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- Даниэль Дефо
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- Робинзон Крузо
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It
might
be
truly
said
,
that
now
I
worked
for
my
bread
.
'
Tis
a
little
wonderful
,
and
what
I
believe
few
people
have
thought
upon
,
viz.
,
the
strange
multitude
of
little
things
necessary
in
the
providing
,
producing
,
curing
,
dressing
,
making
,
and
finishing
this
one
article
of
bread
.
I
,
that
was
reduced
to
a
mere
state
of
nature
,
found
this
to
my
daily
discouragement
,
and
was
made
more
and
more
sensible
of
it
every
hour
,
even
after
I
had
got
the
first
handful
of
seedcorn
,
which
,
as
I
have
said
,
came
up
unexpectedly
,
and
indeed
,
to
a
surprise
.
First
,
I
had
no
plough
to
turn
up
the
earth
,
no
spade
or
shovel
to
dig
it
.
Well
,
this
I
conquered
by
making
a
wooden
spade
,
as
I
observed
before
,
but
this
did
my
work
in
but
a
wooden
manner
;
and
though
it
cost
me
a
great
many
days
to
make
it
,
yet
,
for
want
of
iron
,
it
not
only
wore
out
the
sooner
,
but
made
my
work
the
harder
,
and
made
it
be
performed
much
worse
.
However
,
this
I
bore
with
,
and
was
content
to
work
it
out
with
patience
,
and
bear
with
the
badness
of
the
performance
.
When
the
corn
was
sowed
,
I
had
no
harrow
,
but
was
forced
to
go
over
it
myself
,
and
drag
a
great
heavy
bough
of
a
tree
over
it
,
to
scratch
it
,
as
it
may
be
called
,
rather
than
rake
or
harrow
it
.
When
it
was
growing
and
grown
,
I
have
observed
already
how
many
things
I
wanted
to
fence
it
,
secure
it
,
mow
or
reap
it
,
cure
and
carry
it
home
,
thrash
,
part
it
from
the
chaff
,
and
save
it
.
Then
I
wanted
a
mill
to
grind
it
,
sieves
to
dress
it
,
yeast
and
salt
to
make
it
into
bread
,
and
an
oven
to
bake
it
,
and
yet
all
these
things
I
did
without
,
as
shall
be
observed
;
and
yet
the
corn
was
an
inestimable
comfort
and
advantage
to
me
too
.
All
this
,
as
I
said
,
made
everything
laborious
and
tedious
to
me
,
but
that
there
was
no
help
for
;
neither
was
my
time
so
much
loss
to
me
,
because
,
as
I
had
divided
it
,
a
certain
part
of
it
was
every
day
appointed
to
these
works
,
and
as
I
resolved
to
use
none
of
the
corn
for
bread
till
I
had
a
greater
quantity
by
me
,
I
had
the
next
six
months
to
apply
myself
wholly
,
by
labor
and
invention
,
to
furnish
myself
with
utensils
proper
for
the
performing
all
the
operations
necessary
for
the
making
the
corn
,
when
I
had
it
,
fit
for
my
use
.
But
first
I
was
to
prepare
more
land
,
for
I
had
now
seed
enough
to
sow
above
an
acre
of
ground
.
Before
I
did
this
,
I
had
a
week
's
work
at
least
to
make
me
a
spade
,
which
,
when
it
was
done
,
was
but
a
sorry
one
indeed
,
and
very
heavy
,
and
required
double
labor
to
work
with
it
.
However
,
I
went
through
that
,
and
sowed
my
seed
in
two
large
flat
pieces
of
ground
,
as
near
my
house
as
I
could
find
them
to
my
mind
,
and
fenced
them
in
with
a
good
hedge
,
the
stakes
of
which
were
all
cut
of
that
wood
which
I
had
set
before
,
and
knew
it
would
grow
;
so
that
in
one
year
's
time
I
knew
I
should
have
a
quick
or
living
hedge
,
that
would
want
but
little
repair
.
This
work
was
not
so
little
as
to
take
me
up
less
than
three
months
,
because
great
part
of
that
time
was
of
the
wet
season
,
when
I
could
not
go
abroad
.
Within
doors
,
that
is
,
when
it
rained
,
and
I
could
not
go
out
,
I
found
employment
on
the
following
occasions
;
always
observing
,
that
all
the
while
I
was
at
work
,
I
diverted
myself
with
talking
to
my
parrot
,
and
teaching
him
to
speak
,
and
I
quickly
learned
him
to
know
his
own
name
,
and
at
last
to
speak
it
out
pretty
loud
,
"
Poll
,
"
which
was
the
first
word
I
ever
heard
spoken
in
the
island
by
any
mouth
but
my
own
.
This
,
therefore
,
was
not
my
work
,
but
an
assistant
to
my
work
;
for
now
,
as
I
said
,
I
had
a
great
employment
upon
my
hands
,
as
follows
,
viz.
,
I
had
long
studied
,
by
some
means
or
other
,
to
make
myself
some
earthern
vessels
,
which
indeed
I
wanted
sorely
,
but
knew
not
where
to
come
at
them
.
However
,
considering
the
heat
of
the
climate
,
I
did
not
doubt
but
if
I
could
find
out
any
such
clay
,
I
might
botch
up
some
such
a
pot
as
might
,
being
dried
in
the
sun
,
be
hard
enough
and
strong
enough
to
bear
handling
,
and
to
hold
anything
that
was
dry
,
and
required
to
be
kept
so
;
and
as
this
was
necessary
in
the
preparing
corn
,
meal
,
etc.
,
which
was
the
thing
I
was
upon
,
I
resolved
to
make
some
as
large
as
I
could
,
and
fit
only
to
stand
like
jars
,
to
hold
what
should
be
put
into
them
.
It
would
make
the
reader
pity
me
,
or
rather
laugh
at
me
,
to
tell
how
many
awkward
ways
I
took
to
raise
this
paste
;
what
odd
,
misshapen
,
ugly
things
I
made
;
how
many
of
them
fell
in
,
and
how
many
fell
out
,
the
clay
not
being
stiff
enough
to
bear
its
own
weight
;
how
many
cracked
by
the
over-violent
heat
of
the
sun
,
being
set
out
too
hastily
;
and
how
many
fell
in
pieces
with
only
removing
,
as
well
before
as
after
they
were
dried
;
and
,
in
a
word
,
how
,
after
having
labored
hard
to
find
the
clay
,
to
dig
it
,
to
temper
it
,
to
bring
it
home
,
and
work
it
,
I
could
not
make
above
two
large
earthen
ugly
things
(
(
I
can
not
call
them
jars
)
)
in
about
two
months
'
labor
.
However
,
as
the
sun
baked
these
two
very
dry
and
hard
,
I
lifted
them
very
gently
up
,
and
set
them
down
again
in
two
great
wicker
baskets
,
which
I
had
made
on
purpose
for
them
,
that
they
might
not
break
;
and
as
between
the
pot
and
the
basket
there
was
a
little
room
to
spare
,
I
stuffed
it
full
of
the
rice
and
barley
straw
,
and
these
two
pots
being
to
stand
always
dry
,
I
thought
would
hold
my
dry
corn
,
and
perhaps
the
meal
,
when
the
corn
was
bruised
.