The Further Adventures of Robinson Crusoe by Daniel Defoe Chapter 9 Page 2

in six months’ time, and ordered my friends to have fitted her out again for our supply — had I done this, and stayed there myself, I had at least acted like a man of common sense.

But I was possessed of a wandering spirit, and scorned all advantages: I pleased myself with being the patron of the people I placed there, and doing for them in a kind of haughty, majestic way, like an old patriarchal monarch, providing for them as if I had been father of the whole family, as well as of the plantation. But I never so much as pretended to plant in the name of any government or nation, or to acknowledge any prince, or to call my people subjects to any one nation more than another; nay, I never so much as gave the place a name, but left it as I found it, belonging to nobody, and the people under no discipline or