What are the titles of Chapter 14 of Robinson Crusoe?

Chapter 1 The Restless Robinson

Chapter 2 The First Voyage

Chapter 3 Sailing Again

Chapter 4 Escape from death

Chapter 5: Desert Island Diary

Chapter 6: Fight against the disease

Chapter 7: Labor Creation

Chapter 8 Sailing around the island

Chapter 9 Saving Friday

Chapter 10 Language Education

Chapter 11 Fierce Battle at the Sea

Chapter 12 New Hope

Chapter 13 Returning to Hometown

Chapter 14 Returning to Hometown

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How many chapters are there? What are the subtitles of each chapter?

1*** Chapter 32 Chapter 1 Father's Warning Chapter 2 Encountering a Storm Chapter 3 Encountering Pirates Chapter 4 Escape Chapter 5 Brazil Chapter 6 Shipwreck Chapter 7 The Sole Survivor Chapter 8 The First Days Chapter 9 Diary: Food and Shelter Chapter 10 Diary: Natural Disaster Chapter 11 Diary: Illness Chapter 12 Diary: Recovery Chapter 13 Diary: Investigating the Island Chapter 14 Diary: Making Crock Pots and Canoes Chapter 15 Diary: Quiet Reflection Chapter 16 Chapter 17 Unable to Escape from the Island Chapter 17 Further Improvement in Survival Skills Chapter 18 Footprints Chapter 19 Bones Chapter 20 Fear and Shelter Chapter 21 Wrecked Ship Chapter 22 Encountering Savages Chapter 23 Chapter Observing "Friday" Chapter 24 Teaching "Friday" Chapter 25 New Plan Chapter 26 The Savages Are Coming Again Chapter 27 The Freed Prisoners Chapter 28 The Rebels Chapter 2 Chapter 19 Recovering the Ship Chapter 30 Returning to England Chapter 31 Adventures with "Friday" Chapter 32 Returning to the Island

Extended information: This novel was written by Defoe at the time Inspired by a true story. In September 1704, a Scottish sailor named Alexander Selkirk had an argument with the captain and was abandoned by the captain in the Atlantic Ocean. After living on a desert island for 4 years and 4 months, he was rescued by Captain Woods Rogers. Defoe took Selkirk's legendary story as a basis, poured his many years of maritime experience into the characters, and fully used his rich imagination for literary processing, making "Robinson" not only a popular character among primary and secondary schools at that time A heroic figure in the eyes of the bourgeoisie, and became the first idealized emerging bourgeoisie in Western literature. He is one of the earliest positive characters in bourgeois literature. With his strong will and positive enterprising spirit, he overwhelmed the conservative and depressed aristocratic characters.

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What is the title of each chapter of Robinson Crusoe? urgent! urgent! urgent!

Chapter 1 Father’s Warning Chapter 2 Encountering a Storm Chapter 3 Encountering Pirates Chapter 4 Escape Chapter 5 Brazil Chapter 6 Shipwreck Chapter 7 The Sole Survivor Chapter 8 The First Days Chapter 9 Diary: Food and Shelter Chapter 10 Diary: Natural Disaster Chapter 11 Diary: Illness Chapter 12 Diary: Recovery Chapter 13 Diary: Visiting the Island Chapter 14 Diary: Making Crock Pots and Canoes Chapter 10 Chapter Five Diary: Quiet Reflection Chapter 16 Unable to Escape from the Island Chapter 17 Further Improvement of Survival Skills Chapter 18 Footprints Chapter 19 Bones Chapter 20 Fear and Shelter Chapter 21 Wrecked Ship Part 2 Chapter 12 Meeting the Savages Chapter 23 Observing "Friday" Chapter 24 Teaching "Friday" Chapter 25 New Plan Chapter 26 The Savages Are Here Again Chapter 27 Regaining Freedom Captives Chapter 28 The Rebels Chapter 29 Recovering the Ship Chapter 30 Return to England Chapter 31 Adventures with "Friday" Chapter 32 Return to the Island

