12042 lines
601 KiB
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12042 lines
601 KiB
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The Project Gutenberg Etext of Letters of Robert Louis Stevenson
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Volume 2
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#31 in our series by Robert Louis Stevenson
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Letters of Robert Louis Stevenson
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Volume 2
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August, 1996 [Etext #637]
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The Project Gutenberg Etext of Letters of Robert Louis Stevenson
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Volume 2
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*END*THE SMALL PRINT! FOR PUBLIC DOMAIN ETEXTS*Ver.04.29.93*END*
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The Letters of Robert Louis Stevenson, Volume II
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Scanned and proofed by David Price
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ccx074@coventry.ac.uk
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The Letters of Robert Louis Stevenson, Volume II
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CHAPTER VIII - LIFE AT BOURNEMOUTH, CONTINUED, JANUARY 1886-JULY 1887
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Letter: TO MRS. DE MATTOS
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[SKERRYVORE, BOURNEMOUTH], JANUARY 1ST, 1886.
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DEAREST KATHARINE, - Here, on a very little book and accompanied
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with lame verses, I have put your name. Our kindness is now
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getting well on in years; it must be nearly of age; and it gets
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more valuable to me with every time I see you. It is not possible
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to express any sentiment, and it is not necessary to try, at least
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between us. You know very well that I love you dearly, and that I
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always will. I only wish the verses were better, but at least you
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like the story; and it is sent to you by the one that loves you -
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Jekyll, and not Hyde.
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R. L. S.
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AVE!
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Bells upon the city are ringing in the night;
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High above the gardens are the houses full of light;
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On the heathy Pentlands is the curlew flying free;
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And the broom is blowing bonnie in the north countrie.
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We cannae break the bonds that God decreed to bind,
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Still we'll be the children of the heather and the wind;
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Far away from home, O, it's still for you and me
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That the broom is blowing bonnie in the north countrie!
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R. L. S.
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Letter: TO ALISON CUNNINGHAM
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[SKERRYVORE, BOURNEMOUTH], 1ST, 1886.
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MY DEAR KINNICUM, - I am a very bad dog, but not for the first
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time. Your book, which is very interesting, came duly; and I
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immediately got a very bad cold indeed, and have been fit for
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nothing whatever. I am a bit better now, and aye on the mend; so I
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write to tell you, I thought of you on New Year's Day; though, I
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own, it would have been more decent if I had thought in time for
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you to get my letter then. Well, what can't be cured must be
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endured, Mr. Lawrie; and you must be content with what I give. If
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I wrote all the letters I ought to write, and at the proper time, I
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should be very good and very happy; but I doubt if I should do
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anything else.
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I suppose you will be in town for the New Year; and I hope your
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health is pretty good. What you want is diet; but it is as much
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use to tell you that as it is to tell my father. And I quite admit
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a diet is a beastly thing. I doubt, however, if it be as bad as
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not being allowed to speak, which I have tried fully, and do not
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like. When, at the same time, I was not allowed to read, it passed
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a joke. But these are troubles of the past, and on this day, at
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least, it is proper to suppose they won't return. But we are not
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put here to enjoy ourselves: it was not God's purpose; and I am
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prepared to argue, it is not our sincere wish. As for our deserts,
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the less said of them the better, for somebody might hear, and
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nobody cares to be laughed at. A good man is a very noble thing to
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see, but not to himself; what he seems to God is, fortunately, not
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our business; that is the domain of faith; and whether on the first
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of January or the thirty-first of December, faith is a good word to
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end on.
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My dear Cummy, many happy returns to you and my best love. - The
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worst correspondent in the world,
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ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
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Letter: TO MR. AND MRS. THOMAS STEVENSON
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[SKERRYVORE, BOURNEMOUTH], JANUARY 1ST, 1886.
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MY DEAR PEOPLE, - Many happy returns of the day to you all; I am
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fairly well and in good spirits; and much and hopefully occupied
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with dear Jenkin's life. The inquiry in every detail, every letter
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that I read, makes me think of him more nobly. I cannot imagine
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how I got his friendship; I did not deserve it. I believe the
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notice will be interesting and useful.
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My father's last letter, owing to the use of a quill pen and the
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neglect of blotting-paper, was hopelessly illegible. Every one
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tried, and every one failed to decipher an important word on which
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the interest of one whole clause (and the letter consisted of two)
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depended.
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I find I can make little more of this; but I'll spare the blots. -
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Dear people, ever your loving son,
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R. L. S.
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I will try again, being a giant refreshed by the house being empty.
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The presence of people is the great obstacle to letter-writing. I
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deny that letters should contain news (I mean mine; those of other
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people should). But mine should contain appropriate sentiments and
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humorous nonsense, or nonsense without the humour. When the house
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is empty, the mind is seized with a desire - no, that is too strong
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- a willingness to pour forth unmitigated rot, which constitutes
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(in me) the true spirit of correspondence. When I have no remarks
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to offer (and nobody to offer them to), my pen flies, and you see
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the remarkable consequence of a page literally covered with words
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and genuinely devoid of sense. I can always do that, if quite
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alone, and I like doing it; but I have yet to learn that it is
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beloved by correspondents. The deuce of it is, that there is no
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end possible but the end of the paper; and as there is very little
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left of that - if I cannot stop writing - suppose you give up
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reading. It would all come to the same thing; and I think we
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should all be happier...
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Letter: TO W. H. LOW
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[SKERRYVORE, BOURNEMOUTH], JAN. 2ND, 1886.
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MY DEAR LOW, - LAMIA has come, and I do not know how to thank you,
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not only for the beautiful art of the designs, but for the handsome
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and apt words of the dedication. My favourite is 'Bathes unseen,'
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which is a masterpiece; and the next, 'Into the green recessed
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woods,' is perhaps more remarkable, though it does not take my
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fancy so imperiously. The night scene at Corinth pleases me also.
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The second part offers fewer opportunities. I own I should like to
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see both ISABELLA and the EVE thus illustrated; and then there's
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HYPERION - O, yes, and ENDYMION! I should like to see the lot:
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beautiful pictures dance before me by hundreds: I believe ENDYMION
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would suit you best. It also is in faery-land; and I see a hundred
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opportunities, cloudy and flowery glories, things as delicate as
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the cobweb in the bush; actions, not in themselves of any mighty
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purport, but made for the pencil: the feast of Pan, Peona's isle,
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the 'slabbed margin of a well,' the chase of the butterfly, the
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nymph, Glaucus, Cybele, Sleep on his couch, a farrago of
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unconnected beauties. But I divagate; and all this sits in the
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bosom of the publisher.
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What is more important, I accept the terms of the dedication with a
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frank heart, and the terms of your Latin legend fairly. The sight
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of your pictures has once more awakened me to my right mind;
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something may come of it; yet one more bold push to get free of
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this prisonyard of the abominably ugly, where I take my daily
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exercise with my contemporaries. I do not know, I have a feeling
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in my bones, a sentiment which may take on the forms of
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imagination, or may not. If it does, I shall owe it to you; and
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the thing will thus descend from Keats even if on the wrong side of
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the blanket. If it can be done in prose - that is the puzzle - I
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divagate again. Thank you again: you can draw and yet you do not
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love the ugly: what are you doing in this age? Flee, while it is
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yet time; they will have your four limbs pinned upon a stable door
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to scare witches. The ugly, my unhappy friend, is DE RIGUEUR: it
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is the only wear! What a chance you threw away with the serpent!
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Why had Apollonius no pimples? Heavens, my dear Low, you do not
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know your business....
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I send you herewith a Gothic gnome for your Greek nymph; but the
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gnome is interesting, I think, and he came out of a deep mine,
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where he guards the fountain of tears. It is not always the time
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to rejoice. - Yours ever,
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R. L. S.
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The gnome's name is JEKYLL & HYDE; I believe you will find he is
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likewise quite willing to answer to the name of Low or Stevenson.
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SAME DAY. - I have copied out on the other sheet some bad verses,
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which somehow your picture suggested; as a kind of image of things
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that I pursue and cannot reach, and that you seem - no, not to have
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reached - but to have come a thought nearer to than I. This is the
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life we have chosen: well, the choice was mad, but I should make
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it again.
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What occurs to me is this: perhaps they might be printed in (say)
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the CENTURY for the sake of my name; and if that were possible,
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they might advertise your book. It might be headed as sent in
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acknowledgment of your LAMIA. Or perhaps it might be introduced by
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the phrases I have marked above. I dare say they would stick it
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in: I want no payment, being well paid by LAMIA. If they are not,
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keep them to yourself.
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TO WILL H. LOW
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DAMNED BAD LINES IN RETURN FOR A BEAUTIFUL BOOK
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Youth now flees on feathered foot.
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Faint and fainter sounds the flute;
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Rarer songs of Gods.
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And still,
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Somewhere on the sunny hill,
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Or along the winding stream,
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Through the willows, flits a dream;
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Flits, but shows a smiling face,
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Flees, but with so quaint a grace,
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None can choose to stay at home,
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All must follow - all must roam.
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This is unborn beauty: she
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Now in air floats high and free,
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Takes the sun, and breaks the blue; -
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Late, with stooping pinion flew
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Raking hedgerow trees, and wet
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Her wing in silver streams, and set
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Shining foot on temple roof.
|
|
Now again she flies aloof,
|
|
Coasting mountain clouds, and kissed
|
|
By the evening's amethyst.
|
|
In wet wood and miry lane
|
|
Still we pound and pant in vain;
|
|
Still with earthy foot we chase
|
|
Waning pinion, fainting face;
|
|
Still, with grey hair, we stumble on
|
|
Till - behold! - the vision gone!
|
|
Where has fleeting beauty led?
|
|
To the doorway of the dead!
|
|
qy. omit? [Life is gone, but life was gay:
|
|
We have come the primrose way!]
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO EDMUND GOSSE
|
|
|
|
SKERRYVORE, BOURNEMOUTH, JAN. 2ND, 1886.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR GOSSE, - Thank you for your letter, so interesting to my
|
|
vanity. There is a review in the St. James's, which, as it seems
|
|
to hold somewhat of your opinions, and is besides written with a
|
|
pen and not a poker, we think may possibly be yours. The PRINCE
|
|
has done fairly well in spite of the reviews, which have been bad:
|
|
he was, as you doubtless saw, well slated in the SATURDAY; one
|
|
paper received it as a child's story; another (picture my agony)
|
|
described it as a 'Gilbert comedy.' It was amusing to see the race
|
|
between me and Justin M'Carthy: the Milesian has won by a length.
|
|
|
|
That is the hard part of literature. You aim high, and you take
|
|
longer over your work, and it will not be so successful as if you
|
|
had aimed low and rushed it. What the public likes is work (of any
|
|
kind) a little loosely executed; so long as it is a little wordy, a
|
|
little slack, a little dim and knotless, the dear public likes it;
|
|
it should (if possible) be a little dull into the bargain. I know
|
|
that good work sometimes hits; but, with my hand on my heart, I
|
|
think it is by an accident. And I know also that good work must
|
|
succeed at last; but that is not the doing of the public; they are
|
|
only shamed into silence or affectation. I do not write for the
|
|
public; I do write for money, a nobler deity; and most of all for
|
|
myself, not perhaps any more noble, but both more intelligent and
|
|
nearer home.
|
|
|
|
Let us tell each other sad stories of the bestiality of the beast
|
|
whom we feed. What he likes is the newspaper; and to me the press
|
|
is the mouth of a sewer, where lying is professed as from an
|
|
university chair, and everything prurient, and ignoble, and
|
|
essentially dull, finds its abode and pulpit. I do not like
|
|
mankind; but men, and not all of these - and fewer women. As for
|
|
respecting the race, and, above all, that fatuous rabble of
|
|
burgesses called 'the public,' God save me from such irreligion! -
|
|
that way lies disgrace and dishonour. There must be something
|
|
wrong in me, or I would not be popular.
|
|
|
|
This is perhaps a trifle stronger than my sedate and permanent
|
|
opinion. Not much, I think. As for the art that we practise, I
|
|
have never been able to see why its professors should be respected.
|
|
They chose the primrose path; when they found it was not all
|
|
primroses, but some of it brambly, and much of it uphill, they
|
|
began to think and to speak of themselves as holy martyrs. But a
|
|
man is never martyred in any honest sense in the pursuit of his
|
|
pleasure; and DELIRIUM TREMENS has more of the honour of the cross.
|
|
We were full of the pride of life, and chose, like prostitutes, to
|
|
live by a pleasure. We should be paid if we give the pleasure we
|
|
pretend to give; but why should we be honoured?
|
|
|
|
I hope some day you and Mrs. Gosse will come for a Sunday; but we
|
|
must wait till I am able to see people. I am very full of Jenkin's
|
|
life; it is painful, yet very pleasant, to dig into the past of a
|
|
dead friend, and find him, at every spadeful, shine brighter. I
|
|
own, as I read, I wonder more and more why he should have taken me
|
|
to be a friend. He had many and obvious faults upon the face of
|
|
him; the heart was pure gold. I feel it little pain to have lost
|
|
him, for it is a loss in which I cannot believe; I take it, against
|
|
reason, for an absence; if not to-day, then to-morrow, I still
|
|
fancy I shall see him in the door; and then, now when I know him
|
|
better, how glad a meeting! Yes, if I could believe in the
|
|
immortality business, the world would indeed be too good to be
|
|
true; but we were put here to do what service we can, for honour
|
|
and not for hire: the sods cover us, and the worm that never dies,
|
|
the conscience, sleeps well at last; these are the wages, besides
|
|
what we receive so lavishly day by day; and they are enough for a
|
|
man who knows his own frailty and sees all things in the proportion
|
|
of reality. The soul of piety was killed long ago by that idea of
|
|
reward. Nor is happiness, whether eternal or temporal, the reward
|
|
that mankind seeks. Happinesses are but his wayside campings; his
|
|
soul is in the journey; he was born for the struggle, and only
|
|
tastes his life in effort and on the condition that he is opposed.
|
|
How, then, is such a creature, so fiery, so pugnacious, so made up
|
|
of discontent and aspiration, and such noble and uneasy passions -
|
|
how can he be rewarded but by rest? I would not say it aloud; for
|
|
man's cherished belief is that he loves that happiness which he
|
|
continually spurns and passes by; and this belief in some ulterior
|
|
happiness exactly fits him. He does not require to stop and taste
|
|
it; he can be about the rugged and bitter business where his heart
|
|
lies; and yet he can tell himself this fairy tale of an eternal
|
|
tea-party, and enjoy the notion that he is both himself and
|
|
something else; and that his friends will yet meet him, all ironed
|
|
out and emasculate, and still be lovable, - as if love did not live
|
|
in the faults of the beloved only, and draw its breath in an
|
|
unbroken round of forgiveness! But the truth is, we must fight
|
|
until we die; and when we die there can be no quiet for mankind but
|
|
complete resumption into - what? - God, let us say - when all these
|
|
desperate tricks will lie spellbound at last.
|
|
|
|
Here came my dinner and cut this sermon short - EXCUSEZ.
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO JAMES PAYN
|
|
|
|
SKERRYVORE, BOURNEMOUTH, JAN. 2ND, 1886.
|
|
|
|
DEAR JAMES PAYN, - Your very kind letter came very welcome; and
|
|
still more welcome the news that you see -'s tale. I will now tell
|
|
you (and it was very good and very wise of me not to tell it
|
|
before) that he is one of the most unlucky men I know, having put
|
|
all his money into a pharmacy at Hyeres, when the cholera
|
|
(certainly not his fault) swept away his customers in a body. Thus
|
|
you can imagine the pleasure I have to announce to him a spark of
|
|
hope, for he sits to-day in his pharmacy, doing nothing and taking
|
|
nothing, and watching his debts inexorably mount up.
|
|
|
|
To pass to other matters: your hand, you are perhaps aware, is not
|
|
one of those that can be read running; and the name of your
|
|
daughter remains for me undecipherable. I call her, then, your
|
|
daughter - and a very good name too - and I beg to explain how it
|
|
came about that I took her house. The hospital was a point in my
|
|
tale; but there is a house on each side. Now the true house is the
|
|
one before the hospital: is that No. 11? If not, what do you
|
|
complain of? If it is, how can I help what is true? Everything in
|
|
the DYNAMITER is not true; but the story of the Brown Box is, in
|
|
almost every particular; I lay my hand on my heart and swear to it.
|
|
It took place in that house in 1884; and if your daughter was in
|
|
that house at the time, all I can say is she must have kept very
|
|
bad society.
|
|
|
|
But I see you coming. Perhaps your daughter's house has not a
|
|
balcony at the back? I cannot answer for that; I only know that
|
|
side of Queen Square from the pavement and the back windows of
|
|
Brunswick Row. Thence I saw plenty of balconies (terraces rather);
|
|
and if there is none to the particular house in question, it must
|
|
have been so arranged to spite me.
|
|
|
|
I now come to the conclusion of this matter. I address three
|
|
questions to your daughter:-
|
|
|
|
1st Has her house the proper terrace?
|
|
|
|
2nd. Is it on the proper side of the hospital?
|
|
|
|
3rd. Was she there in the summer of 1884?
|
|
|
|
You see, I begin to fear that Mrs. Desborough may have deceived me
|
|
on some trifling points, for she is not a lady of peddling
|
|
exactitude. If this should prove to be so, I will give your
|
|
daughter a proper certificate, and her house property will return
|
|
to its original value.
|
|
|
|
Can man say more? - Yours very truly,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
I saw the other day that the Eternal had plagiarised from LOST SIR
|
|
MASSINGBERD: good again, sir! I wish he would plagiarise the
|
|
death of Zero.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO W. H. LOW
|
|
|
|
SKERRYVORE, BOURNEMOUTH, JAN. SOMETHINGOROTHER-TH, 1886.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR LOW, - I send you two photographs: they are both done by
|
|
Sir Percy Shelley, the poet's son, which may interest. The sitting
|
|
down one is, I think, the best; but if they choose that, see that
|
|
the little reflected light on the nose does not give me a turn-up;
|
|
that would be tragic. Don't forget 'Baronet' to Sir Percy's name.
|
|
|
|
We all think a heap of your book; and I am well pleased with my
|
|
dedication. - Yours ever,
|
|
|
|
R. L. STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
P.S. - APROPOS of the odd controversy about Shelley's nose: I have
|
|
before me four photographs of myself, done by Shelley's son: my
|
|
nose is hooked, not like the eagle, indeed, but like the
|
|
accipitrine family in man: well, out of these four, only one marks
|
|
the bend, one makes it straight, and one suggests a turn-up. This
|
|
throws a flood of light on calumnious man - and the scandal-
|
|
mongering sun. For personally I cling to my curve. To continue
|
|
the Shelley controversy: I have a look of him, all his sisters had
|
|
noses like mine; Sir Percy has a marked hook; all the family had
|
|
high cheek-bones like mine; what doubt, then, but that this turn-up
|
|
(of which Jeaffreson accuses the poet, along with much other
|
|
FATRAS) is the result of some accident similar to what has happened
|
|
in my photographs by his son?
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO THOMAS STEVENSON
|
|
|
|
[SKERRYVORE, BOURNEMOUTH, JANUARY 25, 1886.]
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR FATHER, - Many thanks for a letter quite like yourself. I
|
|
quite agree with you, and had already planned a scene of religion
|
|
in BALFOUR; the Society for the Propagation of Christian Knowledge
|
|
furnishes me with a catechist whom I shall try to make the man. I
|
|
have another catechist, the blind, pistol-carrying highway robber,
|
|
whom I have transferred from the Long Island to Mull. I find it a
|
|
most picturesque period, and wonder Scott let it escape. The
|
|
COVENANT is lost on one of the Tarrans, and David is cast on
|
|
Earraid, where (being from inland) he is nearly starved before he
|
|
finds out the island is tidal; then he crosses Mull to Toronsay,
|
|
meeting the blind catechist by the way; then crosses Morven from
|
|
Kinlochaline to Kingairloch, where he stays the night with the good
|
|
catechist; that is where I am; next day he is to be put ashore in
|
|
Appin, and be present at Colin Campbell's death. To-day I rest,
|
|
being a little run down. Strange how liable we are to brain fag in
|
|
this scooty family! But as far as I have got, all but the last
|
|
chapter, I think David is on his feet, and (to my mind) a far
|
|
better story and far sounder at heart than TREASURE ISLAND.
|
|
|
|
I have no earthly news, living entirely in my story, and only
|
|
coming out of it to play patience. The Shelleys are gone; the
|
|
Taylors kinder than can be imagined. The other day, Lady Taylor
|
|
drove over and called on me; she is a delightful old lady, and
|
|
great fun. I mentioned a story about the Duchess of Wellington
|
|
which I had heard Sir Henry tell; and though he was very tired, he
|
|
looked it up and copied it out for me in his own hand. - Your most
|
|
affectionate son,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO C. W. STODDARD
|
|
|
|
SKERRYVORE, BOURNEMOUTH, FEB. 13TH, 1886.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR STODDARD, - I am a dreadful character; but, you see, I have
|
|
at last taken pen in hand; how long I may hold it, God knows. This
|
|
is already my sixth letter to-day, and I have many more waiting;
|
|
and my wrist gives me a jog on the subject of scrivener's cramp,
|
|
which is not encouraging.
|
|
|
|
I gather you were a little down in the jaw when you wrote your
|
|
last. I am as usual pretty cheerful, but not very strong. I stay
|
|
in the house all winter, which is base; but, as you continue to
|
|
see, the pen goes from time to time, though neither fast enough nor
|
|
constantly enough to please me.
|
|
|
|
My wife is at Bath with my father and mother, and the interval of
|
|
widowery explains my writing. Another person writing for you when
|
|
you have done work is a great enemy to correspondence. To-day I
|
|
feel out of health, and shan't work; and hence this so much overdue
|
|
reply.
|
|
|
|
I was re-reading some of your South Sea Idyls the other day: some
|
|
of the chapters are very good indeed; some pages as good as they
|
|
can be.
|
|
|
|
How does your class get along? If you like to touch on OTTO, any
|
|
day in a by-hour, you may tell them - as the author's last dying
|
|
confession - that it is a strange example of the difficulty of
|
|
being ideal in an age of realism; that the unpleasant giddy-
|
|
mindedness, which spoils the book and often gives it a wanton air
|
|
of unreality and juggling with air-bells, comes from unsteadiness
|
|
of key; from the too great realism of some chapters and passages -
|
|
some of which I have now spotted, others I dare say I shall never
|
|
spot - which disprepares the imagination for the cast of the
|
|
remainder.
|
|
|
|
Any story can be made TRUE in its own key; any story can be made
|
|
FALSE by the choice of a wrong key of detail or style: Otto is
|
|
made to reel like a drunken - I was going to say man, but let us
|
|
substitute cipher - by the variations of the key. Have you
|
|
observed that the famous problem of realism and idealism is one
|
|
purely of detail? Have you seen my 'Note on Realism' in Cassell's
|
|
MAGAZINE OF ART; and 'Elements of Style' in the CONTEMPORARY; and
|
|
'Romance' and 'Humble Apology' in LONGMAN'S? They are all in your
|
|
line of business; let me know what you have not seen and I'll send
|
|
'em.
|
|
|
|
I am glad I brought the old house up to you. It was a pleasant old
|
|
spot, and I remember you there, though still more dearly in your
|
|
own strange den upon a hill in San Francisco; and one of the most
|
|
San Francisco-y parts of San Francisco.
|
|
|
|
Good-bye, my dear fellow, and believe me your friend,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO J. A. SYMONDS
|
|
|
|
SKERRYVORE, BOURNEMOUTH [SPRING 1886].
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR SYMONDS, - If we have lost touch, it is (I think) only in a
|
|
material sense; a question of letters, not hearts. You will find a
|
|
warm welcome at Skerryvore from both the lightkeepers; and, indeed,
|
|
we never tell ourselves one of our financial fairy tales, but a run
|
|
to Davos is a prime feature. I am not changeable in friendship;
|
|
and I think I can promise you you have a pair of trusty well-
|
|
wishers and friends in Bournemouth: whether they write or not is
|
|
but a small thing; the flag may not be waved, but it is there.
|
|
|
|
Jekyll is a dreadful thing, I own; but the only thing I feel
|
|
dreadful about is that damned old business of the war in the
|
|
members. This time it came out; I hope it will stay in, in future.
|
|
|
|
Raskolnikoff is easily the greatest book I have read in ten years;
|
|
I am glad you took to it. Many find it dull: Henry James could
|
|
not finish it: all I can say is, it nearly finished me. It was
|
|
like having an illness. James did not care for it because the
|
|
character of Raskolnikoff was not objective; and at that I divined
|
|
a great gulf between us, and, on further reflection, the existence
|
|
of a certain impotence in many minds of to-day, which prevents them
|
|
from living IN a book or a character, and keeps them standing afar
|
|
off, spectators of a puppet show. To such I suppose the book may
|
|
seem empty in the centre; to the others it is a room, a house of
|
|
life, into which they themselves enter, and are tortured and
|
|
purified. The Juge d'Instruction I thought a wonderful, weird,
|
|
touching, ingenious creation: the drunken father, and Sonia, and
|
|
the student friend, and the uncircumscribed, protaplasmic humanity
|
|
of Raskolnikoff, all upon a level that filled me with wonder: the
|
|
execution also, superb in places. Another has been translated -
|
|
HUMILIES ET OFFENSES. It is even more incoherent than LE CRIME ET
|
|
LE CHATIMENT, but breathes much of the same lovely goodness, and
|
|
has passages of power. Dostoieffsky is a devil of a swell, to be
|
|
sure. Have you heard that he became a stout, imperialist
|
|
conservative? It is interesting to know. To something of that
|
|
side, the balance leans with me also in view of the incoherency and
|
|
incapacity of all. The old boyish idea of the march on Paradise
|
|
being now out of season, and all plans and ideas that I hear
|
|
debated being built on a superb indifference to the first
|
|
principles of human character, a helpless desire to acquiesce in
|
|
anything of which I know the worst assails me. Fundamental errors
|
|
in human nature of two sorts stand on the skyline of all this modem
|
|
world of aspirations. First, that it is happiness that men want;
|
|
and second, that happiness consists of anything but an internal
|
|
harmony. Men do not want, and I do not think they would accept,
|
|
happiness; what they live for is rivalry, effort, success - the
|
|
elements our friends wish to eliminate. And, on the other hand,
|
|
happiness is a question of morality - or of immorality, there is no
|
|
difference - and conviction. Gordon was happy in Khartoum, in his
|
|
worst hours of danger and fatigue; Marat was happy, I suppose, in
|
|
his ugliest frenzy; Marcus Aurelius was happy in the detested camp;
|
|
Pepys was pretty happy, and I am pretty happy on the whole, because
|
|
we both somewhat crowingly accepted a VIA MEDIA, both liked to
|
|
attend to our affairs, and both had some success in managing the
|
|
same. It is quite an open question whether Pepys and I ought to be
|
|
happy; on the other hand, there is no doubt that Marat had better
|
|
be unhappy. He was right (if he said it) that he was LA MISERE
|
|
HUMAINE, cureless misery - unless perhaps by the gallows. Death is
|
|
a great and gentle solvent; it has never had justice done it, no,
|
|
not by Whitman. As for those crockery chimney-piece ornaments, the
|
|
bourgeois (QUORUM PARS), and their cowardly dislike of dying and
|
|
killing, it is merely one symptom of a thousand how utterly they
|
|
have got out of touch of life. Their dislike of capital punishment
|
|
and their treatment of their domestic servants are for me the two
|
|
flaunting emblems of their hollowness.
|
|
|
|
God knows where I am driving to. But here comes my lunch.
|
|
|
|
Which interruption, happily for you, seems to have stayed the
|
|
issue. I have now nothing to say, that had formerly such a
|
|
pressure of twaddle. Pray don't fail to come this summer. It will
|
|
be a great disappointment, now it has been spoken of, if you do. -
|
|
Yours ever,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO W. H. LOW
|
|
|
|
[SKERRYVORE, BOURNEMOUTH, MARCH 1886.]
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR LOW, - This is the most enchanting picture. Now understand
|
|
my state: I am really an invalid, but of a mysterious order. I
|
|
might be a MALADE IMAGINAIRE, but for one too tangible symptom, my
|
|
tendency to bleed from the lungs. If we could go, (1ST) We must
|
|
have money enough to travel with LEISURE AND COMFORT - especially
|
|
the first. (2ND) You must be prepared for a comrade who would go
|
|
to bed some part of every day and often stay silent (3RD) You
|
|
would have to play the part of a thoughtful courier, sparing me
|
|
fatigue, looking out that my bed was warmed, etc. (4TH) If you are
|
|
very nervous, you must recollect a bad haemorrhage is always on the
|
|
cards, with its concomitants of anxiety and horror for those who
|
|
are beside me.
|
|
|
|
Do you blench? If so, let us say no more about it.
|
|
|
|
If you are still unafraid, and the money were forthcoming, I
|
|
believe the trip might do me good, and I feel sure that, working
|
|
together, we might produce a fine book. The Rhone is the river of
|
|
Angels. I adore it: have adored it since I was twelve, and first
|
|
saw it from the train.
|
|
|
|
Lastly, it would depend on how I keep from now on. I have stood
|
|
the winter hitherto with some credit, but the dreadful weather
|
|
still continues, and I cannot holloa till I am through the wood.
|
|
|
|
Subject to these numerous and gloomy provisos, I embrace the
|
|
prospect with glorious feelings.
|
|
|
|
I write this from bed, snow pouring without, and no circumstance of
|
|
pleasure except your letter. That, however, counts for much. I am
|
|
glad you liked the doggerel: I have already had a liberal cheque,
|
|
over which I licked my fingers with a sound conscience. I had not
|
|
meant to make money by these stumbling feet, but if it comes, it is
|
|
only too welcome in my handsome but impecunious house.
|
|
|
|
Let me know soon what is to be expected - as far as it does not
|
|
hang by that inconstant quantity, my want of health. Remember me
|
|
to Madam with the best thanks and wishes; and believe me your
|
|
friend,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO MRS. FLEEMING JENKIN
|
|
|
|
[SKERRYVORE, BOURNEMOUTH, APRIL 1886.]
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR MRS. JENKIN, - I try to tell myself it is good nature, but
|
|
I know it is vanity that makes me write.
|
|
|
|
I have drafted the first part of Chapter VI., Fleeming and his
|
|
friends, his influence on me, his views on religion and literature,
|
|
his part at the Savile; it should boil down to about ten pages, and
|
|
I really do think it admirably good. It has so much evoked
|
|
Fleeming for myself that I found my conscience stirred just as it
|
|
used to be after a serious talk with him: surely that means it is
|
|
good? I had to write and tell you, being alone.
|
|
|
|
I have excellent news of Fanny, who is much better for the change.
|
|
My father is still very yellow, and very old, and very weak, but
|
|
yesterday he seemed happier, and smiled, and followed what was
|
|
said; even laughed, I think. When he came away, he said to me,
|
|
'Take care of yourself, my dearie,' which had a strange sound of
|
|
childish days, and will not leave my mind.
|
|
|
|
You must get Litolf's GAVOTTES CELEBRES: I have made another
|
|
trover there: a musette of Lully's. The second part of it I have
|
|
not yet got the hang of; but the first - only a few bars! The
|
|
gavotte is beautiful and pretty hard, I think, and very much of the
|
|
period; and at the end of it, this musette enters with the most
|
|
really thrilling effect of simple beauty. O - it's first-rate. I
|
|
am quite mad over it. If you find other books containing Lully,
|
|
Rameau, Martini, please let me know; also you might tell me, you
|
|
who know Bach, where the easiest is to be found. I write all
|
|
morning, come down, and never leave the piano till about five;
|
|
write letters, dine, get down again about eight, and never leave
|
|
the piano till I go to bed. This is a fine life. - Yours most
|
|
sincerely,
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
|
|
|
|
If you get the musette (Lully's), please tell me if I am right, and
|
|
it was probably written for strings. Anyway, it is as neat as - as
|
|
neat as Bach - on the piano; or seems so to my ignorance.
|
|
|
|
I play much of the Rigadoon but it is strange, it don't come off
|
|
QUITE so well with me!
|
|
|
|
[Musical score which cannot be reproduced]
|
|
|
|
There is the first part of the musette copied (from memory, so I
|
|
hope there's nothing wrong). Is it not angelic? But it ought, of
|
|
course, to have the gavotte before. The gavotte is in G, and ends
|
|
on the keynote thus (if I remember):-
|
|
|
|
[Musical score which cannot be reproduced]
|
|
|
|
staccato, I think. Then you sail into the musette.
|
|
|
|
N.B. - Where I have put an 'A,' is that a dominant eleventh, or
|
|
what? or just a seventh on the D? and if the latter, is that
|
|
allowed? It sounds very funny. Never mind all my questions; if I
|
|
begin about music (which is my leading ignorance and curiosity), I
|
|
have always to babble questions: all my friends know me now, and
|
|
take no notice whatever. The whole piece is marked allegro; but
|
|
surely could easily be played too fast? The dignity must not be
|
|
lost; the periwig feeling.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO THOMAS STEVENSON
|
|
|
|
[SKERRYVORE, BOURNEMOUTH, March 1886.]
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR FATHER, - The David problem has to-day been decided. I am
|
|
to leave the door open for a sequel if the public take to it, and
|
|
this will save me from butchering a lot of good material to no
|
|
purpose. Your letter from Carlisle was pretty like yourself, sir,
|
|
as I was pleased to see; the hand of Jekyll, not the hand of Hyde.
|
|
I am for action quite unfit, and even a letter is beyond me; so
|
|
pray take these scraps at a vast deal more than their intrinsic
|
|
worth. I am in great spirits about David, Colvin agreeing with
|
|
Henley, Fanny, and myself in thinking it far the most human of my
|
|
labours hitherto. As to whether the long-eared British public may
|
|
take to it, all think it more than doubtful; I wish they would, for
|
|
I could do a second volume with ease and pleasure, and Colvin
|
|
thinks it sin and folly to throw away David and Alan Breck upon so
|
|
small a field as this one. - Ever your affectionate son,
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO MRS. FLEEMING JENKIN
|
|
|
|
[SKERRYVORE, BOURNEMOUTH], APRIL 15 OR 16 (THE HOUR NOT BEING
|
|
KNOWN), 1886.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR MRS. JENKIN, - It is I know not what hour of the night; but
|
|
I cannot sleep, have lit the gas, and here goes.
|
|
|
|
First, all your packet arrived: I have dipped into the Schumann
|
|
already with great pleasure. Surely, in what concerns us there is
|
|
a sweet little chirrup; the GOOD WORDS arrived in the morning just
|
|
when I needed it, and the famous notes that I had lost were
|
|
recovered also in the nick of time.
|
|
|
|
And now I am going to bother you with my affairs: premising,
|
|
first, that this is PRIVATE; second, that whatever I do the LIFE
|
|
shall be done first, and I am getting on with it well; and third,
|
|
that I do not quite know why I consult you, but something tells me
|
|
you will hear with fairness.
|
|
|
|
Here is my problem. The Curtin women are still miserable
|
|
prisoners; no one dare buy their farm of them, all the manhood of
|
|
England and the world stands aghast before a threat of murder. (1)
|
|
Now, my work can be done anywhere; hence I can take up without loss
|
|
a back-going Irish farm, and live on, though not (as I had
|
|
originally written) in it: First Reason. (2) If I should be
|
|
killed, there are a good many who would feel it: writers are so
|
|
much in the public eye, that a writer being murdered would attract
|
|
attention, throw a bull's-eye light upon this cowardly business:
|
|
Second Reason. (3) I am not unknown in the States, from which the
|
|
funds come that pay for these brutalities: to some faint extent,
|
|
my death (if I should be killed) would tell there: Third Reason.
|
|
(4) NOBODY ELSE IS TAKING UP THIS OBVIOUS AND CRYING DULY: Fourth
|
|
Reason. (5) I have a crazy health and may die at any moment, my
|
|
life is of no purchase in an insurance office, it is the less
|
|
account to husband it, and the business of husbanding a life is
|
|
dreary and demoralising: Fifth Reason.
|
|
|
|
I state these in no order, but as they occur to me. And I shall do
|
|
the like with the objections.
|
|
|
|
First Objection: It will do no good; you have seen Gordon die and
|
|
nobody minded; nobody will mind if you die. This is plainly of the
|
|
devil. Second Objection: You will not even be murdered, the
|
|
climate will miserably kill you, you will strangle out in a rotten
|
|
damp heat, in congestion, etc. Well, what then? It changes
|
|
nothing: the purpose is to brave crime; let me brave it, for such
|
|
time and to such an extent as God allows. Third Objection: The
|
|
Curtin women are probably highly uninteresting females. I haven't
|
|
a doubt of it. But the Government cannot, men will not, protect
|
|
them. If I am the only one to see this public duty, it is to the
|
|
public and the Right I should perform it - not to Mesdames Curtin.
|
|
Fourth Objection: I am married. 'I have married a wife!' I seem
|
|
to have heard it before. It smells ancient! what was the context?
|
|
Fifth Objection: My wife has had a mean life (1), loves me (2),
|
|
could not bear to lose me (3). (1) I admit: I am sorry. (2) But
|
|
what does she love me for? and (3) she must lose me soon or late.
|
|
And after all, because we run this risk, it does not follow we
|
|
should fail. Sixth Objection: My wife wouldn't like it. No, she
|
|
wouldn't. Who would? But the Curtins don't like it. And all
|
|
those who are to suffer if this goes on, won't like it. And if
|
|
there is a great wrong, somebody must suffer. Seventh Objection:
|
|
I won't like it. No, I will not; I have thought it through, and I
|
|
will not. But what of that? And both she and I may like it more
|
|
than we suppose. We shall lose friends, all comforts, all society:
|
|
so has everybody who has ever done anything; but we shall have some
|
|
excitement, and that's a fine thing; and we shall be trying to do
|
|
the right, and that's not to be despised. Eighth Objection: I am
|
|
an author with my work before me. See Second Reason. Ninth
|
|
Objection: But am I not taken with the hope of excitement? I was
|
|
at first. I am not much now. I see what a dreary, friendless,
|
|
miserable, God-forgotten business it will be. And anyway, is not
|
|
excitement the proper reward of doing anything both right and a
|
|
little dangerous? Tenth Objection: But am I not taken with a
|
|
notion of glory? I dare say I am. Yet I see quite clearly how all
|
|
points to nothing coming, to a quite inglorious death by disease
|
|
and from the lack of attendance; or even if I should be knocked on
|
|
the head, as these poor Irish promise, how little any one will
|
|
care. It will be a smile at a thousand breakfast-tables. I am
|
|
nearly forty now; I have not many illusions. And if I had? I do
|
|
not love this health-tending, housekeeping life of mine. I have a
|
|
taste for danger, which is human, like the fear of it. Here is a
|
|
fair cause; a just cause; no knight ever set lance in rest for a
|
|
juster. Yet it needs not the strength I have not, only the passive
|
|
courage that I hope I could muster, and the watchfulness that I am
|
|
sure I could learn.
|
|
|
|
Here is a long midnight dissertation; with myself; with you.
|
|
Please let me hear. But I charge you this: if you see in this
|
|
idea of mine the finger of duty, do not dissuade me. I am nearing
|
|
forty, I begin to love my ease and my home and my habits, I never
|
|
knew how much till this arose; do not falsely counsel me to put my
|
|
head under the bed-clothes. And I will say this to you: my wife,
|
|
who hates the idea, does not refuse. 'It is nonsense,' says she,
|
|
'but if you go, I will go.' Poor girl, and her home and her garden
|
|
that she was so proud of! I feel her garden most of all, because
|
|
it is a pleasure (I suppose) that I do not feel myself to share.
|
|
|
|
1. Here is a great wrong.
|
|
2. " growing wrong.
|
|
3. " wrong founded on crime.
|
|
4. " crime that the Government cannot prevent.
|
|
5. " crime that it occurs to no man to defy.
|
|
6. But it has occurred to me.
|
|
7. Being a known person, some will notice my defiance.
|
|
8. Being a writer, I can MAKE people notice it.
|
|
9. And, I think, MAKE people imitate me.
|
|
10. Which would destroy in time this whole scaffolding of
|
|
oppression.
|
|
11. And if I fail, however ignominiously, that is not my concern.
|
|
It is, with an odd mixture of reverence and humorous remembrances
|
|
of Dickens, be it said - it is A-nother's.
|
|
|
|
And here, at I cannot think what hour of the morning, I shall dry
|
|
up, and remain, - Yours, really in want of a little help,
|
|
|
|
R. L S.
|
|
|
|
Sleepless at midnight's dewy hour.
|
|
" " witching "
|
|
" " maudlin "
|
|
" " etc.
|
|
|
|
NEXT MORNING. - Eleventh Objection: I have a father and mother.
|
|
And who has not? Macduff's was a rare case; if we must wait for a
|
|
Macduff. Besides, my father will not perhaps be long here.
|
|
Twelfth Objection: The cause of England in Ireland is not worth
|
|
supporting. A QUI LE DITES-VOUS? And I am not supporting that.
|
|
Home Rule, if you like. Cause of decency, the idea that
|
|
populations should not be taught to gain public ends by private
|
|
crime, the idea that for all men to bow before a threat of crime is
|
|
to loosen and degrade beyond redemption the whole fabric of man's
|
|
decency.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO MRS. FLEEMING JENKIN
|
|
|
|
[SKERRYVORE, BOURNEMOUTH, APRIL 1886.]
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR MRS. JENKIN, - The Book - It is all drafted: I hope soon
|
|
to send you for comments Chapters III., IV., and V. Chapter VII.
|
|
is roughly but satisfactorily drafted: a very little work should
|
|
put that to rights. But Chapter VI. is no joke; it is a MARE
|
|
MAGNUM: I swim and drown and come up again; and it is all broken
|
|
ends and mystification: moreover, I perceive I am in want of more
|
|
matter. I must have, first of all, a little letter from Mr. Ewing
|
|
about the phonograph work: IF you think he would understand it is
|
|
quite a matter of chance whether I use a word or a fact out of it.
|
|
If you think he would not: I will go without. Also, could I have
|
|
a look at Ewing's PRECIS? And lastly, I perceive I must interview
|
|
you again about a few points; they are very few, and might come to
|
|
little; and I propose to go on getting things as well together as I
|
|
can in the meanwhile, and rather have a final time when all is
|
|
ready and only to be criticised. I do still think it will be good.
|
|
I wonder if Trelat would let me cut? But no, I think I wouldn't
|
|
after all; 'tis so quaint and pretty and clever and simple and
|
|
French, and gives such a good sight of Fleeming: the plum of the
|
|
book, I think.
|
|
|
|
You misunderstood me in one point: I always hoped to found such a
|
|
society; that was the outside of my dream, and would mean entire
|
|
success. BUT - I cannot play Peter the Hermit. In these days of
|
|
the Fleet Street journalist, I cannot send out better men than
|
|
myself, with wives or mothers just as good as mine, and sisters (I
|
|
may at least say) better, to a danger and a long-drawn dreariness
|
|
that I do not share. My wife says it's cowardice; what brave men
|
|
are the leader-writers! Call it cowardice; it is mine. Mind you,
|
|
I may end by trying to do it by the pen only: I shall not love
|
|
myself if I do; and is it ever a good thing to do a thing for which
|
|
you despise yourself? - even in the doing? And if the thing you do
|
|
is to call upon others to do the thing you neglect? I have never
|
|
dared to say what I feel about men's lives, because my own was in
|
|
the wrong: shall I dare to send them to death? The physician must
|
|
heal himself; he must honestly TRY the path he recommends: if he
|
|
does not even try, should he not be silent?
|
|
|
|
I thank you very heartily for your letter, and for the seriousness
|
|
you brought to it. You know, I think when a serious thing is your
|
|
own, you keep a saner man by laughing at it and yourself as you go.
|
|
So I do not write possibly with all the really somewhat sickened
|
|
gravity I feel. And indeed, what with the book, and this business
|
|
to which I referred, and Ireland, I am scarcely in an enviable
|
|
state. Well, I ought to be glad, after ten years of the worst
|
|
training on earth - valetudinarianism - that I can still be
|
|
troubled by a duty. You shall hear more in time; so far, I am at
|
|
least decided: I will go and see Balfour when I get to London.
|
|
|
|
We have all had a great pleasure: a Mrs. Rawlinson came and
|
|
brought with her a nineteen-year-old daughter, simple, human, as
|
|
beautiful as - herself; I never admired a girl before, you know it
|
|
was my weakness: we are all three dead in love with her. How nice
|
|
to be able to do so much good to harassed people by - yourself!
|
|
Ever yours,
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO MISS RAWLINSON
|
|
|
|
[SKERRYVORE, BOURNEMOUTH, APRIL 1886.]
|
|
|
|
OF the many flowers you brought me,
|
|
Only some were meant to stay,
|
|
And the flower I thought the sweetest
|
|
Was the flower that went away.
|
|
|
|
Of the many flowers you brought me,
|
|
All were fair and fresh and gay,
|
|
But the flower I thought the sweetest
|
|
Was the blossom of the May.
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO MISS MONROE
|
|
|
|
SKERRYVORE, BOURNEMOUTH, MAY 25TH, 1886.
|
|
|
|
DEAR MISS MONROE, - (I hope I have this rightly) I must lose no
|
|
time in thanking you for a letter singularly pleasant to receive.
|
|
It may interest you to know that I read to the signature without
|
|
suspecting my correspondent was a woman; though in one point (a
|
|
reference to the Countess) I might have found a hint of the truth.
|
|
You are not pleased with Otto; since I judge you do not like
|
|
weakness; and no more do I. And yet I have more than tolerance for
|
|
Otto, whose faults are the faults of weakness, but never of ignoble
|
|
weakness, and who seeks before all to be both kind and just.
|
|
Seeks, not succeeds. But what is man? So much of cynicism to
|
|
recognise that nobody does right is the best equipment for those
|
|
who do not wish to be cynics in good earnest. Think better of
|
|
Otto, if my plea can influence you; and this I mean for your own
|
|
sake - not his, poor fellow, as he will never learn your opinion;
|
|
but for yours, because, as men go in this world (and women too),
|
|
you will not go far wrong if you light upon so fine a fellow; and
|
|
to light upon one and not perceive his merits is a calamity. In
|
|
the flesh, of course, I mean; in the book the fault, of course, is
|
|
with my stumbling pen. Seraphina made a mistake about her Otto; it
|
|
begins to swim before me dimly that you may have some traits of
|
|
Seraphina?
|
|
|
|
With true ingratitude you see me pitch upon your exception; but it
|
|
is easier to defend oneself gracefully than to acknowledge praise.
|
|
I am truly glad that you should like my books; for I think I see
|
|
from what you write that you are a reader worth convincing. Your
|
|
name, if I have properly deciphered it, suggests that you may be
|
|
also something of my countrywoman; for it is hard to see where
|
|
Monroe came from, if not from Scotland. I seem to have here a
|
|
double claim on your good nature: being myself pure Scotch and
|
|
having appreciated your letter, make up two undeniable merits
|
|
which, perhaps, if it should be quite without trouble, you might
|
|
reward with your photograph. - Yours truly,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO MISS MONROE
|
|
|
|
[SKERRYVORE, BOURNEMOUTH, JUNE 1886.]
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR MISS MONROE, - I am ill in bed and stupid, incoherently
|
|
stupid; yet I have to answer your letter, and if the answer is
|
|
incomprehensible you must forgive me. You say my letter caused you
|
|
pleasure; I am sure, as it fell out, not near so much as yours has
|
|
brought to me. The interest taken in an author is fragile: his
|
|
next book, or your next year of culture, might see the interest
|
|
frosted or outgrown; and himself, in spite of all, you might
|
|
probably find the most distasteful person upon earth. My case is
|
|
different. I have bad health, am often condemned to silence for
|
|
days together - was so once for six weeks, so that my voice was
|
|
awful to hear when I first used it, like the whisper of a shadow -
|
|
have outlived all my chief pleasures, which were active and
|
|
adventurous, and ran in the open air: and being a person who
|
|
prefers life to art, and who knows it is a far finer thing to be in
|
|
love, or to risk a danger, than to paint the finest picture or
|
|
write the noblest book, I begin to regard what remains to me of my
|
|
life as very shadowy. From a variety of reasons, I am ashamed to
|
|
confess I was much in this humour when your letter came. I had a
|
|
good many troubles; was regretting a high average of sins; had been
|
|
recently reminded that I had outlived some friends, and wondering
|
|
if I had not outlived some friendships; and had just, while
|
|
boasting of better health, been struck down again by my haunting
|
|
enemy, an enemy who was exciting at first, but has now, by the
|
|
iteration of his strokes, become merely annoying and inexpressibly
|
|
irksome. Can you fancy that to a person drawing towards the
|
|
elderly this sort of conjunction of circumstances brings a rather
|
|
aching sense of the past and the future? Well, it was just then
|
|
that your letter and your photograph were brought to me in bed; and
|
|
there came to me at once the most agreeable sense of triumph. My
|
|
books were still young; my words had their good health and could go
|
|
about the world and make themselves welcome; and even (in a shadowy
|
|
and distant sense) make something in the nature of friends for the
|
|
sheer hulk that stays at home and bites his pen over the
|
|
manuscripts. It amused me very much to remember that I had been in
|
|
Chicago, not so many years ago, in my proper person; where I had
|
|
failed to awaken much remark, except from the ticket collector; and
|
|
to think how much more gallant and persuasive were the fellows that
|
|
I now send instead of me, and how these are welcome in that quarter
|
|
to the sitter of Herr Platz, while their author was not very
|
|
welcome even in the villainous restaurant where he tried to eat a
|
|
meal and rather failed.
|
|
|
|
And this leads me directly to a confession. The photograph which
|
|
shall accompany this is not chosen as the most like, but the best-
|
|
looking. Put yourself in my place, and you will call this
|
|
pardonable. Even as it is, even putting forth a flattered
|
|
presentment, I am a little pained; and very glad it is a photograph
|
|
and not myself that has to go; for in this case, if it please you,
|
|
you can tell yourself it is my image - and if it displeased you,
|
|
you can lay the blame on the photographer; but in that, there were
|
|
no help, and the poor author might belie his labours.
|
|
|
|
KIDNAPPED should soon appear; I am afraid you may not like it, as
|
|
it is very unlike PRINCE OTTO in every way; but I am myself a great
|
|
admirer of the two chief characters, Alan and David. VIRGINIBUS
|
|
PUERISQUE has never been issued in the States. I do not think it
|
|
is a book that has much charm for publishers in any land; but I am
|
|
to bring out a new edition in England shortly, a copy of which I
|
|
must try to remember to send you. I say try to remember, because I
|
|
have some superficial acquaintance with myself: and I have
|
|
determined, after a galling discipline, to promise nothing more
|
|
until the day of my death: at least, in this way, I shall no more
|
|
break my word, and I must now try being churlish instead of being
|
|
false.
|
|
|
|
I do not believe you to be the least like Seraphina. Your
|
|
photograph has no trace of her, which somewhat relieves me, as I am
|
|
a good deal afraid of Seraphinas - they do not always go into the
|
|
woods and see the sunrise, and some are so well-mailed that even
|
|
that experience would leave them unaffected and unsoftened. The
|
|
'hair and eyes of several complexions' was a trait taken from
|
|
myself; and I do not bind myself to the opinions of Sir John. In
|
|
this case, perhaps - but no, if the peculiarity is shared by two
|
|
such pleasant persons as you and I (as you and me - the grammatical
|
|
nut is hard), it must be a very good thing indeed, and Sir John
|
|
must be an ass.
|
|
|
|
The BOOK READER notice was a strange jumble of fact and fancy. I
|
|
wish you could have seen my father's old assistant and present
|
|
partner when he heard my father described as an 'inspector of
|
|
lighthouses,' for we are all very proud of the family achievements,
|
|
and the name of my house here in Bournemouth is stolen from one of
|
|
the sea-towers of the Hebrides which are our pyramids and
|
|
monuments. I was never at Cambridge, again; but neglected a
|
|
considerable succession of classes at Edinburgh. But to correct
|
|
that friendly blunderer were to write an autobiography. - And so
|
|
now, with many thanks, believe me yours sincerely,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO R. A. M. STEVENSON
|
|
|
|
SKERRYVORE, BOURNEMOUTH, JULY 1886.
|
|
|
|
SIR, - Your foolish letter was unduly received. There may be
|
|
hidden fifths, and if there are, it shows how dam spontaneous the
|
|
thing was. I could tinker and tic-tac-toe on a piece of paper, but
|
|
scorned the act with a Threnody, which was poured forth like blood
|
|
and water on the groaning organ. If your heart (which was what I
|
|
addressed) remained unmoved, let us refer to the affair no more:
|
|
crystallised emotion, the statement and the reconciliation of the
|
|
sorrows of the race and the individual, is obviously no more to you
|
|
than supping sawdust. Well, well. If ever I write another
|
|
Threnody! My next op. will probably be a Passepied and fugue in G
|
|
(or D).
|
|
|
|
The mind is in my case shrunk to the size and sp. gr. of an aged
|
|
Spanish filbert. O, I am so jolly silly. I now pickle with some
|
|
freedom (1) the refrain of MARTINI'S MOUTONS; (2) SUL MARGINE D'UN
|
|
RIO, arranged for the infant school by the Aged Statesman; (3) the
|
|
first phrase of Bach's musette (Sweet Englishwoman, No. 3), the
|
|
rest of the musette being one prolonged cropper, which I take daily
|
|
for the benefit of my health. All my other works (of which there
|
|
are many) are either arranged (by R. L. Stevenson) for the manly
|
|
and melodious forefinger, or else prolonged and melancholy
|
|
croppers. . . . I find one can get a notion of music very nicely.
|
|
I have been pickling deeply in the Magic Flute; and have arranged
|
|
LA DOVE PRENDE, almost to the end, for two melodious forefingers.
|
|
I am next going to score the really nobler COLOMBA O TORTORELLA for
|
|
the same instruments.
|
|
|
|
This day is published
|
|
The works of Ludwig van Beethoven
|
|
arranged
|
|
and wiederdurchgearbeiteted
|
|
for two melodious forefingers
|
|
by,
|
|
Sir, - Your obedient servant,
|
|
|
|
PIMPERLY STIPPLE.
|
|
|
|
That's a good idea? There's a person called Lenz who actually does
|
|
it - beware his den; I lost eighteenpennies on him, and found the
|
|
bleeding corpses of pieces of music divorced from their keys,
|
|
despoiled of their graces, and even changed in time; I do not wish
|
|
to regard music (nor to be regarded) through that bony Lenz. You
|
|
say you are 'a spumfed idiot'; but how about Lenz? And how about
|
|
me, sir, me?
|
|
|
|
I yesterday sent Lloyd by parcel post, at great expense, an empty
|
|
matchbox and empty cigarette-paper book, a bell from a cat's
|
|
collar, an iron kitchen spoon, and a piece of coal more than half
|
|
the superficies of this sheet of paper. They are now
|
|
(appropriately enough) speeding towards the Silly Isles; I hope he
|
|
will find them useful. By that, and my telegram with prepaid
|
|
answer to yourself, you may judge of my spiritual state. The
|
|
finances have much brightened; and if KIDNAPPED keeps on as it has
|
|
begun, I may be solvent. - Yours,
|
|
|
|
THRENODIAE AVCTOR
|
|
|
|
(The authour of ane Threnodie).
|
|
|
|
Op. 2: Scherzo (in G Major) expressive of the Sense of favours to
|
|
come.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO R. A. M. STEVENSON
|
|
|
|
SKERRYVORE [BOURNEMOUTH, JULY 1886].
|
|
|
|
DEAR BOB, - Herewith another shy; more melancholy than before, but
|
|
I think not so abjectly idiotic. The musical terms seem to be as
|
|
good as in Beethoven, and that, after all, is the great affair.
|
|
Bar the dam bareness of the base, it looks like a piece of real
|
|
music from a distance. I am proud to say it was not made one hand
|
|
at a time; the base was of synchronous birth with the treble; they
|
|
are of the same age, sir, and may God have mercy on their souls! -
|
|
Yours,
|
|
|
|
THE MAESTRO.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO MR. AND MRS. THOMAS STEVENSON
|
|
|
|
SKERRYVORE, BOURNEMOUTH, JULY 7TH, 1886.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR PEOPLE, - It is probably my fault, and not yours, that I
|
|
did not understand. I think it would be well worth trying the
|
|
winter in Bournemouth; but I would only take the house by the month
|
|
- this after mature discussion. My leakage still pursues its
|
|
course; if I were only well, I have a notion to go north and get in
|
|
(if I could) at the inn at Kirkmichael, which has always smiled
|
|
upon me much. If I did well there, we might then meet and do what
|
|
should most smile at the time.
|
|
|
|
Meanwhile, of course, I must not move, and am in a rancid box here,
|
|
feeling the heat a great deal, and pretty tired of things.
|
|
Alexander did a good thing of me at last; it looks like a mixture
|
|
of an aztec idol, a lion, an Indian Rajah, and a woman; and
|
|
certainly represents a mighty comic figure. F. and Lloyd both
|
|
think it is the best thing that has been done of me up to now.
|
|
|
|
You should hear Lloyd on the penny whistle, and me on the piano!
|
|
Dear powers, what a concerto! I now live entirely for the piano,
|
|
he for the whistle; the neighbours, in a radius of a furlong and a
|
|
half, are packing up in quest of brighter climes. - Ever yours,
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
|
|
|
|
P.S. - Please say if you can afford to let us have money for this
|
|
trip, and if so, how much. I can see the year through without
|
|
help, I believe, and supposing my health to keep up; but can scarce
|
|
make this change on my own metal.
