Part I of the exercise:
"You may have heard of Robinson Crusoe, but there is an even stranger story of shipwreck and survival. In 1757, a Scottish whaling ship sank in the icy polar sheets of the Arctic. Only one man, Bruce Gordon survived. Without food or shelter, Gordon spent his lonely first night huddled on the ice. The next day, the whaling ship –upside down – rose the surface of the sea and lodge tightly in the ice floes. Gordon, using some of the shipwreck debris managed to break into a cabin window. He survived for a year in the freezing world of the upside- down ship, by using some stored coal to build a fire. Eventually, Bruce Gordon was rescued by a band of Inuit hunters. After living for more than five years in the native village, the shipwrecked sailor finally made it back to Scotland. "
Part II
"You may have heard of Robinson Crusoe, but, there is an even stranger story of shipwreck and survival. In 1757, a Scottish whaling ship sank in the icy polar sheets of the Arctic. Only one man, Bruce Gordon, survived. Without food or shelter, Gordon spent his lonely first night huddled on the ice. The next day, the whaling ship –upside down, – rose the surface of the sea, and lodge tightly in the ice floes. Gordon, using some of the shipwreck debris, managed to break into a cabin window. He survived for a year, in the freezing world of the upside- down ship, by using some stored coal to build a fire. Eventually, Bruce Gordon was rescued by a band of Inuit hunters. After living for more than five years in the native village, the shipwrecked sailor finally made it back to Scotland."