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Robert Louis Stevenson

Robert Louis Stevenson (born Robert Lewis Balfour Stevenson; 13 November 1850 – 3 December 1894) was a Scottish novelist, essayist, poet and travel writer. He is best known for works such as Treasure Island, Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde, Kidnapped and A Child's Garden of Verses.

Robert Louis Stevenson
Stevenson in 1893
BornRobert Lewis Balfour Stevenson
(1850-11-13)13 November 1850
Edinburgh, Scotland
Died3 December 1894(1894-12-03) (aged 44)
Vailima, Upolu, Samoa
Occupation
  • Novelist
  • poet
  • travel writer
Alma materUniversity of Edinburgh
Literary movementNeo-romanticism
Notable works
Spouse
(m. 1880)
ParentsThomas Stevenson (father)
RelativesRobert Stevenson (paternal grandfather)
Lloyd Osbourne (stepson)
Isobel Osbourne (stepdaughter)
Edward Salisbury Field (stepson-in-law)
Signature
Bound set of many of Stevenson's works, 1909

Born and educated in Edinburgh, Stevenson suffered from serious bronchial trouble for much of his life but continued to write prolifically and travel widely in defiance of his poor health. As a young man, he mixed in London literary circles, receiving encouragement from Andrew Lang, Edmund Gosse,[1] Leslie Stephen and W. E. Henley, the last of whom may have provided the model for Long John Silver in Treasure Island. In 1890, he settled in Samoa where, alarmed at increasing European and American influence in the South Sea islands, his writing turned from romance and adventure fiction toward a darker realism. He died of a stroke in his island home in 1894 at age 44.[2]

A celebrity in his lifetime, Stevenson's critical reputation has fluctuated since his death, though today his works are held in general acclaim. In 2018, he was ranked just behind Charles Dickens as the 26th-most-translated author in the world.[3]

Family and education edit

Childhood and youth edit

 
Daguerreotype portrait of Stevenson as a child
 
Stevenson's childhood home in Heriot Row

Stevenson was born at 8 Howard Place, Edinburgh, Scotland, on 13 November 1850 to Thomas Stevenson (1818–1887), a leading lighthouse engineer, and his wife, Margaret Isabella (born Balfour, 1829–1897). He was christened Robert Lewis Balfour Stevenson. At about age 18, he changed the spelling of "Lewis" to "Louis", and he dropped "Balfour" in 1873.[4][5]

Lighthouse design was the family's profession; Thomas's father (Robert's grandfather) was the civil engineer Robert Stevenson, and Thomas's brothers (Robert's uncles) Alan and David were in the same field.[6] Thomas's maternal grandfather Thomas Smith had been in the same profession. However, Robert's mother's family were gentry, tracing their lineage back to Alexander Balfour, who had held the lands of Inchrye in Fife in the fifteenth century.[7] His mother's father, Lewis Balfour (1777–1860), was a minister of the Church of Scotland at nearby Colinton,[8] and her siblings included physician George William Balfour and marine engineer James Balfour. Stevenson spent the greater part of his boyhood holidays in his maternal grandfather's house. "Now I often wonder what I inherited from this old minister," Stevenson wrote. "I must suppose, indeed, that he was fond of preaching sermons, and so am I, though I never heard it maintained that either of us loved to hear them."[9]

Lewis Balfour and his daughter both had weak chests, so they often needed to stay in warmer climates for their health. Stevenson inherited a tendency to coughs and fevers, exacerbated when the family moved to a damp, chilly house at 1 Inverleith Terrace in 1851.[10] The family moved again to the sunnier 17 Heriot Row when Stevenson was six years old, but the tendency to extreme sickness in winter remained with him until he was 11. Illness was a recurrent feature of his adult life and left him extraordinarily thin.[11] Contemporaneous views were that he had tuberculosis, but more recent views are that it was bronchiectasis[12] or sarcoidosis.[13] The family also summered in the spa town of Bridge of Allan, in North Berwick, and in Peebles for the sake of Stevenson's and his mother's health; "Stevenson's cave" in Bridge of Allan was reportedly the inspiration for the character Ben Gunn's cave dwelling in Stevenson's 1883 novel Treasure Island.[14]

 
"My second mother, my first wife. The angel of my infant life— From the sick child, now well and old, Take, nurse, the little book you hold!" ⁠Dedication of "A Child's Garden of Verses": ⁠⁠"To Alison Cunningham. From her Boy."[15]

Stevenson's parents were both devout Presbyterians, but the household was not strict in its adherence to Calvinist principles. His nurse Alison Cunningham (known as Cummy)[16] was more fervently religious. Her mix of Calvinism and folk beliefs were an early source of nightmares for the child, and he showed a precocious concern for religion.[17] But she also cared for him tenderly in illness, reading to him from John Bunyan and the Bible as he lay sick in bed and telling tales of the Covenanters. Stevenson recalled this time of sickness in "The Land of Counterpane" in A Child's Garden of Verses (1885),[18] dedicating the book to his nurse.[19]

Stevenson was an only child, both strange-looking and eccentric, and he found it hard to fit in when he was sent to a nearby school at age 6, a problem repeated at age 11 when he went on to the Edinburgh Academy; but he mixed well in lively games with his cousins in summer holidays at Colinton.[20] His frequent illnesses often kept him away from his first school, so he was taught for long stretches by private tutors. He was a late reader, learning at age 7 or 8, but even before this he dictated stories to his mother and nurse,[21] and he compulsively wrote stories throughout his childhood. His father was proud of this interest; he had also written stories in his spare time until his own father had found them and had told him to "give up such nonsense and mind your business."[6] He paid for the printing of Robert's first publication at 16, entitled The Pentland Rising: A Page of History, 1666. It was an account of the Covenanters' rebellion and was published in 1866, the 200th anniversary of the event.[22]

Education edit

 
Stevenson at age 7
 
Stevenson at age 14
 
Stevenson at age 30

In September 1857, when he was six years old, Stevenson went to Mr Henderson's School in India Street, Edinburgh, but because of poor health stayed only a few weeks and did not return until October 1859, aged eight. During his many absences, he was taught by private tutors. In October 1861, aged ten, he went to Edinburgh Academy, an independent school for boys, and stayed there sporadically for about fifteen months. In the autumn of 1863, he spent one term at an English boarding school at Spring Grove in Isleworth in Middlesex (now an urban area of West London). In October 1864, following an improvement to his health, the 13-year-old was sent to Robert Thomson's private school in Frederick Street, Edinburgh, where he remained until he went to university.[23] In November 1867, Stevenson entered the University of Edinburgh to study engineering. From the start he showed no enthusiasm for his studies and devoted much energy to avoiding lectures. This time was more important for the friendships he made with other students in The Speculative Society (an exclusive debating club), particularly with Charles Baxter, who would become Stevenson's financial agent, and with a professor, Fleeming Jenkin, whose house staged amateur drama in which Stevenson took part, and whose biography he would later write.[24] Perhaps most important at this point in his life was a cousin, Robert Alan Mowbray Stevenson (known as "Bob"), a lively and light-hearted young man who, instead of the family profession, had chosen to study art.[25]

Each year during the holidays, Stevenson travelled to inspect the family's engineering works: to Anstruther and Wick in 1868; with his father on his official tour of Orkney and Shetland islands lighthouses in 1869; and for three weeks to the island of Erraid in 1870. He enjoyed the travels more for the material they gave for his writing than for any engineering interest. The voyage with his father pleased him because a similar journey of Walter Scott with Robert Stevenson had provided the inspiration for Scott's 1822 novel The Pirate.[26] In April 1871, Stevenson notified his father of his decision to pursue a life of letters. Though the elder Stevenson was naturally disappointed, the surprise cannot have been great, and Stevenson's mother reported that he was "wonderfully resigned" to his son's choice. To provide some security, it was agreed that Stevenson should read law (again at Edinburgh University) and be called to the Scottish bar.[27] In his 1887 poetry collection Underwoods, Stevenson muses on his having turned from the family profession:[28]

Say not of me that weakly I declined
The labours of my sires, and fled the sea,
The towers we founded and the lamps we lit,
To play at home with paper like a child.
But rather say: In the afternoon of time
A strenuous family dusted from its hands
The sand of granite, and beholding far
Along the sounding coast its pyramids
And tall memorials catch the dying sun,
Smiled well content, and to this childish task
Around the fire addressed its evening hours.

Rejection of church dogma edit

 
Stevenson at 35 in 1885

In other respects too, Stevenson was moving away from his upbringing. His dress became more Bohemian; he already wore his hair long, but he now took to wearing a velveteen jacket and rarely attended parties in conventional evening dress.[29] Within the limits of a strict allowance, he visited cheap pubs and brothels.[30] More significantly, he had come to reject Christianity and declared himself an atheist.[31] In January 1873, when he was 22, his father came across the constitution of the LJR (Liberty, Justice, Reverence) Club, of which Stevenson and his cousin Bob were members, which began: "Disregard everything our parents have taught us". Questioning his son about his beliefs, he discovered the truth.[32] Stevenson no longer believed in God and had grown tired of pretending to be something he was not: "am I to live my whole life as one falsehood?" His father professed himself devastated: "You have rendered my whole life a failure." His mother accounted the revelation "the heaviest affliction" to befall her. "O Lord, what a pleasant thing it is", Stevenson wrote to his friend Charles Baxter, "to have just damned the happiness of (probably) the only two people who care a damn about you in the world."[33]

Stevenson's rejection of the Presbyterian Church and Christian dogma, however, did not turn into lifelong atheism or agnosticism. On February 15, 1878, the 27-year-old wrote to his father and stated:[34]

Christianity is among other things, a very wise, noble and strange doctrine of life ... You see, I speak of it as a doctrine of life, and as a wisdom for this world ... I have a good heart, and believe in myself and my fellow-men and the God who made us all ... There is a fine text in the Bible, I don't know where, to the effect that all things work together for good for those who love the Lord. Strange as it may seem to you, everything has been, in one way or the other, bringing me nearer to what I think you would like me to be. 'Tis a strange world, indeed, but there is a manifest God for those who care to look for him.

Stevenson did not resume attending church in Scotland. However, he did teach Sunday School lessons in Samoa, and prayers he wrote in his final years were published posthumously.[35]

"An Apology for Idlers" edit

Justifying his rejection of an established profession, in 1877 Stevenson offered "An Apology for Idlers". "A happy man or woman", he reasoned, "is a better thing to find than a five-pound note. He or she is a radiating focus of goodwill" and a practical demonstration of "the great Theorem of the Liveableness of Life". So that if they cannot be happy in the "handicap race for sixpenny pieces", let them take their own "by-road".[36]

Early writing and travels edit

Literary and artistic connections edit

 
Stevenson at age 26 in 1876 at Barbizon, France
 
Stevenson at age 26 by Charles Wirgman

Stevenson was visiting a cousin in England in late 1873 (Stevenson was 23) when he met two people who became very important to him: Fanny (Frances Jane) Sitwell and Sidney Colvin. Sitwell was a 34-year-old woman with a son, who was separated from her husband. She attracted the devotion of many who met her, including Colvin, who married her in 1901. Stevenson was also drawn to her, and they kept up a warm correspondence over several years in which he wavered between the role of a suitor and a son (he addressed her as "Madonna").[37] Colvin became Stevenson's literary adviser and was the first editor of his letters after his death. He placed Stevenson's first paid contribution in The Portfolio, an essay titled "Roads".[38]

Stevenson was soon active in London literary life, becoming acquainted with many of the writers of the time, including Andrew Lang, Edmund Gosse[39] and Leslie Stephen, the editor of The Cornhill Magazine, who took an interest in Stevenson's work. Stephen took Stevenson to visit a patient at the Edinburgh Infirmary named William Ernest Henley, an energetic and talkative poet with a wooden leg. Henley became a close friend and occasional literary collaborator, until a quarrel broke up the friendship in 1888, and he is often considered to be the inspiration for Long John Silver in Treasure Island.[40]

Stevenson was sent to Menton on the French Riviera in November 1873 to recuperate after his health failed. He returned in better health in April 1874 and settled down to his studies, but he returned to France several times after that.[41] He made long and frequent trips to the neighbourhood of the Forest of Fontainebleau, staying at Barbizon, Grez-sur-Loing and Nemours and becoming a member of the artists' colonies there. He also travelled to Paris to visit galleries and the theatres.[42] He qualified for the Scottish bar in July 1875, aged 24, and his father added a brass plate to the Heriot Row house reading "R.L. Stevenson, Advocate". His law studies did influence his books, but he never practised law;[43] all his energies were spent in travel and writing. One of his journeys was a canoe voyage in Belgium and France with Sir Walter Simpson, a friend from the Speculative Society, a frequent travel companion, and the author of The Art of Golf (1887). This trip was the basis of his first travel book An Inland Voyage (1878).[44]

Stevenson had a long correspondence with fellow Scot J.M. Barrie. He invited Barrie to visit him in Samoa, but the two never met.[45]

Marriage edit

 
Fanny Van de Grift Osbourne, c. 1876

The canoe voyage with Simpson brought Stevenson to Grez-sur-Loing in September 1876, where he met Fanny Van de Grift Osbourne (1840–1914), born in Indianapolis. She had married at age 17 and moved to Nevada to rejoin husband Samuel after his participation in the American Civil War. Their children were Isobel (or "Belle"), Lloyd and Hervey (who died in 1875). But anger over her husband's infidelities led to a number of separations. In 1875, she had taken her children to France where she and Isobel studied art.[46] By the time Stevenson met her, Fanny was herself a magazine short-story writer of recognised ability.[47]

Stevenson returned to Britain shortly after this first meeting, but Fanny apparently remained in his thoughts, and he wrote the essay "On falling in love" for The Cornhill Magazine.[48] They met again early in 1877 and became lovers. Stevenson spent much of the following year with her and her children in France.[49] In August 1878, she returned to San Francisco and Stevenson remained in Europe, making the walking trip that formed the basis for Travels with a Donkey in the Cévennes (1879). But he set off to join her in August 1879, aged 28, against the advice of his friends and without notifying his parents. He took a second-class passage on the steamship Devonia, in part to save money but also to learn how others travelled and to increase the adventure of the journey.[50] He then travelled overland by train from New York City to California. He later wrote about the experience in The Amateur Emigrant. It was a good experience for his writing, but it broke his health.

 
French Hotel (now "Stevenson House"), Monterey, California, where he stayed in 1879
 
Family in 1893: Wife Fanny, Stevenson, his stepdaughter Isobel, and his mother Margaret Balfour

He was near death when he arrived in Monterey, California, where some local ranchers nursed him back to health. He stayed for a time at the French Hotel located at 530 Houston Street, now a museum dedicated to his memory called the "Stevenson House". While there, he often dined "on the cuff," as he said, at a nearby restaurant run by Frenchman Jules Simoneau, which stood at what is now Simoneau Plaza; several years later, he sent Simoneau an inscribed copy of his novel Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde (1886), writing that it would be a stranger case still if Robert Louis Stevenson ever forgot Jules Simoneau. While in Monterey, he wrote an evocative article about "the Old Pacific Capital" of Monterey.

By December 1879, aged 29, Stevenson had recovered his health enough to continue to San Francisco where he struggled "all alone on forty-five cents a day, and sometimes less, with quantities of hard work and many heavy thoughts,"[51] in an effort to support himself through his writing. But by the end of the winter, his health was broken again and he found himself at death's door. Fanny was now divorced and recovered from her own illness, and she came to his bedside and nursed him to recovery. "After a while," he wrote, "my spirit got up again in a divine frenzy, and has since kicked and spurred my vile body forward with great emphasis and success."[52] When his father heard of his 28-year-old son's condition, he cabled him money to help him through this period.

Fanny and Robert were married in May 1880. She was 40; he was 29. He said that he was "a mere complication of cough and bones, much fitter for an emblem of mortality than a bridegroom."[53] He travelled with his new wife and her son Lloyd[54] north of San Francisco to Napa Valley and spent a summer honeymoon at an abandoned mining camp on Mount Saint Helena (today designated Robert Louis Stevenson State Park). He wrote about this experience in The Silverado Squatters. He met Charles Warren Stoddard, co-editor of the Overland Monthly and author of South Sea Idylls, who urged Stevenson to travel to the South Pacific, an idea which returned to him many years later. In August 1880, he sailed with Fanny and Lloyd from New York to Britain and found his parents and his friend Sidney Colvin on the wharf at Liverpool, happy to see him return home. Gradually, his wife was able to patch up differences between father and son and make herself a part of the family through her charm and wit.

