Robinson Crusoe

Mr. Crusoe describes in Chapter 1 of Robinson Crusoe, and why does he recommend it to his son ?

Mr. Crusoe describes in Chapter 1 of Robinson Crusoe, and why does he recommend it to his son ?
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Law is in the family and considered a stable respected living. Crusoe's father has designed him for the law, but early on his head is filled with "rambling thoughts" of going to sea. No advice or entreaties can diminish his desire. His father gives him "excellent advice and counsel," telling him that only men of desperate and superior fortunes go abroad in search of adventures, and that he is too high or too low for such activities. His station is the middle station, a state which all figures, great and small, will envy eventually, and his happiness would be assured if he would stay at home.