CONTENTS

CHAPTER I
PAGE
Robinson’s Family—His Elopement from His Parents [1]
CHAPTER II
First Adventures at Sea—Experience of a Maritime Life—Voyage to Guinea [8]
CHAPTER III
Robinson’s Captivity at Sallee—Escape with Xury—Arrival at the Brazils [21]
CHAPTER IV
He Settles in the Brazils as a Planter—Makes Another Voyage and Is Shipwrecked [42]
CHAPTER V
Robinson Finds Himself on a Desolate Island and Procures a Stock of Articles from the Wreck—He Constructs His Habitation [61]
CHAPTER VI
Robinson Carries All His Riches, Provisions, Etc., into His Habitation—Dreariness of Solitude—Consolatory Reflections [77]
CHAPTER VII
Robinson’s Mode of Reckoning Time—Difficulties Arising from Want of Tools—He Arranges His Habitation [83]
CHAPTER VIII
Robinson’s Journal—Details of His Domestic Economy and Contrivances—Shock of an Earthquake [91]
CHAPTER IX
Robinson Obtains More Articles from the Wreck—His Illness and Affliction [109]
CHAPTER X
His Recovery—His Comfort in Reading the Scriptures—He Makes an Excursion into the Interior of the Island—Forms His “Bower” [120]
CHAPTER XI
Robinson Makes a Tour to Explore His Island—Employed in Basket Making [139]
CHAPTER XII
He Returns to His Cave—His Agricultural Labors and Success [146]
CHAPTER XIII
His Manufacture of Pottery, and Contrivances for Baking Bread [157]
CHAPTER XIV
Meditates His Escape from the Island—Builds a Canoe—Failure of His Scheme and Resignation to His Condition—He Makes Himself a New Dress [164]
CHAPTER XV
He Makes a Smaller Canoe in Which He Attempts to Cruise Round the Island—His Perilous Situation at Sea—He Returns Home [180]
CHAPTER XVI
He Rears a Flock of Goats—His Diary—His Domestic Habits and Style of Living—Increasing Prosperity [192]
CHAPTER XVII
Unexpected Alarm—Cause for Apprehension—He Fortifies His Abode [203]
CHAPTER XVIII
Precautions Against Surprise—Robinson Discovers that His Island Has Been Visited by Cannibals [215]
CHAPTER XIX
Robinson Discovers a Cave, Which Serves Him as a Retreat Against the Savages [229]
CHAPTER XX
Another Visit of the Savages—Robinson Sees Them Dancing—He Perceives the Wreck of a Vessel [240]
CHAPTER XXI
He Visits the Wreck and Obtains Many Stores from it—Again Thinks of Quitting the Island—Has a Remarkable Dream [249]
CHAPTER XXII
Robinson Rescues One of Their Captives from the Savages, Whom He Names Friday, and Makes His Servant [266]
CHAPTER XXIII
Robinson Instructs and Civilizes His Man Friday and Endeavors to Give Him an Idea of Christianity [279]
CHAPTER XXIV
Robinson and Friday Build a Canoe to Carry Them to Friday’s Country—Their Scheme Prevented by the Arrival of a Party of Savages [294]
CHAPTER XXV
Robinson Releases a Spaniard—Friday Discovers His Father—Accommodation Provided for These New Guests, Who Were Afterward Sent to Liberate the Other Spaniards—Arrival of an English Vessel [310]
CHAPTER XXVI
Robinson Discovers Himself to the English Captain—Assists Him in Reducing His Mutinous Crew, Who Submit to Him [335]
CHAPTER XXVII
Atkins Entreats the Captain to Spare His Life—The Latter Recovers His Vessel from the Mutineers, and Robinson Leaves the Island [355]