England, and back to the United States edit

 
Stevenson's house Skerryvore in the southern English coastal town of Bournemouth where he wrote the bulk of his most popular work
 
Commemorative plaque in Bournemouth, where Stevenson lived between 1884 and 1887

The Stevensons shuttled back and forth between Scotland and the Continent, finally settling in 1884 in the Westbourne district of the southern English seaside town of Bournemouth in Hampshire. Stevenson had moved there to benefit from its sea air.[55] They lived in a house Stevenson named 'Skerryvore' after a Scottish lighthouse built by his uncle Alan.[56]

From April 1885, 34-year-old Stevenson had the company of the novelist Henry James. They had met previously in London and had recently exchanged views in journal articles on the “art of fiction” and thereafter in a correspondence in which they expressed their admiration for each other’s work. After James had moved to Bournemouth to help support his invalid sister, Alice, he took up the invitation to pay daily visits to Skerryvore for conversation at the Stevensons' dinner table.[57]

Largely bedridden, Stevenson described himself as living "like a weevil in a biscuit." Yet, despite ill health, during his three years in Westbourne, Stevenson wrote the bulk of his most popular work: Treasure Island, Kidnapped, Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde (which established his wider reputation), A Child's Garden of Verses and Underwoods.

 
Stevenson's "Cure Cottage" in Saranac Lake, New York

Thomas Stevenson died in 1887 leaving his 36-year-old son feeling free to follow the advice of his physician to try a complete change of climate. Stevenson headed for Colorado with his widowed mother and family. But after landing in New York, they decided to spend the winter in the Adirondacks at a cure cottage now known as Stevenson Cottage at Saranac Lake, New York. During the intensely cold winter, Stevenson wrote some of his best essays, including Pulvis et Umbra. He also began The Master of Ballantrae and lightheartedly planned a cruise to the southern Pacific Ocean for the following summer.[58]

Reflections on the art of writing edit

 
Portrait of Stevenson

Stevenson's critical essays on literature contain "few sustained analyses of style or content".[59] In "A Penny Plain and Two-pence Coloured" (1884) he suggests that his own approach owed much to the exaggerated and romantic world that, as a child, he had entered as proud owner of Skelt's Juvenile Drama—a toy set of cardboard characters who were actors in melodramatic dramas. "A Gossip on Romance" (1882) and "A Gossip on a Novel of Dumas's" (1887) imply that it is better to entertain than to instruct.

Stevenson very much saw himself in the mould of Sir Walter Scott, a storyteller with an ability to transport his readers away from themselves and their circumstances. He took issue with what he saw as the tendency in French realism to dwell on sordidness and ugliness. In "The Lantern-Bearer" (1888) he appears to take Emile Zola to task for failing to seek out nobility in his protagonists.[59]

In "A Humble Remonstrance", Stevenson answers Henry James's claim in "The Art of Fiction" (1884) that the novel competes with life. Stevenson protests that no novel can ever hope to match life's complexity; it merely abstracts from life to produce a harmonious pattern of its own.[60]

Man's one method, whether he reasons or creates, is to half-shut his eyes against the dazzle and confusion of reality...Life is monstrous, infinite, illogical, abrupt and poignant; a work of art, in comparison, is neat, finite, self-contained, rational, flowing, and emasculate...The novel, which is a work of art, exists, not by its resemblances to life, which are forced and material ... but by its immeasurable difference from life, which is designed and significant.

It is not clear, however, that in this there was any real basis for disagreement with James.[57] Stevenson had presented James with a copy of Kidnapped, but it was Treasure Island that James favoured. Written as a story for boys, Stevenson had thought it in “no need of psychology or fine writing", but its success is credited with liberating children's writing from the "chains of Victorian didacticism".[61]

Politics: "The Day After Tomorrow" edit

 
Photographic portrait, c. 1887
 
Bibliography frontispiece

During his college years, Stevenson briefly identified himself as a "red-hot socialist". But already by age 26 he was writing of looking back on this time "with something like regret. ... Now I know that in thus turning Conservative with years, I am going through the normal cycle of change and travelling in the common orbit of men's opinions."[62] His cousin and biographer Sir Graham Balfour claimed that Stevenson "probably throughout life would, if compelled to vote, have always supported the Conservative candidate."[63] In 1866, then 15-year-old Stevenson did vote for Benjamin Disraeli, the Tory democrat and future Conservative Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, for the Lord Rectorship of the University of Edinburgh. But this was against a markedly illiberal challenger, the historian Thomas Carlyle.[64] Carlyle was notorious for his anti-democratic and pro-slavery views.[65][66]

In "The Day After Tomorrow", appearing in The Contemporary Review (April 1887),[67][68] Stevenson suggested: "we are all becoming Socialists without knowing it". Legislation "grows authoritative, grows philanthropical, bristles with new duties and new penalties, and casts a spawn of inspectors, who now begin, note-book in hand, to darken the face of England".[69] He is referring to the steady growth in social legislation in Britain since the first of the Conservative-sponsored Factory Acts (which, in 1833, established a professional Factory Inspectorate). Stevenson cautioned that this "new waggon-load of laws" points to a future in which our grandchildren might "taste the pleasures of existence in something far liker an ant-heap that any previous human polity".[70] Yet in reproducing the essay his latter-day libertarian admirers omit his express understanding for the abandonment of Whiggish, classical-liberal notions of laissez faire. "Liberty", Stevenson wrote, "has served us a long while" but like all other virtues "she has taken wages".

[Liberty] has dutifully served Mammon; so that many things we were accustomed to admire as the benefits of freedom and common to all, were truly benefits of wealth, and took their value from our neighbour's poverty...Freedom to be desirable, involves kindness, wisdom, and all the virtues of the free; but the free man as we have seen him in action has been, as of yore, only the master of many helots; and the slaves are still ill-fed, ill-clad, ill-taught, ill-housed, insolently entreated, and driven to their mines and workshops by the lash of famine.[71]

In January 1888, aged 37, in response to American press coverage of the Land War in Ireland, Stevenson penned a political essay (rejected by Scribner's magazine and never published in his lifetime) that advanced a broadly conservative theme: the necessity of "staying internal violence by rigid law". Notwithstanding his title, "Confessions of a Unionist", Stevenson defends neither the union with Britain (she had "majestically demonstrated her incapacity to rule Ireland") nor "landlordism" (scarcely more defensible in Ireland than, as he had witnessed it, in the goldfields of California). Rather he protests the readiness to pass "lightly" over crimes—"unmanly murders and the harshest extremes of boycotting"—where these are deemed "political". This he argues is to "defeat law" (which is ever a "compromise") and to invite "anarchy": it is "the sentimentalist preparing the pathway for the brute".[72]

Final years in the Pacific edit

Pacific voyages edit

 
Stevenson playing a flageolet in Hawaii ca. 1889
 
Stevenson and King Kalākaua of Hawaii, c. 1889
 
The author with his wife and their household in Vailima, Samoa, c. 1892
 
Stevenson's birthday fete at Vailima, November 1894
 
Stevenson on the veranda of his home at Vailima, c. 1893
 
Burial on Mount Vaea in Samoa, 1894
 
His tomb on Mount Vaea, c. 1909

In June 1888, Stevenson chartered the yacht Casco and set sail with his family from San Francisco. The vessel "plowed her path of snow across the empty deep, far from all track of commerce, far from any hand of help."[73] The sea air and thrill of adventure for a time restored his health, and for nearly three years he wandered the eastern and central Pacific, stopping for extended stays at the Hawaiian Islands, where he became a good friend of King Kalākaua. He befriended the king's niece Princess Victoria Kaiulani, who also had Scottish heritage. He spent time at the Gilbert Islands, Tahiti, New Zealand and the Samoan Islands. During this period, he completed The Master of Ballantrae, composed two ballads based on the legends of the islanders, and wrote The Bottle Imp. He preserved the experience of these years in his various letters and in his In the South Seas (which was published posthumously).[74] He made a voyage in 1889 with Lloyd on the trading schooner Equator, visiting Butaritari, Mariki, Apaiang and Abemama in the Gilbert Islands.[75] They spent several months on Abemama with tyrant-chief Tem Binoka, whom Stevenson described in In the South Seas.[75]

Stevenson left Sydney, Australia, on the Janet Nicoll in April 1890 for his third and final voyage among the South Seas islands.[76] He intended to produce another book of travel writing to follow his earlier book In the South Seas, but it was his wife who eventually published her journal of their third voyage. (Fanny misnames the ship in her account The Cruise of the Janet Nichol.)[77] A fellow passenger was Jack Buckland, whose stories of life as an island trader became the inspiration for the character of Tommy Hadden in The Wrecker (1892), which Stevenson and Lloyd Osbourne wrote together.[78][79] Buckland visited the Stevensons at Vailima in 1894.[80]

Political engagement in Samoa edit

In December 1889, 39-year-old Stevenson and his extended family arrived at the port of Apia in the Samoan islands and there he and Fanny decided to settle. In January 1890 they purchased 314+14 acres (127.2 ha) at Vailima, some miles inland from Apia the capital, on which they built the islands’ first two-storey house. Fanny's sister, Nellie Van de Grift Sanchez, wrote that “it was in Samoa that the word ‘home’ first began to have a real meaning for these gypsy wanderers”.[81] In May 1891, they were joined by Stevenson's mother, Margaret. While his wife set about managing and working the estate, 40-year-old Stevenson took the native name Tusitala (Samoan for "Teller of Tales"), and began collecting local stories. Often he would exchange these for his own tales. The first work of literature in Samoan was his translation of The Bottle Imp (1891),[81] which presents a Pacific-wide community as the setting for a moral fable.

Immersing himself in the islands' culture, occasioned a "political awakening": it placed Stevenson "at an angle" to the rival great powers, Britain, Germany and the United States whose warships were common sights in Samoan harbours.[82][83] He understood that, as in the Scottish Highlands (comparisons with his homeland "came readily"), an indigenous clan society was unprepared for the arrival of foreigners who played upon its existing rivalries and divisions. As the external pressures upon Samoan society grew, tensions soon descended into several inter-clan wars.[84]

No longer content to be a "romancer", Stevenson became a reporter and an agitator, firing off letters to The Times which "rehearsed with an ironic twist that surely owed something to his Edinburgh legal training", a tale of European and American misconduct.[84] His concern for the Polynesians is also found in the South Sea Letters, published in magazines in 1891 (and then in book form as In the South Seas in 1896). In an effort he feared might result in his own deportation, Stevenson helped secure the recall of two European officials. A Footnote to History: Eight Years of Trouble in Samoa (1892) was a detailed chronicle of the intersection of rivalries between the great powers and the first Samoan Civil War.

As much as he said he disdained politics—"I used to think meanly of the plumber", he wrote to his friend Sidney Colvin, "but how he shines beside the politician!"[85]—Stevenson felt himself obliged to take sides. He openly allied himself with chief Mataafa, whose rival Malietoa was backed by the Germans whose firms were beginning to monopolise copra and cocoa bean processing.[83]

Stevenson was alarmed above all by what he perceived as the Samoans' economic innocence—their failure to secure their claim to proprietorship of the land (in a Lockean sense)[86] through improving management and labour. In 1894 just months before his death, he addressed the island chiefs:[87]

There is but one way to defend Samoa. Hear it before it is too late. It is to make roads, and gardens, and care for your trees, and sell their produce wisely, and, in one word, to occupy and use your country... if you do not occupy and use your country, others will. It will not continue to be yours or your children's, if you occupy it for nothing. You and your children will, in that case, be cast out into outer darkness".

He had "seen these judgments of God", not only in Hawaii where abandoned native churches stood like tombstones "over a grave, in the midst of the white men’s sugar fields", but also in Ireland and "in the mountains of my own country Scotland".

These were a fine people in the past brave, gay, faithful, and very much like Samoans, except in one particular, that they were much wiser and better at that business of fighting of which you think so much. But the time came to them as it now comes to you, and it did not find them ready...

Five years after Stevenson's death, the Samoan Islands were partitioned between Germany and the United States.[88]

Last works edit

 
Portrait by Henry Walter Barnett, 1893

Stevenson wrote an estimated 700,000 words during his years on Samoa. He completed The Beach of Falesá, the first-person tale of a Scottish copra trader on a South Sea island, a man unheroic in his actions or his own soul. Rather he is a man of limited understanding and imagination, comfortable with his own prejudices: where, he wonders, can he find "whites" for his "half caste" daughters. The villains are white, their behaviour towards the islanders ruthlessly duplicitous.

Stevenson saw "The Beach of Falesá" as the ground-breaking work in his turn away from romance to realism. Stevenson wrote to his friend Sidney Colvin:

It is the first realistic South Seas story; I mean with real South Sea character and details of life. Everybody else that has tried, that I have seen, got carried away by the romance, and ended in a kind of sugar candy sham epic, and the whole effect was lost... Now I have got the smell and look of the thing a good deal. You will know more about the South Seas after you have read my little tale than if you had read a library.[89]

The Ebb-Tide (1894), the misadventures of three deadbeats marooned in the Tahitian port of Papeete, has been described as presenting "a microcosm of imperialist society, directed by greedy but incompetent whites, the labour supplied by long-suffering natives who fulfil their duties without orders and are true to the missionary faith which the Europeans make no pretence of respecting".[90] It confirmed the new Realistic turn in Stevenson's writing away from romance and adolescent adventure. The first sentence reads: "Throughout the island world of the Pacific, scattered men of many European races and from almost every grade of society carry activity and disseminate disease". No longer was Stevenson writing about human nature "in terms of a contest between Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde": "the edges of moral responsibility and the margins of moral judgement were too blurred".[84] As with The Beach of Falesà, in The Ebb Tide contemporary reviewers find parallels with several of Conrad's works: Almayer’s Folly, An Outcast of the Islands, The Nigger of the 'Narcissus', Heart of Darkness, Lord Jim.[91][92][83]

With his imagination still residing in Scotland and returning to earlier form, Stevenson also wrote Catriona (1893), a sequel to his earlier novel Kidnapped (1886), continuing the adventures of its hero David Balfour.[93]

Although he felt, as a writer, that "there was never any man had so many irons in the fire".[94] by the end of 1893 Stevenson feared that he had "overworked" and exhausted his creative vein.[95] His writing was partly driven by the need to meet the expenses of Vailima. But in a last burst of energy he began work on Weir of Hermiston. "It's so good that it frightens me," he is reported to have exclaimed.[96] He felt that this was the best work he had done.[97] Set in eighteenth century Scotland, it is a story of a society that (however different), like Samoa is witnessing a breakdown of social rules and structures leading to growing moral ambivalence.[84]

Death edit

 
Stevenson on horseback

On 3 December 1894, Stevenson was talking to his wife and straining to open a bottle of wine when he suddenly exclaimed, "What's that?", then asked his wife, "Does my face look strange?", and collapsed.[2] (Some sources have stated that he was, instead, attempting to make mayonnaise when he collapsed.)[98][99] He died within a few hours, at the age of 44, due to a stroke. The Samoans insisted on surrounding his body with a watch-guard during the night and on bearing him on their shoulders to nearby Mount Vaea, where they buried him on a spot overlooking the sea on land donated by British Acting Vice Consul Thomas Trood.[100] Based on Stevenson's poem Requiem,[101] the following epitaph is inscribed on his tomb:[102]

Under the wide and starry sky
Dig the grave and let me lie
Glad did I live and gladly die
And I laid me down with a will
This be the verse you grave for me
Here he lies where he longed to be
Home is the sailor home from the sea
And the hunter home from the hill

Stevenson was loved by the Samoans, and his tombstone epigraph was translated to a Samoan song of grief.[103] The requiem appears on the eastern side of the grave. On the western side the biblical passage of Ruth 1:16-17 is inscribed:

Whither thou goest, I will go; and where thou lodgest, I will lodge:
And thy people shall be my people, and thy God shall be my God:
Where thou diest will I die, and there will I be buried.[104]

Artistic reception edit

 
Portrait by Henry Walter Barnett in 1893, sent by Stevenson to J. M. Barrie

Half of Stevenson's original manuscripts are lost, including those of Treasure Island, The Black Arrow and The Master of Ballantrae. His heirs sold his papers during World War I, and many Stevenson documents were auctioned off in 1918.[105]

Stevenson was a celebrity in his own time, being admired by many other writers, including Marcel Proust, Arthur Conan Doyle, Henry James, J. M. Barrie,[106] Rudyard Kipling, Emilio Salgari, and later Cesare Pavese, Bertolt Brecht, Ernest Hemingway, Jack London, Vladimir Nabokov,[107] and G. K. Chesterton, who said that Stevenson "seemed to pick the right word up on the point of his pen, like a man playing spillikins."[108]

Stevenson was seen for much of the 20th century as a second-class writer. He became relegated to children's literature and horror genres,[109] condemned by literary figures such as Virginia Woolf (daughter of his early mentor Leslie Stephen) and her husband Leonard Woolf, and he was gradually excluded from the canon of literature taught in schools.[109] His exclusion reached its nadir in the 1973 2,000-page Oxford Anthology of English Literature where he was entirely unmentioned, and The Norton Anthology of English Literature excluded him from 1968 to 2000 (1st–7th editions), including him only in the eighth edition (2006).[109]

 
Portrait in 1893 by Barnett

The late 20th century brought a re-evaluation of Stevenson as an artist of great range and insight, a literary theorist, an essayist and social critic, a witness to the colonial history of the Pacific Islands and a humanist.[109] He was praised by Roger Lancelyn Green, one of the Oxford Inklings, as a writer of a consistently high level of "literary skill or sheer imaginative power" and a pioneer of the Age of the Story Tellers along with H. Rider Haggard.[110] He is now evaluated as a peer of authors such as Joseph Conrad (whom Stevenson influenced with his South Seas fiction) and Henry James, with new scholarly studies and organisations devoted to him.[109] Throughout the vicissitudes of his scholarly reception, Stevenson has remained popular worldwide. According to the Index Translationum, Stevenson is ranked the 26th-most-translated author in the world, ahead of Oscar Wilde and Edgar Allan Poe.[111]

On the subject of Stevenson's modern reputation, American film critic Roger Ebert wrote in 1996,

I was talking to a friend the other day who said he'd never met a child who liked reading Robert Louis Stevenson's Treasure Island.

