|
Robert Louis Stevenson
Books
Robert
Louis Stevenson
Quotes
|
Robert
Louis Stevenson
Robert
Louis Stevenson grew up in Edinburgh, and this profoundly shaped
his writing. He was born on 13th November 1850 and from earliest
childhood he was frequently ill, which influenced a fertile imagination.
It was assumed that Stevenson would follow the profession of his
father, Thomas Stevenson, a distinguished lighthouse and harbour
engineer, and he studied engineering at Edinburgh University.
However, in his twenty-first year he announced his intention of
becoming a writer.
He began with essays and travel writing and within
a few years was recognised as a writer of great promise. His first
commercially published book, An Inland voyage, (1878) described
a canoe trip in Belgium and France. He followed this in 1879 with
Edinburgh, picturesque notes and an account of a walking tour
in the Cevennes, Travels with a donkey. Although he began writing
fiction as a teenager, it was not until 1877 that his first short
story was published, and 1882 before he began to publish longer
fiction. Treasure Island, serialised in that year, was published
in volume form in 1883. He did not become popular until 1886,
with the publication of Kidnapped and Strange case of Dr Jekyll
and Mr Hyde, the first gaining critical esteem, the second a best-seller
which made his reputation on both sides of the Atlantic.
Stevenson was absorbed by Scottish history and
Scottish character, and this fascination is an essential aspect
of his writing. He also examined, in Jekyll and Hyde and elsewhere,
what he considered to be the hypocrisy of Victorian values. His
own bohemianism flouted convention, and his marriage to Fanny
Osbourne, an American divorcee ten years his senior, caused some
distress to friends and family.
From his early twenties, ill-health kept him away
from Scotland for long periods. But he continued to write about
Scotland, and some of his most powerful short stories, Thrawn
Janet and The Merry men for example, have Scottish themes. In
these stories, as well as in Kidnapped and later fiction such
as The Master of Ballantrae (1888), he examined some of the extreme
and contrary currents of Scotland's past, often projecting a dualism
of both personality and belief. This dualism is most famous in
Jekyll and Hyde and Kidnapped, whose two central characters are
David Balfour, a Lowland Whig, and Alan Breck Stewart, a Highland
Jacobite. The novel revolves around their friendship and their
differences, suggesting a metaphor for Scotland itself.
Stevenson lived for several years in Switzerland,
France and the south of England. In 1887, after the death of his
father, he went to America. From there he continued west, embarking
on a voyage through the South Pacific, accompanied by Fanny and
his widowed mother. He wrote about his Pacific voyages in numerous
articles which were published in volume form as In the South Seas
(1892). He never returned to Scotland. He had at last found a
climate that suited his health, and decided to settle on the island
of Upolu in Samoa. It was there in his house Vailima that he spent
the last years of his life.
The South Pacific opened new subjects for his
writing. He responded to island culture with sympathetic understanding,
comparing the erosion of traditions to the experience of Highland
culture in Scotland. He was critical of the exploitative impact
of Europeans and Americans, and in Samoa adopted the cause of
a Polynesian chief who was defeated in a brief episode of civil
war. He described this in A Footnote to history (1892). His South
Sea experiences also produced fiction, and for almost the first
time he turned his attention to the contemporary scene. He drew
directly on Polynesian tradition to write The Bottle imp and The
Isle of Voices and the epic poem Rahero, but his story The Beach
of Falesa is rather different. It explores the clash of cultures
between white traders and islanders and is one of Stevenson's
best pieces of fiction. His novel The Ebb tide (1894) is a remarkable
study of morality and individual responsibility, themes that had
absorbed him earlier. The mature stylist, combining precision
and complexity, is seen at his most challenging.
Stevenson collaborated with his stepson Lloyd
Osbourne to write The Wrong box (1889), a rather heavy-handed
comedy, and The Wrecker (1892), a Pacific adventure story. The
immediacy and creative stimulus of the Pacific was strong, but
Scotland continued to inspire both fiction and poetry. It was
at Vailima that he wrote Catriona (1893), a sequel to Kidnapped,
St Ives (unfinished and published after his death in 1897) and
Weir of Hermiston (1896, also unfinished). It was Weir he was
working at on the day he died. Pivoting on the bitterly fraught
relationship between a father and son, the novel employs both
Scottish tradition and the Scots language with memorable force.
In these last years Stevenson wrote vividly about
his native land and some of his most effective poems owe much
to the pain of absence. As a poet Stevenson tends to be best remembered
as the author of A Child's garden of verses (1885), poems which
communicate the fears as well as the pleasures of childhood, but
he also wrote lyric, comic and narrative poems in both Scots and
English, published in Underwoods (1887) and Ballads (1890). His
Collected Poems (1971) were edited by Janet Adam Smith.
Stevenson
was one of the greatest letter writers in the English language,
and the complete collection is now available in eight volumes,
edited by Bradford A. Booth and Ernest Mehew, 1994-5. These are
the best possible introduction to Stevenson's life and work. Biographies
include Voyage to windward by J.C. Furnas, 1950; RLS: a life study
by Jenni Calder, 1980; and Dreams of exile by Ian Bell, 1994.
Return
to Scottish Books
|
|