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591
Near
this
dwelling
of
mine
,
but
a
little
farther
within
the
land
,
and
upon
lower
ground
,
lay
my
two
pieces
of
corn
ground
,
which
I
kept
duly
cultivated
and
sowed
,
and
which
duly
yielded
me
their
harvest
in
its
season
;
and
whenever
I
had
occasion
for
more
corn
,
I
had
more
land
adjoining
as
fit
as
that
.
592
Besides
this
,
I
had
my
country
seat
,
and
I
had
now
a
tolerable
plantation
there
also
;
for
,
first
,
I
had
my
little
bower
,
as
I
called
it
,
which
I
kept
in
repair
;
that
is
to
say
,
I
kept
the
hedge
which
circled
it
in
constantly
fitted
up
to
its
usual
height
,
the
ladder
standing
always
in
the
inside
.
I
kept
the
trees
,
which
at
first
were
no
more
than
my
stakes
,
but
were
now
grown
very
firm
and
tall
,
I
kept
them
always
so
cut
,
that
they
might
spread
and
grow
thick
and
wild
,
and
make
the
more
agreeable
shade
,
which
they
did
effectually
to
my
mind
.
In
the
middle
of
this
,
I
had
my
tent
always
standing
,
being
a
piece
of
a
sail
spread
over
poles
,
set
up
for
that
purpose
,
and
which
never
wanted
any
repair
or
renewing
;
593
and
under
this
I
had
made
me
a
squab
or
couch
,
with
the
skins
of
the
creatures
I
had
killed
,
and
with
other
soft
things
,
and
a
blanket
laid
on
them
,
such
as
belonged
to
our
sea-bedding
,
which
I
had
saved
,
and
a
great
watch-coat
to
cover
me
;
and
here
,
whenever
I
had
occasion
to
be
absent
from
my
chief
seat
,
I
took
up
my
country
habitation
.
Отключить рекламу
594
Adjoining
to
this
I
had
my
enclosure
for
my
cattle
,
that
is
to
say
,
my
goats
.
And
as
I
had
taken
an
inconceivable
deal
of
pains
to
fence
and
enclose
this
ground
,
so
I
was
uneasy
to
see
it
kept
entire
,
less
the
goats
should
break
through
,
that
I
never
left
off
till
,
with
infinite
labor
,
I
had
struck
the
outside
of
the
hedge
so
full
of
small
stakes
,
and
so
near
to
one
another
,
that
it
was
rather
a
pale
than
a
hedge
,
and
there
was
scarce
room
to
put
a
hand
through
them
;
which
afterwards
,
when
those
stakes
grew
,
as
they
all
did
in
the
next
rainy
season
,
made
the
enclosure
strong
like
a
wall
,
indeed
,
stronger
than
any
wall
.
595
This
will
testify
for
me
that
I
was
not
idle
,
and
that
I
spared
no
pains
to
bring
to
pass
whatever
appeared
necessary
for
my
comfortable
support
;
for
I
considered
the
keeping
up
a
breed
of
tame
creatures
thus
at
my
hand
would
be
a
living
magazine
of
flesh
,
milk
,
butter
,
and
cheese
for
me
as
long
as
I
lived
in
the
place
,
if
it
were
to
be
forty
years
;
and
that
keeping
them
in
my
reach
depended
entirely
upon
my
perfecting
my
enclosures
to
such
a
degree
that
I
might
be
sure
of
keeping
them
together
;
which
,
by
this
method
,
indeed
,
I
so
effectually
secured
that
when
these
little
stakes
began
to
grow
,
I
had
planted
them
so
very
thick
I
was
forced
to
pull
some
of
them
up
again
.
596
In
this
place
also
I
had
my
grapes
growing
,
which
I
principally
depended
on
for
my
winter
store
of
raisins
,
and
which
I
never
failed
to
preserve
very
carefully
,
as
the
best
and
most
agreeable
dainty
of
my
whole
diet
.
And
indeed
they
were
not
agreeable
only
,
but
physical
,
wholesome
,
nourishing
,
and
refreshing
to
the
last
degree
.
597
As
this
was
also
about
half-way
between
my
other
habitation
and
the
place
where
I
had
laid
up
my
boat
,
I
generally
stayed
and
lay
here
in
my
way
thither
;
for
I
used
frequently
to
visit
my
boat
,
and
I
kept
all
things
about
,
or
belonging
to
her
,
in
very
good
order
.