Neither have I, I said. And he'd never met a child who liked reading Stevenson's Kidnapped. Me neither, I said. My early exposure to both books was via the Classics Illustrated comic books. But I did read the books later, when I was no longer a kid, and I enjoyed them enormously. Same goes for Stevenson's Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde.

The fact is, Stevenson is a splendid writer of stories for adults, and he should be put on the same shelf with Joseph Conrad and Jack London instead of in between Winnie the Pooh and Peter Pan.[112]

Monuments and commemoration edit

United Kingdom edit

 
Bronze relief memorial of Stevenson in St. Giles' Cathedral, Edinburgh
 
Profile bust of Stevenson, Writers' Museum, Edinburgh
 
Statue of Stevenson as a child, outside Colinton Parish Church in Edinburgh

The Writers' Museum near Edinburgh's Royal Mile devotes a room to Stevenson, containing some of his personal possessions from childhood through to adulthood.

A bronze relief memorial to Stevenson, designed by the American sculptor Augustus Saint-Gaudens in 1904, is mounted in the Moray Aisle of St Giles' Cathedral, Edinburgh.[113] Saint-Gaudens' scaled-down version of this relief is in the collection of the Montclair Art Museum.[114] Another small version depicting Stevenson with a cigarette in his hand rather than the pen he holds in the St. Giles memorial is displayed in the Nichols House Museum in Beacon Hill, Boston.[115]

In the West Princes Street Gardens below Edinburgh Castle a simple upright stone is inscribed: "RLS – A Man of Letters 1850–1894" by sculptor Ian Hamilton Finlay in 1987.[116] In 2013, a statue of Stevenson as a child with his dog was unveiled by the author Ian Rankin outside Colinton Parish Church.[117] The sculptor of the statue was Alan Herriot, and the money to erect it was raised by the Colinton Community Conservation Trust.[117]

Stevenson's house Skerryvore, at the head of Alum Chine, was severely damaged by bombs during a destructive and lethal raid in the Bournemouth Blitz. Despite a campaign to save it, the building was demolished.[118] A garden was designed by the Bournemouth Corporation in 1957 as a memorial to Stevenson, on the site of his Westbourne house, "Skerryvore", which he occupied from 1885 to 1887. A statue of the Skerryvore lighthouse is present on the site. Robert Louis Stevenson Avenue in Westbourne is named after him.

In 1994, to mark the 100th anniversary of Stevenson's death, the Royal Bank of Scotland issued a series of commemorative £1 notes which featured a quill pen and Stevenson's signature on the obverse, and Stevenson's face on the reverse side. Alongside Stevenson's portrait are scenes from some of his books and his house in Western Samoa.[119] Two million notes were issued, each with a serial number beginning "RLS". The first note to be printed was sent to Samoa in time for their centenary celebrations on 3 December 1994.[120]

United States edit

The Stevenson House at 530 Houston Street in Monterey, California, formerly the French Hotel, memorialises Stevenson's 1879 stay in "the Old Pacific Capital", as he was crossing the United States to join his future wife, Fanny Osbourne. The Stevenson House museum is graced with a bas-relief depicting the sickly author writing in bed.

Spyglass Hill Golf Course, originally called Pebble Beach Pines Golf Club, was renamed "Spyglass Hill" by Samuel F. B. Morse (1885–1969), the founder of Pebble Beach Company, after a place in Stevenson's Treasure Island. All the holes at Spyglass Hill are named after characters and places in the novel.

The Robert Louis Stevenson Museum in St. Helena, California, is home to over 11,000 objects and artifacts, the majority of which belonged to Stevenson. Opened in 1969, the museum houses such treasures as his childhood rocking chair, writing desk, toy soldiers and personal writings among many other items. The museum is free to the public and serves as an academic archive for students, writers and Stevenson enthusiasts.

In San Francisco there is an outdoor Robert Louis Stevenson Memorial in Portsmouth Square.

At least six US public and private schools are named after Stevenson, in the Upper West Side of New York City,[121] in Fridley, Minnesota,[122] in Burbank, California,[123] in Grandview Heights, Ohio (suburb of Columbus), in San Francisco, California,[124] and in Merritt Island, Florida.[125] There is an R. L. Stevenson middle school in Honolulu, Hawaii and in Saint Helena, California. Stevenson School in Pebble Beach, California, was established in 1952 and still exists as a college preparatory boarding school. Robert Louis Stevenson State Park near Calistoga, California, contains the location where he and Fanny spent their honeymoon in 1880.[126]

A street in Honolulu's Waikiki District, where Stevenson lived while in the Hawaiian Islands, was named after his Samoan moniker: Tusitala.[127]

Samoa edit

 
RLS Museum, Samoa

Stevenson's former home in Vailima, Samoa, is now a museum dedicated to the later years of his life. The Robert Louis Stevenson Museum presents the house as it was at the time of his death along with two other buildings added to Stevenson's original one, tripling the museum in size. The path to Stevenson's grave at the top of Mount Vaea starts at the museum.[128]

France edit

The Chemin de Stevenson (GR 70) is a popular long-distance footpath in France that approximately follows Stevenson's route as described in Travels with a Donkey in the Cévennes. There are numerous monuments and businesses named after him along the route, including a fountain in the town of Saint-Jean-du-Gard where Stevenson sold his donkey Modestine and took a stagecoach to Alès.[129]

Gallery edit

Bibliography edit

Novels edit

 
Illustration from Kidnapped. Caption: "Hoseason turned upon him with a flash" (chapter VII, "I Go to Sea in the Brig "Covenant" of Dysart")

Short story collections edit

 
Stevenson at 37
  • New Arabian Nights (1882) (11 stories)
  • More New Arabian Nights: The Dynamiter (1885) (co-written with Fanny Van de Grift Stevenson)
  • The Merry Men and Other Tales and Fables (1887) (6 stories)
  • Island Nights' Entertainments (1893) (3 stories)
  • Fables (1896) (20 stories: "The Persons of the Tale", "The Sinking Ship", "The Two Matches", "The Sick Man and the Fireman", "The Devil and the Innkeeper", "The Penitent", "The Yellow Paint", "The House of Eld", "The Four Reformers", "The Man and His Friend", "The Reader", "The Citizen and the Traveller", "The Distinguished Stranger", "The Carthorses and the Saddlehorse", "The Tadpole and the Frog", "Something in It", "Faith, Half Faith and No Faith at All", "The Touchstone", "The Poor Thing" and "The Song of the Morrow")
  • Tales and Fantasies (1905) (3 stories)
  • South Sea Tales (1996) (6 stories: "The Beach of Falesá", "The Bottle Imp", "The Isle of Voices", "The Ebb-Tide: A Trio and Quartette", "The Cart-Horses and the Saddle-Horse" and "Something in It")

Short stories edit

List of short stories sorted chronologically.[131] Note: does not include collaborations with Fanny found in More New Arabian Nights: The Dynamiter.

Title Date Collection Notes
"An Old Song" 1875 Uncollected Stevenson's first published fiction, in London, 1877. Anonymous. Republished in 1982 by R. Swearingen.
"When the Devil Was Well" 1875 Uncollected First published in 1921, by the Boston Bibliophile Society.
"Edifying Letters of the Rutherford Family" 1877 Uncollected Unfinished. Not truly a short-story. First published in 1982 by R. Swearingen.
"Will o' the Mill" 1877 The Merry Men and Other Tales and Fables, 1887 First published in The Cornhill Magazine, 1878
"A Lodging for the Night" 1877 New Arabian Nights, 1882 First published in Temple Bar in 1877
"The Sire De Malétroit's Door" 1877 New Arabian Nights, 1882 First published in Temple Bar in 1878
"The Suicide Club" 1878 New Arabian Nights, 1882 First published in London in 1878. Three interconnected stories: "Story of the Young Man with the Cream Tarts", "Story of the Physician and the Saratoga Trunk" and "The Adventure of the Hansom Cab". Part of the Later-day Arabian Nights.
"The Rajah's Diamond" 1878 New Arabian Nights, 1882 First published in London in 1878. Four interconnected stories: "Story of the Bandbox", "Story of the Young Man in Holy Orders", "Story of the House with the Green Blinds" and "The Adventure of Prince Florizel and a Detective". Part of the Later-day Arabian Nights.
"Providence and the Guitar" 1878 New Arabian Nights, 1882 First published in London in 1878
"The Story of a Lie" 1879 Tales and Fantasies, 1905 First published in New Quarterly Magazine in 1879.
"The Pavilion on the Links" 1880 New Arabian Nights, 1882 First Published in The Cornhill Magazine in 1880. Told in 9 mini-chapters. Later included with a few suppressions in New Arabian Nights. Conan Doyle in 1890 called it the first English short story.
"Thrawn Janet" 1881 The Merry Men and Other Tales and Fables, 1887 First published in The Cornhill Magazine, 1881
"The Body Snatcher" 1881 Tales and Fantasies, 1905 First published in the Christmas 1884 edition of The Pall Mall Gazette.
"The Merry Men" 1882 The Merry Men and Other Tales and Fables, 1887 First published in The Cornhill Magazine in 1882. Later included with changes in The Merry Men and Other Tales and Fables.
"Diogenes" 1882 Uncollected Two sketches: "Diogenes in London" and "Diogenes at the Savile Club".
"The Treasure of Franchard" 1883 The Merry Men and Other Tales and Fables, 1887 First published in Longman's Magazine, 1883
"Markheim" 1884 The Merry Men and Other Tales and Fables, 1887 First published in the Broken Shaft. Unwin's Annual., 1885
"Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde" 1885 Standalone, 1886 Novella. Also referred to, more rarely, as a short novel.[132]
"Olalla" 1885 The Merry Men and Other Tales and Fables, 1887 First published in The Court and Society Review, 1885
"The Great North Road" 1885 Uncollected Unfinished. First published in Illustrated London News/The Cosmopolitan, 1895
"The Story of a Recluse" 1885 Uncollected Unfinished. First published by the Boston Bibliophile Society, 1921. Later completed by Alasdair Gray.
"The Misadventures of John Nicholson" 1887 Tales and Fantasies, 1905 Novella. With the subtitle: "A Christmas Story". First published in Yule Tide, 1887
"The Clockmaker" 1880s Uncollected One of two fables not included in the 1896 collection.[133]
"The Scientific Ape" 1880s Uncollected One of two fables not included in the 1896 collection.
"The Enchantress" 1889 Uncollected First published in the Fall 1989 issue of The Georgia Review.
"Adventures of Henry Shovel" 1891 Uncollected Unfinished. First published in the Vailima Edition, Vol. 25. Published alongside three other short fragments: "The Owl", "Cannonmills" and "Mr Baskerville and His Ward".
"The Bottle Imp" 1891 Island Nights' Entertainments, 1893 First published in Black and White, 1891
"The Beach of Falesá" 1892 Island Nights' Entertainments, 1893 Novella. First published in The Illustrated London News in 1892
"The Isle of Voices" 1892 Island Nights' Entertainments, 1893 First published in National Observer, 1883
"The Waif Woman" 1892 Uncollected Unfinished. First published in the Scribner's Magazine, 1914
"The Young Chevalier" 1893 Uncollected Unfinished. First published in the Edinburgh Edition, Vol. 26, 1897
"Heathercat" 1894 Uncollected Unfinished. First published in the Edinburgh Edition, Vol. 20, 1897

Non-fiction edit

 
Pen and ink sketch by Wyatt Eaton, 1888
  • "Béranger, Pierre Jean de" . Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). 1911. – first published in the 9th edition (1875–1889).
  • Virginibus Puerisque, and Other Papers (1881), contains the essays Virginibus Puerisque i (1876); Virginibus Puerisque ii (1881); Virginibus Puerisque iii: On Falling in Love (1877); Virginibus Puerisque iv: The Truth of Intercourse (1879); Crabbed Age and Youth (1878); An Apology for Idlers (1877); Ordered South (1874); Aes Triplex (1878); El Dorado (1878); The English Admirals (1878); Some Portraits by Raeburn (previously unpublished); Child's Play (1878); Walking Tours (1876); Pan's Pipes (1878); A Plea for Gas Lamps (1878).
  • Familiar Studies of Men and Books (1882) containing Preface, by Way of Criticism (not previously published); Victor Hugo's Romances (1874); Some Aspects of Robert Burns (1879); The Gospel According to Walt Whitman (1878); Henry David Thoreau: His Character and Opinions (1880); Yoshida-Torajiro (1880); François Villon, Student, Poet, Housebreaker (1877); Charles of Orleans (1876); Samuel Pepys (1881); John Knox and his Relations to Women (1875).
  • Memories and Portraits (1887), a collection of essays.
  • On the Choice of a Profession (1887)
  • The Day After Tomorrow (1887)
  • Memoir of Fleeming Jenkin (1888)
  • Father Damien: an Open Letter to the Rev. Dr. Hyde of Honolulu (1890)
  • A Footnote to History: Eight Years of Trouble in Samoa (1892)
  • Vailima Letters (1895)
  • Prayers Written at Vailima (1904)
  • Essays in the Art of Writing (1905)
  • The New Lighthouse on the Dhu Heartach Rock, Argyllshire (1995) – based on an 1872 manuscript, edited by R. G. Swearingen. California. Silverado Museum.
  • Sophia Scarlet (2008) – based on an 1892 manuscript, edited by Robert Hoskins. AUT Media (AUT University).

Poetry edit

  • A Child's Garden of Verses (1885) – written for children but also popular with their parents. Includes such favourites as "My Shadow" and "The Lamplighter". Often thought to represent a positive reflection of the author's sickly childhood.
  • Underwoods (1887), a collection of poetry written in both English and Scots
  • Ballads (1891) – includes "Ticonderoga: A Legend of the West Highlands" (1887), based on a famous Scottish ghost story, and "Heather Ale", arguably Stevenson's most famous Stevenson poem
  • Songs of Travel and Other Verses (1896)
  • Poems Hitherto Unpublished, 3 vol. 1916, 1916, 1921, Boston Bibliophile Society, republished in New Poems

Plays edit

  • Three Plays (1892), co-written with William Ernest Henley. Includes the theatre pieces Deacon Brodie, Beau Austin and Admiral Guinea.