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO CHARLES BAXTER
|
|
|
|
[SKERRYVORE, BOURNEMOUTH, JULY 1886].
|
|
|
|
DEAR CHARLES, - Doubtless, if all goes well, towards the 1st of
|
|
August we shall be begging at your door. Thanks for a sight of the
|
|
papers, which I return (you see) at once, fearing further
|
|
responsibility.
|
|
|
|
Glad you like Dauvit; but eh, man, yon's terrible strange conduc'
|
|
o' thon man Rankeillor. Ca' him a legal adviser! It would make a
|
|
bonny law-shuit, the Shaws case; and yon paper they signed, I'm
|
|
thinking, wouldnae be muckle thought o' by Puggy Deas. - Yours
|
|
ever,
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO THOMAS STEVENSON
|
|
|
|
[SKERRYVORE, BOURNEMOUTH], JULY 28, 1886.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR FATHER, - We have decided not to come to Scotland, but just
|
|
to do as Dobell wished, and take an outing. I believe this is
|
|
wiser in all ways; but I own it is a disappointment. I am weary of
|
|
England; like Alan, 'I weary for the heather,' if not for the deer.
|
|
Lloyd has gone to Scilly with Katharine and C., where and with whom
|
|
he should have a good time. David seems really to be going to
|
|
succeed, which is a pleasant prospect on all sides. I am, I
|
|
believe, floated financially; a book that sells will be a pleasant
|
|
novelty. I enclose another review; mighty complimentary, and
|
|
calculated to sell the book too.
|
|
|
|
Coolin's tombstone has been got out, honest man! and it is to be
|
|
polished, for it has got scratched, and have a touch of gilding in
|
|
the letters, and be sunk in the front of the house. Worthy man,
|
|
he, too, will maybe weary for the heather, and the bents of
|
|
Gullane, where (as I dare say you remember) he gaed clean gyte, and
|
|
jumped on to his crown from a gig, in hot and hopeless chase of
|
|
many thousand rabbits. I can still hear the little cries of the
|
|
honest fellow as he disappeared; and my mother will correct me, but
|
|
I believe it was two days before he turned up again at North
|
|
Berwick: to judge by his belly, he had caught not one out of these
|
|
thousands, but he had had some exercise.
|
|
|
|
I keep well. - Ever your affectionate son,
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO MRS. THOMAS STEVENSON
|
|
|
|
BRITISH MUSEUM [AUGUST 10TH, 1886].
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR MOTHER, - We are having a capital holiday, and I am much
|
|
better, and enjoying myself to the nines. Richmond is painting my
|
|
portrait. To-day I lunch with him, and meet Burne-Jones; to-night
|
|
Browning dines with us. That sounds rather lofty work, does it
|
|
not? His path was paved with celebrities. To-morrow we leave for
|
|
Paris, and next week, I suppose, or the week after, come home.
|
|
Address here, as we may not reach Paris. I am really very well. -
|
|
Ever your affectionate son,
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO T. WATTS-DUNTON
|
|
|
|
SKERRYVORE, BOURNEMOUTH [SEPTEMBER 1886].
|
|
|
|
DEAR MR. WATTS, The sight of the last ATHENAEUM reminds me of you,
|
|
and of my debt, now too long due. I wish to thank you for your
|
|
notice of KIDNAPPED; and that not because it was kind, though for
|
|
that also I valued it, but in the same sense as I have thanked you
|
|
before now for a hundred articles on a hundred different writers.
|
|
A critic like you is one who fights the good fight, contending with
|
|
stupidity, and I would fain hope not all in vain; in my own case,
|
|
for instance, surely not in vain.
|
|
|
|
What you say of the two parts in KIDNAPPED was felt by no one more
|
|
painfully than by myself. I began it partly as a lark, partly as a
|
|
pot-boiler; and suddenly it moved, David and Alan stepped out from
|
|
the canvas, and I found I was in another world. But there was the
|
|
cursed beginning, and a cursed end must be appended; and our old
|
|
friend Byles the butcher was plainly audible tapping at the back
|
|
door. So it had to go into the world, one part (as it does seem to
|
|
me) alive, one part merely galvanised: no work, only an essay.
|
|
For a man of tentative method, and weak health, and a scarcity of
|
|
private means, and not too much of that frugality which is the
|
|
artist's proper virtue, the days of sinecures and patrons look very
|
|
golden: the days of professional literature very hard. Yet I do
|
|
not so far deceive myself as to think I should change my character
|
|
by changing my epoch; the sum of virtue in our books is in a
|
|
relation of equality to the sum of virtues in ourselves; and my
|
|
KIDNAPPED was doomed, while still in the womb and while I was yet
|
|
in the cradle, to be the thing it is.
|
|
|
|
And now to the more genial business of defence. You attack my
|
|
fight on board the COVENANT: I think it literal. David and Alan
|
|
had every advantage on their side - position, arms, training, a
|
|
good conscience; a handful of merchant sailors, not well led in the
|
|
first attack, not led at all in the second, could only by an
|
|
accident have taken the round-house by attack; and since the
|
|
defenders had firearms and food, it is even doubtful if they could
|
|
have been starved out. The only doubtful point with me is whether
|
|
the seamen would have ever ventured on the second onslaught; I half
|
|
believe they would not; still the illusion of numbers and the
|
|
authority of Hoseason would perhaps stretch far enough to justify
|
|
the extremity. - I am, dear Mr. Watts, your very sincere admirer,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO FREDERICK LOCKER-LAMPSON
|
|
|
|
SKERRYVORE, SEPTEMBER 4, 1886.
|
|
|
|
NOT roses to the rose, I trow,
|
|
The thistle sends, nor to the bee
|
|
Do wasps bring honey. Wherefore now
|
|
Should Locker ask a verse from me?
|
|
|
|
Martial, perchance, - but he is dead,
|
|
And Herrick now must rhyme no more;
|
|
Still burning with the muse, they tread
|
|
(And arm in arm) the shadowy shore.
|
|
|
|
They, if they lived, with dainty hand,
|
|
To music as of mountain brooks,
|
|
Might bring you worthy words to stand
|
|
Unshamed, dear Locker, in your books.
|
|
|
|
But tho' these fathers of your race
|
|
Be gone before, yourself a sire,
|
|
To-day you see before your face
|
|
Your stalwart youngsters touch the lyre -
|
|
|
|
On these - on Lang, or Dobson - call,
|
|
Long leaders of the songful feast.
|
|
They lend a verse your laughing fall -
|
|
A verse they owe you at the least.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO FREDERICK LOCKER-LAMPSON
|
|
|
|
[SKERRYVORE], BOURNEMOUTH, SEPTEMBER 1886.
|
|
|
|
DEAR LOCKER, - You take my verses too kindly, but you will admit,
|
|
for such a bluebottle of a versifier to enter the house of
|
|
Gertrude, where her necklace hangs, was not a little brave. Your
|
|
kind invitation, I fear, must remain unaccented; and yet - if I am
|
|
very well - perhaps next spring - (for I mean to be very well) - my
|
|
wife might.... But all that is in the clouds with my better
|
|
health. And now look here: you are a rich man and know many
|
|
people, therefore perhaps some of the Governors of Christ's
|
|
Hospital. If you do, I know a most deserving case, in which I
|
|
would (if I could) do anything. To approach you, in this way, is
|
|
not decent; and you may therefore judge by my doing it, how near
|
|
this matter lies to my heart. I enclose you a list of the
|
|
Governors, which I beg you to return, whether or not you shall be
|
|
able to do anything to help me.
|
|
|
|
The boy's name is -; he and his mother are very poor. It may
|
|
interest you in her cause if I tell you this: that when I was
|
|
dangerously ill at Hyeres, this brave lady, who had then a sick
|
|
husband of her own (since dead) and a house to keep and a family of
|
|
four to cook for, all with her own hands, for they could afford no
|
|
servant, yet took watch-about with my wife, and contributed not
|
|
only to my comfort, but to my recovery in a degree that I am not
|
|
able to limit. You can conceive how much I suffer from my
|
|
impotence to help her, and indeed I have already shown myself a
|
|
thankless friend. Let not my cry go up before you in vain! - Yours
|
|
in hope,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO FREDERICK LOCKER-LAMPSON
|
|
|
|
SKERRYVORE, BOURNEMOUTH, SEPTEMBER 1886.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR LOCKER, - That I should call myself a man of letters, and
|
|
land myself in such unfathomable ambiguities! No, my dear Locker,
|
|
I did not want a cheque; and in my ignorance of business, which is
|
|
greater even than my ignorance of literature, I have taken the
|
|
liberty of drawing a pen through the document and returning it;
|
|
should this be against the laws of God or man, forgive me. All
|
|
that I meant by my excessively disgusting reference to your
|
|
material well-being was the vague notion that a man who is well off
|
|
was sure to know a Governor of Christ's Hospital; though how I
|
|
quite arrived at this conclusion I do not see. A man with a cold
|
|
in the head does not necessarily know a ratcatcher; and the
|
|
connection is equally close - as it now appears to my awakened and
|
|
somewhat humbled spirit. For all that, let me thank you in the
|
|
warmest manner for your friendly readiness to contribute. You say
|
|
you have hopes of becoming a miser: I wish I had; but indeed I
|
|
believe you deceive yourself, and are as far from it as ever. I
|
|
wish I had any excuse to keep your cheque, for it is much more
|
|
elegant to receive than to return; but I have my way of making it
|
|
up to you, and I do sincerely beg you to write to the two
|
|
Governors. This extraordinary outpouring of correspondence would
|
|
(if you knew my habits) convince you of my great eagerness in this
|
|
matter. I would promise gratitude; but I have made a promise to
|
|
myself to make no more promises to anybody else, having broken such
|
|
a host already, and come near breaking my heart in consequence; and
|
|
as for gratitude, I am by nature a thankless dog, and was spoiled
|
|
from a child up. But if you can help this lady in the matter of
|
|
the Hospital, you will have helped the worthy. Let me continue to
|
|
hope that I shall make out my visit in the spring, and believe me,
|
|
yours very truly,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
It may amuse you to know that a very long while ago, I broke my
|
|
heart to try to imitate your verses, and failed hopelessly. I saw
|
|
some of the evidences the other day among my papers, and blushed to
|
|
the heels.
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
|
|
|
|
I give up finding out your name in the meantime, and keep to that
|
|
by which you will be known - Frederick Locker.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO FREDERICK LOCKER-LAMPSON
|
|
|
|
[SKERRYVORE, BOURNEMOUTH], 24TH SEPTEMBER 1886.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR LOCKER, - You are simply an angel of light, and your two
|
|
letters have gone to the post; I trust they will reach the hearts
|
|
of the recipients - at least, that could not be more handsomely
|
|
expressed. About the cheque: well now, I am going to keep it; but
|
|
I assure you Mrs. - has never asked me for money, and I would not
|
|
dare to offer any till she did. For all that I shall stick to the
|
|
cheque now, and act to that amount as your almoner. In this way I
|
|
reward myself for the ambiguity of my epistolary style.
|
|
|
|
I suppose, if you please, you may say your verses are thin (would
|
|
you so describe an arrow, by the way, and one that struck the gold?
|
|
It scarce strikes me as exhaustively descriptive), and, thin or
|
|
not, they are (and I have found them) inimitably elegant. I thank
|
|
you again very sincerely for the generous trouble you have taken in
|
|
this matter which was so near my heart, and you may be very certain
|
|
it will be the fault of my health and not my inclination, if I do
|
|
not see you before very long; for all that has past has made me in
|
|
more than the official sense sincerely yours,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO SIDNEY COLVIN
|
|
|
|
SKERRYVORE, DEC. 14, 1886.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR COLVIN, - This is first-rate of you, the Lord love you for
|
|
it! I am truly much obliged. He - my father - is very changeable;
|
|
at times, he seems only a slow quiet edition of himself; again, he
|
|
will be very heavy and blank; but never so violent as last spring;
|
|
and therefore, to my mind, better on the whole.
|
|
|
|
Fanny is pretty peepy; I am splendid. I have been writing much
|
|
verse - quite the bard, in fact; and also a dam tale to order,
|
|
which will be what it will be: I don't love it, but some of it is
|
|
passable in its mouldy way, THE MISADVENTURES OF JOHN NICHOLSON.
|
|
All my bardly exercises are in Scotch; I have struck my somewhat
|
|
ponderous guitar in that tongue to no small extent: with what
|
|
success, I know not, but I think it's better than my English verse;
|
|
more marrow and fatness, and more ruggedness.
|
|
|
|
How goes KEATS? Pray remark, if he (Keats) hung back from Shelley,
|
|
it was not to be wondered at, WHEN SO MANY OF HIS FRIENDS WERE
|
|
SHELLEY'S PENSIONERS. I forget if you have made this point; it has
|
|
been borne in upon me reading Dowden and the SHELLEY PAPERS; and it
|
|
will do no harm if you have made it. I finished a poem to-day, and
|
|
writ 3000 words of a story, TANT BIEN QUE MAL; and have a right to
|
|
be sleepy, and (what is far nobler and rarer) am so. - My dear
|
|
Colvin, ever yours,
|
|
|
|
THE REAL MACKAY.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO FREDERICK LOCKER-LAMPSON
|
|
|
|
SKERRYVORE, BOURNEMOUTH, FEBRUARY 5TH, 1887.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR LOCKER, - Here I am in my bed as usual, and it is indeed a
|
|
long while since I went out to dinner. You do not know what a
|
|
crazy fellow this is. My winter has not so far been luckily
|
|
passed, and all hope of paying visits at Easter has vanished for
|
|
twelve calendar months. But because I am a beastly and indurated
|
|
invalid, I am not dead to human feelings; and I neither have
|
|
forgotten you nor will forget you. Some day the wind may round to
|
|
the right quarter and we may meet; till then I am still truly
|
|
yours,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO HENRY JAMES
|
|
|
|
[SKERRYVORE, BOURNEMOUTH, FEBRUARY 1887.]
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR JAMES, - My health has played me it in once more in the
|
|
absurdest fashion, and the creature who now addresses you is but a
|
|
stringy and white-faced BOUILLI out of the pot of fever, with the
|
|
devil to pay in every corner of his economy. I suppose (to judge
|
|
by your letter) I need not send you these sheets, which came during
|
|
my collapse by the rush. I am on the start with three volumes,
|
|
that one of tales, a second one of essays, and one of - ahem -
|
|
verse. This is a great order, is it not? After that I shall have
|
|
empty lockers. All new work stands still; I was getting on well
|
|
with Jenkin when this blessed malady unhorsed me, and sent me back
|
|
to the dung-collecting trade of the republisher. I shall re-issue
|
|
VIRG. PUER. as Vol. I. of ESSAYS, and the new vol. as Vol. II. of
|
|
ditto; to be sold, however, separately. This is but a dry
|
|
maundering; however, I am quite unfit - 'I am for action quite
|
|
unfit Either of exercise or wit.' My father is in a variable
|
|
state; many sorrows and perplexities environ the house of
|
|
Stevenson; my mother shoots north at this hour on business of a
|
|
distinctly rancid character; my father (under my wife's tutorage)
|
|
proceeds to-morrow to Salisbury; I remain here in my bed and
|
|
whistle; in no quarter of heaven is anything encouraging apparent,
|
|
except that the good Colvin comes to the hotel here on a visit.
|
|
This dreary view of life is somewhat blackened by the fact that my
|
|
head aches, which I always regard as a liberty on the part of the
|
|
powers that be. This is also my first letter since my recovery.
|
|
God speed your laudatory pen!
|
|
|
|
My wife joins in all warm messages. - Yours,
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO W. H. LOW
|
|
|
|
(APRIL 1887.)
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR LOW, - The fares to London may be found in any continental
|
|
Bradshaw or sich; from London to Bournemouth impoverished parties
|
|
who can stoop to the third class get their ticket for the matter of
|
|
10s., or, as my wife loves to phrase it, 'a half a pound.' You
|
|
will also be involved in a 3s. fare to get to Skerryvore; but this,
|
|
I dare say, friends could help you in on your arrival; so that you
|
|
may reserve your energies for the two tickets - costing the matter
|
|
of a pound - and the usual gratuities to porters. This does not
|
|
seem to me much: considering the intellectual pleasures that await
|
|
you here, I call it dirt cheap. I BELIEVE the third class from
|
|
Paris to London (VIA Dover) is ABOUT forty francs, but I cannot
|
|
swear. Suppose it to be fifty.
|
|
|
|
50x2=100
|
|
|
|
The expense of spirit or spontaneous lapse of coin on the journey,
|
|
at 5 frcs. a head, 5x2=10
|
|
|
|
Victuals on ditto, at 5 frcs. a head, 5x2 = 10
|
|
|
|
Gratuity to stewardess, in case of severe prostration, at 3 francs
|
|
|
|
One night in London, on a modest footing, say 20
|
|
|
|
Two tickets to Bournemouth at 12.50, 12.50x2=25
|
|
|
|
Porters and general devilment, say 5
|
|
|
|
Cabs in London, say 2 shillings, and in Bournemouth, 3 shillings=5
|
|
shillings, 6 frcs. 25
|
|
|
|
Total frcs. 179.25
|
|
|
|
Or, the same in pounds, 7 pounds, 3s. 6 and a half d.
|
|
|
|
Or, the same in dollars, $35.45,
|
|
|
|
if there be any arithmetical virtue in me. I have left out dinner
|
|
in London in case you want to blow out, which would come extry, and
|
|
with the aid of VANGS FANGS might easily double the whole amount -
|
|
above all if you have a few friends to meet you.
|
|
|
|
In making this valuable project, or budget, I discovered for the
|
|
first time a reason (frequently overlooked) for the singular
|
|
costliness of travelling with your wife. Anybody would count the
|
|
tickets double; but how few would have remembered - or indeed has
|
|
any one ever remembered? - to count the spontaneous lapse of coin
|
|
double also? Yet there are two of you, each must do his daily
|
|
leakage, and it must be done out of your travelling fund. You will
|
|
tell me, perhaps, that you carry the coin yourself: my dear sir,
|
|
do you think you can fool your Maker? Your wife has to lose her
|
|
quota; and by God she will - if you kept the coin in a belt. One
|
|
thing I have omitted: you will lose a certain amount on the
|
|
exchange, but this even I cannot foresee, as it is one of the few
|
|
things that vary with the way a man has. - I am, dear sir, yours
|
|
financially,
|
|
|
|
SAMUEL BUDGETT.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO ALISON CUNNINGHAM
|
|
|
|
SKERRYVORE, APRIL 16TH, 1887.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAREST CUMMY, - As usual, I have been a dreary bad fellow and
|
|
not written for ages; but you must just try to forgive me, to
|
|
believe (what is the truth) that the number of my letters is no
|
|
measure of the number of times I think of you, and to remember how
|
|
much writing I have to do. The weather is bright, but still cold;
|
|
and my father, I'm afraid, feels it sharply. He has had - still
|
|
has, rather - a most obstinate jaundice, which has reduced him
|
|
cruelly in strength, and really upset him altogether. I hope, or
|
|
think, he is perhaps a little better; but he suffers much, cannot
|
|
sleep at night, and gives John and my mother a severe life of it to
|
|
wait upon him. My wife is, I think, a little better, but no great
|
|
shakes. I keep mightily respectable myself.
|
|
|
|
Coolin's Tombstone is now built into the front wall of Skerryvore,
|
|
and poor Bogie's (with a Latin inscription also) is set just above
|
|
it. Poor, unhappy wee man, he died, as you must have heard, in
|
|
fight, which was what he would have chosen; for military glory was
|
|
more in his line than the domestic virtues. I believe this is
|
|
about all my news, except that, as I write, there is a blackbird
|
|
singing in our garden trees, as it were at Swanston. I would like
|
|
fine to go up the burnside a bit, and sit by the pool and be young
|
|
again - or no, be what I am still, only there instead of here, for
|
|
just a little. Did you see that I had written about John Todd? In
|
|
this month's LONGMAN it was; if you have not seen it, I will try
|
|
and send it you. Some day climb as high as Halkerside for me (I am
|
|
never likely to do it for myself), and sprinkle some of the well
|
|
water on the turf. I am afraid it is a pagan rite, but quite
|
|
harmless, and YE CAN SAIN IT WI' A BIT PRAYER. Tell the Peewies
|
|
that I mind their forbears well. My heart is sometimes heavy, and
|
|
sometimes glad to mind it all. But for what we have received, the
|
|
Lord make us truly thankful. Don't forget to sprinkle the water,
|
|
and do it in my name; I feel a childish eagerness in this.
|
|
|
|
Remember me most kindly to James, and with all sorts of love to
|
|
yourself, believe me, your laddie,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
P.S. - I suppose Mrs. Todd ought to see the paper about her man;
|
|
judge of that, and if you think she would not dislike it, buy her
|
|
one from me, and let me know. The article is called 'Pastoral,' in
|
|
LONGMAN'S MAGAZINE for April. I will send you the money; I would
|
|
to-day, but it's the Sabbie day, and I cannae.
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
|
|
|
|
Remembrances from all here.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO SIDNEY COLVIN
|
|
|
|
[EDINBURGH, JUNE 1887.]
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR S. C., - At last I can write a word to you. Your little
|
|
note in the P. M. G. was charming. I have written four pages in
|
|
the CONTEMPORARY, which Bunting found room for: they are not very
|
|
good, but I shall do more for his memory in time.
|
|
|
|
About the death, I have long hesitated, I was long before I could
|
|
tell my mind; and now I know it, and can but say that I am glad.
|
|
If we could have had my father, that would have been a different
|
|
thing. But to keep that changeling - suffering changeling - any
|
|
longer, could better none and nothing. Now he rests; it is more
|
|
significant, it is more like himself. He will begin to return to
|
|
us in the course of time, as he was and as we loved him.
|
|
|
|
My favourite words in literature, my favourite scene - 'O let him
|
|
pass,' Kent and Lear - was played for me here in the first moment
|
|
of my return. I believe Shakespeare saw it with his own father. I
|
|
had no words; but it was shocking to see. He died on his feet, you
|
|
know; was on his feet the last day, knowing nobody - still he would
|
|
be up. This was his constant wish; also that he might smoke a pipe
|
|
on his last day. The funeral would have pleased him; it was the
|
|
largest private funeral in man's memory here.
|
|
|
|
We have no plans, and it is possible we may go home without going
|
|
through town. I do not know; I have no views yet whatever; nor can
|
|
have any at this stage of my cold and my business. - Ever yours,
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER IX - THE UNITED STATES AGAIN: WINTER IN THE ADIRONDACKS,
|
|
AUGUST 1887-OCTOBER 1888
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO W. E. HENLEY
|
|
|
|
[SKERRYVORE, BOURNEMOUTH], AUGUST 1887.
|
|
|
|
DEAR LAD, - I write to inform you that Mr. Stevenson's well-known
|
|
work, VIRGINIBUS PUERISQUE, is about to be reprinted. At the same
|
|
time a second volume called MEMORIES AND PORTRAITS will issue from
|
|
the roaring loom. Its interest will be largely autobiographical,
|
|
Mr. S. having sketched there the lineaments of many departed
|
|
friends, and dwelt fondly, and with a m'istened eye, upon byegone
|
|
pleasures. The two will be issued under the common title of
|
|
FAMILIAR ESSAYS; but the volumes will be vended separately to those
|
|
who are mean enough not to hawk at both.
|
|
|
|
The blood is at last stopped: only yesterday. I began to think I
|
|
should not get away. However, I hope - I hope - remark the word -
|
|
no boasting - I hope I may luff up a bit now. Dobell, whom I saw,
|
|
gave as usual a good account of my lungs, and expressed himself,
|
|
like his neighbours, hopefully about the trip. He says, my uncle
|
|
says, Scott says, Brown says - they all say - You ought not to be
|
|
in such a state of health; you should recover. Well, then, I mean
|
|
to. My spirits are rising again after three months of black
|
|
depression: I almost begin to feel as if I should care to live: I
|
|
would, by God! And so I believe I shall. - Yours, BULLETIN
|
|
M'GURDER.
|
|
|
|
How has the Deacon gone?
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO W. H. LOW
|
|
|
|
[SKERRYVORE, BOURNEMOUTH], August 6TH, 1887.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR LOW, - We - my mother, my wife, my stepson, my maidservant,
|
|
and myself, five souls - leave, if all is well, Aug. 20th, per
|
|
Wilson line SS. LUDGATE HILL. Shall probably evade N. Y. at first,
|
|
cutting straight to a watering-place: Newport, I believe, its
|
|
name. Afterwards we shall steal incognito into LA BONNE VILLA, and
|
|
see no one but you and the Scribners, if it may be so managed. You
|
|
must understand I have been very seedy indeed, quite a dead body;
|
|
and unless the voyage does miracles, I shall have to draw it dam
|
|
fine. Alas, 'The Canoe Speaks' is now out of date; it will figure
|
|
in my volume of verses now imminent. However, I may find some
|
|
inspiration some day. - Till very soon, yours ever,
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO MISS ADELAIDE BOODLE
|
|
|
|
BOURNEMOUTH, AUGUST 19TH, 1887.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR MISS BOODLE, - I promise you the paper-knife shall go to
|
|
sea with me; and if it were in my disposal, I should promise it
|
|
should return with me too. All that you say, I thank you for very
|
|
much; I thank you for all the pleasantness that you have brought
|
|
about our house; and I hope the day may come when I shall see you
|
|
again in poor old Skerryvore, now left to the natives of Canada, or
|
|
to worse barbarians, if such exist. I am afraid my attempt to jest
|
|
is rather A CONTRE-COEUR. Good-bye - AU REVOIR - and do not forget
|
|
your friend,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO MESSRS. CHATTO AND WINDUS
|
|
|
|
BOURNEMOUTH [AUGUST 1887].
|
|
|
|
DEAR SIRS, - I here enclose the two titles. Had you not better
|
|
send me the bargains to sign? I shall be here till Saturday; and
|
|
shall have an address in London (which I shall send you) till
|
|
Monday, when I shall sail. Even if the proofs do not reach you
|
|
till Monday morning, you could send a clerk from Fenchurch Street
|
|
Station at 10.23 A.M. for Galleons Station, and he would find me
|
|
embarking on board the LUDGATE HILL, Island Berth, Royal Albert
|
|
Dock. Pray keep this in case it should be necessary to catch this
|
|
last chance. I am most anxious to have the proofs with me on the
|
|
voyage. - Yours very truly,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO SIDNEY COLVIN
|
|
|
|
H.M.S. 'VULGARIUM,'
|
|
OFF HAVRE DE GRACE, THIS 22ND DAY OF AUGUST [1887].
|
|
|
|
SIR, - The weather has been hitherto inimitable. Inimitable is the
|
|
only word that I can apply to our fellow-voyagers, whom a
|
|
categorist, possibly premature, has been already led to divide into
|
|
two classes - the better sort consisting of the baser kind of
|
|
Bagman, and the worser of undisguised Beasts of the Field. The
|
|
berths are excellent, the pasture swallowable, the champagne of H.
|
|
James (to recur to my favourite adjective) inimitable. As for the
|
|
Commodore, he slept awhile in the evening, tossed off a cup of
|
|
Henry James with his plain meal, walked the deck till eight, among
|
|
sands and floating lights and buoys and wrecked brigantines, came
|
|
down (to his regret) a minute too soon to see Margate lit up,
|
|
turned in about nine, slept, with some interruptions, but on the
|
|
whole sweetly, until six, and has already walked a mile or so of
|
|
deck, among a fleet of other steamers waiting for the tide, within
|
|
view of Havre, and pleasantly entertained by passing fishing-boats,
|
|
hovering sea-gulls, and Vulgarians pairing on deck with endearments
|
|
of primitive simplicity. There, sir, can be viewed the sham
|
|
quarrel, the sham desire for information, and every device of these
|
|
two poor ancient sexes (who might, you might think, have learned in
|
|
the course of the ages something new) down to the exchange of head-
|
|
gear. - I am, sir, yours,
|
|
|
|
BOLD BOB BOLTSPRIT.
|
|
|
|
B. B. B. (ALIAS the Commodore) will now turn to his proofs. Havre
|
|
de Grace is a city of some show. It is for-ti-fied; and, so far as
|
|
I can see, is a place of some trade. It is situ-ated in France, a
|
|
country of Europe. You always complain there are no facts in my
|
|
letters.
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO SIDNEY COLVIN
|
|
|
|
NEWPORT, R. I. U.S.A. [SEPTEMBER 1887].
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR COLVIN, - So long it went excellent well, and I had a time
|
|
I am glad to have had; really enjoying my life. There is nothing
|
|
like being at sea, after all. And O, why have I allowed myself to
|
|
rot so long on land? But on the Banks I caught a cold, and I have
|
|
not yet got over it. My reception here was idiotic to the last
|
|
degree.... It is very silly, and not pleasant, except where humour
|
|
enters; and I confess the poor interviewer lads pleased me. They
|
|
are too good for their trade; avoided anything I asked them to
|
|
avoid, and were no more vulgar in their reports than they could
|
|
help. I liked the lads.
|
|
|
|
O, it was lovely on our stable-ship, chock full of stallions. She
|
|
rolled heartily, rolled some of the fittings out of our state-room,
|
|
and I think a more dangerous cruise (except that it was summer) it
|
|
would be hard to imagine. But we enjoyed it to the masthead, all
|
|
but Fanny; and even she perhaps a little. When we got in, we had
|
|
run out of beer, stout, cocoa, soda-water, water, fresh meat, and
|
|
(almost) of biscuit. But it was a thousandfold pleasanter than a
|
|
great big Birmingham liner like a new hotel; and we liked the
|
|
officers, and made friends with the quartermasters, and I (at
|
|
least) made a friend of a baboon (for we carried a cargo of apes),
|
|
whose embraces have pretty near cost me a coat. The passengers
|
|
improved, and were a very good specimen lot, with no drunkard, no
|
|
gambling that I saw, and less grumbling and backbiting than one
|
|
would have asked of poor human nature. Apes, stallions, cows,
|
|
matches, hay, and poor men-folk, all, or almost all, came
|
|
successfully to land. - Yours ever,
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO HENRY JAMES
|
|
|
|
[NEWPORT, U.S.A., SEPTEMBER 1887.]
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR JAMES, - Here we are at Newport in the house of the good
|
|
Fairchilds; and a sad burthen we have laid upon their shoulders. I
|
|
have been in bed practically ever since I came. I caught a cold on
|
|
the Banks after having had the finest time conceivable, and enjoyed
|
|
myself more than I could have hoped on board our strange floating
|
|
menagerie: stallions and monkeys and matches made our cargo; and
|
|
the vast continent of these incongruities rolled the while like a
|
|
haystack; and the stallions stood hypnotised by the motion, looking
|
|
through the ports at our dinner-table, and winked when the crockery
|
|
was broken; and the little monkeys stared at each other in their
|
|
cages, and were thrown overboard like little bluish babies; and the
|
|
big monkey, Jacko, scoured about the ship and rested willingly in
|
|
my arms, to the ruin of my clothing; and the man of the stallions
|
|
made a bower of the black tarpaulin, and sat therein at the feet of
|
|
a raddled divinity, like a picture on a box of chocolates; and the
|
|
other passengers, when they were not sick, looked on and laughed.
|
|
Take all this picture, and make it roll till the bell shall sound
|
|
unexpected notes and the fittings shall break lose in our state-
|
|
room, and you have the voyage of the LUDGATE HILL. She arrived in
|
|
the port of New York, without beer, porter, soda-water, curacoa,
|
|
fresh meat, or fresh water; and yet we lived, and we regret her.
|
|
|
|
My wife is a good deal run down, and I am no great shakes.
|
|
|
|
America is, as I remarked, a fine place to eat in, and a great
|
|
place for kindness; but, Lord, what a silly thing is popularity! I
|
|
envy the cool obscurity of Skerryvore. If it even paid, said
|
|
Meanness! and was abashed at himself. - Yours most sincerely,
|
|
|
|
R. L S.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO SIDNEY COLVIN
|
|
|
|
[NEW YORK: END OF SEPTEMBER 1887.]
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR S. C., - Your delightful letter has just come, and finds me
|
|
in a New York hotel, waiting the arrival of a sculptor (St.
|
|
Gaudens) who is making a medallion of yours truly and who is (to
|
|
boot) one of the handsomest and nicest fellows I have seen. I
|
|
caught a cold on the Banks; fog is not for me; nearly died of
|
|
interviewers and visitors, during twenty-four hours in New York;
|
|
cut for Newport with Lloyd and Valentine, a journey like fairy-land
|
|
for the most engaging beauties, one little rocky and pine-shaded
|
|
cove after another, each with a house and a boat at anchor, so that
|
|
I left my heart in each and marvelled why American authors had been
|
|
so unjust to their country; caught another cold on the train;
|
|
arrived at Newport to go to bed and to grow worse, and to stay in
|
|
bed until I left again; the Fairchilds proving during this time
|
|
kindness itself; Mr. Fairchild simply one of the most engaging men
|
|
in the world, and one of the children, Blair, AET. ten, a great joy
|
|
and amusement in his solemn adoring attitude to the author of
|
|
TREASURE ISLAND.
|
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Here I was interrupted by the arrival of my sculptor. I have
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begged him to make a medallion of himself and give me a copy. I
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will not take up the sentence in which I was wandering so long, but
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begin fresh. I was ten or twelve days at Newport; then came back
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convalescent to New York. Fanny and Lloyd are off to the
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Adirondacks to see if that will suit; and the rest of us leave
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Monday (this is Saturday) to follow them up. I hope we may manage
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to stay there all winter. I have a splendid appetite and have on
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the whole recovered well after a mighty sharp attack. I am now on
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a salary of 500 pounds a year for twelve articles in SCRIBNER'S
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MAGAZINE on what I like; it is more than 500 pounds, but I cannot
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calculate more precisely. You have no idea how much is made of me
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here; I was offered 2000 pounds for a weekly article - eh heh! how
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is that? but I refused that lucrative job. The success of
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UNDERWOODS is gratifying. You see, the verses are sane; that is
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their strong point, and it seems it is strong enough to carry them.
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A thousand thanks for your grand letter, ever yours,
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R. L. S.
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Letter: TO W. E. HENLEY
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NEW YORK [SEPTEMBER 1887]
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MY DEAR LAD, - Herewith verses for Dr. Hake, which please
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communicate. I did my best with the interviewers; I don't know if
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Lloyd sent you the result; my heart was too sick: you can do
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nothing with them; and yet - literally sweated with anxiety to
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please, and took me down in long hand!
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I have been quite ill, but go better. I am being not busted, but
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medallioned, by St. Gaudens, who is a first-rate, plain, high-
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minded artist and honest fellow; you would like him down to the
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ground. I believe sculptors are fine fellows when they are not
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demons. O, I am now a salaried person, 600 pounds a year, to write
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twelve articles in SCRIBNER'S MAGAZINE; it remains to be seen if it
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really pays, huge as the sum is, but the slavery may overweigh me.
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I hope you will like my answer to Hake, and specially that he will.
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Love to all. - Yours affectionately,
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R. L. S.
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(LE SALARIE).
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Letter: To R. A. M. STEVENSON
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SARANAC LAKE, ADIRONDACKS, NEW YORK, U.S.A. [OCTOBER 1887].
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MY DEAR BOB, - The cold [of Colorado] was too rigorous for me; I
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could not risk the long railway voyage, and the season was too late
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to risk the Eastern, Cape Hatteras side of the steamer one; so here
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we stuck and stick. We have a wooden house on a hill-top,
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overlooking a river, and a village about a quarter of a mile away,
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and very wooded hills; the whole scene is very Highland, bar want
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of heather and the wooden houses.
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I have got one good thing of my sea voyage: it is proved the sea
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agrees heartily with me, and my mother likes it; so if I get any
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better, or no worse, my mother will likely hire a yacht for a month
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or so in summer. Good Lord! What fun! Wealth is only useful for
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two things: a yacht and a string quartette. For these two I will
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sell my soul. Except for these I hold that 700 pounds a year is as
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much as anybody can possibly want; and I have had more, so I know,
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for the extry coins were for no use, excepting for illness, which
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damns everything.
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I was so happy on board that ship, I could not have believed it
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possible. We had the beastliest weather, and many discomforts; but
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the mere fact of its being a tramp-ship gave us many comforts; we
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could cut about with the men and officers, stay in the wheel-house,
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discuss all manner of things, and really be a little at sea. And
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truly there is nothing else. I had literally forgotten what
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happiness was, and the full mind - full of external and physical
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things, not full of cares and labours and rot about a fellow's
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behaviour. My heart literally sang; I truly care for nothing so
|
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much as for that. We took so north a course, that we saw
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Newfoundland; no one in the ship had ever seen it before.
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It was beyond belief to me how she rolled; in seemingly smooth
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|
water, the bell striking, the fittings bounding out of our state-
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room. It is worth having lived these last years, partly because I
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have written some better books, which is always pleasant, but
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chiefly to have had the joy of this voyage. I have been made a lot
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of here, and it is sometimes pleasant, sometimes the reverse; but I
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could give it all up, and agree that - was the author of my works,
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for a good seventy ton schooner and the coins to keep her on. And
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to think there are parties with yachts who would make the exchange!
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I know a little about fame now; it is no good compared to a yacht;
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and anyway there is more fame in a yacht, more genuine fame; to
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|
cross the Atlantic and come to anchor in Newport (say) with the
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|
Union Jack, and go ashore for your letters and hang about the pier,
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among the holiday yachtsmen - that's fame, that's glory, and nobody
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|
can take it away; they can't say your book is bad; you HAVE crossed
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the Atlantic. I should do it south by the West Indies, to avoid
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the damned Banks; and probably come home by steamer, and leave the
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skipper to bring the yacht home.
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Well, if all goes well, we shall maybe sail out of Southampton
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water some of these days and take a run to Havre, and try the
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Baltic, or somewhere.
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Love to you all. - Ever your afft.,
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ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
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Letter: TO EDMUND GOSSE
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SARANAC LAKE, OCT. 8TH, 1887.
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MY DEAR GOSSE, - I have just read your article twice, with cheers
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of approving laughter. I do not believe you ever wrote anything so
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funny: Tyndall's 'shell,' the passage on the Davos press and its
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invaluable issues, and that on V. Hugo and Swinburne, are
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exquisite; so, I say it more ruefully, is the touch about the
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doctors. For the rest, I am very glad you like my verses so well;
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and the qualities you ascribe to them seem to me well found and
|
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well named. I own to that kind of candour you attribute to me:
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when I am frankly interested, I suppose I fancy the public will be
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|
so too; and when I am moved, I am sure of it. It has been my luck
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|
hitherto to meet with no staggering disillusion. 'Before' and
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'After' may be two; and yet I believe the habit is now too
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|
thoroughly ingrained to be altered. About the doctors, you were
|
|
right, that dedication has been the subject of some pleasantries
|
|
that made me grind, and of your happily touched reproof which made
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|
me blush. And to miscarry in a dedication is an abominable form of
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|
book-wreck; I am a good captain, I would rather lose the tent and
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save my dedication.
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I am at Saranac Lake in the Adirondacks, I suppose for the winter:
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it seems a first-rate place; we have a house in the eye of many
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|
winds, with a view of a piece of running water - Highland, all but
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|
the dear hue of peat - and of many hills - Highland also, but for
|
|
the lack of heather. Soon the snow will close on us; we are here
|
|
some twenty miles - twenty-seven, they say, but this I profoundly
|
|
disbelieve - in the woods; communication by letter is slow and (let
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|
me be consistent) aleatory; by telegram is as near as may be
|
|
impossible.
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I had some experience of American appreciation; I liked a little of
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|
it, but there is too much; a little of that would go a long way to
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|
spoil a man; and I like myself better in the woods. I am so damned
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candid and ingenuous (for a cynic), and so much of a 'cweatu' of
|
|
impulse - aw' (if you remember that admirable Leech), that I begin
|
|
to shirk any more taffy; I think I begin to like it too well. But
|
|
let us trust the Gods; they have a rod in pickle; reverently I doff
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|
my trousers, and with screwed eyes await the AMARI ALIQUID of the
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|
great God Busby.
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I thank you for the article in all ways, and remain yours
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|
affectionately,
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R. L. S.
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Letter: TO W. H. LOW
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[SARANAC, OCTOBER 1887.]
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SIR, - I have to trouble you with the following PAROLES BIEN
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SENTIES. We are here at a first-rate place. 'Baker's' is the name
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|
of our house, but we don't address there; we prefer the tender care
|
|
of the Post-Office, as more aristocratic (it is no use to telegraph
|
|
even to the care of the Post-Office who does not give a single
|
|
damn). Baker's has a prophet's chamber, which the hypercritical
|
|
might describe as a garret with a hole in the floor: in that
|
|
garret, sir, I have to trouble you and your wife to come and
|
|
slumber. Not now, however: with manly hospitality, I choke off
|
|
any sudden impulse. Because first, my wife and my mother are gone
|
|
(a note for the latter, strongly suspected to be in the hand of
|
|
your talented wife, now sits silent on the mantel shelf), one to
|
|
Niagara and t'other to Indianapolis. Because, second, we are not
|
|
yet installed. And because third, I won't have you till I have a
|
|
buffalo robe and leggings, lest you should want to paint me as a
|
|
plain man, which I am not, but a rank Saranacker and wild man of
|
|
the woods. - Yours,
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ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
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Letter: TO WILLIAM ARCHER.
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SARANAC LAKE, OCTOBER 1887.
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DEAR ARCHER, - Many thanks for the Wondrous Tale. It is scarcely a
|
|
work of genius, as I believe you felt. Thanks also for your
|
|
pencillings; though I defend 'shrew,' or at least many of the
|
|
shrews.
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|
We are here (I suppose) for the winter in the Adirondacks, a hill
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|
and forest country on the Canadian border of New York State, very
|
|
unsettled and primitive and cold, and healthful, or we are the more
|
|
bitterly deceived. I believe it will do well for me; but must not
|
|
boast.
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|
My wife is away to Indiana to see her family; my mother, Lloyd, and
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|
I remain here in the cold, which has been exceeding sharp, and the
|
|
hill air, which is inimitably fine. We all eat bravely, and sleep
|
|
well, and make great fires, and get along like one o'clock,
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|
I am now a salaried party; I am a BOURGEOIS now; I am to write a
|
|
weekly paper for Scribner's, at a scale of payment which makes my
|
|
teeth ache for shame and diffidence. The editor is, I believe, to
|
|
apply to you; for we were talking over likely men, and when I
|
|
instanced you, he said he had had his eye upon you from the first.
|
|
It is worth while, perhaps, to get in tow with the Scribners; they
|
|
are such thorough gentlefolk in all ways that it is always a
|
|
pleasure to deal with them. I am like to be a millionaire if this
|
|
goes on, and be publicly hanged at the social revolution: well, I
|
|
would prefer that to dying in my bed; and it would be a godsend to
|
|
my biographer, if ever I have one. What are you about? I hope you
|
|
are all well and in good case and spirits, as I am now, after a
|
|
most nefast experience of despondency before I left; but indeed I
|
|
was quite run down. Remember me to Mrs. Archer, and give my
|
|
respects to Tom. - Yours very truly,
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|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
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Letter: TO HENRY JAMES
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|
[SARANAC LAKE, OCTOBER 1887.] I know not the day; but the month it
|
|
is the drear October by the ghoul-haunted woodland of Weir
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|
MY DEAR HENRY JAMES, - This is to say FIRST, the voyage was a huge
|
|
success. We all enjoyed it (bar my wife) to the ground: sixteen
|
|
days at sea with a cargo of hay, matches, stallions, and monkeys,
|
|
and in a ship with no style on, and plenty of sailors to talk to,
|
|
and the endless pleasures of the sea - the romance of it, the sport
|
|
of the scratch dinner and the smashing crockery, the pleasure - an
|
|
endless pleasure - of balancing to the swell: well, it's over.
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|
SECOND, I had a fine time, rather a troubled one, at Newport and
|
|
New York; saw much of and liked hugely the Fairchilds, St. Gaudens
|
|
the sculptor, Gilder of the CENTURY - just saw the dear Alexander -
|
|
saw a lot of my old and admirable friend Will Low, whom I wish you
|
|
knew and appreciated - was medallioned by St. Gaudens, and at last
|
|
escaped to
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THIRD, Saranac Lake, where we now are, and which I believe we mean
|
|
to like and pass the winter at. Our house - emphatically 'Baker's'
|
|
- is on a hill, and has a sight of a stream turning a corner in the
|
|
valley - bless the face of running water! - and sees some hills
|
|
too, and the paganly prosaic roofs of Saranac itself; the Lake it
|
|
does not see, nor do I regret that; I like water (fresh water I
|
|
mean) either running swiftly among stones, or else largely
|
|
qualified with whisky. As I write, the sun (which has been long a
|
|
stranger) shines in at my shoulder; from the next room, the bell of
|
|
Lloyd's typewriter makes an agreeable music as it patters off (at a
|
|
rate which astonishes this experienced novelist) the early chapters
|
|
of a humorous romance; from still further off - the walls of
|
|
Baker's are neither ancient nor massive - rumours of Valentine
|
|
about the kitchen stove come to my ears; of my mother and Fanny I
|
|
hear nothing, for the excellent reason that they have gone sparking
|
|
off, one to Niagara, one to Indianapolis. People complain that I
|
|
never give news in my letters. I have wiped out that reproach.
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|
|
But now, FOURTH, I have seen the article; and it may be from
|
|
natural partiality, I think it the best you have written. O - I
|
|
remember the Gautier, which was an excellent performance; and the
|
|
Balzac, which was good; and the Daudet, over which I licked my
|
|
chops; but the R. L. S. is better yet. It is so humorous, and it
|
|
hits my little frailties with so neat (and so friendly) a touch;
|
|
and Alan is the occasion for so much happy talk, and the quarrel is
|
|
so generously praised. I read it twice, though it was only some
|
|
hours in my possession; and Low, who got it for me from the
|
|
CENTURY, sat up to finish it ere he returned it; and, sir, we were
|
|
all delighted. Here is the paper out, nor will anything, not even
|
|
friendship, not even gratitude for the article, induce me to begin
|
|
a second sheet; so here with the kindest remembrances and the
|
|
warmest good wishes, I remain, yours affectionately,
|
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|
|
R. L. S.
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|
|
Letter: TO CHARLES BAXTER
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|
|
SARANAC, 18TH NOVEMBER 1887.
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|
|
MY DEAR CHARLES, - No likely I'm going to waste a sheet of paper. .
|
|
. . I am offered 1600 pounds ($8000) for the American serial
|
|
rights on my next story! As you say, times are changed since the
|
|
Lothian Road. Well, the Lothian Road was grand fun too; I could
|
|
take an afternoon of it with great delight. But I'm awfu' grand
|
|
noo, and long may it last!
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|
|
Remember me to any of the faithful - if there are any left. I wish
|
|
I could have a crack with you. - Yours ever affectionately,
|
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|
|
R. L. S.
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|
|
I find I have forgotten more than I remembered of business. . . .
|
|
Please let us know (if you know) for how much Skerryvore is let;
|
|
you will here detect the female mind; I let it for what I could
|
|
get; nor shall the possession of this knowledge (which I am happy
|
|
to have forgot) increase the amount by so much as the shadow of a
|
|
sixpenny piece; but my females are agog. - Yours ever,
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|
|
R. L. S.
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|
Letter: TO CHARLES SCRIBNER
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|
|
[SARANAC, NOVEMBER 20 OR 21, 1887.]
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|
|
MY DEAR MR. SCRIBNER, - Heaven help me, I am under a curse just
|
|
now. I have played fast and loose with what I said to you; and
|
|
that, I beg you to believe, in the purest innocence of mind. I
|
|
told you you should have the power over all my work in this
|
|
country; and about a fortnight ago, when M'Clure was here, I calmly
|
|
signed a bargain for the serial publication of a story. You will
|
|
scarce believe that I did this in mere oblivion; but I did; and all
|
|
that I can say is that I will do so no more, and ask you to forgive
|
|
me. Please write to me soon as to this.
|
|
|
|
Will you oblige me by paying in for three articles, as already
|
|
sent, to my account with John Paton & Co., 52 William Street? This
|
|
will be most convenient for us.
|
|
|
|
The fourth article is nearly done; and I am the more deceived, or
|
|
it is A BUSTER.
|
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|
|
Now as to the first thing in this letter, I do wish to hear from
|
|
you soon; and I am prepared to hear any reproach, or (what is
|
|
harder to hear) any forgiveness; for I have deserved the worst. -
|
|
Yours sincerely,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
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|
|
Letter: TO E. L. BURLINGAME
|
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|
|
SARANAC, NOVEMBER 1887.
|
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|
|
DEAR MR. BURLINGAME, - I enclose corrected proof of BEGGARS, which
|
|
seems good. I mean to make a second sermon, which, if it is about
|
|
the same length as PULVIS ET UMBRA, might go in along with it as
|
|
two sermons, in which case I should call the first 'The Whole
|
|
Creation,' and the second 'Any Good.' We shall see; but you might
|
|
say how you like the notion.
|
|
|
|
One word: if you have heard from Mr. Scribner of my unhappy
|
|
oversight in the matter of a story, you will make me ashamed to
|
|
write to you, and yet I wish to beg you to help me into quieter
|
|
waters. The oversight committed - and I do think it was not so bad
|
|
as Mr. Scribner seems to think it-and discovered, I was in a
|
|
miserable position. I need not tell you that my first impulse was
|
|
to offer to share or to surrender the price agreed upon when it
|
|
should fall due; and it is almost to my credit that I arranged to
|
|
refrain. It is one of these positions from which there is no
|
|
escape; I cannot undo what I have done. And I wish to beg you -
|
|
should Mr. Scribner speak to you in the matter - to try to get him
|
|
to see this neglect of mine for no worse than it is: unpardonable
|
|
enough, because a breach of an agreement; but still pardonable,
|
|
because a piece of sheer carelessness and want of memory, done, God
|
|
knows, without design and since most sincerely regretted. I have
|
|
no memory. You have seen how I omitted to reserve the American
|
|
rights in JEKYLL: last winter I wrote and demanded, as an
|
|
increase, a less sum than had already been agreed upon for a story
|
|
that I gave to Cassell's. For once that my forgetfulness has, by a
|
|
cursed fortune, seemed to gain, instead of lose, me money, it is
|
|
painful indeed that I should produce so poor an impression on the
|
|
mind of Mr. Scribner. But I beg you to believe, and if possible to
|
|
make him believe, that I am in no degree or sense a FAISEUR, and
|
|
that in matters of business my design, at least, is honest. Nor
|
|
(bating bad memory and self-deception) am I untruthful in such
|
|
affairs.
|
|
|
|
If Mr. Scribner shall have said nothing to you in the matter,
|
|
please regard the above as unwritten, and believe me, yours very
|
|
truly,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO E. L. BURLINGAME
|
|
|
|
SARANAC, NOVEMBER 1887.
|
|
|
|
DEAR MR. BURLINGAME, - The revise seemed all right, so I did not
|
|
trouble you with it; indeed, my demand for one was theatrical, to
|
|
impress that obdurate dog, your reader. Herewith a third paper:
|
|
it has been a cruel long time upon the road, but here it is, and
|
|
not bad at last, I fondly hope. I was glad you liked the LANTERN
|
|
BEARERS; I did, too. I thought it was a good paper, really
|
|
contained some excellent sense, and was ingeniously put together.
|
|
I have not often had more trouble than I have with these papers;
|
|
thirty or forty pages of foul copy, twenty is the very least I have
|
|
had. Well, you pay high; it is fit that I should have to work
|
|
hard, it somewhat quiets my conscience. - Yours very truly,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO J. A. SYMONDS
|
|
|
|
SARANAC LAKE, ADIRONDACK MOUNTAINS, NEW YORK, U.S.A., NOVEMBER 21,
|
|
1887.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR SYMONDS, - I think we have both meant and wanted to write
|
|
to you any time these months; but we have been much tossed about,
|
|
among new faces and old, and new scenes and old, and scenes (like
|
|
this of Saranac) which are neither one nor other. To give you some
|
|
clue to our affairs, I had best begin pretty well back. We sailed
|
|
from the Thames in a vast bucket of iron that took seventeen days
|
|
from shore to shore. I cannot describe how I enjoyed the voyage,
|
|
nor what good it did me; but on the Banks I caught friend catarrh.
|
|
In New York and then in Newport I was pretty ill; but on my return
|
|
to New York, lying in bed most of the time, with St. Gaudens the
|
|
sculptor sculping me, and my old friend Low around, I began to pick
|
|
up once more. Now here we are in a kind of wilderness of hills and
|
|
firwoods and boulders and snow and wooden houses. So far as we
|
|
have gone the climate is grey and harsh, but hungry and somnolent;
|
|
and although not charming like that of Davos, essentially bracing
|
|
and briskening. The country is a kind of insane mixture of
|
|
Scotland and a touch of Switzerland and a dash of America, and a
|
|
thought of the British Channel in the skies. We have a decent
|
|
house -
|
|
|
|
DECEMBER 6TH.
|
|
|
|
- A decent house, as I was saying, sir, on a hill-top, with a look
|
|
down a Scottish river in front, and on one hand a Perthshire hill;
|
|
on the other, the beginnings and skirts of the village play hide
|
|
and seek among other hills. We have been below zero, I know not
|
|
how far (10 at 8 A.M. once), and when it is cold it is delightful;
|
|
but hitherto the cold has not held, and we have chopped in and out
|
|
from frost to thaw, from snow to rain, from quiet air to the most
|
|
disastrous north-westerly curdlers of the blood. After a week of
|
|
practical thaw, the ice still bears in favoured places. So there
|
|
is hope.
|
|
|
|
I wonder if you saw my book of verses? It went into a second
|
|
edition, because of my name, I suppose, and its PROSE merits. I do
|
|
not set up to be a poet. Only an all-round literary man: a man
|
|
who talks, not one who sings. But I believe the very fact that it
|
|
was only speech served the book with the public. Horace is much a
|
|
speaker, and see how popular! most of Martial is only speech, and I
|
|
cannot conceive a person who does not love his Martial; most of
|
|
Burns, also, such as 'The Louse,' 'The Toothache,' 'The Haggis,'
|
|
and lots more of his best. Excuse this little apology for my
|
|
house; but I don't like to come before people who have a note of
|
|
song, and let it be supposed I do not know the difference.
|
|
|
|
To return to the more important - news. My wife again suffers in
|
|
high and cold places; I again profit. She is off to-day to New
|
|
York for a change, as heretofore to Berne, but I am glad to say in
|
|
better case than then. Still it is undeniable she suffers, and you
|
|
must excuse her (at least) if we both prove bad correspondents. I
|
|
am decidedly better, but I have been terribly cut up with business
|
|
complications: one disagreeable, as threatening loss; one, of the
|
|
most intolerable complexion, as involving me in dishonour. The
|
|
burthen of consistent carelessness: I have lost much by it in the
|
|
past; and for once (to my damnation) I have gained. I am sure you
|
|
will sympathise. It is hard work to sleep; it is hard to be told
|
|
you are a liar, and have to hold your peace, and think, 'Yes, by
|
|
God, and a thief too!' You remember my lectures on Ajax, or the
|
|
Unintentional Sin? Well, I know all about that now. Nothing seems
|
|
so unjust to the sufferer: or is more just in essence. LAISSEZ
|
|
PASSER LA JUSTICE DE DIEU.
|
|
|
|
Lloyd has learned to use the typewriter, and has most gallantly
|
|
completed upon that the draft of a tale, which seems to me not
|
|
without merit and promise, it is so silly, so gay, so absurd, in
|
|
spots (to my partial eyes) so genuinely humorous. It is true, he
|
|
would not have written it but for the New Arabian Nights; but it is
|
|
strange to find a young writer funny. Heavens, but I was
|
|
depressing when I took the pen in hand! And now I doubt if I am
|
|
sadder than my neighbours. Will this beginner move in the inverse
|
|
direction?
|
|
|
|
Let me have your news, and believe me, my dear Symonds, with
|
|
genuine affection, yours,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO W. E. HENLEY
|
|
|
|
SARANAC [DECEMBER 1887].
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR LAD, - I was indeed overjoyed to hear of the Dumas. In the
|
|
matter of the dedication, are not cross dedications a little
|
|
awkward? Lang and Rider Haggard did it, to be sure. Perpend. And
|
|
if you should conclude against a dedication, there is a passage in
|
|
MEMORIES AND PORTRAITS written AT you, when I was most desperate
|
|
(to stir you up a bit), which might be quoted: something about
|
|
Dumas still waiting his biographer. I have a decent time when the
|
|
weather is fine; when it is grey, or windy, or wet (as it too often
|
|
is), I am merely degraded to the dirt. I get some work done every
|
|
day with a devil of a heave; not extra good ever; and I regret my
|
|
engagement. Whiles I have had the most deplorable business
|
|
annoyances too; have been threatened with having to refund money;
|
|
got over that; and found myself in the worse scrape of being a kind
|
|
of unintentional swindler. These have worried me a great deal;
|
|
also old age with his stealing steps seems to have clawed me in his
|
|
clutch to some tune.
|
|
|
|
Do you play All Fours? We are trying it; it is still all haze to
|
|
me. Can the elder hand BEG more than once? The Port Admiral is at
|
|
Boston mingling with millionaires. I am but a weed on Lethe wharf.
|
|
The wife is only so-so. The Lord lead us all: if I can only get
|
|
off the stage with clean hands, I shall sing Hosanna. 'Put' is
|
|
described quite differently from your version in a book I have;
|
|
what are your rules? The Port Admiral is using a game of put in a
|
|
tale of his, the first copy of which was gloriously finished about
|
|
a fortnight ago, and the revise gallantly begun: THE FINSBURY
|
|
TONTINE it is named, and might fill two volumes, and is quite
|
|
incredibly silly, and in parts (it seems to me) pretty humorous. -
|
|
Love to all from
|
|
|
|
AN OLD, OLD MAN.
|
|
|
|
I say, Taine's ORIGINES DE LA FRANCE CONTEMPORAINE is no end; it
|
|
would turn the dead body of Charles Fox into a living Tory.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO MRS. FLEEMING JENKIN
|
|
|
|
[SARANAC LAKE, DECEMBER 1887.]
