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Robert
Michael Ballantyne (1825 - 1894)
Scottish
writer of fiction, was born at Edinburgh on the 24th of April
1825, and came of the same family as the famous printers and publishers.
When sixteen years of age he went to Canada and was for six years
in the service of the Hudsons Bay Company. He returned to Scotland
in 1847, and next year published his first book, Hudsons Bay:
or, Life in the Wilds of North America. For some time he was employed
by Messrs Constable, the publishers, but in 1856 he gave up business
for the profession of literature, and began the series of excellent
stories of adventure for the young with which his name is popularly
associated. The Young Fur-Traders (1856), The Coral Island (1857),
The World of Ice (1859), Ungava: a Tale of Eskimo Land (1857),
The Dog Crusoe (1860), The Lighthouse (1865), Deep Down (1868),
The Pirate City (1874), Erling the Bold (1869), The Settler and
the Savage (1877), and other books, to the number of upwards of
a hundred, followed in regular succession, his rule being in every
case to write as far as possible from personal knowledge of the
scenes he described.
His
stories had the merit of being thoroughly healthy in tone and
possessed considerable graphic force. Ballantyne was also no mean
artist, and exhibited some of his water-colors at the Royal Scottish
Academy. He lived in later years at Harrow, and died on the 8th
of February 1894, at Rome, where he had gone to attempt to shake
off the results of overwork. He wrote a volume of Personal Reminiscences
of Book-making (1893).
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