Travel writing edit

 
Stevenson with native Chief Tui-Ma-Le-Alh-Fano
  • An Inland Voyage (1878), travels with a friend in a Rob Roy canoe from Antwerp (Belgium) to Pontoise, just north of Paris.
  • Edinburgh: Picturesque Notes (1878) - a paean to his birthplace, it provides Stevenson's personal introduction to each part of the city and some history behind the various sections of the city and its most famous buildings.
  • Travels with a Donkey in the Cévennes (1879), two weeks' solo ramble (with Modestine as his beast of burden) in the mountains of Cévennes (south-central France), one of the first books to present hiking and camping as recreational activities. It tells of commissioning one of the first sleeping bags.
  • The Silverado Squatters (1883). An unconventional honeymoon trip to an abandoned mining camp in Napa Valley with his new wife Fanny and her son Lloyd. He presciently identifies the California wine industry as one to be reckoned with.
  • Across the Plains (written in 1879–80, published in 1892). Second leg of his journey, by train from New York to California (then picks up with The Silverado Squatters). Also includes other travel essays.
  • The Amateur Emigrant (written 1879–80, published 1895). An account of the first leg of his journey to California, by ship from Europe to New York. Andrew Noble (From the Clyde to California: Robert Louis Stevenson's Emigrant Journey, 1985) considers it to be his finest work.
  • The Old and New Pacific Capitals (1882). An account of his stay in Monterey, California in August to December 1879. Never published separately. See, for example, James D. Hart, ed., From Scotland to Silverado, 1966.
  • Essays of Travel (London: Chatto & Windus, 1905)
  • Sawyers, June Skinner (ed.) (2002), Dreams of Elsewhere: The Selected Travel Writings of Robert Louis Stevenson, The In Pin, Glasgow, ISBN 1-903238-62-5

Island literature edit

Although not well known, his island fiction and non-fiction is among the most valuable and collected of the 19th century body of work that addresses the Pacific area.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Gosse, Edmund William (1911). "Stevenson, Robert Lewis Balfour" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 25 (11th ed.). pp. 907–910.
  2. ^ a b Balfour, Graham (1906). The Life of Robert Louis Stevenson London: Methuen. 264
  3. ^ Osborn, Jacob. "49 most-translated authors from around the world". Stacker. from the original on 22 December 2020. Retrieved 26 October 2020.
  4. ^ Mehew (2004). The spelling "Lewis" is said to have been rejected because his father violently disliked another person of the same name, and the new spelling was not accompanied by a change of pronunciation (Balfour (1901) I, 29 n. 1.
  5. ^ Furnas (1952), 23–4; Mehew (2004)).
  6. ^ a b Paxton (2004).
  7. ^ The Life of Robert Louis Stevenson by Sir Graham Balfour - Delphi Classics (Illustrated). Delphi Classics. 17 July 2017. ISBN 9781786568007. from the original on 18 April 2023. Retrieved 19 March 2023.
  8. ^ Balfour (1901), 10–12; Furnas (1952), 24; Mehew (2004).
  9. ^ Memories and Portraits (1887), .
  10. ^ "A Robert Louis Stevenson Timeline (born Nov. 13th 1850 in Edinburgh, died Dec. 3rd 1894 in Samoa)". robert-louis-stevenson.org. from the original on 14 April 2012. Retrieved 14 May 2012.
  11. ^ Furnas (1952), 25–8; Mehew (2004).
  12. ^ Holmes, Lowell (2002). Treasured Islands: Cruising the South Seas with Robert Louis Stevenson. Sheridan House, Inc. ISBN 1-57409-130-1.
  13. ^ Sharma, O. P. (2005). "Murray Kornfeld, American College of Chest Physician, and sarcoidosis: a historical footnote: 2004 Murray Kornfeld Memorial Founders Lecture". Chest. 128 (3): 1830–35. doi:10.1378/chest.128.3.1830. PMID 16162793.
  14. ^ "RLS in Stirlingshire". robert-louis-stevenson.org. from the original on 11 June 2023. Retrieved 3 September 2023.
  15. ^ Robert Louis Stevenson: A Bookman Extra Number, 1913, Hodder & Stoughton, 1913
  16. ^ "Stevenson's Nurse Dead: Alison Cunningham ("Cummy") lived to be over 91 years old" (PDF). The New York Times. 10 August 1913. p. 3. (PDF) from the original on 8 March 2021. Retrieved 13 June 2018.
  17. ^ Furnas (1952), 28–32; Mehew (2004).
  18. ^ Available at Bartleby 9 June 2008 at the Wayback Machine and elsewhere.
  19. ^ Furnas (1952), 29; Mehew (2004).
  20. ^ Furnas (1952), 34–6; Mehew (2004). Alison Cunningham's recollection of Stevenson balances the picture of an oversensitive child, "like other bairns, whiles very naughty": Furnas (1952), 30.
  21. ^ Mehew (2004).
  22. ^ Balfour (1901) I, 67; Furnas (1952), pp. 43–45.
  23. ^ Stephenson, Robert Louis (1850–1894) – Childhood and schooling 9 August 2016 at the Wayback Machine. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Retrieved: 1 August 2013.
  24. ^ Furnas (1952), 51–54, 60–62; Mehew (2004)
  25. ^ Balfour (1901) I, 86–8; 90–4; Furnas (1952), 64–9
  26. ^ Balfour (1901) I, 70–2; Furnas (1952), 48–9; Mehew (2004)
  27. ^ Balfour (1901) I, 85–6
  28. ^ Underwoods (1887), Poem XXXVIII
  29. ^ Furnas (1952), 69–70; Mehew (2004)
  30. ^ Furnas (1952), 53–7; Mehew (2004.
  31. ^ Theo Tait (30 January 2005). "Like an intelligent hare – Theo Tait reviews Robert Louis Stevenson by Claire Harman". The Telegraph. Archived from the original on 11 January 2022. Retrieved 4 August 2013. A decadent dandy who envied the manly Victorian achievements of his family, a professed atheist haunted by religious terrors, a generous and loving man who fell out with many of his friends – the Robert Louis Stevenson of Claire Harman's biography is all of these and, of course, a bed-ridden invalid who wrote some of the finest adventure stories in the language. [...] Worse still, he affected a Bohemian style, haunted the seedier parts of the Old Town, read Charles Darwin and Herbert Spencer, and declared himself an atheist. This caused a painful rift with his father, who damned him as a "careless infidel".
  32. ^ Furnas (1952), 69 with n. 15 (on the club); 72–6
  33. ^ Stevenson, Robert Loui (2001). Selected Letters of Robert Louis Stevenson. New Have CT: Yale University Press. p. 29. ISBN 0-300-09124-9. Retrieved 23 October 2020.
  34. ^ Colvin, Sidney, ed. (1917). The Letters of Robert Louis Stevenson, Vol. 1: 1868–1880. New York: Scribner's. pp. 259–260.
  35. ^ Stevenson, Robert Louis (8 December 1912). "Prayers written at Vailima". New York, : C. Scribner's sons. Retrieved 8 December 2022 – via Internet Archive.
  36. ^ "Robert Louis Stevenson "An Apology for Idlers" (first appeared in Cornhill Magazine, July 1877)". Wired. ISSN 1059-1028. from the original on 11 April 2021. Retrieved 18 March 2021.
  37. ^ Furnas (1952), 81–2; 85–9; Mehew (2004)
  38. ^ Furnas (1952), 84–5
  39. ^ Furnas (1952), 95; 101
  40. ^ Balfour (1901) I, 123-4; Furnas (1952) 105–6; Mehew (2004)
  41. ^ Furnas (1952), 89–95
  42. ^ Balfour (1901) I, 128–37
  43. ^ Furnas (1952), 100–1
  44. ^ Balfour (1901) I, 127
  45. ^ Shaw, Michael (ed.) (2020), A Friendship in Letters: Robert Louis Stevenson & J.M. Barrie, Sandstone Press, Inverness ISBN 978-1-913207-02-1
  46. ^ Furnas (1952), 122–9; Mehew (2004)
  47. ^ Van de Grift Sanchez, Nellie (1920). The Life of Mrs. Robert Louis Stevenson. New York: C. Scribner's Sons. from the original on 13 November 2018. Retrieved 25 October 2020.
  48. ^ Balfour (1901) I, 145–6; Mehew (2004)
  49. ^ Furnas (1952), 130–6; Mehew (2004)
  50. ^ Balfour (1901) I, 164–5; Furnas (1952), 142–6; Mehew (2004)
  51. ^ Letter to Sidney Colvin, January 1880, The Letters of Robert Louis Stevenson, Volume 1, Chapter IV
  52. ^ "To Edmund Gosse, Monterey, Monterey Co., California, 8 October 1879," The Letters of Robert Louis Stevenson, Volume 1, Chapter IV
  53. ^ "To P. G. Hamerton, Kinnaird Cottage, Pitlochry [July 1881]," The Letters of Robert Louis Stevenson, Volume 1, Chapter V
  54. ^ Isobel was married to artist Joseph Strong.
  55. ^ Hainsworth, J. J. (2015). Jack the Ripper—Case Solved, 1891. Jefferson, NC: McFarland. p. 141. ISBN 978-0-7864-9676-1. Retrieved 15 June 2023.
  56. ^ "Bournemouth | Robert Louis Stevenson". robert-louis-stevenson.org. from the original on 23 January 2021. Retrieved 29 January 2021.
  57. ^ a b O'Hagan, Andrew (2020). "Bournemouth". The London Review of Books. 42 (10). ISSN 0260-9592. from the original on 1 November 2020. Retrieved 4 November 2020.
  58. ^ "To W.E. Henley, Pitlochry, if you please, [August] 1881," The Letters of Robert Louis Stevenson, Volume 1, Chapter V
  59. ^ a b "Robert Louis Stevenson Biography". people.brandeis.edu. Brandeis University. from the original on 23 February 2021. Retrieved 27 October 2020.
  60. ^ Stevenson, Robert Louis. "A Humble Remonstrance" (PDF). (PDF) from the original on 1 February 2021. Retrieved 27 October 2020.
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  62. ^ Stevenson, Robert Louis (1907) [originally written 1877]. "Crabbed Age and Youth". Crabbed Age and Youth and Other Essays. Portland, Maine: Thomas B. Mosher. pp. 11–12.
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Sources edit

Biographies of Stevenson

  • Graham Balfour, The Life of Robert Louis Stevenson, London: Methuen, 1901
  • Calder, Jenni, RLS: A Life Study, London: Hamish Hamilton, 1980, ISBN 0-241-10374-6
  • Callow, Philip (2001). Louis: A Life of Robert Louis Stevenson. London: Constable. ISBN 0-09-480180-0.
  • John Jay Chapman, "Robert Louis Stevenson", in Emerson, and Other Essays. New York: AMS Press, 1969, ISBN 0-404-00619-1 (reprinted from the edition of 1899)
  • David Daiches, Robert Louis Stevenson and His World, London: Thames and Hudson, 1973, ISBN 0-500-13045-0
  • Farrell, Joseph, Robert Louis Stevenson in Samoa. London: Maclehose Press, 2017. ISBN 978-0-85705-995-6.
  • J.C. Furnas, Voyage to Windward: The Life of Robert Louis Stevenson, London: Faber and Faber, 1952
  • Claire Harman, Robert Louis Stevenson: A Biography, HarperCollins, ISBN 0-00-711321-8 [reviewed by Matthew Sturgis in The Times Literary Supplement, 11 March 2005, page 8]
  • Knight, Alanna (ed.), R.L.S. in the South Seas: An Intimate Photographic Record, Edinburgh: Mainstream, 1986, ISBN 978-185158013-2
  • McLynn, Frank, Robert Louis Stevenson. A Biography. London: Hutchinson, 1993
  • Rosaline Masson, Robert Louis Stevenson. London: The People's Books, 1912
  • Rosaline Masson, The Life of Robert Louis Stevenson. Edinburgh & London: W. & R. Chambers, 1923
  • Rosaline Masson (editor), I Can Remember Robert Louis Stevenson. Edinburgh & London: W. & R. Chambers, 1923
  • Ernest Mehew, "Robert Louis Stevenson", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford: OUP, 2004. Retrieved 29 September 2008
  • Roland Paxton, "Stevenson, Thomas (1818–1887)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford: OUP, 2004. Retrieved 11 October 2008
  • Pinero, Arthur Wing (1903). Robert Louis Stevenson: The Dramatist . London: Philosophical Institution of Edinburgh.
  • James Pope-Hennessy, Robert Louis Stevenson. A Biography, London: Cape, 1974, ISBN 0-224-01007-7
  • Eve Blantyre Simpson, Robert Louis Stevenson's Edinburgh Days, London: Hodder & Stoughton, 1898
  • Eve Blantyre Simpson, The Robert Louis Stevenson Originals, [With illustrations and facsimiles], London & Edinburgh: T. N. Foulis, 1912
  • Stephen, Leslie (1902). "Robert Louis Stevenson" . Studies of a Biographer. Vol. 4. London: Duckworth & Co. pp. 206–246.

Further reading edit

  • Clunas, Alex, R.L. Stevenson, Precursor of the Post-Moderns?, in Murray, Glen (ed.), Cencrastus No. 6, Autumn 1981, pp. 9 – 11
  • Gosse, Edmund William (1911). "Stevenson, Robert Lewis Balfour" . In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 25 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 907–910.
  • Hubbard, Tom (1996), "Debut at Antwerp: The Flanders Chapters of Robert Louis Stevenson's An Inland Voyage, in Hubbard, Tom (2022), Invitation to the Voyage: Scotland, Europe and Literature, Rymour, pp. 48 - 52, ISBN 9-781739-596002
  • Hubbard, Tom (2009), "Writing Scottishly on Non-Scottish Matters", in Hubbard, Tom (2022), Invitation to the Voyage: Scotland, Europe and Literature, Rymour, pp.135 - 138, ISBN 9-781739-596002
  • Shaw, Michael (ed.), A Friendship in Letters: Robert Louis Stevenson & J.M. Barrie, Sandstone Press, Inverness, 2020, ISBN 978-1-913207-02-1

