alone for four years and four months. In 1709 he was picked up by a passing vessel. Selkirk's story interested Defoe so much that he decided to use H for a book However, he made his hero, Robinson Crusoe, spend twenty-six years on a desert island.
At the beginning of the story the hero is an inexperienced youth, a rather light-minded boy, who develops into a strong-willed man, able to withstand all the hardships. Being cast ashore on a desert island after the shipwreck, alone and defenseless, Crusoe tried to be reasonable. He knows that he must not give way to self-pity and fear or to lose himself in mourning for his lost companions.
Robinson Crusoe's most characteristic trait is his optimism. His guiding principle in life is “never say die” and "in trouble to be troubled is to have your trouble doubled”. Sometimes of course, especial\y during earthquakes or when he is ill, panic and anxiety overtake him, but never for long. He has confidence in himself and in man, and believes that it is in the power of man to overcome all difficulties and hardships. Another of Crusoe's good qualities which saves him from, despair is hit ability to put his whole heart into everything he does. He is an enthusiastic worker and always hopes for the best.
As soon as he gets a pen and ink he begins to keep a journal. It is also Robinson Crusoe is typically bourgeois. He is very practical. The beauty of the island has no appeal to him. He does not care for scenery. He regards the island as his personal property. He is proud to be master of it, and is pleased at the thought that everything belongs to him.
Negro slavery seems natural to Crusoe. He considers his race to be superior to all other races. As soon as a man appears on the island, Crusoe makes him his slave. "Master" is the first word he teaches Friday to say.
Crusoe is full of religious superstitions. He is terrified at the thought that a terrible dream may come true. He believes in God and in the hand of Providence. In desperate moments he turns to God for help.
The other central character of the book is the man Friday. Defoe makes the reader sympathize with Friday. He is intelligent, brave, generous and skilful. He performs all the tasks well. Crusoe teaches him to speak English and is astonished how quickly the man begins to understand the language. The savage is portrayed as a kind-hearted human being.
The novel "Robinson Crusoe" is a glorification of energy and practicism yet these qualities are exaggerated when concentrated in one man. Individualism is characteristic of Defoe. According to the author, man can live with no other humans, no other hands to help him however, Crusoe succeeds in making things using the tools he has found on the ship, tools made by many other people. Besides, he inherited the experience of many generations who had lived on the earth before him.
The novel stirs the imagination of people of all ages and all times. The task is a glorification of human labour, a triumph of man over nature. It is not only a work of fiction, a book of adventures, biography; it is a study of man in relation to labour, to nature, to private property.
Defoe was a true writer of the Enlightenment. He introduced the common man as the key-character of his novel. Defoe used the manner of speech of the common people to whom he addressed himself.
The story is told in the first person, much attention is paid to concrete details. This produces the
impression that the author himself lived through all the adventure described by him.