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR MRS. JENKIN, - The Opal is very well; it is fed with
|
|
glycerine when it seems hungry. I am very well, and get about much
|
|
more than I could have hoped. My wife is not very well; there is
|
|
no doubt the high level does not agree with her, and she is on the
|
|
move for a holiday to New York. Lloyd is at Boston on a visit, and
|
|
I hope has a good time. My mother is really first-rate; she and I,
|
|
despairing of other games for two, now play All Fours out of a
|
|
gamebook, and have not yet discovered its niceties, if any.
|
|
|
|
You will have heard, I dare say, that they made a great row over me
|
|
here. They also offered me much money, a great deal more than my
|
|
works are worth: I took some of it, and was greedy and hasty, and
|
|
am now very sorry. I have done with big prices from now out.
|
|
Wealth and self-respect seem, in my case, to be strangers.
|
|
|
|
We were talking the other day of how well Fleeming managed to grow
|
|
rich. Ah, that is a rare art; something more intellectual than a
|
|
virtue. The book has not yet made its appearance here; the life
|
|
alone, with a little preface, is to appear in the States; and the
|
|
Scribners are to send you half the royalties. I should like it to
|
|
do well, for Fleeming's sake.
|
|
|
|
Will you please send me the Greek water-carrier's song? I have a
|
|
particular use for it.
|
|
|
|
Have I any more news, I wonder? - and echo wonders along with me.
|
|
I am strangely disquieted on all political matters; and I do not
|
|
know if it is 'the signs of the times' or the sign of my own time
|
|
of life. But to me the sky seems black both in France and England,
|
|
and only partly clear in America. I have not seen it so dark in my
|
|
time; of that I am sure.
|
|
|
|
Please let us have some news; and, excuse me, for the sake of my
|
|
well-known idleness; and pardon Fanny, who is really not very well,
|
|
for this long silence. - Very sincerely your friend,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO MISS ADELAIDE BOODLE
|
|
|
|
[SARANAC LAKE, DECEMBER 1887.]
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR MISS BOODLE, - I am so much afraid, our gamekeeper may
|
|
weary of unacknowledged reports! Hence, in the midst of a perfect
|
|
horror of detestable weathers of a quite incongruous strain, and
|
|
with less desire for correspondence than - well, than - well, with
|
|
no desire for correspondence, behold me dash into the breach. Do
|
|
keep up your letters. They are most delightful to this exiled
|
|
backwoods family; and in your next, we shall hope somehow or other
|
|
to hear better news of you and yours - that in the first place -
|
|
and to hear more news of our beasts and birds and kindly fruits of
|
|
earth and those human tenants who are (truly) too much with us.
|
|
|
|
I am very well; better than for years: that is for good. But then
|
|
my wife is no great shakes; the place does not suit her - it is my
|
|
private opinion that no place does - and she is now away down to
|
|
New York for a change, which (as Lloyd is in Boston) leaves my
|
|
mother and me and Valentine alone in our wind-beleaguered hilltop
|
|
hatbox of a house. You should hear the cows butt against the walls
|
|
in the early morning while they feed; you should also see our back
|
|
log when the thermometer goes (as it does go) away - away below
|
|
zero, till it can be seen no more by the eye of man - not the
|
|
thermometer, which is still perfectly visible, but the mercury,
|
|
which curls up into the bulb like a hibernating bear; you should
|
|
also see the lad who 'does chores' for us, with his red stockings
|
|
and his thirteen year old face, and his highly manly tramp into the
|
|
room; and his two alternative answers to all questions about the
|
|
weather: either 'Cold,' or with a really lyrical movement of the
|
|
voice, 'LOVELY - raining!'
|
|
|
|
Will you take this miserable scarp for what it is worth? Will you
|
|
also understand that I am the man to blame, and my wife is really
|
|
almost too much out of health to write, or at least doesn't write?
|
|
- And believe me, with kind remembrance to Mrs. Boodle and your
|
|
sisters, very sincerely yours,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO CHARLES BAXTER
|
|
|
|
SARANAC, 12TH DECEMBER '87.
|
|
|
|
Give us news of all your folk. A Merry Christmas from all of us.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR CHARLES, - Will you please send 20 pounds to - for a
|
|
Christmas gift from -? Moreover, I cannot remember what I told you
|
|
to send to - ; but as God has dealt so providentially with me this
|
|
year, I now propose to make it 20 pounds.
|
|
|
|
I beg of you also to consider my strange position. I jined a club
|
|
which it was said was to defend the Union; and had a letter from
|
|
the secretary, which his name I believe was Lord Warmingpan (or
|
|
words to that effect), to say I am elected, and had better pay up a
|
|
certain sum of money, I forget what. Now I cannae verra weel draw
|
|
a blank cheque and send to -
|
|
|
|
LORD WARMINGPAN (or words to that effect),
|
|
London, England.
|
|
|
|
And, man, if it was possible, I would be dooms glad to be out o'
|
|
this bit scrapie. Mebbe the club was ca'd 'The Union,' but I
|
|
wouldnae like to sweir; and mebbe it wasnae, or mebbe only words to
|
|
that effec' - but I wouldnae care just exac'ly about sweirin'. Do
|
|
ye no think Henley, or Pollick, or some o' they London fellies,
|
|
micht mebbe perhaps find out for me? and just what the soom was?
|
|
And that you would aiblins pay for me? For I thocht I was sae dam
|
|
patriotic jinin', and it would be a kind o' a come-doun to be
|
|
turned out again. Mebbe Lang would ken; or mebbe Rider Haggyard:
|
|
they're kind o' Union folks. But it's my belief his name was
|
|
Warmingpan whatever. Yours,
|
|
|
|
THOMSON,
|
|
ALIAS ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Could it be Warminster?
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO MISS MONROE
|
|
|
|
SARANAC LAKE, NEW YORK [DECEMBER 19, 1887].
|
|
|
|
DEAR MISS MONROE, - Many thanks for your letter and your good
|
|
wishes. It was much my desire to get to Chicago: had I done - or
|
|
if I yet do - so, I shall hope to see the original of my
|
|
photograph, which is one of my show possessions; but the fates are
|
|
rather contrary. My wife is far from well; I myself dread worse
|
|
than almost any other imaginable peril, that miraculous and really
|
|
insane invention the American Railroad Car. Heaven help the man -
|
|
may I add the woman - that sets foot in one! Ah, if it were only
|
|
an ocean to cross, it would be a matter of small thought to me -
|
|
and great pleasure. But the railroad car - every man has his weak
|
|
point; and I fear the railroad car as abjectly as I do an earwig,
|
|
and, on the whole, on better grounds. You do not know how bitter
|
|
it is to have to make such a confession; for you have not the
|
|
pretension nor the weakness of a man. If I do get to Chicago, you
|
|
will hear of me: so much can be said. And do you never come east?
|
|
|
|
I was pleased to recognise a word of my poor old Deacon in your
|
|
letter. It would interest me very much to hear how it went and
|
|
what you thought of piece and actors; and my collaborator, who
|
|
knows and respects the photograph, would be pleased too. - Still in
|
|
the hope of seeing you, I am, yours very truly,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO HENRY JAMES
|
|
|
|
SARANAC LAKE, WINTER 1887-8.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR HENRY JAMES, - It may please you to know how our family has
|
|
been employed. In the silence of the snow the afternoon lamp has
|
|
lighted an eager fireside group: my mother reading, Fanny, Lloyd,
|
|
and I devoted listeners; and the work was really one of the best
|
|
works I ever heard; and its author is to be praised and honoured;
|
|
and what do you suppose is the name of it? and have you ever read
|
|
it yourself? and (I am bound I will get to the bottom of the page
|
|
before I blow the gaff, if I have to fight it out on this line all
|
|
summer; for if you have not to turn a leaf, there can be no
|
|
suspense, the conspectory eye being swift to pick out proper names;
|
|
and without suspense, there can be little pleasure in this world,
|
|
to my mind at least) - and, in short, the name of it is RODERICK
|
|
HUDSON, if you please. My dear James, it is very spirited, and
|
|
very sound, and very noble too. Hudson, Mrs. Hudson, Rowland, O,
|
|
all first-rate: Rowland a very fine fellow; Hudson as good as he
|
|
can stick (did you know Hudson? I suspect you did), Mrs. H. his
|
|
real born mother, a thing rarely managed in fiction.
|
|
|
|
We are all keeping pretty fit and pretty hearty; but this letter is
|
|
not from me to you, it is from a reader of R. H. to the author of
|
|
the same, and it says nothing, and has nothing to say, but thank
|
|
you.
|
|
|
|
We are going to re-read CASAMASSIMA as a proper pendant. Sir, I
|
|
think these two are your best, and care not who knows it.
|
|
|
|
May I beg you, the next time RODERICK is printed off, to go over
|
|
the sheets of the last few chapters, and strike out 'immense' and
|
|
'tremendous'? You have simply dropped them there like your pocket-
|
|
handkerchief; all you have to do is to pick them up and pouch them,
|
|
and your room - what do I say? - your cathedral! - will be swept
|
|
and garnished. - I am, dear sir, your delighted reader,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
P.S. - Perhaps it is a pang of causeless honesty, perhaps. I hope
|
|
it will set a value on my praise of RODERICK, perhaps it's a burst
|
|
of the diabolic, but I must break out with the news that I can't
|
|
bear the PORTRAIT OF A LADY. I read it all, and I wept too; but I
|
|
can't stand your having written it; and I beg you will write no
|
|
more of the like. INFRA, sir; Below you: I can't help it - it may
|
|
be your favourite work, but in my eyes it's BELOW YOU to write and
|
|
me to read. I thought RODERICK was going to be another such at the
|
|
beginning; and I cannot describe my pleasure as I found it taking
|
|
bones and blood, and looking out at me with a moved and human
|
|
countenance, whose lineaments are written in my memory until my
|
|
last of days.
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
|
|
|
|
My wife begs your forgiveness; I believe for her silence.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO SIDNEY COLVIN
|
|
|
|
SARANAC LAKE [DECEMBER 1887].
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR COLVIN, - This goes to say that we are all fit, and the
|
|
place is very bleak and wintry, and up to now has shown no such
|
|
charms of climate as Davos, but is a place where men eat and where
|
|
the cattarh, catarrh (cattarrh, or cattarrhh) appears to be
|
|
unknown. I walk in my verandy in the snaw, sir, looking down over
|
|
one of those dabbled wintry landscapes that are (to be frank) so
|
|
chilly to the human bosom, and up at a grey, English - nay,
|
|
MEHERCLE, Scottish - heaven; and I think it pretty bleak; and the
|
|
wind swoops at me round the corner, like a lion, and fluffs the
|
|
snow in my face; and I could aspire to be elsewhere; but yet I do
|
|
not catch cold, and yet, when I come in, I eat. So that hitherto
|
|
Saranac, if not deliriously delectable, has not been a failure;
|
|
nay, from the mere point of view of the wicked body, it has proved
|
|
a success. But I wish I could still get to the woods; alas, NOUS
|
|
N'IRONS PLUS AU BOIS is my poor song; the paths are buried, the
|
|
dingles drifted full, a little walk is grown a long one; till
|
|
spring comes, I fear the burthen will hold good.
|
|
|
|
I get along with my papers for SCRIBNER not fast, nor so far
|
|
specially well; only this last, the fourth one (which makes a third
|
|
part of my whole task), I do believe is pulled off after a fashion.
|
|
It is a mere sermon: 'Smith opens out'; but it is true, and I find
|
|
it touching and beneficial, to me at least; and I think there is
|
|
some fine writing in it, some very apt and pregnant phrases.
|
|
PULVIS ET UMBRA, I call it; I might have called it a Darwinian
|
|
Sermon, if I had wanted. Its sentiments, although parsonic, will
|
|
not offend even you, I believe. The other three papers, I fear,
|
|
bear many traces of effort, and the ungenuine inspiration of an
|
|
income at so much per essay, and the honest desire of the incomer
|
|
to give good measure for his money. Well, I did my damndest
|
|
anyway.
|
|
|
|
We have been reading H. James's RODERICK HUDSON, which I eagerly
|
|
press you to get at once: it is a book of a high order - the last
|
|
volume in particular. I wish Meredith would read it. It took my
|
|
breath away.
|
|
|
|
I am at the seventh book of the AENEID, and quite amazed at its
|
|
merits (also very often floored by its difficulties). The Circe
|
|
passage at the beginning, and the sublime business of Amata with
|
|
the simile of the boy's top - O Lord, what a happy thought! - have
|
|
specially delighted me. - I am, dear sir, your respected friend,
|
|
|
|
JOHN GREGG GILLSON, J.P., M.R.I.A., etc
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO SIDNEY COLVIN
|
|
|
|
[SARANAC, DECEMBER 24, 1887.]
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR COLVIN, - Thank you for your explanations. I have done no
|
|
more Virgil since I finished the seventh book, for I have, first
|
|
been eaten up with Taine, and next have fallen head over heels into
|
|
a new tale, THE MASTER OF BALLANTRAE. No thought have I now apart
|
|
from it, and I have got along up to page ninety-two of the draft
|
|
with great interest. It is to me a most seizing tale: there are
|
|
some fantastic elements; the most is a dead genuine human problem -
|
|
human tragedy, I should say rather. It will be about as long, I
|
|
imagine, as KIDNAPPED.
|
|
|
|
DRAMATIS PERSONAE:
|
|
|
|
(1) My old Lord Durrisdeer.
|
|
(2) The Master of Ballantrae, AND
|
|
(3) Henry Durie, HIS SONS.
|
|
(4) Clementina, ENGAGED TO THE FIRST, MARRIED TO THE SECOND.
|
|
(5) Ephraim Mackellar, LAND STEWARD AT DURRISDEER AND NARRATOR OF
|
|
THE MOST OF THE BOOK.
|
|
(6) Francis Burke, Chevalier de St. Louis, ONE OF PRINCE CHARLIE'S
|
|
IRISHMEN AND NARRATOR OF THE REST.
|
|
|
|
Besides these, many instant figures, most of them dumb or nearly
|
|
so: Jessie Brown the whore, Captain Crail, Captain MacCombie, our
|
|
old friend Alan Breck, our old friend Riach (both only for an
|
|
instant), Teach the pirate (vulgarly Blackbeard), John Paul and
|
|
Macconochie, servants at Durrisdeer. The date is from 1745 to '65
|
|
(about). The scene, near Kirkcudbright, in the States, and for a
|
|
little moment in the French East Indies. I have done most of the
|
|
big work, the quarrel, duel between the brothers, and announcement
|
|
of the death to Clementina and my Lord - Clementina, Henry, and
|
|
Mackellar (nicknamed Squaretoes) are really very fine fellows; the
|
|
Master is all I know of the devil. I have known hints of him, in
|
|
the world, but always cowards; he is as bold as a lion, but with
|
|
the same deadly, causeless duplicity I have watched with so much
|
|
surprise in my two cowards. 'Tis true, I saw a hint of the same
|
|
nature in another man who was not a coward; but he had other things
|
|
to attend to; the Master has nothing else but his devilry. Here
|
|
come my visitors - and have now gone, or the first relay of them;
|
|
and I hope no more may come. For mark you, sir, this is our 'day'
|
|
- Saturday, as ever was, and here we sit, my mother and I, before a
|
|
large wood fire and await the enemy with the most steadfast
|
|
courage; and without snow and greyness: and the woman Fanny in New
|
|
York for her health, which is far from good; and the lad Lloyd at
|
|
the inn in the village because he has a cold; and the handmaid
|
|
Valentine abroad in a sleigh upon her messages; and to-morrow
|
|
Christmas and no mistake. Such is human life: LA CARRIERE
|
|
HUMAINE. I will enclose, if I remember, the required autograph.
|
|
|
|
I will do better, put it on the back of this page. Love to all,
|
|
and mostly, my very dear Colvin, to yourself. For whatever I say
|
|
or do, or don't say or do, you may be very sure I am, - Yours
|
|
always affectionately,
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO MISS ADELAIDE BOODLE
|
|
|
|
SARANAC LAKE, ADIRONDACKS, N.Y., U.S.A., CHRISTMAS 1887.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR MISS BOODLE, - And a very good Christmas to you all; and
|
|
better fortune; and if worse, the more courage to support it -
|
|
which I think is the kinder wish in all human affairs. Somewhile -
|
|
I fear a good while - after this, you should receive our Christmas
|
|
gift; we have no tact and no taste, only a welcome and (often)
|
|
tonic brutality; and I dare say the present, even after my friend
|
|
Baxter has acted on and reviewed my hints, may prove a White
|
|
Elephant. That is why I dread presents. And therefore pray
|
|
understand if any element of that hamper prove unwelcome, IT IS TO
|
|
BE EXCHANGED. I will not sit down under the name of a giver of
|
|
White Elephants. I never had any elephant but one, and his
|
|
initials were R. L. S.; and he trod on my foot at a very early age.
|
|
But this is a fable, and not in the least to the point: which is
|
|
that if, for once in my life, I have wished to make things nicer
|
|
for anybody but the Elephant (see fable), do not suffer me to have
|
|
made them ineffably more embarrassing, and exchange - ruthlessly
|
|
exchange!
|
|
|
|
For my part, I am the most cockered up of any mortal being; and one
|
|
of the healthiest, or thereabout, at some modest distance from the
|
|
bull's eye. I am condemned to write twelve articles in SCRIBNER'S
|
|
MAGAZINE for the love of gain; I think I had better send you them;
|
|
what is far more to the purpose, I am on the jump with a new story
|
|
which has bewitched me - I doubt it may bewitch no one else. It is
|
|
called THE MASTER OF BALLANTRAE - pronounce Ballan-tray. If it is
|
|
not good, well, mine will be the fault; for I believe it is a good
|
|
tale.
|
|
|
|
The greetings of the season to you, and your mother, and your
|
|
sisters. My wife heartily joins. - And I am, yours very sincerely,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
P.S. - You will think me an illiterate dog: I am, for the first
|
|
time, reading ROBERTSON'S SERMONS. I do not know how to express
|
|
how much I think of them. If by any chance you should be as
|
|
illiterate as I, and not know them, it is worth while curing the
|
|
defect.
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO CHARLES BAXTER
|
|
|
|
SARANAC LAKE, JANUARY '88.
|
|
|
|
DEAR CHARLES, - You are the flower of Doers. . . . Will my doer
|
|
collaborate thus much in my new novel? In the year 1794 or 5, Mr.
|
|
Ephraim Mackellar, A.M., late. steward on the Durrisdeer estates,
|
|
completed a set of memoranda (as long as a novel) with regard to
|
|
the death of the (then) late Lord Durrisdeer, and as to that of his
|
|
attainted elder brother, called by the family courtesy title the
|
|
Master of Ballantrae. These he placed in the hands of John
|
|
Macbrair. W.S., the family agent, on the understanding they were
|
|
to be sealed until 1862, when a century would have elapsed since
|
|
the affair in the wilderness (my lord's death). You succeeded Mr.
|
|
Macbrair's firm; the Durrisdeers are extinct; and last year, in an
|
|
old green box, you found these papers with Macbrair's indorsation.
|
|
It is that indorsation of which I want a copy; you may remember,
|
|
when you gave me the papers, I neglected to take that, and I am
|
|
sure you are a man too careful of antiquities to have let it fall
|
|
aside. I shall have a little introduction descriptive of my visit
|
|
to Edinburgh, arrival there, denner with yoursel', and first
|
|
reading of the papers in your smoking-room: all of which, of
|
|
course, you well remember. - Ever yours affectionately,
|
|
|
|
R. L S.
|
|
|
|
Your name is my friend Mr. Johnstone Thomson, W.S.!!!
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO E. L. BURLINGAME
|
|
|
|
SARANAC, WINTER 1887-8.
|
|
|
|
DEAR MR. BURLINGAME, - I am keeping the sermon to see if I can't
|
|
add another. Meanwhile, I will send you very soon a different
|
|
paper which may take its place. Possibly some of these days soon I
|
|
may get together a talk on things current, which should go in (if
|
|
possible) earlier than either. I am now less nervous about these
|
|
papers; I believe I can do the trick without great strain, though
|
|
the terror that breathed on my back in the beginning is not yet
|
|
forgotten.
|
|
|
|
THE MASTER OF BALLANTRAE I have had to leave aside, as I was quite
|
|
worked out. But in about a week I hope to try back and send you
|
|
the first four numbers: these are all drafted, it is only the
|
|
revision that has broken me down, as it is often the hardest work.
|
|
These four I propose you should set up for me at once, and we'll
|
|
copyright 'em in a pamphlet. I will tell you the names of the BONA
|
|
FIDE purchasers in England.
|
|
|
|
The numbers will run from twenty to thirty pages of my manuscript.
|
|
You can give me that much, can you not? It is a howling good tale
|
|
- at least these first four numbers are; the end is a trifle more
|
|
fantastic, but 'tis all picturesque.
|
|
|
|
Don't trouble about any more French books; I am on another scent,
|
|
you see, just now. Only the FRENCH IN HINDUSTAN I await with
|
|
impatience, as that is for BALLANTRAE. The scene of that romance
|
|
is Scotland - the States - Scotland - India - Scotland - and the
|
|
States again; so it jumps like a flea. I have enough about the
|
|
States now, and very much obliged I am; yet if Drake's TRAGEDIES OF
|
|
the WILDERNESS is (as I gather) a collection of originals, I should
|
|
like to purchase it. If it is a picturesque vulgarisation, I do
|
|
not wish to look it in the face. Purchase, I say; for I think it
|
|
would be well to have some such collection by me with a view to
|
|
fresh works. - Yours very sincerely,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
P.S. - If you think of having the MASTER illustrated, I suggest
|
|
that Hole would be very well up to the Scottish, which is the
|
|
larger part. If you have it done here, tell your artist to look at
|
|
the hall of Craigievar in Billing's BARONIAL AND ECCLESIASTICAL
|
|
ANTIQUITIES, and he will get a broad hint for the hall at
|
|
Durrisdeer: it is, I think, the chimney of Craigievar and the roof
|
|
of Pinkie, and perhaps a little more of Pinkie altogether; but I
|
|
should have to see the book myself to be sure. Hole would be
|
|
invaluable for this. I dare say if you had it illustrated, you
|
|
could let me have one or two for the English edition.
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO WILLIAM ARCHER
|
|
|
|
[SARANAC, WINTER 1887-8.]
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR ARCHER, - What am I to say? I have read your friend's book
|
|
with singular relish. If he has written any other, I beg you will
|
|
let me see it; and if he has not, I beg him to lose no time in
|
|
supplying the deficiency. It is full of promise; but I should like
|
|
to know his age. There are things in it that are very clever, to
|
|
which I attach small importance; it is the shape of the age. And
|
|
there are passages, particularly the rally in presence of the Zulu
|
|
king, that show genuine and remarkable narrative talent - a talent
|
|
that few will have the wit to understand, a talent of strength,
|
|
spirit, capacity, sufficient vision, and sufficient self-sacrifice,
|
|
which last is the chief point in a narrator.
|
|
|
|
As a whole, it is (of course) a fever dream of the most feverish.
|
|
Over Bashville the footman I howled with derision and delight; I
|
|
dote on Bashville - I could read of him for ever; DE BASHVILLE JE
|
|
SUIS LE FERVENT - there is only one Bashville, and I am his devoted
|
|
slave; BASHVILLE EST MAGNIFIQUE, MAIS IL N'EST GUERE POSSIBLE. He
|
|
is the note of the book. It is all mad, mad and deliriously
|
|
delightful; the author has a taste in chivalry like Walter Scott's
|
|
or Dumas', and then he daubs in little bits of socialism; he soars
|
|
away on the wings of the romantic griffon - even the griffon, as he
|
|
cleaves air, shouting with laughter at the nature of the quest -
|
|
and I believe in his heart he thinks he is labouring in a quarry of
|
|
solid granite realism.
|
|
|
|
It is this that makes me - the most hardened adviser now extant -
|
|
stand back and hold my peace. If Mr. Shaw is below five-and-
|
|
twenty, let him go his path; if he is thirty, he had best be told
|
|
that he is a romantic, and pursue romance with his eyes open; - or
|
|
perhaps he knows it; - God knows! - my brain is softened.
|
|
|
|
It is HORRID FUN. All I ask is more of it. Thank you for the
|
|
pleasure you gave us, and tell me more of the inimitable author.
|
|
|
|
(I say, Archer, my God, what women!) - Yours very truly,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO WILLIAM ARCHER
|
|
|
|
SARANAC, FEBRUARY 1888.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR ARCHER, - Pretty sick in bed; but necessary to protest and
|
|
continue your education.
|
|
|
|
Why was Jenkin an amateur in my eyes? You think because not
|
|
amusing (I think he often was amusing). The reason is this: I
|
|
never, or almost never, saw two pages of his work that I could not
|
|
have put in one without the smallest loss of material. That is the
|
|
only test I know of writing. If there is anywhere a thing said in
|
|
two sentences that could have been as clearly and as engagingly and
|
|
as forcibly said in one, then it's amateur work. Then you will
|
|
bring me up with old Dumas. Nay, the object of a story is to be
|
|
long, to fill up hours; the story-teller's art of writing is to
|
|
water out by continual invention, historical and technical, and yet
|
|
not seem to water; seem on the other hand to practise that same wit
|
|
of conspicuous and declaratory condensation which is the proper art
|
|
of writing. That is one thing in which my stories fail: I am
|
|
always cutting the flesh off their bones.
|
|
|
|
I would rise from the dead to preach!
|
|
|
|
Hope all well. I think my wife better, but she's not allowed to
|
|
write; and this (only wrung from me by desire to Boss and Parsonise
|
|
and Dominate, strong in sickness) is my first letter for days, and
|
|
will likely be my last for many more. Not blame my wife for her
|
|
silence: doctor's orders. All much interested by your last, and
|
|
fragment from brother, and anecdotes of Tomarcher. - The sick but
|
|
still Moral
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
|
|
|
|
Tell Shaw to hurry up: I want another.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO WILLIAM ARCHER
|
|
|
|
[SARANAC, SPRING 1888?]
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR ARCHER, - It happened thus. I came forth from that
|
|
performance in a breathing heat of indignation. (Mind, at this
|
|
distance of time and with my increased knowledge, I admit there is
|
|
a problem in the piece; but I saw none then, except a problem in
|
|
brutality; and I still consider the problem in that case not
|
|
established.) On my way down the FRANCAIS stairs, I trod on an old
|
|
gentleman's toes, whereupon with that suavity that so well becomes
|
|
me, I turned about to apologise, and on the instant, repenting me
|
|
of that intention, stopped the apology midway, and added something
|
|
in French to this effect: No, you are one of the LACHES who have
|
|
been applauding that piece. I retract my apology. Said the old
|
|
Frenchman, laying his hand on my arm, and with a smile that was
|
|
truly heavenly in temperance, irony, good-nature, and knowledge of
|
|
the world, 'Ah, monsieur, vous etes bien jeune!' - Yours very
|
|
truly,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO E. L. BURLINGAME
|
|
|
|
SARANAC [FEBRUARY 1888].
|
|
|
|
DEAR MR. BURLINGAME, - Will you send me (from the library) some of
|
|
the works of my dear old G. P. R. James. With the following
|
|
especially I desire to make or to renew acquaintance: THE
|
|
SONGSTER, THE GIPSY, THE CONVICT, THE STEPMOTHER, THE GENTLEMAN OF
|
|
THE OLD SCHOOL, THE ROBBER.
|
|
|
|
EXCUSEZ DU PEU.
|
|
|
|
This sudden return to an ancient favourite hangs upon an accident.
|
|
The 'Franklin County Library' contains two works of his, THE
|
|
CAVALIER and MORLEY ERNSTEIN. I read the first with indescribable
|
|
amusement - it was worse than I had feared, and yet somehow
|
|
engaging; the second (to my surprise) was better than I had dared
|
|
to hope: a good honest, dull, interesting tale, with a genuine
|
|
old-fashioned talent in the invention when not strained; and a
|
|
genuine old-fashioned feeling for the English language. This
|
|
experience awoke appetite, and you see I have taken steps to stay
|
|
it.
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO E. L. BURLINGAME
|
|
|
|
[SARANAC, FEBRUARY 1888.]
|
|
|
|
DEAR MR. BURLINGAME, - 1. Of course then don't use it. Dear Man,
|
|
I write these to please you, not myself, and you know a main sight
|
|
better than I do what is good. In that case, however, I enclose
|
|
another paper, and return the corrected proof of PULVIS ET UMBRA,
|
|
so that we may be afloat.
|
|
|
|
2. I want to say a word as to the MASTER. (THE MASTER OF
|
|
BALLANTRAE shall be the name by all means.) If you like and want
|
|
it, I leave it to you to make an offer. You may remember I thought
|
|
the offer you made when I was still in England too small; by which
|
|
I did not at all mean, I thought it less than it was worth, but too
|
|
little to tempt me to undergo the disagreeables of serial
|
|
publication. This tale (if you want it) you are to have; for it is
|
|
the least I can do for you; and you are to observe that the sum you
|
|
pay me for my articles going far to meet my wants, I am quite open
|
|
to be satisfied with less than formerly. I tell you I do dislike
|
|
this battle of the dollars. I feel sure you all pay too much here
|
|
in America; and I beg you not to spoil me any more. For I am
|
|
getting spoiled: I do not want wealth, and I feel these big sums
|
|
demoralise me.
|
|
|
|
My wife came here pretty ill; she had a dreadful bad night; to-day
|
|
she is better. But now Valentine is ill; and Lloyd and I have got
|
|
breakfast, and my hand somewhat shakes after washing dishes. -
|
|
Yours very sincerely,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
P.S. - Please order me the EVENING POST for two months. My
|
|
subscription is run out. The MUTINY and EDWARDES to hand.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO SIDNEY COLVIN
|
|
|
|
[SARANAC, MARCH 1888.]
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR COLVIN, - Fanny has been very unwell. She is not long
|
|
home, has been ill again since her return, but is now better again
|
|
to a degree. You must not blame her for not writing, as she is not
|
|
allowed to write at all, not even a letter. To add to our
|
|
misfortunes, Valentine is quite ill and in bed. Lloyd and I get
|
|
breakfast; I have now, 10.15, just got the dishes washed and the
|
|
kitchen all clear, and sit down to give you as much news as I have
|
|
spirit for, after such an engagement. Glass is a thing that really
|
|
breaks my spirit: I do not like to fail, and with glass I cannot
|
|
reach the work of my high calling - the artist's.
|
|
|
|
I am, as you may gather from this, wonderfully better: this harsh,
|
|
grey, glum, doleful climate has done me good. You cannot fancy how
|
|
sad a climate it is. When the thermometer stays all day below 10
|
|
degrees, it is really cold; and when the wind blows, O commend me
|
|
to the result. Pleasure in life is all delete; there is no red
|
|
spot left, fires do not radiate, you burn your hands all the time
|
|
on what seem to be cold stones. It is odd, zero is like summer
|
|
heat to us now; and we like, when the thermometer outside is really
|
|
low, a room at about 48 degrees: 60 degrees we find oppressive.
|
|
Yet the natives keep their holes at 90 degrees or even 100 degrees.
|
|
|
|
This was interrupted days ago by household labours. Since then I
|
|
have had and (I tremble to write it, but it does seem as if I had)
|
|
beaten off an influenza. The cold is exquisite. Valentine still
|
|
in bed. The proofs of the first part of the MASTER OF BALLANTRAE
|
|
begin to come in; soon you shall have it in the pamphlet form; and
|
|
I hope you will like it. The second part will not be near so good;
|
|
but there - we can but do as it'll do with us. I have every reason
|
|
to believe this winter has done me real good, so far as it has
|
|
gone; and if I carry out my scheme for next winter, and succeeding
|
|
years, I should end by being a tower of strength. I want you to
|
|
save a good holiday for next winter; I hope we shall be able to
|
|
help you to some larks. Is there any Greek Isle you would like to
|
|
explore? or any creek in Asia Minor? - Yours ever affectionately,
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO THE REV. DR. CHARTERIS
|
|
|
|
[SARANAC LAKE, WINTER 1887-1888.]
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR DR. CHARTERIS, - I have asked Douglas and Foulis to send
|
|
you my last volume, so that you may possess my little paper on my
|
|
father in a permanent shape; not for what that is worth, but as a
|
|
tribute of respect to one whom my father regarded with such love,
|
|
esteem, and affection. Besides, as you will see, I have brought
|
|
you under contribution, and I have still to thank you for your
|
|
letter to my mother; so more than kind; in much, so just. It is my
|
|
hope, when time and health permit, to do something more definite
|
|
for my father's memory. You are one of the very few who can (if
|
|
you will) help me. Pray believe that I lay on you no obligation; I
|
|
know too well, you may believe me, how difficult it is to put even
|
|
two sincere lines upon paper, where all, too, is to order. But if
|
|
the spirit should ever move you, and you should recall something
|
|
memorable of your friend, his son will heartily thank you for a
|
|
note of it. - With much respect, believe me, yours sincerely,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO HENRY JAMES
|
|
|
|
[SARANAC LAKE, MARCH 1888.]
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR DELIGHTFUL JAMES, - To quote your heading to my wife, I
|
|
think no man writes so elegant a letter, I am sure none so kind,
|
|
unless it be Colvin, and there is more of the stern parent about
|
|
him. I was vexed at your account of my admired Meredith: I wish I
|
|
could go and see him; as it is I will try to write. I read with
|
|
indescribable admiration your EMERSON. I begin to long for the day
|
|
when these portraits of yours shall be collected: do put me in.
|
|
But Emerson is a higher flight. Have you a TOURGUENEFF? You have
|
|
told me many interesting things of him, and I seem to see them
|
|
written, and forming a graceful and BILDEND sketch. My novel is a
|
|
tragedy; four parts out of six or seven are written, and gone to
|
|
Burlingame. Five parts of it are sound, human tragedy; the last
|
|
one or two, I regret to say, not so soundly designed; I almost
|
|
hesitate to write them; they are very picturesque, but they are
|
|
fantastic; they shame, perhaps degrade, the beginning. I wish I
|
|
knew; that was how the tale came to me however. I got the
|
|
situation; it was an old taste of mine: The older brother goes out
|
|
in the '45, the younger stays; the younger, of course, gets title
|
|
and estate and marries the bride designate of the elder - a family
|
|
match, but he (the younger) had always loved her, and she had
|
|
really loved the elder. Do you see the situation? Then the devil
|
|
and Saranac suggested this DENOUEMENT, and I joined the two ends in
|
|
a day or two of constant feverish thought, and began to write. And
|
|
now - I wonder if I have not gone too far with the fantastic? The
|
|
elder brother is an INCUBUS: supposed to be killed at Culloden, he
|
|
turns up again and bleeds the family of money; on that stopping he
|
|
comes and lives with them, whence flows the real tragedy, the
|
|
nocturnal duel of the brothers (very naturally, and indeed, I
|
|
think, inevitably arising), and second supposed death of the elder.
|
|
Husband and wife now really make up, and then the cloven hoof
|
|
appears. For the third supposed death and the manner of the third
|
|
reappearance is steep; steep, sir. It is even very steep, and I
|
|
fear it shames the honest stuff so far; but then it is highly
|
|
pictorial, and it leads up to the death of the elder brother at the
|
|
hands of the younger in a perfectly cold-blooded murder, of which I
|
|
wish (and mean) the reader to approve. You see how daring is the
|
|
design. There are really but six characters, and one of these
|
|
episodic, and yet it covers eighteen years, and will be, I imagine,
|
|
the longest of my works. - Yours ever,
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
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READ GOSSE'S RALEIGH. First-rate. - Yours ever,
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|
|
R. L. S.
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Letter: TO THE REV. DR. CHARTERIS
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|
SARANAC LAKE, ADIRONDACKS, NEW YORK, U.S.A., SPRING 1888.
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|
MY DEAR DR. CHARTERIS, - The funeral letter, your notes, and many
|
|
other things, are reserved for a book, MEMORIALS OF A SCOTTISH
|
|
FAMILY, if ever I can find time and opportunity. I wish I could
|
|
throw off all else and sit down to it to-day. Yes, my father was a
|
|
'distinctly religious man,' but not a pious. The distinction
|
|
painfully and pleasurably recalls old conflicts; it used to be my
|
|
great gun - and you, who suffered for the whole Church, know how
|
|
needful it was to have some reserve artillery! His sentiments were
|
|
tragic; he was a tragic thinker. Now, granted that life is tragic
|
|
to the marrow, it seems the proper function of religion to make us
|
|
accept and serve in that tragedy, as officers in that other and
|
|
comparable one of war. Service is the word, active service, in the
|
|
military sense; and the religious man - I beg pardon, the pious man
|
|
- is he who has a military joy in duty - not he who weeps over the
|
|
wounded. We can do no more than try to do our best. Really, I am
|
|
the grandson of the manse - I preach you a kind of sermon. Box the
|
|
brat's ears!
|
|
|
|
My mother - to pass to matters more within my competence - finely
|
|
enjoys herself. The new country, some new friends we have made,
|
|
the interesting experiment of this climate-which (at least) is
|
|
tragic - all have done her good. I have myself passed a better
|
|
winter than for years, and now that it is nearly over have some
|
|
diffident hopes of doing well in the summer and 'eating a little
|
|
more air' than usual.
|
|
|
|
I thank you for the trouble you are taking, and my mother joins
|
|
with me in kindest regards to yourself and Mrs. Charteris. - Yours
|
|
very truly,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
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|
|
Letter: TO S. R. CROCKETT
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|
[SARANAC LAKE, SPRING 1888.]
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|
DEAR MINISTER OF THE FREE KIRK AT PENICUIK, - For O, man, I cannae
|
|
read your name! - That I have been so long in answering your
|
|
delightful letter sits on my conscience badly. The fact is I let
|
|
my correspondence accumulate until I am going to leave a place; and
|
|
then I pitch in, overhaul the pile, and my cries of penitence might
|
|
be heard a mile about. Yesterday I despatched thirty-five belated
|
|
letters: conceive the state of my conscience, above all as the
|
|
Sins of Omission (see boyhood's guide, the Shorter Catechism) are
|
|
in my view the only serious ones; I call it my view, but it cannot
|
|
have escaped you that it was also Christ's. However, all that is
|
|
not to the purpose, which is to thank you for the sincere pleasure
|
|
afforded by your charming letter. I get a good few such; how few
|
|
that please me at all, you would be surprised to learn - or have a
|
|
singularly just idea of the dulness of our race; how few that
|
|
please me as yours did, I can tell you in one word - NONE. I am no
|
|
great kirkgoer, for many reasons - and the sermon's one of them,
|
|
and the first prayer another, but the chief and effectual reason is
|
|
the stuffiness. I am no great kirkgoer, says I, but when I read
|
|
yon letter of yours, I thought I would like to sit under ye. And
|
|
then I saw ye were to send me a bit buik, and says I, I'll wait for
|
|
the bit buik, and then I'll mebbe can read the man's name, and
|
|
anyway I'll can kill twa birds wi' ae stane. And, man! the buik
|
|
was ne'er heard tell o'!
|
|
|
|
That fact is an adminicle of excuse for my delay.
|
|
|
|
And now, dear minister of the illegible name, thanks to you, and
|
|
greeting to your wife, and may you have good guidance in your
|
|
difficult labours, and a blessing on your life.
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
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|
|
|
(No just so young sae young's he was, though -
|
|
I'm awfae near forty, man.)
|
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|
|
Address c/o CHARLES SCRIBNER'S SONS,
|
|
743 BROADWAY, NEW YORK.
|
|
|
|
Don't put 'N.B.' in your paper: put SCOTLAND, and be done with it.
|
|
Alas, that I should be thus stabbed in the home of my friends! The
|
|
name of my native land is not NORTH BRITAIN, whatever may be the
|
|
name of yours.
|
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|
|
R. L. S.
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|
|
Letter: TO MISS FERRIER
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|
|
|
[SARANAC LAKE, APRIL 1888.]
|
|
|
|
MY DEAREST COGGIE, - I wish I could find the letter I began to you
|
|
some time ago when I was ill; but I can't and I don't believe there
|
|
was much in it anyway. We have all behaved like pigs and beasts
|
|
and barn-door poultry to you; but I have been sunk in work, and the
|
|
lad is lazy and blind and has been working too; and as for Fanny,
|
|
she has been (and still is) really unwell. I had a mean hope you
|
|
might perhaps write again before I got up steam: I could not have
|
|
been more ashamed of myself than I am, and I should have had
|
|
another laugh.
|
|
|
|
They always say I cannot give news in my letters: I shall shake
|
|
off that reproach. On Monday, if she is well enough, Fanny leaves
|
|
for California to see her friends; it is rather an anxiety to let
|
|
her go alone; but the doctor simply forbids it in my case, and she
|
|
is better anywhere than here - a bleak, blackguard, beggarly
|
|
climate, of which I can say no good except that it suits me and
|
|
some others of the same or similar persuasions whom (by all rights)
|
|
it ought to kill. It is a form of Arctic St. Andrews, I should
|
|
imagine; and the miseries of forty degrees below zero, with a high
|
|
wind, have to be felt to be appreciated. The greyness of the
|
|
heavens here is a circumstance eminently revolting to the soul; I
|
|
have near forgot the aspect of the sun - I doubt if this be news;
|
|
it is certainly no news to us. My mother suffers a little from the
|
|
inclemency of the place, but less on the whole than would be
|
|
imagined. Among other wild schemes, we have been projecting yacht
|
|
voyages; and I beg to inform you that Cogia Hassan was cast for the
|
|
part of passenger. They may come off! - Again this is not news.
|
|
The lad? Well, the lad wrote a tale this winter, which appeared to
|
|
me so funny that I have taken it in hand, and some of these days
|
|
you will receive a copy of a work entitled 'A GAME OF BLUFF, by
|
|
Lloyd Osbourne and Robert Louis Stevenson.'
|
|
|
|
Otherwise he (the lad) is much as usual. There remains, I believe,
|
|
to be considered only R. L. S., the house-bond, prop, pillar,
|
|
bread-winner, and bully of the establishment. Well, I do think him
|
|
much better; he is making piles of money; the hope of being able to
|
|
hire a yacht ere long dances before his eyes; otherwise he is not
|
|
in very high spirits at this particular moment, though compared
|
|
with last year at Bournemouth an angel of joy.
|
|
|
|
And now is this news, Cogia, or is it not? It all depends upon the
|
|
point of view, and I call it news. The devil of it is that I can
|
|
think of nothing else, except to send you all our loves, and to
|
|
wish exceedingly you were here to cheer us all up. But we'll see
|
|
about that on board the yacht. - Your affectionate friend,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO SIDNEY COLVIN
|
|
|
|
[SARANAC LAKE], APRIL 9TH!! 1888
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR COLVIN, - I have been long without writing to you, but am
|
|
not to blame, I had some little annoyances quite for a private eye,
|
|
but they ran me so hard that I could not write without lugging them
|
|
in, which (for several reasons) I did not choose to do. Fanny is
|
|
off to San Francisco, and next week I myself flit to New York:
|
|
address Scribner's. Where we shall go I know not, nor (I was going
|
|
to say) care; so bald and bad is my frame of mind. Do you know our
|
|
- ahem! - fellow clubman, Colonel Majendie? I had such an
|
|
interesting letter from him. Did you see my sermon? It has evoked
|
|
the worst feeling: I fear people don't care for the truth, or else
|
|
I don't tell it. Suffer me to wander without purpose. I have sent
|
|
off twenty letters to-day, and begun and stuck at a twenty-first,
|
|
and taken a copy of one which was on business, and corrected
|
|
several galleys of proof, and sorted about a bushel of old letters;
|
|
so if any one has a right to be romantically stupid it is I - and I
|
|
am. Really deeply stupid, and at that stage when in old days I
|
|
used to pour out words without any meaning whatever and with my
|
|
mind taking no part in the performance. I suspect that is now the
|
|
case. I am reading with extraordinary pleasure the life of Lord
|
|
Lawrence: Lloyd and I have a mutiny novel -
|
|
|
|
(NEXT MORNING, AFTER TWELVE OTHER LETTERS) - mutiny novel on hand -
|
|
a tremendous work - so we are all at Indian books. The idea of the
|
|
novel is Lloyd's: I call it a novel. 'Tis a tragic romance, of
|
|
the most tragic sort: I believe the end will be almost too much
|
|
for human endurance - when the hero is thrown to the ground with
|
|
one of his own (Sepoy) soldier's knees upon his chest, and the
|
|
cries begin in the Beebeeghar. O truly, you know it is a howler!
|
|
The whole last part is - well the difficulty is that, short of
|
|
resuscitating Shakespeare, I don't know who is to write it.
|
|
|
|
I still keep wonderful. I am a great performer before the Lord on
|
|
the penny whistle. Dear sir, sincerely yours,
|
|
|
|
ANDREW JACKSON.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO MISS ADELAIDE BOODLE
|
|
|
|
[SARANAC LAKE, APRIL 1888.] ADDRESS C/O MESSRS. SCRIBNER'S SONS,
|
|
743 BROADWAY, N.Y.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR GAMEKEEPER, - Your p. c. (proving you a good student of
|
|
Micawber) has just arrived, and it paves the way to something I am
|
|
anxious to say. I wrote a paper the other day - PULVIS ET UMBRA; -
|
|
I wrote it with great feeling and conviction: to me it seemed
|
|
bracing and healthful, it is in such a world (so seen by me), that
|
|
I am very glad to fight out my battle, and see some fine sunsets,
|
|
and hear some excellent jests between whiles round the camp fire.
|
|
But I find that to some people this vision of mine is a nightmare,
|
|
and extinguishes all ground of faith in God or pleasure in man.
|
|
Truth I think not so much of; for I do not know it. And I could
|
|
wish in my heart that I had not published this paper, if it
|
|
troubles folk too much: all have not the same digestion, nor the
|
|
same sight of things. And it came over me with special pain that
|
|
perhaps this article (which I was at the pains to send to her)
|
|
might give dismalness to my GAMEKEEPER AT HOME. Well, I cannot
|
|
take back what I have said; but yet I may add this. If my view be
|
|
everything but the nonsense that it may be - to me it seems self-
|
|
evident and blinding truth - surely of all things it makes this
|
|
world holier. There is nothing in it but the moral side - but the
|
|
great battle and the breathing times with their refreshments. I
|
|
see no more and no less. And if you look again, it is not ugly,
|
|
and it is filled with promise.
|
|
|
|
Pray excuse a desponding author for this apology. My wife is away
|
|
off to the uttermost parts of the States, all by herself. I shall
|
|
be off, I hope, in a week; but where? Ah! that I know not. I keep
|
|
wonderful, and my wife a little better, and the lad flourishing.
|
|
We now perform duets on two D tin whistles; it is no joke to make
|
|
the bass; I think I must really send you one, which I wish you
|
|
would correct . . . I may be said to live for these instrumental
|
|
labours now, but I have always some childishness on hand. - I am,
|
|
dear Gamekeeper, your indulgent but intemperate Squire,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO CHARLES BAXTER
|
|
|
|
UNION HOUSE, MANASQUAN, N.J., BUT ADDRESS TO SCRIBNER'S, 11TH MAY
|
|
1888.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR CHARLES, - I have found a yacht, and we are going the full
|
|
pitch for seven months. If I cannot get my health back (more or
|
|
less), 'tis madness; but, of course, there is the hope, and I will
|
|
play big. . . . If this business fails to set me up, well, 2000
|
|
pounds is gone, and I know I can't get better. We sail from San
|
|
Francisco, June 15th, for the South Seas in the yacht CASCO. - With
|
|
a million thanks for all your dear friendliness, ever yours
|
|
affectionately,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Letter: To HOMER ST. GAUDENS
|
|
|
|
MANASQUAN, NEW JERSEY, 27TH MAY 1888.
|
|
|
|
DEAR HOMER ST. GAUDENS, - Your father has brought you this day to
|
|
see me, and he tells me it is his hope you may remember the
|
|
occasion. I am going to do what I can to carry out his wish; and
|
|
it may amuse you, years after, to see this little scrap of paper
|
|
and to read what I write. I must begin by testifying that you
|
|
yourself took no interest whatever in the introduction, and in the
|
|
most proper spirit displayed a single-minded ambition to get back
|
|
to play, and this I thought an excellent and admirable point in
|
|
your character. You were also (I use the past tense, with a view
|
|
to the time when you shall read, rather than to that when I am
|
|
writing) a very pretty boy, and (to my European views) startlingly
|
|
self-possessed. My time of observation was so limited that you
|
|
must pardon me if I can say no more: what else I marked, what
|
|
restlessness of foot and hand, what graceful clumsiness, what
|
|
experimental designs upon the furniture, was but the common
|
|
inheritance of human youth. But you may perhaps like to know that
|
|
the lean flushed man in bed, who interested you so little, was in a
|
|
state of mind extremely mingled and unpleasant: harassed with work
|
|
which he thought he was not doing well, troubled with difficulties
|
|
to which you will in time succeed, and yet looking forward to no
|
|
less a matter than a voyage to the South Seas and the visitation of
|
|
savage and desert islands. -Your father's friend,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO HENRY JAMES
|
|
|
|
MANASQUAN (AHEM!), NEW JERSEY, MAY 28TH, 1888.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR JAMES, - With what a torrent it has come at last! Up to
|
|
now, what I like best is the first number of a LONDON LIFE. You
|
|
have never done anything better, and I don't know if perhaps you
|
|
have ever done anything so good as the girl's outburst: tip-top.
|
|
I have been preaching your later works in your native land. I had
|
|
to present the Beltraffio volume to Low, and it has brought him to
|
|
his knees; he was AMAZED at the first part of Georgina's Reasons,
|
|
although (like me) not so well satisfied with Part II. It is
|
|
annoying to find the American public as stupid as the English, but
|
|
they will waken up in time: I wonder what they will think of TWO
|
|
NATIONS? . .
|
|
|
|
This, dear James, is a valedictory. On June 15th the schooner
|
|
yacht CASCO will (weather and a jealous providence permitting)
|
|
steam through the Golden Gates for Honolulu, Tahiti, the Galapagos,
|
|
Guayaquil, and - I hope NOT the bottom of the Pacific. It will
|
|
contain your obedient 'umble servant and party. It seems too good
|
|
to be true, and is a very good way of getting through the green-
|
|
sickness of maturity which, with all its accompanying ills, is now
|
|
declaring itself in my mind and life. They tell me it is not so
|
|
severe as that of youth; if I (and the CASCO) are spared, I shall
|
|
tell you more exactly, as I am one of the few people in the world
|
|
who do not forget their own lives.
|
|
|
|
Good-bye, then, my dear fellow, and please write us a word; we
|
|
expect to have three mails in the next two months: Honolulu,
|
|
Tahiti, and Guayaquil. But letters will be forwarded from
|
|
Scribner's, if you hear nothing more definite directly. In 3
|
|
(three) days I leave for San Francisco. - Ever yours most
|
|
cordially,
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER X - PACIFIC VOYAGES, JUNE 1888-NOVEMBER 1890
|
|
|
|
TO SIDNEY COLVIN
|
|
|
|
YACHT 'CASCO,' ANAHO BAY, NUKAHIVA, MARQUESAS ISLANDS [JULY 1888].
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR COLVIN, - From this somewhat (ahem) out of the way place, I
|
|
write to say how d'ye do. It is all a swindle: I chose these
|
|
isles as having the most beastly population, and they are far
|
|
better, and far more civilised than we. I know one old chief Ko-o-
|
|
amua, a great cannibal in his day, who ate his enemies even as he
|
|
walked home from killing 'em, and he is a perfect gentleman and
|
|
exceedingly amiable and simple-minded: no fool, though.
|
|
|
|
The climate is delightful; and the harbour where we lie one of the
|
|
loveliest spots imaginable. Yesterday evening we had near a score
|
|
natives on board; lovely parties. We have a native god; very rare
|
|
now. Very rare and equally absurd to view.
|
|
|
|
This sort of work is not favourable to correspondence: it takes me
|
|
all the little strength I have to go about and see, and then come
|
|
home and note, the strangeness around us. I shouldn't wonder if
|
|
there came trouble here some day, all the same. I could name a
|
|
nation that is not beloved in certain islands - and it does not
|
|
know it! Strange: like ourselves, perhaps, in India! Love to all
|
|
and much to yourself.
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO CHARLES BAXTER
|
|
|
|
YACHT 'CASCO,' AT SEA, NEAR THE PAUMOTUS, 7 A.M., SEPTEMBER 6TH,
|
|
1888, WITH A DREADFUL PEN.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR CHARLES, - Last night as I lay under my blanket in the
|
|
cockpit, courting sleep, I had a comic seizure. There was nothing
|
|
visible but the southern stars, and the steersman there out by the
|
|
binnacle lamp; we were all looking forward to a most deplorable
|
|
landfall on the morrow, praying God we should fetch a tuft of palms
|
|
which are to indicate the Dangerous Archipelago; the night was as
|
|
warm as milk, and all of a sudden I had a vision of - Drummond
|
|
Street. It came on me like a flash of lightning: I simply
|
|
returned thither, and into the past. And when I remember all I
|
|
hoped and feared as I pickled about Rutherford's in the rain and
|
|
the east wind; how I feared I should make a mere shipwreck, and yet
|
|
timidly hoped not; how I feared I should never have a friend, far
|
|
less a wife, and yet passionately hoped I might; how I hoped (if I
|
|
did not take to drink) I should possibly write one little book,
|
|
etc. etc. And then now - what a change! I feel somehow as if I
|
|
should like the incident set upon a brass plate at the corner of
|
|
that dreary thoroughfare for all students to read, poor devils,
|
|
when their hearts are down. And I felt I must write one word to
|
|
you. Excuse me if I write little: when I am at sea, it gives me a
|
|
headache; when I am in port, I have my diary crying 'Give, give.'
|
|
I shall have a fine book of travels, I feel sure; and will tell you
|
|
more of the South Seas after very few months than any other writer
|
|
has done - except Herman Melville perhaps, who is a howling cheese.
|
|
Good luck to you, God bless you. - Your affectionate friend,
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO SIDNEY COLVIN
|
|
|
|
FAKARAVA, LOW ARCHIPELAGO, SEPTEMBER 21ST, 1888.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR COLVIN, - Only a word. Get out your big atlas, and imagine
|
|
a straight line from San Francisco to Anaho, the N.E. corner of
|
|
Nukahiva, one of the Marquesas Islands; imagine three weeks there:
|
|
imagine a day's sail on August 12th round the eastern end of the
|
|
island to Tai-o-hae, the capital; imagine us there till August
|
|
22nd: imagine us skirt the east side of Ua-pu - perhaps Rona-Poa
|
|
on your atlas - and through the Bondelais straits to Taaka-uku in
|
|
Hiva-Oa, where we arrive on the 23rd; imagine us there until
|
|
September 4th, when we sailed for Fakarava, which we reached on the
|
|
9th, after a very difficult and dangerous passage among these
|
|
isles. Tuesday, we shall leave for Taiti, where I shall knock off
|
|
and do some necessary work ashore. It looks pretty bald in the
|
|
atlas; not in fact; nor I trust in the 130 odd pages of diary which
|
|
I have just been looking up for these dates: the interest, indeed,
|
|
has been INCREDIBLE: I did not dream there were such places or
|
|
such races. My health has stood me splendidly; I am in for hours
|
|
wading over the knees for shells; I have been five hours on
|
|
horseback: I have been up pretty near all night waiting to see
|
|
where the CASCO would go ashore, and with my diary all ready -
|
|
simply the most entertaining night of my life. Withal I still have
|
|
colds; I have one now, and feel pretty sick too; but not as at
|
|
home: instead of being in bed, for instance, I am at this moment
|
|
sitting snuffling and writing in an undershirt and trousers; and as
|
|
for colour, hands, arms, feet, legs, and face, I am browner than
|
|
the berry: only my trunk and the aristocratic spot on which I sit
|
|
retain the vile whiteness of the north.
|
|
|
|
Please give my news and kind love to Henley, Henry James, and any
|
|
whom you see of well-wishers. Accept from me the very best of my
|
|
affection: and believe me ever yours,
|
|
|
|
THE OLD MAN VIRULENT.
|
|
|
|
TAITI, OCTOBER 7TH, 1888.
|
|
|
|
Never having found a chance to send this off, I may add more of my
|
|
news. My cold took a very bad turn, and I am pretty much out of
|
|
sorts at this particular, living in a little bare one-twentieth-
|
|
furnished house, surrounded by mangoes, etc. All the rest are
|
|
well, and I mean to be soon. But these Taiti colds are very severe
|
|
and, to children, often fatal; so they were not the thing for me.
|
|
Yesterday the brigantine came in from San Francisco, so we can get
|
|
our letters off soon. There are in Papeete at this moment, in a
|
|
little wooden house with grated verandahs, two people who love you
|
|
very much, and one of them is
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO CHARLES BAXTER
|
|
|
|
TAITI, AS EVER WAS, 6TH OCTOBER 1888.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR CHARLES, - . . . You will receive a lot of mostly very bad
|
|
proofs of photographs: the paper was so bad. Please keep them
|
|
very private, as they are for the book. We send them, having
|
|
learned so dread a fear of the sea, that we wish to put our eggs in
|
|
different baskets. We have been thrice within an ace of being
|
|
ashore: we were lost (!) for about twelve hours in the Low
|
|
Archipelago, but by God's blessing had quiet weather all the time;
|
|
and once, in a squall, we cam' so near gaun heels ower hurdies,
|
|
that I really dinnae ken why we didnae athegither. Hence, as I
|
|
say, a great desire to put our eggs in different baskets,
|
|
particularly on the Pacific (aw-haw-haw) Pacific Ocean.
|
|
|
|
You can have no idea what a mean time we have had, owing to
|
|
incidental beastlinesses, nor what a glorious, owing to the
|
|
intrinsic interest of these isles. I hope the book will be a good
|
|
one; nor do I really very much doubt that - the stuff is so
|
|
curious; what I wonder is, if the public will rise to it. A copy
|
|
of my journal, or as much of it as is made, shall go to you also;
|
|
it is, of course, quite imperfect, much being to be added and
|
|
corrected; but O, for the eggs in the different baskets.
|
|
|
|
All the rest are well enough, and all have enjoyed the cruise so
|
|
far, in spite of its drawbacks. We have had an awfae time in some
|
|
ways, Mr. Baxter; and if I wasnae sic a verra patient man (when I
|
|
ken that I HAVE to be) there wad hae been a braw row; and ance if I
|
|
hadnae happened to be on deck about three in the marnin', I THINK
|
|
there would have been MURDER done. The American Mairchant Marine
|
|
is a kent service; ye'll have heard its praise, I'm thinkin'; an'
|
|
if ye never did, ye can get TWA YEARS BEFORE THE MAST, by Dana,
|
|
whaur forbye a great deal o' pleisure, ye'll get a' the needcessary
|
|
information. Love to your father and all the family. - Ever your
|
|
affectionate friend,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO MISS ADELAIDE BOODLE
|
|
|
|
TAITI, OCTOBER 10TH, 1888.
|
|
|
|
DEAR GIVER, - I am at a loss to conceive your object in giving me
|
|
to a person so locomotory as my proprietor. The number of thousand
|
|
miles that I have travelled, the strange bed-fellows with which I
|
|
have been made acquainted, I lack the requisite literary talent to
|
|
make clear to your imagination. I speak of bed-fellows; pocket-
|
|
fellows would be a more exact expression, for the place of my abode
|
|
is in my master's righthand trouser-pocket; and there, as he waded
|
|
on the resounding beaches of Nukahiva, or in the shallow tepid
|
|
water on the reef of Fakarava, I have been overwhelmed by and
|
|
buried among all manner of abominable South Sea shells, beautiful
|
|
enough in their way, I make no doubt, but singular company for any
|
|
self-respecting paper-cutter. He, my master - or as I more justly
|
|
call him, my bearer; for although I occasionally serve him, does
|
|
not he serve me daily and all day long, carrying me like an African
|
|
potentate on my subject's legs? - HE is delighted with these isles,
|
|
and this climate, and these savages, and a variety of other things.
|
|
He now blows a flageolet with singular effects: sometimes the poor
|
|
thing appears stifled with shame, sometimes it screams with agony;
|
|
he pursues his career with truculent insensibility. Health appears
|
|
to reign in the party. I was very nearly sunk in a squall. I am
|
|
sorry I ever left England, for here there are no books to be had,
|
|
and without books there is no stable situation for, dear Giver,
|
|
your affectionate
|
|
|
|
WOODEN PAPER-CUTTER.
|
|
|
|
A neighbouring pair of scissors snips a kiss in your direction.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO SIDNEY COLVIN
|
|
|
|
TAITI, OCTOBER 16TH, 1888.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR COLVIN, - The cruiser for San Francisco departs to-morrow
|
|
morning bearing you some kind of a scratch. This much more
|
|
important packet will travel by way of Auckland. It contains a
|
|
ballant; and I think a better ballant than I expected ever to do.
|
|
I can imagine how you will wag your pow over it; and how ragged you
|
|
will find it, etc., but has it not spirit all the same? and though
|
|
the verse is not all your fancy painted it, has it not some life?
|
|
And surely, as narrative, the thing has considerable merit! Read
|
|
it, get a typewritten copy taken, and send me that and your opinion
|
|
to the Sandwiches. I know I am only courting the most excruciating
|
|
mortification; but the real cause of my sending the thing is that I
|
|
could bear to go down myself, but not to have much MS. go down with
|
|
me. To say truth, we are through the most dangerous; but it has
|
|
left in all minds a strong sense of insecurity, and we are all for
|
|
putting eggs in various baskets.
|
|
|
|
We leave here soon, bound for Uahiva, Reiatea, Bora-Bora, and the
|
|
Sandwiches.
|
|
|
|
O, how my spirit languishes
|
|
To step ashore on the Sanguishes;
|
|
For there my letters wait,
|
|
There shall I know my fate.
|
|
O, how my spirit languidges
|
|
To step ashore on the Sanguidges.
|
|
|
|
18TH. - I think we shall leave here if all is well on Monday. I am
|
|
quite recovered, astonishingly recovered. It must be owned these
|
|
climates and this voyage have given me more strength than I could
|
|
have thought possible. And yet the sea is a terrible place,
|
|
stupefying to the mind and poisonous to the temper, the sea, the
|
|
motion, the lack of space, the cruel publicity, the villainous
|
|
tinned foods, the sailors, the captain, the passengers - but you
|
|
are amply repaid when you sight an island, and drop anchor in a new
|
|
world. Much trouble has attended this trip, but I must confess
|
|
more pleasure. Nor should I ever complain, as in the last few
|
|
weeks, with the curing of my illness indeed, as if that were the
|
|
bursting of an abscess, the cloud has risen from my spirits and to
|
|
some degree from my temper. Do you know what they called the CASCO
|
|
at Fakarava? The SILVER SHIP. Is that not pretty? Pray tell Mrs.
|
|
Jenkin, DIE SILBERNE FRAU, as I only learned it since I wrote her.
|
|
I think of calling the book by that name: THE CRUISE OF THE SILVER
|
|
SHIP - so there will be one poetic page at least - the title. At
|
|
the Sandwiches we shall say farewell to the S. S. with mingled
|
|
feelings. She is a lovely creature: the most beautiful thing at
|
|
this moment in Taiti.
|
|
|
|
Well, I will take another sheet, though I know I have nothing to
|
|
say. You would think I was bursting: but the voyage is all stored
|
|
up for the book, which is to pay for it, we fondly hope; and the
|
|
troubles of the time are not worth telling; and our news is little.
|
|
|
|
Here I conclude (Oct. 24th, I think), for we are now stored, and
|
|
the Blue Peter metaphorically flies.