External links edit

robert, louis, stevenson, born, robert, lewis, balfour, stevenson, november, 1850, december, 1894, scottish, novelist, essayist, poet, travel, writer, best, known, works, such, treasure, island, strange, case, jekyll, hyde, kidnapped, child, garden, verses, st. Robert Louis Stevenson born Robert Lewis Balfour Stevenson 13 November 1850 3 December 1894 was a Scottish novelist essayist poet and travel writer He is best known for works such as Treasure Island Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde Kidnapped and A Child s Garden of Verses Robert Louis StevensonStevenson in 1893BornRobert Lewis Balfour Stevenson 1850 11 13 13 November 1850Edinburgh ScotlandDied3 December 1894 1894 12 03 aged 44 Vailima Upolu SamoaOccupationNovelist poet travel writerAlma materUniversity of EdinburghLiterary movementNeo romanticismNotable worksTreasure Island A Child s Garden of Verses Kidnapped Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr HydeSpouseFanny Van de Grift Osbourne m 1880 wbr ParentsThomas Stevenson father RelativesRobert Stevenson paternal grandfather Lloyd Osbourne stepson Isobel Osbourne stepdaughter Edward Salisbury Field stepson in law SignatureBound set of many of Stevenson s works 1909Born and educated in Edinburgh Stevenson suffered from serious bronchial trouble for much of his life but continued to write prolifically and travel widely in defiance of his poor health As a young man he mixed in London literary circles receiving encouragement from Andrew Lang Edmund Gosse 1 Leslie Stephen and W E Henley the last of whom may have provided the model for Long John Silver in Treasure Island In 1890 he settled in Samoa where alarmed at increasing European and American influence in the South Sea islands his writing turned from romance and adventure fiction toward a darker realism He died of a stroke in his island home in 1894 at age 44 2 A celebrity in his lifetime Stevenson s critical reputation has fluctuated since his death though today his works are held in general acclaim In 2018 he was ranked just behind Charles Dickens as the 26th most translated author in the world 3 Contents 1 Family and education 1 1 Childhood and youth 1 2 Education 1 3 Rejection of church dogma 1 4 An Apology for Idlers 2 Early writing and travels 2 1 Literary and artistic connections 2 2 Marriage 2 3 England and back to the United States 3 Reflections on the art of writing 4 Politics The Day After Tomorrow 5 Final years in the Pacific 5 1 Pacific voyages 5 2 Political engagement in Samoa 6 Last works 7 Death 8 Artistic reception 9 Monuments and commemoration 9 1 United Kingdom 9 2 United States 9 3 Samoa 9 4 France 10 Gallery 11 Bibliography 11 1 Novels 11 2 Short story collections 11 3 Short stories 11 4 Non fiction 11 5 Poetry 11 6 Plays 11 7 Travel writing 11 8 Island literature 12 See also 13 References 14 Sources 15 Further reading 16 External linksFamily and education editChildhood and youth edit nbsp Daguerreotype portrait of Stevenson as a child nbsp Stevenson s childhood home in Heriot RowStevenson was born at 8 Howard Place Edinburgh Scotland on 13 November 1850 to Thomas Stevenson 1818 1887 a leading lighthouse engineer and his wife Margaret Isabella born Balfour 1829 1897 He was christened Robert Lewis Balfour Stevenson At about age 18 he changed the spelling of Lewis to Louis and he dropped Balfour in 1873 4 5 Lighthouse design was the family s profession Thomas s father Robert s grandfather was the civil engineer Robert Stevenson and Thomas s brothers Robert s uncles Alan and David were in the same field 6 Thomas s maternal grandfather Thomas Smith had been in the same profession However Robert s mother s family were gentry tracing their lineage back to Alexander Balfour who had held the lands of Inchrye in Fife in the fifteenth century 7 His mother s father Lewis Balfour 1777 1860 was a minister of the Church of Scotland at nearby Colinton 8 and her siblings included physician George William Balfour and marine engineer James Balfour Stevenson spent the greater part of his boyhood holidays in his maternal grandfather s house Now I often wonder what I inherited from this old minister Stevenson wrote I must suppose indeed that he was fond of preaching sermons and so am I though I never heard it maintained that either of us loved to hear them 9 Lewis Balfour and his daughter both had weak chests so they often needed to stay in warmer climates for their health Stevenson inherited a tendency to coughs and fevers exacerbated when the family moved to a damp chilly house at 1 Inverleith Terrace in 1851 10 The family moved again to the sunnier 17 Heriot Row when Stevenson was six years old but the tendency to extreme sickness in winter remained with him until he was 11 Illness was a recurrent feature of his adult life and left him extraordinarily thin 11 Contemporaneous views were that he had tuberculosis but more recent views are that it was bronchiectasis 12 or sarcoidosis 13 The family also summered in the spa town of Bridge of Allan in North Berwick and in Peebles for the sake of Stevenson s and his mother s health Stevenson s cave in Bridge of Allan was reportedly the inspiration for the character Ben Gunn s cave dwelling in Stevenson s 1883 novel Treasure Island 14 nbsp My second mother my first wife The angel of my infant life From the sick child now well and old Take nurse the little book you hold Dedication of A Child s Garden of Verses To Alison Cunningham From her Boy 15 Stevenson s parents were both devout Presbyterians but the household was not strict in its adherence to Calvinist principles His nurse Alison Cunningham known as Cummy 16 was more fervently religious Her mix of Calvinism and folk beliefs were an early source of nightmares for the child and he showed a precocious concern for religion 17 But she also cared for him tenderly in illness reading to him from John Bunyan and the Bible as he lay sick in bed and telling tales of the Covenanters Stevenson recalled this time of sickness in The Land of Counterpane in A Child s Garden of Verses 1885 18 dedicating the book to his nurse 19 Stevenson was an only child both strange looking and eccentric and he found it hard to fit in when he was sent to a nearby school at age 6 a problem repeated at age 11 when he went on to the Edinburgh Academy but he mixed well in lively games with his cousins in summer holidays at Colinton 20 His frequent illnesses often kept him away from his first school so he was taught for long stretches by private tutors He was a late reader learning at age 7 or 8 but even before this he dictated stories to his mother and nurse 21 and he compulsively wrote stories throughout his childhood His father was proud of this interest he had also written stories in his spare time until his own father had found them and had told him to give up such nonsense and mind your business 6 He paid for the printing of Robert s first publication at 16 entitled The Pentland Rising A Page of History 1666 It was an account of the Covenanters rebellion and was published in 1866 the 200th anniversary of the event 22 Education edit nbsp Stevenson at age 7 nbsp Stevenson at age 14 nbsp Stevenson at age 30In September 1857 when he was six years old Stevenson went to Mr Henderson s School in India Street Edinburgh but because of poor health stayed only a few weeks and did not return until October 1859 aged eight During his many absences he was taught by private tutors In October 1861 aged ten he went to Edinburgh Academy an independent school for boys and stayed there sporadically for about fifteen months In the autumn of 1863 he spent one term at an English boarding school at Spring Grove in Isleworth in Middlesex now an urban area of West London In October 1864 following an improvement to his health the 13 year old was sent to Robert Thomson s private school in Frederick Street Edinburgh where he remained until he went to university 23 In November 1867 Stevenson entered the University of Edinburgh to study engineering From the start he showed no enthusiasm for his studies and devoted much energy to avoiding lectures This time was more important for the friendships he made with other students in The Speculative Society an exclusive debating club particularly with Charles Baxter who would become Stevenson s financial agent and with a professor Fleeming Jenkin whose house staged amateur drama in which Stevenson took part and whose biography he would later write 24 Perhaps most important at this point in his life was a cousin Robert Alan Mowbray Stevenson known as Bob a lively and light hearted young man who instead of the family profession had chosen to study art 25 Each year during the holidays Stevenson travelled to inspect the family s engineering works to Anstruther and Wick in 1868 with his father on his official tour of Orkney and Shetland islands lighthouses in 1869 and for three weeks to the island of Erraid in 1870 He enjoyed the travels more for the material they gave for his writing than for any engineering interest The voyage with his father pleased him because a similar journey of Walter Scott with Robert Stevenson had provided the inspiration for Scott s 1822 novel The Pirate 26 In April 1871 Stevenson notified his father of his decision to pursue a life of letters Though the elder Stevenson was naturally disappointed the surprise cannot have been great and Stevenson s mother reported that he was wonderfully resigned to his son s choice To provide some security it was agreed that Stevenson should read law again at Edinburgh University and be called to the Scottish bar 27 In his 1887 poetry collection Underwoods Stevenson muses on his having turned from the family profession 28 Say not of me that weakly I declined The labours of my sires and fled the sea The towers we founded and the lamps we lit To play at home with paper like a child But rather say In the afternoon of timeA strenuous family dusted from its handsThe sand of granite and beholding farAlong the sounding coast its pyramidsAnd tall memorials catch the dying sun Smiled well content and to this childish taskAround the fire addressed its evening hours Rejection of church dogma edit nbsp Stevenson at 35 in 1885In other respects too Stevenson was moving away from his upbringing His dress became more Bohemian he already wore his hair long but he now took to wearing a velveteen jacket and rarely attended parties in conventional evening dress 29 Within the limits of a strict allowance he visited cheap pubs and brothels 30 More significantly he had come to reject Christianity and declared himself an atheist 31 In January 1873 when he was 22 his father came across the constitution of the LJR Liberty Justice Reverence Club of which Stevenson and his cousin Bob were members which began Disregard everything our parents have taught us Questioning his son about his beliefs he discovered the truth 32 Stevenson no longer believed in God and had grown tired of pretending to be something he was not am I to live my whole life as one falsehood His father professed himself devastated You have rendered my whole life a failure His mother accounted the revelation the heaviest affliction to befall her O Lord what a pleasant thing it is Stevenson wrote to his friend Charles Baxter to have just damned the happiness of probably the only two people who care a damn about you in the world 33 Stevenson s rejection of the Presbyterian Church and Christian dogma however did not turn into lifelong atheism or agnosticism On February 15 1878 the 27 year old wrote to his father and stated 34 Christianity is among other things a very wise noble and strange doctrine of life You see I speak of it as a doctrine of life and as a wisdom for this world I have a good heart and believe in myself and my fellow men and the God who made us all There is a fine text in the Bible I don t know where to the effect that all things work together for good for those who love the Lord Strange as it may seem to you everything has been in one way or the other bringing me nearer to what I think you would like me to be Tis a strange world indeed but there is a manifest God for those who care to look for him Stevenson did not resume attending church in Scotland However he did teach Sunday School lessons in Samoa and prayers he wrote in his final years were published posthumously 35 An Apology for Idlers edit Justifying his rejection of an established profession in 1877 Stevenson offered An Apology for Idlers A happy man or woman he reasoned is a better thing to find than a five pound note He or she is a radiating focus of goodwill and a practical demonstration of the great Theorem of the Liveableness of Life So that if they cannot be happy in the handicap race for sixpenny pieces let them take their own by road 36 Early writing and travels editLiterary and artistic connections edit nbsp Stevenson at age 26 in 1876 at Barbizon France nbsp Stevenson at age 26 by Charles WirgmanStevenson was visiting a cousin in England in late 1873 Stevenson was 23 when he met two people who became very important to him Fanny Frances Jane Sitwell and Sidney Colvin Sitwell was a 34 year old woman with a son who was separated from her husband She attracted the devotion of many who met her including Colvin who married her in 1901 Stevenson was also drawn to her and they kept up a warm correspondence over several years in which he wavered between the role of a suitor and a son he addressed her as Madonna 37 Colvin became Stevenson s literary adviser and was the first editor of his letters after his death He placed Stevenson s first paid contribution in The Portfolio an essay titled Roads 38 Stevenson was soon active in London literary life becoming acquainted with many of the writers of the time including Andrew Lang Edmund Gosse 39 and Leslie Stephen the editor of The Cornhill Magazine who took an interest in Stevenson s work Stephen took Stevenson to visit a patient at the Edinburgh Infirmary named William Ernest Henley an energetic and talkative poet with a wooden leg Henley became a close friend and occasional literary collaborator until a quarrel broke up the friendship in 1888 and he is often considered to be the inspiration for Long John Silver in Treasure Island 40 Stevenson was sent to Menton on the French Riviera in November 1873 to recuperate after his health failed He returned in better health in April 1874 and settled down to his studies but he returned to France several times after that 41 He made long and frequent trips to the neighbourhood of the Forest of Fontainebleau staying at Barbizon Grez sur Loing and Nemours and becoming a member of the artists colonies there He also travelled to Paris to visit galleries and the theatres 42 He qualified for the Scottish bar in July 1875 aged 24 and his father added a brass plate to the Heriot Row house reading R L Stevenson Advocate His law studies did influence his books but he never practised law 43 all his energies were spent in travel and writing One of his journeys was a canoe voyage in Belgium and France with Sir Walter Simpson a friend from the Speculative Society a frequent travel companion and the author of The Art of Golf 1887 This trip was the basis of his first travel book An Inland Voyage 1878 44 Stevenson had a long correspondence with fellow Scot J M Barrie He invited Barrie to visit him in Samoa but the two never met 45 Marriage edit nbsp Fanny Van de Grift Osbourne c 1876The canoe voyage with Simpson brought Stevenson to Grez sur Loing in September 1876 where he met Fanny Van de Grift Osbourne 1840 1914 born in Indianapolis She had married at age 17 and moved to Nevada to rejoin husband Samuel after his participation in the American Civil War Their children were Isobel or Belle Lloyd and Hervey who died in 1875 But anger over her husband s infidelities led to a number of separations In 1875 she had taken her children to France where she and Isobel studied art 46 By the time Stevenson met her Fanny was herself a magazine short story writer of recognised ability 47 Stevenson returned to Britain shortly after this first meeting but Fanny apparently remained in his thoughts and he wrote the essay On falling in love for The Cornhill Magazine 48 They met again early in 1877 and became lovers Stevenson spent much of the following year with her and her children in France 49 In August 1878 she returned to San Francisco and Stevenson remained in Europe making the walking trip that formed the basis for Travels with a Donkey in the Cevennes 1879 But he set off to join her in August 1879 aged 28 against the advice of his friends and without notifying his parents He took a second class passage on the steamship Devonia in part to save money but also to learn how others travelled and to increase the adventure of the journey 50 He then travelled overland by train from New York City to California He later wrote about the experience in The Amateur Emigrant It was a good experience for his writing but it broke his health nbsp French Hotel now Stevenson House Monterey California where he stayed in 1879 nbsp Family in 1893 Wife Fanny Stevenson his stepdaughter Isobel and his mother Margaret BalfourHe was near death when he arrived in Monterey California where some local ranchers nursed him back to health He stayed for a time at the French Hotel located at 530 Houston Street now a museum dedicated to his memory called the Stevenson House While there he often dined on the cuff as he said at a nearby restaurant run by Frenchman Jules Simoneau which stood at what is now Simoneau Plaza several years later he sent Simoneau an inscribed copy of his novel Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde 1886 writing that it would be a stranger case still if Robert Louis Stevenson ever forgot Jules Simoneau While in Monterey he wrote an evocative article about the Old Pacific Capital of Monterey By December 1879 aged 29 Stevenson had recovered his health enough to continue to San Francisco where he struggled all alone on forty five cents a day and sometimes less with quantities of hard work and many heavy thoughts 51 in an effort to support himself through his writing But by the end of the winter his health was broken again and he found himself at death s door Fanny was now divorced and recovered from her own illness and she came to his bedside and nursed him to recovery After a while he wrote my spirit got up again in a divine frenzy and has since kicked and spurred my vile body forward with great emphasis and success 52 When his father heard of his 28 year old son s condition he cabled him money to help him through this period Fanny and Robert were married in May 1880 She was 40 he was 29 He said that he was a mere complication of cough and bones much fitter for an emblem of mortality than a bridegroom 53 He travelled with his new wife and her son Lloyd 54 north of San Francisco to Napa Valley and spent a summer honeymoon at an abandoned mining camp on Mount Saint Helena today designated Robert Louis Stevenson State Park He wrote about this experience in The Silverado Squatters He met Charles Warren Stoddard co editor of the Overland Monthly and author of South Sea Idylls who urged Stevenson to travel to the South Pacific an idea which returned to him many years later In August 1880 he sailed with Fanny and Lloyd from New York to Britain and found his parents and his friend Sidney Colvin on the wharf at Liverpool happy to see him return home Gradually his wife was able to patch up differences between father and son and make herself a part of