Robinson Crusoe — Daniel Defoe
About the Author
Daniel Defoe (c. 1660–1731) was an English writer, journalist, and spy. He is considered the FATHER of the ENGLISH NOVEL. Robinson Crusoe (1719) was based on the real story of ALEXANDER SELKIRK — a Scottish sailor marooned on an island off Chile for four years. Defoe's novel made the story IMMORTAL by exploring the inner life — the MIND and SOUL of a man alone in nature.
The Story — A Summary
The Shipwreck
ROBINSON CRUSOE defies his parents' wishes and goes to SEA. After many adventures, he is SHIPWRECKED on a DESERTED ISLAND near the mouth of the Orinoco River (off the coast of South America). He is the ONLY SURVIVOR. He manages to swim to shore with a few supplies from the wreck.
The First Days — Despair and Survival
Crusoe's first reaction is DESPAIR. He is alone. He has no food, no shelter, no hope. But he SOON takes control:
- He builds a SHELTER with a fence for protection
- He makes FURNITURE — a table, a chair
- He learns to HUNT goats for food
- He discovers wild GRAPES and dries them as raisins
- He plants BARLEY and RICE from seeds he finds
Building a New Life
Crusoe turns the island into his HOME:
- He domesticates GOATS for milk and meat
- He makes POTTERY — bowls, pots, jars
- He weaves BASKETS
- He sews CLOTHES from animal skins
- He keeps a JOURNAL — writing down his thoughts and prayers
His journal is CRUCIAL. It shows his INNER JOURNEY — from despair to gratitude, from fear to faith.
The Discovery of the Footprint
One day, Crusoe finds a SINGLE HUMAN FOOTPRINT in the sand. He is TERRIFIED. For TWO YEARS, he lives in fear of cannibals. He strengthens his shelter and stays hidden. 'The footprint is one of the most DRAMATIC moments in all of English literature — a single image of FEAR and the OTHER.'
Friday
Crusoe eventually sees CANNIBALS visiting the island with a PRISONER. He rescues the prisoner — a native man. Crusoe names him FRIDAY (because he was found on a Friday).
Friday becomes Crusoe's companion and SERVANT. Crusoe teaches him English and converts him to Christianity. Their relationship reflects the COLONIAL attitudes of Defoe's time — a European 'master' and a 'native' who serves him.
The Rescue
After many years, an ENGLISH SHIP arrives. Mutineers have taken over the ship. Crusoe and Friday help the CAPTAIN regain control. They sail away from the island. Crusoe returns to England after 28 YEARS — a changed man.
Key Themes
| Theme | Explanation |
|---|---|
| Survival and Self-Reliance | Crusoe makes EVERYTHING from scratch. He does not GIVE UP. He adapts. He CREATES civilisation from nothing. |
| Man vs. Nature | The island is both BEAUTIFUL and DANGEROUS. Crusoe must LEARN nature's ways to survive. |
| Faith and Providence | Crusoe's spiritual journey is CENTRAL. He starts as a rebellious young man. He ends as a HUMBLE believer in God's providence. |
| Colonialism | Friday's relationship with Crusoe reflects colonial attitudes. A 'master' and 'servant.' Modern readers must read this CRITICALLY. |
| The Inner Journey | The novel is not just about PHYSICAL survival. It is about MAINTAINING SANITY, finding MEANING, and discovering GOD in solitude. |
The Journal — Why It Matters
Crusoe's journal is a KEY literary device:
- It shows his INNER THOUGHTS
- It demonstrates his NEED to RECORD and make sense of experience
- It marks his SPIRITUAL PROGRESS — from despair to gratitude
- It proves he remains CIVILISED — keeping records is a human act
ICSE Exam Focus
| Question Type | Marks | Likely Topics |
|---|---|---|
| Short Answer | 3 | How does Crusoe survive on the island? |
| Short Answer | 2 | What is the significance of Friday? |
| Short Answer | 2 | What does Crusoe's journal reveal? |
| Short Answer | 2 | The footprint — why is it important? |
| Short Answer | 3 | Crusoe's spiritual journey |
| MCQ | 1 | Name the author / real-life inspiration |
Defoe's Writing Style
Robinson Crusoe is written as an AUTOBIOGRAPHY — as if Crusoe himself wrote it. This gives the novel a sense of AUTHENTICITY:
- First-Person Narration: Crusoe tells HIS OWN story. We are INSIDE his mind — his fears, his prayers, his practical thoughts.