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Summary of Chapter 14 of Robinson Crusoe

1. The First Voyage Robinson's father originally expected his son to study law, but Robinson only wanted to sail.

One day, when Robinson went to Hull, one of his companions was about to take his father's ship to London. He was tempted, so he went with him - this was August 1651, when he was nineteen. age. As soon as the ship sailed out of the sea, it encountered terrible wind and waves, which made him feel unspeakable sadness all over his body and very scared in his heart. He swore in pain that if God spared his life during this voyage, he would stay with his loving parents after landing on land, and he would definitely follow their advice from now on. But the next day the wind stopped and the waves stopped. The sun was setting in the west, and what followed was a beautiful and lovely dusk. At this time, after drinking another bowl of sweet wine made by his companions, he threw away his determination to go home after this voyage. 2. Second voyage. The second time he went overseas to do business in Africa, he made a lot of money. 3. The third voyage. While on a business trip to Guinea in Africa, Robinson was captured by a Turkish pirate ship and sold as a slave. Later, he escaped on his master's boat and was rescued by a Portuguese cargo ship on the way. He fled to Brazil, where he lived alone He ran a sugar cane plantation and became the owner of the manor. Life was going smoothly. 4. The fourth voyage ended in Brazil. Due to the shortage of manpower, several planters knew that Robinson had visited some slave market ports in Africa for business. They tried their best to coax him to make a voyage and go to that area to help them. Buy some black slaves from the plantation. Unexpectedly, their ship ran aground on an unnamed island on the north coast of South America. All the sailors and passengers drowned. Only he was rolled ashore by high waves and saved his life. 5. Buried Beetle. When I first arrived on a desert island, I saw a beetle on the beach. He grabbed handfuls of sand and buried the beetles, but after a while the beetles would crawl out again, which greatly motivated him. (Perhaps Robinson lived on a desert island for 28 years with this Beetle spirit.) 6. Talk to the puppy and birdie. Robinson's only companion was the dog. He was afraid that he would forget the human language, so he insisted on talking to the dog every day. (It shows that he misses human society very much.) 7. Keep a diary every day. Relying on the ancient method of keeping time, Robinson insisted on writing a diary every day. I hope that one day I can return to the homeland of mankind. 8. Carrying things from the ship to the desert island. At that time, all Robinson had on him was a knife, a pipe and a little tobacco in a box. When he regained enough strength to walk, he walked along the coast. To his great joy, fresh water was discovered. After drinking the water, he took a handful of tobacco and put it in his mouth to satisfy his hunger. After that, I perched on a tree and had a comfortable sleep to refresh myself. The sea was calm and calm. But what pleased him the most was that he saw the boat. When the tide went out, he saw that it was very close to the coast, so he swam to the boat. There was only one dog and two cats left on the ship, and no other living creatures. But there were a lot of necessities on board, so he got to work. In order to transport those things to an inlet on the island, he specially built a raft and made a relatively flat highland with fresh water on the island his residence. Bread, rice, barley and wheat, cheese and mutton jerky, sugar, flour, boards, logs, rope—all this, plus a few muskets, two pistols, several shotguns, a hammer, and --That's the most useless thing of all--thirty-six pounds. He carried all these things from the ship to the shore one by one, day after day - between two low tides. By the night of the thirtieth day, he had completed the moving work and felt at ease as he was ready to deal with this desert island in the future. 9. Sun-drying raisins and hunting goats. There were many wild fruit trees on the island, but Robinson discovered this after a long time. He dried them into raisins. There were goats running around on the island, so he raised docile goats, then killed them, smoked them and pickled them. 10. Making a Calendar Robinson made the pillar into a large cross and erected it at the place where he first landed. On the four sides of the pillar, he carved a notch with a knife every day, a notch that doubled in length every seven days, and a notch that doubled in length every month. Just like that he had a calendar and could calculate dates. 11. The first attempt at planting barley and rice failed. There was still a lot to do to ensure his survival on the island. Robinson did his best to do several things that he had to do one after another. But his efforts were not always met with good fortune. When he first sowed the seeds of barley and rice, half of this precious stock was wasted because the seeds were sown at the wrong time.