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO WILLIAM AND THOMAS ARCHER
|
|
|
|
TAITI, OCTOBER 17TH, 1888.
|
|
|
|
DEAR ARCHER, - Though quite unable to write letters, I nobly send
|
|
you a line signifying nothing. The voyage has agreed well with
|
|
all; it has had its pains, and its extraordinary pleasures; nothing
|
|
in the world can equal the excitement of the first time you cast
|
|
anchor in some bay of a tropical island, and the boats begin to
|
|
surround you, and the tattooed people swarm aboard. Tell
|
|
Tomarcher, with my respex, that hide-and-seek is not equal to it;
|
|
no, nor hidee-in-the-dark; which, for the matter of that, is a game
|
|
for the unskilful: the artist prefers daylight, a good-sized
|
|
garden, some shrubbery, an open paddock, and - come on, Macduff.
|
|
|
|
TOMARCHER, I am now a distinguished litterytour, but that was not
|
|
the real bent of my genius. I was the best player of hide-and-seek
|
|
going; not a good runner, I was up to every shift and dodge, I
|
|
could jink very well, I could crawl without any noise through
|
|
leaves, I could hide under a carrot plant, it used to be my
|
|
favourite boast that I always WALKED into the den. You may care to
|
|
hear, Tomarcher, about the children in these parts; their parents
|
|
obey them, they do not obey their parents; and I am sorry to tell
|
|
you (for I dare say you are already thinking the idea a good one)
|
|
that it does not pay one halfpenny. There are three sorts of
|
|
civilisation, Tomarcher: the real old-fashioned one, in which
|
|
children either had to find out how to please their dear papas, or
|
|
their dear papas cut their heads off. This style did very well,
|
|
but is now out of fashion. Then the modern European style: in
|
|
which children have to behave reasonably well, and go to school and
|
|
say their prayers, or their dear papas WILL KNOW THE REASON WHY.
|
|
This does fairly well. Then there is the South Sea Island plan,
|
|
which does not do one bit. The children beat their parents here;
|
|
it does not make their parents any better; so do not try it.
|
|
|
|
Dear Tomarcher, I have forgotten the address of your new house, but
|
|
will send this to one of your papa's publishers. Remember us all
|
|
to all of you, and believe me, yours respectably,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO CHARLES BAXTER
|
|
|
|
TAUTIRA (THE GARDEN OF THE WORLD), OTHERWISE CALLED HANS-CHRISTIAN-
|
|
ANDERSEN-VILLE [NOVEMBER 1888].
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR CHARLES, - Whether I have a penny left in the wide world, I
|
|
know not, nor shall know, till I get to Honolulu, where I
|
|
anticipate a devil of an awakening. It will be from a mighty
|
|
pleasant dream at least: Tautira being mere Heaven. But suppose,
|
|
for the sake of argument, any money to be left in the hands of my
|
|
painful doer, what is to be done with it? Save us from exile would
|
|
be the wise man's choice, I suppose; for the exile threatens to be
|
|
eternal. But yet I am of opinion - in case there should be SOME
|
|
dibs in the hand of the P.D., I.E. painful doer; because if there
|
|
be none, I shall take to my flageolet on the high-road, and work
|
|
home the best way I can, having previously made away with my family
|
|
- I am of opinion that if - and his are in the customary state, and
|
|
you are thinking of an offering, and there should be still some
|
|
funds over, you would be a real good P.D. to put some in with yours
|
|
and tak' the credit o't, like a wee man! I know it's a beastly
|
|
thing to ask; but it, after all, does no earthly harm, only that
|
|
much good. And besides, like enough there's nothing in the till,
|
|
and there is an end. Yet I live here in the full lustre of
|
|
millions; it is thought I am the richest son of man that has yet
|
|
been to Tautira: I! - and I am secretly eaten with the fear of
|
|
lying in pawn, perhaps for the remainder of my days, in San
|
|
Francisco. As usual, my colds have much hashed my finances.
|
|
|
|
Do tell Henley I write this just after having dismissed Ori the
|
|
sub-chief, in whose house I live, Mrs. Ori, and Pairai, their
|
|
adopted child, from the evening hour of music: during which I
|
|
Publickly (with a k) Blow on the Flageolet. These are words of
|
|
truth. Yesterday I told Ori about W. E. H., counterfeited his
|
|
playing on the piano and the pipe, and succeeded in sending the six
|
|
feet four there is of that sub-chief somewhat sadly to his bed;
|
|
feeling that his was not the genuine article after all. Ori is
|
|
exactly like a colonel in the Guards. - I am, dear Charles, ever
|
|
yours affectionately,
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TAUTIRA, 10TH NOVEMBER '88.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR CHARLES, - Our mainmast is dry-rotten, and we are all to
|
|
the devil; I shall lie in a debtor's jail. Never mind, Tautira is
|
|
first chop. I am so besotted that I shall put on the back of this
|
|
my attempt at words to Wandering Willie; if you can conceive at all
|
|
the difficulty, you will also conceive the vanity with which I
|
|
regard any kind of result; and whatever mine is like, it has some
|
|
sense, and Burns's has none.
|
|
|
|
Home no more home to me, whither must I wander?
|
|
Hunger my driver, I go where I must.
|
|
Cold blows the winter wind over hill and heather;
|
|
Thick drives the rain, and my roof is in the dust.
|
|
Loved of wise men was the shade of my roof-tree.
|
|
The true word of welcome was spoken in the door -
|
|
Dear days of old, with the faces in the firelight,
|
|
Kind folks of old, you come again no more.
|
|
|
|
Home was home then, my dear, full of kindly faces,
|
|
Home was home then, my dear, happy for the child.
|
|
Fire and the windows bright glittered on the moorland;
|
|
Song, tuneful song, built a palace in the wild.
|
|
Now, when day dawns on the brow of the moorland,
|
|
Lone stands the house, and the chimney-stone is cold.
|
|
Lone let it stand, now the friends are all departed,
|
|
The kind hearts, the true hearts, that loved the place of old.
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO J. A. SYMONDS
|
|
|
|
NOVEMBER 11TH 1888.
|
|
|
|
One November night, in the village of Tautira, we sat at the high
|
|
table in the hall of assembly, hearing the natives sing. It was
|
|
dark in the hall, and very warm; though at times the land wind blew
|
|
a little shrewdly through the chinks, and at times, through the
|
|
larger openings, we could see the moonlight on the lawn. As the
|
|
songs arose in the rattling Tahitian chorus, the chief translated
|
|
here and there a verse. Farther on in the volume you shall read
|
|
the songs themselves; and I am in hopes that not you only, but all
|
|
who can find a savour in the ancient poetry of places, will read
|
|
them with some pleasure. You are to conceive us, therefore, in
|
|
strange circumstances and very pleasing; in a strange land and
|
|
climate, the most beautiful on earth; surrounded by a foreign race
|
|
that all travellers have agreed to be the most engaging; and taking
|
|
a double interest in two foreign arts.
|
|
|
|
We came forth again at last, in a cloudy moonlight, on the forest
|
|
lawn which is the street of Tautira. The Pacific roared outside
|
|
upon the reef. Here and there one of the scattered palm-built
|
|
lodges shone out under the shadow of the wood, the lamplight
|
|
bursting through the crannies of the wall. We went homeward
|
|
slowly, Ori a Ori carrying behind us the lantern and the chairs,
|
|
properties with which we had just been enacting our part of the
|
|
distinguished visitor. It was one of those moments in which minds
|
|
not altogether churlish recall the names and deplore the absence of
|
|
congenial friends; and it was your name that first rose upon our
|
|
lips. 'How Symonds would have enjoyed this evening!' said one, and
|
|
then another. The word caught in my mind; I went to bed, and it
|
|
was still there. The glittering, frosty solitudes in which your
|
|
days are cast arose before me: I seemed to see you walking there
|
|
in the late night, under the pine-trees and the stars; and I
|
|
received the image with something like remorse.
|
|
|
|
There is a modern attitude towards fortune; in this place I will
|
|
not use a graver name. Staunchly to withstand her buffets and to
|
|
enjoy with equanimity her favours was the code of the virtuous of
|
|
old. Our fathers, it should seem, wondered and doubted how they
|
|
had merited their misfortunes: we, rather how we have deserved our
|
|
happiness. And we stand often abashed and sometimes revolted, at
|
|
those partialities of fate by which we profit most. It was so with
|
|
me on that November night: I felt that our positions should be
|
|
changed. It was you, dear Symonds, who should have gone upon that
|
|
voyage and written this account. With your rich stores of
|
|
knowledge, you could have remarked and understood a thousand things
|
|
of interest and beauty that escaped my ignorance; and the brilliant
|
|
colours of your style would have carried into a thousand sickrooms
|
|
the sea air and the strong sun of tropic islands. It was otherwise
|
|
decreed. But suffer me at least to connect you, if only in name
|
|
and only in the fondness of imagination, with the voyage of the
|
|
'SILVER SHIP.'
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
DEAR SYMONDS, - I send you this (November 11th), the morning of its
|
|
completion. If I ever write an account of this voyage, may I place
|
|
this letter at the beginning? It represents - I need not tell you,
|
|
for you too are an artist - a most genuine feeling, which kept me
|
|
long awake last night; and though perhaps a little elaborate, I
|
|
think it a good piece of writing. We are IN HEAVEN HERE. Do not
|
|
forget
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
|
|
|
|
Please keep this: I have no perfect copy.
|
|
TAUTIRA, ON THE PENINSULA OF TAHITI.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO THOMAS ARCHER
|
|
|
|
TAUTIRA, ISLAND OF TAHITI [NOVEMBER 1888].
|
|
|
|
DEAR TOMARCHER, - This is a pretty state of things! seven o'clock
|
|
and no word of breakfast! And I was awake a good deal last night,
|
|
for it was full moon, and they had made a great fire of cocoa-nut
|
|
husks down by the sea, and as we have no blinds or shutters, this
|
|
kept my room very bright. And then the rats had a wedding or a
|
|
school-feast under my bed. And then I woke early, and I have
|
|
nothing to read except Virgil's AENEID, which is not good fun on an
|
|
empty stomach, and a Latin dictionary, which is good for naught,
|
|
and by some humorous accident, your dear papa's article on
|
|
Skerryvore. And I read the whole of that, and very impudent it is,
|
|
but you must not tell your dear papa I said so, or it might come to
|
|
a battle in which you might lose either a dear papa or a valued
|
|
correspondent, or both, which would be prodigal. And still no
|
|
breakfast; so I said 'Let's write to Tomarcher.'
|
|
|
|
This is a much better place for children than any I have hitherto
|
|
seen in these seas. The girls (and sometimes the boys) play a very
|
|
elaborate kind of hopscotch. The boys play horses exactly as we do
|
|
in Europe; and have very good fun on stilts, trying to knock each
|
|
other down, in which they do not often succeed. The children of
|
|
all ages go to church and are allowed to do what they please,
|
|
running about the aisles, rolling balls, stealing mamma's bonnet
|
|
and publicly sitting on it, and at last going to sleep in the
|
|
middle of the floor. I forgot to say that the whips to play
|
|
horses, and the balls to roll about the church - at least I never
|
|
saw them used elsewhere - grow ready made on trees; which is rough
|
|
on toy-shops. The whips are so good that I wanted to play horses
|
|
myself; but no such luck! my hair is grey, and I am a great, big,
|
|
ugly man. The balls are rather hard, but very light and quite
|
|
round. When you grow up and become offensively rich, you can
|
|
charter a ship in the port of London, and have it come back to you
|
|
entirely loaded with these balls; when you could satisfy your mind
|
|
as to their character, and give them away when done with to your
|
|
uncles and aunts. But what I really wanted to tell you was this:
|
|
besides the tree-top toys (Hush-a-by, toy-shop, on the tree-top!),
|
|
I have seen some real MADE toys, the first hitherto observed in the
|
|
South Seas.
|
|
|
|
This was how. You are to imagine a four-wheeled gig; one horse; in
|
|
the front seat two Tahiti natives, in their Sunday clothes, blue
|
|
coat, white shirt, kilt (a little longer than the Scotch) of a blue
|
|
stuff with big white or yellow flowers, legs and feet bare; in the
|
|
back seat me and my wife, who is a friend of yours; under our feet,
|
|
plenty of lunch and things: among us a great deal of fun in broken
|
|
Tahitian, one of the natives, the sub-chief of the village, being a
|
|
great ally of mine. Indeed we have exchanged names; so that he is
|
|
now called Rui, the nearest they can come to Louis, for they have
|
|
no L and no S in their language. Rui is six feet three in his
|
|
stockings, and a magnificent man. We all have straw hats, for the
|
|
sun is strong. We drive between the sea, which makes a great
|
|
noise, and the mountains; the road is cut through a forest mostly
|
|
of fruit trees, the very creepers, which take the place of our ivy,
|
|
heavy with a great and delicious fruit, bigger than your head and
|
|
far nicer, called Barbedine. Presently we came to a house in a
|
|
pretty garden, quite by itself, very nicely kept, the doors and
|
|
windows open, no one about, and no noise but that of the sea. It
|
|
looked like a house in a fairy-tale, and just beyond we must ford a
|
|
river, and there we saw the inhabitants. Just in the mouth of the
|
|
river, where it met the sea waves, they were ducking and bathing
|
|
and screaming together like a covey of birds: seven or eight
|
|
little naked brown boys and girls as happy as the day was long; and
|
|
on the banks of the stream beside them, real toys - toy ships, full
|
|
rigged, and with their sails set, though they were lying in the
|
|
dust on their beam ends. And then I knew for sure they were all
|
|
children in a fairy-story, living alone together in that lonely
|
|
house with the only toys in all the island; and that I had myself
|
|
driven, in my four-wheeled gig, into a corner of the fairy-story,
|
|
and the question was, should I get out again? But it was all
|
|
right; I guess only one of the wheels of the gig had got into the
|
|
fairy-story; and the next jolt the whole thing vanished, and we
|
|
drove on in our sea-side forest as before, and I have the honour to
|
|
be Tomarcher's valued correspondent, TERIITEPA, which he was
|
|
previously known as
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO SIDNEY COLVIN
|
|
|
|
YACHT 'CASCO,' AT SEA, 14TH JANUARY, 1889.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR COLVIN, - Twenty days out from Papeete. Yes, sir, all
|
|
that, and only (for a guess) in 4 degrees north or at the best 4
|
|
degrees 30 minutes, though already the wind seems to smell a little
|
|
of the North Pole. My handwriting you must take as you get, for we
|
|
are speeding along through a nasty swell, and I can only keep my
|
|
place at the table by means of a foot against the divan, the
|
|
unoccupied hand meanwhile gripping the ink-bottle. As we begin (so
|
|
very slowly) to draw near to seven months of correspondence, we are
|
|
all in some fear; and I want to have letters written before I shall
|
|
be plunged into that boiling pot of disagreeables which I
|
|
constantly expect at Honolulu. What is needful can be added there.
|
|
|
|
We were kept two months at Tautira in the house of my dear old
|
|
friend, Ori a Ori, till both the masts of this invaluable yacht had
|
|
been repaired. It was all for the best: Tautira being the most
|
|
beautiful spot, and its people the most amiable, I have ever found.
|
|
Besides which, the climate suited me to the ground; I actually went
|
|
sea-bathing almost every day, and in our feasts (we are all huge
|
|
eaters in Taiarapu) have been known to apply four times for pig.
|
|
And then again I got wonderful materials for my book, collected
|
|
songs and legends on the spot; songs still sung in chorus by
|
|
perhaps a hundred persons, not two of whom can agree on their
|
|
translation; legends, on which I have seen half a dozen seniors
|
|
sitting in conclave and debating what came next. Once I went a
|
|
day's journey to the other side of the island to Tati, the high
|
|
chief of the Tevas - MY chief that is, for I am now a Teva and
|
|
Teriitera, at your service - to collect more and correct what I had
|
|
already. In the meanwhile I got on with my work, almost finished
|
|
the MASTER OF BALLANTRAE, which contains more human work than
|
|
anything of mine but KIDNAPPED, and wrote the half of another
|
|
ballad, the SONG OF RAHERO, on a Taiarapu legend of my own clan,
|
|
sir - not so much fire as the FEAST OF FAMINE, but promising to be
|
|
more even and correct. But the best fortune of our stay at Tautira
|
|
was my knowledge of Ori himself, one of the finest creatures
|
|
extant. The day of our parting was a sad one. We deduced from it
|
|
a rule for travellers: not to stay two months in one place - which
|
|
is to cultivate regrets.
|
|
|
|
At last our contemptible ship was ready; to sea we went, bound for
|
|
Honolulu and the letter-bag, on Christmas Day; and from then to now
|
|
have experienced every sort of minor misfortune, squalls, calms,
|
|
contrary winds and seas, pertinacious rains, declining stores, till
|
|
we came almost to regard ourselves as in the case of Vanderdecken.
|
|
Three days ago our luck seemed to improve, we struck a leading
|
|
breeze, got creditably through the doldrums, and just as we looked
|
|
to have the N.E. trades and a straight run, the rains and squalls
|
|
and calms began again about midnight, and this morning, though
|
|
there is breeze enough to send us along, we are beaten back by an
|
|
obnoxious swell out of the north. Here is a page of complaint,
|
|
when a verse of thanksgiving had perhaps been more in place. For
|
|
all this time we must have been skirting past dangerous weather, in
|
|
the tail and circumference of hurricanes, and getting only
|
|
annoyance where we should have had peril, and ill-humour instead of
|
|
fear.
|
|
|
|
I wonder if I have managed to give you any news this time, or
|
|
whether the usual damn hangs over my letter? 'The midwife
|
|
whispered, Be thou dull!' or at least inexplicit. Anyway I have
|
|
tried my best, am exhausted with the effort, and fall back into the
|
|
land of generalities. I cannot tell you how often we have planned
|
|
our arrival at the Monument: two nights ago, the 12th January, we
|
|
had it all planned out, arrived in the lights and whirl of
|
|
Waterloo, hailed a hansom, span up Waterloo Road, over the bridge,
|
|
etc. etc., and hailed the Monument gate in triumph and with
|
|
indescribable delight. My dear Custodian, I always think we are
|
|
too sparing of assurances: Cordelia is only to be excused by Regan
|
|
and Goneril in the same nursery; I wish to tell you that the longer
|
|
I live, the more dear do you become to me; nor does my heart own
|
|
any stronger sentiment. If the bloody schooner didn't send me
|
|
flying in every sort of direction at the same time, I would say
|
|
better what I feel so much; but really, if you were here, you would
|
|
not be writing letters, I believe; and even I, though of a more
|
|
marine constitution, am much perturbed by this bobbery and wish - O
|
|
ye Gods, how I wish! - that it was done, and we had arrived, and I
|
|
had Pandora's Box (my mail bag) in hand, and was in the lively hope
|
|
of something eatable for dinner instead of salt horse, tinned
|
|
mutton, duff without any plums, and pie fruit, which now make up
|
|
our whole repertory. O Pandora's Box! I wonder what you will
|
|
contain. As like as not you will contain but little money: if
|
|
that be so, we shall have to retire to 'Frisco in the CASCO, and
|
|
thence by sea VIA Panama to Southampton, where we should arrive in
|
|
April. I would like fine to see you on the tug: ten years older
|
|
both of us than the last time you came to welcome Fanny and me to
|
|
England. If we have money, however, we shall do a little
|
|
differently: send the CASCO away from Honolulu empty of its high-
|
|
born lessees, for that voyage to 'Frisco is one long dead beat in
|
|
foul and at last in cold weather; stay awhile behind, follow by
|
|
steamer, cross the States by train, stay awhile in New York on
|
|
business, and arrive probably by the German Line in Southampton.
|
|
But all this is a question of money. We shall have to lie very
|
|
dark awhile to recruit our finances: what comes from the book of
|
|
the cruise, I do not want to touch until the capital is repaid.
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO E. L. BURLINGAME
|
|
|
|
HONOLULU, JANUARY 1889.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR BURLINGAME, - Here at last I have arrived. We could not
|
|
get away from Tahiti till Christmas Day, and then had thirty days
|
|
of calms and squalls, a deplorable passage. This has thrown me all
|
|
out of gear in every way. I plunge into business.
|
|
|
|
1. THE MASTER: Herewith go three more parts. You see he grows in
|
|
balk; this making ten already, and I am not yet sure if I can
|
|
finish it in an eleventh; which shall go to you QUAM PRIMUM - I
|
|
hope by next mail.
|
|
|
|
2. ILLUSTRATIONS TO M. I totally forgot to try to write to Hole.
|
|
It was just as well, for I find it impossible to forecast with
|
|
sufficient precision. You had better throw off all this and let
|
|
him have it at once. PLEASE DO: ALL, AND AT ONCE: SEE FURTHER;
|
|
and I should hope he would still be in time for the later numbers.
|
|
The three pictures I have received are so truly good that I should
|
|
bitterly regret having the volume imperfectly equipped. They are
|
|
the best illustrations I have seen since I don't know when.
|
|
|
|
3. MONEY. To-morrow the mail comes in, and I hope it will bring
|
|
me money either from you or home, but I will add a word on that
|
|
point.
|
|
|
|
4. My address will be Honolulu - no longer Yacht CASCO, which I am
|
|
packing off - till probably April.
|
|
|
|
5. As soon as I am through with THE MASTER, I shall finish the
|
|
GAME OF BLUFF - now rechristened THE WRONG BOX. This I wish to
|
|
sell, cash down. It is of course copyright in the States; and I
|
|
offer it to you for five thousand dollars. Please reply on this by
|
|
return. Also please tell the typewriter who was so good as to be
|
|
amused by our follies that I am filled with admiration for his
|
|
piece of work.
|
|
|
|
6. MASTER again. Please see that I haven't the name of the
|
|
Governor of New York wrong (1764 is the date) in part ten. I have
|
|
no book of reference to put me right. Observe you now have up to
|
|
August inclusive in hand, so you should begin to feel happy.
|
|
|
|
Is this all? I wonder, and fear not. Henry the Trader has not yet
|
|
turned up: I hope he may to-morrow, when we expect a mail. Not
|
|
one word of business have I received either from the States or
|
|
England, nor anything in the shape of coin; which leaves me in a
|
|
fine uncertainty and quite penniless on these islands. H.M. (who
|
|
is a gentleman of a courtly order and much tinctured with letters)
|
|
is very polite; I may possibly ask for the position of palace
|
|
doorkeeper. My voyage has been a singular mixture of good and ill-
|
|
fortune. As far as regards interest and material, the fortune has
|
|
been admirable; as far as regards time, money, and impediments of
|
|
all kinds, from squalls and calms to rotten masts and sprung spars,
|
|
simply detestable. I hope you will be interested to hear of two
|
|
volumes on the wing. The cruise itself, you are to know, will make
|
|
a big volume with appendices; some of it will first appear as (what
|
|
they call) letters in some of M'Clure's papers. I believe the book
|
|
when ready will have a fair measure of serious interest: I have
|
|
had great fortune in finding old songs and ballads and stories, for
|
|
instance, and have many singular instances of life in the last few
|
|
years among these islands.
|
|
|
|
The second volume is of ballads. You know TICONDEROGA. I have
|
|
written another: THE FEAST OF FAMINE, a Marquesan story. A third
|
|
is half done: THE SONG OF RAHERO, a genuine Tahitian legend. A
|
|
fourth dances before me. A Hawaiian fellow this, THE PRIEST'S
|
|
DROUGHT, or some such name. If, as I half suspect, I get enough
|
|
subjects out of the islands, TICONDEROGA shall be suppressed, and
|
|
we'll call the volume SOUTH SEA BALLADS. In health, spirits,
|
|
renewed interest in life, and, I do believe, refreshed capacity for
|
|
work, the cruise has proved a wise folly. Still we're not home,
|
|
and (although the friend of a crowned head) are penniless upon
|
|
these (as one of my correspondents used to call them) 'lovely but
|
|
FATIL islands.' By the way, who wrote the LION OF THE NILE? My
|
|
dear sir, that is Something Like. Overdone in bits, it has a true
|
|
thought and a true ring of language. Beg the anonymous from me, to
|
|
delete (when he shall republish) the two last verses, and end on
|
|
'the lion of the Nile.' One Lampman has a good sonnet on a 'Winter
|
|
Evening' in, I think, the same number: he seems ill named, but I
|
|
am tempted to hope a man is not always answerable for his name.
|
|
For instance, you would think you knew mine. No such matter. It
|
|
is - at your service and Mr. Scribner's and that of all of the
|
|
faithful - Teriitera (pray pronounce Tayree-Tayra) or (GALLICE)
|
|
Teri-tera.
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
|
|
|
|
More when the mail shall come.
|
|
|
|
I am an idiot. I want to be clear on one point. Some of Hole's
|
|
drawings must of course be too late; and yet they seem to me so
|
|
excellent I would fain have the lot complete. It is one thing for
|
|
you to pay for drawings which are to appear in that soul-swallowing
|
|
machine, your magazine: quite another if they are only to
|
|
illustrate a volume. I wish you to take a brisk (even a fiery)
|
|
decision on the point; and let Hole know. To resume my desultory
|
|
song, I desire you would carry the same fire (hereinbefore
|
|
suggested) into your decision on the WRONG BOX; for in my present
|
|
state of benighted ignorance as to my affairs for the last seven
|
|
months - I know not even whether my house or my mother's house have
|
|
been let - I desire to see something definite in front of me -
|
|
outside the lot of palace doorkeeper. I believe the said WRONG BOX
|
|
is a real lark; in which, of course, I may be grievously deceived;
|
|
but the typewriter is with me. I may also be deceived as to the
|
|
numbers of THE MASTER now going and already gone; but to me they
|
|
seem First Chop, sir, First Chop. I hope I shall pull off that
|
|
damned ending; but it still depresses me: this is your doing, Mr.
|
|
Burlingame: you would have it there and then, and I fear it - I
|
|
fear that ending.
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO CHARLES BAXTER
|
|
|
|
HONOLULU, FEBRUARY 8TH, 1889.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR CHARLES, - Here we are at Honolulu, and have dismissed the
|
|
yacht, and lie here till April anyway, in a fine state of haze,
|
|
which I am yet in hopes some letter of yours (still on the way) may
|
|
dissipate. No money, and not one word as to money! However, I
|
|
have got the yacht paid off in triumph, I think; and though we stay
|
|
here impignorate, it should not be for long, even if you bring us
|
|
no extra help from home. The cruise has been a great success, both
|
|
as to matter, fun, and health; and yet, Lord, man! we're pleased to
|
|
be ashore! Yon was a very fine voyage from Tahiti up here, but -
|
|
the dry land's a fine place too, and we don't mind squalls any
|
|
longer, and eh, man, that's a great thing. Blow, blow, thou wintry
|
|
wind, thou hast done me no appreciable harm beyond a few grey
|
|
hairs! Altogether, this foolhardy venture is achieved; and if I
|
|
have but nine months of life and any kind of health, I shall have
|
|
both eaten my cake and got it back again with usury. But, man,
|
|
there have been days when I felt guilty, and thought I was in no
|
|
position for the head of a house.
|
|
|
|
Your letter and accounts are doubtless at S. F., and will reach me
|
|
in course. My wife is no great shakes; she is the one who has
|
|
suffered most. My mother has had a Huge Old Time; Lloyd is first
|
|
chop; I so well that I do not know myself - sea-bathing, if you
|
|
please, and what is far more dangerous, entertaining and being
|
|
entertained by His Majesty here, who is a very fine intelligent
|
|
fellow, but O, Charles! what a crop for the drink! He carries it,
|
|
too, like a mountain with a sparrow on its shoulders. We
|
|
calculated five bottles of champagne in three hours and a half
|
|
(afternoon), and the sovereign quite presentable, although
|
|
perceptibly more dignified at the end. . . .
|
|
|
|
The extraordinary health I enjoy and variety of interests I find
|
|
among these islands would tempt me to remain here; only for Lloyd,
|
|
who is not well placed in such countries for a permanency; and a
|
|
little for Colvin, to whom I feel I owe a sort of filial duty. And
|
|
these two considerations will no doubt bring me back - to go to bed
|
|
again - in England. - Yours ever affectionately,
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO R. A. M. STEVENSON
|
|
|
|
HONOLULU, HAWAIIAN ISLANDS, FEBRUARY 1889.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR BOB, - My extremely foolhardy venture is practically over.
|
|
How foolhardy it was I don't think I realised. We had a very small
|
|
schooner, and, like most yachts, over-rigged and over-sparred, and
|
|
like many American yachts on a very dangerous sail plan. The
|
|
waters we sailed in are, of course, entirely unlighted, and very
|
|
badly charted; in the Dangerous Archipelago, through which we were
|
|
fools enough to go, we were perfectly in ignorance of where we were
|
|
for a whole night and half the next day, and this in the midst of
|
|
invisible islands and rapid and variable currents; and we were
|
|
lucky when we found our whereabouts at last. We have twice had all
|
|
we wanted in the way of squalls: once, as I came on deck, I found
|
|
the green sea over the cockpit coamings and running down the
|
|
companion like a brook to meet me; at that same moment the foresail
|
|
sheet jammed and the captain had no knife; this was the only
|
|
occasion on the cruise that ever I set a hand to a rope, but I
|
|
worked like a Trojan, judging the possibility of haemorrhage better
|
|
than the certainty of drowning. Another time I saw a rather
|
|
singular thing: our whole ship's company as pale as paper from the
|
|
captain to the cook; we had a black squall astern on the port side
|
|
and a white squall ahead to starboard; the complication passed off
|
|
innocuous, the black squall only fetching us with its tail, and the
|
|
white one slewing off somewhere else. Twice we were a long while
|
|
(days) in the close vicinity of hurricane weather, but again luck
|
|
prevailed, and we saw none of it. These are dangers incident to
|
|
these seas and small craft. What was an amazement, and at the same
|
|
time a powerful stroke of luck, both our masts were rotten, and we
|
|
found it out - I was going to say in time, but it was stranger and
|
|
luckier than that. The head of the mainmast hung over so that
|
|
hands were afraid to go to the helm; and less than three weeks
|
|
before - I am not sure it was more than a fortnight - we had been
|
|
nearly twelve hours beating off the lee shore of Eimeo (or Moorea,
|
|
next island to Tahiti) in half a gale of wind with a violent head
|
|
sea: she would neither tack nor wear once, and had to be boxed off
|
|
with the mainsail - you can imagine what an ungodly show of kites
|
|
we carried - and yet the mast stood. The very day after that, in
|
|
the southern bight of Tahiti, we had a near squeak, the wind
|
|
suddenly coming calm; the reefs were close in with, my eye! what a
|
|
surf! The pilot thought we were gone, and the captain had a boat
|
|
cleared, when a lucky squall came to our rescue. My wife, hearing
|
|
the order given about the boats, remarked to my mother, 'Isn't that
|
|
nice? We shall soon be ashore!' Thus does the female mind
|
|
unconsciously skirt along the verge of eternity. Our voyage up
|
|
here was most disastrous - calms, squalls, head sea, waterspouts of
|
|
rain, hurricane weather all about, and we in the midst of the
|
|
hurricane season, when even the hopeful builder and owner of the
|
|
yacht had pronounced these seas unfit for her. We ran out of food,
|
|
and were quite given up for lost in Honolulu: people had ceased to
|
|
speak to Belle about the CASCO, as a deadly subject.
|
|
|
|
But the perils of the deep were part of the programme; and though I
|
|
am very glad to be done with them for a while and comfortably
|
|
ashore, where a squall does not matter a snuff to any one, I feel
|
|
pretty sure I shall want to get to sea again ere long. The
|
|
dreadful risk I took was financial, and double-headed. First, I
|
|
had to sink a lot of money in the cruise, and if I didn't get
|
|
health, how was I to get it back? I have got health to a wonderful
|
|
extent; and as I have the most interesting matter for my book, bar
|
|
accidents, I ought to get all I have laid out and a profit. But,
|
|
second (what I own I never considered till too late), there was the
|
|
danger of collisions, of damages and heavy repairs, of disablement,
|
|
towing, and salvage; indeed, the cruise might have turned round and
|
|
cost me double. Nor will this danger be quite over till I hear the
|
|
yacht is in San Francisco; for though I have shaken the dust of her
|
|
deck from my feet, I fear (as a point of law) she is still mine
|
|
till she gets there.
|
|
|
|
From my point of view, up to now the cruise has been a wonderful
|
|
success. I never knew the world was so amusing. On the last
|
|
voyage we had grown so used to sea-life that no one wearied, though
|
|
it lasted a full month, except Fanny, who is always ill. All the
|
|
time our visits to the islands have been more like dreams than
|
|
realities: the people, the life, the beachcombers, the old stories
|
|
and songs I have picked up, so interesting; the climate, the
|
|
scenery, and (in some places) the women, so beautiful. The women
|
|
are handsomest in Tahiti, the men in the Marquesas; both as fine
|
|
types as can be imagined. Lloyd reminds me, I have not told you
|
|
one characteristic incident of the cruise from a semi-naval point
|
|
of view. One night we were going ashore in Anaho Bay; the most
|
|
awful noise on deck; the breakers distinctly audible in the cabin;
|
|
and there I had to sit below, entertaining in my best style a
|
|
negroid native chieftain, much the worse for rum! You can imagine
|
|
the evening's pleasure.
|
|
|
|
This naval report on cruising in the South Seas would be incomplete
|
|
without one other trait. On our voyage up here I came one day into
|
|
the dining-room, the hatch in the floor was open, the ship's boy
|
|
was below with a baler, and two of the hands were carrying buckets
|
|
as for a fire; this meant that the pumps had ceased working.
|
|
|
|
One stirring day was that in which we sighted Hawaii. It blew
|
|
fair, but very strong; we carried jib, foresail, and mainsail, all
|
|
single-reefed, and she carried her lee rail under water and flew.
|
|
The swell, the heaviest I have ever been out in - I tried in vain
|
|
to estimate the height, AT LEAST fifteen feet - came tearing after
|
|
us about a point and a half off the wind. We had the best hand -
|
|
old Louis - at the wheel; and, really, he did nobly, and had noble
|
|
luck, for it never caught us once. At times it seemed we must have
|
|
it; Louis would look over his shoulder with the queerest look and
|
|
dive down his neck into his shoulders; and then it missed us
|
|
somehow, and only sprays came over our quarter, turning the little
|
|
outside lane of deck into a mill race as deep as to the cockpit
|
|
coamings. I never remember anything more delightful and exciting.
|
|
Pretty soon after we were lying absolutely becalmed under the lee
|
|
of Hawaii, of which we had been warned; and the captain never
|
|
confessed he had done it on purpose, but when accused, he smiled.
|
|
Really, I suppose he did quite right, for we stood committed to a
|
|
dangerous race, and to bring her to the wind would have been rather
|
|
a heart-sickening manoeuvre.
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO MARCEL SCHWOB
|
|
|
|
HONOLULU, SANDWICH ISLANDS, FEBRUARY 8TH, 1889.
|
|
|
|
DEAR SIR, - I thank you - from the midst of such a flurry as you
|
|
can imagine, with seven months' accumulated correspondence on my
|
|
table - for your two friendly and clever letters. Pray write me
|
|
again. I shall be home in May or June, and not improbably shall
|
|
come to Paris in the summer. Then we can talk; or in the interval
|
|
I may be able to write, which is to-day out of the question. Pray
|
|
take a word from a man of crushing occupations, and count it as a
|
|
volume. Your little CONTE is delightful. Ah yes, you are right, I
|
|
love the eighteenth century; and so do you, and have not listened
|
|
to its voice in vain. - The Hunted One,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO CHARLES BAXTER
|
|
|
|
HONOLULU, 8TH MARCH 1889.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR CHARLES, - At last I have the accounts: the Doer has done
|
|
excellently, and in the words of -, 'I reciprocate every step of
|
|
your behaviour.' . . I send a letter for Bob in your care, as I
|
|
don't know his Liverpool address, by which (for he is to show you
|
|
part of it) you will see we have got out of this adventure - or
|
|
hope to have - with wonderful fortune. I have the retrospective
|
|
horrors on me when I think of the liabilities I incurred; but,
|
|
thank God, I think I'm in port again, and I have found one climate
|
|
in which I can enjoy life. Even Honolulu is too cold for me; but
|
|
the south isles were a heaven upon earth to a puir, catarrhal party
|
|
like Johns'one. We think, as Tahiti is too complete a banishment,
|
|
to try Madeira. It's only a week from England, good
|
|
communications, and I suspect in climate and scenery not unlike our
|
|
dear islands; in people, alas! there can be no comparison. But
|
|
friends could go, and I could come in summer, so I should not be
|
|
quite cut off.
|
|
|
|
Lloyd and I have finished a story, THE WRONG BOX. If it is not
|
|
funny, I am sure I do not know what is. I have split over writing
|
|
it. Since I have been here, I have been toiling like a galley
|
|
slave: three numbers of THE MASTER to rewrite, five chapters of
|
|
the WRONG BOX to write and rewrite, and about five hundred lines of
|
|
a narrative poem to write, rewrite, and re-rewrite. Now I have THE
|
|
MASTER waiting me for its continuation, two numbers more; when
|
|
that's done, I shall breathe. This spasm of activity has been
|
|
chequered with champagne parties: Happy and Glorious, Hawaii Ponoi
|
|
paua: kou moi - (Native Hawaiians, dote upon your monarch!)
|
|
Hawaiian God save the King. (In addition to my other labours, I am
|
|
learning the language with a native moonshee.) Kalakaua is a
|
|
terrible companion; a bottle of fizz is like a glass of sherry to
|
|
him, he thinks nothing of five or six in an afternoon as a whet for
|
|
dinner. You should see a photograph of our party after an
|
|
afternoon with H. H. M.: my! what a crew! - Yours ever
|
|
affectionately,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO HENRY JAMES
|
|
|
|
HONOLULU [MARCH 1889].
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR JAMES, - Yes - I own up - I am untrue to friendship and
|
|
(what is less, but still considerable) to civilisation. I am not
|
|
coming home for another year. There it is, cold and bald, and now
|
|
you won't believe in me at all, and serve me right (says you) and
|
|
the devil take me. But look here, and judge me tenderly. I have
|
|
had more fun and pleasure of my life these past months than ever
|
|
before, and more health than any time in ten long years. And even
|
|
here in Honolulu I have withered in the cold; and this precious
|
|
deep is filled with islands, which we may still visit; and though
|
|
the sea is a deathful place, I like to be there, and like squalls
|
|
(when they are over); and to draw near to a new island, I cannot
|
|
say how much I like. In short, I take another year of this sort of
|
|
life, and mean to try to work down among the poisoned arrows, and
|
|
mean (if it may be) to come back again when the thing is through,
|
|
and converse with Henry James as heretofore; and in the meanwhile
|
|
issue directions to H. J. to write to me once more. Let him
|
|
address here at Honolulu, for my views are vague; and if it is sent
|
|
here it will follow and find me, if I am to be found; and if I am
|
|
not to be found the man James will have done his duty, and we shall
|
|
be at the bottom of the sea, where no post-office clerk can be
|
|
expected to discover us, or languishing on a coral island, the
|
|
philosophic drudges of some barbarian potentate: perchance, of an
|
|
American Missionary. My wife has just sent to Mrs. Sitwell a
|
|
translation (TANT BIEN QUE MAL) of a letter I have had from my
|
|
chief friend in this part of the world: go and see her, and get a
|
|
hearing of it; it will do you good; it is a better method of
|
|
correspondence 'than even Henry James's. I jest, but seriously it
|
|
is a strange thing for a tough, sick, middle-aged scrivener like R.
|
|
L. S. to receive a letter so conceived from a man fifty years old,
|
|
a leading politician, a crack orator, and the great wit of his
|
|
village: boldly say, 'the highly popular M.P. of Tautira.' My
|
|
nineteenth century strikes here, and lies alongside of something
|
|
beautiful and ancient. I think the receipt of such a letter might
|
|
humble, shall I say even -? and for me, I would rather have
|
|
received it than written REDGAUNTLET or the SIXTH AENEID. All
|
|
told, if my books have enabled or helped me to make this voyage, to
|
|
know Rui, and to have received such a letter, they have (in the old
|
|
prefatorial expression) not been writ in vain. It would seem from
|
|
this that I have been not so much humbled as puffed up; but, I
|
|
assure you, I have in fact been both. A little of what that letter
|
|
says is my own earning; not all, but yet a little; and the little
|
|
makes me proud, and all the rest ashamed; and in the contrast, how
|
|
much more beautiful altogether is the ancient man than him of to-
|
|
day!
|
|
|
|
Well, well, Henry James is pretty good, though he IS of the
|
|
nineteenth century, and that glaringly. And to curry favour with
|
|
him, I wish I could be more explicit; but, indeed, I am still of
|
|
necessity extremely vague, and cannot tell what I am to do, nor
|
|
where I am to go for some while yet. As soon as I am sure, you
|
|
shall hear. All are fairly well - the wife, your countrywoman,
|
|
least of all; troubles are not entirely wanting; but on the whole
|
|
we prosper, and we are all affectionately yours,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO SIDNEY COLVIN
|
|
|
|
HONOLULU, APRIL 2ND, 1889.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR COLVIN, - I am beginning to be ashamed of writing on to you
|
|
without the least acknowledgment, like a tramp; but I do not care -
|
|
I am hardened; and whatever be the cause of your silence, I mean to
|
|
write till all is blue. I am outright ashamed of my news, which is
|
|
that we are not coming home for another year. I cannot but hope it
|
|
may continue the vast improvement of my health: I think it good
|
|
for Fanny and Lloyd; and we have all a taste for this wandering and
|
|
dangerous life. My mother I send home, to my relief, as this part
|
|
of our cruise will be (if we can carry it out) rather difficult in
|
|
places. Here is the idea: about the middle of June (unless the
|
|
Boston Board objects) we sail from Honolulu in the missionary ship
|
|
(barquentine auxiliary steamer) MORNING STAR: she takes us through
|
|
the Gilberts and Marshalls, and drops us (this is my great idea) on
|
|
Ponape, one of the volcanic islands of the Carolines. Here we stay
|
|
marooned among a doubtful population, with a Spanish vice-governor
|
|
and five native kings, and a sprinkling of missionaries all at
|
|
loggerheads, on the chance of fetching a passage to Sydney in a
|
|
trader, a labour ship, or (maybe, but this appears too bright) a
|
|
ship of war. If we can't get the MORNING STAR (and the Board has
|
|
many reasons that I can see for refusing its permission) I mean to
|
|
try to fetch Fiji, hire a schooner there, do the Fijis and
|
|
Friendlies, hit the course of the RICHMOND at Tonga Tabu, make back
|
|
by Tahiti, and so to S. F., and home: perhaps in June 1890. For
|
|
the latter part of the cruise will likely be the same in either
|
|
case. You can see for yourself how much variety and adventure this
|
|
promises, and that it is not devoid of danger at the best; but if
|
|
we can pull it off in safety, gives me a fine book of travel, and
|
|
Lloyd a fine lecture and diorama, which should vastly better our
|
|
finances.
|
|
|
|
I feel as if I were untrue to friendship; believe me, Colvin, when
|
|
I look forward to this absence of another year, my conscience sinks
|
|
at thought of the Monument; but I think you will pardon me if you
|
|
consider how much this tropical weather mends my health. Remember
|
|
me as I was at home, and think of me sea-bathing and walking about,
|
|
as jolly as a sandboy: you will own the temptation is strong; and
|
|
as the scheme, bar fatal accidents, is bound to pay into the
|
|
bargain, sooner or later, it seems it would be madness to come home
|
|
now, with an imperfect book, no illustrations to speak of, no
|
|
diorama, and perhaps fall sick again by autumn. I do not think I
|
|
delude myself when I say the tendency to catarrh has visibly
|
|
diminished.
|
|
|
|
It is a singular tiring that as I was packing up old papers ere I
|
|
left Skerryvore, I came on the prophecies of a drunken Highland
|
|
sibyl, when I was seventeen. She said I was to be very happy, to
|
|
visit America, and TO BE MUCH UPON THE SEA. It seems as if it were
|
|
coming true with a vengeance. Also, do you remember my strong,
|
|
old, rooted belief that I shall die by drowning? I don't want that
|
|
to come true, though it is an easy death; but it occurs to me
|
|
oddly, with these long chances in front. I cannot say why I like
|
|
the sea; no man is more cynically and constantly alive to its
|
|
perils; I regard it as the highest form of gambling; and yet I love
|
|
the sea as much as I hate gambling. Fine, clean emotions; a world
|
|
all and always beautiful; air better than wine; interest
|
|
unflagging; there is upon the whole no better life. - Yours ever,
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO E. L. BURLINGAME
|
|
|
|
[HONOLULU, APRIL 1889.]
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR BURLINGAME, - This is to announce the most prodigious
|
|
change of programme. I have seen so much of the South Seas that I
|
|
desire to see more, and I get so much health here that I dread a
|
|
return to our vile climates. I have applied accordingly to the
|
|
missionary folk to let me go round in the MORNING STAR; and if the
|
|
Boston Board should refuse, I shall get somehow to Fiji, hire a
|
|
trading schooner, and see the Fijis and Friendlies and Samoa. He
|
|
would be a South Seayer, Mr. Burlingame. Of course, if I go in the
|
|
MORNING STAR, I see all the eastern (or western?) islands.
|
|
|
|
Before I sail, I shall make out to let you have the last of THE
|
|
MASTER: though I tell you it sticks! - and I hope to have had some
|
|
proofs forbye, of the verses anyway. And now to business.
|
|
|
|
I want (if you can find them) in the British sixpenny edition, if
|
|
not, in some equally compact and portable shape - Seaside Library,
|
|
for instance - the Waverley Novels entire, or as entire as you can
|
|
get 'em, and the following of Marryat: PHANTOM SHIP, PETER SIMPLE,
|
|
PERCIVAL KEENE, PRIVATEERSMAN, CHILDREN OF THE NEW FOREST, FRANK
|
|
MILDMAY, NEWTON FORSTER, DOG FIEND (SNARLEYYOW). Also MIDSHIPMAN
|
|
EASY, KINGSBURN, Carlyle's FRENCH REVOLUTION, Motley's DUTCH
|
|
REPUBLIC, Lang's LETTERS ON LITERATURE, a complete set of my works,
|
|
JENKIN, in duplicate; also FAMILIAR STUDIES, ditto.
|
|
|
|
I have to thank you for the accounts, which are satisfactory
|
|
indeed, and for the cheque for $1000. Another account will have
|
|
come and gone before I see you. I hope it will be equally roseate
|
|
in colour. I am quite worked out, and this cursed end of THE
|
|
MASTER hangs over me like the arm of the gallows; but it is always
|
|
darkest before dawn, and no doubt the clouds will soon rise; but it
|
|
is a difficult thing to write, above all in Mackellarese; and I
|
|
cannot yet see my way clear. If I pull this off, THE MASTER will
|
|
be a pretty good novel or I am the more deceived; and even if I
|
|
don't pull it off, it'll still have some stuff in it.
|
|
|
|
We shall remain here until the middle of June anyway; but my mother
|
|
leaves for Europe early in May. Hence our mail should continue to
|
|
come here; but not hers. I will let you know my next address,
|
|
which will probably be Sydney. If we get on the MORNING STAR, I
|
|
propose at present to get marooned on Ponape, and take my chance of
|
|
getting a passage to Australia. It will leave times and seasons
|
|
mighty vague, and the cruise is risky; but I shall know something
|
|
of the South Seas when it is done, or else the South Seas will
|
|
contain all there is of me. It should give me a fine book of
|
|
travels, anyway.
|
|
|
|
Low will probably come and ask some dollars of you. Pray let him
|
|
have them, they are for outfit. O, another complete set of my
|
|
books should go to Captain A. H. Otis, care of Dr. Merritt, Yacht
|
|
CASCO, Oakland, Cal. In haste,
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO MISS ADELAIDE BOODLE
|
|
|
|
HONOLULU, APRIL 6TH, 1889.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR MISS BOODLE, - Nobody writes a better letter than my
|
|
Gamekeeper: so gay, so pleasant, so engagingly particular,
|
|
answering (by some delicate instinct) all the questions she
|
|
suggests. It is a shame you should get such a poor return as I can
|
|
make, from a mind essentially and originally incapable of the art
|
|
epistolary. I would let the paper-cutter take my place; but I am
|
|
sorry to say the little wooden seaman did after the manner of
|
|
seamen, and deserted in the Societies. The place he seems to have
|
|
stayed at - seems, for his absence was not observed till we were
|
|
near the Equator - was Tautira, and, I assure you, he displayed
|
|
good taste, Tautira being as 'nigh hand heaven' as a paper-cutter
|
|
or anybody has a right to expect.
|
|
|
|
I think all our friends will be very angry with us, and I give the
|
|
grounds of their probable displeasure bluntly - we are not coming
|
|
home for another year. My mother returns next month. Fanny,
|
|
Lloyd, and I push on again among the islands on a trading schooner,
|
|
the EQUATOR - first for the Gilbert group, which we shall have an
|
|
opportunity to explore thoroughly; then, if occasion serve, to the
|
|
Marshalls and Carolines; and if occasion (or money) fail, to Samoa,
|
|
and back to Tahiti. I own we are deserters, but we have excuses.
|
|
You cannot conceive how these climates agree with the wretched
|
|
house-plant of Skerryvore: he wonders to find himself sea-bathing,
|
|
and cutting about the world loose, like a grown-up person. They
|
|
agree with Fanny too, who does not suffer from her rheumatism, and
|
|
with Lloyd also. And the interest of the islands is endless; and
|
|
the sea, though I own it is a fearsome place, is very delightful.
|
|
We had applied for places in the American missionary ship, the
|
|
MORNING STAR, but this trading schooner is a far preferable idea,
|
|
giving us more time and a thousandfold more liberty; so we
|
|
determined to cut off the missionaries with a shilling.
|
|
|
|
The Sandwich Islands do not interest us very much; we live here,
|
|
oppressed with civilisation, and look for good things in the
|
|
future. But it would surprise you if you came out to-night from
|
|
Honolulu (all shining with electric lights, and all in a bustle
|
|
from the arrival of the mail, which is to carry you these lines)
|
|
and crossed the long wooden causeway along the beach, and came out
|
|
on the road through Kapiolani park, and seeing a gate in the
|
|
palings, with a tub of gold-fish by the wayside, entered casually
|
|
in. The buildings stand in three groups by the edge of the beach,
|
|
where an angry little spitfire sea continually spirts and thrashes
|
|
with impotent irascibility, the big seas breaking further out upon
|
|
the reef. The first is a small house, with a very large summer
|
|
parlour, or LANAI, as they call it here, roofed, but practically
|
|
open. There you will find the lamps burning and the family sitting
|
|
about the table, dinner just done: my mother, my wife, Lloyd,
|
|
Belle, my wife's daughter, Austin her child, and to-night (by way
|
|
of rarity) a guest. All about the walls our South Sea curiosities,
|
|
war clubs, idols, pearl shells, stone axes, etc.; and the walls are
|
|
only a small part of a lanai, the rest being glazed or latticed
|
|
windows, or mere open space. You will see there no sign of the
|
|
Squire, however; and being a person of a humane disposition, you
|
|
will only glance in over the balcony railing at the merry-makers in
|
|
the summer parlour, and proceed further afield after the Exile.
|
|
You look round, there is beautiful green turf, many trees of an
|
|
outlandish sort that drop thorns - look out if your feet are bare;
|
|
but I beg your pardon, you have not been long enough in the South
|
|
Seas - and many oleanders in full flower. The next group of
|
|
buildings is ramshackle, and quite dark; you make out a coach-house
|
|
door, and look in - only some cocoanuts; you try round to the left
|
|
and come to the sea front, where Venus and the moon are making
|
|
luminous tracks on the water, and a great swell rolls and shines on
|
|
the outer reef; and here is another door - all these places open
|
|
from the outside - and you go in, and find photography, tubs of
|
|
water, negatives steeping, a tap, and a chair and an inkbottle,
|
|
where my wife is supposed to write; round a little further, a third
|
|
door, entering which you find a picture upon the easel and a table
|
|
sticky with paints; a fourth door admits you to a sort of court,
|
|
where there is a hen sitting - I believe on a fallacious egg. No
|
|
sign of the Squire in all this. But right opposite the studio door
|
|
you have observed a third little house, from whose open door
|
|
lamplight streams and makes hay of the strong moonlight shadows.
|
|
You had supposed it made no part of the grounds, for a fence runs
|
|
round it lined with oleander; but as the Squire is nowhere else, is
|
|
it not just possible he may be here? It is a grim little wooden
|
|
shanty; cobwebs bedeck it; friendly mice inhabit its recesses; the
|
|
mailed cockroach walks upon the wall; so also, I regret to say, the
|
|
scorpion. Herein are two pallet beds, two mosquito curtains,
|
|
strung to the pitch-boards of the roof, two tables laden with books
|
|
and manuscripts, three chairs, and, in one of the beds, the Squire
|
|
busy writing to yourself, as it chances, and just at this moment
|
|
somewhat bitten by mosquitoes. He has just set fire to the insect
|
|
powder, and will be all right in no time; but just now he
|
|
contemplates large white blisters, and would like to scratch them,
|
|
but knows better. The house is not bare; it has been inhabited by
|
|
Kanakas, and - you know what children are! - the bare wood walls
|
|
are pasted over with pages from the GRAPHIC, HARPER'S WEEKLY, etc.
|
|
The floor is matted, and I am bound to say the matting is filthy.
|
|
There are two windows and two doors, one of which is condemned; on
|
|
the panels of that last a sheet of paper is pinned up, and covered
|
|
with writing. I cull a few plums:-
|
|
|
|
'A duck-hammock for each person.
|
|
A patent organ like the commandant's at Taiohae.
|
|
Cheap and bad cigars for presents.
|
|
Revolvers.
|
|
Permanganate of potass.
|
|
Liniment for the head and sulphur.
|
|
Fine tooth-comb.'
