النتائج (
العربية) 2:
[نسخ]نسخ!
Notes
Crusoe has been given several chances to lead a quiet, peaceful life, but he rejects each of them to find more adventure. This willful disobedience of God's Providence provokes disaster. When he decides to become an immoral slave trader, he is severely punished. As he sails forth in search of natives, a storm literally and figuratively hits his ship, but they manage to survive, losing only three men.
After the first storm, the master of the ship insists that they return to safety in Brazil, but he is overruled by Crusoe. In reality, what Crusoe is rejecting is a return to a settled life. The price of his disobedience is costly, for they soon encounter another storm, which kills all the men except Crusoe. With great effort, he manages to swim to an island, where he will be forced to live a lonely and isolated existence for the next twenty-eight years.
Throughout this first part of the novel, Defoe has deftly shown the process of cause and effect. Crusoe disobeys and, as a result, he is punished. Now stranded on an uninhabited island with no provisions, Crusoe, although alive, is at the lowest point of his life
يجري ترجمتها، يرجى الانتظار ..