12. Digging cellars and building a stone mortar for pounding wheat. Robinson worked hard for several months and dug several cellars to store fresh water. It took forty-two days to chop down a large tree into the first long plank. He worked diligently for several weeks to make a stone mortar for pounding wheat, but in the end he had to hollow out a large piece of wood. 13. The first time the shipbuilding failed, Robinson spent five months cutting down a big iron tree, splitting and paring it, and turned it into a very decent canoe for escaping from the island, but As a result, it was too big to be put into the sea, so it had to be discarded. However, every failure taught him something he didn't know before. 14. Robinson made pottery. Out of the needs of life, Robinson began to make pottery. After finding clay, he conducted numerous experiments. At the beginning, some were not finished because the clay was too soft, and some burst because the temperature was too high. After more than two months of groping, they finally made two large earthenware vessels and many small vessels, but there was still no clay pot that could hold liquids and withstand fire. By chance, he discovered that some broken clay utensils were burned as hard as stone, so Robinson began to study the firepower of burning pottery, and finally burned three earthen pots and two earthen pots, one of which was exactly the same. It is what Robinson needs most. 15. Discovering human footprints for the first time One day, Robinson accidentally discovered a person's bare footprints on the beach. He seemed to have received a bolt from the blue. He listened attentively and looked around, but he heard nothing and saw nothing. He ran to the coast and went into the sea to check, but there was only one footprint! He was so frightened that he fled back to his house like a man being stalked. For three days and three nights, he did not dare to go out. 16. Rescue "Friday" One morning, Robinson saw thirty savages dancing around a campfire through the telescope. They had already cooked one prisoner and were preparing to roast two more on the fire. At this time, Robinson ran down the mountain towards them with two loaded muskets and the big knife, killed two savages, and rescued a prisoner who ran out in time. Robinson named the man he rescued "Friday" to commemorate the day the savage was rescued. Under Robinson's guidance, "Friday" quickly learned to dress, shoot, speak English, believe in Christ... and became Robinson's most loyal servant and friend. 17. Robinson and "Friday" built a canoe. In order to reach the mainland opposite the isolated island, Robinson wanted to build a canoe with "Friday". Since he was eager to think about the boat, he got to work without much thought. As a result, the wooden boat that took several months to be hewn from a big cypress tree was abandoned because it was too big. A few years later, Robinson learned his lesson and built a smaller canoe along the river, installed masts and sails, and cut many slots for placing things in the boat. But because the canoe was too small, Robinson could not take it to the opposite continent and could only use it nearby. 18. The father who rescued "Friday". Just as Robinson and "Friday" had finished making the wooden boat and were almost ready to sail the boat, another twenty-one barbarians took three canoes and brought three prisoners to the island. Come up for a banquet. One of the prisoners was a white man, which made Robinson furious. He loaded two shotguns, four muskets, and two pistols with double ammunition, gave "Friday" a small axe, and drank a lot of sugar cane wine. He took a big knife and rushed down the mountain. They killed all the savages and only four of them escaped. One of the prisoners was "Friday"'s father. 19. Leaving the desert island, Robinson gave the white man and "Friday"'s father guns and food, and asked them to take the newly built ship to bring the sailors who were killed on the Spanish ship to the island. While waiting for their return, a British ship anchored near his desert island due to sailors making trouble. Robinson helped the captain regain the ship and returned to England with the captain. When they left, they took with them two honest sailors who also wanted to go back to England, while leaving some of the most troublesome sailors on the island. Later, the Spaniards came back and settled on the island. At first they quarreled and discorded, but after settling down, they eventually established a prosperous colony. A few years later, Robinson visited the island again. 20. Returning to England When Robinson left the island, he had stayed on the island for twenty-eight years, two months, and twenty-nine days. Robinson always thought that he would be overjoyed as soon as he arrived in England, but he did not expect that he would become a stranger there. His parents are both deceased and he regrets that he cannot fulfill his filial piety.

Because in addition to the twelve hundred gold coins he had taken from the Spanish ship, he had twenty thousand pounds waiting for him to collect from an honest friend, who was a Portuguese captain. Before he went on that ill-fated errand, the captain was entrusted with running Robinson's estate in Brazil. Seeing that the captain was so honest, Robinson was very happy and decided to pay him one hundred Portuguese gold coins every year, and after the captain's death, he would pay his son fifty Portuguese gold coins every year as their lifelong allowance. Robinson got married and had three children. Except for a visit to the island and another voyage, there was no more wandering.

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Write a story summary for the 14 chapters of Robinson Crusoe. Each chapter should be at least 100 words

Hello, I am very happy to answer your questions: 1 . The First Voyage Robinson's father originally expected his son to study law, but Robinson only wanted to sail. One day, when Robinson went to Hull, one of his companions was about to take his father's ship to London. He was tempted, so he went with him - this was August 1651, when he was nineteen. age. As soon as the ship sailed out of the sea, it encountered terrible wind and waves, which made him feel unspeakable sadness all over his body and very scared in his heart. He swore in pain that if God spared his life during this voyage, he would stay with his loving parents after landing on land, and he would definitely follow their advice from now on. But the next day the wind stopped and the waves stopped. The sun was setting in the west, and what followed was a beautiful and lovely dusk. At this time, after drinking another bowl of sweet wine made by his companions, he threw away his determination to go home after this voyage. 2. Second voyage. The second time he went overseas to do business in Africa, he made a lot of money. 3. The third voyage. While on a business trip to Guinea in Africa, Robinson was captured by a Turkish pirate ship and sold as a slave. Later, he escaped on his master's boat and was rescued by a Portuguese cargo ship on the way. He fled to Brazil, where he lived alone He ran a sugar cane plantation and became the owner of the manor. Life was going smoothly. 4. The fourth voyage ended in Brazil. Due to the shortage of manpower, several planters knew that Robinson had visited some slave market ports in Africa for business. They tried their best to coax him to make a voyage and go to that area to help them. Buy some black slaves from the plantation. Unexpectedly, their ship ran aground on an unnamed island on the north coast of South America. All the sailors and passengers drowned. Only he was rolled ashore by high waves and saved his life. 5. Buried Beetle. When I first arrived on a desert island, I saw a beetle on the beach. He grabbed handfuls of sand and buried the beetles, but after a while the beetles would crawl out again, which greatly motivated him. (Perhaps Robinson lived on a desert island for 28 years with this Beetle spirit.) 6. Talk to the puppy and birdie. Robinson's only companion was the dog. He was afraid that he would forget the human language, so he insisted on talking to the dog every day. (It shows that he misses human society very much.) 7. Keep a diary every day. Relying on the ancient method of keeping time, Robinson insisted on writing a diary every day. I hope that one day I can return to the homeland of mankind. 8. Carrying things from the ship to the desert island. At that time, all Robinson had on him was a knife, a pipe and a little tobacco in a box. When he regained enough strength to walk, he walked along the coast. To his great joy, fresh water was discovered. After drinking the water, he took a handful of tobacco and put it in his mouth to satisfy his hunger. After that, I perched on a tree and had a comfortable sleep to refresh myself. The sea was calm and calm. But what pleased him the most was that he saw the boat. When the tide went out, he saw that it was very close to the coast, so he swam to the boat. There was only one dog and two cats left on the ship, and no other living creatures. But there were a lot of necessities on board, so he got to work. In order to transport those things to an inlet on the island, he specially built a raft and made a relatively flat highland with fresh water on the island his residence. Bread, rice, barley and wheat, cheese and mutton jerky, sugar, flour, boards, logs, rope—all this, plus a few muskets, two pistols, several shotguns, a hammer, and --That's the most useless thing of all--thirty-six pounds. He carried all these things from the ship to the shore one by one, day after day - between two low tides. By the night of the thirtieth day, he had completed the moving work and felt at ease as he was ready to deal with this desert island in the future.

9. Sun-drying raisins and hunting goats. There were many wild fruit trees on the island, but Robinson discovered this after a long time. He dried them into raisins. There were goats running around on the island, so he raised docile goats, then killed them, smoked them and pickled them. 10. Making a Calendar Robinson made the pillar into a large cross and erected it at the place where he first landed. On the four sides of the pillar, he carved a notch with a knife every day, a notch that doubled in length every seven days, and a notch that doubled in length every month. Just like that he had a calendar and could calculate dates. 11. The first attempt at planting barley and rice failed. There was still a lot to do to ensure that he could survive on this island. Robinson did his best to do several things that he had to do one after another. But his efforts were not always met with good fortune. When he first sowed the seeds of barley and rice, half of this precious stock was wasted because the seeds were sown at the wrong time. 12. Digging cellars and building a stone mortar for pounding wheat. Robinson worked hard for several months and dug several cellars to store fresh water. It took forty-two days to chop down a large tree into the first long plank. He worked diligently for several weeks to make a stone mortar for pounding wheat, but in the end he had to hollow out a large piece of wood. 13. The first time the shipbuilding failed, Robinson spent five months cutting down a big iron tree, splitting and paring it, and turned it into a very decent canoe for escaping from the island, but As a result, it was too big to be put into the sea, so it had to be discarded. However, every failure taught him something he didn't know before. 14. Robinson made pottery. Out of the needs of life, Robinson began to make pottery. After finding clay, he conducted numerous experiments. At the beginning, some were not finished because the clay was too soft, and some burst because the temperature was too high. After more than two months of groping, I finally made two large earthenware vessels and many small vessels, but there was still no clay pot that could hold liquids and withstand fire. By chance, he discovered that some broken clay utensils were burned as hard as stone, so Robinson began to study the firepower of burning pottery, and finally burned three earthen pots and two earthen pots, one of which was exactly the same. It is what Robinson needs most. 15. Discovering human footprints for the first time One day, Robinson accidentally discovered a person's bare footprints on the beach. He seemed to have received a bolt from the blue. He listened attentively and looked around, but he heard nothing and saw nothing. He ran to the coast and went into the sea to check, but there was only one footprint! He was so frightened that he fled back to his house like a man being stalked. For three days and three nights, he did not dare to go out. 16. Rescue "Friday" One morning, Robinson saw thirty savages dancing around a campfire through the telescope. They had already cooked one prisoner and were preparing to roast two more on the fire. At this time, Robinson ran down the mountain towards them with two loaded muskets and the big knife, killed two savages, and rescued a prisoner who ran out in time. Robinson named the man he rescued "Friday" to commemorate the day the savage was rescued. Under Robinson's guidance, "Friday" quickly learned to dress, shoot, speak English, believe in Christ... and became Robinson's most loyal servant and friend. 17. Robinson and "Friday" built a canoe. In order to reach the mainland opposite the isolated island, Robinson wanted to build a canoe with "Friday". Since he was eager to think about the boat, he got to work without much thought. As a result, the wooden boat that took several months to be hewn from a big cypress tree was abandoned because it was too big. A few years later, Robinson learned his lesson and built a smaller canoe along the river, installed masts and sails, and cut many slots for placing things in the boat. But because the canoe was too small, Robinson could not take it to the opposite continent and could only use it nearby. 18. The father who rescued "Friday". Just as Robinson and "Friday" had finished making the wooden boat and were almost ready to sail the boat, another twenty-one barbarians took three canoes and brought three prisoners to the island. Come up and have a banquet. One of the prisoners was a white man, which made Robinson furious. He loaded two shotguns, four muskets, and two pistols with double ammunition, gave "Friday" a small axe, and drank a lot of sugar cane wine. He took a big knife and rushed down the mountain. They killed all the savages and only four of them escaped. One of the prisoners was "Friday"'s father.