|
|
|
|
What do you think this is? Simply life in the South Seas
|
|
foreshortened. These are a few of our desiderata for the next
|
|
trip, which we jot down as they occur.
|
|
|
|
There, I have really done my best and tried to send something like
|
|
a letter - one letter in return for all your dozens. Pray remember
|
|
us all to yourself, Mrs. Boodle, and the rest of your house. I do
|
|
hope your mother will be better when this comes. I shall write and
|
|
give you a new address when I have made up my mind as to the most
|
|
probable, and I do beg you will continue to write from time to time
|
|
and give us airs from home. To-morrow - think of it - I must be
|
|
off by a quarter to eight to drive in to the palace and breakfast
|
|
with his Hawaiian Majesty at 8.30: I shall be dead indeed. Please
|
|
give my news to Scott, I trust he is better; give him my warm
|
|
regards. To you we all send all kinds of things, and I am the
|
|
absentee Squire,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO CHARLES BAXTER
|
|
|
|
HONOLULU, APRIL 1889.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR CHARLES, - As usual, your letter is as good as a cordial,
|
|
and I thank you for it, and all your care, kindness, and generous
|
|
and thoughtful friendship, from my heart. I was truly glad to hear
|
|
a word of Colvin, whose long silence has terrified me; and glad to
|
|
hear that you condoned the notion of my staying longer in the South
|
|
Seas, for I have decided in that sense. The first idea was to go
|
|
in the MORNING STAR, missionary ship; but now I have found a
|
|
trading schooner, the EQUATOR, which is to call for me here early
|
|
in June and carry us through the Gilberts. What will happen then,
|
|
the Lord knows. My mother does not accompany us: she leaves here
|
|
for home early in May, and you will hear of us from her; but not, I
|
|
imagine, anything more definite. We shall get dumped on
|
|
Butaritari, and whether we manage to go on to the Marshalls and
|
|
Carolines, or whether we fall back on Samoa, Heaven must decide;
|
|
but I mean to fetch back into the course of the RICHMOND - (to
|
|
think you don't know what the RICHMOND is! - the steamer of the
|
|
Eastern South Seas, joining New Zealand, Tongatabu, the Samoas,
|
|
Taheite, and Rarotonga, and carrying by last advices sheep in the
|
|
saloon!) - into the course of the RICHMOND and make Taheite again
|
|
on the home track. Would I like to see the SCOTS OBSERVER?
|
|
Wouldn't I not? But whaur? I'm direckit at space. They have nae
|
|
post offishes at the Gilberts, and as for the Car'lines! Ye see,
|
|
Mr. Baxter, we're no just in the punkshewal CENTRE o' civ'lisation.
|
|
But pile them up for me, and when I've decided on an address, I'll
|
|
let you ken, and ye'll can send them stavin' after me. - Ever your
|
|
affectionate,
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO CHARLES BAXTER
|
|
|
|
HONOLULU, 10TH MAY 1889.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR CHARLES, - I am appalled to gather from your last just to
|
|
hand that you have felt so much concern about the letter. Pray
|
|
dismiss it from your mind. But I think you scarce appreciate how
|
|
disagreeable it is to have your private affairs and private
|
|
unguarded expressions getting into print. It would soon sicken any
|
|
one of writing letters. I have no doubt that letter was very
|
|
wisely selected, but it just shows how things crop up. There was a
|
|
raging jealousy between the two yachts; our captain was nearly in a
|
|
fight over it. However, no more; and whatever you think, my dear
|
|
fellow, do not suppose me angry with you or -; although I was
|
|
ANNOYED AT THE CIRCUMSTANCE - a very different thing. But it is
|
|
difficult to conduct life by letter, and I continually feel I may
|
|
be drifting into some matter of offence, in which my heart takes no
|
|
part.
|
|
|
|
I must now turn to a point of business. This new cruise of ours is
|
|
somewhat venturesome; and I think it needful to warn you not to be
|
|
in a hurry to suppose us dead. In these ill-charted seas, it is
|
|
quite on the cards we might be cast on some unvisited, or very
|
|
rarely visited, island; that there we might lie for a long time,
|
|
even years, unheard of; and yet turn up smiling at the hinder end.
|
|
So do not let me be 'rowpit' till you get some certainty we have
|
|
gone to Davie Jones in a squall, or graced the feast of some
|
|
barbarian in the character of Long Pig.
|
|
|
|
I have just been a week away alone on the lee coast of Hawaii, the
|
|
only white creature in many miles, riding five and a half hours one
|
|
day, living with a native, seeing four lepers shipped off to
|
|
Molokai, hearing native causes, and giving my opinion as AMICUS
|
|
CURIAE as to the interpretation of a statute in English; a lovely
|
|
week among God's best - at least God's sweetest works -
|
|
Polynesians. It has bettered me greatly. If I could only stay
|
|
there the time that remains, I could get my work done and be happy;
|
|
but the care of my family keeps me in vile Honolulu, where I am
|
|
always out of sorts, amidst heat and cold and cesspools and beastly
|
|
HAOLES. What is a haole? You are one; and so, I am sorry to say,
|
|
am I. After so long a dose of whites, it was a blessing to get
|
|
among Polynesians again even for a week.
|
|
|
|
Well, Charles, there are waur haoles than yoursel', I'll say that
|
|
for ye; and trust before I sail I shall get another letter with
|
|
more about yourself. - Ever your affectionate friend
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO W. H. LOW
|
|
|
|
HONOLULU, (ABOUT) 20TH MAY '89.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR LOW, - The goods have come; many daughters have done
|
|
virtuously, but thou excellest them all. - I have at length
|
|
finished THE MASTER; it has been a sore cross to me; but now he is
|
|
buried, his body's under hatches, - his soul, if there is any hell
|
|
to go to, gone to hell; and I forgive him: it is harder to forgive
|
|
Burlingame for having induced me to begin the publication, or
|
|
myself for suffering the induction. - Yes, I think Hole has done
|
|
finely; it will be one of the most adequately illustrated books of
|
|
our generation; he gets the note, he tells the story - MY story: I
|
|
know only one failure - the Master standing on the beach. - You
|
|
must have a letter for me at Sydney - till further notice.
|
|
Remember me to Mrs. Will. H., the godlike sculptor, and any of the
|
|
faithful. If you want to cease to be a republican, see my little
|
|
Kaiulani, as she goes through - but she is gone already. You will
|
|
die a red, I wear the colours of that little royal maiden, NOUS
|
|
ALLONS CHANTER A LA RONDE, SI VOUS VOULEZ! only she is not blonde
|
|
by several chalks, though she is but a half-blood, and the wrong
|
|
half Edinburgh Scots like mysel'. But, O Low, I love the
|
|
Polynesian: this civilisation of ours is a dingy, ungentlemanly
|
|
business; it drops out too much of man, and too much of that the
|
|
very beauty of the poor beast: who has his beauties in spite of
|
|
Zola and Co. As usual, here is a whole letter with no news: I am
|
|
a bloodless, inhuman dog; and no doubt Zola is a better
|
|
correspondent. - Long live your fine old English admiral - yours, I
|
|
mean - the U.S.A. one at Samoa; I wept tears and loved myself and
|
|
mankind when I read of him: he is not too much civilised. And
|
|
there was Gordon, too; and there are others, beyond question. But
|
|
if you could live, the only white folk, in a Polynesian village;
|
|
and drink that warm, light VIN DU PAYS of human affection, and
|
|
enjoy that simple dignity of all about you - I will not gush, for I
|
|
am now in my fortieth year, which seems highly unjust, but there it
|
|
is, Mr. Low, and the Lord enlighten your affectionate
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO MRS. R. L. STEVENSON
|
|
|
|
KALAWAO, MOLOKAI [MAY 1889].
|
|
|
|
DEAR FANNY, - I had a lovely sail up. Captain Cameron and Mr.
|
|
Gilfillan, both born in the States, yet the first still with a
|
|
strong Highland, and the second still with a strong Lowland accent,
|
|
were good company; the night was warm, the victuals plain but good.
|
|
Mr. Gilfillan gave me his berth, and I slept well, though I heard
|
|
the sisters sick in the next stateroom, poor souls. Heavy rolling
|
|
woke me in the morning; I turned in all standing, so went right on
|
|
the upper deck. The day was on the peep out of a low morning bank,
|
|
and we were wallowing along under stupendous cliffs. As the lights
|
|
brightened, we could see certain abutments and buttresses on their
|
|
front where wood clustered and grass grew brightly. But the whole
|
|
brow seemed quite impassable, and my heart sank at the sight. Two
|
|
thousand feet of rock making 19 degrees (the Captain guesses)
|
|
seemed quite beyond my powers. However, I had come so far; and, to
|
|
tell you the truth, I was so cowed with fear and disgust that I
|
|
dared not go back on the adventure in the interests of my own self-
|
|
respect. Presently we came up with the leper promontory: lowland,
|
|
quite bare and bleak and harsh, a little town of wooden houses, two
|
|
churches, a landing-stair, all unsightly, sour, northerly, lying
|
|
athwart the sunrise, with the great wall of the pali cutting the
|
|
world out on the south. Our lepers were sent on the first boat,
|
|
about a dozen, one poor child very horrid, one white man, leaving a
|
|
large grown family behind him in Honolulu, and then into the second
|
|
stepped the sisters and myself. I do not know how it would have
|
|
been with me had the sisters not been there. My horror of the
|
|
horrible is about my weakest point; but the moral loveliness at my
|
|
elbow blotted all else out; and when I found that one of them was
|
|
crying, poor soul, quietly under her veil, I cried a little myself;
|
|
then I felt as right as a trivet, only a little crushed to be there
|
|
so uselessly. I thought it was a sin and a shame she should feel
|
|
unhappy; I turned round to her, and said something like this:
|
|
'Ladies, God Himself is here to give you welcome. I'm sure it is
|
|
good for me to be beside you; I hope it will be blessed to me; I
|
|
thank you for myself and the good you do me.' It seemed to cheer
|
|
her up; but indeed I had scarce said it when we were at the
|
|
landing-stairs, and there was a great crowd, hundreds of (God save
|
|
us!) pantomime masks in poor human flesh, waiting to receive the
|
|
sisters and the new patients.
|
|
|
|
Every hand was offered: I had gloves, but I had made up my mind on
|
|
the boat's voyage NOT to give my hand; that seemed less offensive
|
|
than the gloves. So the sisters and I went up among that crew, and
|
|
presently I got aside (for I felt I had no business there) and set
|
|
off on foot across the promontory, carrying my wrap and the camera.
|
|
All horror was quite gone from me: to see these dread creatures
|
|
smile and look happy was beautiful. On my way through Kalaupapa I
|
|
was exchanging cheerful ALOHAS with the patients coming galloping
|
|
over on their horses; I was stopping to gossip at house-doors; I
|
|
was happy, only ashamed of myself that I was here for no good. One
|
|
woman was pretty, and spoke good English, and was infinitely
|
|
engaging and (in the old phrase) towardly; she thought I was the
|
|
new white patient; and when she found I was only a visitor, a
|
|
curious change came in her face and voice - the only sad thing,
|
|
morally sad, I mean - that I met that morning. But for all that,
|
|
they tell me none want to leave. Beyond Kalaupapa the houses
|
|
became rare; dry stone dykes, grassy, stony land, one sick
|
|
pandanus; a dreary country; from overhead in the little clinging
|
|
wood shogs of the pali chirruping of birds fell; the low sun was
|
|
right in my face; the trade blew pure and cool and delicious; I
|
|
felt as right as ninepence, and stopped and chatted with the
|
|
patients whom I still met on their horses, with not the least
|
|
disgust. About half-way over, I met the superintendent (a leper)
|
|
with a horse for me, and O, wasn't I glad! But the horse was one
|
|
of those curious, dogged, cranky brutes that always dully want to
|
|
go somewhere else, and my traffic with him completed my crushing
|
|
fatigue. I got to the guest-house, an empty house with several
|
|
rooms, kitchen, bath, etc. There was no one there, and I let the
|
|
horse go loose in the garden, lay down on the bed, and fell asleep.
|
|
|
|
Dr. Swift woke me and gave me breakfast, then I came back and slept
|
|
again while he was at the dispensary, and he woke me for dinner;
|
|
and I came back and slept again, and he woke me about six for
|
|
supper; and then in about an hour I felt tired again, and came up
|
|
to my solitary guest-house, played the flageolet, and am now
|
|
writing to you. As yet, you see, I have seen nothing of the
|
|
settlement, and my crushing fatigue (though I believe that was
|
|
moral and a measure of my cowardice) and the doctor's opinion make
|
|
me think the pali hopeless. 'You don't look a strong man,' said
|
|
the doctor; 'but are you sound?' I told him the truth; then he
|
|
said it was out of the question, and if I were to get up at all, I
|
|
must be carried up. But, as it seems, men as well as horses
|
|
continually fall on this ascent: the doctor goes up with a change
|
|
of clothes - it is plain that to be carried would in itself be very
|
|
fatiguing to both mind and body; and I should then be at the
|
|
beginning of thirteen miles of mountain road to be ridden against
|
|
time. How should I come through? I hope you will think me right
|
|
in my decision: I mean to stay, and shall not be back in Honolulu
|
|
till Saturday, June first. You must all do the best you can to
|
|
make ready.
|
|
|
|
Dr. Swift has a wife and an infant son, beginning to toddle and
|
|
run, and they live here as composed as brick and mortar - at least
|
|
the wife does, a Kentucky German, a fine enough creature, I
|
|
believe, who was quite amazed at the sisters shedding tears! How
|
|
strange is mankind! Gilfillan too, a good fellow I think, and far
|
|
from a stupid, kept up his hard Lowland Scottish talk in the boat
|
|
while the sister was covering her face; but I believe he knew, and
|
|
did it (partly) in embarrassment, and part perhaps in mistaken
|
|
kindness. And that was one reason, too, why I made my speech to
|
|
them. Partly, too, I did it, because I was ashamed to do so, and
|
|
remembered one of my golden rules, 'When you are ashamed to speak,
|
|
speak up at once.' But, mind you, that rule is only golden with
|
|
strangers; with your own folks, there are other considerations.
|
|
This is a strange place to be in. A bell has been sounded at
|
|
intervals while I wrote, now all is still but a musical humming of
|
|
the sea, not unlike the sound of telegraph wires; the night is
|
|
quite cool and pitch dark, with a small fine rain; one light over
|
|
in the leper settlement, one cricket whistling in the garden, my
|
|
lamp here by my bedside, and my pen cheeping between my inky
|
|
fingers.
|
|
|
|
Next day, lovely morning, slept all night, 80 degrees in the shade,
|
|
strong, sweet Anaho trade-wind.
|
|
|
|
LOUIS.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO SIDNEY COLVIN
|
|
|
|
HONOLULU, JUNE 1889.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR COLVIN, - I am just home after twelve days journey to
|
|
Molokai, seven of them at the leper settlement, where I can only
|
|
say that the sight of so much courage, cheerfulness, and devotion
|
|
strung me too high to mind the infinite pity and horror of the
|
|
sights. I used to ride over from Kalawao to Kalaupapa (about three
|
|
miles across the promontory, the cliff-wall, ivied with forest and
|
|
yet inaccessible from steepness, on my left), go to the Sisters'
|
|
home, which is a miracle of neatness, play a game of croquet with
|
|
seven leper girls (90 degrees in the shade), got a little old-maid
|
|
meal served me by the Sisters, and ride home again, tired enough,
|
|
but not too tired. The girls have all dolls, and love dressing
|
|
them. You who know so many ladies delicately clad, and they who
|
|
know so many dressmakers, please make it known it would be an
|
|
acceptable gift to send scraps for doll dressmaking to the Reverend
|
|
Sister Maryanne, Bishop Home, Kalaupapa, Molokai, Hawaiian Islands.
|
|
|
|
I have seen sights that cannot be told, and heard stories that
|
|
cannot be repeated: yet I never admired my poor race so much, nor
|
|
(strange as it may seem) loved life more than in the settlement. A
|
|
horror of moral beauty broods over the place: that's like bad
|
|
Victor Hugo, but it is the only way I can express the sense that
|
|
lived with me all these days. And this even though it was in great
|
|
part Catholic, and my sympathies flew never with so much difficulty
|
|
as towards Catholic virtues. The pass-book kept with heaven stirs
|
|
me to anger and laughter. One of the sisters calls the place 'the
|
|
ticket office to heaven.' Well, what is the odds? They do their
|
|
darg and do it with kindness and efficiency incredible; and we must
|
|
take folk's virtues as we find them, and love the better part. Of
|
|
old Damien, whose weaknesses and worse perhaps I heard fully, I
|
|
think only the more. It was a European peasant: dirty, bigoted,
|
|
untruthful, unwise, tricky, but superb with generosity, residual
|
|
candour and fundamental good-humour: convince him he had done
|
|
wrong (it might take hours of insult) and he would undo what he had
|
|
done and like his corrector better. A man, with all the grime and
|
|
paltriness of mankind, but a saint and hero all the more for that.
|
|
The place as regards scenery is grand, gloomy, and bleak. Mighty
|
|
mountain walls descending sheer along the whole face of the island
|
|
into a sea unusually deep; the front of the mountain ivied and
|
|
furred with clinging forest, one viridescent cliff: about half-way
|
|
from east to west, the low, bare, stony promontory edged in between
|
|
the cliff and the ocean; the two little towns (Kalawao and
|
|
Kalaupapa) seated on either side of it, as bare almost as bathing
|
|
machines upon a beach; and the population - gorgons and chimaeras
|
|
dire. All this tear of the nerves I bore admirably; and the day
|
|
after I got away, rode twenty miles along the opposite coast and up
|
|
into the mountains: they call it twenty, I am doubtful of the
|
|
figures: I should guess it nearer twelve; but let me take credit
|
|
for what residents allege; and I was riding again the day after, so
|
|
I need say no more about health. Honolulu does not agree with me
|
|
at all: I am always out of sorts there, with slight headache,
|
|
blood to the head, etc. I had a good deal of work to do and did it
|
|
with miserable difficulty; and yet all the time I have been gaining
|
|
strength, as you see, which is highly encouraging. By the time I
|
|
am done with this cruise I shall have the material for a very
|
|
singular book of travels: names of strange stories and characters,
|
|
cannibals, pirates, ancient legends, old Polynesian poetry, - never
|
|
was so generous a farrago. I am going down now to get the story of
|
|
a shipwrecked family, who were fifteen months on an island with a
|
|
murderer: there is a specimen. The Pacific is a strange place;
|
|
the nineteenth century only exists there in spots: all round, it
|
|
is a no man's land of the ages, a stir-about of epochs and races,
|
|
barbarisms and civilisations, virtues and crimes.
|
|
|
|
It is good of you to let me stay longer, but if I had known how ill
|
|
you were, I should be now on my way home. I had chartered my
|
|
schooner and made all arrangements before (at last) we got definite
|
|
news. I feel highly guilty; I should be back to insult and worry
|
|
you a little. Our address till further notice is to be c/o R.
|
|
Towns and Co., Sydney. That is final: I only got the arrangement
|
|
made yesterday; but you may now publish it abroad. - Yours ever,
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO JAMES PAYN
|
|
|
|
HONOLULU, H.I., JUNE 13TH, 1889.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR JAMES PAYN, - I get sad news of you here at my offsetting
|
|
for further voyages: I wish I could say what I feel. Sure there
|
|
was never any man less deserved this calamity; for I have heard you
|
|
speak time and again, and I remember nothing that was unkind,
|
|
nothing that was untrue, nothing that was not helpful, from your
|
|
lips. It is the ill-talkers that should hear no more. God knows,
|
|
I know no word of consolation; but I do feel your trouble. You are
|
|
the more open to letters now; let me talk to you for two pages. I
|
|
have nothing but happiness to tell; and you may bless God you are a
|
|
man so sound-hearted that (even in the freshness of your calamity)
|
|
I can come to you with my own good fortune unashamed and secure of
|
|
sympathy. It is a good thing to be a good man, whether deaf or
|
|
whether dumb; and of all our fellow-craftsmen (whom yet they count
|
|
a jealous race), I never knew one but gave you the name of honesty
|
|
and kindness: come to think of it gravely, this is better than the
|
|
finest hearing. We are all on the march to deafness, blindness,
|
|
and all conceivable and fatal disabilities; we shall not all get
|
|
there with a report so good. My good news is a health
|
|
astonishingly reinstated. This climate; these voyagings; these
|
|
landfalls at dawn; new islands peaking from the morning bank; new
|
|
forested harbours; new passing alarms of squalls and surf; new
|
|
interests of gentle natives, - the whole tale of my life is better
|
|
to me than any poem.
|
|
|
|
I am fresh just now from the leper settlement of Molokai, playing
|
|
croquet with seven leper girls, sitting and yarning with old,
|
|
blind, leper beachcombers in the hospital, sickened with the
|
|
spectacle of abhorrent suffering and deformation amongst the
|
|
patients, touched to the heart by the sight of lovely and effective
|
|
virtues in their helpers: no stranger time have I ever had, nor
|
|
any so moving. I do not think it a little thing to be deaf, God
|
|
knows, and God defend me from the same! - but to be a leper, of one
|
|
of the self-condemned, how much more awful! and yet there's a way
|
|
there also. 'There are Molokais everywhere,' said Mr. Dutton,
|
|
Father Damien's dresser; you are but new landed in yours; and my
|
|
dear and kind adviser, I wish you, with all my soul, that patience
|
|
and courage which you will require. Think of me meanwhile on a
|
|
trading schooner, bound for the Gilbert Islands, thereafter for the
|
|
Marshalls, with a diet of fish and cocoanut before me; bound on a
|
|
cruise of - well, of investigation to what islands we can reach,
|
|
and to get (some day or other) to Sydney, where a letter addressed
|
|
to the care of R. Towns & Co. will find me sooner or later; and if
|
|
it contain any good news, whether of your welfare or the courage
|
|
with which you bear the contrary, will do me good. - Yours
|
|
affectionately (although so near a stranger),
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO SIDNEY COLVIN
|
|
|
|
SCHOONER 'EQUATOR,' APAIANG LAGOON, AUGUST 22ND, 1889.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR COLVIN, - The missionary ship is outside the reef trying
|
|
(vainly) to get in; so I may have a chance to get a line off. I am
|
|
glad to say I shall be home by June next for the summer, or we
|
|
shall know the reason why. For God's sake be well and jolly for
|
|
the meeting. I shall be, I believe, a different character from
|
|
what you have seen this long while. This cruise is up to now a
|
|
huge success, being interesting, pleasant, and profitable. The
|
|
beachcomber is perhaps the most interesting character here; the
|
|
natives are very different, on the whole, from Polynesians: they
|
|
are moral, stand-offish (for good reasons), and protected by a dark
|
|
tongue. It is delightful to meet the few Hawaiians (mostly
|
|
missionaries) that are dotted about, with their Italian BRIO and
|
|
their ready friendliness. The whites are a strange lot, many of
|
|
them good, kind, pleasant fellows; others quite the lowest I have
|
|
ever seen even in the slums of cities. I wish I had time to
|
|
narrate to you the doings and character of three white murderers
|
|
(more or less proven) I have met. One, the only undoubted assassin
|
|
of the lot, quite gained my affection in his big home out of a
|
|
wreck, with his New Hebrides wife in her savage turban of hair and
|
|
yet a perfect lady, and his three adorable little girls in Rob Roy
|
|
Macgregor dresses, dancing to the hand organ, performing circus on
|
|
the floor with startling effects of nudity, and curling up together
|
|
on a mat to sleep, three sizes, three attitudes, three Rob Roy
|
|
dresses, and six little clenched fists: the murderer meanwhile
|
|
brooding and gloating over his chicks, till your whole heart went
|
|
out to him; and yet his crime on the face of it was dark:
|
|
disembowelling, in his own house, an old man of seventy, and him
|
|
drunk.
|
|
|
|
It is lunch-time, I see, and I must close up with my warmest love
|
|
to you. I wish you were here to sit upon me when required. Ah! if
|
|
you were but a good sailor! I will never leave the sea, I think;
|
|
it is only there that a Briton lives: my poor grandfather, it is
|
|
from him I inherit the taste, I fancy, and he was round many
|
|
islands in his day; but I, please God, shall beat him at that
|
|
before the recall is sounded. Would you be surprised to learn that
|
|
I contemplate becoming a shipowner? I do, but it is a secret.
|
|
Life is far better fun than people dream who fall asleep among the
|
|
chimney stacks and telegraph wires.
|
|
|
|
Love to Henry James and others near. - Ever yours, my dear fellow,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
EQUATOR TOWN, APEMAMA, OCTOBER 1889.
|
|
|
|
No MORNING STAR came, however; and so now I try to send this to you
|
|
by the schooner J. L. TIERNAN. We have been about a month ashore,
|
|
camping out in a kind of town the king set up for us: on the idea
|
|
that I was really a 'big chief' in England. He dines with us
|
|
sometimes, and sends up a cook for a share of our meals when he
|
|
does not come himself. This sounds like high living! alas,
|
|
undeceive yourself. Salt junk is the mainstay; a low island,
|
|
except for cocoanuts, is just the same as a ship at sea: brackish
|
|
water, no supplies, and very little shelter. The king is a great
|
|
character - a thorough tyrant, very much of a gentleman, a poet, a
|
|
musician, a historian, or perhaps rather more a genealogist - it is
|
|
strange to see him lying in his house among a lot of wives (nominal
|
|
wives) writing the History of Apemama in an account-book; his
|
|
description of one of his own songs, which he sang to me himself,
|
|
as 'about sweethearts, and trees, and the sea - and no true, all-
|
|
the-same lie,' seems about as compendious a definition of lyric
|
|
poetry as a man could ask. Tembinoka is here the great attraction:
|
|
all the rest is heat and tedium and villainous dazzle, and yet more
|
|
villainous mosquitoes. We are like to be here, however, many a
|
|
long week before we get away, and then whither? A strange trade
|
|
this voyaging: so vague, so bound-down, so helpless. Fanny has
|
|
been planting some vegetables, and we have actually onions and
|
|
radishes coming up: ah, onion-despiser, were you but awhile in a
|
|
low island, how your heart would leap at sight of a coster's
|
|
barrow! I think I could shed tears over a dish of turnips. No
|
|
doubt we shall all be glad to say farewell to low islands - I had
|
|
near said for ever. They are very tame; and I begin to read up the
|
|
directory, and pine for an island with a profile, a running brook,
|
|
or were it only a well among the rocks. The thought of a mango
|
|
came to me early this morning and set my greed on edge; but you do
|
|
not know what a mango is, so -.
|
|
|
|
I have been thinking a great deal of you and the Monument of late,
|
|
and even tried to get my thoughts into a poem, hitherto without
|
|
success. God knows how you are: I begin to weary dreadfully to
|
|
see you - well, in nine months, I hope; but that seems a long time.
|
|
I wonder what has befallen me too, that flimsy part of me that
|
|
lives (or dwindles) in the public mind; and what has befallen THE
|
|
MASTER, and what kind of a Box the Merry Box has been found. It is
|
|
odd to know nothing of all this. We had an old woman to do devil-
|
|
work for you about a month ago, in a Chinaman's house on Apaiang
|
|
(August 23rd or 24th). You should have seen the crone with a noble
|
|
masculine face, like that of an old crone [SIC], a body like a
|
|
man's (naked all but the feathery female girdle), knotting cocoanut
|
|
leaves and muttering spells: Fanny and I, and the good captain of
|
|
the EQUATOR, and the Chinaman and his native wife and sister-in-
|
|
law, all squatting on the floor about the sibyl; and a crowd of
|
|
dark faces watching from behind her shoulder (she sat right in the
|
|
doorway) and tittering aloud with strange, appalled, embarrassed
|
|
laughter at each fresh adjuration. She informed us you were in
|
|
England, not travelling and now no longer sick; she promised us a
|
|
fair wind the next day, and we had it, so I cherish the hope she
|
|
was as right about Sidney Colvin. The shipownering has rather
|
|
petered out since I last wrote, and a good many other plans beside.
|
|
|
|
Health? Fanny very so-so; I pretty right upon the whole, and
|
|
getting through plenty work: I know not quite how, but it seems to
|
|
me not bad and in places funny.
|
|
|
|
South Sea Yarns:
|
|
|
|
1. THE WRECKER }
|
|
} R. L. S.
|
|
2. THE PEARL FISHER } by and
|
|
} Lloyd O.
|
|
3. THE BEACHCOMBERS }
|
|
|
|
THE PEARL FISHER, part done, lies in Sydney. It is THE WRECKER we
|
|
are now engaged upon: strange ways of life, I think, they set
|
|
forth: things that I can scarce touch upon, or even not at all, in
|
|
my travel book; and the yarns are good, I do believe. THE PEARL
|
|
FISHER is for the NEW YORK LEDGER: the yarn is a kind of Monte
|
|
Cristo one. THE WRECKER is the least good as a story, I think; but
|
|
the characters seem to me good. THE BEACHCOMBERS is more
|
|
sentimental. These three scarce touch the outskirts of the life we
|
|
have been viewing; a hot-bed of strange characters and incidents:
|
|
Lord, how different from Europe or the Pallid States! Farewell.
|
|
Heaven knows when this will get to you. I burn to be in Sydney and
|
|
have news.
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO SIDNEY COLVIN
|
|
|
|
SCHOONER 'EQUATOR,' AT SEA. 190 MILES OFF SAMOA. MONDAY, DECEMBER
|
|
2ND, 1889
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR COLVIN, - We are just nearing the end of our long cruise.
|
|
Rain, calms, squalls, bang - there's the foretopmast gone; rain,
|
|
calm, squalls, away with the staysail; more rain, more calm, more
|
|
squalls; a prodigious heavy sea all the time, and the EQUATOR
|
|
staggering and hovering like a swallow in a storm; and the cabin, a
|
|
great square, crowded with wet human beings, and the rain
|
|
avalanching on the deck, and the leaks dripping everywhere: Fanny,
|
|
in the midst of fifteen males, bearing up wonderfully. But such
|
|
voyages are at the best a trial. We had one particularity: coming
|
|
down on Winslow Reef, p. d. (position doubtful): two positions in
|
|
the directory, a third (if you cared to count that) on the chart;
|
|
heavy sea running, and the night due. The boats were cleared,
|
|
bread put on board, and we made up our packets for a boat voyage of
|
|
four or five hundred miles, and turned in, expectant of a crash.
|
|
Needless to say it did not come, and no doubt we were far to
|
|
leeward. If we only had twopenceworth of wind, we might be at
|
|
dinner in Apia to-morrow evening; but no such luck: here we roll,
|
|
dead before a light air - and that is no point of sailing at all
|
|
for a fore and aft schooner - the sun blazing overhead, thermometer
|
|
88 degrees, four degrees above what I have learned to call South
|
|
Sea temperature; but for all that, land so near, and so much grief
|
|
being happily astern, we are all pretty gay on board, and have been
|
|
photographing and draught-playing and sky-larking like anything. I
|
|
am minded to stay not very long in Samoa and confine my studies
|
|
there (as far as any one can forecast) to the history of the late
|
|
war. My book is now practically modelled: if I can execute what
|
|
is designed, there are few better books now extant on this globe,
|
|
bar the epics, and the big tragedies, and histories, and the choice
|
|
lyric poetics and a novel or so - none. But it is not executed
|
|
yet; and let not him that putteth on his armour, vaunt himself. At
|
|
least, nobody has had such stuff; such wild stories, such beautiful
|
|
scenes, such singular intimacies, such manners and traditions, so
|
|
incredible a mixture of the beautiful and horrible, the savage and
|
|
civilised. I will give you here some idea of the table of
|
|
contents, which ought to make your mouth water. I propose to call
|
|
the book THE SOUTH SEAS: it is rather a large title, but not many
|
|
people have seen more of them than I, perhaps no one - certainly no
|
|
one capable of using the material.
|
|
|
|
PART I. GENERAL. 'OF SCHOONERS, ISLANDS, AND MAROONS.'
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER I. Marine.
|
|
|
|
II. Contraband (smuggling, barratry, labour traffic).
|
|
|
|
III. The Beachcomber.
|
|
|
|
IV. Beachcomber stories. i. The Murder of the Chinaman. ii. Death
|
|
of a Beachcomber. iii. A Character. iv. The Apia Blacksmith.
|
|
|
|
PART II. THE MARQUESAS.
|
|
|
|
V. Anaho. i. Arrival. ii. Death. iii. The Tapu. iv. Morals. v.
|
|
Hoka.
|
|
|
|
VI. Tai-o-hae. i. Arrival. ii. The French. iii. The Royal
|
|
Family. iv. Chiefless Folk. v. The Catholics. vi. Hawaiian
|
|
Missionaries.
|
|
|
|
VII. Observations of a Long Pig. i. Cannibalism. ii. Hatiheu.
|
|
iii. Frere Michel. iv. Toahauka and Atuona. v. The Vale of
|
|
Atuona. vi. Moipu. vii. Captain Hati.
|
|
|
|
PART III. THE DANGEROUS ARCHIPELAGO.
|
|
|
|
VIII. The Group.
|
|
|
|
IX. A House to let in a Low Island.
|
|
|
|
X. A Paumotuan Funeral. i. The Funeral. ii. Tales of the Dead.
|
|
|
|
PART IV. TAHITI.
|
|
|
|
XI. Tautira.
|
|
|
|
XII. Village Government in Tahiti.
|
|
|
|
XIII. A Journey in Quest of Legends.
|
|
|
|
XIV. Legends and Songs.
|
|
|
|
XV. Life in Eden.
|
|
|
|
XVI. Note on the French Regimen.
|
|
|
|
PART V. THE EIGHT ISLANDS.
|
|
|
|
XVII. A Note on Missions.
|
|
|
|
XVIII. The Kona Coast of Hawaii. i. Hookena. ii. A Ride in the
|
|
Forest. iii. A Law Case. iv. The City of Refuge. v. The Lepers.
|
|
|
|
XIX. Molokai. i. A Week in the Precinct. ii. History of the Leper
|
|
Settlement. iii. The Mokolii. iv. The Free Island.
|
|
|
|
PART VI. THE GILBERTS.
|
|
|
|
XX. The Group. ii. Position of Woman. iii. The Missions. iv.
|
|
Devilwork. v. Republics.
|
|
|
|
XXI. Rule and Misrule on Makin. i. Butaritari, its King and Court.
|
|
ii. History of Three Kings. iii. The Drink Question.
|
|
|
|
XXII. A Butaritarian Festival.
|
|
|
|
XXIII. The King of Apemama. i. First Impressions. ii. Equator
|
|
Town and the Palace. iii. The Three Corselets.
|
|
|
|
PART VII. SAMOA.
|
|
|
|
which I have not yet reached.
|
|
|
|
Even as so sketched it makes sixty chapters, not less than 300
|
|
CORNHILL pages; and I suspect not much under 500. Samoa has yet to
|
|
be accounted for: I think it will be all history, and I shall work
|
|
in observations on Samoan manners, under the similar heads in other
|
|
Polynesian islands. It is still possible, though unlikely, that I
|
|
may add a passing visit to Fiji or Tonga, or even both; but I am
|
|
growing impatient to see yourself, and I do not want to be later
|
|
than June of coming to England. Anyway, you see it will be a large
|
|
work, and as it will be copiously illustrated, the Lord knows what
|
|
it will cost. We shall return, God willing, by Sydney, Ceylon,
|
|
Suez and, I guess, Marseilles the many-masted (copyright epithet).
|
|
I shall likely pause a day or two in Paris, but all that is too far
|
|
ahead - although now it begins to look near - so near, and I can
|
|
hear the rattle of the hansom up Endell Street, and see the gates
|
|
swing back, and feel myself jump out upon the Monument steps -
|
|
Hosanna! - home again. My dear fellow, now that my father is done
|
|
with his troubles, and 17 Heriot Row no more than a mere shell, you
|
|
and that gaunt old Monument in Bloomsbury are all that I have in
|
|
view when I use the word home; some passing thoughts there may be
|
|
of the rooms at Skerryvore, and the black-birds in the chine on a
|
|
May morning; but the essence is S. C. and the Museum. Suppose, by
|
|
some damned accident, you were no more: well, I should return just
|
|
the same, because of my mother and Lloyd, whom I now think to send
|
|
to Cambridge; but all the spring would have gone out of me, and
|
|
ninety per cent. of the attraction lost. I will copy for you here
|
|
a copy of verses made in Apemama.
|
|
|
|
I heard the pulse of the besieging sea
|
|
Throb far away all night. I heard the wind
|
|
Fly crying, and convulse tumultuous palms.
|
|
I rose and strolled. The isle was all bright sand,
|
|
And flailing fans and shadows of the palm:
|
|
The heaven all moon, and wind, and the blind vault -
|
|
The keenest planet slain, for Venus slept.
|
|
The King, my neighbour, with his host of wives,
|
|
Slept in the precinct of the palisade:
|
|
Where single, in the wind, under the moon,
|
|
Among the slumbering cabins, blazed a fire,
|
|
Sole street-lamp and the only sentinel.
|
|
To other lands and nights my fancy turned,
|
|
To London first, and chiefly to your house,
|
|
The many-pillared and the well-beloved.
|
|
There yearning fancy lighted; there again
|
|
In the upper room I lay and heard far off
|
|
The unsleeping city murmur like a shell;
|
|
The muffled tramp of the Museum guard
|
|
Once more went by me; I beheld again
|
|
Lamps vainly brighten the dispeopled street;
|
|
Again I longed for the returning morn,
|
|
The awaking traffic, the bestirring birds,
|
|
The consentaneous trill of tiny song
|
|
That weaves round monumental cornices
|
|
A passing charm of beauty: most of all,
|
|
For your light foot I wearied, and your knock
|
|
That was the glad reveille of my day.
|
|
Lo, now, when to your task in the great house
|
|
At morning through the portico you pass,
|
|
One moment glance where, by the pillared wall,
|
|
Far-voyaging island gods, begrimed with smoke,
|
|
Sit now unworshipped, the rude monument
|
|
Of faiths forgot and races undivined;
|
|
Sit now disconsolate, remembering well
|
|
The priest, the victim, and the songful crowd,
|
|
The blaze of the blue noon, and that huge voice
|
|
Incessant, of the breakers on the shore.
|
|
As far as these from their ancestral shrine,
|
|
So far, so foreign, your divided friends
|
|
Wander, estranged in body, not in mind.
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO E. L. BURLINGAME
|
|
|
|
SCHOONER 'EQUATOR,' AT SEA, WEDNESDAY, 4TH DECEMBER 1889.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR BURLINGAME, - We are now about to rise, like whales, from
|
|
this long dive, and I make ready a communication which is to go to
|
|
you by the first mail from Samoa. How long we shall stay in that
|
|
group I cannot forecast; but it will be best still to address at
|
|
Sydney, where I trust, when I shall arrive, perhaps in one month
|
|
from now, more probably in two or three, to find all news.
|
|
|
|
BUSINESS. - Will you be likely to have a space in the Magazine for
|
|
a serial story, which should be, ready, I believe, by April, at
|
|
latest by autumn? It is called THE WRECKER; and in book form will
|
|
appear as number 1 of South Sea Yarns by R. L. S. and Lloyd
|
|
Osbourne. Here is the table as far as fully conceived, and indeed
|
|
executed. ...
|
|
|
|
The story is founded on fact, the mystery I really believe to be
|
|
insoluble; the purchase of a wreck has never been handled before,
|
|
no more has San Francisco. These seem all elements of success.
|
|
There is, besides, a character, Jim Pinkerton, of the advertising
|
|
American, on whom we build a good deal; and some sketches of the
|
|
American merchant marine, opium smuggling in Honolulu, etc. It
|
|
should run to (about) three hundred pages of my MS. I would like
|
|
to know if this tale smiles upon you, if you will have a vacancy,
|
|
and what you will be willing to pay. It will of course be
|
|
copyright in both the States and England. I am a little anxious to
|
|
have it tried serially, as it tests the interest of the mystery.
|
|
|
|
PLEASURE. - We have had a fine time in the Gilbert group, though
|
|
four months on low islands, which involves low diet, is a largish
|
|
order; and my wife is rather down. I am myself, up to now, a
|
|
pillar of health, though our long and vile voyage of calms,
|
|
squalls, cataracts of rain, sails carried away, foretopmast lost,
|
|
boats cleared and packets made on the approach of a p. d. reef,
|
|
etc., has cured me of salt brine, and filled me with a longing for
|
|
beef steak and mangoes not to be depicted. The interest has been
|
|
immense. Old King Tembinoka of Apemama, the Napoleon of the group,
|
|
poet, tyrant, altogether a man of mark, gave me the woven corselets
|
|
of his grandfather, his father and his uncle, and, what pleased me
|
|
more, told me their singular story, then all manner of strange
|
|
tales, facts and experiences for my South Sea book, which should be
|
|
a Tearer, Mr. Burlingame: no one at least has had such stuff.
|
|
|
|
We are now engaged in the hell of a dead calm, the heat is cruel -
|
|
it is the only time when I suffer from heat: I have nothing on but
|
|
a pair of serge trousers, and a singlet without sleeves of Oxford
|
|
gauze - O, yes, and a red sash about my waist; and yet as I sit
|
|
here in the cabin, sweat streams from me. The rest are on deck
|
|
under a bit of awning; we are not much above a hundred miles from
|
|
port, and we might as well be in Kamschatka. However, I should be
|
|
honest: this is the first calm I have endured without the added
|
|
bane of a heavy swell, and the intoxicated blue-bottle wallowings
|
|
and knockings of the helpless ship.
|
|
|
|
I wonder how you liked the end of THE MASTER; that was the hardest
|
|
job I ever had to do; did I do it?
|
|
|
|
My wife begs to be remembered to yourself and Mrs. Burlingame.
|
|
Remember all of us to all friends, particularly Low, in case I
|
|
don't get a word through for him. - I am, yours very sincerely,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO CHARLES BAXTER
|
|
|
|
SAMOA, [DECEMBER 1889].
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR BAXTER, - . . . I cannot return until I have seen either
|
|
Tonga or Fiji or both: and I must not leave here till I have
|
|
finished my collections on the war - a very interesting bit of
|
|
history, the truth often very hard to come at, and the search (for
|
|
me) much complicated by the German tongue, from the use of which I
|
|
have desisted (I suppose) these fifteen years. The last two days I
|
|
have been mugging with a dictionary from five to six hours a day;
|
|
besides this, I have to call upon, keep sweet, and judiciously
|
|
interview all sorts of persons - English, American, German, and
|
|
Samoan. It makes a hard life; above all, as after every interview
|
|
I have to come and get my notes straight on the nail. I believe I
|
|
should have got my facts before the end of January, when I shall
|
|
make our Tonga or Fiji. I am down right in the hurricane season;
|
|
but they had so bad a one last year, I don't imagine there will be
|
|
much of an edition this. Say that I get to Sydney some time in
|
|
April, and I shall have done well, and be in a position to write a
|
|
very singular and interesting book, or rather two; for I shall
|
|
begin, I think, with a separate opuscule on the Samoan Trouble,
|
|
about as long as KIDNAPPED, not very interesting, but valuable -
|
|
and a thing proper to be done. And then, hey! for the big South
|
|
Sea Book: a devil of a big one, and full of the finest sport.
|
|
|
|
This morning as I was going along to my breakfast a little before
|
|
seven, reading a number of BLACKWOOD'S MAGAZINE, I was startled by
|
|
a soft TALOFA, ALII (note for my mother: they are quite courteous
|
|
here in the European style, quite unlike Tahiti), right in my ear:
|
|
it was Mataafa coming from early mass in his white coat and white
|
|
linen kilt, with three fellows behind him. Mataafa is the nearest
|
|
thing to a hero in my history, and really a fine fellow; plenty
|
|
sense, and the most dignified, quiet, gentle manners. Talking of
|
|
BLACKWOOD - a file of which I was lucky enough to find here in the
|
|
lawyer's - Mrs. Oliphant seems in a staggering state: from the
|
|
WRONG BOX to THE MASTER I scarce recognise either my critic or
|
|
myself. I gather that THE MASTER should do well, and at least that
|
|
notice is agreeable reading. I expect to be home in June: you
|
|
will have gathered that I am pretty well. In addition to my
|
|
labours, I suppose I walk five or six miles a day, and almost every
|
|
day I ride up and see Fanny and Lloyd, who are in a house in the
|
|
bush with Ah Fu. I live in Apia for history's sake with Moors, an
|
|
American trader. Day before yesterday I was arrested and fined for
|
|
riding fast in the street, which made my blood bitter, as the wife
|
|
of the manager of the German Firm has twice almost ridden me down,
|
|
and there seems none to say her nay. The Germans have behaved
|
|
pretty badly here, but not in all ways so ill as you may have
|
|
gathered: they were doubtless much provoked; and if the insane
|
|
Knappe had not appeared upon the scene, might have got out of the
|
|
muddle with dignity. I write along without rhyme or reason, as
|
|
things occur to me.
|
|
|
|
I hope from my outcries about printing you do not think I want you
|
|
to keep my news or letters in a Blue Beard closet. I like all
|
|
friends to hear of me; they all should if I had ninety hours in the
|
|
day, and strength for all of them; but you must have gathered how
|
|
hard worked I am, and you will understand I go to bed a pretty
|
|
tired man.
|
|
|
|
29TH DECEMBER, [1889].
|
|
|
|
To-morrow (Monday, I won't swear to my day of the month; this is
|
|
the Sunday between Christmas and New Year) I go up the coast with
|
|
Mr. Clarke, one of the London Society missionaries, in a boat to
|
|
examine schools, see Tamasese, etc. Lloyd comes to photograph.
|
|
Pray Heaven we have good weather; this is the rainy season; we
|
|
shall be gone four or five days; and if the rain keep off, I shall
|
|
be glad of the change; if it rain, it will be beastly. This
|
|
explains still further how hard pressed I am, as the mail will be
|
|
gone ere I return, and I have thus lost the days I meant to write
|
|
in. I have a boy, Henry, who interprets and copies for me, and is
|
|
a great nuisance. He said he wished to come to me in order to
|
|
learn 'long expressions.' Henry goes up along with us; and as I am
|
|
not fond of him, he may before the trip is over hear some 'strong
|
|
expressions.' I am writing this on the back balcony at Moors',
|
|
palms and a hill like the hill of Kinnoull looking in at me; myself
|
|
lying on the floor, and (like the parties in Handel's song) 'clad
|
|
in robes of virgin white'; the ink is dreadful, the heat delicious,
|
|
a fine going breeze in the palms, and from the other side of the
|
|
house the sudden angry splash and roar of the Pacific on the reef,
|
|
where the warships are still piled from last year's hurricane, some
|
|
under water, one high and dry upon her side, the strangest figure
|
|
of a ship was ever witnessed; the narrow bay there is full of
|
|
ships; the men-of-war covered with sail after the rains, and
|
|
(especially the German ship, which is fearfully and awfully top
|
|
heavy) rolling almost yards in, in what appears to be calm water.
|
|
|
|
Samoa, Apia at least, is far less beautiful than the Marquesas or
|
|
Tahiti: a more gentle scene, gentler acclivities, a tamer face of
|
|
nature; and this much aided, for the wanderer, by the great German
|
|
plantations with their countless regular avenues of palms. The
|
|
island has beautiful rivers, of about the bigness of our waters in
|
|
the Lothians, with pleasant pools and waterfalls and overhanging
|
|
verdure, and often a great volume of sound, so that once I thought
|
|
I was passing near a mill, and it was only the voice of the river.
|
|
I am not specially attracted by the people; but they are courteous;
|
|
the women very attractive, and dress lovely; the men purposelike,
|
|
well set up, tall, lean, and dignified. As I write the breeze is
|
|
brisking up, doors are beginning to slam: and shutters; a strong
|
|
draught sweeps round the balcony; it looks doubtful for to-morrow.
|
|
Here I shut up. - Ever your affectionate,
|
|
|
|
R. L. STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO DR. SCOTT
|
|
|
|
APIA, SAMOA, JANUARY 20TH, 1890.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR SCOTT, - Shameful indeed that you should not have heard of
|
|
me before! I have now been some twenty months in the South Seas,
|
|
and am (up to date) a person whom you would scarce know. I think
|
|
nothing of long walks and rides: I was four hours and a half gone
|
|
the other day, partly riding, partly climbing up a steep ravine. I
|
|
have stood a six months' voyage on a copra schooner with about
|
|
three months ashore on coral atolls, which means (except for
|
|
cocoanuts to drink) no change whatever from ship's food. My wife
|
|
suffered badly - it was too rough a business altogether - Lloyd
|
|
suffered - and, in short, I was the only one of the party who 'kept
|
|
my end up.'
|
|
|
|
I am so pleased with this climate that I have decided to settle;
|
|
have even purchased a piece of land from three to four hundred
|
|
acres, I know not which till the survey is completed, and shall
|
|
only return next summer to wind up my affairs in England;
|
|
thenceforth I mean to be a subject of the High Commissioner.
|
|
|
|
Now you would have gone longer yet without news of your truant
|
|
patient, but that I have a medical discovery to communicate. I
|
|
find I can (almost immediately) fight off a cold with liquid
|
|
extract of coca; two or (if obstinate) three teaspoonfuls in the
|
|
day for a variable period of from one to five days sees the cold
|
|
generally to the door. I find it at once produces a glow, stops
|
|
rigour, and though it makes one very uncomfortable, prevents the
|
|
advance of the disease. Hearing of this influenza, it occurred to
|
|
me that this might prove remedial; and perhaps a stronger
|
|
exhibition - injections of cocaine, for instance - still better.
|
|
|
|
If on my return I find myself let in for this epidemic, which seems
|
|
highly calculated to nip me in the bud, I shall feel very much
|
|
inclined to make the experiment. See what a gulf you may save me
|
|
from if you shall have previously made it on ANIMA VILI, on some
|
|
less important sufferer, and shall have found it worse than
|
|
useless.
|
|
|
|
How is Miss Boodle and her family? Greeting to your brother and
|
|
all friends in Bournemouth, yours very sincerely,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO CHARLES BAXTER
|
|
|
|
FEBRUAR DEN 3EN 1890.
|
|
DAMPFER LUBECK ZWISCHEN APIA UND SYDNEY.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR CHARLES, - I have got one delightful letter from you, and
|
|
heard from my mother of your kindness in going to see her. Thank
|
|
you for that: you can in no way more touch and serve me. . . . Ay,
|
|
ay, it is sad to sell 17; sad and fine were the old days: when I
|
|
was away in Apemama, I wrote two copies of verse about Edinburgh
|
|
and the past, so ink black, so golden bright. I will send them, if
|
|
I can find them, for they will say something to you, and indeed one
|
|
is more than half addressed to you. This is it -
|
|
|
|
TO MY OLD COMRADES
|
|
|
|
Do you remember - can we e'er forget? -
|
|
How, in the coiled perplexities of youth,
|
|
In our wild climate, in our scowling town,
|
|
We gloomed and shivered, sorrowed, sobbed, and feared?
|
|
The belching winter wind, the missile rain,
|
|
The rare and welcome silence of the snows,
|
|
The laggard morn, the haggard day, the night,
|
|
The grimy spell of the nocturnal town,
|
|
Do you remember? - Ah, could one forget!
|
|
As when the fevered sick that all night long
|
|
Listed the wind intone, and hear at last
|
|
The ever-welcome voice of the chanticleer
|
|
Sing in the bitter hour before the dawn, -
|
|
With sudden ardour, these desire the day:
|
|
|
|
(Here a squall sends all flying.)
|
|
|
|
So sang in the gloom of youth the bird of hope;
|
|
So we, exulting, hearkened and desired.
|
|
For lo! as in the palace porch of life
|
|
We huddled with chimeras, from within -
|
|
How sweet to hear! - the music swelled and fell,
|
|
And through the breach of the revolving doors
|
|
What dreams of splendour blinded us and fled!
|
|
I have since then contended and rejoiced;
|
|
Amid the glories of the house of life
|
|
Profoundly entered, and the shrine beheld:
|
|
Yet when the lamp from my expiring eyes
|
|
Shall dwindle and recede, the voice of love
|
|
Fall insignificant on my closing ears,
|
|
What sound shall come but the old cry of the wind
|
|
In our inclement city? what return
|
|
But the image of the emptiness of youth,
|
|
Filled with the sound of footsteps and that voice
|
|
Of discontent and rapture and despair?
|
|
So, as in darkness, from the magic lamp,
|
|
The momentary pictures gleam and fade
|
|
And perish, and the night resurges - these
|
|
Shall I remember, and then all forget.
|
|
|
|
They're pretty second-rate, but felt. I can't be bothered to copy
|
|
the other.
|
|
|
|
I have bought 314 and a half acres of beautiful land in the bush
|
|
behind Apia; when we get the house built, the garden laid, and
|
|
cattle in the place, it will be something to fall back on for
|
|
shelter and food; and if the island could stumble into political
|
|
quiet, it is conceivable it might even bring a little income. . . .
|
|
We range from 600 to 1500 feet, have five streams, waterfalls,
|
|
precipices, profound ravines, rich tablelands, fifty head of cattle
|
|
on the ground (if any one could catch them), a great view of
|
|
forest, sea, mountains, the warships in the haven: really a noble
|
|
place. Some day you are to take a long holiday and come and see
|
|
us: it has been all planned.
|
|
|
|
With all these irons in the fire, and cloudy prospects, you may be
|
|
sure I was pleased to hear a good account of business. I believed
|
|
THE MASTER was a sure card: I wonder why Henley thinks it grimy;
|
|
grim it is, God knows, but sure not grimy, else I am the more
|
|
deceived. I am sorry he did not care for it; I place it on the
|
|
line with KIDNAPPED myself. We'll see as time goes on whether it
|
|
goes above or falls below.
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO E. L. BURLINGAME
|
|
|
|
SS. LUBECK, [BETWEEN APIA AND SYDNEY, FEBRUARY] 1890.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR BURLINGAME, - I desire nothing better than to continue my
|
|
relation with the Magazine, to which it pleases me to hear I have
|
|
been useful. The only thing I have ready is the enclosed barbaric
|
|
piece. As soon as I have arrived in Sydney I shall send you some
|
|
photographs, a portrait of Tembinoka, perhaps a view of the palace
|
|
or of the 'matted men' at their singing; also T.'s flag, which my
|
|
wife designed for him: in a word, what I can do best for you. It
|
|
will be thus a foretaste of my book of travels. I shall ask you to
|
|
let me have, if I wish it, the use of the plates made, and to make
|
|
up a little tract of the verses and illustrations, of which you
|
|
might send six copies to H. M. Tembinoka, King of Apemama VIA
|
|
Butaritari, Gilbert Islands. It might be best to send it by
|
|
Crawford and Co., S. F. There is no postal service; and schooners
|
|
must take it, how they may and when. Perhaps some such note as
|
|
this might be prefixed:
|
|
|
|
AT MY DEPARTURE FROM THE ISLAND OF APEMAMA, FOR WHICH YOU WILL LOOK
|
|
IN VAIN IN MOST ATLASES, THE KING AND I AGREED, SINCE WE BOTH SET
|
|
UP TO BE IN THE POETICAL WAY, THAT WE SHOULD CELEBRATE OUR
|
|
SEPARATION IN VERSE. WHETHER OR NOT HIS MAJESTY HAS BEEN TRUE TO
|
|
HIS BARGAIN, THE LAGGARD POSTS OF THE PACIFIC MAY PERHAPS INFORM ME
|
|
IN SIX MONTHS, PERHAPS NOT BEFORE A YEAR. THE FOLLOWING LINES
|
|
REPRESENT MY PART OF THE CONTRACT, AND IT IS HOPED, BY THEIR
|
|
PICTURES OF STRANGE MANNERS, THEY MAY ENTERTAIN A CIVILISED
|
|
AUDIENCE. NOTHING THROUGHOUT HAS BEEN INVENTED OR EXAGGERATED; THE
|
|
LADY HEREIN REFERRED TO AS THE AUTHOR'S MUSE, HAS CONFINED HERSELF
|
|
TO STRINGING INTO RHYME FACTS AND LEGENDS THAT I SAW OR HEARD
|
|
DURING TWO MONTHS' RESIDENCE UPON THE ISLAND.
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
|
|
|
|
You will have received from me a letter about THE WRECKER. No
|
|
doubt it is a new experiment for me, being disguised so much as a
|
|
study of manners, and the interest turning on a mystery of the
|
|
detective sort, I think there need be no hesitation about beginning
|
|
it in the fall of the year. Lloyd has nearly finished his part,
|
|
and I shall hope to send you very soon the MS. of about the first
|
|
four-sevenths. At the same time, I have been employing myself in
|
|
Samoa, collecting facts about the recent war; and I propose to
|
|
write almost at once and to publish shortly a small volume, called
|
|
I know not what - the War In Samoa, the Samoa Trouble, an Island
|
|
War, the War of the Three Consuls, I know not - perhaps you can
|
|
suggest. It was meant to be a part of my travel book; but material
|
|
has accumulated on my hands until I see myself forced into volume
|
|
form, and I hope it may be of use, if it come soon. I have a few
|
|
photographs of the war, which will do for illustrations. It is
|
|
conceivable you might wish to handle this in the Magazine, although
|
|
I am inclined to think you won't, and to agree with you. But if
|
|
you think otherwise, there it is. The travel letters (fifty of
|
|
them) are already contracted for in papers; these I was quite bound
|
|
to let M'Clure handle, as the idea was of his suggestion, and I
|
|
always felt a little sore as to one trick I played him in the
|
|
matter of the end-papers. The war-volume will contain some very
|
|
interesting and picturesque details: more I can't promise for it.
|
|
Of course the fifty newspaper letters will be simply patches chosen
|
|
from the travel volume (or volumes) as it gets written.
|
|
|
|
But you see I have in hand:-
|
|
|
|
Say half done. 1. THE WRECKER.
|
|
|
|
Lloyd's copy half done, mine not touched. 2. THE PEARL FISHER (a
|
|
novel promised to the LEDGER, and which will form, when it comes in
|
|
book form, No. 2 of our SOUTH SEA YARNS).
|
|
|
|
Not begun, but all material ready. 3. THE WAR VOLUME.
|
|
|
|
Ditto. 4. THE BIG TRAVEL BOOK, which includes the letters.
|
|
|
|
You know how they stand. 5. THE BALLADS.
|
|
|
|
EXCUSEZ DU PEU! And you see what madness it would be to make any
|
|
fresh engagement. At the same time, you have THE WRECKER and the
|
|
WAR VOLUME, if you like either - or both - to keep my name in the
|
|
Magazine.
|
|
|
|
It begins to look as if I should not be able to get any more
|
|
ballads done this somewhile. I know the book would sell better if
|
|
it were all ballads; and yet I am growing half tempted to fill up
|
|
with some other verses. A good few are connected with my voyage,
|
|
such as the 'Home of Tembinoka' sent herewith, and would have a
|
|
sort of slight affinity to the SOUTH SEA BALLADS. You might tell
|
|
me how that strikes a stranger.
|
|
|
|
In all this, my real interest is with the travel volume, which
|
|
ought to be of a really extraordinary interest
|
|
|
|
I am sending you 'Tembinoka' as he stands; but there are parts of
|
|
him that I hope to better, particularly in stanzas III. and II. I
|
|
scarce feel intelligent enough to try just now; and I thought at
|
|
any rate you had better see it, set it up if you think well, and
|
|
let me have a proof; so, at least, we shall get the bulk of it
|
|
straight. I have spared you Tenkoruti, Tenbaitake, Tembinatake,
|
|
and other barbarous names, because I thought the dentists in the
|
|
States had work enough without my assistance; but my chiefs name is
|
|
TEMBINOKA, pronounced, according to the present quite modern habit
|
|
in the Gilberts, Tembinok'. Compare in the margin Tengkorootch; a
|
|
singular new trick, setting at defiance all South Sea analogy, for
|
|
nowhere else do they show even the ability, far less the will, to
|
|
end a word upon a consonant. Loia is Lloyd's name, ship becomes
|
|
shipe, teapot, tipote, etc. Our admirable friend Herman Melville,
|
|
of whom, since I could judge, I have thought more than ever, had no
|
|
ear for languages whatever: his Hapar tribe should be Hapaa, etc.
|
|
|
|
But this is of no interest to you: suffice it, you see how I am as
|
|
usual up to the neck in projects, and really all likely bairns this
|
|
time. When will this activity cease? Too soon for me, I dare to
|
|
say.
