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691
It
seemed
evident
to
me
that
the
visits
which
they
thus
made
to
this
island
are
not
very
frequent
,
for
it
was
above
fifteen
months
before
any
more
of
them
came
on
shore
there
again
;
that
is
to
say
,
I
neither
saw
them
,
or
any
footsteps
or
signals
of
them
,
in
all
that
time
;
for
,
as
to
the
rainy
seasons
,
then
they
are
sure
not
to
come
abroad
,
at
least
not
so
far
.
Yet
all
this
while
I
lived
uncomfortably
by
reason
of
the
constant
apprehensions
I
was
in
of
their
coming
upon
me
by
surprise
;
from
whence
I
observe
,
that
the
expectation
of
evil
is
more
bitter
than
the
suffering
,
especially
if
there
is
no
room
to
shake
off
that
expectation
,
or
those
apprehensions
.
692
During
all
this
time
I
was
in
the
murdering
humor
,
and
took
up
most
of
my
hours
,
which
should
have
been
better
employed
,
in
contriving
how
to
circumvent
and
fall
upon
them
the
very
next
time
I
should
see
them
;
especially
if
they
should
be
divided
,
as
they
were
the
last
time
,
into
two
parties
.
Nor
did
I
consider
at
all
that
if
I
killed
one
party
,
suppose
often
or
a
dozen
,
I
was
still
the
next
day
,
or
week
,
or
month
,
to
kill
another
,
and
so
another
,
even
ad
infinitum
,
till
I
should
be
at
length
no
less
a
murderer
than
they
were
in
being
man-eaters
,
and
perhaps
more
so
.
693
I
spent
my
days
now
in
great
perplexity
and
anxiety
of
mind
,
expecting
that
I
should
,
one
day
or
other
,
fall
into
the
hands
of
these
merciless
creatures
;
and
if
I
did
at
any
time
venture
abroad
,
it
was
not
without
looking
round
me
with
the
greatest
care
and
caution
imaginable
.
And
now
I
found
,
to
my
great
comfort
,
how
happy
it
was
that
I
provided
for
a
tame
flock
or
herd
of
goats
;
for
I
durst
not
,
upon
any
account
,
fire
my
gun
,
especially
near
that
side
of
the
island
where
they
usually
came
,
lest
I
should
alarm
the
savages
.
And
if
they
had
fled
from
me
now
,
I
was
sure
to
have
them
come
back
again
,
with
perhaps
two
or
three
hundred
canoes
with
them
,
in
a
few
days
,
and
then
I
knew
what
to
expect
.
Отключить рекламу
694
However
,
I
wore
out
a
year
and
three
months
more
before
I
ever
saw
any
more
of
the
savages
,
and
then
I
found
them
again
,
as
I
shall
soon
observe
.
It
is
true
they
might
have
been
there
once
or
twice
,
but
either
they
made
no
stay
,
or
at
least
I
did
not
hear
them
;
but
in
the
month
of
May
,
as
near
as
I
could
calculate
,
and
in
my
four
and
twentieth
year
,
I
had
a
very
strange
encounter
with
them
;
of
which
in
its
place
.
695
The
perturbation
of
my
mind
,
during
this
fifteen
or
sixteen
months
'
interval
,
was
very
great
.
I
slept
unquiet
,
dreamed
always
frightful
dreams
,
and
often
started
out
of
my
sleep
in
the
night
.
In
the
day
great
troubles
overwhelmed
my
mind
,
and
in
the
night
I
deamed
often
of
killing
the
savages
,
and
of
the
reasons
why
I
might
justify
the
doing
of
it
.
But
,
to
waive
all
this
for
a
while
,
it
was
the
middle
of
May
,
on
the
sixteenth
day
,
I
think
,
as
well
as
my
poor
wooden
calendar
would
reckon
,
for
I
marked
all
upon
the
post
still
;
I
say
,
it
was
the
sixteenth
of
May
that
it
blew
a
very
great
storm
of
wind
all
day
,
with
a
great
deal
of
lightning
and
thunder
,
and
a
very
foul
night
it
was
after
it
.
696
I
know
not
what
was
the
particular
occasion
of
it
,
but
as
I
was
reading
in
the
Bible
,
and
taken
up
with
very
serious
thoughts
about
my
present
condition
,
I
was
surprised
with
a
noise
of
a
gun
,
as
I
thought
,
fired
at
sea
.
697
This
was
,
to
be
sure
,
a
surprise
of
a
quite
different
nature
from
any
I
had
met
with
before
;
for
the
notions
this
put
into
my
thoughts
were
quite
of
another
kind
.