19. Leaving the Desert Island Robinson gave the white man and "Friday"'s father guns and food, and asked them to take the newly built ship to bring the sailors who were killed on the Spanish ship to the island. While waiting for their return, a British ship anchored near his desert island due to sailors making trouble. Robinson helped the captain regain the ship and returned to England with the captain. When they left, they took with them two honest sailors who also wanted to go back to England, while leaving some of the most troublesome sailors on the island. Later, the Spaniards came back and settled on the island. At first they quarreled and discorded, but after settling down, they eventually established a prosperous colony. A few years later, Robinson visited the island again. 20. Returning to England When Robinson left the island, he had stayed on the island for twenty-eight years, two months, and twenty-nine days. Robinson always thought that he would be overjoyed as soon as he arrived in England, but he did not expect that he would become a stranger there. His parents are both deceased and he regrets that he cannot fulfill his filial piety. Because in addition to the twelve hundred gold coins he had taken from the Spanish ship, he had twenty thousand pounds waiting for him to collect from an honest friend, who was a Portuguese captain. Before he went on that ill-fated errand, the captain was entrusted with running Robinson's estate in Brazil. Seeing that the captain was so honest, Robinson was very happy and decided to pay him one hundred Portuguese gold coins every year, and after the captain's death, he would pay his son fifty Portuguese gold coins every year as their lifelong allowance. Robinson got married and had three children. Except for a visit to the island and another voyage, there was no more wandering.

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A summary of each chapter of Robinson Crusoe Chapter 14. Thank you for the words in each chapter. Please help me

< p>1. The First Voyage Robinson's father originally expected his son to study law, but Robinson only wanted to sail. One day, when Robinson went to Hull, one of his companions was about to take his father's ship to London. He was tempted, so he went with him - this was August 1651, when he was nineteen. age. As soon as the ship sailed out of the sea, it encountered terrible wind and waves, which made him feel unspeakable sadness all over his body and very scared in his heart. He swore in pain that if God spared his life during this voyage, he would stay with his loving parents after landing on land, and he would definitely follow their advice from now on. But the next day the wind stopped and the waves stopped. The sun was setting in the west, and what followed was a beautiful and lovely dusk. At this time, after drinking another bowl of sweet wine made by his companions, he threw away his determination to go home after this voyage. 2. Second voyage. The second time he went overseas to do business in Africa, he made a lot of money. 3. The third voyage. While on a business trip to Guinea in Africa, Robinson was captured by a Turkish pirate ship and sold as a slave. Later, he escaped on his master's boat and was rescued by a Portuguese cargo ship on the way. He fled to Brazil, where he lived alone He ran a sugar cane plantation and became the owner of the manor. Life was going smoothly. 4. The fourth voyage ended in Brazil. Due to the shortage of manpower, several planters knew that Robinson had visited some slave market ports in Africa for business. They tried their best to coax him to make a voyage and go to that area to help them. Buy some black slaves from the plantation. Unexpectedly, their ship ran aground on an unnamed island on the north coast of South America. All the sailors and passengers drowned. Only he was rolled ashore by high waves and saved his life. 5. Buried Beetle. When I first arrived on a desert island, I saw a beetle on the beach. He grabbed handfuls of sand and buried the beetles, but after a while the beetles would crawl out again, which greatly motivated him. (Perhaps Robinson lived on a desert island for 28 years with this Beetle spirit.) 6. Talk to the puppy and birdie. Robinson's only companion was the dog. He was afraid that he would forget the human language, so he insisted on talking to the dog every day. (It shows that he misses human society very much.) 7. Keep a diary every day. Relying on the ancient method of keeping time, Robinson insisted on writing a diary every day. I hope that one day I can return to the homeland of mankind. 8. Carrying things from the ship to the desert island. At that time, all Robinson had on him was a knife, a pipe and a little tobacco in a box. When he regained enough strength to walk, he walked along the coast. To his great joy, fresh water was discovered. After drinking the water, he took a handful of tobacco and put it in his mouth to satisfy his hunger.

