Shop for Robert_Louis_Stevenson at ml-shopping.com

 
Web www.ml-shopping.com

 
Web www.ml-shopping.com

Robert Louis Stevenson

Please expand this article.
This template may be found on the article's talk page, where there may be further information. Alternatively, more information might be found at Requests for expansion.
Please remove this message once the article has been expanded.
Robert Louis Stevenson
Enlarge
Robert Louis Stevenson

Robert Louis (Balfour) Stevenson (November 13, 1850December 3, 1894), was a Scottish novelist, poet, and travel writer.

Contents

Life

Stevenson was born Robert Lewis Balfour Stevenson in Edinburgh, Scotland. His father was Thomas Stevenson and grandfather was Robert Stevenson, both successful lighthouse engineers, and his mother was Margaret Balfour. He studied at Edinburgh Academy in his youth. His parents were both very religious. Robert gave up the religion of his parents while studying at the University of Edinburgh, but the teaching that he received as a child continued to influence him. He actually took up a branch of Christianity called Calvinism as his new religion in college.

Although ill with tuberculosis from childhood, Stevenson had a full life. He began his education as an engineer but, despite his family history, he showed little aptitude and soon switched to studying law. At the age of 18 he dropped the name Balfour and changed his middle name from Lewis to Louis (but retaining the original pronunciation); from this time on he began styling himself RLS. He turned to the law because of poor health, but he never practiced. He ended his life as a tribal leader (called by his tribe Tusitala, meaning "storyteller" in Samoa) and plantation owner at his residence "Vailima" in Samoa, all this in addition to his literary career.

Stevenson's novels of adventure, romance, and horror are of considerable psychological depth and have continued in popularity long after his death, both as books and as films.

His wife Fanny Vandegrift Osbourne, whom he married in 1880 in San Francisco, was a great support in his adventurous and arduous life.

Stevenson travelled to San Francisco in the late 1870s and at one point 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. He also wrote of his visits to the Silverado Hills above the Napa Valley. RLS subsequently made several trips to the Kingdom of Hawaii and became a good friend of King David Kalakaua with whom Stevenson spent much time. Stevenson also became best friends with the king's niece Princess Victoria Kaiulani, also of Scottish heritage. Since the tragic deaths of both Stevenson and Kaiulani, historians have debated the true nature of their relationship as to whether or not they had romantic feelings for each other. Because of the age difference, such stories have often been discredited. In 1888, Stevenson travelled to the island of Molokai just weeks after the death of Father Damien. He spent twelve days at the missionary priest's residence, Bishop Home at Kalawao. Stevenson taught the local girls to play croquet. When Congregationalist and Presbyterian ministers began to defame Father Damien out of spite for his Catholicism, Stevenson wrote one of his most famous essays in defence of the life and work of the missionary priest.

Stevenson died of a cerebral hemorrhage in Vailima in Samoa, aged 44. In his will, he bequeathed his birthday to a little girl, Annie Ide, who had been born on Christmas Day.

Fiction

Poetry

Travel writing

Island literature

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.

Non-fiction works on the Pacific

Island fiction

Works in Scots

Stevenson also wrote poetry and prose in Scots. See ScotsteXt

Musical Compositions

Stevenson was an amateur composer who wrote songs typical of California in the 1880s, salon-type music, entertaining rather than serious. A flageolet player, Stevenson had studied harmony and simple counterpoint and knew such basic instrumental techniques as transposition. Some song titles include Fanfare, Tune for Flageolet, Habanera, Quadrille. Robert Hughes in 1968 arranged for chamber orchestra a number of Stevenson's songs, which went on a tour of the Pacific Northwest in that year. [1]

Further reading

Claire Harman, Robert Louis Stevenson: A Biography, HarperCollins, ISBN 0007113218 [reviewed by Matthew Sturgis in Times Literary Supplement, 11 March 2005, page 8]

Sources

O'Brien, Robert - This is San Francisco, 1948, reprint Chronicle Books 1994

External links

Wikisource
Wikisource has original works written by or about:
Wikiquote has a collection of quotations related to: