النتائج (
العربية) 2:
[نسخ]نسخ!
In this chapter, Crusoe, hardened by difficulties but not defeated by them, is pictured as industrious. Refusing to be idle and mourn his fate, he conquers his fear and prepares for survival. For almost an entire year, he works assiduously until every important task is done. In the process, he builds "a fort" on the side of a hill, creates a shelter for himself that will protect him from men, animals and weather, fashions a double tent in which to store his supplies, and hunts for food. He creates a crude form of a calendar to keep track of time and faithfully writes a journal of his routine until the inks runs out. When depression over his situation overcomes him, he counts his blessings for surviving the shipwreck and acknowledges that God's hand spared him from a watery grave.
The great wooden cross that Crusoe makes to mark time is a symbol of his journey towards regeneration. His salvation will not come easily to him, but must be bought over a period of time, that he carefully marks with notches. The entire image is an appropriate and intentional symbol, recalling the cross of Christ that symbolizes forgiveness and redemption for all of Christianity. The symbol, in turn, casts a new, somewhat romantic light on the adventure, for it gives hope and foreshadows success for Robinson Crusoe
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