the family through her charm and wit England and back to the United States edit nbsp Stevenson s house Skerryvore in the southern English coastal town of Bournemouth where he wrote the bulk of his most popular work nbsp Commemorative plaque in Bournemouth where Stevenson lived between 1884 and 1887 The Stevensons shuttled back and forth between Scotland and the Continent finally settling in 1884 in the Westbourne district of the southern English seaside town of Bournemouth in Hampshire Stevenson had moved there to benefit from its sea air 55 They lived in a house Stevenson named Skerryvore after a Scottish lighthouse built by his uncle Alan 56 From April 1885 34 year old Stevenson had the company of the novelist Henry James They had met previously in London and had recently exchanged views in journal articles on the art of fiction and thereafter in a correspondence in which they expressed their admiration for each other s work After James had moved to Bournemouth to help support his invalid sister Alice he took up the invitation to pay daily visits to Skerryvore for conversation at the Stevensons dinner table 57 Largely bedridden Stevenson described himself as living like a weevil in a biscuit Yet despite ill health during his three years in Westbourne Stevenson wrote the bulk of his most popular work Treasure Island Kidnapped Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde which established his wider reputation A Child s Garden of Verses and Underwoods nbsp Stevenson s Cure Cottage in Saranac Lake New YorkThomas Stevenson died in 1887 leaving his 36 year old son feeling free to follow the advice of his physician to try a complete change of climate Stevenson headed for Colorado with his widowed mother and family But after landing in New York they decided to spend the winter in the Adirondacks at a cure cottage now known as Stevenson Cottage at Saranac Lake New York During the intensely cold winter Stevenson wrote some of his best essays including Pulvis et Umbra He also began The Master of Ballantrae and lightheartedly planned a cruise to the southern Pacific Ocean for the following summer 58 Reflections on the art of writing edit nbsp Portrait of StevensonStevenson s critical essays on literature contain few sustained analyses of style or content 59 In A Penny Plain and Two pence Coloured 1884 he suggests that his own approach owed much to the exaggerated and romantic world that as a child he had entered as proud owner of Skelt s Juvenile Drama a toy set of cardboard characters who were actors in melodramatic dramas A Gossip on Romance 1882 and A Gossip on a Novel of Dumas s 1887 imply that it is better to entertain than to instruct Stevenson very much saw himself in the mould of Sir Walter Scott a storyteller with an ability to transport his readers away from themselves and their circumstances He took issue with what he saw as the tendency in French realism to dwell on sordidness and ugliness In The Lantern Bearer 1888 he appears to take Emile Zola to task for failing to seek out nobility in his protagonists 59 In A Humble Remonstrance Stevenson answers Henry James s claim in The Art of Fiction 1884 that the novel competes with life Stevenson protests that no novel can ever hope to match life s complexity it merely abstracts from life to produce a harmonious pattern of its own 60 Man s one method whether he reasons or creates is to half shut his eyes against the dazzle and confusion of reality Life is monstrous infinite illogical abrupt and poignant a work of art in comparison is neat finite self contained rational flowing and emasculate The novel which is a work of art exists not by its resemblances to life which are forced and material but by its immeasurable difference from life which is designed and significant It is not clear however that in this there was any real basis for disagreement with James 57 Stevenson had presented James with a copy of Kidnapped but it was Treasure Island that James favoured Written as a story for boys Stevenson had thought it in no need of psychology or fine writing but its success is credited with liberating children s writing from the chains of Victorian didacticism 61 Politics The Day After Tomorrow edit nbsp Photographic portrait c 1887 nbsp Bibliography frontispieceDuring his college years Stevenson briefly identified himself as a red hot socialist But already by age 26 he was writing of looking back on this time with something like regret Now I know that in thus turning Conservative with years I am going through the normal cycle of change and travelling in the common orbit of men s opinions 62 His cousin and biographer Sir Graham Balfour claimed that Stevenson probably throughout life would if compelled to vote have always supported the Conservative candidate 63 In 1866 then 15 year old Stevenson did vote for Benjamin Disraeli the Tory democrat and future Conservative Prime Minister of the United Kingdom for the Lord Rectorship of the University of Edinburgh But this was against a markedly illiberal challenger the historian Thomas Carlyle 64 Carlyle was notorious for his anti democratic and pro slavery views 65 66 In The Day After Tomorrow appearing in The Contemporary Review April 1887 67 68 Stevenson suggested we are all becoming Socialists without knowing it Legislation grows authoritative grows philanthropical bristles with new duties and new penalties and casts a spawn of inspectors who now begin note book in hand to darken the face of England 69 He is referring to the steady growth in social legislation in Britain since the first of the Conservative sponsored Factory Acts which in 1833 established a professional Factory Inspectorate Stevenson cautioned that this new waggon load of laws points to a future in which our grandchildren might taste the pleasures of existence in something far liker an ant heap that any previous human polity 70 Yet in reproducing the essay his latter day libertarian admirers omit his express understanding for the abandonment of Whiggish classical liberal notions of laissez faire Liberty Stevenson wrote has served us a long while but like all other virtues she has taken wages Liberty has dutifully served Mammon so that many things we were accustomed to admire as the benefits of freedom and common to all were truly benefits of wealth and took their value from our neighbour s poverty Freedom to be desirable involves kindness wisdom and all the virtues of the free but the free man as we have seen him in action has been as of yore only the master of many helots and the slaves are still ill fed ill clad ill taught ill housed insolently entreated and driven to their mines and workshops by the lash of famine 71 In January 1888 aged 37 in response to American press coverage of the Land War in Ireland Stevenson penned a political essay rejected by Scribner s magazine and never published in his lifetime that advanced a broadly conservative theme the necessity of staying internal violence by rigid law Notwithstanding his title Confessions of a Unionist Stevenson defends neither the union with Britain she had majestically demonstrated her incapacity to rule Ireland nor landlordism scarcely more defensible in Ireland than as he had witnessed it in the goldfields of California Rather he protests the readiness to pass lightly over crimes unmanly murders and the harshest extremes of boycotting where these are deemed political This he argues is to defeat law which is ever a compromise and to invite anarchy it is the sentimentalist preparing the pathway for the brute 72 Final years in the Pacific editPacific voyages edit nbsp Stevenson playing a flageolet in Hawaii ca 1889 nbsp Stevenson and King Kalakaua of Hawaii c 1889 nbsp The author with his wife and their household in Vailima Samoa c 1892 nbsp Stevenson s birthday fete at Vailima November 1894 nbsp Stevenson on the veranda of his home at Vailima c 1893 nbsp Burial on Mount Vaea in Samoa 1894 nbsp His tomb on Mount Vaea c 1909In June 1888 Stevenson chartered the yacht Casco and set sail with his family from San Francisco The vessel plowed her path of snow across the empty deep far from all track of commerce far from any hand of help 73 The sea air and thrill of adventure for a time restored his health and for nearly three years he wandered the eastern and central Pacific stopping for extended stays at the Hawaiian Islands where he became a good friend of King Kalakaua He befriended the king s niece Princess Victoria Kaiulani who also had Scottish heritage He spent time at the Gilbert Islands Tahiti New Zealand and the Samoan Islands During this period he completed The Master of Ballantrae composed two ballads based on the legends of the islanders and wrote The Bottle Imp He preserved the experience of these years in his various letters and in his In the South Seas which was published posthumously 74 He made a voyage in 1889 with Lloyd on the trading schooner Equator visiting Butaritari Mariki Apaiang and Abemama in the Gilbert Islands 75 They spent several months on Abemama with tyrant chief Tem Binoka whom Stevenson described in In the South Seas 75 Stevenson left Sydney Australia on the Janet Nicoll in April 1890 for his third and final voyage among the South Seas islands 76 He intended to produce another book of travel writing to follow his earlier book In the South Seas but it was his wife who eventually published her journal of their third voyage Fanny misnames the ship in her account The Cruise of the Janet Nichol 77 A fellow passenger was Jack Buckland whose stories of life as an island trader became the inspiration for the character of Tommy Hadden in The Wrecker 1892 which Stevenson and Lloyd Osbourne wrote together 78 79 Buckland visited the Stevensons at Vailima in 1894 80 Political engagement in Samoa edit In December 1889 39 year old Stevenson and his extended family arrived at the port of Apia in the Samoan islands and there he and Fanny decided to settle In January 1890 they purchased 314 1 4 acres 127 2 ha at Vailima some miles inland from Apia the capital on which they built the islands first two storey house Fanny s sister Nellie Van de Grift Sanchez wrote that it was in Samoa that the word home first began to have a real meaning for these gypsy wanderers 81 In May 1891 they were joined by Stevenson s mother Margaret While his wife set about managing and working the estate 40 year old Stevenson took the native name Tusitala Samoan for Teller of Tales and began collecting local stories Often he would exchange these for his own tales The first work of literature in Samoan was his translation of The Bottle Imp 1891 81 which presents a Pacific wide community as the setting for a moral fable Immersing himself in the islands culture occasioned a political awakening it placed Stevenson at an angle to the rival great powers Britain Germany and the United States whose warships were common sights in Samoan harbours 82 83 He understood that as in the Scottish Highlands comparisons with his homeland came readily an indigenous clan society was unprepared for the arrival of foreigners who played upon its existing rivalries and divisions As the external pressures upon Samoan society grew tensions soon descended into several inter clan wars 84 No longer content to be a romancer Stevenson became a reporter and an agitator firing off letters to The Times which rehearsed with an ironic twist that surely owed something to his Edinburgh legal training a tale of European and American misconduct 84 His concern for the Polynesians is also found in the South Sea Letters published in magazines in 1891 and then in book form as In the South Seas in 1896 In an effort he feared might result in his own deportation Stevenson helped secure the recall of two European officials A Footnote to History Eight Years of Trouble in Samoa 1892 was a detailed chronicle of the intersection of rivalries between the great powers and the first Samoan Civil War As much as he said he disdained politics I used to think meanly of the plumber he wrote to his friend Sidney Colvin but how he shines beside the politician 85 Stevenson felt himself obliged to take sides He openly allied himself with chief Mataafa whose rival Malietoa was backed by the Germans whose firms were beginning to monopolise copra and cocoa bean processing 83 Stevenson was alarmed above all by what he perceived as the Samoans economic innocence their failure to secure their claim to proprietorship of the land in a Lockean sense 86 through improving management and labour In 1894 just months before his death he addressed the island chiefs 87 There is but one way to defend Samoa Hear it before it is too late It is to make roads and gardens and care for your trees and sell their produce wisely and in one word to occupy and use your country if you do not occupy and use your country others will It will not continue to be yours or your children s if you occupy it for nothing You and your children will in that case be cast out into outer darkness He had seen these judgments of God not only in Hawaii where abandoned native churches stood like tombstones over a grave in the midst of the white men s sugar fields but also in Ireland and in the mountains of my own country Scotland These were a fine people in the past brave gay faithful and very much like Samoans except in one particular that they were much wiser and better at that business of fighting of which you think so much But the time came to them as it now comes to you and it did not find them ready Five years after Stevenson s death the Samoan Islands were partitioned between Germany and the United States 88 Last works edit nbsp Portrait by Henry Walter Barnett 1893Stevenson wrote an estimated 700 000 words during his years on Samoa He completed The Beach of Falesa the first person tale of a Scottish copra trader on a South Sea island a man unheroic in his actions or his own soul Rather he is a man of limited understanding and imagination comfortable with his own prejudices where he wonders can he find whites for his half caste daughters The villains are white their behaviour towards the islanders ruthlessly duplicitous Stevenson saw The Beach of Falesa as the ground breaking work in his turn away from romance to realism Stevenson wrote to his friend Sidney Colvin It is the first realistic South Seas story I mean with real South Sea character and details of life Everybody else that has tried that I have seen got carried away by the romance and ended in a kind of sugar candy sham epic and the whole effect was lost Now I have got the smell and look of the thing a good deal You will know more about the South Seas after you have read my little tale than if you had read a library 89 The Ebb Tide 1894 the misadventures of three deadbeats marooned in the Tahitian port of Papeete has been described as presenting a microcosm of imperialist society directed by greedy but incompetent whites the labour supplied by long suffering natives who fulfil their duties without orders and are true to the missionary faith which the Europeans make no pretence of respecting 90 It confirmed the new Realistic turn in Stevenson s writing away from romance and adolescent adventure The first sentence reads Throughout the island world of the Pacific scattered men of many European races and from almost every grade of society carry activity and disseminate disease No longer was Stevenson writing about human nature in terms of a contest between Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde the edges of moral responsibility and the margins of moral judgement were too blurred 84 As with The Beach of Falesa in The Ebb Tide contemporary reviewers find parallels with several of Conrad s works Almayer s Folly An Outcast of the Islands The Nigger of the Narcissus Heart of Darkness Lord Jim 91 92 83 With his imagination still residing in Scotland and returning to earlier form Stevenson also wrote Catriona 1893 a sequel to his earlier novel Kidnapped 1886 continuing the adventures of its hero David Balfour 93 Although he felt as a writer that there was never any man had so many irons in the fire 94 by the end of 1893 Stevenson feared that he had overworked and exhausted his creative vein 95 His writing was partly driven by the need to meet the expenses of Vailima But in a last burst of energy he began work on Weir of Hermiston It s so good that it frightens me he is reported to have exclaimed 96 He felt that this was the best work he had done 97 Set in eighteenth century Scotland it is a story of a society that however different like Samoa is witnessing a breakdown of social rules and structures leading to growing moral ambivalence 84 Death edit nbsp Stevenson on horsebackOn 3 December 1894 Stevenson was talking to his wife and straining to open a bottle of wine when he suddenly exclaimed What s that then asked his wife Does my face look strange and collapsed 2 Some sources have stated that he was instead attempting to make mayonnaise when he collapsed 98 99 He died within a few hours at the age of 44 due to a stroke The Samoans insisted on surrounding his body with a watch guard during the night and on bearing him on their shoulders to nearby Mount Vaea where they buried him on a spot overlooking the sea on land donated by British Acting Vice Consul Thomas Trood 100 Based on Stevenson s poem Requiem 101 the following epitaph is inscribed on his tomb 102 Under the wide and starry sky Dig the grave and let me lie Glad did I live and gladly die And I laid me down with a will This be the verse you grave for me Here he lies where he longed to be Home is the sailor home from the sea And the hunter home from the hill Stevenson was loved by the Samoans and his tombstone epigraph was translated to a Samoan song of grief 103 The requiem appears on the eastern side of the grave On the western side the biblical passage of Ruth 1 16 17 is inscribed Whither thou goest I will go and where thou lodgest I will lodge And thy people shall be my people and thy God shall be my God Where thou diest will I die and there will I be buried 104 Artistic reception edit nbsp Portrait by Henry Walter Barnett in 1893 sent by Stevenson to J M BarrieHalf of Stevenson s original manuscripts are lost including those of Treasure Island The Black Arrow and The Master of Ballantrae His heirs sold his papers during World War I and many Stevenson documents were auctioned off in 1918 105 Stevenson was a celebrity in his own time being admired by many other writers including Marcel Proust Arthur Conan Doyle Henry James J M Barrie 106 Rudyard Kipling Emilio Salgari and later Cesare Pavese Bertolt Brecht Ernest Hemingway Jack London Vladimir Nabokov 107 and G K Chesterton who said that Stevenson seemed to pick the right word up on the point of his pen like a man playing spillikins 108 Stevenson was seen for much of the 20th century as a second class writer He became relegated to children s literature and horror genres 109 condemned by literary figures such as Virginia Woolf daughter of his early mentor Leslie Stephen and her husband Leonard Woolf and he was gradually excluded from the canon of literature taught in schools 109 His exclusion reached its nadir in the 1973 2 000 page Oxford Anthology of English Literature where he was entirely unmentioned and The Norton Anthology of English Literature excluded him from 1968 to 2000 1st 7th editions including him only in the eighth edition 2006 109 nbsp Portrait in 1893 by BarnettThe late 20th century brought a re evaluation of Stevenson as an artist of great range and insight a literary