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO JAMES PAYN
|
|
|
|
FEBRUARY 4TH, 1890, SS. 'LUBECK.'
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR JAMES PAYN, - In virtue of confessions in your last, you
|
|
would at the present moment, if you were along of me, be sick; and
|
|
I will ask you to receive that as an excuse for my hand of write.
|
|
Excuse a plain seaman if he regards with scorn the likes of you
|
|
pore land-lubbers ashore now. (Reference to nautical ditty.)
|
|
Which I may however be allowed to add that when eight months' mail
|
|
was laid by my side one evening in Apia, and my wife and I sat up
|
|
the most of the night to peruse the same - (precious indisposed we
|
|
were next day in consequence) - no letter, out of so many, more
|
|
appealed to our hearts than one from the pore, stick-in-the-mud,
|
|
land-lubbering, common (or garden) Londoner, James Payn. Thank you
|
|
for it; my wife says, 'Can't I see him when we get back to London?'
|
|
I have told her the thing appeared to me within the spear of
|
|
practical politix. (Why can't I spell and write like an honest,
|
|
sober, god-fearing litry gent? I think it's the motion of the
|
|
ship.) Here I was interrupted to play chess with the chief
|
|
engineer; as I grow old, I prefer the 'athletic sport of cribbage,'
|
|
of which (I am sure I misquote) I have just been reading in your
|
|
delightful LITERARY RECOLLECTIONS. How you skim along, you and
|
|
Andrew Lang (different as you are), and yet the only two who can
|
|
keep a fellow smiling every page, and ever and again laughing out
|
|
loud. I joke wi' deeficulty, I believe; I am not funny; and when I
|
|
am, Mrs. Oliphant says I'm vulgar, and somebody else says (in
|
|
Latin) that I'm a whore, which seems harsh and even uncalled for:
|
|
I shall stick to weepers; a 5s. weeper, 2s. 6d. laugher, 1s.
|
|
shocker.
|
|
|
|
My dear sir, I grow more and more idiotic; I cannot even feign
|
|
sanity. Sometime in the month of June a stalwart weather-beaten
|
|
man, evidently of seafaring antecedents, shall be observed wending
|
|
his way between the Athenaeum Club and Waterloo Place. Arrived off
|
|
No. 17, he shall be observed to bring his head sharply to the wind,
|
|
and tack into the outer haven. 'Captain Payn in the harbour?' -
|
|
'Ay, ay, sir. What ship?' - 'Barquentin R. L. S., nine hundred and
|
|
odd days out from the port of Bournemouth, homeward bound, with
|
|
yarns and curiosities.'
|
|
|
|
Who was it said, 'For God's sake, don't speak of it!' about Scott
|
|
and his tears? He knew what he was saying. The fear of that hour
|
|
is the skeleton in all our cupboards; that hour when the pastime
|
|
and the livelihood go together; and - I am getting hard of hearing
|
|
myself; a pore young child of forty, but new come frae my Mammy, O!
|
|
|
|
Excuse these follies, and accept the expression of all my regards.
|
|
- Yours affectionately,
|
|
|
|
R. L. STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO CHARLES BAXTER
|
|
|
|
UNION CLUB, SYDNEY, MARCH 7TH, 1890.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR CHARLES, - I did not send off the enclosed before from
|
|
laziness; having gone quite sick, and being a blooming prisoner
|
|
here in the club, and indeed in my bedroom. I was in receipt of
|
|
your letters and your ornamental photo, and was delighted to see
|
|
how well you looked, and how reasonably well I stood. . . . I am
|
|
sure I shall never come back home except to die; I may do it, but
|
|
shall always think of the move as suicidal, unless a great change
|
|
comes over me, of which as yet I see no symptom. This visit to
|
|
Sydney has smashed me handsomely; and yet I made myself a prisoner
|
|
here in the club upon my first arrival. This is not encouraging
|
|
for further ventures; Sydney winter - or, I might almost say,
|
|
Sydney spring, for I came when the worst was over - is so small an
|
|
affair, comparable to our June depression at home in Scotland. . .
|
|
. The pipe is right again; it was the springs that had rusted, and
|
|
ought to have been oiled. Its voice is now that of an angel; but,
|
|
Lord! here in the club I dare not wake it! Conceive my impatience
|
|
to be in my own backwoods and raise the sound of minstrelsy. What
|
|
pleasures are to be compared with those of the Unvirtuous Virtuoso.
|
|
- Yours ever affectionately, the Unvirtuous Virtuoso,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO SIDNEY COLVIN
|
|
|
|
SS. 'JANET NICOLL,' OFF UPOLU [SPRING 1890].
|
|
|
|
MY DEAREST COLVIN, - I was sharply ill at Sydney, cut off, right
|
|
out of bed, in this steamer on a fresh island cruise, and have
|
|
already reaped the benefit. We are excellently found this time, on
|
|
a spacious vessel, with an excellent table; the captain,
|
|
supercargo, our one fellow-passenger, etc., very nice; and the
|
|
charterer, Mr. Henderson, the very man I could have chosen. The
|
|
truth is, I fear, this life is the only one that suits me; so long
|
|
as I cruise in the South Seas, I shall be well and happy - alas,
|
|
no, I do not mean that, and ABSIT OMEN! - I mean that, so soon as I
|
|
cease from cruising, the nerves are strained, the decline
|
|
commences, and I steer slowly but surely back to bedward. We left
|
|
Sydney, had a cruel rough passage to Auckland, for the JANET is the
|
|
worst roller I was ever aboard of. I was confined to my cabin,
|
|
ports closed, self shied out of the berth, stomach (pampered till
|
|
the day I left on a diet of perpetual egg-nogg) revolted at ship's
|
|
food and ship eating, in a frowsy bunk, clinging with one hand to
|
|
the plate, with the other to the glass, and using the knife and
|
|
fork (except at intervals) with the eyelid. No matter: I picked
|
|
up hand over hand. After a day in Auckland, we set sail again;
|
|
were blown up in the main cabin with calcium fires, as we left the
|
|
bay. Let no man say I am unscientific: when I ran, on the alert,
|
|
out of my stateroom, and found the main cabin incarnadined with the
|
|
glow of the last scene of a pantomime, I stopped dead: 'What is
|
|
this?' said I. 'This ship is on fire, I see that; but why a
|
|
pantomime?' And I stood and reasoned the point, until my head was
|
|
so muddled with the fumes that I could not find the companion. A
|
|
few seconds later, the captain had to enter crawling on his belly,
|
|
and took days to recover (if he has recovered) from the fumes. By
|
|
singular good fortune, we got the hose down in time and saved the
|
|
ship, but Lloyd lost most of his clothes and a great part of our
|
|
photographs was destroyed. Fanny saw the native sailors tossing
|
|
overboard a blazing trunk; she stopped them in time, and behold, it
|
|
contained my manuscripts. Thereafter we had three (or two) days
|
|
fine weather: then got into a gale of wind, with rain and a
|
|
vexatious sea. As we drew into our anchorage in a bight of Savage
|
|
Island, a man ashore told me afterwards the sight of the JANET
|
|
NICOLL made him sick; and indeed it was rough play, though nothing
|
|
to the night before. All through this gale I worked four to six
|
|
hours per diem, spearing the ink-bottle like a flying fish, and
|
|
holding my papers together as I might. For, of all things, what I
|
|
was at was history - the Samoan business - and I had to turn from
|
|
one to another of these piles of manuscript notes, and from one
|
|
page to another in each, until I should have found employment for
|
|
the hands of Briareus. All the same, this history is a godsend for
|
|
a voyage; I can put in time, getting events co-ordinated and the
|
|
narrative distributed, when my much-heaving numskull would be
|
|
incapable of finish or fine style. At Savage we met the missionary
|
|
barque JOHN WILLIAMS. I tell you it was a great day for Savage
|
|
Island: the path up the cliffs was crowded with gay islandresses
|
|
(I like that feminine plural) who wrapped me in their embraces, and
|
|
picked my pockets of all my tobacco, with a manner which a touch
|
|
would have made revolting, but as it was, was simply charming, like
|
|
the Golden Age. One pretty, little, stalwart minx, with a red
|
|
flower behind her ear, had searched me with extraordinary zeal; and
|
|
when, soon after, I missed my matches, I accused her (she still
|
|
following us) of being the thief. After some delay, and with a
|
|
subtle smile, she produced the box, gave me ONE MATCH, and put the
|
|
rest away again. Too tired to add more. - Your most affectionate,
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO E. L. BURLINGAME
|
|
|
|
S.S. 'JANET NICOLL,' OFF PERU ISLAND, KINGSMILLS GROUP, JULY 13th,
|
|
'90.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR BURLINGAME, - I am moved to write to you in the matter of
|
|
the end papers. I am somewhat tempted to begin them again. Follow
|
|
the reasons PRO and CON:-
|
|
|
|
1st. I must say I feel as if something in the nature of the end
|
|
paper were a desirable finish to the number, and that the
|
|
substitutes of occasional essays by occasional contributors somehow
|
|
fail to fill the bill. Should you differ with me on this point, no
|
|
more is to be said. And what follows must be regarded as lost
|
|
words.
|
|
|
|
2nd. I am rather taken with the idea of continuing the work. For
|
|
instance, should you have no distaste for papers of the class
|
|
called RANDOM MEMORIES, I should enjoy continuing them (of course
|
|
at intervals), and when they were done I have an idea they might
|
|
make a readable book. On the other hand, I believe a greater
|
|
freedom of choice might be taken, the subjects more varied and more
|
|
briefly treated, in somewhat approaching the manner of Andrew Lang
|
|
in the SIGN OF THE SHIP; it being well understood that the broken
|
|
sticks method is one not very suitable (as Colonel Burke would say)
|
|
to my genius, and not very likely to be pushed far in my practice.
|
|
Upon this point I wish you to condense your massive brain. In the
|
|
last lot I was promised, and I fondly expected to receive, a vast
|
|
amount of assistance from intelligent and genial correspondents. I
|
|
assure you, I never had a scratch of a pen from any one above the
|
|
level of a village idiot, except once, when a lady sowed my head
|
|
full of grey hairs by announcing that she was going to direct her
|
|
life in future by my counsels. Will the correspondents be more
|
|
copious and less irrelevant in the future? Suppose that to be the
|
|
case, will they be of any use to me in my place of exile? Is it
|
|
possible for a man in Samoa to be in touch with the great heart of
|
|
the People? And is it not perhaps a mere folly to attempt, from so
|
|
hopeless a distance, anything so delicate as a series of papers?
|
|
Upon these points, perpend, and give me the results of your
|
|
perpensions.
|
|
|
|
3rd. The emolument would be agreeable to your humble servant.
|
|
|
|
I have now stated all the PROS, and the most of the CONS are come
|
|
in by the way. There follows, however, one immense Con (with a
|
|
capital 'C'), which I beg you to consider particularly. I fear
|
|
that, to be of any use for your magazine, these papers should begin
|
|
with the beginning of a volume. Even supposing my hands were free,
|
|
this would be now impossible for next year. You have to consider
|
|
whether, supposing you have no other objection, it would be worth
|
|
while to begin the series in the middle of a volume, or desirable
|
|
to delay the whole matter until the beginning of another year.
|
|
|
|
Now supposing that the CONS have it, and you refuse my offer, let
|
|
me make another proposal, which you will be very inclined to refuse
|
|
at the first off-go, but which I really believe might in time come
|
|
to something. You know how the penny papers have their answers to
|
|
correspondents. Why not do something of the same kind for the
|
|
'culchawed'? Why not get men like Stimson, Brownell, Professor
|
|
James, Goldwin Smith, and others who will occur to you more readily
|
|
than to me, to put and to answer a series of questions of
|
|
intellectual and general interest, until at last you should have
|
|
established a certain standard of matter to be discussed in this
|
|
part of the Magazine?
|
|
|
|
I want you to get me bound volumes of the Magazine from its start.
|
|
The Lord knows I have had enough copies; where they are I know not.
|
|
A wandering author gathers no magazines.
|
|
|
|
THE WRECKER is in no forrader state than in last reports. I have
|
|
indeed got to a period when I cannot well go on until I can refresh
|
|
myself on the proofs of the beginning. My respected collaborator,
|
|
who handles the machine which is now addressing you, has indeed
|
|
carried his labours farther, but not, I am led to understand, with
|
|
what we used to call a blessing; at least, I have been refused a
|
|
sight of his latest labours. However, there is plenty of time
|
|
ahead, and I feel no anxiety about the tale, except that it may
|
|
meet with your approval.
|
|
|
|
All this voyage I have been busy over my TRAVELS, which, given a
|
|
very high temperature and the saloon of a steamer usually going
|
|
before the wind, and with the cabins in front of the engines, has
|
|
come very near to prostrating me altogether. You will therefore
|
|
understand that there are no more poems. I wonder whether there
|
|
are already enough, and whether you think that such a volume would
|
|
be worth the publishing? I shall hope to find in Sydney some
|
|
expression of your opinion on this point. Living as I do among -
|
|
not the most cultured of mankind ('splendidly educated and perfect
|
|
gentlemen when sober') - I attach a growing importance to friendly
|
|
criticisms from yourself.
|
|
|
|
I believe that this is the most of our business. As for my health,
|
|
I got over my cold in a fine style, but have not been very well of
|
|
late. To my unaffected annoyance, the blood-spitting has started
|
|
again. I find the heat of a steamer decidedly wearing and trying
|
|
in these latitudes, and I am inclined to think the superior
|
|
expedition rather dearly paid for. Still, the fact that one does
|
|
not even remark the coming of a squall, nor feel relief on its
|
|
departure, is a mercy not to be acknowledged without gratitude.
|
|
The rest of the family seem to be doing fairly well; both seem less
|
|
run down than they were on the EQUATOR, and Mrs. Stevenson very
|
|
much less so. We have now been three months away, have visited
|
|
about thirty-five islands, many of which were novel to us, and some
|
|
extremely entertaining; some also were old acquaintances, and
|
|
pleasant to revisit. In the meantime, we have really a capital
|
|
time aboard ship, in the most pleasant and interesting society, and
|
|
with (considering the length and nature of the voyage) an excellent
|
|
table. Please remember us all to Mr. Scribner, the young chieftain
|
|
of the house, and the lady, whose health I trust is better. To
|
|
Mrs. Burlingame we all desire to be remembered, and I hope you will
|
|
give our news to Low, St. Gaudens, Faxon, and others of the
|
|
faithful in the city. I shall probably return to Samoa direct,
|
|
having given up all idea of returning to civilisation in the
|
|
meanwhile. There, on my ancestral acres, which I purchased six
|
|
months ago from a blind Scots blacksmith, you will please address
|
|
me until further notice. The name of the ancestral acres is going
|
|
to be Vailima; but as at the present moment nobody else knows the
|
|
name, except myself and the co-patentees, it will be safer, if less
|
|
ambitious, to address R. L. S., Apia, Samoa. The ancestral acres
|
|
run to upwards of three hundred; they enjoy the ministrations of
|
|
five streams, whence the name. They are all at the present moment
|
|
under a trackless covering of magnificent forest, which would be
|
|
worth a great deal if it grew beside a railway terminus. To me, as
|
|
it stands, it represents a handsome deficit. Obliging natives from
|
|
the Cannibal Islands are now cutting it down at my expense. You
|
|
would be able to run your magazine to much greater advantage if the
|
|
terms of authors were on the same scale with those of my cannibals.
|
|
We have also a house about the size of a manufacturer's lodge.
|
|
'Tis but the egg of the future palace, over the details of which on
|
|
paper Mrs. Stevenson and I have already shed real tears; what it
|
|
will be when it comes to paying for it, I leave you to imagine.
|
|
But if it can only be built as now intended, it will be with
|
|
genuine satisfaction and a growunded pride that I shall welcome you
|
|
at the steps of my Old Colonial Home, when you land from the
|
|
steamer on a long-merited holiday. I speak much at my ease; yet I
|
|
do not know, I may be now an outlaw, a bankrupt, the abhorred of
|
|
all good men. I do not know, you probably do. Has Hyde turned
|
|
upon me? Have I fallen, like Danvers Carew?
|
|
|
|
It is suggested to me that you might like to know what will be my
|
|
future society. Three consuls, all at logger-heads with one
|
|
another, or at the best in a clique of two against one; three
|
|
different sects of missionaries, not upon the best of terms; and
|
|
the Catholics and Protestants in a condition of unhealable ill-
|
|
feeling as to whether a wooden drum ought or ought not to be beaten
|
|
to announce the time of school. The native population, very
|
|
genteel, very songful, very agreeable, very good-looking,
|
|
chronically spoiling for a fight (a circumstance not to be entirely
|
|
neglected in the design of the palace). As for the white
|
|
population of (technically, 'The Beach'), I don't suppose it is
|
|
possible for any person not thoroughly conversant with the South
|
|
Seas to form the smallest conception of such a society, with its
|
|
grog-shops, its apparently unemployed hangers-on, its merchants of
|
|
all degrees of respectability and the reverse. The paper, of which
|
|
I must really send you a copy - if yours were really a live
|
|
magazine, you would have an exchange with the editor: I assure
|
|
you, it has of late contained a great deal of matter about one of
|
|
your contributors - rejoices in the name of SAMOA TIMES AND SOUTH
|
|
SEA ADVERTISER. The advertisements in the ADVERTISER are
|
|
permanent, being simply subsidies for its existence. A dashing
|
|
warfare of newspaper correspondence goes on between the various
|
|
residents, who are rather fond of recurring to one another's
|
|
antecedents. But when all is said, there are a lot of very nice,
|
|
pleasant people, and I don't know that Apia is very much worse than
|
|
half a hundred towns that I could name.
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO CHARLES BAXTER
|
|
|
|
HOTEL SEBASTOPOL, NOUMEA, AUGUST 1890.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR CHARLES, - I have stayed here a week while Lloyd and my
|
|
wife continue to voyage in the JANET NICOLL; this I did, partly to
|
|
see the convict system, partly to shorten my stay in the extreme
|
|
cold - hear me with my extreme! MOI QUI SUIS ORIGINAIRE D'EDINBOURG
|
|
- of Sydney at this season. I am feeling very seedy, utterly
|
|
fatigued, and overborne with sleep. I have a fine old gentleman of
|
|
a doctor, who attends and cheers and entertains, if he does not
|
|
cure me; but even with his ministrations I am almost incapable of
|
|
the exertion sufficient for this letter; and I am really, as I
|
|
write, falling down with sleep. What is necessary to say, I must
|
|
try to say shortly. Lloyd goes to clear out our establishments:
|
|
pray keep him in funds, if I have any; if I have not, pray try to
|
|
raise them. Here is the idea: to install ourselves, at the risk
|
|
of bankruptcy, in Samoa. It is not the least likely it will pay
|
|
(although it may); but it is almost certain it will support life,
|
|
with very few external expenses. If I die, it will be an endowment
|
|
for the survivors, at least for my wife and Lloyd; and my mother,
|
|
who might prefer to go home, has her own. Hence I believe I shall
|
|
do well to hurry my installation. The letters are already in part
|
|
done; in part done is a novel for Scribner; in the course of the
|
|
next twelve months I should receive a considerable amount of money.
|
|
I am aware I had intended to pay back to my capital some of this.
|
|
I am now of opinion I should act foolishly. Better to build the
|
|
house and have a roof and farm of my own; and thereafter, with a
|
|
livelihood assured, save and repay . . . There is my livelihood,
|
|
all but books and wine, ready in a nutshell; and it ought to be
|
|
more easy to save and to repay afterwards. Excellent, say you, but
|
|
will you save and will you repay? I do not know, said the Bell of
|
|
Old Bow. . . . It seems clear to me. . . . The deuce of the affair
|
|
is that I do not know when I shall see you and Colvin. I guess you
|
|
will have to come and see me: many a time already we have arranged
|
|
the details of your visit in the yet unbuilt house on the mountain.
|
|
I shall be able to get decent wine from Noumea. We shall be able
|
|
to give you a decent welcome, and talk of old days. APROPOS of old
|
|
days, do you remember still the phrase we heard in Waterloo Place?
|
|
I believe you made a piece for the piano on that phrase. Pray, if
|
|
you remember it, send it me in your next. If you find it
|
|
impossible to write correctly, send it me A LA RECITATIVE, and
|
|
indicate the accents. Do you feel (you must) how strangely heavy
|
|
and stupid I am? I must at last give up and go sleep; I am simply
|
|
a rag.
|
|
|
|
The morrow: I feel better, but still dim and groggy. To-night I
|
|
go to the governor's; such a lark - no dress clothes - twenty-four
|
|
hours' notice - able-bodied Polish tailor - suit made for a man
|
|
with the figure of a puncheon - same hastily altered for self with
|
|
the figure of a bodkin - sight inconceivable. Never mind; dress
|
|
clothes, 'which nobody can deny'; and the officials have been all
|
|
so civil that I liked neither to refuse nor to appear in mufti.
|
|
Bad dress clothes only prove you are a grisly ass; no dress
|
|
clothes, even when explained, indicate a want of respect. I wish
|
|
you were here with me to help me dress in this wild raiment, and to
|
|
accompany me to M. Noel-Pardon's. I cannot say what I would give
|
|
if there came a knock now at the door and you came in. I guess
|
|
Noel-Pardon would go begging, and we might burn the fr. 200 dress
|
|
clothes in the back garden for a bonfire; or what would be yet more
|
|
expensive and more humorous, get them once more expanded to fit
|
|
you, and when that was done, a second time cut down for my gossamer
|
|
dimensions.
|
|
|
|
I hope you never forget to remember me to your father, who has
|
|
always a place in my heart, as I hope I have a little in his. His
|
|
kindness helped me infinitely when you and I were young; I recall
|
|
it with gratitude and affection in this town of convicts at the
|
|
world's end. There are very few things, my dear Charles, worth
|
|
mention: on a retrospect of life, the day's flash and colour, one
|
|
day with another, flames, dazzles, and puts to sleep; and when the
|
|
days are gone, like a fast-flying thaumatrope, they make but a
|
|
single pattern. Only a few things stand out; and among these -
|
|
most plainly to me - Rutland Square, - Ever, my dear Charles, your
|
|
affectionate friend,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
P.S. - Just returned from trying on the dress clo'. Lord, you
|
|
should see the coat! It stands out at the waist like a bustle, the
|
|
flaps cross in front, the sleeves are like bags.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO E. L. BURLINGAME
|
|
|
|
UNION CLUB, SYDNEY [AUGUST 1890].
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR BURLINGAME
|
|
|
|
BALLADS.
|
|
|
|
The deuce is in this volume. It has cost me more botheration and
|
|
dubiety than any other I ever took in hand. On one thing my mind
|
|
is made up: the verses at the end have no business there, and
|
|
throw them down. Many of them are bad, many of the rest want nine
|
|
years' keeping, and the remainder are not relevant - throw them
|
|
down; some I never want to hear of more, others will grow in time
|
|
towards decent items in a second UNDERWOODS - and in the meanwhile,
|
|
down with them! At the same time, I have a sneaking idea the
|
|
ballads are not altogether without merit - I don't know if they're
|
|
poetry, but they're good narrative, or I'm deceived. (You've never
|
|
said one word about them, from which I astutely gather you are dead
|
|
set against: 'he was a diplomatic man' - extract from epitaph of
|
|
E. L. B. - 'and remained on good terms with Minor Poets.') You
|
|
will have to judge: one of the Gladstonian trinity of paths must
|
|
be chosen. (1st) Either publish the five ballads, such as they
|
|
are, in a volume called BALLADS; in which case pray send sheets at
|
|
once to Chatto and Windus. Or (2nd) write and tell me you think
|
|
the book too small, and I'll try and get into the mood to do some
|
|
more. Or (3rd) write and tell me the whole thing is a blooming
|
|
illusion; in which case draw off some twenty copies for my private
|
|
entertainment, and charge me with the expense of the whole dream.
|
|
|
|
In the matter of rhyme no man can judge himself; I am at the
|
|
world's end, have no one to consult, and my publisher holds his
|
|
tongue. I call it unfair and almost unmanly. I do indeed begin to
|
|
be filled with animosity; Lord, wait till you see the continuation
|
|
of THE WRECKER, when I introduce some New York publishers. . . It's
|
|
a good scene; the quantities you drink and the really hideous
|
|
language you are represented as employing may perhaps cause you one
|
|
tithe of the pain you have inflicted by your silence on, sir, The
|
|
Poetaster,
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
|
|
|
|
Lloyd is off home; my wife and I dwell sundered: she in lodgings,
|
|
preparing for the move; I here in the club, and at my old trade -
|
|
bedridden. Naturally, the visit home is given up; we only wait our
|
|
opportunity to get to Samoa, where, please, address me.
|
|
|
|
Have I yet asked you to despatch the books and papers left in your
|
|
care to me at Apia, Samoa? I wish you would, QUAM PRIMUM.
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO HENRY JAMES
|
|
|
|
UNION CLUB, SYDNEY, AUGUST 1890.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR HENRY JAMES, - Kipling is too clever to live. The BETE
|
|
HUMAINE I had already perused in Noumea, listening the while to the
|
|
strains of the convict band. He a Beast; but not human, and, to be
|
|
frank, not very interesting. 'Nervous maladies: the homicidal
|
|
ward,' would be the better name: O, this game gets very tedious.
|
|
|
|
Your two long and kind letters have helped to entertain the old
|
|
familiar sickbed. So has a book called THE BONDMAN, by Hall Caine;
|
|
I wish you would look at it. I am not half-way through yet. Read
|
|
the book, and communicate your views. Hall Caine, by the way,
|
|
appears to take Hugo's view of History and Chronology. (LATER; the
|
|
book doesn't keep up; it gets very wild.)
|
|
|
|
I must tell you plainly - I can't tell Colvin - I do not think I
|
|
shall come to England more than once, and then it'll be to die.
|
|
Health I enjoy in the tropics; even here, which they call sub- or
|
|
semi-tropical, I come only to catch cold. I have not been out
|
|
since my arrival; live here in a nice bedroom by the fireside, and
|
|
read books and letters from Henry James, and send out to get his
|
|
TRAGIC MUSE, only to be told they can't be had as yet in Sydney,
|
|
and have altogether a placid time. But I can't go out! The
|
|
thermometer was nearly down to 50 degrees the other day - no
|
|
temperature for me, Mr. James: how should I do in England? I fear
|
|
not at all. Am I very sorry? I am sorry about seven or eight
|
|
people in England, and one or two in the States. And outside of
|
|
that, I simply prefer Samoa. These are the words of honesty and
|
|
soberness. (I am fasting from all but sin, coughing, THE BONDMAN,
|
|
a couple of eggs and a cup of tea.) I was never fond of towns,
|
|
houses, society, or (it seems) civilisation. Nor yet it seems was
|
|
I ever very fond of (what is technically called) God's green earth.
|
|
The sea, islands, the islanders, the island life and climate, make
|
|
and keep me truly happier. These last two years I have been much
|
|
at sea, and I have NEVER WEARIED; sometimes I have indeed grown
|
|
impatient for some destination; more often I was sorry that the
|
|
voyage drew so early to an end; and never once did I lose my
|
|
fidelity to blue water and a ship. It is plain, then, that for me
|
|
my exile to the place of schooners and islands can be in no sense
|
|
regarded as a calamity.
|
|
|
|
Good-bye just now: I must take a turn at my proofs.
|
|
|
|
N.B. - Even my wife has weakened about the sea. She wearied, the
|
|
last time we were ashore, to get afloat again. - Yours ever,
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO MARCEL SCHWOB
|
|
|
|
UNION CLUB, SYDNEY, AUGUST 19TH, 1890.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR MR. SCHWOB, - MAIS, ALORS, VOUS AVEZ TOUS LES BONHEURS,
|
|
VOUS! More about Villon; it seems incredible: when it is put in
|
|
order, pray send it me.
|
|
|
|
You wish to translate the BLACK ARROW: dear sir, you are hereby
|
|
authorised; but I warn you, I do not like the work. Ah, if you,
|
|
who know so well both tongues, and have taste and instruction - if
|
|
you would but take a fancy to translate a book of mine that I
|
|
myself admired - for we sometimes admire our own - or I do - with
|
|
what satisfaction would the authority be granted! But these things
|
|
are too much to expect. VOUS NE DETESTEZ PAS ALORS MES BONNES
|
|
FEMMES? MOI, JE LES DETESTE. I have never pleased myself with any
|
|
women of mine save two character parts, one of only a few lines -
|
|
the Countess of Rosen, and Madame Desprez in the TREASURE OF
|
|
FRANCHARD.
|
|
|
|
I had indeed one moment of pride about my poor BLACK ARROW: Dickon
|
|
Crookback I did, and I do, think is a spirited and possible figure.
|
|
Shakespeare's - O, if we can call that cocoon Shakespeare! -
|
|
Shakespeare's is spirited - one likes to see the untaught athlete
|
|
butting against the adamantine ramparts of human nature, head down,
|
|
breach up; it reminds us how trivial we are to-day, and what safety
|
|
resides in our triviality. For spirited it may be, but O, sure not
|
|
possible! I love Dumas and I love Shakespeare: you will not
|
|
mistake me when I say that the Richard of the one reminds me of the
|
|
Porthos of the other; and if by any sacrifice of my own literary
|
|
baggage I could clear the VICOMTE DE BRAGELONNE of Porthos, JEKYLL
|
|
might go, and the MASTER, and the BLACK ARROW, you may be sure, and
|
|
I should think my life not lost for mankind if half a dozen more of
|
|
my volumes must be thrown in.
|
|
|
|
The tone of your pleasant letters makes me egotistical; you make me
|
|
take myself too gravely. Comprehend how I have lived much of my
|
|
time in France, and loved your country, and many of its people, and
|
|
all the time was learning that which your country has to teach -
|
|
breathing in rather that atmosphere of art which can only there be
|
|
breathed; and all the time knew - and raged to know - that I might
|
|
write with the pen of angels or of heroes, and no Frenchman be the
|
|
least the wiser! And now steps in M. Marcel Schwob, writes me the
|
|
most kind encouragement, and reads and understands, and is kind
|
|
enough to like my work.
|
|
|
|
I am just now overloaded with work. I have two huge novels on hand
|
|
- THE WRECKER and the PEARL FISHER, in collaboration with my
|
|
stepson: the latter, the PEARL FISHER, I think highly of, for a
|
|
black, ugly, trampling, violent story, full of strange scenes and
|
|
striking characters. And then I am about waist-deep in my big book
|
|
on the South Seas: THE big book on the South Seas it ought to be,
|
|
and shall. And besides, I have some verses in the press, which,
|
|
however, I hesitate to publish. For I am no judge of my own verse;
|
|
self-deception is there so facile. All this and the cares of an
|
|
impending settlement in Samoa keep me very busy, and a cold (as
|
|
usual) keeps me in bed.
|
|
|
|
Alas, I shall not have the pleasure to see you yet awhile, if ever.
|
|
You must be content to take me as a wandering voice, and in the
|
|
form of occasional letters from recondite islands; and address me,
|
|
if you will be good enough to write, to Apia, Samoa. My stepson,
|
|
Mr. Osbourne, goes home meanwhile to arrange some affairs; it is
|
|
not unlikely he may go to Paris to arrange about the illustrations
|
|
to my South Seas; in which case I shall ask him to call upon you,
|
|
and give you some word of our outlandish destinies. You will find
|
|
him intelligent, I think; and I am sure, if (PAR HASARD) you should
|
|
take any interest in the islands, he will have much to tell you. -
|
|
Herewith I conclude, and am your obliged and interested
|
|
correspondent,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
P.S. - The story you refer to has got lost in the post.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO ANDREW LANG
|
|
|
|
UNION CLUB, SYDNEY [AUGUST 1890].
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR LANG, - I observed with a great deal of surprise and
|
|
interest that a controversy in which you have been taking sides at
|
|
home, in yellow London, hinges in part at least on the Gilbert
|
|
Islanders and their customs in burial. Nearly six months of my
|
|
life has been passed in the group: I have revisited it but the
|
|
other day; and I make haste to tell you what I know. The upright
|
|
stones - I enclose you a photograph of one on Apemama - are
|
|
certainly connected with religion; I do not think they are adored.
|
|
They stand usually on the windward shore of the islands, that is to
|
|
say, apart from habitation (on ENCLOSED ISLANDS, where the people
|
|
live on the sea side, I do not know how it is, never having lived
|
|
on one). I gathered from Tembinoka, Rex Apemamae, that the pillars
|
|
were supposed to fortify the island from invasion: spiritual
|
|
martellos. I think he indicated they were connected with the cult
|
|
of Tenti - pronounce almost as chintz in English, the T being
|
|
explosive; but you must take this with a grain of salt, for I knew
|
|
no word of Gilbert Island; and the King's English, although
|
|
creditable, is rather vigorous than exact. Now, here follows the
|
|
point of interest to you: such pillars, or standing stones, have
|
|
no connection with graves. The most elaborate grave that I have
|
|
ever seen in the group - to be certain - is in the form of a RAISED
|
|
BORDER of gravel, usually strewn with broken glass. One, of which
|
|
I cannot be sure that it was a grave, for I was told by one that it
|
|
was, and by another that it was not - consisted of a mound about
|
|
breast high in an excavated taro swamp, on the top of which was a
|
|
child's house, or rather MANIAPA - that is to say, shed, or open
|
|
house, such as is used in the group for social or political
|
|
gatherings - so small that only a child could creep under its
|
|
eaves. I have heard of another great tomb on Apemama, which I did
|
|
not see; but here again, by all accounts, no sign of a standing
|
|
stone. My report would be - no connection between standing stones
|
|
and sepulture. I shall, however, send on the terms of the problem
|
|
to a highly intelligent resident trader, who knows more than
|
|
perhaps any one living, white or native, of the Gilbert group; and
|
|
you shall have the result. In Samoa, whither I return for good, I
|
|
shall myself make inquiries; up to now, I have neither seen nor
|
|
heard of any standing stones in that group. - Yours,
|
|
|
|
R. L. STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO MRS. CHARLES FAIRCHILD
|
|
|
|
UNION CLUB, SYDNEY [SEPTEMBER 1890].
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR MRS. FAIRCHILD, - I began a letter to you on board the
|
|
JANET NICOLL on my last cruise, wrote, I believe, two sheets, and
|
|
ruthlessly destroyed the flippant trash. Your last has given me
|
|
great pleasure and some pain, for it increased the consciousness of
|
|
my neglect. Now, this must go to you, whatever it is like.
|
|
|
|
. . . You are quite right; our civilisation is a hollow fraud, all
|
|
the fun of life is lost by it; all it gains is that a larger number
|
|
of persons can continue to be contemporaneously unhappy on the
|
|
surface of the globe. O, unhappy! - there is a big word and a
|
|
false - continue to be not nearly - by about twenty per cent. - so
|
|
happy as they might be: that would be nearer the mark.
|
|
|
|
When - observe that word, which I will write again and larger -
|
|
WHEN you come to see us in Samoa, you will see for yourself a
|
|
healthy and happy people.
|
|
|
|
You see, you are one of the very few of our friends rich enough to
|
|
come and see us; and when my house is built, and the road is made,
|
|
and we have enough fruit planted and poultry and pigs raised, it is
|
|
undeniable that you must come - must is the word; that is the way
|
|
in which I speak to ladies. You and Fairchild, anyway - perhaps my
|
|
friend Blair - we'll arrange details in good time. It will be the
|
|
salvation of your souls, and make you willing to die.
|
|
|
|
Let me tell you this: In '74 or 5 there came to stay with my
|
|
father and mother a certain Mr. Seed, a prime minister or something
|
|
of New Zealand. He spotted what my complaint was; told me that I
|
|
had no business to stay in Europe; that I should find all I cared
|
|
for, and all that was good for me, in the Navigator Islands; sat up
|
|
till four in the morning persuading me, demolishing my scruples.
|
|
And I resisted: I refused to go so far from my father and mother.
|
|
O, it was virtuous, and O, wasn't it silly! But my father, who was
|
|
always my dearest, got to his grave without that pang; and now in
|
|
1890, I (or what is left of me) go at last to the Navigator
|
|
Islands. God go with us! It is but a Pisgah sight when all is
|
|
said; I go there only to grow old and die; but when you come, you
|
|
will see it is a fair place for the purpose.
|
|
|
|
Flaubert has not turned up; I hope he will soon; I knew of him only
|
|
through Maxime Descamps. - With kindest messages to yourself and
|
|
all of yours, I remain,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XI - LIFE IN SAMOA, NOVEMBER 1890-DECEMBER 1892
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO E. L BURLINGAME
|
|
|
|
VAILIMA, APIA, SAMOA, NOV. 7, 1890.
|
|
|
|
I WISH you to add to the words at the end of the prologue; they
|
|
run, I think, thus, 'And this is the yarn of Loudon Dodd'; add,
|
|
'not as he told, but as he wrote it afterwards for his diversion.'
|
|
This becomes the more needful, because, when all is done, I shall
|
|
probably revert to Tai-o-hae, and give final details about the
|
|
characters in the way of a conversation between Dodd and Havers.
|
|
These little snippets of information and FAITS-DIVERS have always a
|
|
disjointed, broken-backed appearance; yet, readers like them. In
|
|
this book we have introduced so many characters, that this kind of
|
|
epilogue will be looked for; and I rather hope, looking far ahead,
|
|
that I can lighten it in dialogue.
|
|
|
|
We are well past the middle now. How does it strike you? and can
|
|
you guess my mystery? It will make a fattish volume!
|
|
|
|
I say, have you ever read the HIGHLAND WIDOW? I never had till
|
|
yesterday: I am half inclined, bar a trip or two, to think it
|
|
Scott's masterpiece; and it has the name of a failure! Strange
|
|
things are readers.
|
|
|
|
I expect proofs and revises in duplicate.
|
|
|
|
We have now got into a small barrack at our place. We see the sea
|
|
six hundred feet below filling the end of two vales of forest. On
|
|
one hand the mountain runs above us some thousand feet higher;
|
|
great trees stand round us in our clearing; there is an endless
|
|
voice of birds; I have never lived in such a heaven; just now, I
|
|
have fever, which mitigates but not destroys my gusto in my
|
|
circumstances. - You may envy
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
. . . O, I don't know if I mentioned that having seen your new tail
|
|
to the magazine, I cried off interference, at least for this trip.
|
|
Did I ask you to send me my books and papers, and all the bound
|
|
volumes of the mag.? QUORUM PARS. I might add that were there a
|
|
good book or so - new - I don't believe there is - such would be
|
|
welcome.
|
|
|
|
I desire - I positively begin to awake - to be remembered to
|
|
Scribner, Low, St. Gaudens, Russell Sullivan. Well, well, you
|
|
fellows have the feast of reason and the flow of soul; I have a
|
|
better-looking place and climate: you should hear the birds on the
|
|
hill now! The day has just wound up with a shower; it is still
|
|
light without, though I write within here at the cheek of a lamp;
|
|
my wife and an invaluable German are wrestling about bread on the
|
|
back verandah; and how the birds and the frogs are rattling, and
|
|
piping, and hailing from the woods! Here and there a throaty
|
|
chuckle; here and there, cries like those of jolly children who
|
|
have lost their way; here and there, the ringing sleigh-bell of the
|
|
tree frog. Out and away down below me on the sea it is still
|
|
raining; it will be wet under foot on schooners, and the house will
|
|
leak; how well I know that! Here the showers only patter on the
|
|
iron roof, and sometimes roar; and within, the lamp burns steady on
|
|
the tafa-covered walls, with their dusky tartan patterns, and the
|
|
book-shelves with their thin array of books; and no squall can rout
|
|
my house or bring my heart into my mouth. - The well-pleased South
|
|
Sea Islander,
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO E. L. BURLINGAME
|
|
|
|
[VAILIMA, DECEMBER 1890.]
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR BURLINGAME, - By some diabolical accident, I have mislaid
|
|
your last. What was in it? I know not, and here I am caught
|
|
unexpectedly by the American mail, a week earlier than by
|
|
computation. The computation, not the mail, is supposed to be in
|
|
error. The vols. of SCRIBNER'S have arrived, and present a noble
|
|
appearance in my house, which is not a noble structure at present.
|
|
But by autumn we hope to be sprawling in our verandah, twelve feet,
|
|
sir, by eighty-eight in front, and seventy-two on the flank; view
|
|
of the sea and mountains, sunrise, moonrise, and the German fleet
|
|
at anchor three miles away in Apia harbour. I hope some day to
|
|
offer you a bowl of kava there, or a slice of a pineapple, or some
|
|
lemonade from my own hedge. 'I know a hedge where the lemons grow'
|
|
- SHAKESPEARE. My house at this moment smells of them strong; and
|
|
the rain, which a while ago roared there, now rings in minute drops
|
|
upon the iron roof. I have no WRECKER for you this mail, other
|
|
things having engaged me. I was on the whole rather relieved you
|
|
did not vote for regular papers, as I feared the traces. It is my
|
|
design from time to time to write a paper of a reminiscential
|
|
(beastly word) description; some of them I could scarce publish
|
|
from different considerations; but some of them - for instance, my
|
|
long experience of gambling places - Homburg, Wiesbaden, Baden-
|
|
Baden, old Monaco, and new Monte Carlo - would make good magazine
|
|
padding, if I got the stuff handled the right way. I never could
|
|
fathom why verse was put in magazines; it has something to do with
|
|
the making-up, has it not? I am scribbling a lot just now; if you
|
|
are taken badly that way, apply to the South Seas. I could send
|
|
you some, I believe, anyway, only none of it is thoroughly ripe.
|
|
If kept back the volume of ballads, I'll soon make it a respectable
|
|
size if this fit continue. By the next mail you may expect some
|
|
more WRECKER, or I shall be displeased. Probably no more than a
|
|
chapter, however, for it is a hard one, and I am denuded of my
|
|
proofs, my collaborator having walked away with them to England;
|
|
hence some trouble in catching the just note.
|
|
|
|
I am a mere farmer: my talk, which would scarce interest you on
|
|
Broadway, is all of fuafua and tuitui, and black boys, and planting
|
|
and weeding, and axes and cutlasses; my hands are covered with
|
|
blisters and full of thorns; letters are, doubtless, a fine thing,
|
|
so are beer and skittles, but give me farmering in the tropics for
|
|
real interest. Life goes in enchantment; I come home to find I am
|
|
late for dinner; and when I go to bed at night, I could cry for the
|
|
weariness of my loins and thighs. Do not speak to me of vexation,
|
|
the life brims with it, but with living interest fairly.
|
|
|
|
Christmas I go to Auckland, to meet Tamate, the New Guinea
|
|
missionary, a man I love. The rest of my life is a prospect of
|
|
much rain, much weeding and making of paths, a little letters, and
|
|
devilish little to eat. - I am, my dear Burlingame, with messages
|
|
to all whom it may concern, very sincerely yours,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO HENRY JAMES
|
|
|
|
VAILIMA, APIA, SAMOA, DECEMBER 29TH, 1890.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR HENRY JAMES, - It is terrible how little everybody writes,
|
|
and how much of that little disappears in the capacious maw of the
|
|
Post Office. Many letters, both from and to me, I now know to have
|
|
been lost in transit: my eye is on the Sydney Post Office, a large
|
|
ungainly structure with a tower, as being not a hundred miles from
|
|
the scene of disappearance; but then I have no proof. THE TRAGIC
|
|
MUSE you announced to me as coming; I had already ordered it from a
|
|
Sydney bookseller: about two months ago he advised me that his
|
|
copy was in the post; and I am still tragically museless.
|
|
|
|
News, news, news. What do we know of yours? What do you care for
|
|
ours? We are in the midst of the rainy season, and dwell among
|
|
alarms of hurricanes, in a very unsafe little two-storied wooden
|
|
box 650 feet above and about three miles from the sea-beach.
|
|
Behind us, till the other slope of the island, desert forest,
|
|
peaks, and loud torrents; in front green slopes to the sea, some
|
|
fifty miles of which we dominate. We see the ships as they go out
|
|
and in to the dangerous roadstead of Apia; and if they lie far out,
|
|
we can even see their topmasts while they are at anchor. Of sounds
|
|
of men, beyond those of our own labourers, there reach us, at very
|
|
long intervals, salutes from the warships in harbour, the bell of
|
|
the cathedral church, and the low of the conch-shell calling the
|
|
labour boys on the German plantations. Yesterday, which was Sunday
|
|
- the QUANTIEME is most likely erroneous; you can now correct it -
|
|
we had a visitor - Baker of Tonga. Heard you ever of him? He is a
|
|
great man here: he is accused of theft, rape, judicial murder,
|
|
private poisoning, abortion, misappropriation of public moneys -
|
|
oddly enough, not forgery, nor arson: you would be amused if you
|
|
knew how thick the accusations fly in this South Sea world. I make
|
|
no doubt my own character is something illustrious; or if not yet,
|
|
there is a good time coming.
|
|
|
|
But all our resources have not of late been Pacific. We have had
|
|
enlightened society: La Farge the painter, and your friend Henry
|
|
Adams: a great privilege - would it might endure. I would go
|
|
oftener to see them, but the place is awkward to reach on
|
|
horseback. I had to swim my horse the last time I went to dinner;
|
|
and as I have not yet returned the clothes I had to borrow, I dare
|
|
not return in the same plight: it seems inevitable - as soon as
|
|
the wash comes in, I plump straight into the American consul's
|
|
shirt or trousers! They, I believe, would come oftener to see me
|
|
but for the horrid doubt that weighs upon our commissariat
|
|
department; we have OFTEN almost nothing to eat; a guest would
|
|
simply break the bank; my wife and I have dined on one avocado
|
|
pear; I have several times dined on hard bread and onions. What
|
|
would you do with a guest at such narrow seasons? - eat him? or
|
|
serve up a labour boy fricasseed?
|
|
|
|
Work? work is now arrested, but I have written, I should think,
|
|
about thirty chapters of the South Sea book; they will all want
|
|
rehandling, I dare say. Gracious, what a strain is a long book!
|
|
The time it took me to design this volume, before I could dream of
|
|
putting pen to paper, was excessive; and then think of writing a
|
|
book of travels on the spot, when I am continually extending my
|
|
information, revising my opinions, and seeing the most finely
|
|
finished portions of my work come part by part in pieces. Very
|
|
soon I shall have no opinions left. And without an opinion, how to
|
|
string artistically vast accumulations of fact? Darwin said no one
|
|
could observe without a theory; I suppose he was right; 'tis a fine
|
|
point of metaphysic; but I will take my oath, no man can write
|
|
without one - at least the way he would like to, and my theories
|
|
melt, melt, melt, and as they melt the thaw-waters wash down my
|
|
writing, and leave unideal tracts - wastes instead of cultivated
|
|
farms.
|
|
|
|
Kipling is by far the most promising young man who has appeared
|
|
since - ahem - I appeared. He amazes me by his precocity and
|
|
various endowment. But he alarms me by his copiousness and haste.
|
|
He should shield his fire with both hands 'and draw up all his
|
|
strength and sweetness in one ball.' ('Draw all his strength and
|
|
all His sweetness up into one ball'? I cannot remember Marvell's
|
|
words.) So the critics have been saying to me; but I was never
|
|
capable of - and surely never guilty of - such a debauch of
|
|
production. At this rate his works will soon fill the habitable
|
|
globe; and surely he was armed for better conflicts than these
|
|
succinct sketches and flying leaves of verse? I look on, I admire,
|
|
I rejoice for myself; but in a kind of ambition we all have for our
|
|
tongue and literature I am wounded. If I had this man's fertility
|
|
and courage, it seems to me I could heave a pyramid.
|
|
|
|
Well, we begin to be the old fogies now; and it was high time
|
|
SOMETHING rose to take our places. Certainly Kipling has the
|
|
gifts; the fairy godmothers were all tipsy at his christening:
|
|
what will he do with them?
|
|
|
|
Goodbye, my dear James; find an hour to write to us, and register
|
|
your letter. - Yours affectionately,
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO RUDYARD KIPLING
|
|
|
|
[VAILIMA, 1891.]
|
|
|
|
SIR, - I cannot call to mind having written you, but I am so throng
|
|
with occupation this may have fallen aside. I never heard tell I
|
|
had any friends in Ireland, and I am led to understand you are come
|
|
of no considerable family. The gentleman I now serve with assures
|
|
me, however, you are a very pretty fellow and your letter deserves
|
|
to be remarked. It's true he is himself a man of a very low
|
|
descent upon the one side; though upon the other he counts
|
|
cousinship with a gentleman, my very good friend, the late Mr.
|
|
Balfour of the Shaws, in the Lothian; which I should be wanting in
|
|
good fellowship to forget. He tells me besides you are a man of
|
|
your hands; I am not informed of your weapon; but if all be true it
|
|
sticks in my mind I would be ready to make exception in your
|
|
favour, and meet you like one gentleman with another. I suppose
|
|
this'll be your purpose in your favour, which I could very ill make
|
|
out; it's one I would be sweir to baulk you of. It seems, Mr.
|
|
McIlvaine, which I take to be your name, you are in the household
|
|
of a gentleman of the name of Coupling: for whom my friend is very
|
|
much engaged. The distances being very uncommodious, I think it
|
|
will be maybe better if we leave it to these two to settle all
|
|
that's necessary to honour. I would have you to take heed it's a
|
|
very unusual condescension on my part, that bear a King's name; and
|
|
for the matter of that I think shame to be mingled with a person of
|
|
the name of Coupling, which is doubtless a very good house but one
|
|
I never heard tell of, any more than Stevenson. But your purpose
|
|
being laudable, I would be sorry (as the word goes) to cut off my
|
|
nose to spite my face. - I am, Sir, your humble servant,
|
|
|
|
A. STEWART,
|
|
CHEVALIER DE ST. LOUIS.
|
|
|
|
TO MR. M'ILVAINE,
|
|
GENTLEMAN PRIVATE IN A FOOT REGIMENT,
|
|
UNDER COVER TO MR. COUPLING.
|
|
|
|
He has read me some of your Barrack Room Ballants, which are not of
|
|
so noble a strain as some of mine in the Gaelic, but I could set
|
|
some of them to the pipes if this rencounter goes as it's to be
|
|
desired. Let's first, as I understand you to move, do each other
|
|
this rational courtesys; and if either will survive, we may grow
|
|
better acquaint. For your tastes for what's martial and for poetry
|
|
agree with mine.
|
|
|
|
A. S.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO MARCEL SCHWOB
|
|
|
|
SYDNEY, JANUARY 19th, 1891.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR SIR, - SAPRISTI, COMME VOUS Y ALLEZ! Richard III. and
|
|
Dumas, with all my heart; but not Hamlet. Hamlet is great
|
|
literature; Richard III. a big, black, gross, sprawling melodrama,
|
|
writ with infinite spirit but with no refinement or philosophy by a
|
|
man who had the world, himself, mankind, and his trade still to
|
|
learn. I prefer the Vicomte de Bragelonne to Richard III.; it is
|
|
better done of its kind: I simply do not mention the Vicomte in
|
|
the same part of the building with Hamlet, or Lear, or Othello, or
|
|
any of those masterpieces that Shakespeare survived to give us.
|
|
|
|
Also, COMME VOUS Y ALLEZ in my commendation! I fear my SOLIDE
|
|
EDUCATION CLASSIQUE had best be described, like Shakespeare's, as
|
|
'little Latin and no Greek,' and I was educated, let me inform you,
|
|
for an engineer. I shall tell my bookseller to send you a copy of
|
|
MEMORIES AND PORTRAITS, where you will see something of my descent
|
|
and education, as it was, and hear me at length on my dear Vicomte.
|
|
I give you permission gladly to take your choice out of my works,
|
|
and translate what you shall prefer, too much honoured that so
|
|
clever a young man should think it worth the pains. My own choice
|
|
would lie between KIDNAPPED and the MASTER OF BALLANTRAE. Should
|
|
you choose the latter, pray do not let Mrs. Henry thrust the sword
|
|
up to the hilt in the frozen ground - one of my inconceivable
|
|
blunders, an exaggeration to stagger Hugo. Say 'she sought to
|
|
thrust it in the ground.' In both these works you should be
|
|
prepared for Scotticisms used deliberately.
|
|
|
|
I fear my stepson will not have found time to get to Paris; he was
|
|
overwhelmed with occupation, and is already on his voyage back. We
|
|
live here in a beautiful land, amid a beautiful and interesting
|
|
people. The life is still very hard: my wife and I live in a two-
|
|
roomed cottage, about three miles and six hundred and fifty feet
|
|
above the sea; we have had to make the road to it; our supplies are
|
|
very imperfect; in the wild weather of this (the hurricane) season
|
|
we have much discomfort: one night the wind blew in our house so
|
|
outrageously that we must sit in the dark; and as the sound of the
|
|
rain on the roof made speech inaudible, you may imagine we found
|
|
the evening long. All these things, however, are pleasant to me.
|
|
You say L'ARTISTE INCONSCIENT set off to travel: you do not divide
|
|
me right. 0.6 of me is artist; 0.4, adventurer. First, I suppose,
|
|
come letters; then adventure; and since I have indulged the second
|
|
part, I think the formula begins to change: 0.55 of an artist,
|
|
0.45 of the adventurer were nearer true. And if it had not been
|
|
for my small strength, I might have been a different man in all
|
|
things,
|
|
|
|
Whatever you do, do not neglect to send me what you publish on
|
|
Villon: I look forward to that with lively interest. I have no
|
|
photograph at hand, but I will send one when I can. It would be
|
|
kind if you would do the like, for I do not see much chance of our
|
|
meeting in the flesh: and a name, and a handwriting, and an
|
|
address, and even a style? I know about as much of Tacitus, and
|
|
more of Horace; it is not enough between contemporaries, such as we
|
|
still are. I have just remembered another of my books, which I re-
|
|
read the other day, and thought in places good - PRINCE OTTO. It
|
|
is not as good as either of the others; but it has one
|
|
recommendation - it has female parts, so it might perhaps please
|
|
better in France.
|
|
|
|
I will ask Chatto to send you, then - PRINCE OTTO, MEMORIES AND
|
|
PORTRAITS, UNDERWOODS, and BALLADS, none of which you seem to have
|
|
seen. They will be too late for the New Year: let them be an
|
|
Easter present.
|
|
|
|
You must translate me soon; you will soon have better to do than to
|
|
transverse the work of others. - Yours very truly,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON,
|
|
|
|
With the worst pen in the South Pacific.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO CHARLES BAXTER
|
|
|
|
SS. 'LUBECK,' AT SEA [ON THE RETURN VOYAGE FROM SYDNEY, MARCH
|
|
1891].
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR CHARLES, - Perhaps in my old days I do grow irascible; 'the
|
|
old man virulent' has long been my pet name for myself. Well, the
|
|
temper is at least all gone now; time is good at lowering these
|
|
distemperatures; far better is a sharp sickness, and I am just (and
|
|
scarce) afoot again after a smoking hot little malady at Sydney.
|
|
And the temper being gone, I still think the same. . . . We have
|
|
not our parents for ever; we are never very good to them; when they
|
|
go and we have lost our front-file man, we begin to feel all our
|
|
neglects mighty sensibly. I propose a proposal. My mother is here
|
|
on board with me; to-day for once I mean to make her as happy as I
|
|
am able, and to do that which I know she likes. You, on the other
|
|
hand, go and see your father, and do ditto, and give him a real
|
|
good hour or two. We shall both be glad hereafter. - Yours ever,
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO H. B. BAILDON
|
|
|
|
VAILIMA, UPOLU [UNDATED, BUT WRITTEN IN 1891].
