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621
When
this
was
done
,
I
stuck
all
the
ground
without
my
wall
,
for
a
great
way
every
way
,
as
full
with
stakes
,
or
sticks
,
of
the
osier-like
wood
,
which
I
found
so
apt
to
grow
,
as
they
could
well
stand
;
insomuch
,
that
I
believe
I
might
set
in
near
twenty
thousand
of
them
,
leaving
a
pretty
large
space
between
them
and
my
wall
,
that
I
might
have
room
to
see
an
enemy
,
and
they
might
have
no
shelter
from
the
young
trees
,
if
they
attempted
to
approach
my
outer
wall
.
622
Thus
in
two
years
'
time
I
had
a
thick
grove
;
and
in
five
or
six
years
'
time
I
had
a
wood
before
my
dwelling
,
growing
so
monstrous
thick
and
strong
,
that
it
was
indeed
perfectly
impassable
;
and
no
men
,
of
what
kind
soever
,
would
ever
imagine
that
there
was
anything
beyond
it
,
much
less
a
habitation
.
As
for
the
way
which
I
proposed
to
myself
to
go
in
and
out
,
for
I
left
no
avenue
,
it
was
by
setting
two
ladders
,
one
to
a
part
of
the
rock
which
was
low
,
and
then
broke
in
,
and
left
room
to
place
another
ladder
upon
that
;
so
when
the
two
ladders
were
taken
down
,
no
man
living
could
come
down
to
me
without
mischieving
himself
;
and
if
they
had
come
down
,
they
were
still
on
the
outside
of
my
outer
wall
.
623
Thus
I
took
all
the
measures
human
prudence
could
suggest
for
my
own
preservation
;
and
it
will
be
seen
,
at
length
,
that
they
were
not
altogether
without
just
reason
;
though
I
foresaw
nothing
at
that
time
more
than
my
mere
fear
suggested
to
me
.
Отключить рекламу
624
While
this
was
doing
,
I
was
not
altogether
careless
of
my
other
affairs
;
for
I
had
a
great
concern
upon
me
for
my
little
herd
of
goats
.
They
were
not
only
a
present
supply
to
me
upon
every
occasion
,
and
began
to
be
sufficient
to
me
,
without
the
expense
of
powder
and
shot
,
but
also
without
the
fatigue
of
hunting
after
the
wild
ones
;
and
I
was
loth
to
lose
the
advantage
of
them
,
and
to
have
them
all
to
nurse
up
over
again
.
625
To
this
purpose
,
after
long
consideration
,
I
could
think
of
but
two
ways
to
preserve
them
.
One
was
,
to
find
another
convenient
place
to
dig
a
cave
under
ground
,
and
to
drive
them
into
it
every
night
;
and
the
other
was
,
to
enclose
two
or
three
little
bits
of
land
,
remote
from
one
another
,
and
as
much
concealed
as
I
could
,
where
I
might
keep
about
half
a
dozen
young
goats
in
each
place
;
so
that
if
any
disaster
happened
to
the
flock
in
general
,
I
might
be
able
to
raise
them
again
with
little
trouble
and
time
.
And
this
,
though
it
would
require
a
great
deal
of
time
and
labor
,
I
thought
was
the
most
rational
design
.
626
Accordingly
I
spent
some
time
to
find
out
the
most
retired
parts
of
the
island
;
and
I
pitched
upon
one
which
was
as
private
indeed
as
my
heart
could
wish
for
.
It
was
a
little
damp
piece
of
ground
,
in
the
middle
of
the
hollow
and
thick
woods
,
where
,
as
is
observed
,
I
almost
lost
myself
once
before
,
endeavoring
to
come
back
that
way
from
the
eastern
part
of
the
island
.
Here
I
found
a
clear
piece
of
land
,
near
three
acres
,
so
surrounded
with
woods
that
it
was
almost
an
enclosure
by
Nature
;
at
least
,
it
did
not
want
near
so
much
labor
to
make
it
as
the
other
pieces
of
ground
I
had
worked
so
hard
at
.