theorist an essayist and social critic a witness to the colonial history of the Pacific Islands and a humanist 109 He was praised by Roger Lancelyn Green one of the Oxford Inklings as a writer of a consistently high level of literary skill or sheer imaginative power and a pioneer of the Age of the Story Tellers along with H Rider Haggard 110 He is now evaluated as a peer of authors such as Joseph Conrad whom Stevenson influenced with his South Seas fiction and Henry James with new scholarly studies and organisations devoted to him 109 Throughout the vicissitudes of his scholarly reception Stevenson has remained popular worldwide According to the Index Translationum Stevenson is ranked the 26th most translated author in the world ahead of Oscar Wilde and Edgar Allan Poe 111 On the subject of Stevenson s modern reputation American film critic Roger Ebert wrote in 1996 I was talking to a friend the other day who said he d never met a child who liked reading Robert Louis Stevenson s Treasure Island Neither have I I said And he d never met a child who liked reading Stevenson s Kidnapped Me neither I said My early exposure to both books was via the Classics Illustrated comic books But I did read the books later when I was no longer a kid and I enjoyed them enormously Same goes for Stevenson s Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde The fact is Stevenson is a splendid writer of stories for adults and he should be put on the same shelf with Joseph Conrad and Jack London instead of in between Winnie the Pooh and Peter Pan 112 Monuments and commemoration editUnited Kingdom edit nbsp Bronze relief memorial of Stevenson in St Giles Cathedral Edinburgh nbsp Profile bust of Stevenson Writers Museum Edinburgh nbsp Statue of Stevenson as a child outside Colinton Parish Church in EdinburghThe Writers Museum near Edinburgh s Royal Mile devotes a room to Stevenson containing some of his personal possessions from childhood through to adulthood A bronze relief memorial to Stevenson designed by the American sculptor Augustus Saint Gaudens in 1904 is mounted in the Moray Aisle of St Giles Cathedral Edinburgh 113 Saint Gaudens scaled down version of this relief is in the collection of the Montclair Art Museum 114 Another small version depicting Stevenson with a cigarette in his hand rather than the pen he holds in the St Giles memorial is displayed in the Nichols House Museum in Beacon Hill Boston 115 In the West Princes Street Gardens below Edinburgh Castle a simple upright stone is inscribed RLS A Man of Letters 1850 1894 by sculptor Ian Hamilton Finlay in 1987 116 In 2013 a statue of Stevenson as a child with his dog was unveiled by the author Ian Rankin outside Colinton Parish Church 117 The sculptor of the statue was Alan Herriot and the money to erect it was raised by the Colinton Community Conservation Trust 117 Stevenson s house Skerryvore at the head of Alum Chine was severely damaged by bombs during a destructive and lethal raid in the Bournemouth Blitz Despite a campaign to save it the building was demolished 118 A garden was designed by the Bournemouth Corporation in 1957 as a memorial to Stevenson on the site of his Westbourne house Skerryvore which he occupied from 1885 to 1887 A statue of the Skerryvore lighthouse is present on the site Robert Louis Stevenson Avenue in Westbourne is named after him In 1994 to mark the 100th anniversary of Stevenson s death the Royal Bank of Scotland issued a series of commemorative 1 notes which featured a quill pen and Stevenson s signature on the obverse and Stevenson s face on the reverse side Alongside Stevenson s portrait are scenes from some of his books and his house in Western Samoa 119 Two million notes were issued each with a serial number beginning RLS The first note to be printed was sent to Samoa in time for their centenary celebrations on 3 December 1994 120 United States edit The Stevenson House at 530 Houston Street in Monterey California formerly the French Hotel memorialises Stevenson s 1879 stay in the Old Pacific Capital as he was crossing the United States to join his future wife Fanny Osbourne The Stevenson House museum is graced with a bas relief depicting the sickly author writing in bed Spyglass Hill Golf Course originally called Pebble Beach Pines Golf Club was renamed Spyglass Hill by Samuel F B Morse 1885 1969 the founder of Pebble Beach Company after a place in Stevenson s Treasure Island All the holes at Spyglass Hill are named after characters and places in the novel The Robert Louis Stevenson Museum in St Helena California is home to over 11 000 objects and artifacts the majority of which belonged to Stevenson Opened in 1969 the museum houses such treasures as his childhood rocking chair writing desk toy soldiers and personal writings among many other items The museum is free to the public and serves as an academic archive for students writers and Stevenson enthusiasts In San Francisco there is an outdoor Robert Louis Stevenson Memorial in Portsmouth Square At least six US public and private schools are named after Stevenson in the Upper West Side of New York City 121 in Fridley Minnesota 122 in Burbank California 123 in Grandview Heights Ohio suburb of Columbus in San Francisco California 124 and in Merritt Island Florida 125 There is an R L Stevenson middle school in Honolulu Hawaii and in Saint Helena California Stevenson School in Pebble Beach California was established in 1952 and still exists as a college preparatory boarding school Robert Louis Stevenson State Park near Calistoga California contains the location where he and Fanny spent their honeymoon in 1880 126 A street in Honolulu s Waikiki District where Stevenson lived while in the Hawaiian Islands was named after his Samoan moniker Tusitala 127 Samoa edit nbsp RLS Museum SamoaStevenson s former home in Vailima Samoa is now a museum dedicated to the later years of his life The Robert Louis Stevenson Museum presents the house as it was at the time of his death along with two other buildings added to Stevenson s original one tripling the museum in size The path to Stevenson s grave at the top of Mount Vaea starts at the museum 128 France edit The Chemin de Stevenson GR 70 is a popular long distance footpath in France that approximately follows Stevenson s route as described in Travels with a Donkey in the Cevennes There are numerous monuments and businesses named after him along the route including a fountain in the town of Saint Jean du Gard where Stevenson sold his donkey Modestine and took a stagecoach to Ales 129 Gallery edit nbsp Portrait by Girolamo Nerli 1892 nbsp With Kalakaua in the King s boathouse nbsp Portrait by John Singer Sargent 1887 nbsp Stevenson paces in his dining room in an 1885 portrait by John Singer Sargent His wife Fanny seated in an Indian dress is visible in the lower right corner nbsp Alternate portrait in 1893 by Barnett subtly different from the more familiar shot nbsp Portrait by William Blake Richmond 1886Bibliography editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Robert Louis Stevenson news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message Novels edit nbsp Illustration from Kidnapped Caption Hoseason turned upon him with a flash chapter VII I Go to Sea in the Brig Covenant of Dysart The Hair Trunk or The Ideal Commonwealth 1877 unfinished and unpublished 130 An annotated edition of the original manuscript edited and introduced by Roger G Swearingen was published as The Hair Trunk or The Ideal Commonwealth An Extravaganza in August 2014 Treasure Island 1883 his first major success a tale of piracy buried treasure and adventure has been filmed frequently In an 1881 letter to W E Henley he provided the earliest known title The Sea Cook or Treasure Island a Story for Boys Prince Otto 1885 Stevenson s third full length narrative an action romance set in the imaginary Germanic state of Grunewald Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde 1886 a novella about a dual personality much adapted in plays and films also influential in the growth of understanding of the subconscious mind through its treatment of a kind and intelligent physician who turns into a psychopathic monster after imbibing a drug intended to separate good from evil in a personality Kidnapped 1886 a historical novel that tells of the boy David Balfour s pursuit of his inheritance and his alliance with Alan Breck Stewart in the intrigues of Jacobite troubles in Scotland The Black Arrow 1888 a historical adventure novel and romance set during the Wars of the Roses The Master of Ballantrae 1889 a tale of revenge set in Scotland America and India The Wrong Box 1889 co written with Lloyd Osbourne A comic novel of a tontine filmed in 1966 starring John Mills Ralph Richardson and Michael Caine The Wrecker 1892 co written with Lloyd Osbourne and filmed in 1957 as a television series episode of Maverick starring James Garner and Jack Kelly with full credit to Stevenson and Osbourne Catriona 1893 also known as David Balfour a sequel to Kidnapped telling of Balfour s further adventures The Ebb Tide 1894 co written with Lloyd Osbourne Weir of Hermiston 1896 unfinished at the time of Stevenson s death considered to have promised great artistic growth St Ives 1897 unfinished at the time of Stevenson s death completed by Arthur Quiller Couch Short story collections edit nbsp Stevenson at 37New Arabian Nights 1882 11 stories More New Arabian Nights The Dynamiter 1885 co written with Fanny Van de Grift Stevenson The Merry Men and Other Tales and Fables 1887 6 stories Island Nights Entertainments 1893 3 stories Fables 1896 20 stories The Persons of the Tale The Sinking Ship The Two Matches The Sick Man and the Fireman The Devil and the Innkeeper The Penitent The Yellow Paint The House of Eld The Four Reformers The Man and His Friend The Reader The Citizen and the Traveller The Distinguished Stranger The Carthorses and the Saddlehorse The Tadpole and the Frog Something in It Faith Half Faith and No Faith at All The Touchstone The Poor Thing and The Song of the Morrow Tales and Fantasies 1905 3 stories South Sea Tales 1996 6 stories The Beach of Falesa The Bottle Imp The Isle of Voices The Ebb Tide A Trio and Quartette The Cart Horses and the Saddle Horse and Something in It Short stories edit List of short stories sorted chronologically 131 Note does not include collaborations with Fanny found in More New Arabian Nights The Dynamiter Title Date Collection Notes An Old Song 1875 Uncollected Stevenson s first published fiction in London 1877 Anonymous Republished in 1982 by R Swearingen When the Devil Was Well 1875 Uncollected First published in 1921 by the Boston Bibliophile Society Edifying Letters of the Rutherford Family 1877 Uncollected Unfinished Not truly a short story First published in 1982 by R Swearingen Will o the Mill 1877 The Merry Men and Other Tales and Fables 1887 First published in The Cornhill Magazine 1878 A Lodging for the Night 1877 New Arabian Nights 1882 First published in Temple Bar in 1877 The Sire De Maletroit s Door 1877 New Arabian Nights 1882 First published in Temple Bar in 1878 The Suicide Club 1878 New Arabian Nights 1882 First published in London in 1878 Three interconnected stories Story of the Young Man with the Cream Tarts Story of the Physician and the Saratoga Trunk and The Adventure of the Hansom Cab Part of the Later day Arabian Nights The Rajah s Diamond 1878 New Arabian Nights 1882 First published in London in 1878 Four interconnected stories Story of the Bandbox Story of the Young Man in Holy Orders Story of the House with the Green Blinds and The Adventure of Prince Florizel and a Detective Part of the Later day Arabian Nights Providence and the Guitar 1878 New Arabian Nights 1882 First published in London in 1878 The Story of a Lie 1879 Tales and Fantasies 1905 First published in New Quarterly Magazine in 1879 The Pavilion on the Links 1880 New Arabian Nights 1882 First Published in The Cornhill Magazine in 1880 Told in 9 mini chapters Later included with a few suppressions in New Arabian Nights Conan Doyle in 1890 called it the first English short story Thrawn Janet 1881 The Merry Men and Other Tales and Fables 1887 First published in The Cornhill Magazine 1881 The Body Snatcher 1881 Tales and Fantasies 1905 First published in the Christmas 1884 edition of The Pall Mall Gazette The Merry Men 1882 The Merry Men and Other Tales and Fables 1887 First published in The Cornhill Magazine in 1882 Later included with changes in The Merry Men and Other Tales and Fables Diogenes 1882 Uncollected Two sketches Diogenes in London and Diogenes at the Savile Club The Treasure of Franchard 1883 The Merry Men and Other Tales and Fables 1887 First published in Longman s Magazine 1883 Markheim 1884 The Merry Men and Other Tales and Fables 1887 First published in the Broken Shaft Unwin s Annual 1885 Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde 1885 Standalone 1886 Novella Also referred to more rarely as a short novel 132 Olalla 1885 The Merry Men and Other Tales and Fables 1887 First published in The Court and Society Review 1885 The Great North Road 1885 Uncollected Unfinished First published in Illustrated London News The Cosmopolitan 1895 The Story of a Recluse 1885 Uncollected Unfinished First published by the Boston Bibliophile Society 1921 Later completed by Alasdair Gray The Misadventures of John Nicholson 1887 Tales and Fantasies 1905 Novella With the subtitle A Christmas Story First published in Yule Tide 1887 The Clockmaker 1880s Uncollected One of two fables not included in the 1896 collection 133 The Scientific Ape 1880s Uncollected One of two fables not included in the 1896 collection The Enchantress 1889 Uncollected First published in the Fall 1989 issue of The Georgia Review Adventures of Henry Shovel 1891 Uncollected Unfinished First published in the Vailima Edition Vol 25 Published alongside three other short fragments The Owl Cannonmills and Mr Baskerville and His Ward The Bottle Imp 1891 Island Nights Entertainments 1893 First published in Black and White 1891 The Beach of Falesa 1892 Island Nights Entertainments 1893 Novella First published in The Illustrated London News in 1892 The Isle of Voices 1892 Island Nights Entertainments 1893 First published in National Observer 1883 The Waif Woman 1892 Uncollected Unfinished First published in the Scribner s Magazine 1914 The Young Chevalier 1893 Uncollected Unfinished First published in the Edinburgh Edition Vol 26 1897 Heathercat 1894 Uncollected Unfinished First published in the Edinburgh Edition Vol 20 1897Non fiction edit nbsp Pen and ink sketch by Wyatt Eaton 1888 Beranger Pierre Jean de Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed 1911 first published in the 9th edition 1875 1889 Virginibus Puerisque and Other Papers 1881 contains the essays Virginibus Puerisque i 1876 Virginibus Puerisque ii 1881 Virginibus Puerisque iii On Falling in Love 1877 Virginibus Puerisque iv The Truth of Intercourse 1879 Crabbed Age and Youth 1878 An Apology for Idlers 1877 Ordered South 1874 Aes Triplex 1878 El Dorado 1878 The English Admirals 1878 Some Portraits by Raeburn previously unpublished Child s Play 1878 Walking Tours 1876 Pan s Pipes 1878 A Plea for Gas Lamps 1878 Familiar Studies of Men and Books 1882 containing Preface by Way of Criticism not previously published Victor Hugo s Romances 1874 Some Aspects of Robert Burns 1879 The Gospel According to Walt Whitman 1878 Henry David Thoreau His Character and Opinions 1880 Yoshida Torajiro 1880 Francois Villon Student Poet Housebreaker 1877 Charles of Orleans 1876 Samuel Pepys 1881 John Knox and his Relations to Women 1875 Memories and Portraits 1887 a collection of essays On the Choice of a Profession 1887 The Day After Tomorrow 1887 Memoir of Fleeming Jenkin 1888 Father Damien an Open Letter to the Rev Dr Hyde of Honolulu 1890 A Footnote to History Eight Years of Trouble in Samoa 1892 Vailima Letters 1895 Prayers Written at Vailima 1904 Essays in the Art of Writing 1905 The New Lighthouse on the Dhu Heartach Rock Argyllshire 1995 based on an 1872 manuscript edited by R G Swearingen California Silverado Museum Sophia Scarlet 2008 based on an 1892 manuscript edited by Robert Hoskins AUT Media AUT University Poetry edit A Child s Garden of Verses 1885 written for children but also popular with their parents Includes such favourites as My Shadow and The Lamplighter Often thought to represent a positive reflection of the author s sickly childhood Underwoods 1887 a collection of poetry written in both English and Scots Ballads 1891 includes Ticonderoga A Legend of the West Highlands 1887 based on a famous Scottish ghost story and Heather Ale arguably Stevenson s most famous Stevenson poem Songs of Travel and Other Verses 1896 Poems Hitherto Unpublished 3 vol 1916 1916 1921 Boston Bibliophile Society republished in New PoemsPlays edit Three Plays 1892 co written with William Ernest Henley Includes the theatre pieces Deacon Brodie Beau Austin and Admiral Guinea Travel writing edit nbsp Stevenson with native Chief Tui Ma Le Alh FanoAn Inland Voyage 1878 travels with a friend in a Rob Roy canoe from Antwerp Belgium to Pontoise just north of Paris Edinburgh Picturesque Notes 1878 a paean to his birthplace it provides Stevenson s personal introduction to each part of the city and some history behind the various sections of the city and its most famous buildings Travels with a Donkey in the Cevennes 1879 two weeks solo ramble with Modestine as his beast of burden in the mountains of Cevennes south central France one of the first books to present hiking and camping as recreational activities It tells of commissioning one of the first sleeping bags The Silverado Squatters 1883 An unconventional honeymoon trip to an abandoned mining camp in Napa Valley with his new wife Fanny and her son Lloyd He presciently identifies the California wine industry as one to be reckoned with Across the Plains written in 1879 80 published in 1892 Second leg of his journey by train from New York to California then picks up with The Silverado Squatters Also includes other travel essays The Amateur Emigrant written 1879 80 published 1895 An account of the first leg of his journey to California by ship from Europe to New York Andrew Noble From the Clyde to California Robert Louis Stevenson s Emigrant Journey 1985 considers it to be his finest work The Old and New Pacific Capitals 1882 An account of his stay in Monterey California in August to December 1879 Never published separately See for example James D Hart ed From Scotland to Silverado 1966 Essays of Travel London Chatto amp Windus 1905 Sawyers June Skinner ed 2002 Dreams of Elsewhere The Selected Travel Writings of Robert Louis Stevenson The In Pin Glasgow ISBN 1 903238 62 5Island literature edit Although not well known his island fiction and non fiction is among the most valuable and collected of the 19th century body of work that addresses the Pacific area In the South Seas 1896 A collection of Stevenson s articles and essays on his travels in the Pacific A Footnote to History Eight Years of Trouble in Samoa 1892 See also edit nbsp Poetry portal nbsp Children s literature portal nbsp Biography portalRobert Louis Stevenson State Park People on Scottish banknotes Victorian literature Salvation Army Waiʻoli Tea Room Robert Louis Stevenson Memorial Grass House on premises Writers MuseumReferences edit Gosse Edmund William 1911 Stevenson Robert Lewis Balfour Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 25 11th ed pp 907 910 a b Balfour Graham 1906 The