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR BAILDON, - This is a real disappointment. It was so long
|
|
since we had met, I was anxious to see where time had carried and
|
|
stranded us. Last time we saw each other - it must have been all
|
|
ten years ago, as we were new to the thirties - it was only for a
|
|
moment, and now we're in the forties, and before very long we shall
|
|
be in our graves. Sick and well, I have had a splendid life of it,
|
|
grudge nothing, regret very little - and then only some little
|
|
corners of misconduct for which I deserve hanging, and must
|
|
infallibly be damned - and, take it all over, damnation and all,
|
|
would hardly change with any man of my time, unless perhaps it were
|
|
Gordon or our friend Chalmers: a man I admire for his virtues,
|
|
love for his faults, and envy for the really A1 life he has, with
|
|
everything heart - my heart, I mean - could wish. It is curious to
|
|
think you will read this in the grey metropolis; go the first grey,
|
|
east-windy day into the Caledonian Station, if it looks at all as
|
|
it did of yore: I met Satan there. And then go and stand by the
|
|
cross, and remember the other one - him that went down - my
|
|
brother, Robert Fergusson. It is a pity you had not made me out,
|
|
and seen me as patriarch and planter. I shall look forward to some
|
|
record of your time with Chalmers: you can't weary me of that
|
|
fellow, he is as big as a house and far bigger than any church,
|
|
where no man warms his hands. Do you know anything of Thomson? Of
|
|
A-, B-, C-, D-, E-, F-, at all? As I write C.'s name mustard rises
|
|
my nose; I have never forgiven that weak, amiable boy a little
|
|
trick he played me when I could ill afford it: I mean that
|
|
whenever I think of it, some of the old wrath kindles, not that I
|
|
would hurt the poor soul, if I got the world with it. And Old X-?
|
|
Is he still afloat? Harmless bark! I gather you ain't married
|
|
yet, since your sister, to whom I ask to be remembered, goes with
|
|
you. Did you see a silly tale, JOHN NICHOLSON'S PREDICAMENT, or
|
|
some such name, in which I made free with your home at Murrayfield?
|
|
There is precious little sense in it, but it might amuse.
|
|
Cassell's published it in a thing called YULE-TIDE years ago, and
|
|
nobody that ever I heard of read or has ever seen YULE-TIDE. It is
|
|
addressed to a class we never met - readers of Cassell's series and
|
|
that class of conscientious chaff, and my tale was dull, though I
|
|
don't recall that it was conscientious. Only, there's the house at
|
|
Murrayfield and a dead body in it. Glad the BALLADS amused you.
|
|
They failed to entertain a coy public, at which I wondered, not
|
|
that I set much account by my verses, which are the verses of
|
|
Prosator; but I do know how to tell a yarn, and two of the yarns
|
|
are great. RAHERO is for its length a perfect folk-tale: savage
|
|
and yet fine, full of tailforemost morality, ancient as the granite
|
|
rocks; if the historian, not to say the politician, could get that
|
|
yarn into his head, he would have learned some of his A B C. But
|
|
the average man at home cannot understand antiquity; he is sunk
|
|
over the ears in Roman civilisation; and a tale like that of RAHERO
|
|
falls on his ears inarticulate. The SPECTATOR said there was no
|
|
psychology in it; that interested me much: my grandmother (as I
|
|
used to call that able paper, and an able paper it is, and a fair
|
|
one) cannot so much as observe the existence of savage psychology
|
|
when it is put before it. I am at bottom a psychologist and
|
|
ashamed of it; the tale seized me one-third because of its
|
|
picturesque features, two-thirds because of its astonishing
|
|
psychology, and the SPECTATOR says there's none. I am going on
|
|
with a lot of island work, exulting in the knowledge of a new
|
|
world, 'a new created world' and new men; and I am sure my income
|
|
will DECLINE and FALL off; for the effort of comprehension is death
|
|
to the intelligent public, and sickness to the dull.
|
|
|
|
I do not know why I pester you with all this trash, above all as
|
|
you deserve nothing. I give you my warm TALOFA ('my love to you,'
|
|
Samoan salutation). Write me again when the spirit moves you. And
|
|
some day, if I still live, make out the trip again and let us hob-
|
|
a-nob with our grey pows on my verandah. - Yours sincerely,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO W. CRAIBE ANGUS
|
|
|
|
VAILIMA, SAMOA, APRIL 1891.
|
|
|
|
DEAR MR. ANGUS, - Surely I remember you! It was W. C. Murray who
|
|
made us acquainted, and we had a pleasant crack. I see your poet
|
|
is not yet dead. I remember even our talk - or you would not think
|
|
of trusting that invaluable JOLLY BEGGARS to the treacherous posts,
|
|
and the perils of the sea, and the carelessness of authors. I love
|
|
the idea, but I could not bear the risk. However -
|
|
|
|
'Hale be your heart, hale be your fiddle - '
|
|
|
|
it was kindly thought upon.
|
|
|
|
My interest in Burns is, as you suppose, perennial. I would I
|
|
could be present at the exhibition, with the purpose of which I
|
|
heartily sympathise; but the NANCY has not waited in vain for me, I
|
|
have followed my chest, the anchor is weighed long ago, I have said
|
|
my last farewell to the hills and the heather and the lynns: like
|
|
Leyden, I have gone into far lands to die, not stayed like Burns to
|
|
mingle in the end with Scottish soil. I shall not even return like
|
|
Scott for the last scene. Burns Exhibitions are all over. 'Tis a
|
|
far cry to Lochow from tropical Vailima.
|
|
|
|
'But still our hearts are true, our hearts are Highland,
|
|
And we in dreams behold the Hebrides.'
|
|
|
|
When your hand is in, will you remember our poor Edinburgh Robin?
|
|
Burns alone has been just to his promise; follow Burns, he knew
|
|
best, he knew whence he drew fire - from the poor, white-faced,
|
|
drunken, vicious boy that raved himself to death in the Edinburgh
|
|
madhouse. Surely there is more to be gleaned about Fergusson, and
|
|
surely it is high time the task was set about. I way tell you
|
|
(because your poet is not dead) something of how I feel: we are
|
|
three Robins who have touched the Scots lyre this last century.
|
|
Well, the one is the world's, he did it, he came off, he is for
|
|
ever; but I and the other - ah! what bonds we have - born in the
|
|
same city; both sickly, both pestered, one nearly to madness, one
|
|
to the madhouse, with a damnatory creed; both seeing the stars and
|
|
the dawn, and wearing shoe-leather on the same ancient stones,
|
|
under the same pends, down the same closes, where our common
|
|
ancestors clashed in their armour, rusty or bright. And the old
|
|
Robin, who was before Burns and the flood, died in his acute,
|
|
painful youth, and left the models of the great things that were to
|
|
come; and the new, who came after, outlived his greensickness, and
|
|
has faintly tried to parody the finished work. If you will collect
|
|
the strays of Robin Fergusson, fish for material, collect any last
|
|
re-echoing of gossip, command me to do what you prefer - to write
|
|
the preface - to write the whole if you prefer: anything, so that
|
|
another monument (after Burns's) be set up to my unhappy
|
|
predecessor on the causey of Auld Reekie. You will never know, nor
|
|
will any man, how deep this feeling is: I believe Fergusson lives
|
|
in me. I do, but tell it not in Gath; every man has these fanciful
|
|
superstitions, coming, going, but yet enduring; only most men are
|
|
so wise (or the poet in them so dead) that they keep their follies
|
|
for themselves. - I am, yours very truly,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO EDMUND GOSSE
|
|
|
|
VAILIMA, APRIL 1891.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR GOSSE, - I have to thank you and Mrs. Gosse for many
|
|
mementoes, chiefly for your LIFE of your father. There is a very
|
|
delicate task, very delicately done. I noted one or two
|
|
carelessnesses, which I meant to point out to you for another
|
|
edition; but I find I lack the time, and you will remark them for
|
|
yourself against a new edition. They were two, or perhaps three,
|
|
flabbinesses of style which (in your work) amazed me. Am I right
|
|
in thinking you were a shade bored over the last chapters? or was
|
|
it my own fault that made me think them susceptible of a more
|
|
athletic compression? (The flabbinesses were not there, I think,
|
|
but in the more admirable part, where they showed the bigger.)
|
|
Take it all together, the book struck me as if you had been hurried
|
|
at the last, but particularly hurried over the proofs, and could
|
|
still spend a very profitable fortnight in earnest revision and
|
|
(towards the end) heroic compression. The book, in design,
|
|
subject, and general execution, is well worth the extra trouble.
|
|
And even if I were wrong in thinking it specially wanted, it will
|
|
not be lost; for do we not know, in Flaubert's dread confession,
|
|
that 'prose is never done'? What a medium to work in, for a man
|
|
tired, perplexed among different aims and subjects, and spurred by
|
|
the immediate need of 'siller'! However, it's mine for what it's
|
|
worth; and it's one of yours, the devil take it; and you know, as
|
|
well as Flaubert, and as well as me, that it is NEVER DONE; in
|
|
other words, it is a torment of the pit, usually neglected by the
|
|
bards who (lucky beggars!) approached the Styx in measure. I speak
|
|
bitterly at the moment, having just detected in myself the last
|
|
fatal symptom, three blank verses in succession - and I believe,
|
|
God help me, a hemistich at the tail of them; hence I have deposed
|
|
the labourer, come out of hell by my private trap, and now write to
|
|
you from my little place in purgatory. But I prefer hell: would I
|
|
could always dig in those red coals - or else be at sea in a
|
|
schooner, bound for isles unvisited: to be on shore and not to
|
|
work is emptiness - suicidal vacancy.
|
|
|
|
I was the more interested in your LIFE of your father, because I
|
|
meditate one of mine, or rather of my family. I have no such
|
|
materials as you, and (our objections already made) your attack
|
|
fills me with despair; it is direct and elegant, and your style is
|
|
always admirable to me - lenity, lucidity, usually a high strain of
|
|
breeding, an elegance that has a pleasant air of the accidental.
|
|
But beware of purple passages. I wonder if you think as well of
|
|
your purple passages as I do of mine? I wonder if you think as ill
|
|
of mine as I do of yours? I wonder; I can tell you at least what
|
|
is wrong with yours - they are treated in the spirit of verse. The
|
|
spirit - I don't mean the measure, I don't mean you fall into
|
|
bastard cadences; what I mean is that they seem vacant and smoothed
|
|
out, ironed, if you like. And in a style which (like yours) aims
|
|
more and more successfully at the academic, one purple word is
|
|
already much; three - a whole phrase - is inadmissible. Wed
|
|
yourself to a clean austerity: that is your force. Wear a linen
|
|
ephod, splendidly candid. Arrange its folds, but do not fasten it
|
|
with any brooch. I swear to you, in your talking robes, there
|
|
should be no patch of adornment; and where the subject forces, let
|
|
it force you no further than it must; and be ready with a twinkle
|
|
of your pleasantry. Yours is a fine tool, and I see so well how to
|
|
hold it; I wonder if you see how to hold mine? But then I am to
|
|
the neck in prose, and just now in the 'dark INTERSTYLAR cave,' all
|
|
methods and effects wooing me, myself in the midst impotent to
|
|
follow any. I look for dawn presently, and a full flowing river of
|
|
expression, running whither it wills. But these useless seasons,
|
|
above all, when a man MUST continue to spoil paper, are infinitely
|
|
weary.
|
|
|
|
We are in our house after a fashion; without furniture, 'tis true,
|
|
camping there, like the family after a sale. But the bailiff has
|
|
not yet appeared; he will probably come after. The place is
|
|
beautiful beyond dreams; some fifty miles of the Pacific spread in
|
|
front; deep woods all round; a mountain making in the sky a profile
|
|
of huge trees upon our left; about us, the little island of our
|
|
clearing, studded with brave old gentlemen (or ladies, or 'the twa
|
|
o' them') whom we have spared. It is a good place to be in; night
|
|
and morning, we have Theodore Rousseaus (always a new one) hung to
|
|
amuse us on the walls of the world; and the moon - this is our good
|
|
season, we have a moon just now - makes the night a piece of
|
|
heaven. It amazes me how people can live on in the dirty north;
|
|
yet if you saw our rainy season (which is really a caulker for
|
|
wind, wet, and darkness - howling showers, roaring winds, pit-
|
|
blackness at noon) you might marvel how we could endure that. And
|
|
we can't. But there's a winter everywhere; only ours is in the
|
|
summer. Mark my words: there will be a winter in heaven - and in
|
|
hell. CELA RENTRE DANS LES PROCEDES DU BON DIEU; ET VOUS VERREZ!
|
|
There's another very good thing about Vailima, I am away from the
|
|
little bubble of the literary life. It is not all beer and
|
|
skittles, is it? By the by, my BALLADS seem to have been dam bad;
|
|
all the crickets sing so in their crickety papers; and I have no
|
|
ghost of an idea on the point myself: verse is always to me the
|
|
unknowable. You might tell me how it strikes a professional bard:
|
|
not that it really matters, for, of course, good or bad, I don't
|
|
think I shall get into THAT galley any more. But I should like to
|
|
know if you join the shrill chorus of the crickets. The crickets
|
|
are the devil in all to you: 'tis a strange thing, they seem to
|
|
rejoice like a strong man in their injustice. I trust you got my
|
|
letter about your Browning book. In case it missed, I wish to say
|
|
again that your publication of Browning's kind letter, as an
|
|
illustration of HIS character, was modest, proper, and in radiant
|
|
good taste. - In Witness whereof, etc., etc.,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO MISS RAWLINSON
|
|
|
|
VAILIMA, APIA, SAMOA, APRIL 1891.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR MAY, - I never think of you by any more ceremonial name, so
|
|
I will not pretend. There is not much chance that I shall forget
|
|
you until the time comes for me to forget all this little turmoil
|
|
in a corner (though indeed I have been in several corners) of an
|
|
inconsiderable planet. You remain in my mind for a good reason,
|
|
having given me (in so short a time) the most delightful pleasure.
|
|
I shall remember, and you must still be beautiful. The truth is,
|
|
you must grow more so, or you will soon be less. It is not so easy
|
|
to be a flower, even when you bear a flower's name. And if I
|
|
admired you so much, and still remember you, it is not because of
|
|
your face, but because you were then worthy of it, as you must
|
|
still continue.
|
|
|
|
Will you give my heartiest congratulations to Mr. S.? He has my
|
|
admiration; he is a brave man; when I was young, I should have run
|
|
away from the sight of you, pierced with the sense of my unfitness.
|
|
He is more wise and manly. What a good husband he will have to be!
|
|
And you - what a good wife! Carry your love tenderly. I will
|
|
never forgive him - or you - it is in both your hands - if the face
|
|
that once gladdened my heart should be changed into one sour or
|
|
sorrowful.
|
|
|
|
What a person you are to give flowers! It was so I first heard of
|
|
you; and now you are giving the May flower!
|
|
|
|
Yes, Skerryvore has passed; it was, for us. But I wish you could
|
|
see us in our new home on the mountain, in the middle of great
|
|
woods, and looking far out over the Pacific. When Mr. S. is very
|
|
rich, he must bring you round the world and let you see it, and see
|
|
the old gentleman and the old lady. I mean to live quite a long
|
|
while yet, and my wife must do the same, or else I couldn't manage
|
|
it; so, you see, you will have plenty of time; and it's a pity not
|
|
to see the most beautiful places, and the most beautiful people
|
|
moving there, and the real stars and moon overhead, instead of the
|
|
tin imitations that preside over London. I do not think my wife
|
|
very well; but I am in hopes she will now have a little rest. It
|
|
has been a hard business, above all for her; we lived four months
|
|
in the hurricane season in a miserable house, overborne with work,
|
|
ill-fed, continually worried, drowned in perpetual rain, beaten
|
|
upon by wind, so that we must sit in the dark in the evenings; and
|
|
then I ran away, and she had a month of it alone. Things go better
|
|
now; the back of the work is broken; and we are still foolish
|
|
enough to look forward to a little peace. I am a very different
|
|
person from the prisoner of Skerryvore. The other day I was three-
|
|
and-twenty hours in an open boat; it made me pretty ill; but fancy
|
|
its not killing me half-way! It is like a fairy story that I
|
|
should have recovered liberty and strength, and should go round
|
|
again among my fellow-men, boating, riding, bathing, toiling hard
|
|
with a wood-knife in the forest. I can wish you nothing more
|
|
delightful than my fortune in life; I wish it you; and better, if
|
|
the thing be possible.
|
|
|
|
Lloyd is tinkling below me on the typewriter; my wife has just left
|
|
the room; she asks me to say she would have written had she been
|
|
well enough, and hopes to do it still. - Accept the best wishes of
|
|
your admirer,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO MISS ADELAIDE BOODLE
|
|
|
|
[VAILIMA, MAY 1891.]
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR ADELAIDE, - I will own you just did manage to tread on my
|
|
gouty toe; and I beg to assure you with most people I should simply
|
|
have turned away and said no more. My cudgelling was therefore in
|
|
the nature of a caress or testimonial.
|
|
|
|
God forbid, I should seem to judge for you on such a point; it was
|
|
what you seemed to set forth as your reasons that fluttered my old
|
|
Presbyterian spirit - for, mind you, I am a child of the
|
|
Covenanters - whom I do not love, but they are mine after all, my
|
|
father's and my mother's - and they had their merits too, and their
|
|
ugly beauties, and grotesque heroisms, that I love them for, the
|
|
while I laugh at them; but in their name and mine do what you think
|
|
right, and let the world fall. That is the privilege and the duty
|
|
of private persons; and I shall think the more of you at the
|
|
greater distance, because you keep a promise to your fellow-man,
|
|
your helper and creditor in life, by just so much as I was tempted
|
|
to think the less of you (O not much, or I would never have been
|
|
angry) when I thought you were the swallower of a (tinfoil)
|
|
formula.
|
|
|
|
I must say I was uneasy about my letter, not because it was too
|
|
strong as an expression of my unregenerate sentiments, but because
|
|
I knew full well it should be followed by something kinder. And
|
|
the mischief has been in my health. I fell sharply sick in Sydney,
|
|
was put aboard the LUBECK pretty bad, got to Vailima, hung on a
|
|
month there, and didn't pick up as well as my work needed; set off
|
|
on a journey, gained a great deal, lost it again; and am back at
|
|
Vailima, still no good at my necessary work. I tell you this for
|
|
my imperfect excuse that I should not have written you again sooner
|
|
to remove the bad taste of my last.
|
|
|
|
A road has been called Adelaide Road; it leads from the back of our
|
|
house to the bridge, and thence to the garden, and by a bifurcation
|
|
to the pig pen. It is thus much traversed, particularly by Fanny.
|
|
An oleander, the only one of your seeds that prospered in this
|
|
climate, grows there; and the name is now some week or ten days
|
|
applied and published. ADELAIDE ROAD leads also into the bush, to
|
|
the banana patch, and by a second bifurcation over the left branch
|
|
of the stream to the plateau and the right hand of the gorges. In
|
|
short, it leads to all sorts of good, and is, besides, in itself a
|
|
pretty winding path, bound downhill among big woods to the margin
|
|
of the stream.
|
|
|
|
What a strange idea, to think me a Jew-hater! Isaiah and David and
|
|
Heine are good enough for me; and I leave more unsaid. Were I of
|
|
Jew blood, I do not think I could ever forgive the Christians; the
|
|
ghettos would get in my nostrils like mustard or lit gunpowder.
|
|
Just so you as being a child of the Presbytery, I retain - I need
|
|
not dwell on that. The ascendant hand is what I feel most
|
|
strongly; I am bound in and in with my forbears; were he one of
|
|
mine, I should not be struck at all by Mr. Moss of Bevis Marks, I
|
|
should still see behind him Moses of the Mount and the Tables and
|
|
the shining face. We are all nobly born; fortunate those who know
|
|
it; blessed those who remember.
|
|
|
|
I am, my dear Adelaide, most genuinely yours,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Write by return to say you are better, and I will try to do the
|
|
same.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO CHARLES BAXTER
|
|
|
|
[VAILIMA], TUESDAY, 19TH MAY '91.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR CHARLES, - I don't know what you think of me, not having
|
|
written to you at all during your illness. I find two sheets begun
|
|
with your name, but that is no excuse. . . . I am keeping bravely;
|
|
getting about better, every day, and hope soon to be in my usual
|
|
fettle. My books begin to come; and I fell once more on the Old
|
|
Bailey session papers. I have 1778, 1784, and 1786. Should you be
|
|
able to lay hands on any other volumes, above all a little later, I
|
|
should be very glad you should buy them for me. I particularly
|
|
want ONE or TWO during the course of the Peninsular War. Come to
|
|
think, I ought rather to have communicated this want to Bain.
|
|
Would it bore you to communicate to that effect with the great man?
|
|
The sooner I have them, the better for me. 'Tis for Henry Shovel.
|
|
But Henry Shovel has now turned into a work called 'The Shovels of
|
|
Newton French: Including Memoirs of Henry Shovel, a Private in the
|
|
Peninsular War,' which work is to begin in 1664 with the marriage
|
|
of Skipper, afterwards Alderman Shovel of Bristol, Henry's great-
|
|
great-grandfather, and end about 1832 with his own second marriage
|
|
to the daughter of his runaway aunt. Will the public ever stand
|
|
such an opus? Gude kens, but it tickles me. Two or three
|
|
historical personages will just appear: Judge Jeffreys,
|
|
Wellington, Colquhoun, Grant, and I think Townsend the runner. I
|
|
know the public won't like it; let 'em lump it then; I mean to make
|
|
it good; it will be more like a saga. - Adieu, yours ever
|
|
affectionately,
|
|
|
|
R. L. STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO E. L. BURLINGAME
|
|
|
|
VAILIMA [SUMMER 1891].
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR BURLINGAME, - I find among my grandfather's papers his own
|
|
reminiscences of his voyage round the north with Sir Walter, eighty
|
|
years ago, LABUNTUR ANNI! They are not remarkably good, but he was
|
|
not a bad observer, and several touches seem to me speaking. It
|
|
has occurred to me you might like them to appear in the MAGAZINE.
|
|
If you would, kindly let me know, and tell me how you would like it
|
|
handled. My grandad's MS. runs to between six and seven thousand
|
|
words, which I could abbreviate of anecdotes that scarce touch Sir
|
|
W. Would you like this done? Would you like me to introduce the
|
|
old gentleman? I had something of the sort in my mind, and could
|
|
fill a few columns rather A PROPOS. I give you the first offer of
|
|
this, according to your request; for though it may forestall one of
|
|
the interests of my biography, the thing seems to me particularly
|
|
suited for prior appearance in a magazine.
|
|
|
|
I see the first number of the WRECKER; I thought it went lively
|
|
enough; and by a singular accident, the picture is not unlike Tai-
|
|
o-hae!
|
|
|
|
Thus we see the age of miracles, etc. - Yours very sincerely,
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
|
|
|
|
Proofs for next mail.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO W. CRAIBE ANGUS
|
|
|
|
[SUMMER 1891.]
|
|
|
|
DEAR MR. ANGUS, - You can use my letter as you will. The parcel
|
|
has not come; pray Heaven the next post bring it safe. Is it
|
|
possible for me to write a preface here? I will try if you like,
|
|
if you think I must: though surely there are Rivers in Assyria.
|
|
Of course you will send me sheets of the catalogue; I suppose it
|
|
(the preface) need not be long; perhaps it should be rather very
|
|
short? Be sure you give me your views upon these points. Also
|
|
tell me what names to mention among those of your helpers, and do
|
|
remember to register everything, else it is not safe.
|
|
|
|
The true place (in my view) for a monument to Fergusson were the
|
|
churchyard of Haddington. But as that would perhaps not carry many
|
|
votes, I should say one of the two following sites:- First, either
|
|
as near the site of the old Bedlam as we could get, or, second,
|
|
beside the Cross, the heart of his city. Upon this I would have a
|
|
fluttering butterfly, and, I suggest, the citation,
|
|
|
|
Poor butterfly, thy case I mourn.
|
|
|
|
For the case of Fergusson is not one to pretend about. A more
|
|
miserable tragedy the sun never shone upon, or (in consideration of
|
|
our climate) I should rather say refused to brighten. - Yours
|
|
truly,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Where Burns goes will not matter. He is no local poet, like your
|
|
Robin the First; he is general as the casing air. Glasgow, as the
|
|
chief city of Scottish men, would do well; but for God's sake,
|
|
don't let it be like the Glasgow memorial to Knox: I remember,
|
|
when I first saw this, laughing for an hour by Shrewsbury clock.
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO H. C. IDE
|
|
|
|
[VAILIMA, JUNE 19, 1891.]
|
|
|
|
DEAR MR. IDE, - Herewith please find the DOCUMENT, which I trust
|
|
will prove sufficient in law. It seems to me very attractive in
|
|
its eclecticism; Scots, English, and Roman law phrases are all
|
|
indifferently introduced, and a quotation from the works of Haynes
|
|
Bayly can hardly fail to attract the indulgence of the Bench. -
|
|
Yours very truly,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
I, Robert Louis Stevenson, Advocate of the Scots Bar, author of THE
|
|
MASTER OF BALLANTRAE and MORAL EMBLEMS, stuck civil engineer, sole
|
|
owner and patentee of the Palace and Plantation known as Vailima in
|
|
the island of Upolu, Samoa, a British Subject, being in sound mind,
|
|
and pretty well, I thank you, in body:
|
|
|
|
In consideration that Miss Annie H. Ide, daughter of H. C. Ide, in
|
|
the town of Saint Johnsbury, in the county of Caledonia, in the
|
|
state of Vermont, United States of America, was born, out of all
|
|
reason, upon Christmas Day, and is therefore out of all justice
|
|
denied the consolation and profit of a proper birthday;
|
|
|
|
And considering that I, the said Robert Louis Stevenson, have
|
|
attained an age when O, we never mention it, and that I have now no
|
|
further use for a birthday of any description;
|
|
|
|
And in consideration that I have met H. C. Ide, the father of the
|
|
said Annie H. Ide, and found him about as white a land commissioner
|
|
as I require:
|
|
|
|
HAVE TRANSFERRED, and DO HEREBY TRANSFER, to the said Annie H. Ide,
|
|
ALL AND WHOLE my rights and priviledges in the thirteenth day of
|
|
November, formerly my birthday, now, hereby, and henceforth, the
|
|
birthday of the said Annie H. Ide, to have, hold, exercise, and
|
|
enjoy the same in the customary manner, by the sporting of fine
|
|
raiment, eating of rich meats, and receipt of gifts, compliments,
|
|
and copies of verse, according to the manner of our ancestors;
|
|
|
|
AND I DIRECT the said Annie H. Ide to add to the said name of Annie
|
|
H. Ide the name Louisa - at least in private; and I charge her to
|
|
use my said birthday with moderation and humanity, ET TAMQUAM BONA
|
|
FILIA FAMILIAE, the said birthday not being so young as it once
|
|
was, and having carried me in a very satisfactory manner since I
|
|
can remember;
|
|
|
|
And in case the said Annie H. Ide shall neglect or contravene
|
|
either of the above conditions, I hereby revoke the donation and
|
|
transfer my rights in the said birthday to the President of the
|
|
United States of America for the time being:
|
|
|
|
In witness whereof I have hereto set my hand and seal this
|
|
nineteenth day of June in the year of grace eighteen hundred and
|
|
ninety-one.
|
|
|
|
[SEAL.]
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
WITNESS, LLOYD OSBOURNE,
|
|
WITNESS, HAROLD WATTS.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO HENRY JAMES
|
|
|
|
[VAILIMA, OCTOBER 1891.]
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR HENRY JAMES, - From this perturbed and hunted being expect
|
|
but a line, and that line shall be but a whoop for Adela. O she's
|
|
delicious, delicious; I could live and die with Adela - die, rather
|
|
the better of the two; you never did a straighter thing, and never
|
|
will.
|
|
|
|
DAVID BALFOUR, second part of KIDNAPPED, is on the stocks at last;
|
|
and is not bad, I think. As for THE WRECKER, it's a machine, you
|
|
know - don't expect aught else - a machine, and a police machine;
|
|
but I believe the end is one of the most genuine butcheries in
|
|
literature; and we point to our machine with a modest pride, as the
|
|
only police machine without a villain. Our criminals are a most
|
|
pleasing crew, and leave the dock with scarce a stain upon their
|
|
character.
|
|
|
|
What a different line of country to be trying to draw Adela, and
|
|
trying to write the last four chapters of THE WRECKER! Heavens,
|
|
it's like two centuries; and ours is such rude, transpontine
|
|
business, aiming only at a certain fervour of conviction and sense
|
|
of energy and violence in the men; and yours is so neat and bright
|
|
and of so exquisite a surface! Seems dreadful to send such a book
|
|
to such an author; but your name is on the list. And we do
|
|
modestly ask you to consider the chapters on the NORAH CREINA with
|
|
the study of Captain Nares, and the forementioned last four, with
|
|
their brutality of substance and the curious (and perhaps unsound)
|
|
technical manoeuvre of running the story together to a point as we
|
|
go along, the narrative becoming more succinct and the details
|
|
fining off with every page. - Sworn affidavit of
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
|
|
|
|
NO PERSON NOW ALIVE HAS BEATEN ADELA: I ADORE ADELA AND HER MAKER.
|
|
SIC SUBSCRIB.
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
A Sublime Poem to follow.
|
|
|
|
Adela, Adela, Adela Chart,
|
|
What have you done to my elderly heart?
|
|
Of all the ladies of paper and ink
|
|
I count you the paragon, call you the pink.
|
|
The word of your brother depicts you in part:
|
|
'You raving maniac!' Adela Chart;
|
|
But in all the asylums that cumber the ground,
|
|
So delightful a maniac was ne'er to be found.
|
|
|
|
I pore on you, dote on you, clasp you to heart,
|
|
I laud, love, and laugh at you, Adela Chart,
|
|
And thank my dear maker the while I admire
|
|
That I can be neither your husband nor sire.
|
|
|
|
Your husband's, your sire's were a difficult part;
|
|
You're a byway to suicide, Adela Chart;
|
|
But to read of, depicted by exquisite James,
|
|
O, sure you're the flower and quintessence of dames.
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
|
|
|
|
ERUCTAVIT COR MEUM.
|
|
|
|
My heart was inditing a goodly matter about Adela Chart.
|
|
Though oft I've been touched by the volatile dart,
|
|
To none have I grovelled but Adela Chart,
|
|
There are passable ladies, no question, in art -
|
|
But where is the marrow of Adela Chart?
|
|
I dreamed that to Tyburn I passed in the cart -
|
|
I dreamed I was married to Adela Chart:
|
|
From the first I awoke with a palpable start,
|
|
The second dumfoundered me, Adela Chart!
|
|
|
|
Another verse bursts from me, you see; no end to the violence of
|
|
the Muse.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO E. L. BURLINGAME
|
|
|
|
OCTOBER 8TH, 1891.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR BURLINGAME, - All right, you shall have the TALES OF MY
|
|
GRANDFATHER soon, but I guess we'll try and finish off THE WRECKER
|
|
first. A PROPOS of whom, please send some advanced sheets to
|
|
Cassell's - away ahead of you - so that they may get a dummy out.
|
|
|
|
Do you wish to illustrate MY GRANDFATHER? He mentions as excellent
|
|
a portrait of Scott by Basil Hall's brother. I don't think I ever
|
|
saw this engraved; would it not, if you could get track of it,
|
|
prove a taking embellishment? I suggest this for your
|
|
consideration and inquiry. A new portrait of Scott strikes me as
|
|
good. There is a hard, tough, constipated old portrait of my
|
|
grandfather hanging in my aunt's house, Mrs. Alan Stevenson, 16 St.
|
|
Leonard's Terrace, Chelsea, which has never been engraved - the
|
|
better portrait, Joseph's bust has been reproduced, I believe,
|
|
twice - and which, I am sure, my aunt would let you have a copy of.
|
|
The plate could be of use for the book when we get so far, and thus
|
|
to place it in the MAGAZINE might be an actual saving.
|
|
|
|
I am swallowed up in politics for the first, I hope for the last,
|
|
time in my sublunary career. It is a painful, thankless trade; but
|
|
one thing that came up I could not pass in silence. Much drafting,
|
|
addressing, deputationising has eaten up all my time, and again (to
|
|
my contrition) I leave you Wreckerless. As soon as the mail leaves
|
|
I tackle it straight. - Yours very sincerely,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO E. L. BURLINGAME
|
|
|
|
VAILIMA [AUTUMN 1891].
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR BURLINGAME, - The time draws nigh, the mail is near due,
|
|
and I snatch a moment of collapse so that you may have at least
|
|
some sort of a scratch of note along with the
|
|
|
|
\ end
|
|
\ of
|
|
\ THE
|
|
\ WRECKER.
|
|
Hurray!
|
|
|
|
which I mean to go herewith. It has taken me a devil of a pull,
|
|
but I think it's going to be ready. If I did not know you were on
|
|
the stretch waiting for it and trembling for your illustrations, I
|
|
would keep it for another finish; but things being as they are, I
|
|
will let it go the best way I can get it. I am now within two
|
|
pages of the end of Chapter XXV., which is the last chapter, the
|
|
end with its gathering up of loose threads, being the dedication to
|
|
Low, and addressed to him: this is my last and best expedient for
|
|
the knotting up of these loose cards. 'Tis possible I may not get
|
|
that finished in time, in which case you'll receive only Chapters
|
|
XXII. to XXV. by this mail, which is all that can be required for
|
|
illustration.
|
|
|
|
I wish you would send me MEMOIRS OF BARON MARBOT (French);
|
|
INTRODUCTION TO THE STUDY OF THE HISTORY OF LANGUAGE, Strong,
|
|
Logeman & Wheeler; PRINCIPLES OF PSYCHOLOGY, William James; Morris
|
|
& Magnusson's SAGA LIBRARY, any volumes that are out; George
|
|
Meredith's ONE OF OUR CONQUERORS; LA BAS, by Huysmans (French);
|
|
O'Connor Morris's GREAT COMMANDERS OF MODERN TIMES; LIFE'S
|
|
HANDICAP, by Kipling; of Taine's ORIGINES DE LA FRANCE
|
|
CONTEMPORAINE, I have only as far as LA REVOLUTION, vol. iii.; if
|
|
another volume is out, please add that. There is for a book-box.
|
|
|
|
I hope you will like the end; I think it is rather strong meat. I
|
|
have got into such a deliberate, dilatory, expansive turn, that the
|
|
effort to compress this last yarn was unwelcome; but the longest
|
|
yarn has to come to an end sometime. Please look it over for
|
|
carelessnesses, and tell me if it had any effect upon your jaded
|
|
editorial mind. I'll see if ever I have time to add more.
|
|
|
|
I add to my book-box list Adams' HISTORICAL ESSAYS; the Plays of A.
|
|
W. Pinero - all that have appeared, and send me the rest in course
|
|
as they do appear; NOUGHTS AND CROSSES by Q.; Robertson's SCOTLAND
|
|
UNDER HER EARLY KINGS.
|
|
|
|
SUNDAY.
|
|
|
|
The deed is done, didst thou not hear a noise? 'The end' has been
|
|
written to this endless yarn, and I am once more a free man. What
|
|
will he do with it?
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO W. CRAIBE ANGUS
|
|
|
|
VAILIMA, SAMOA, NOVEMBER 1891.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR MR. ANGUS, - Herewith the invaluable sheets. They came
|
|
months after your letter, and I trembled; but here they are, and I
|
|
have scrawled my vile name on them, and 'thocht shame' as I did it.
|
|
I am expecting the sheets of your catalogue, so that I may attack
|
|
the preface. Please give me all the time you can. The sooner the
|
|
better; you might even send me early proofs as they are sent out,
|
|
to give me more incubation. I used to write as slow as judgment;
|
|
now I write rather fast; but I am still 'a slow study,' and sit a
|
|
long while silent on my eggs. Unconscious thought, there is the
|
|
only method: macerate your subject, let it boil slow, then take
|
|
the lid off and look in - and there your stuff is, good or bad.
|
|
But the journalist's method is the way to manufacture lies; it is
|
|
will-worship - if you know the luminous quaker phrase; and the will
|
|
is only to be brought in the field for study, and again for
|
|
revision. The essential part of work is not an act, it is a state.
|
|
|
|
I do not know why I write you this trash.
|
|
|
|
Many thanks for your handsome dedication. I have not yet had time
|
|
to do more than glance at Mrs. Begg; it looks interesting. - Yours
|
|
very truly,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO MISS ANNIE H. IDE
|
|
|
|
VAILIMA, SAMOA [NOVEMBER 1891].
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR LOUISA, - Your picture of the church, the photograph of
|
|
yourself and your sister, and your very witty and pleasing letter,
|
|
came all in a bundle, and made me feel I had my money's worth for
|
|
that birthday. I am now, I must be, one of your nearest relatives;
|
|
exactly what we are to each other, I do not know, I doubt if the
|
|
case has ever happened before - your papa ought to know, and I
|
|
don't believe he does; but I think I ought to call you in the
|
|
meanwhile, and until we get the advice of counsel learned in the
|
|
law, my name-daughter. Well, I was extremely pleased to see by the
|
|
church that my name-daughter could draw; by the letter, that she
|
|
was no fool; and by the photograph, that she was a pretty girl,
|
|
which hurts nothing. See how virtues are rewarded! My first idea
|
|
of adopting you was entirely charitable; and here I find that I am
|
|
quite proud of it, and of you, and that I chose just the kind of
|
|
name-daughter I wanted. For I can draw too, or rather I mean to
|
|
say I could before I forgot how; and I am very far from being a
|
|
fool myself, however much I may look it; and I am as beautiful as
|
|
the day, or at least I once hoped that perhaps I might be going to
|
|
be. And so I might. So that you see we are well met, and peers on
|
|
these important points. I am VERY glad also that you are older
|
|
than your sister. So should I have been, if I had had one. So
|
|
that the number of points and virtues which you have inherited from
|
|
your name-father is already quite surprising.
|
|
|
|
I wish you would tell your father - not that I like to encourage my
|
|
rival - that we have had a wonderful time here of late, and that
|
|
they are having a cold day on Mulinuu, and the consuls are writing
|
|
reports, and I am writing to the TIMES, and if we don't get rid of
|
|
our friends this time I shall begin to despair of everything but my
|
|
name-daughter.
|
|
|
|
You are quite wrong as to the effect of the birthday on your age.
|
|
From the moment the deed was registered (as it was in the public
|
|
press with every solemnity), the 13th of November became your own
|
|
AND ONLY birthday, and you ceased to have been born on Christmas
|
|
Day. Ask your father: I am sure he will tell you this is sound
|
|
law. You are thus become a month and twelve days younger than you
|
|
were, but will go on growing older for the future in the regular
|
|
and human manner from one 13th November to the next. The effect on
|
|
me is more doubtful; I may, as you suggest, live for ever; I might,
|
|
on the other hand, come to pieces like the one-horse shay at a
|
|
moment's notice; doubtless the step was risky, but I do not the
|
|
least regret that which enables me to sign myself your revered and
|
|
delighted name-father,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO FRED ORR
|
|
|
|
VAILIMA, UPOLU, SAMOA, NOVEMBER 28TH, 1891.
|
|
|
|
DEAR SIR, - Your obliging communication is to hand. I am glad to
|
|
find that you have read some of my books, and to see that you spell
|
|
my name right. This is a point (for some reason) of great
|
|
difficulty; and I believe that a gentleman who can spell Stevenson
|
|
with a v at sixteen, should have a show for the Presidency before
|
|
fifty. By that time
|
|
|
|
I, nearer to the wayside inn,
|
|
|
|
predict that you will have outgrown your taste for autographs, but
|
|
perhaps your son may have inherited the collection, and on the
|
|
morning of the great day will recall my prophecy to your mind. And
|
|
in the papers of 1921 (say) this letter may arouse a smile.
|
|
|
|
Whatever you do, read something else besides novels and newspapers;
|
|
the first are good enough when they are good; the second, at their
|
|
best, are worth nothing. Read great books of literature and
|
|
history; try to understand the Roman Empire and the Middle Ages; be
|
|
sure you do not understand when you dislike them; condemnation is
|
|
non-comprehension. And if you know something of these two periods,
|
|
you will know a little more about to-day, and may be a good
|
|
President.
|
|
|
|
I send you my best wishes, and am yours,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON,
|
|
|
|
AUTHOR OF A VAST QUANTITY OF LITTLE BOOKS.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO E. L. BURLINGAME
|
|
|
|
[VAILIMA, DECEMBER 1891.]
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR BURLINGAME, - The end of THE WRECKER having but just come
|
|
in, you will, I dare say, be appalled to receive three (possibly
|
|
four) chapters of a new book of the least attractive sort: a
|
|
history of nowhere in a corner, for no time to mention, running to
|
|
a volume! Well, it may very likely be an illusion; it is very
|
|
likely no one could possibly wish to read it, but I wish to publish
|
|
it. If you don't cotton to the idea, kindly set it up at my
|
|
expense, and let me know your terms for publishing. The great
|
|
affair to me is to have per return (if it might be) four or five -
|
|
better say half a dozen - sets of the roughest proofs that can be
|
|
drawn. There are a good many men here whom I want to read the
|
|
blessed thing, and not one would have the energy to read MS. At
|
|
the same time, if you care to glance at it, and have the time, I
|
|
should be very glad of your opinion as to whether I have made any
|
|
step at all towards possibly inducing folk at home to read matter
|
|
so extraneous and outlandish. I become heavy and owlish; years sit
|
|
upon me; it begins to seem to me to be a man's business to leave
|
|
off his damnable faces and say his say. Else I could have made it
|
|
pungent and light and lively. In considering, kindly forget that I
|
|
am R. L. S.; think of the four chapters as a book you are reading,
|
|
by an inhabitant of our 'lovely but fatil' islands; and see if it
|
|
could possibly amuse the hebetated public. I have to publish
|
|
anyway, you understand; I have a purpose beyond; I am concerned for
|
|
some of the parties to this quarrel. What I want to hear is from
|
|
curiosity; what I want you to judge of is what we are to do with
|
|
the book in a business sense. To me it is not business at all; I
|
|
had meant originally to lay all the profits to the credit of Samoa;
|
|
when it comes to the pinch of writing, I judge this unfair - I give
|
|
too much - and I mean to keep (if there be any profit at all) one-
|
|
half for the artisan; the rest I shall hold over to give to the
|
|
Samoans FOR THAT WHICH I CHOOSE AND AGAINST WORK DONE. I think I
|
|
have never heard of greater insolence than to attempt such a
|
|
subject; yet the tale is so strange and mixed, and the people so
|
|
oddly charactered - above all, the whites - and the high note of
|
|
the hurricane and the warships is so well prepared to take popular
|
|
interest, and the latter part is so directly in the day's movement,
|
|
that I am not without hope but some may read it; and if they don't,
|
|
a murrain on them! Here is, for the first time, a tale of Greeks -
|
|
Homeric Greeks - mingled with moderns, and all true; Odysseus
|
|
alongside of Rajah Brooke, PROPORTION GARDEE; and all true. Here
|
|
is for the first time since the Greeks (that I remember) the
|
|
history of a handful of men, where all know each other in the eyes,
|
|
and live close in a few acres, narrated at length, and with the
|
|
seriousness of history. Talk of the modern novel; here is a modern
|
|
history. And if I had the misfortune to found a school, the
|
|
legitimate historian might lie down and die, for he could never
|
|
overtake his material. Here is a little tale that has not 'caret'-
|
|
ed its 'vates'; 'sacer' is another point.
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO HENRY JAMES
|
|
|
|
DECEMBER 7TH, 1891.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR HENRY JAMES, - Thanks for yours; your former letter was
|
|
lost; so it appears was my long and masterly treatise on the TRAGIC
|
|
MUSE. I remember sending it very well, and there went by the same
|
|
mail a long and masterly tractate to Gosse about his daddy's life,
|
|
for which I have been long expecting an acknowledgment, and which
|
|
is plainly gone to the bottom with the other. If you see Gosse,
|
|
please mention it. These gems of criticism are now lost
|
|
literature, like the tomes of Alexandria. I could not do 'em
|
|
again. And I must ask you to be content with a dull head, a weary
|
|
hand, and short commons, for to-day, as I am physically tired with
|
|
hard work of every kind, the labours of the planter and the author
|
|
both piled upon me mountain deep. I am delighted beyond expression
|
|
by Bourget's book: he has phrases which affect me almost like
|
|
Montaigne; I had read ere this a masterly essay of his on Pascal;
|
|
this book does it; I write for all his essays by this mail, and
|
|
shall try to meet him when I come to Europe. The proposal is to
|
|
pass a summer in France, I think in Royat, where the faithful could
|
|
come and visit me; they are now not many. I expect Henry James to
|
|
come and break a crust or two with us. I believe it will be only
|
|
my wife and myself; and she will go over to England, but not I, or
|
|
possibly incog. to Southampton, and then to Boscombe to see poor
|
|
Lady Shelley. I am writing - trying to write in a Babel fit for
|
|
the bottomless pit; my wife, her daughter, her grandson and my
|
|
mother, all shrieking at each other round the house - not in war,
|
|
thank God! but the din is ultra martial, and the note of Lloyd
|
|
joins in occasionally, and the cause of this to-do is simply cacao,
|
|
whereof chocolate comes. You may drink of our chocolate perhaps in
|
|
five or six years from now, and not know it. It makes a fine
|
|
bustle, and gives us some hard work, out of which I have slunk for
|
|
to-day.
|
|
|
|
I have a story coming out: God knows when or how; it answers to
|
|
the name of the BEACH OF FALESA, and I think well of it. I was
|
|
delighted with the TRAGIC MUSE; I thought the Muse herself one of
|
|
your best works; I was delighted also to hear of the success of
|
|
your piece, as you know I am a dam failure, and might have dined
|
|
with the dinner club that Daudet and these parties frequented.
|
|
|
|
NEXT DAY.
|
|
|
|
I have just been breakfasting at Baiae and Brindisi, and the charm
|
|
of Bourget hag-rides me. I wonder if this exquisite fellow, all
|
|
made of fiddle-strings and scent and intelligence, could bear any
|
|
of my bald prose. If you think he could, ask Colvin to send him a
|
|
copy of these last essays of mine when they appear; and tell
|
|
Bourget they go to him from a South Sea Island as literal homage.
|
|
I have read no new book for years that gave me the same literary
|
|
thrill as his SENSATIONS D'ITALIE. If (as I imagine) my cut-and-
|
|
dry literature would be death to him, and worse than death -
|
|
journalism - be silent on the point. For I have a great curiosity
|
|
to know him, and if he doesn't know my work, I shall have the
|
|
better chance of making his acquaintance. I read THE PUPIL the
|
|
other day with great joy; your little boy is admirable; why is
|
|
there no little boy like that unless he hails from the Great
|
|
Republic?
|
|
|
|
Here I broke off, and wrote Bourget a dedication; no use resisting;
|
|
it's a love affair. O, he's exquisite, I bless you for the gift of
|
|
him. I have really enjoyed this book as I - almost as I - used to
|
|
enjoy books when I was going twenty - twenty-three; and these are
|
|
the years for reading!
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO E. L. BURLINGAME
|
|
|
|
[VAILIMA] JAN 2ND, '92.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR BURLINGAME, - Overjoyed you were pleased with WRECKER, and
|
|
shall consider your protests. There is perhaps more art than you
|
|
think for in the peccant chapter, where I have succeeded in packing
|
|
into one a dedication, an explanation, and a termination. Surely
|
|
you had not recognised the phrase about boodle? It was a quotation
|
|
from Jim Pinkerton, and seemed to me agreeably skittish. However,
|
|
all shall be prayerfully considered.
|
|
|
|
To come to a more painful subject. Herewith go three more chapters
|
|
of the wretched HISTORY; as you see, I approach the climax. I
|
|
expect the book to be some 70,000 words, of which you have now 45.
|
|
Can I finish it for next mail? I am going to try! 'Tis a long
|
|
piece of journalism, and full of difficulties here and there, of
|
|
this kind and that, and will make me a power of friends to be sure.
|
|
There is one Becker who will probably put up a window to me in the
|
|
church where he was baptized; and I expect a testimonial from
|
|
Captain Hand.
|
|
|
|
Sorry to let the mail go without the Scott; this has been a bad
|
|
month with me, and I have been below myself. I shall find a way to
|
|
have it come by next, or know the reason why. The mail after,
|
|
anyway.
|
|
|
|
A bit of a sketch map appears to me necessary for my HISTORY;
|
|
perhaps two. If I do not have any, 'tis impossible any one should
|
|
follow; and I, even when not at all interested, demand that I shall
|
|
be able to follow; even a tourist book without a map is a cross to
|
|
me; and there must be others of my way of thinking. I inclose the
|
|
very artless one that I think needful. Vailima, in case you are
|
|
curious, is about as far again behind Tanugamanono as that is from
|
|
the sea.
|
|
|
|
M'Clure is publishing a short story of mine, some 50,000 words, I
|
|
think, THE BEACH OF FALESA; when he's done with it, I want you and
|
|
Cassell to bring it out in a little volume; I shall send you a
|
|
dedication for it; I believe it good; indeed, to be honest, very
|
|
good. Good gear that pleases the merchant.
|
|
|
|
The other map that I half threaten is a chart for the hurricane.
|
|
Get me Kimberley's report of the hurricane: not to be found here.
|
|
It is of most importance; I MUST have it with my proofs of that
|
|
part, if I cannot have it earlier, which now seems impossible. -
|
|
Yours in hot haste,
|
|
|
|
R. L. STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO J. M. BARRIE
|
|
|
|
VAILIMA, SAMOA, FEBRUARY 1892.
|
|
|
|
DEAR MR. BARRIE, - This is at least the third letter I have written
|
|
you, but my correspondence has a bad habit of not getting so far as
|
|
the post. That which I possess of manhood turns pale before the
|
|
business of the address and envelope. But I hope to be more
|
|
fortunate with this: for, besides the usual and often recurrent
|
|
desire to thank you for your work-you are one of four that have
|
|
come to the front since I was watching and had a corner of my own
|
|
to watch, and there is no reason, unless it be in these mysterious
|
|
tides that ebb and flow, and make and mar and murder the works of
|
|
poor scribblers, why you should not do work of the best order. The
|
|
tides have borne away my sentence, of which I was weary at any
|
|
rate, and between authors I may allow myself so much freedom as to
|
|
leave it pending. We are both Scots besides, and I suspect both
|
|
rather Scotty Scots; my own Scotchness tends to intermittency, but
|
|
is at times erisypelitous - if that be rightly spelt. Lastly, I
|
|
have gathered we had both made our stages in the metropolis of the
|
|
winds: our Virgil's 'grey metropolis,' and I count that a lasting
|
|
bond. No place so brands a man.
|
|
|
|
Finally, I feel it a sort of duty to you to report progress. This
|
|
may be an error, but I believed I detected your hand in an article
|
|
- it may be an illusion, it may have been by one of those
|
|
industrious insects who catch up and reproduce the handling of each
|
|
emergent man - but I'll still hope it was yours - and hope it may
|
|
please you to hear that the continuation of KIDNAPPED is under way.
|
|
I have not yet got to Alan, so I do not know if he is still alive,
|
|
but David seems to have a kick or two in his shanks. I was pleased
|
|
to see how the Anglo-Saxon theory fell into the trap: I gave my
|
|
Lowlander a Gaelic name, and even commented on the fact in the
|
|
text; yet almost all critics recognised in Alan and David a Saxon
|
|
and a Celt. I know not about England; in Scotland at least, where
|
|
Gaelic was spoken in Fife little over the century ago, and in
|
|
Galloway not much earlier, I deny that there exists such a thing as
|
|
a pure Saxon, and I think it more than questionable if there be
|
|
such a thing as a pure Celt.
|
|
|
|
But what have you to do with this? and what have I? Let us
|
|
continue to inscribe our little bits of tales, and let the heathen
|
|
rage! Yours, with sincere interest in your career,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO WILLIAM MORRIS
|
|
|
|
VAILIMA, SAMOA, FEB. 1892.
|
|
|
|
MASTER, - A plea from a place so distant should have some weight,
|
|
and from a heart so grateful should have some address. I have been
|
|
long in your debt, Master, and I did not think it could be so much
|
|
increased as you have now increased it. I was long in your debt
|
|
and deep in your debt for many poems that I shall never forget, and
|
|
for SIGURD before all, and now you have plunged me beyond payment
|
|
by the Saga Library. And so now, true to human nature, being
|
|
plunged beyond payment, I come and bark at your heels.
|
|
|
|
For surely, Master, that tongue that we write, and that you have
|
|
illustrated so nobly, is yet alive. She has her rights and laws,
|
|
and is our mother, our queen, and our instrument. Now in that
|
|
living tongue WHERE has one sense, WHEREAS another. In the
|
|
HEATHSLAYINGS STORY, p. 241, line 13, it bears one of its ordinary
|
|
senses. Elsewhere and usually through the two volumes, which is
|
|
all that has yet reached me of this entrancing publication, WHEREAS
|
|
is made to figure for WHERE.
|
|
|
|
For the love of God, my dear and honoured Morris, use WHERE, and
|
|
let us know WHEREAS we are, wherefore our gratitude shall grow,
|
|
whereby you shall be the more honoured wherever men love clear
|
|
language, whereas now, although we honour, we are troubled.
|
|
|
|
Whereunder, please find inscribed to this very impudent but yet
|
|
very anxious document, the name of one of the most distant but not
|
|
the youngest or the coldest of those who honour you.
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO MRS. CHARLES FAIRCHILD
|
|
|
|
[VAILIMA, MARCH 1892.]
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR MRS. FAIRCHILD, - I am guilty in your sight, but my affairs
|
|
besiege me. The chief-justiceship of a family of nineteen
|
|
persons is in itself no sinecure, and sometimes occupies me for
|
|
days: two weeks ago for four days almost entirely, and for two
|
|
days entirely. Besides which, I have in the last few months
|
|
written all but one chapter of a HISTORY OF SAMOA for the last
|
|
eight or nine years; and while I was unavoidably delayed in the
|
|
writing of this, awaiting material, put in one-half of DAVID
|
|
BALFOUR, the sequel to KIDNAPPED. Add the ordinary impediments of
|
|
life, and admire my busyness. I am now an old, but healthy
|
|
skeleton, and degenerate much towards the machine. By six at work:
|
|
stopped at half-past ten to give a history lesson to a step-
|
|
grandson; eleven, lunch; after lunch we have a musical performance
|
|
till two; then to work again; bath, 4.40, dinner, five; cards in
|
|
the evening till eight; and then to bed - only I have no bed, only
|
|
a chest with a mat and blankets - and read myself to sleep. This
|
|
is the routine, but often sadly interrupted. Then you may see me
|
|
sitting on the floor of my verandah haranguing and being harangued
|
|
by squatting chiefs on a question of a road; or more privately
|
|
holding an inquiry into some dispute among our familiars, myself on
|
|
my bed, the boys on the floor - for when it comes to the judicial I
|
|
play dignity - or else going down to Apia on some more or less
|
|
unsatisfactory errand. Altogether it is a life that suits me, but
|
|
it absorbs me like an ocean. That is what I have always envied and
|
|
admired in Scott; with all that immensity of work and study, his
|
|
mind kept flexible, glancing to all points of natural interest.
|
|
But the lean hot spirits, such as mine, become hypnotised with
|
|
their bit occupations - if I may use Scotch to you - it is so far
|
|
more scornful than any English idiom. Well, I can't help being a
|
|
skeleton, and you are to take this devious passage for an apology.
|
|
|
|
I thought ALADDIN capital fun; but why, in fortune, did he pretend
|
|
it was moral at the end? The so-called nineteenth century, OU VA-
|
|
T-IL SE NICHER? 'Tis a trifle, but Pyle would do well to knock the
|
|
passage out, and leave his boguey tale a boguey tale, and a good
|
|
one at that.
|
|
|
|
The arrival of your box was altogether a great success to the
|
|
castaways. You have no idea where we live. Do you know, in all
|
|
these islands there are not five hundred whites, and no postal
|
|
delivery, and only one village - it is no more - and would be a
|
|
mean enough village in Europe? We were asked the other day if
|
|
Vailima were the name of our post town, and we laughed. Do you
|
|
know, though we are but three miles from the village metropolis, we
|
|
have no road to it, and our goods are brought on the pack-saddle?
|
|
And do you know - or I should rather say, can you believe - or (in
|
|
the famous old Tichborne trial phrase) would you be surprised to
|
|
learn, that all you have read of Vailima - or Subpriorsford, as I
|
|
call it - is entirely false, and we have no ice-machine, and no
|
|
electric light, and no water supply but the cistern of the heavens,
|
|
and but one public room, and scarce a bedroom apiece? But, of
|
|
course, it is well known that I have made enormous sums by my
|
|
evanescent literature, and you will smile at my false humility.
|
|
The point, however, is much on our minds just now. We are
|
|
expecting an invasion of Kiplings; very glad we shall be to see
|
|
them; but two of the party are ladies, and I tell you we had to
|
|
hold a council of war to stow them. You European ladies are so
|
|
particular; with all of mine, sleeping has long become a public
|
|
function, as with natives and those who go down much into the sea
|
|
in ships.
|
|
|
|
Dear Mrs. Fairchild, I must go to my work. I have but two words to
|
|
say in conclusion.
|
|
|
|
First, civilisation is rot.
|
|
|
|
Second, console a savage with more of the milk of that over
|
|
civilised being, your adorable schoolboy.
|
|
|
|
As I wrote these remarkable words, I was called down to eight
|
|
o'clock prayers, and have just worked through a chapter of Joshua
|
|
and five verses, with five treble choruses of a Samoan hymn; but
|
|
the music was good, our boys and precentress ('tis always a woman
|
|
that leads) did better than I ever heard them, and to my great
|
|
pleasure I understood it all except one verse. This gave me the
|
|
more time to try and identify what the parts were doing, and
|
|
further convict my dull ear. Beyond the fact that the soprano rose
|
|
to the tonic above, on one occasion I could recognise nothing.
|
|
This is sickening, but I mean to teach my ear better before I am
|
|
done with it or this vile carcase.
|
|
|
|
I think it will amuse you (for a last word) to hear that our
|
|
precentress - she is the washerwoman - is our shame. She is a
|
|
good, healthy, comely, strapping young wench, full of energy and
|
|
seriousness, a splendid workwoman, delighting to train our chorus,
|
|
delighting in the poetry of the hymns, which she reads aloud (on
|
|
the least provocation) with a great sentiment of rhythm. Well,
|
|
then, what is curious? Ah, we did not know! but it was told us in
|
|
a whisper from the cook-house - she is not of good family. Don't
|
|
let it get out, please; everybody knows it, of course, here; there
|
|
is no reason why Europe and the States should have the advantage of
|
|
me also. And the rest of my housefolk are all chief-people, I
|
|
assure you. And my late overseer (far the best of his race) is a
|
|
really serious chief with a good 'name.' Tina is the name; it is
|
|
not in the Almanach de Gotha, it must have got dropped at press.
|
|
The odd thing is, we rather share the prejudice. I have almost
|
|
always - though not quite always - found the higher the chief the
|
|
better the man through all the islands; or, at least, that the best
|
|
man came always from a highish rank. I hope Helen will continue to
|
|
prove a bright exception.
|
|
|
|
With love to Fairchild and the Huge Schoolboy, I am, my dear Mrs.
|
|
Fairchild, yours very sincerely,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO E. L. BURLINGAME
|
|
|
|
[VAILIMA, MARCH 1892.]
