Chapter XII.□327□Nuptial preparations.328□Indian Poultry.329□Pranks of thieves.330□Nuptial ceremonies.331□Speech of Robinson.332□Services of Upis and Calefus ;333□also of Pachus. Skill of Totopil in snares.334□Functions of Robinson.335□New Pottery and store closet.336□Sago, Wax, Oil, Sugar.337□Pachus and Calefus undertake rice.338□Apartments.339□New cares of Robinson.340□Retrospect of his slavery.341□His rest on Sunday.342□His Sunday School.343□His pupil teachers.344□Materials for paper.345□Religious talk with Gelavi.346□Pachus makes needles.347□New ideas of Gelavi.348□Robinson seeks explanation.349□Gelavi cannot satisfy him.350□Pachus finds a stream of copper.351□Three persons are driven on shore in a boat.352□Policy of Robinson.353□Perplexing comment of Gelavi.354□The strangers depart.355□Anxieties of Robinson.356□New arrivals.357□Robinson’s suspicions.358□of Gelavi and Fenis.359□Fenis’s defence.360□Robinson recovers himself.361□His promises to Cortops.365□Supplementary conditions.Chapter XIII.□366□Robinson’s zeal for his own language.367□Gelavi opposes.368,9□The discussion.370□Robinson reluctantly yields.371□He aids Gelavi in new alphabet.372□He trains his own family to firearms.373□Refuses totell how to make gunpowder.374□Pachus and Robinson sleep in hammocks.375□Guns of distress.376□Robinson sends to Cortops for rowers,377□and boards the ship.378□The rowers tow it off the sandbank.379□Robinson guides them to the creek.380□He promises a new mast,381□and food.382□The captain’s story.383□He asks the longitude,384□and promises to carry Robinson to England.385□Robinson orders food,386□and shoots three wild antelopes,387□and a pelican.388□Cortops gives rice liberally.389□The captain visits the caverns,390□and acceptsonedead antelope.391□Gifts to Cortops and the rowers.392□On the new mast.393□Robinson and two men cut it.394□Robinson visits Cortops by appointment.395□Secret interview and compact.396□It is revealed to Pachus and Gelavi.397□Robinson abdicates in favor of Cortops.398□Cortops adopts Gelavi as son and successor.Chapter XIV.□399□Dispatch of business.400□Royal gifts of Robinson to Cortops.401□Sudden loss of Robinson’s skiff by Upis.402□Yards are wanting to the mast.403□Robinson undertakes to be ship-carpenter ;404□and buys many wares of the captain as presents to Cortops, Pachus and Calefus.405□Great farewell on the Sunday ;406□and solemn advice to Gelavi.407□Final arrangements in the ship.408□Last gifts of Robinson.409□The ship is wind-bound.410□Robinson’s story of himself.411□How he escaped from the Moors to Brazil.412□Received funds from England.413□Became familiar with his employer’s sons ;414□was invited to join in partnership.415□Easy liberality of the Brazilians.416□European considerations.417□Robinson becomes a partner.418□Fertility of the country.419□Nature and management of his estates.420□Occupation of three years.421□Hisennuiin the fourth.422□New overtures of his partner.423-430□Robinson consents, after faint resistance.431-3□His voyage and shipwreck.434□The weather changes.435□They are towed off.436□The boats and Gelavi depart.437□They fall in with a ship bound for England.438□Robinson sends a letter by it.439□He reaches Jamaica.440□Arranges business at Brazil by letters—and without further events, regains his English home.
Chapter XII.□
Chapter XIII.□
Chapter XIV.□