Life of Robert Louis Stevenson London Methuen 264 Osborn Jacob 49 most translated authors from around the world Stacker Archived from the original on 22 December 2020 Retrieved 26 October 2020 Mehew 2004 The spelling Lewis is said to have been rejected because his father violently disliked another person of the same name and the new spelling was not accompanied by a change of pronunciation Balfour 1901 I 29 n 1 Furnas 1952 23 4 Mehew 2004 a b Paxton 2004 The Life of Robert Louis Stevenson by Sir Graham Balfour Delphi Classics Illustrated Delphi Classics 17 July 2017 ISBN 9781786568007 Archived from the original on 18 April 2023 Retrieved 19 March 2023 Balfour 1901 10 12 Furnas 1952 24 Mehew 2004 Memories and Portraits 1887 Chapter VII The Manse A Robert Louis Stevenson Timeline born Nov 13th 1850 in Edinburgh died Dec 3rd 1894 in Samoa robert louis stevenson org Archived from the original on 14 April 2012 Retrieved 14 May 2012 Furnas 1952 25 8 Mehew 2004 Holmes Lowell 2002 Treasured Islands Cruising the South Seas with Robert Louis Stevenson Sheridan House Inc ISBN 1 57409 130 1 Sharma O P 2005 Murray Kornfeld American College of Chest Physician and sarcoidosis a historical footnote 2004 Murray Kornfeld Memorial Founders Lecture Chest 128 3 1830 35 doi 10 1378 chest 128 3 1830 PMID 16162793 RLS in Stirlingshire robert louis stevenson org Archived from the original on 11 June 2023 Retrieved 3 September 2023 Robert Louis Stevenson A Bookman Extra Number 1913 Hodder amp Stoughton 1913 Stevenson s Nurse Dead Alison Cunningham Cummy lived to be over 91 years old PDF The New York Times 10 August 1913 p 3 Archived PDF from the original on 8 March 2021 Retrieved 13 June 2018 Furnas 1952 28 32 Mehew 2004 Available at Bartleby Archived 9 June 2008 at the Wayback Machine and elsewhere Furnas 1952 29 Mehew 2004 Furnas 1952 34 6 Mehew 2004 Alison Cunningham s recollection of Stevenson balances the picture of an oversensitive child like other bairns whiles very naughty Furnas 1952 30 Mehew 2004 Balfour 1901 I 67 Furnas 1952 pp 43 45 Stephenson Robert Louis 1850 1894 Childhood and schooling Archived 9 August 2016 at the Wayback Machine Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Retrieved 1 August 2013 Furnas 1952 51 54 60 62 Mehew 2004 Balfour 1901 I 86 8 90 4 Furnas 1952 64 9 Balfour 1901 I 70 2 Furnas 1952 48 9 Mehew 2004 Balfour 1901 I 85 6 Underwoods 1887 Poem XXXVIII Furnas 1952 69 70 Mehew 2004 Furnas 1952 53 7 Mehew 2004 Theo Tait 30 January 2005 Like an intelligent hare Theo Tait reviews Robert Louis Stevenson by Claire Harman The Telegraph Archived from the original on 11 January 2022 Retrieved 4 August 2013 A decadent dandy who envied the manly Victorian achievements of his family a professed atheist haunted by religious terrors a generous and loving man who fell out with many of his friends the Robert Louis Stevenson of Claire Harman s biography is all of these and of course a bed ridden invalid who wrote some of the finest adventure stories in the language Worse still he affected a Bohemian style haunted the seedier parts of the Old Town read Charles Darwin and Herbert Spencer and declared himself an atheist This caused a painful rift with his father who damned him as a careless infidel Furnas 1952 69 with n 15 on the club 72 6 Stevenson Robert Loui 2001 Selected Letters of Robert Louis Stevenson New Have CT Yale University Press p 29 ISBN 0 300 09124 9 Retrieved 23 October 2020 Colvin Sidney ed 1917 The Letters of Robert Louis Stevenson Vol 1 1868 1880 New York Scribner s pp 259 260 Stevenson Robert Louis 8 December 1912 Prayers written at Vailima New York C Scribner s sons Retrieved 8 December 2022 via Internet Archive Robert Louis Stevenson An Apology for Idlers first appeared in Cornhill Magazine July 1877 Wired ISSN 1059 1028 Archived from the original on 11 April 2021 Retrieved 18 March 2021 Furnas 1952 81 2 85 9 Mehew 2004 Furnas 1952 84 5 Furnas 1952 95 101 Balfour 1901 I 123 4 Furnas 1952 105 6 Mehew 2004 Furnas 1952 89 95 Balfour 1901 I 128 37 Furnas 1952 100 1 Balfour 1901 I 127 Shaw Michael ed 2020 A Friendship in Letters Robert Louis Stevenson amp J M Barrie Sandstone Press Inverness ISBN 978 1 913207 02 1 Furnas 1952 122 9 Mehew 2004 Van de Grift Sanchez Nellie 1920 The Life of Mrs Robert Louis Stevenson New York C Scribner s Sons Archived from the original on 13 November 2018 Retrieved 25 October 2020 Balfour 1901 I 145 6 Mehew 2004 Furnas 1952 130 6 Mehew 2004 Balfour 1901 I 164 5 Furnas 1952 142 6 Mehew 2004 Letter to Sidney Colvin January 1880 The Letters of Robert Louis Stevenson Volume 1 Chapter IV To Edmund Gosse Monterey Monterey Co California 8 October 1879 The Letters of Robert Louis Stevenson Volume 1 Chapter IV To P G Hamerton Kinnaird Cottage Pitlochry July 1881 The Letters of Robert Louis Stevenson Volume 1 Chapter V Isobel was married to artist Joseph Strong Hainsworth J J 2015 Jack the Ripper Case Solved 1891 Jefferson NC McFarland p 141 ISBN 978 0 7864 9676 1 Retrieved 15 June 2023 Bournemouth Robert Louis Stevenson robert louis stevenson org Archived from the original on 23 January 2021 Retrieved 29 January 2021 a b O Hagan Andrew 2020 Bournemouth The London Review of Books 42 10 ISSN 0260 9592 Archived from the original on 1 November 2020 Retrieved 4 November 2020 To W E Henley Pitlochry if you please August 1881 The Letters of Robert Louis Stevenson Volume 1 Chapter V a b Robert Louis Stevenson Biography people brandeis edu Brandeis University Archived from the original on 23 February 2021 Retrieved 27 October 2020 Stevenson Robert Louis A Humble Remonstrance PDF Archived PDF from the original on 1 February 2021 Retrieved 27 October 2020 Livesey Margot November 1994 The Double Life of Robert Louis Stevenson The Atlantic Archived from the original on 28 October 2020 Retrieved 26 October 2020 Stevenson Robert Louis 1907 originally written 1877 Crabbed Age and Youth Crabbed Age and Youth and Other Essays Portland Maine Thomas B Mosher pp 11 12 Terry R C ed 1996 Robert Louis Stevenson Interviews and Recollections Iowa City U of Iowa P p 30 ISBN 978 0 87745 512 7 Reginald Charles Terry 1996 Robert Louis Stevenson Interviews and Recollections p 49 University of Iowa Press Goldberg David Theo 2008 Liberalism s Limits Carlyle and Mill on the Negro Question Nineteenth Century Contexts Vol XX No 2 pp 203 216 Cumming Mark 2004 The Carlyle Encyclopedia Archived 10 May 2023 at the Wayback Machine Fairleigh Dickinson University Press p 223 ISBN 978 0 8386 3792 0 Stevenson Robert Louis 1887 The Contemporary Review Vol LI April pp 472 479 Robert Louis Stevenson National Library of Scotland digital nls uk Archived from the original on 27 September 2022 Retrieved 8 December 2022 Collected Works pp 286 287 Collected Works pp 288 Collected Works pp 287 288 Stevenson Robert Louis 1921 Confessions of a Unionist Cambridge Massachusetts Privately Printed by G G Winchip Archived from the original on 15 August 2021 Retrieved 27 October 2020 Quoted from Stevenson s diary in Overton Jacqueline M The Life of Robert Louis Stevenson for Boys and Girls Archived 12 October 2008 at the Wayback Machine New York Charles Scribner s Sons 1933 In the South Seas 1896 amp 1900 Chatto amp Windus republished by The Hogarth Press 1987 A collection of Stevenson s articles and essays on his travels in the Pacific a b In the South Seas 1896 amp 1900 Chatto amp Windus republished by The Hogarth Press 1987 The Cruise of the Janet Nichol Among the South Sea Islands Mrs Robert Louis Stevenson Charles Scribner s Sons New York 1914 The Cruise of the Janet Nichol among the South Sea Islands A Diary by Mrs Robert Louis Stevenson first published 1914 republished 2004 editor Roslyn Jolly U of Washington Press U of New South Wales Press Selected Letters of Robert Louis Stevenson ed by Ernest Mehew New Haven amp London Yale University Press 2001 p 418 n 3 Robert Louis Stevenson The Wrecker in Tales of the South Seas Island Landfalls The Ebb Tide The Wrecker Edinburgh Canongate Classics 1996 ed and introduced by Jenni Calder Memories of Vailima by Isobel Strong amp Lloyd Osbourne Archibald Constable amp Co Westminster 1903 a b Farrell Joseph 8 September 2019 The story of Samoa s love for Robert Louis Stevenson The National Archived from the original on 27 October 2020 Retrieved 24 October 2020 Jamie Kathleen 20 August 2017 Scot of the South Seas Robert Louis Stevenson in Samoa New Statesman Archived from the original on 27 October 2020 Retrieved 24 October 2020 a b c Farrell Joseph 2017 Robert Louis Stevenson in Samoa London Maclehose Press ISBN 978 0 85705 995 6 a b c d Jenni Calder Introduction Stevenson Robert Louis 1987 Island Landfalls Edinburgh Cannongate ISBN 0 86241 144 0 Letter to Sidney Colvin 17 April 1893 Vailima Letters Chapter XXVIII Graeber David Wengrow David 19 October 2021 The Dawn of Everything A New History of Humanity Penguin Books Limited p 149 ISBN 978 0 241 40245 0 Lang Andrew 1911 The Works of Robert Louis Stevenson Vol 25 Appendix II London Chatto and Windus Archived from the original on 27 October 2020 Retrieved 23 October 2020 German Colonies in the Pacific National Library of Australia www nla gov au Archived from the original on 3 February 2021 Retrieved 29 January 2021 Roslyn Jolly editor Robert Louis Stevenson South Sea Tales The World s Classics Oxford University Press 1996 See Introduction Roslyn Jolly Introduction in Robert Louis Stevenson South Sea Tales 1996 Tabachnick Stephen January 2011 Robert Louis Stevenson and Joseph Conrad Writers of Transition review English Literature in Transition 1880 1920 54 2 247 250 Retrieved 24 October 2020 Sandison Alan 1996 Robert Louis Stevenson and the Appearance of Modernism London Palgrave Macmillan pp 317 368 ISBN 978 1 349 39295 7 Robert Louis Stevenson Bibliography Detailed list of works robert louis stevenson org Archived from the original on 4 February 2009 Retrieved 20 April 2008 Letter to Sidney Colvin 3 January 1892 Vailima Letters Chapter XIV Letter to Sidney Colvin December 1893 Vailima Letters Chapter XXXV Stevenson Robert Louis 2006 Robert Allen Armstrong ed An Inland Voyage Including Travels with a Donkey Cosimo Inc p xvi ISBN 978 1 59605 823 1 To H B Baildon Vailima Upolu undated but written in 1891 The Letters of Robert Louis Stevenson Volume 2 Chapter XI Farrell J 2017 Robert Louis Stevenson in Samoa Quercus Publishing p 199 ISBN 978 1 84866 882 9 Archived from the original on 10 March 2023 Retrieved 10 March 2023 Theroux A 2017 Einstein s Beets Mersion Emergent Village Resources for Communities of Faith Series in German Fantagraphics Books p 507 ISBN 978 1 60699 976 9 Archived from the original on 10 March 2023 Retrieved 10 March 2023 Stevenson s tomb National Library of Scotland Archived from the original on 8 December 2008 Retrieved 20 October 2008 Stevenson Robert Louis 1887 Underwoods London Chatto and Windus p 43 Mattix Micah 4 November 2018 Wide and Starry Sky Washington Examiner Archived from the original on 4 November 2022 Retrieved 21 November 2022 Jolly Roslyn 2009 Robert Louis Stevenson in the Pacific Travel Empire and the Author s Profession Ashgate Publishing Ltd p 160 ISBN 978 0 7546 6195 5 Harry J Moors With Stevenson in Samoa Boston Small Maynard 1910 page 214 1 Bid to trace lost Robert Louis Stevenson manuscripts BBC News 9 July 2010 Archived from the original on 25 September 2015 Retrieved 8 June 2015 Chaney Lisa 2006 Hide and seek with Angels The Life of J M Barrie London Arrow Books ISBN 0 09 945323 1 Dillard R H W 1998 Introduction to Treasure Island New York Signet Classics xiii ISBN 0 451 52704 6 Chesterton Gilbert Keith 1913 The Victorian Age in Literature London Henry Holt and Co p 246 Archived from the original on 29 June 2008 Retrieved 28 July 2008 a b c d e Stephen Arata 2006 Robert Louis Stevenson David Scott Kastan ed The Oxford Encyclopedia of British Literature Vol 5 99 102 introduction to 1965 Everyman s Library edition of the one volume The Prisoner of Zenda and Rupert of Hentzau Top 50 Authors Index Translationum United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization Archived from the original on 12 June 2014 Retrieved 17 January 2019 Muppet Treasure Island Chicago Sun Times 16 February 1996 Archived from the original on 25 January 2019 Retrieved 7 May 2019 Robert Louis Stevenson Memorial St Giles Cathedral Archived from the original on 28 August 2008 Retrieved 20 October 2008 50 199 148 5 8081 view objects asitem 45 97 primaryMaker asc t state flow 92095637 f394 4ee3 9846 f82e8985400e Saint Gaudens Augustus American 1848 1907 Robert Louis Stevenson 1887 88 cast after 1895 accessed 26 February 2015 Petronella Mary Melvin ed Victorian Boston Today Twelve Walking Tours Lebanon N H University Press of New England 2004 p 107 Robert Louis Stevenson Memorial Grove City of Edinburgh Council Archived from the original on 29 October 2013 Retrieved 27 October 2013 a b 27 October 2013 Robert Louis Stevenson statue unveiled by Ian Rankin Archived 28 October 2018 at the Wayback Machine BBC News Scotland Retrieved 27 October 2013 Sean O Connor 27 February 2014 Handsome Brute The True Story of a Ladykiller Simon and Schuster ISBN 978 1 4711 0135 9 Royal Bank Commemorative Notes Rampant Scotland Archived from the original on 25 May 2017 Retrieved 14 October 2008 Our Banknotes Commemorative Banknote The Royal Bank of Scotland Archived from the original on 15 October 2007 Retrieved 20 October 2008 Robert Louis Stevenson School stevenson school org Archived from the original on 23 July 2015 Retrieved 8 June 2015 R L Stevenson Elementary School Archived 19 December 2014 at the Wayback Machine Fridley Public Schools Retrieved 26 January 2014 Robert Louis Stevenson Elementary School Archived 27 December 2022 at the Wayback Machine Burbank Unified School District Retrieved 27 December 2022 Robert Louis Stevenson Elementary robertlouisstevensonschool org Archived from the original on 28 October 2016 Retrieved 29 October 2016 Stevenson Elementary School FAQ s Edline Archived from the original on 26 March 2018 Retrieved 26 March 2018 Robert Louis Stevenson SP Archived 15 October 2017 at the Wayback Machine California Department of Parks and Recreation Retrieved 18 July 2014 Farrell Joseph Robert Louis Stevenson and his meeting with a princess in Hawaii The National Archived from the original on 3 July 2020 Retrieved 6 May 2020 Robert Louis Stevenson Museum Atlas Obscura Archived from the original on 16 May 2021 Retrieved 16 May 2021 Castle Alan 2007 The Robert Louis Stevenson Trail 2nd ed Cicerone ISBN 978 1 85284 511 7 McCracken Edd 20 March 2011 Found Louis Stevenson s missing masterpiece Sunday Herald Glasgow Archived from the original on 9 March 2012 Retrieved 20 March 2011 Robert Louis Stevenson robert louis stevenson org Archived from the original on 8 December 2022 Retrieved 8 December 2022 Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde and Other Tales Robert Louis Stevenson Oxford World s Classics Parfect Ralph Robert Louis Stevenson s The Clockmaker and The Scientific Ape Two Unpublished Fables English Literature in Transition 1880 1920 vol 48 no 4 2005 p 387 400 Project MUSE doi 10 2487 Y008 J320 0428 0742 Sources editBiographies of Stevenson Graham Balfour The Life of Robert Louis Stevenson London Methuen 1901 Calder Jenni RLS A Life Study London Hamish Hamilton 1980 ISBN 0 241 10374 6 Callow Philip 2001 Louis A Life of Robert Louis Stevenson London Constable ISBN 0 09 480180 0 John Jay Chapman Robert Louis Stevenson in Emerson and Other Essays New York AMS Press 1969 ISBN 0 404 00619 1 reprinted from the edition of 1899 David Daiches Robert Louis Stevenson and His World London Thames and Hudson 1973 ISBN 0 500 13045 0 Farrell Joseph Robert Louis Stevenson in Samoa London Maclehose Press 2017 ISBN 978 0 85705 995 6 J C Furnas Voyage to Windward The Life of Robert Louis Stevenson London Faber and Faber 1952 Claire Harman Robert Louis Stevenson A Biography HarperCollins ISBN 0 00 711321 8 reviewed by Matthew Sturgis in The Times Literary Supplement 11 March 2005 page 8 Knight Alanna ed R L S in the South Seas An Intimate Photographic Record Edinburgh Mainstream 1986 ISBN 978 185158013 2 McLynn Frank Robert Louis Stevenson A Biography London Hutchinson 1993 Rosaline Masson Robert Louis Stevenson London The People s Books 1912 Rosaline Masson The Life of Robert Louis Stevenson Edinburgh amp London W amp R Chambers 1923 Rosaline Masson editor I Can Remember Robert Louis Stevenson Edinburgh amp London W amp R Chambers 1923 Ernest Mehew Robert Louis Stevenson Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford OUP 2004 Retrieved 29 September 2008 Roland Paxton Stevenson Thomas 1818 1887 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford OUP 2004 Retrieved 11 October 2008 Pinero Arthur Wing 1903 Robert Louis Stevenson The Dramatist London Philosophical Institution of Edinburgh James Pope Hennessy Robert Louis Stevenson A Biography London Cape 1974 ISBN 0 224 01007 7 Eve Blantyre Simpson Robert Louis Stevenson s Edinburgh Days London Hodder amp Stoughton 1898 Eve Blantyre Simpson The Robert Louis Stevenson Originals With illustrations and facsimiles London amp Edinburgh T N Foulis 1912 Stephen Leslie 1902 Robert Louis Stevenson Studies of a Biographer Vol 4 London Duckworth amp Co pp 206 246 Further reading editClunas Alex R L Stevenson Precursor of the Post Moderns in Murray Glen ed Cencrastus No 6 Autumn 1981 pp 9 11 Gosse Edmund William 1911 Stevenson Robert Lewis Balfour In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 25 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 907 910 Hubbard Tom 1996 Debut at Antwerp The Flanders Chapters of Robert Louis Stevenson s An Inland Voyage in Hubbard Tom 2022 Invitation to the Voyage Scotland Europe and Literature Rymour pp 48 52 ISBN 9 781739 596002 Hubbard Tom 2009 Writing Scottishly on Non Scottish Matters in Hubbard Tom 2022 Invitation to the Voyage Scotland Europe and Literature Rymour pp 135 138 ISBN 9 781739 596002 Shaw Michael ed A Friendship in Letters Robert Louis Stevenson amp J M Barrie Sandstone Press Inverness 2020 ISBN 978 1 913207 02 1External links edit nbsp Wikisource has original works by or about Robert Louis Stevenson nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Robert Louis Stevenson nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Robert Louis Stevenson Works by Robert Louis Stevenson in eBook form at Standard Ebooks Works by Robert Louis Stevenson at Project Gutenberg Works by Robert Louis Stevenson at Faded Page Canada Works by or about Robert Louis Stevenson at Internet Archive Works by Robert Louis Stevenson at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp Robert Louis Stevenson at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database nbsp Early works including books collected and uncollected essays and serialisations from National Library of Scotland Robert Louis Stevenson at the British Library Archival material at Leeds University Library Stuart A Rose Manuscript Archives and Rare Book Library Emory University Robert Louis Stevenson collection circa 1890 1923 Edwin J Beinecke Collection of Robert Louis Stevenson General Collection Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library Yale University Robert Louis Stevenson Collection General Collection Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library Yale University Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Robert Louis Stevenson amp oldid 1196991144, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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