书城公版Robinson Crusoe
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第52章

But then it presently occurr'd to me,that I must keep the tame from the wild,or else they would always run wild when they grew up,and the only Way for this was to have some enclosed Piece of Ground,well fenc'd either with Hedge or Pale,to keep them in so effectually,that those within might not break out,or those without break in.

This was a great Undertaking for one Pair of Hands,yet as I saw there was an absolute Necessity of doing it,my first Piece of Work was to find out a proper Piece of Ground,viz. where there was likely to be Herbage for them to eat,Water for them to drink,and Cover to keep them from the Sun.

Those who understand such Enclosures will think I had very little Contrivance,when I pitch'd upon a Place very proper for all these,being a plain open Piece of Meadow-Land,or Savanna,(as our People call it in the Western Collonies,) which had two or three little Drills' of fresh Water in it,and at one end was very woody. I say they will smile at my Forecast,when I shall tell them I began my enclosing of this Piece of Ground in such a manner,that my Hedge or Pale must have been at least two Mile about. Nor was the Madness of it so great as to the Compass,for if it was ten Mile about I was like to have time enough to do it in. But I did not consider that my Goats would be as wild in so much Compass as if they had had the whole Island,and I should have so much Room to chace them in,that I should never catch them.

My Hedge was begun and carry'd on,I believe,about fifty Yards,when this Thought occurr'd to me,so I presently stopt short,and for the first beginning I resolv'd to enclose a Piece of about 150 Yards in length,and 100 Yards in breadth,which as it would maintain as many as I should have in any reasonable time,so as my Flock encreased,I could add more Ground to my Enclosure.

This was acting with some Prudence,and I went to work with Courage. I was about three Months hedging in the first Piece,and till I had done it I tether'd the three Kids in the best part of it,and us'd them to feed as near me as possible to make them familiar;and very often I would go and carry them some Ears of Barley,or a handful of Rice,and feed them out of my Hand;so that after my Enclosure was finished,and I let them loose,they would follow me up and down,bleating after me for a handful of Corn.

This answer'd my End,and in about a Year and half I had a Flock of about twelve Goats,Kids and all;and in two Years more I had three and forty,besides several that I took and kill'd for my Food. And after that I enclosed five several Pieces of Ground to feed them in,with little Pens to drive them into,to take them as I wanted,and Gates out of one Piece of Ground into another.

But this was not all,for now I not only had Goats Flesh to feed on when I pleas'd,but Milk too,a thing which indeed in my beginning I did not so much as think of,and which,when it came into my Thoughts,was really an agreeable Surprize. For now I set up my Dairy,and had sometimes a Gallon or two of Milk in a Day. And as Nature,who gives Supplies of Food to every Creature,dictates even naturally how to make use of it;so I that had never milk'd a Cow,much less a Goat,or seen Butter or Cheese made,very readily and handily,tho' after a great many Essays and Miscarriages,made me both Butter and Cheese at last,and never wanted it afterwards.

How mercifully can our great Creator treat his Creatures,even in those Conditions in which they seem'd to be overwhelm'd in Destruction. How can he sweeten the bitterest Providences,and give us Cause to praise him for Dungeons and Prisons. What a Table was here spread for me in a Wilderness,where I saw nothing at first but to perish for Hunger.

It would have made a Stoick smile to have seen,me and my little Family sit down to Dinner;there was my Majesty the Prince and Lord of the whole island;I had the Lives of all my Subjects at my absolute Command. I could hang,draw,give Liberty,and take it away,and no Rebels among all my Subjects.

Then to see how like a King I din'd too all alone,attended by my Servants,Poll,as if he had been my Favourite,was the only Person permitted to talk to me. My Dog who was now grown very old and crazy,and had found no Species to multiply his Kind upon,sat always at my Right Hand,and two Cats,one on one Side the Table,and one on the other,expecting now and then a Bit from my Hand,as a Mark of special Favour.

But these were not the two Cats which I brought on Shore at first,for they were both of them dead,and had been interr'd near my Habitation by my own Hand;but one of them having multiply'd by I know not what Kind of Creature,these were two which I had preserv'd tame,whereas the rest run wild in the Woods,and became indeed troublesom to me at last;for they would often come into my House,and plunder me too,till at last I was obliged to shoot them,and did kill a great many;at length they left me with this Attendance,and in this plentiful Manner I lived;neither could I be said to want any thing but Society,and of that in some time after this,I was like to have too much.

I was something impatient,as I have observ'd,to have the Use of my Boat;though very loath to run any more Hazards;and therefore sometimes I sat contriving Ways to get her about the Island,and at other Times I sat my self down contented enough without her. But I had a strange Uneasiness in my Mind to go down to the Point of the Island,where,as I have said,in my last Ramble,I went up the Hill to see how the Shore lay,and how the Current set,that I might see what I had to do:This Inclination encreas'd upon me every Day,and at length I resolv'd to travel thither by Land,following the Edge of the Shore. I did so:But had any one in England been to meet such a Man as I was,it must either have frighted them,or rais'd a great deal of Laughter;and as I frequently stood still to look at my self,I could not but smile at the Notion of my travelling though Yorkshire with such an Equipage,and in such a Dress:Be pleas'd to take a Scetch of my Figure as follows,