After that, I perched on a tree and had a comfortable sleep to refresh myself. The sea was calm. But what pleased him the most was that he saw the boat. When the tide went out, he saw that it was very close to the coast, so he swam to the boat. There was only one dog and two cats left on the ship, and no other living creatures. But there were a lot of necessities on board, so he got to work. In order to transport those things to an inlet on the island, he specially built a raft and made a relatively flat highland with fresh water on the island his residence. Bread, rice, barley and wheat, cheese and mutton jerky, sugar, flour, boards, logs, rope—all this, plus a few muskets, two pistols, several shotguns, a hammer, and --That's the most useless thing of all--thirty-six pounds. He transported all these things from the ship to the shore one by one, day after day - between two low tides. By the night of the thirtieth day, he had completed the portage work and felt at ease as he was ready to deal with this desert island in the future. 9. Sun-drying raisins and hunting goats. There were many wild fruit trees on the island, but Robinson discovered this after a long time. He dried them into raisins. There were goats running around on the island, so he raised docile goats, then killed them, smoked them and pickled them. 10. Making a Calendar Robinson made the pillar into a large cross and erected it at the place where he first landed. On the four sides of the pillar, he carved a notch with a knife every day, a notch that doubled in length every seven days, and a notch that doubled in length every month. Just like that he had a calendar and could calculate dates. 11. The first attempt at planting barley and rice failed. There was still a lot to do to ensure his survival on the island. Robinson did his best to do several things that he had to do one after another. But his efforts were not always met with good fortune. When he first sowed the seeds of barley and rice, half of this precious stock was wasted because the seeds were sown at the wrong time. 12. Digging cellars and building a stone mortar for pounding wheat. Robinson worked hard for several months and dug several cellars to store fresh water. It took forty-two days to chop down a large tree into the first long plank. He worked diligently for several weeks to make a stone mortar for pounding wheat, but in the end he had to hollow out a large piece of wood. 13. The first time the shipbuilding failed, Robinson spent five months cutting down a big iron tree, splitting and paring it, and turned it into a very decent canoe for escaping from the island, but As a result, it was too big to be put into the sea, so it had to be discarded. However, every failure taught him something he didn't know before. 14. Robinson made pottery. Out of the needs of life, Robinson began to make pottery. After finding clay, he conducted numerous experiments. At the beginning, some were not finished because the clay was too soft, and some burst because the temperature was too high. After more than two months of groping, they finally made two large earthenware vessels and many small vessels, but there was still no clay pot that could hold liquids and withstand fire. By chance, he discovered that some broken clay utensils were burned as hard as stone, so Robinson began to study the firepower of burning pottery, and finally burned three earthen pots and two earthen pots, one of which was exactly the same. It is what Robinson needs most. 15. Discovering human footprints for the first time One day, Robinson accidentally discovered a person's bare footprints on the beach. He seemed to have received a bolt from the blue. He listened attentively and looked around, but he heard nothing and saw nothing. He ran to the coast and went into the sea to check, but there was only one footprint! He was so frightened that he fled back to his house like a man being stalked. For three days and three nights, he did not dare to go out. 16. Rescue "Friday" One morning, Robinson saw thirty savages dancing around a campfire through the telescope. They had already cooked one prisoner and were preparing to roast two more on the fire. At this time, Robinson ran down the mountain towards them with two loaded muskets and the big knife, and killed two savages.