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Crusoe's Island: A Ramble in the Footsteps of Alexander Selkirk

Chapter 5 ROBINSON CRUSOE'S CAVE.

Word Count: 2951    |    Released on: 06/12/2017

r many years alone; and I believe most mariners who have visited the island have fixed upon that spot as the actual abode of Alexander Selkirk. There are two ways of getting to the cave

seamen and others, in climbing over these treacherous heights. The distance by water is only two miles, and by passing along under the brow of the cliffs a very vivid idea may be had of their strange and romantic formation. We had our guns with us, which we did not fail to use whenever there was an opportunity; but the game, consisting principally of wild goats, kept so far out of reach on the dizzy h

r heavily, we had to run the boat up in regular beach-comber style. Riding in on the back of a heavy sea, we sprang out as soon as the boat struck, and held our ground, when, by watching our ch

OE'S

e uncovered it, and made out the purpose for which it was built. There was a darkish line, about a foot wide, reaching up to the roof of the cave, which, by removing the surface a little, we discovered to be produced originally by smoke, cemented in some sort by a drip that still moistened the wall, and this we found came through a hole in the top, which we concluded was the original chimney, now covered over with deposits of earth and leaves from the mountain above. In rooting about the fireplace, so as to get away the loose rubbish that lay over it, one of our party brought to light an earthen vessel, broken a little on one side, but otherwise perfect. It was about eight inches in diameter at the rim, and an inch or two smaller at the bottom, and had some rough marks upon the outside, which we were unable to decipher, on account of the clay which covered it. Afterward we took it out and washed it in a spring near by, when we contr

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human hands; but we were unable to make out that any of them had a meaning beyond the unconscious expression of those vague and wandering thoughts which must have passed occasionally through the mind of the solitary mariner who dwelt in this lonely place. Th

'S DEV

eing, until recently, more than once or twice in half a century, and then probably only by some deserter

bout over the rocky heights, sometimes diving suddenly into the water, from which they rose again flecked with foam, and, soaring upward in the sunlight, their wings seemed to sparkle with jewels out of the ocean. Following the curve of the horizon, the view is suddenly cut off by a huge cliff of lava that rises directly out of the water to the height of twelve or fifteen hundred feet. It forms an abrupt precipice in front, and joins a range of rugged cliffs behind, which all abound in wonderful ledges overlooking the depths below, dark and loneso

WITH THE CA

ts margins were fringed with rich grass and fragrant flowers, and groves of myrtle overhung the little lakelets that were made in its course, and seemed to linger there like mirrored beauties spell-bound. Ridges of amber-colored earth, mingled with rugged and moss-covered lava, sloped down from the mountains on every side and converged into the valley, as if attracted by its romantic beauties. Immense masses of rock, cast off from the tower

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I am now making a confession of facts rather out of the common order, and for which it would be useless to offer any excuse. Pleasant scenes of my early life rose up before me now with all their original freshness. How well I remembered the first time I read the surprising adventures of Robinson Crusoe! It was in the country, where I had never learned the worldly wisdom of the rising generation in cities. Indeed, I had never seen a city, and only knew by hearsay that such wonderful places existed. My father, after an absence of some weeks, returned with an illustrated volume of Crusoe, bound in cream-colored muslin (how plainly I could see that book now!), which he gave me, with a smiling admonition not to commence reading it for two or three years, by which time he hoped I would be old enough to understand it. That very night I was in a new world-a world all strange and fas

RY

blissful disaster. Years passed away; I lived on the banks of the Ohio; I had been upon the ocean. Still a boy in years, and more so perhaps in feeling, the dream was not ended. I gathered up drift-wood, and built a hut among the rocks; whole days I lay there thinking of that island in the far-off seas. A piece of tarred plank from some steam-boat had a sweeter scent to me than the most odorous flower; for, as I lay smelling it by the hour, it brought up such exquisite visions of shipwreck as never before, perhaps, so ch

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med to me that little world upon the seas, where dwelt in solitude the shipwrecked mariner. In the vicissitudes of fortune, I was again a wanderer; impelled by that vision of island-life which for seventeen years had never ceased to haunt me, I cast all upon the hazard of a die-escaped in an open boat through the perils of a storm, and now-where was I? What pleasant sadness was it that weighed upon

, the earnest, the adventurous Robinson Crusoe? Could it be that there was no "mortal mixture of earth's mould in him;" that he was barely the simple mariner Alexander Selkirk? No! no! Robinson Crusoe himself had wandered through these

OE A

! Blessing on thee, Robinson, how I have admired thy prolific genius; how I have loved thee for thine honest truthfulness! And blessings on thee, Frida

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Crusoe's Island: A Ramble in the Footsteps of Alexander Selkirk
Crusoe's Island: A Ramble in the Footsteps of Alexander Selkirk
“Crusoe's Island: A Ramble in the Footsteps of Alexander Selkirk by John Ross Browne”
1 Chapter 1 THE BOAT ADVENTURE.2 Chapter 2 FIRST IMPRESSIONS OF THE ISLAND.3 Chapter 3 GOING ASHORE.4 Chapter 4 CONDITION OF THE ISLAND IN 1849.5 Chapter 5 ROBINSON CRUSOE'S CAVE.6 Chapter 6 THE VALLEY ON FIRE.7 Chapter 7 THE CAVE OF THE BUCCANEERS.8 Chapter 8 LODGINGS UNDER GROUND.9 Chapter 9 COOKING FISH.10 Chapter 10 RAMBLE INTO THE INTERIOR.11 Chapter 11 THE VALLEY OF ENCHANTMENT.12 Chapter 12 A STRANGE DISCOVERY.13 Chapter 13 THE STORM AND ESCAPE.14 Chapter 14 THE AMERICAN CRUSOE.15 Chapter 15 CASTLE OF THE AMERICAN CRUSOE.16 Chapter 16 DIFFICULTY BETWEEN ABRAHAM AND THE DOUBTER.17 Chapter 17 THE MURDER.18 Chapter 18 THE SKULL.19 Chapter 19 THE GOVERNOR'S VISION.20 Chapter 20 THE DOUBTER'S DYSPEPTIC STORY.21 Chapter 21 BAD DREAM CONCERNING THE DOUBTER.22 Chapter 22 THE UNPLEASANT AFFAIR OF HONOR.23 Chapter 23 DOCTOR STILLMAN'S JOURNAL.24 Chapter 24 CONFIDENTIAL CHAT WITH THE READER.25 Chapter 25 EARLY VOYAGES TO JUAN FERNANDEZ.26 Chapter 26 THE CANNIBAL.27 Chapter 27 THE MIRAGE.28 Chapter 28 A DEATH-STRUGGLE.29 Chapter 29 THE OUTLAWS' CAMP.30 Chapter 30 THE ESCAPE.31 Chapter 31 A LONELY RIDE.32 Chapter 32 THE ATTACK.33 Chapter 33 SAN MIGUEL.34 Chapter 34 A DANGEROUS ADVENTURE.35 Chapter 35 No.3536 Chapter 36 START FOR WASHOE.37 Chapter 37 ACROSS THE MOUNTAINS.38 Chapter 38 AN INFERNAL CITY.39 Chapter 39 SOCIETY OF VIRGINIA CITY.40 Chapter 40 ESCAPE FROM VIRGINIA CITY.41 Chapter 41 MY WASHOE AGENCY.42 Chapter 42 START FOR HOME.43 Chapter 43 ARRIVAL IN SAN FRANCISCO.