Sometimes
I
went
out
in
her
to
divert
myself
,
but
no
more
hazardous
voyages
would
I
go
,
nor
scarce
ever
above
a
stone
's
cast
or
two
from
the
shore
,
I
was
so
apprehensive
of
being
hurried
out
of
my
knowledge
again
by
the
currents
or
winds
,
or
any
other
accident
.
But
now
I
come
to
a
new
scene
of
my
life
.
Отключить рекламу
598
It
happened
one
day
,
about
noon
,
going
towards
my
boat
,
I
was
exceedingly
surprised
with
the
print
of
a
man
's
naked
foot
on
the
shore
,
which
was
very
plain
to
be
seen
in
the
sand
.
I
stood
like
one
thunder-struck
,
or
as
if
I
had
seen
an
apparition
.
I
listened
,
I
looked
round
me
,
I
could
hear
nothing
,
nor
see
anything
.
I
went
up
to
a
rising
ground
,
to
look
farther
.
I
went
up
the
shore
,
and
down
the
shore
,
but
it
was
all
one
;
I
could
see
no
other
impression
but
that
one
,
I
went
to
it
again
to
see
if
there
were
any
more
,
and
to
observe
if
it
might
not
be
my
fancy
;
but
there
was
no
room
for
that
,
for
there
was
exactly
the
very
print
of
a
foot
--
toes
,
heel
,
and
every
part
of
a
foot
.
How
it
came
thither
I
knew
not
,
nor
could
in
the
least
imagine
.
But
after
innumerable
fluttering
thoughts
,
like
a
man
perfectly
confused
and
out
of
myself
,
I
came
home
to
my
fortification
,
not
feeling
,
as
we
say
,
the
ground
I
went
on
,
but
terrified
to
the
last
degree
,
looking
behind
me
at
every
two
or
three
steps
,
mistaking
every
bush
and
tree
,
and
fancying
every
stump
at
a
distance
to
be
a
man
;
nor
is
it
possible
to
describe
how
many
various
shapes
affrighted
imagination
represented
things
to
me
in
,
how
many
wild
ideas
were
found
every
moment
in
my
fancy
,
and
what
strange
unaccountable
whimsies
came
into
my
thoughts
by
the
way
.
599
When
I
came
to
my
castle
,
for
so
I
think
I
called
it
ever
after
this
,
I
fled
into
it
like
one
pursued
.
Whether
I
went
over
by
the
ladder
,
as
first
contrived
,
or
went
in
at
the
hole
in
the
rock
,
which
I
called
a
door
,
I
can
not
remember
;
no
,
nor
could
I
remember
the
next
morning
,
for
never
frighted
hare
fled
to
cover
,
or
fox
to
earth
,
with
more
terror
of
mind
than
I
to
this
retreat
.
600
I
slept
none
that
night
.
The
farther
I
was
from
the
occasion
of
my
fright
,
the
greater
my
apprehensions
were
;
which
is
something
contrary
to
the
nature
of
such
things
,
and
especially
to
the
usual
practice
of
all
creatures
in
fear
.
But
I
was
so
embarrassed
with
my
own
frightful
ideas
of
the
thing
,
that
I
formed
nothing
but
dismal
imaginations
to
myself
,
even
though
I
was
now
a
great
way
off
it
.
Sometimes
I
fancied
it
must
be
the
devil
,
and
reason
joined
in
with
me
upon
this
supposition
;
for
how
should
any
other
thing
in
human
shape
come
into
the
place
?
Where
was
the
vessel
that
brought
them
?
What
was
there
of
any
other
footsteps
?
And
how
was
it
possible
a
man
should
come
there
?
But
then
to
think
that
Satan
should
take
human
shape
upon
him
in
such
a
place
,
where
there
could
be
no
manner
of
occasion
for
it
,
but
to
leave
the
print
of
his
foot
behind
him
,
that
even
for
no
purpose
too
,
for
he
could
not
be
sure
I
should
see
it
;
this
was
an
amusement
the
other
way
.
I
considered
that
the
devil
might
have
found
out
abundance
of
other
ways
to
have
terrified
me
than
this
of
the
single
print
of
a
foot
;
that
as
I
lived
quite
on
the
other
side
of
the
island
,
he
would
never
have
been
so
simple
to
leave
a
mark
in
a
place
where
it
was
often
thousand
to
one
whether
I
should
ever
see
it
or
not
,
and
in
the
sand
,
too
,
which
the
first
surge
of
the
sea
,
upon
a
high
wind
,
would
have
defaced
entirely
.
All
this
seemed
inconsistent
with
the
thing
itself
,
and
with
all
the
notions
we
usually
entertain
of
the
subtilty
of
the
devil
.