- Detailed, Realistic Description: Defoe describes EVERYTHING Crusoe does in GREAT detail — how he builds his shelter, makes pottery, plants grain. This makes the story FEEL real and IMMERSIVE.
- Journal Format: Part of the novel is Crusoe's JOURNAL — giving us DIRECT access to his thoughts. The journal marks his SPIRITUAL journey.
- Plain, Direct Language: Defoe does NOT use fancy language. The style is SIMPLE and FACTUAL — like a REAL person writing a REAL account.
The Real Story That Inspired the Novel
'Fact is STRANGER than fiction.' Defoe was inspired by the TRUE story of ALEXANDER SELKIRK, a Scottish sailor.
| Detail | Alexander Selkirk (Real) | Robinson Crusoe (Fictional) |
|---|---|---|
| Shipwrecked | 1704 (asked to be left on island) | 1659 (shipwrecked) |
| Island | Más a Tierra (Juan Fernández, Chile) | Unnamed island near Trinidad |
| Time Alone | 4 years 4 months | 28 years |
| Rescue | 1709 (by Woodes Rogers) | By English ship |
| Companion | No Friday | FRIDAY — a companion he rescues |
Why the Novel Still Matters
Robinson Crusoe is considered the FIRST ENGLISH NOVEL by many scholars. It introduced:
- The REALISTIC NOVEL — fiction that FEELS like real life
- The SURVIVAL STORY — a person alone against nature
- The SPIRITUAL JOURNEY — inner transformation alongside outer adventure
- The COLONIAL NARRATIVE — the European 'master' and the 'native' servant
'The novel raises TIMELESS questions: What would YOU do if you were alone on an island? Would you SURVIVE? Would you keep your SANITY? Would you find GOD? Crusoe's answers have fascinated readers for 300 years.'
Common Mistakes in ICSE Exams
- Calling it a simple adventure story — The novel is DEEPLY SPIRITUAL. Crusoe's FAITH journey is as important as his survival.
- Forgetting the real-life inspiration — Alexander Selkirk, a Scottish sailor. Defoe was inspired by his story.
- Ignoring the colonial context — Friday's role as a 'servant' reflects 18th-century colonial attitudes. Be aware of this.
- Confusing 'Providence' — 'Providence' means God's GUIDANCE and CARE. Crusoe believes God saved him for a REASON.
Self-Test: 5 Questions
Q1. How does Crusoe TRANSFORM the island into a HOME? A1. Crusoe builds a SHELTER with a protective fence, makes FURNITURE (table, chair), hunts goats for food, dries grapes as raisins, plants barley and rice from seeds, domesticates goats for milk and meat, makes POTTERY, weaves baskets, sews clothes from animal skins, and keeps a JOURNAL. He brings CIVILISATION to a wild place through HARD WORK and INTELLIGENCE.
Q2. What is the SIGNIFICANCE of the FOOTPRINT? A2. The single footprint is a moment of DRAMATIC TENSION. After YEARS of thinking he is alone, Crusoe discovers another human being exists on or near the island. It terrifies him because he fears CANNIBALS. The footprint represents the 'OTHER' — the unknown, the dangerous, the human outside one's own experience. It CHANGES Crusoe's life on the island from peaceful survival to FEARFUL vigilance.
Q3. Who is FRIDAY? What is his role in the story? A3. Friday is a NATIVE man Crusoe rescues from cannibals. Crusoe names him after the day he was found. Friday becomes Crusoe's COMPANION and SERVANT. Crusoe teaches him English and converts him to Christianity. Friday's role is CENTRAL — he ends Crusoe's 25 years of total solitude. However, their relationship reflects the colonial attitudes of Defoe's time: Crusoe is the 'master,' Friday the 'servant.'
Q4. What is Crusoe's SPIRITUAL JOURNEY? A4. Crusoe begins as a REBELLIOUS young man who defies his parents and ignores God. On the island, he experiences DESPAIR. But through his journal and his experiences, he comes to believe in GOD'S PROVIDENCE — the idea that God has a PLAN for him and is WATCHING OVER him. He becomes HUMBLE, GRATEFUL, and FAITHFUL. The story is as much about finding GOD as it is about finding food.
Q5. Why is Robinson Crusoe considered a GREAT novel? A5. Robinson Crusoe is considered great because it explores UNIQUE questions: What happens to a person ALONE in nature? How do we build civilisation from NOTHING? How do we remain SANE and HOPEFUL in total isolation? It combines a thrilling SURVIVAL story with a deep SPIRITUAL and PSYCHOLOGICAL journey. It also launched the REALISTIC NOVEL in English literature — making everyday experience the subject of serious fiction.