I
started
up
in
the
greatest
haste
imaginable
and
,
in
a
trice
,
clapped
my
ladder
to
the
middle
place
of
the
rock
,
and
pulled
it
after
me
;
and
mounting
it
the
second
time
,
got
to
the
top
of
the
hill
the
very
moment
that
a
flash
of
fire
bid
me
listen
for
a
second
gun
,
which
accordingly
,
in
about
half
a
minute
,
I
heard
;
and
,
by
the
sound
,
knew
that
it
was
from
the
part
of
the
sea
where
I
was
driven
down
the
current
in
my
boat
.
Отключить рекламу
698
I
immediately
considered
that
this
must
be
some
ship
in
distress
,
and
that
they
had
some
comrade
,
or
some
other
ship
in
company
,
and
fired
these
gun
for
signals
of
distress
,
and
to
obtain
help
.
I
had
this
presence
of
mind
,
at
that
minute
,
as
to
think
that
though
I
could
not
help
them
,
it
might
be
that
they
might
help
me
;
so
I
brought
together
all
the
dry
wood
I
could
get
at
hand
,
and
,
making
a
good
handsome
pile
,
I
set
it
on
fire
upon
the
hill
.
The
wood
was
dry
,
and
blazed
freely
;
and
though
the
wind
blew
very
hard
,
yet
it
burnt
fairly
out
;
so
that
I
was
certain
,
if
there
was
any
such
thing
as
a
ship
,
they
must
needs
see
it
,
and
no
doubt
they
did
;
for
as
soon
as
ever
my
fire
blazed
up
I
heard
another
gun
,
and
after
that
several
others
,
all
from
the
same
quarter
.
I
plied
my
fire
all
night
long
till
day
broke
;
and
when
it
was
broad
day
,
and
the
air
cleared
up
,
I
saw
something
at
a
great
distance
at
sea
,
full
east
of
the
island
,
whether
a
sail
or
a
hull
I
could
not
distinguish
,
no
,
not
with
my
glasses
,
the
distance
was
so
great
,
and
the
weather
still
something
hazy
also
;
at
least
it
was
so
out
at
sea
.
699
I
looked
at
it
all
that
day
,
and
soon
perceived
that
it
did
not
move
;
so
I
presently
concluded
that
it
was
a
ship
at
an
anchor
.
And
being
eager
,
you
may
be
sure
,
to
be
satisfied
,
I
took
my
gun
in
hand
and
ran
toward
the
south
side
of
the
island
,
to
the
rocks
where
I
had
formerly
been
carried
away
with
the
current
;
and
getting
up
there
,
the
weather
by
this
time
being
perfectly
clear
,
I
could
plainly
see
,
to
my
great
sorrow
,
the
wreck
of
a
ship
,
cast
away
in
the
night
upon
those
concealed
rocks
which
I
found
when
I
was
out
in
my
boat
;
and
which
rocks
,
as
they
checked
the
violence
of
the
stream
,
and
made
a
kind
of
counter-stream
or
eddy
,
were
the
occasion
of
my
recovering
from
the
most
desperate
,
hopeless
condition
that
ever
I
had
been
in
in
all
my
life
.
700
Thus
,
what
is
one
man
's
safety
is
another
man
's
destruction
;
for
it
seems
these
men
,
whoever
they
were
,
being
out
of
their
knowledge
,
and
the
rocks
being
wholly
under
water
,
had
been
driven
upon
them
in
the
night
,
the
wind
blowing
hard
at
E.
and
ENE
.
Had
they
seen
the
island
,
as
I
must
necessarily
suppose
they
did
not
,
they
must
,
as
I
thought
,
have
endeavored
to
have
saved
themselves
on
shore
by
the
help
of
their
boat
;
but
their
firing
of
guns
for
help
,
especially
when
they
saw
,
as
I
imagined
,
my
fire
,
filled
me
with
man
thoughts
.
First
,
I
imagined
that
upon
seeing
my
light
,
they
might
have
put
themselves
into
their
boat
,
and
have
endeavored
to
make
the
shore
;
but
that
the
sea
going
very
high
,
they
might
have
been
cast
away
.
Other
times
I
imagined
that
they
might
have
lost
their
boat
before
,
as
might
be
the
case
many
ways
;
as
,
particularly
,
by
the
breaking
of
the
sea
upon
their
ship
,
which
many
times
obliges
men
to
stave
,
or
take
in
pieces
of
their
boat
,
and
sometimes
to
throw
it
overboard
with
their
own
hands
.
Other
times
I
imagined
they
had
some
other
ship
or
ships
in
company
,
who
,
upon
the
signals
of
distress
they
had
made
,
had
taken
them
up
and
carried
them
off
.