627
I
immediately
went
to
work
with
this
piece
of
ground
,
and
in
less
than
a
month
's
time
I
had
so
fenced
it
round
that
my
flock
,
or
herd
,
call
it
which
you
please
,
who
were
not
so
wild
now
as
at
first
they
might
be
supposed
to
be
,
were
well
enough
secured
in
it
.
Отключить рекламу
628
So
,
without
any
farther
delay
,
I
removed
often
young
she-goats
and
two
he-goats
to
this
piece
.
And
when
they
were
there
,
I
continued
to
perfect
the
fence
,
till
I
had
made
it
as
secure
as
the
other
,
which
,
however
,
I
did
at
more
leisure
,
and
it
took
me
up
more
time
by
a
great
deal
.
629
All
this
labor
I
was
at
the
expense
of
,
purely
from
my
apprehensions
on
the
account
of
the
print
of
a
man
's
foot
which
I
had
seen
;
for
,
as
yet
,
I
never
saw
any
human
creature
come
near
the
island
.
And
I
had
now
lived
two
years
under
these
uneasinesses
,
which
,
indeed
,
made
my
life
much
less
comfortable
than
it
was
before
,
as
may
well
be
imagined
by
any
who
know
what
it
is
to
live
in
the
constant
snare
of
the
fear
of
man
.
And
this
I
must
observe
,
with
grief
,
too
,
that
the
discomposure
of
my
mind
had
too
great
impressions
also
upon
the
religious
part
of
my
thoughts
;
for
the
dread
and
terror
of
falling
into
the
hands
of
savages
and
cannibals
lay
so
upon
my
spirits
,
that
I
seldom
found
myself
in
a
due
temper
for
application
to
my
Maker
,
at
least
not
with
the
sedate
calmness
and
resignation
of
soul
which
I
was
wont
to
do
.
I
rather
prayed
to
God
as
under
great
affliction
and
pressure
of
mind
,
surrounded
with
danger
,
and
in
expectation
every
night
of
being
murdered
and
devoured
before
morning
;
and
I
must
testify
from
my
experience
,
that
a
temper
of
peace
,
thankfulness
,
love
,
and
affection
,
is
much
more
the
proper
frame
for
prayer
than
that
of
terror
and
discomposure
;
and
that
under
the
dread
of
mischief
impending
,
a
man
is
no
more
fit
for
a
comforting
performance
of
the
duty
of
praying
to
God
than
he
is
for
repentance
on
a
sicklied
.
For
these
discomposures
affect
the
mind
,
as
the
others
do
the
body
;
and
the
discomposure
of
the
mind
must
necessarily
be
as
great
a
disability
as
that
of
the
body
,
and
much
greater
,
praying
to
God
being
properly
an
act
of
the
mind
,
not
of
the
body
.
630
But
to
go
on
.
After
I
had
thus
secured
one
part
of
my
little
living
stock
,
I
went
about
the
whole
island
,
searching
for
another
private
place
to
make
such
another
deposit
;
when
,
wandering
more
the
the
west
point
of
the
island
than
I
had
ever
done
yet
,
and
looking
out
to
sea
,
I
thought
I
saw
a
boat
upon
the
sea
,
at
a
great
distance
.
I
had
found
a
prospective
glass
or
two
in
one
of
the
seamen
's
chests
,
which
I
saved
out
of
our
ship
,
but
I
had
it
not
about
me
;
and
this
was
so
remote
that
I
could
not
tell
what
to
make
of
it
,
though
I
looked
at
it
till
my
eyes
were
not
able
to
hold
to
look
any
longer
.
Whether
it
was
a
boat
or
not
,
I
do
not
know
;
but
as
I
descended
from
the
hill
,
I
could
see
no
more
of
it
,
so
I
gave
it
over
;
only
I
resolved
to
go
no
more
out
without
a
prospective
glass
in
my
pocket
.