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR BURLINGAME, - Herewith Chapters IX. and X., and I am left
|
|
face to face with the horrors and dilemmas of the present regimen:
|
|
pray for those that go down to the sea in ships. I have promised
|
|
Henley shall have a chance to publish the hurricane chapter if he
|
|
like, so please let the slips be sent QUAM PRIMUM to C. Baxter,
|
|
W.S., 11 S. Charlotte Street, Edinburgh. I got on mighty quick
|
|
with that chapter - about five days of the toughest kind of work.
|
|
God forbid I should ever have such another pirn to wind! When I
|
|
invent a language, there shall be a direct and an indirect pronoun
|
|
differently declined - then writing would be some fun.
|
|
|
|
DIRECT INDIRECT
|
|
|
|
He Tu
|
|
Him Tum
|
|
His Tus
|
|
|
|
Ex.: HE seized TUM by TUS throat; but TU at the same moment caught
|
|
HIM by HIS hair. A fellow could write hurricanes with an
|
|
inflection like that! Yet there would he difficulties too.
|
|
|
|
Do what you please about THE BEACH; and I give you CARTE BLANCHE to
|
|
write in the matter to Baxter - or telegraph if the time press - to
|
|
delay the English contingent. Herewith the two last slips of THE
|
|
WRECKER. I cannot go beyond. By the way, pray compliment the
|
|
printers on the proofs of the Samoa racket, but hint to them that
|
|
it is most unbusiness-like and unscholarly to clip the edges of the
|
|
galleys; these proofs should really have been sent me on large
|
|
paper; and I and my friends here are all put to a great deal of
|
|
trouble and confusion by the mistake. - For, as you must conceive,
|
|
in a matter so contested and complicated, the number of corrections
|
|
and the length of explanations is considerable.
|
|
|
|
Please add to my former orders -
|
|
|
|
LE CHEVALIER DES TOUCHES } by Barbey d'Aurevilly.
|
|
LES DIABOLIQUES . . . }
|
|
CORRESPONDANCE DE HENRI BEYLE (Stendahl).
|
|
|
|
Yours sincerely,
|
|
|
|
R. L. STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO T. W. DOVER
|
|
|
|
VAILIMA PLANTATION, UPOLU, SAMOA, JUNE 20TH, 1892.
|
|
|
|
SIR, - In reply to your very interesting letter, I cannot fairly
|
|
say that I have ever been poor, or known what it was to want a
|
|
meal. I have been reduced, however, to a very small sum of money,
|
|
with no apparent prospect of increasing it; and at that time I
|
|
reduced myself to practically one meal a day, with the most
|
|
disgusting consequences to my health. At this time I lodged in the
|
|
house of a working man, and associated much with others. At the
|
|
same time, from my youth up, I have always been a good deal and
|
|
rather intimately thrown among the working-classes, partly as a
|
|
civil engineer in out-of-the-way places, partly from a strong and,
|
|
I hope, not ill-favoured sentiment of curiosity. But the place
|
|
where, perhaps, I was most struck with the fact upon which you
|
|
comment was the house of a friend, who was exceedingly poor, in
|
|
fact, I may say destitute, and who lived in the attic of a very
|
|
tall house entirely inhabited by persons in varying stages of
|
|
poverty. As he was also in ill-health, I made a habit of passing
|
|
my afternoon with him, and when there it was my part to answer the
|
|
door. The steady procession of people begging, and the expectant
|
|
and confident manner in which they presented themselves, struck me
|
|
more and more daily; and I could not but remember with surprise
|
|
that though my father lived but a few streets away in a fine house,
|
|
beggars scarce came to the door once a fortnight or a month. From
|
|
that time forward I made it my business to inquire, and in the
|
|
stories which I am very fond of hearing from all sorts and
|
|
conditions of men, learned that in the time of their distress it
|
|
was always from the poor they sought assistance, and almost always
|
|
from the poor they got it.
|
|
|
|
Trusting I have now satisfactorily answered your question, which I
|
|
thank you for asking, I remain, with sincere compliments,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO E. L. BURLINGAME
|
|
|
|
VAILIMA, SUMMER 1892.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR BURLINGAME, - First of all, YOU HAVE ALL THE CORRECTIONS ON
|
|
'THE WRECKER.' I found I had made what I meant and forgotten it,
|
|
and was so careless as not to tell you.
|
|
|
|
Second, of course, and by all means, charge corrections on the
|
|
Samoa book to me; but there are not near so many as I feared. The
|
|
Lord hath dealt bountifully with me, and I believe all my advisers
|
|
were amazed to see how nearly correct I had got the truck, at least
|
|
I was. With this you will receive the whole revise and a
|
|
typewritten copy of the last chapter. And the thing now is Speed,
|
|
to catch a possible revision of the treaty. I believe Cassells are
|
|
to bring it out, but Baxter knows, and the thing has to be crammed
|
|
through PRESTISSIMO, A LA CHASSEUR.
|
|
|
|
You mention the belated Barbeys; what about the equally belated
|
|
Pineros? And I hope you will keep your bookshop alive to supplying
|
|
me continuously with the SAGA LIBRARY. I cannot get enough of
|
|
SAGAS; I wish there were nine thousand; talk about realism!
|
|
|
|
All seems to flourish with you; I also prosper; none the less for
|
|
being quit of that abhorred task, Samoa. I could give a supper
|
|
party here were there any one to sup. Never was such a
|
|
disagreeable task, but the thing had to be told. . . .
|
|
|
|
There, I trust I am done with this cursed chapter of my career, bar
|
|
the rotten eggs and broken bottles that may follow, of course.
|
|
Pray remember, speed is now all that can be asked, hoped, or
|
|
wished. I give up all hope of proofs, revises, proof of the map,
|
|
or sic like; and you on your side will try to get it out as
|
|
reasonably seemly as may be.
|
|
|
|
Whole Samoa book herewith. Glory be to God. - Yours very
|
|
sincerely,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO CHARLES BAXTER
|
|
|
|
VAILIMA PLANTATION, UPOLU, SAMOAN ISLANDS, 18TH JULY 1892.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR CHARLES,- . . . I have been now for some time contending
|
|
with powers and principalities, and I have never once seen one of
|
|
my own letters to the TIMES. So when you see something in the
|
|
papers that you think might interest the exiles of Upolu, do not
|
|
think twice, out with your saxpence, and send it flying to Vailima.
|
|
Of what you say of the past, eh, man, it was a queer time, and
|
|
awful miserable, but there's no sense in denying it was awful fun.
|
|
Do you mind the youth in Highland garb and the tableful of coppers?
|
|
Do you mind the SIGNAL of Waterloo Place? - Hey, how the blood
|
|
stands to the heart at such a memory! - Hae ye the notes o't?
|
|
Gie's them. - Gude's sake, man, gie's the notes o't; I mind ye made
|
|
a tune o't an' played it on your pinanny; gie's the notes. Dear
|
|
Lord, that past.
|
|
|
|
Glad to hear Henley's prospects are fair: his new volume is the
|
|
work of a real poet. He is one of those who can make a noise of
|
|
his own with words, and in whom experience strikes an individual
|
|
note. There is perhaps no more genuine poet living, bar the Big
|
|
Guns. In case I cannot overtake an acknowledgment to himself by
|
|
this mail, please let him hear of my pleasure and admiration. How
|
|
poorly - compares! He is all smart journalism and cleverness: it
|
|
is all bright and shallow and limpid, like a business paper - a
|
|
good one, S'ENTEND; but there is no blot of heart's blood and the
|
|
Old Night: there are no harmonics, there is scarce harmony to his
|
|
music; and in Henley - all of these; a touch, a sense within sense,
|
|
a sound outside the sound, the shadow of the inscrutable, eloquent
|
|
beyond all definition. The First London Voluntary knocked me
|
|
wholly. - Ever yours affectionately, my dear Charles,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Kind memories to your father and all friends.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO W. E. HENLEY
|
|
|
|
VAILIMA PLANTATION, UPOLU, SAMOA, AUGUST 1ST, 1892.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR HENLEY, - It is impossible to let your new volume pass in
|
|
silence. I have not received the same thrill of poetry since G.
|
|
M.'s JOY OF EARTH volume and LOVE IN A VALLEY; and I do not know
|
|
that even that was so intimate and deep. Again and again, I take
|
|
the book down, and read, and my blood is fired as it used to be in
|
|
youth. ANDANTE CON MOTO in the VOLUNTARIES, and the thing about
|
|
the trees at night (No. XXIV. I think) are up to date my
|
|
favourites. I did not guess you were so great a magician; these
|
|
are new tunes, this is an undertone of the true Apollo; these are
|
|
not verse, they are poetry - inventions, creations, in language. I
|
|
thank you for the joy you have given me, and remain your old friend
|
|
and present huge admirer,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
The hand is really the hand of Esau, but under a course of
|
|
threatened scrivener's cramp.
|
|
|
|
For the next edition of the Book of Verses, pray accept an
|
|
emendation. Last three lines of Echoes No. XLIV. read -
|
|
|
|
'But life in act? How should the grave
|
|
Be victor over these,
|
|
Mother, a mother of men?'
|
|
|
|
The two vocatives scatter the effect of this inimitable close. If
|
|
you insist on the longer line, equip 'grave' with an epithet.
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO E. L. BURLINGAME
|
|
|
|
VAILIMA, UPOLU, AUGUST 1st, '92.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR BURLINGAME, - Herewith MY GRANDFATHER. I have had rather a
|
|
bad time suppressing the old gentleman, who was really in a very
|
|
garrulous stage; as for getting him IN ORDER, I could do but little
|
|
towards that; however, there are one or two points of interest
|
|
which may justify us in printing. The swinging of his stick and
|
|
not knowing the sailor of Coruiskin, in particular, and the account
|
|
of how he wrote the lives in the Bell Book particularly please me.
|
|
I hope my own little introduction is not egoistic; or rather I do
|
|
not care if it is. It was that old gentleman's blood that brought
|
|
me to Samoa.
|
|
|
|
By the by, vols. vii., viii., and ix. of Adams's HISTORY have never
|
|
come to hand; no more have the dictionaries.
|
|
|
|
Please send me STONEHENGE ON HORSE, STORIES AND INTERLUDES by Barry
|
|
Pain, and EDINBURGH SKETCHES AND MEMOIRS by David Masson. THE
|
|
WRECKER has turned up. So far as I have seen, it is very
|
|
satisfactory, but on pp. 548, 549, there has been a devil of a
|
|
miscarriage. The two Latin quotations instead of following each
|
|
other being separated (doubtless for printing considerations) by a
|
|
line of prose. My compliments to the printers; there is doubtless
|
|
such a thing as good printing, but there is such a thing as good
|
|
sense.
|
|
|
|
The sequel to KIDNAPPED, DAVID BALFOUR by name, is about three-
|
|
quarters done and gone to press for serial publication. By what I
|
|
can find out it ought to be through hand with that and ready for
|
|
volume form early next spring. - Yours very sincerely,
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO ANDREW LANG
|
|
|
|
[VAILIMA, AUGUST 1892.]
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR LANG, - I knew you would prove a trusty purveyor. The
|
|
books you have sent are admirable. I got the name of my hero out
|
|
of Brown - Blair of Balmyle - Francie Blair. But whether to call
|
|
the story BLAIR OF BALMYLE, or whether to call it THE YOUNG
|
|
CHEVALIER, I have not yet decided. The admirable Cameronian tract
|
|
- perhaps you will think this a cheat - is to be boned into DAVID
|
|
BALFOUR, where it will fit better, and really furnishes me with a
|
|
desired foothold over a boggy place.
|
|
|
|
LATER; no, it won't go in, and I fear I must give up 'the
|
|
idolatrous occupant upon the throne,' a phrase that overjoyed me
|
|
beyond expression. I am in a deuce of a flutter with politics,
|
|
which I hate, and in which I certainly do not shine; but a fellow
|
|
cannot stand aside and look on at such an exhibition as our
|
|
government. 'Taint decent; no gent can hold a candle to it. But
|
|
it's a grind to be interrupted by midnight messengers and pass your
|
|
days writing proclamations (which are never proclaimed) and
|
|
petitions (which ain't petited) and letters to the TIMES, which it
|
|
makes my jaws yawn to re-read, and all your time have your heart
|
|
with David Balfour: he has just left Glasgow this morning for
|
|
Edinburgh, James More has escaped from the castle; it is far more
|
|
real to me than the Behring Sea or the Baring brothers either - he
|
|
got the news of James More's escape from the Lord Advocate, and
|
|
started off straight to comfort Catriona. You don't know her;
|
|
she's James More's daughter, and a respectable young wumman; the
|
|
Miss Grants think so - the Lord Advocate's daughters - so there
|
|
can't be anything really wrong. Pretty soon we all go to Holland,
|
|
and be hanged; thence to Dunkirk, and be damned; and the tale
|
|
concludes in Paris, and be Poll-parrotted. This is the last
|
|
authentic news. You are not a real hard-working novelist; not a
|
|
practical novelist; so you don't know the temptation to let your
|
|
characters maunder. Dumas did it, and lived. But it is not war;
|
|
it ain't sportsmanlike, and I have to be stopping their chatter all
|
|
the time. Brown's appendix is great reading.
|
|
|
|
My only grief is that I can't
|
|
Use the idolatrous occupant.
|
|
|
|
Yours ever,
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
|
|
|
|
Blessing and praising you for a useful (though idolatrous) occupant
|
|
of Kensington.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO THE COUNTESS OF JERSEY
|
|
|
|
AUGUST 14, 1745.
|
|
|
|
TO MISS AMELIA BALFOUR - MY DEAR COUSIN, - We are going an
|
|
expedition to leeward on Tuesday morning. If a lady were perhaps
|
|
to be encountered on horseback - say, towards the Gasi-gasi river -
|
|
about six A.M., I think we should have an episode somewhat after
|
|
the style of the '45. What a misfortune, my dear cousin, that you
|
|
should have arrived while your cousin Graham was occupying my only
|
|
guest-chamber - for Osterley Park is not so large in Samoa as it
|
|
was at home - but happily our friend Haggard has found a corner for
|
|
you!
|
|
|
|
The King over the Water - the Gasi-gasi water - will be pleased to
|
|
see the clan of Balfour mustering so thick around his standard.
|
|
|
|
I have (one serious word) been so lucky as to get a really secret
|
|
interpreter, so all is for the best in our little adventure into
|
|
the WAVERLEY NOVELS. - I am your affectionate cousin,
|
|
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ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
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Observe the stealth with which I have blotted my signature, but we
|
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must be political A OUTRANCE.
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Letter: TO THE COUNTESS OF JERSEY
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MY DEAR COUSIN, - I send for your information a copy of my last
|
|
letter to the gentleman in question. 'Tis thought more wise, in
|
|
consideration of the difficulty and peril of the enterprise, that
|
|
we should leave the town in the afternoon, and by several
|
|
detachments. If you would start for a ride with the Master of
|
|
Haggard and Captain Lockhart of Lee, say at three o'clock of the
|
|
afternoon, you would make some rencounters by the wayside which
|
|
might be agreeable to your political opinions. All present will be
|
|
staunch.
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|
The Master of Haggard might extend his ride a little, and return
|
|
through the marsh and by the nuns' house (I trust that has the
|
|
proper flavour), so as a little to diminish the effect of
|
|
separation. - I remain, your affectionate cousin to command,
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O TUSITALA.
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P.S. - It is to be thought this present year of grace will be
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historical.
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Letter: TO MRS. CHARLES FAIRCHILD
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[VAILIMA, AUGUST 1892.]
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MY DEAR MRS. FAIRCHILD, - Thank you a thousand times for your
|
|
letter. You are the Angel of (the sort of) Information (that I
|
|
care about); I appoint you successor to the newspaper press; and I
|
|
beg of you, whenever you wish to gird at the age, or think the bugs
|
|
out of proportion to the roses, or despair, or enjoy any cosmic or
|
|
epochal emotion, to sit down again and write to the Hermit of
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|
Samoa. What do I think of it all? Well, I love the romantic
|
|
solemnity of youth; and even in this form, although not without
|
|
laughter, I have to love it still. They are such ducks! But what
|
|
are they made of? We were just as solemn as that about atheism and
|
|
the stars and humanity; but we were all for belief anyway - we held
|
|
atheism and sociology (of which none of us, nor indeed anybody,
|
|
knew anything) for a gospel and an iron rule of life; and it was
|
|
lucky enough, or there would have been more windows broken. What
|
|
is apt to puzzle one at first sight in the New Youth is that, with
|
|
such rickety and risky problems always at heart, they should not
|
|
plunge down a Niagara of Dissolution. But let us remember the high
|
|
practical timidity of youth. I was a particularly brave boy - this
|
|
I think of myself, looking back - and plunged into adventures and
|
|
experiments, and ran risks that it still surprises me to recall.
|
|
But, dear me, what a fear I was in of that strange blind machinery
|
|
in the midst of which I stood; and with what a compressed heart and
|
|
what empty lungs I would touch a new crank and await developments!
|
|
I do not mean to say I do not fear life still; I do; and that
|
|
terror (for an adventurer like myself) is still one of the chief
|
|
joys of living.
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|
But it was different indeed while I was yet girt with the priceless
|
|
robes of inexperience; then the fear was exquisite and infinite.
|
|
And so, when you see all these little Ibsens, who seem at once so
|
|
dry and so excitable, and faint in swathes over a play (I suppose -
|
|
for a wager) that would seem to me merely tedious, smile behind
|
|
your hand, and remember the little dears are all in a blue funk.
|
|
It must be very funny, and to a spectator like yourself I almost
|
|
envy it. But never get desperate; human nature is human nature;
|
|
and the Roman Empire, since the Romans founded it and made our
|
|
European human nature what it is, bids fair to go on and to be true
|
|
to itself. These little bodies will all grow up and become men and
|
|
women, and have heaps of fun; nay, and are having it now; and
|
|
whatever happens to the fashion of the age, it makes no difference
|
|
- there are always high and brave and amusing lives to be lived;
|
|
and a change of key, however exotic, does not exclude melody. Even
|
|
Chinamen, hard as we find it to believe, enjoy being Chinese. And
|
|
the Chinaman stands alone to be unthinkable; natural enough, as the
|
|
representative of the only other great civilisation. Take my
|
|
people here at my doors; their life is a very good one; it is quite
|
|
thinkable, quite acceptable to us. And the little dears will be
|
|
soon skating on the other foot; sooner or later, in each
|
|
generation, the one-half of them at least begin to remember all the
|
|
material they had rejected when first they made and nailed up their
|
|
little theory of life; and these become reactionaries or
|
|
conservatives, and the ship of man begins to fill upon the other
|
|
tack.
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|
Here is a sermon, by your leave! It is your own fault, you have
|
|
amused and interested me so much by your breath of the New Youth,
|
|
which comes to me from so far away, where I live up here in my
|
|
mountain, and secret messengers bring me letters from rebels, and
|
|
the government sometimes seizes them, and generally grumbles in its
|
|
beard that Stevenson should really be deported. O, my life is the
|
|
more lively, never fear!
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|
|
|
It has recently been most amusingly varied by a visit from Lady
|
|
Jersey. I took her over mysteriously (under the pseudonym of my
|
|
cousin, Miss Amelia Balfour) to visit Mataafa, our rebel; and we
|
|
had great fun, and wrote a Ouida novel on our life here, in which
|
|
every author had to describe himself in the Ouida glamour, and of
|
|
which - for the Jerseys intend printing it - I must let you have a
|
|
copy. My wife's chapter, and my description of myself, should, I
|
|
think, amuse you. But there were finer touches still; as when
|
|
Belle and Lady Jersey came out to brush their teeth in front of the
|
|
rebel King's palace, and the night guard squatted opposite on the
|
|
grass and watched the process; or when I and my interpreter, and
|
|
the King with his secretary, mysteriously disappeared to conspire.
|
|
- Ever yours sincerely,
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R. L. STEVENSON.
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Letter: TO GORDON BROWNE
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|
VAILIMA, SAMOA, AUTUMN 1892.
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|
TO THE ARTIST WHO DID THE ILLUSTRATIONS TO 'UMA.'
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|
DEAR SIR, - I only know you under the initials G. B., but you have
|
|
done some exceedingly spirited and satisfactory illustrations to my
|
|
story THE BEACH OF FALESA, and I wish to write and thank you
|
|
expressly for the care and talent shown. Such numbers of people
|
|
can do good black and whites! So few can illustrate a story, or
|
|
apparently read it. You have shown that you can do both, and your
|
|
creation of Wiltshire is a real illumination of the text. It was
|
|
exactly so that Wiltshire dressed and looked, and you have the line
|
|
of his nose to a nicety. His nose is an inspiration. Nor should I
|
|
forget to thank you for Case, particularly in his last appearance.
|
|
It is a singular fact - which seems to point still more directly to
|
|
inspiration in your case - that your missionary actually resembles
|
|
the flesh-and-blood person from whom Mr. Tarleton was drawn. The
|
|
general effect of the islands is all that could be wished; indeed I
|
|
have but one criticism to make, that in the background of Case
|
|
taking the dollar from Mr. Tarleton's head - head - not hand, as
|
|
the fools have printed it - the natives have a little too much the
|
|
look of Africans.
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|
But the great affair is that you have been to the pains to
|
|
illustrate my story instead of making conscientious black and
|
|
whites of people sitting talking. I doubt if you have left
|
|
unrepresented a single pictorial incident. I am writing by this
|
|
mail to the editor in the hopes that I may buy from him the
|
|
originals, and I am, dear sir, your very much obliged,
|
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ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
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Letter: TO MISS MORSE
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VAILIMA, SAMOAN ISLANDS, OCTOBER 7TH, 1892.
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|
DEAR MADAM, - I have a great diffidence in answering your valued
|
|
letter. It would be difficult for me to express the feelings with
|
|
which I read it - and am now trying to re-read it as I dictate
|
|
this.
|
|
|
|
You ask me to forgive what you say 'must seem a liberty,' and I
|
|
find that I cannot thank you sufficiently or even find a word with
|
|
which to qualify your letter. Dear Madam, such a communication
|
|
even the vainest man would think a sufficient reward for a lifetime
|
|
of labour. That I should have been able to give so much help and
|
|
pleasure to your sister is the subject of my grateful wonder.
|
|
|
|
That she, being dead, and speaking with your pen, should be able to
|
|
repay the debt with such a liberal interest, is one of those things
|
|
that reconcile us with the world and make us take hope again. I do
|
|
not know what I have done to deserve so beautiful and touching a
|
|
compliment; and I feel there is but one thing fit for me to say
|
|
here, that I will try with renewed courage to go on in the same
|
|
path, and to deserve, if not to receive, a similar return from
|
|
others.
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|
|
|
You apologise for speaking so much about yourselves. Dear Madam, I
|
|
thought you did so too little. I should have wished to have known
|
|
more of those who were so sympathetic as to find a consolation in
|
|
my work, and so graceful and so tactful as to acknowledge it in
|
|
such a letter as was yours.
|
|
|
|
Will you offer to your mother the expression of a sympathy which
|
|
(coming from a stranger) must seem very airy, but which yet is
|
|
genuine; and accept for yourself my gratitude for the thought which
|
|
inspired you to write to me and the words which you found to
|
|
express it.
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|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
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|
|
Letter: TO E. L. BURLINGAME
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|
|
VAILIMA PLANTATION, SAMOAN ISLANDS, OCT. 10TH, 1892.
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|
|
MY DEAR BURLINGAME, - It is now, as you see, the 10th of October,
|
|
and there has not reached the Island of Upolu one single copy, or
|
|
rag of a copy, of the Samoa book. I lie; there has come one, and
|
|
that in the pocket of a missionary man who is at daggers drawn with
|
|
me, who lends it to all my enemies, conceals it from all my
|
|
friends, and is bringing a lawsuit against me on the strength of
|
|
expressions in the same which I have forgotten, and now cannot see.
|
|
This is pretty tragic, I think you will allow; and I was inclined
|
|
to fancy it was the fault of the Post Office. But I hear from my
|
|
sister-in-law Mrs. Sanchez that she is in the same case, and has
|
|
received no 'Footnote.' I have also to consider that I had no
|
|
letter from you last mail, although you ought to have received by
|
|
that time 'My Grandfather and Scott,' and 'Me and my Grandfather.'
|
|
Taking one consideration with another, therefore, I prefer to
|
|
conceive that No. 743 Broadway has fallen upon gentle and
|
|
continuous slumber, and is become an enchanted palace among
|
|
publishing houses. If it be not so, if the 'Footnotes' were really
|
|
sent, I hope you will fall upon the Post Office with all the vigour
|
|
you possess. How does THE WRECKER go in the States? It seems to
|
|
be doing exceptionally well in England. - Yours sincerely,
|
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|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
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|
|
Letter: TO J. M. BARRIE
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|
|
VAILIMA PLANTATION, SAMOAN ISLANDS, NOVEMBER 1ST, 1892.
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|
|
DEAR MR. BARRIE, - I can scarce thank you sufficiently for your
|
|
extremely amusing letter. No, THE AULD LICHT IDYLS never reached
|
|
me - I wish it had, and I wonder extremely whether it would not be
|
|
good for me to have a pennyworth of the Auld Licht pulpit. It is a
|
|
singular thing that I should live here in the South Seas under
|
|
conditions so new and so striking, and yet my imagination so
|
|
continually inhabit that cold old huddle of grey hills from which
|
|
we come. I have just finished DAVID BALFOUR; I have another book
|
|
on the stocks, THE YOUNG CHEVALIER, which is to be part in France
|
|
and part in Scotland, and to deal with Prince Charlie about the
|
|
year 1749; and now what have I done but begun a third which is to
|
|
be all moorland together, and is to have for a centrepiece a figure
|
|
that I think you will appreciate - that of the immortal Braxfield -
|
|
Braxfield himself is my GRAND PREMIER, or, since you are so much
|
|
involved in the British drama, let me say my heavy lead. . . .
|
|
|
|
Your descriptions of your dealings with Lord Rintoul are
|
|
frightfully unconscientious. You should never write about anybody
|
|
until you persuade yourself at least for the moment that you love
|
|
him, above all anybody on whom your plot revolves. It will always
|
|
make a hole in the book; and, if he has anything to do with the
|
|
mechanism, prove a stick in your machinery. But you know all this
|
|
better than I do, and it is one of your most promising traits that
|
|
you do not take your powers too seriously. The LITTLE MINISTER
|
|
ought to have ended badly; we all know it did; and we are
|
|
infinitely grateful to you for the grace and good feeling with
|
|
which you lied about it. If you had told the truth, I for one
|
|
could never have forgiven you. As you had conceived and written
|
|
the earlier parts, the truth about the end, though indisputably
|
|
true to fact, would have been a lie, or what is worse, a discord in
|
|
art. If you are going to make a book end badly, it must end badly
|
|
from the beginning. Now your book began to end well. You let
|
|
yourself fall in love with, and fondle, and smile at your puppets.
|
|
Once you had done that, your honour was committed - at the cost of
|
|
truth to life you were bound to save them. It is the blot on
|
|
RICHARD FEVEREL, for instance, that it begins to end well; and then
|
|
tricks you and ends ill. But in that case there is worse behind,
|
|
for the ill-ending does not inherently issue from the plot - the
|
|
story HAD, in fact, ENDED WELL after the great last interview
|
|
between Richard and Lucy - and the blind, illogical bullet which
|
|
smashes all has no more to do between the boards than a fly has to
|
|
do with the room into whose open window it comes buzzing. It MIGHT
|
|
have so happened; it needed not; and unless needs must, we have no
|
|
right to pain our readers. I have had a heavy case of conscience
|
|
of the same kind about my Braxfield story. Braxfield - only his
|
|
name is Hermiston - has a son who is condemned to death; plainly,
|
|
there is a fine tempting fitness about this; and I meant he was to
|
|
hang. But now on considering my minor characters, I saw there were
|
|
five people who would - in a sense who must - break prison and
|
|
attempt his rescue. They were capable, hardy folks, too, who might
|
|
very well succeed. Why should they not then? Why should not young
|
|
Hermiston escape clear out of the country? and be happy, if he
|
|
could, with his - But soft! I will not betray my secret of my
|
|
heroine. Suffice it to breathe in your ear that she was what Hardy
|
|
calls (and others in their plain way don't) a Pure Woman. Much
|
|
virtue in a capital letter, such as yours was.
|
|
|
|
Write to me again in my infinite distance. Tell me about your new
|
|
book. No harm in telling ME; I am too far off to be indiscreet;
|
|
there are too few near me who would care to hear. I am rushes by
|
|
the riverside, and the stream is in Babylon: breathe your secrets
|
|
to me fearlessly; and if the Trade Wind caught and carried them
|
|
away, there are none to catch them nearer than Australia, unless it
|
|
were the Tropic Birds. In the unavoidable absence of my
|
|
amanuensis, who is buying eels for dinner, I have thus concluded my
|
|
despatch, like St. Paul, with my own hand.
|
|
|
|
And in the inimitable words of Lord Kames, Faur ye weel, ye bitch.
|
|
- Yours very truly,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO E. L. BURLINGAME
|
|
|
|
VAILIMA PLANTATION, NOV. 2ND, 1892.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR BURLINGAME, - In the first place, I have to acknowledge
|
|
receipt of your munificent cheque for three hundred and fifty
|
|
dollars. Glad you liked the Scott voyage; rather more than I did
|
|
upon the whole. As the proofs have not turned up at all, there can
|
|
be no question of returning them, and I am therefore very much
|
|
pleased to think you have arranged not to wait. The volumes of
|
|
Adams arrived along with yours of October 6th. One of the
|
|
dictionaries has also blundered home, apparently from the Colonies;
|
|
the other is still to seek. I note and sympathise with your
|
|
bewilderment as to FALESA. My own direct correspondence with Mr.
|
|
Baxter is now about three months in abeyance. Altogether you see
|
|
how well it would be if you could do anything to wake up the Post
|
|
Office. Not a single copy of the 'Footnote' has yet reached Samoa,
|
|
but I hear of one having come to its address in Hawaii. Glad to
|
|
hear good news of Stoddard. - Yours sincerely,
|
|
|
|
R. L. STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
P.S. - Since the above was written an aftermath of post matter came
|
|
in, among which were the proofs of MY GRANDFATHER. I shall correct
|
|
and return them, but as I have lost all confidence in the Post
|
|
Office, I shall mention here: first galley, 4th line from the
|
|
bottom, for 'AS' read 'OR.'
|
|
|
|
Should I ever again have to use my work without waiting for proofs,
|
|
bear in mind this golden principle. From a congenital defect, I
|
|
must suppose, I am unable to write the word OR - wherever I write
|
|
it the printer unerringly puts AS - and those who read for me had
|
|
better, wherever it is possible, substitute OR for AS. This the
|
|
more so since many writers have a habit of using AS which is death
|
|
to my temper and confusion to my face.
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO LIEUTENANT EELES
|
|
|
|
VAILIMA PLANTATION, UPOLU, SAMOAN ISLANDS, NOVEMBER 15TH, 1892.
|
|
|
|
DEAR EELES, - In the first place, excuse me writing to you by
|
|
another hand, as that is the way in which alone all my
|
|
correspondence gets effected. Before I took to this method, or
|
|
rather before I found a victim, it SIMPLY didn't get effected.
|
|
|
|
Thank you again and again, first for your kind thought of writing
|
|
to me, and second for your extremely amusing and interesting
|
|
letter. You can have no guess how immediately interesting it was
|
|
to our family. First of all, the poor soul at Nukufetau is an old
|
|
friend of ours, and we have actually treated him ourselves on a
|
|
former visit to the island. I don't know if Hoskin would approve
|
|
of our treatment; it consisted, I believe, mostly in a present of
|
|
stout and a recommendation to put nails in his water-tank. We also
|
|
(as you seem to have done) recommended him to leave the island; and
|
|
I remember very well how wise and kind we thought his answer. He
|
|
had half-caste children (he said) who would suffer and perhaps be
|
|
despised if he carried them elsewhere; if he left them there alone,
|
|
they would almost certainly miscarry; and the best thing was that
|
|
he should stay and die with them. But the cream of the fun was
|
|
your meeting with Burn. We not only know him, but (as the French
|
|
say) we don't know anybody else; he is our intimate and adored
|
|
original; and - prepare your mind - he was, is, and ever will be,
|
|
TOMMY HADDON! As I don't believe you to be inspired, I suspect you
|
|
to have suspected this. At least it was a mighty happy suspicion.
|
|
You are quite right: Tommy is really 'a good chap,' though about
|
|
as comic as they make them.
|
|
|
|
I was extremely interested in your Fiji legend, and perhaps even
|
|
more so in your capital account of the CURACOA'S misadventure.
|
|
Alas! we have nothing so thrilling to relate. All hangs and fools
|
|
on in this isle of misgovernment, without change, though not
|
|
without novelty, but wholly without hope, unless perhaps you should
|
|
consider it hopeful that I am still more immediately threatened
|
|
with arrest. The confounded thing is, that if it comes off, I
|
|
shall be sent away in the Ringarooma instead of the CURACOA. The
|
|
former ship burst upon by the run - she had been sent off by
|
|
despatch and without orders - and to make me a little more easy in
|
|
my mind she brought newspapers clamouring for my incarceration.
|
|
Since then I have had a conversation with the German Consul. He
|
|
said he had read a review of my Samoa book, and if the review were
|
|
fair, must regard it as an insult, and one that would have to be
|
|
resented. At the same time, I learn that letters addressed to the
|
|
German squadron lie for them here in the Post Office. Reports are
|
|
current of other English ships being on the way - I hope to
|
|
goodness yours will be among the number. And I gather from one
|
|
thing and another that there must be a holy row going on between
|
|
the powers at home, and that the issue (like all else connected
|
|
with Samoa) is on the knees of the gods. One thing, however, is
|
|
pretty sure - if that issue prove to be a German Protectorate, I
|
|
shall have to tramp. Can you give us any advice as to a fresh
|
|
field of energy? We have been searching the atlas, and it seems
|
|
difficult to fill the bill. How would Rarotonga do? I forget if
|
|
you have been there. The best of it is that my new house is going
|
|
up like winking, and I am dictating this letter to the
|
|
accompaniment of saws and hammers. A hundred black boys and about
|
|
a score draught-oxen perished, or at least barely escaped with
|
|
their lives, from the mud-holes on our road, bringing up the
|
|
materials. It will be a fine legacy to H.I.G.M.'s Protectorate,
|
|
and doubtless the Governor will take it for his country-house. The
|
|
Ringarooma people, by the way, seem very nice. I liked Stansfield
|
|
particularly.
|
|
|
|
Our middy has gone up to San Francisco in pursuit of the phantom
|
|
Education. We have good word of him, and I hope he will not be in
|
|
disgrace again, as he was when the hope of the British Navy - need
|
|
I say that I refer to Admiral Burney? - honoured us last. The next
|
|
time you come, as the new house will be finished, we shall be able
|
|
to offer you a bed. Nares and Meiklejohn may like to hear that our
|
|
new room is to be big enough to dance in. It will be a very
|
|
pleasant day for me to see the Curacoa in port again and at least a
|
|
proper contingent of her officers 'skipping in my 'all.'
|
|
|
|
We have just had a feast on my birthday at which we had three of
|
|
the Ringaromas, and I wish they had been three CURACOAS - say
|
|
yourself, Hoskin, and Burney the ever Great. (Consider this an
|
|
invitation.) Our boys had got the thing up regardless. There were
|
|
two huge sows - oh, brutes of animals that would have broken down a
|
|
hansom cab - four smaller pigs, two barrels of beef, and a horror
|
|
of vegetables and fowls. We sat down between forty and fifty in a
|
|
big new native house behind the kitchen that you have never seen,
|
|
and ate and public spoke till all was blue. Then we had about half
|
|
an hour's holiday with some beer and sherry and brandy and soda to
|
|
restrengthen the European heart, and then out to the old native
|
|
house to see a siva. Finally, all the guests were packed off in a
|
|
trackless black night and down a road that was rather fitted for
|
|
the CURACOA than any human pedestrian, though to be sure I do not
|
|
know the draught of the CURACOA. My ladies one and all desire to
|
|
be particularly remembered to our friends on board, and all look
|
|
forward, as I do myself, in the hope of your return. - Yours
|
|
sincerely,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
And let me hear from you again!
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO CHARLES BAXTER
|
|
|
|
1ST DEC. '92.
|
|
|
|
. . . I have a novel on the stocks to be called THE JUSTICE-CLERK.
|
|
It is pretty Scotch, the Grand Premier is taken from Braxfield -
|
|
(Oh, by the by, send me Cockburn's MEMORIALS) - and some of the
|
|
story is - well - queer. The heroine is seduced by one man, and
|
|
finally disappears with the other man who shot him. . . . Mind you,
|
|
I expect the JUSTICE-CLERK to be my masterpiece. My Braxfield is
|
|
already a thing of beauty and a joy for ever, and so far as he has
|
|
gone FAR my best character.
|
|
|
|
[LATER.]
|
|
|
|
Second thought. I wish Pitcairn's CRIMINAL TRIALS QUAM PRIMUM.
|
|
Also, an absolutely correct text of the Scots judiciary oath.
|
|
|
|
Also, in case Pitcairn does not come down late enough, I wish as
|
|
full a report as possible of a Scotch murder trial between 1790-
|
|
1820. Understand, THE FULLEST POSSIBLE.
|
|
|
|
Is there any book which would guide me as to the following facts?
|
|
|
|
The Justice-Clerk tries some people capitally on circuit. Certain
|
|
evidence cropping up, the charge is transferred to the J.-C.'s own
|
|
son. Of course, in the next trial the J.-C. is excluded, and the
|
|
case is called before the Lord-Justice General.
|
|
|
|
Where would this trial have to be? I fear in Edinburgh, which
|
|
would not suit my view. Could it be again at the circuit town?
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO MRS. JENKIN
|
|
|
|
DECEMBER 5TH, 1892.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR MRS. JENKIN, - . . . So much said, I come with guilty speed
|
|
to what more immediately concerns myself. Spare us a month or two
|
|
for old sake's sake, and make my wife and me happy and proud. We
|
|
are only fourteen days from San Francisco, just about a month from
|
|
Liverpool; we have our new house almost finished. The thing CAN be
|
|
done; I believe we can make you almost comfortable. It is the
|
|
loveliest climate in the world, our political troubles seem near an
|
|
end. It can be done, it must! Do, please, make a virtuous effort,
|
|
come and take a glimpse of a new world I am sure you do not dream
|
|
of, and some old friends who do often dream of your arrival.
|
|
|
|
Alas, I was just beginning to get eloquent, and there goes the
|
|
lunch bell, and after lunch I must make up the mail.
|
|
|
|
Do come. You must not come in February or March - bad months.
|
|
From April on it is delightful. - Your sincere friend,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO HENRY JAMES
|
|
|
|
DECEMBER 5TH, 1892.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR JAMES, - How comes it so great a silence has fallen? The
|
|
still small voice of self-approval whispers me it is not from me.
|
|
I have looked up my register, and find I have neither written to
|
|
you nor heard from you since June 22nd, on which day of grace that
|
|
invaluable work began. This is not as it should be. How to get
|
|
back? I remember acknowledging with rapture the - of the MASTER,
|
|
and I remember receiving MARBOT: was that our last relation?
|
|
|
|
Hey, well! anyway, as you may have probably gathered from the
|
|
papers, I have been in devilish hot water, and (what may be new to
|
|
you) devilish hard at work. In twelve calendar months I finished
|
|
THE WRECKER, wrote all of FALESA but the first chapter (well, much
|
|
of), the HISTORY OF SAMOA, did something here and there to my LIFE
|
|
OF MY GRANDFATHER, and began And Finished DAVID BALFOUR. What do
|
|
you think of it for a year? Since then I may say I have done
|
|
nothing beyond draft three chapters of another novel, THE JUSTICE-
|
|
CLERK, which ought to be shorter and a blower - at least if it
|
|
don't make a spoon, it will spoil the horn of an Aurochs (if that's
|
|
how it should be spelt).
|
|
|
|
On the hot water side it may entertain you to know that I have been
|
|
actually sentenced to deportation by my friends on Mulinuu, C. J.
|
|
Cedercrantz, and Baron Senfft von Pilsach. The awful doom,
|
|
however, declined to fall, owing to Circumstances over Which. I
|
|
only heard of it (so to speak) last night. I mean officially, but
|
|
I had walked among rumours. The whole tale will be some day put
|
|
into my hand, and I shall share it with humorous friends.
|
|
|
|
It is likely, however, by my judgment, that this epoch of gaiety in
|
|
Samoa will soon cease; and the fierce white light of history will
|
|
beat no longer on Yours Sincerely and his fellows here on the
|
|
beach. We ask ourselves whether the reason will more rejoice over
|
|
the end of a disgraceful business, or the unregenerate man more
|
|
sorrow over the stoppage of the fun. For, say what you please, it
|
|
has been a deeply interesting time. You don't know what news is,
|
|
nor what politics, nor what the life of man, till you see it on so
|
|
small a scale and with your own liberty on the board for stake. I
|
|
would not have missed it for much. And anxious friends beg me to
|
|
stay at home and study human nature in Brompton drawing-rooms!
|
|
FARCEURS! And anyway you know that such is not my talent. I could
|
|
never be induced to take the faintest interest in Brompton QUA
|
|
Brompton or a drawing-room QUA a drawing-room. I am an Epick
|
|
Writer with a k to it, but without the necessary genius.
|
|
|
|
Hurry up with another book of stories. I am now reduced to two of
|
|
my contemporaries, you and Barrie - O, and Kipling - you and Barrie
|
|
and Kipling are now my Muses Three. And with Kipling, as you know,
|
|
there are reservations to be made. And you and Barrie don't write
|
|
enough. I should say I also read Anstey when he is serious, and
|
|
can almost always get a happy day out of Marion Crawford - CE N'EST
|
|
PAS TOUJOURS LA GUERRE, but it's got life to it and guts, and it
|
|
moves. Did you read the WITCH OF PRAGUE? Nobody could read it
|
|
twice, of course; and the first time even it was necessary to skip.
|
|
E PUR SI MUOVE. But Barrie is a beauty, the LITTLE MINISTER and
|
|
the WINDOW IN THRUMS, eh? Stuff in that young man; but he must see
|
|
and not be too funny. Genius in him, but there's a journalist at
|
|
his elbow - there's the risk. Look, what a page is the glove
|
|
business in the WINDOW! knocks a man flat; that's guts, if you
|
|
please.
|
|
|
|
Why have I wasted the little time that is left with a sort of naked
|
|
review article? I don't know, I'm sure. I suppose a mere
|
|
ebullition of congested literary talk I am beginning to think a
|
|
visit from friends would be due. Wish you could come!
|
|
|
|
Let us have your news anyway, and forgive this silly stale
|
|
effusion. - Yours ever,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO J. M. BARRIE
|
|
|
|
[VAILIMA, DECEMBER 1892.]
|
|
|
|
DEAR J. M. BARRIE, - You will be sick of me soon; I cannot help it.
|
|
I have been off my work for some time, and re-read the EDINBURGH
|
|
ELEVEN, and had a great mind to write a parody and give you all
|
|
your sauce back again, and see how you would like it yourself. And
|
|
then I read (for the first time - I know not how) the WINDOW IN
|
|
THRUMS; I don't say that it is better than THE MINISTER; it's less
|
|
of a tale - and there is a beauty, a material beauty, of the tale
|
|
IPSE, which clever critics nowadays long and love to forget; it has
|
|
more real flaws; but somehow it is - well, I read it last anyway,
|
|
and it's by Barrie. And he's the man for my money. The glove is a
|
|
great page; it is startlingly original, and as true as death and
|
|
judgment. Tibbie Birse in the Burial is great, but I think it was
|
|
a journalist that got in the word 'official.' The same character
|
|
plainly had a word to say to Thomas Haggard. Thomas affects me as
|
|
a lie - I beg your pardon; doubtless he was somebody you knew, that
|
|
leads people so far astray. The actual is not the true.
|
|
|
|
I am proud to think you are a Scotchman - though to be sure I know
|
|
nothing of that country, being only an English tourist, quo' Gavin
|
|
Ogilvy. I commend the hard case of Mr. Gavin Ogilvy to J. M.
|
|
Barrie, whose work is to me a source of living pleasure and
|
|
heartfelt national pride. There are two of us now that the Shirra
|
|
might have patted on the head. And please do not think when I thus
|
|
seem to bracket myself with you, that I am wholly blinded with
|
|
vanity. Jess is beyond my frontier line; I could not touch her
|
|
skirt; I have no such glamour of twilight on my pen. I am a
|
|
capable artist; but it begins to look to me as if you were a man of
|
|
genius. Take care of yourself, for my sake. It's a devilish hard
|
|
thing for a man who writes so many novels as I do, that I should
|
|
get so few to read. And I can read yours, and I love them.
|
|
|
|
A pity for you that my amanuensis is not on stock to-day, and my
|
|
own hand perceptibly worse than usual. - Yours,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
DECEMBER 5TH, 1892.
|
|
|
|
P.S. - They tell me your health is not strong. Man, come out here
|
|
and try the Prophet's chamber. There's only one bad point to us -
|
|
we do rise early. The Amanuensis states that you are a lover of
|
|
silence - and that ours is a noisy house - and she is a chatterbox
|
|
- I am not answerable for these statements, though I do think there
|
|
is a touch of garrulity about my premises. We have so little to
|
|
talk about, you see. The house is three miles from town, in the
|
|
midst of great silent forests. There is a burn close by, and when
|
|
we are not talking you can hear the burn, and the birds, and the
|
|
sea breaking on the coast three miles away and six hundred feet
|
|
below us, and about three times a month a bell - I don't know where
|
|
the bell is, nor who rings it; it may be the bell in Hans
|
|
Andersen's story for all I know. It is never hot here - 86 in the
|
|
shade is about our hottest - and it is never cold except just in
|
|
the early mornings. Take it for all in all, I suppose this island
|
|
climate to be by far the healthiest in the world - even the
|
|
influenza entirely lost its sting. Only two patients died, and one
|
|
was a man nearly eighty, and the other a child below four months.
|
|
I won't tell you if it is beautiful, for I want you to come here
|
|
and see for yourself. Everybody on the premises except my wife has
|
|
some Scotch blood in their veins - I beg your pardon - except the
|
|
natives - and then my wife is a Dutchwoman - and the natives are
|
|
the next thing conceivable to Highlanders before the forty-five.
|
|
We would have some grand cracks!
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
|
|
|
|
COME, it will broaden your mind, and be the making of me.
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XII - LIFE IN SAMOA, CONTINUED, JANUARY 1893-DECEMBER 1894
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO CHARLES BAXTER
|
|
|
|
[APRIL, 1893.]
|
|
|
|
. . . About THE JUSTICE-CLERK, I long to go at it, but will first
|
|
try to get a short story done. Since January I have had two severe
|
|
illnesses, my boy, and some heart-breaking anxiety over Fanny; and
|
|
am only now convalescing. I came down to dinner last night for the
|
|
first time, and that only because the service had broken down, and
|
|
to relieve an inexperienced servant. Nearly four months now I have
|
|
rested my brains; and if it be true that rest is good for brains, I
|
|
ought to be able to pitch in like a giant refreshed. Before the
|
|
autumn, I hope to send you some JUSTICE-CLERK, or WEIR OF
|
|
HERMISTON, as Colvin seems to prefer; I own to indecision.
|
|
Received SYNTAX, DANCE OF DEATH, and PITCAIRN, which last I have
|
|
read from end to end since its arrival, with vast improvement.
|
|
What a pity it stops so soon! I wonder is there nothing that seems
|
|
to prolong the series? Why doesn't some young man take it up? How
|
|
about my old friend Fountainhall's DECISIONS? I remember as a boy
|
|
that there was some good reading there. Perhaps you could borrow
|
|
me that, and send it on loan; and perhaps Laing's MEMORIALS
|
|
therewith; and a work I'm ashamed to say I have never read,
|
|
BALFOUR'S LETTERS. . . . I have come by accident, through a
|
|
correspondent, on one very curious and interesting fact - namely,
|
|
that Stevenson was one of the names adopted by the MacGregors at
|
|
the proscription. The details supplied by my correspondent are
|
|
both convincing and amusing; but it would be highly interesting to
|
|
find out more of this.
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO A. CONAN DOYLE
|
|
|
|
VAILIMA, APIA, SAMOA, APRIL 5TH, 1893.
|
|
|
|
DEAR SIR, - You have taken many occasions to make yourself very
|
|
agreeable to me, for which I might in decency have thanked you
|
|
earlier. It is now my turn; and I hope you will allow me to offer
|
|
you my compliments on your very ingenious and very interesting
|
|
adventures of Sherlock Holmes. That is the class of literature
|
|
that I like when I have the toothache. As a matter of fact, it was
|
|
a pleurisy I was enjoying when I took the volume up; and it will
|
|
interest you as a medical man to know that the cure was for the
|
|
moment effectual. Only the one thing troubles me: can this be my
|
|
old friend Joe Bell? - I am, yours very truly,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
P.S. - And lo, here is your address supplied me here in Samoa! But
|
|
do not take mine, O frolic fellow Spookist, from the same source;
|
|
mine is wrong.
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO S. R. CROCKETT
|
|
|
|
VAILIMA, SAMOA, MAY 17TH, 1893.
|
|
|
|
DEAR MR. CROCKETT, - I do not owe you two letters, nor yet nearly
|
|
one, sir! The last time I heard of you, you wrote about an
|
|
accident, and I sent you a letter to my lawyer, Charles Baxter,
|
|
which does not seem to have been presented, as I see nothing of it
|
|
in his accounts. Query, was that lost? I should not like you to
|
|
think I had been so unmannerly and so inhuman. If you have written
|
|
since, your letter also has miscarried, as is much the rule in this
|
|
part of the world, unless you register.
|
|
|
|
Your book is not yet to hand, but will probably follow next month.
|
|
I detected you early in the BOOKMAN, which I usually see, and noted
|
|
you in particular as displaying a monstrous ingratitude about the
|
|
footnote. Well, mankind is ungrateful; 'Man's ingratitude to man
|
|
makes countless thousands mourn,' quo' Rab - or words to that
|
|
effect. By the way, an anecdote of a cautious sailor: 'Bill,
|
|
Bill,' says I to him, 'OR WORDS TO THAT EFFECT.'
|
|
|
|
I shall never take that walk by the Fisher's Tryst and Glencorse.
|
|
I shall never see Auld Reekie. I shall never set my foot again
|
|
upon the heather. Here I am until I die, and here will I be
|
|
buried. The word is out and the doom written. Or, if I do come,
|
|
it will be a voyage to a further goal, and in fact a suicide;
|
|
which, however, if I could get my family all fixed up in the money
|
|
way, I might, perhaps, perform, or attempt. But there is a plaguey
|
|
risk of breaking down by the way; and I believe I shall stay here
|
|
until the end comes like a good boy, as I am. If I did it, I
|
|
should put upon my trunks: 'Passenger to - Hades.' How strangely
|
|
wrong your information is! In the first place, I should never
|
|
carry a novel to Sydney; I should post it from here. In the second
|
|
place, WEIR OF HERMISTON is as yet scarce begun. It's going to be
|
|
excellent, no doubt; but it consists of about twenty pages. I have
|
|
a tale, a shortish tale in length, but it has proved long to do,
|
|
THE EBB TIDE, some part of which goes home this mail. It is by me
|
|
and Mr. Osbourne, and is really a singular work. There are only
|
|
four characters, and three of them are bandits - well, two of them
|
|
are, and the third is their comrade and accomplice. It sounds
|
|
cheering, doesn't it? Barratry, and drunkenness, and vitriol, and
|
|
I cannot tell you all what, are the beams of the roof. And yet - I
|
|
don't know - I sort of think there's something in it. You'll see
|
|
(which is more than I ever can) whether Davis and Attwater come off
|
|
or not.
|
|
|
|
WEIR OF HERMISTON is a much greater undertaking, and the plot is
|
|
not good, I fear; but Lord Justice-Clerk Hermiston ought to be a
|
|
plum. Of other schemes, more or less executed, it skills not to
|
|
speak.
|
|
|
|
I am glad to hear so good an account of your activity and
|
|
interests, and shall always hear from you with pleasure; though I
|
|
am, and must continue, a mere sprite of the inkbottle, unseen in
|
|
the flesh. Please remember me to your wife and to the four-year-
|
|
old sweetheart, if she be not too engrossed with higher matters.
|
|
Do you know where the road crosses the burn under Glencorse Church?
|
|
Go there, and say a prayer for me: MORITURUS SALUTAT. See that
|
|
it's a sunny day; I would like it to be a Sunday, but that's not
|
|
possible in the premises; and stand on the right-hand bank just
|
|
where the road goes down into the water, and shut your eyes, and if
|
|
I don't appear to you! well, it can't be helped, and will be
|
|
extremely funny.
|
|
|
|
I have no concern here but to work and to keep an eye on this
|
|
distracted people. I live just now wholly alone in an upper room
|
|
of my house, because the whole family are down with influenza, bar
|
|
my wife and myself. I get my horse up sometimes in the afternoon
|
|
and have a ride in the woods; and I sit here and smoke and write,
|
|
and rewrite, and destroy, and rage at my own impotence, from six in
|
|
the morning till eight at night, with trifling and not always
|
|
agreeable intervals for meals.
|
|
|
|
I am sure you chose wisely to keep your country charge. There a
|
|
minister can be something, not in a town. In a town, the most of
|
|
them are empty houses - and public speakers. Why should you
|
|
suppose your book will be slated because you have no friends? A
|
|
new writer, if he is any good, will be acclaimed generally with
|
|
more noise than he deserves. But by this time you will know for
|
|
certain. - I am, yours sincerely,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
P.S. - Be it known to this fluent generation that I R. L. S., in
|
|
the forty-third of my age and the twentieth of my professional
|
|
life, wrote twenty-four pages in twenty-one days, working from six
|
|
to eleven, and again in the afternoon from two to four or so,
|
|
without fail or interruption. Such are the gifts the gods have
|
|
endowed us withal: such was the facility of this prolific writer!
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO AUGUSTUS ST. GAUDENS
|
|
|
|
VAILIMA, SAMOA, MAY 29TH, 1893
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR GOD-LIKE SCULPTOR, - I wish in the most delicate manner in
|
|
the world to insinuate a few commissions:-
|
|
|
|
No. 1. Is for a couple of copies of my medallion, as gilt-edged and
|
|
high-toned as it is possible to make them. One is for our house
|
|
here, and should be addressed as above. The other is for my friend
|
|
Sidney Colvin, and should be addressed - Sidney Colvin, Esq.,
|
|
Keeper of the Print Room, British Museum, London.
|
|
|
|
No. 2. This is a rather large order, and demands some explanation.
|
|
Our house is lined with varnished wood of a dark ruddy colour, very
|
|
beautiful to see; at the same time, it calls very much for gold;
|
|
there is a limit to picture frames, and really you know there has
|
|
to be a limit to the pictures you put inside of them. Accordingly,
|
|
we have had an idea of a certain kind of decoration, which, I
|
|
think, you might help us to make practical. What we want is an
|
|
alphabet of gilt letters (very much such as people play with), and
|
|
all mounted on spikes like drawing-pins; say two spikes to each
|
|
letter, one at top, and one at bottom. Say that they were this
|
|
height,
|
|
|
|
I
|
|
I
|
|
I
|
|
|
|
and that you chose a model of some really exquisitely fine, clear
|
|
type from some Roman monument, and that they were made either of
|
|
metal or some composition gilt - the point is, could not you, in
|
|
your land of wooden houses, get a manufacturer to take the idea and
|
|
manufacture them at a venture, so that I could get two or three
|
|
hundred pieces or so at a moderate figure? You see, suppose you
|
|
entertain an honoured guest, when he goes he leaves his name in
|
|
gilt letters on your walls; an infinity of fun and decoration can
|
|
be got out of hospitable and festive mottoes; and the doors of
|
|
every room can be beautified by the legend of their names. I
|
|
really think there is something in the idea, and you might be able
|
|
to push it with the brutal and licentious manufacturer, using my
|
|
name if necessary, though I should think the name of the god-like
|
|
sculptor would be more germane. In case you should get it started,
|
|
I should tell you that we should require commas in order to write
|
|
the Samoan language, which is full of words written thus: la'u,
|
|
ti'e ti'e. As the Samoan language uses but a very small proportion
|
|
of the consonants, we should require a double or treble stock of
|
|
all vowels and of F, G, L, U, N, P, S, T, and V.
|
|
|
|
The other day in Sydney, I think you might be interested to hear, I
|
|
was sculpt a second time by a man called -, as well as I can
|
|
remember and read. I mustn't criticise a present, and he had very
|
|
little time to do it in. It is thought by my family to be an
|
|
excellent likeness of Mark Twain. This poor fellow, by the by, met
|
|
with the devil of an accident. A model of a statue which he had
|
|
just finished with a desperate effort was smashed to smithereens on
|
|
its way to exhibition.
|
|
|
|
Please be sure and let me know if anything is likely to come of
|
|
this letter business, and the exact cost of each letter, so that I
|
|
may count the cost before ordering. - Yours sincerely,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO EDMUND GOSSE
|
|
|
|
JUNE 10TH, 1893.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR GOSSE, - My mother tells me you never received the very
|
|
long and careful letter that I sent you more than a year ago; or is
|
|
it two years?
|
|
|
|
I was indeed so much surprised at your silence that I wrote to
|
|
Henry James and begged him to inquire if you had received it; his
|
|
reply was an (if possible) higher power of the same silence;
|
|
whereupon I bowed my head and acquiesced. But there is no doubt
|
|
the letter was written and sent; and I am sorry it was lost, for it
|
|
contained, among other things, an irrecoverable criticism of your
|
|
father's LIFE, with a number of suggestions for another edition,
|
|
which struck me at the time as excellent.
|
|
|
|
Well, suppose we call that cried off, and begin as before? It is
|
|
fortunate indeed that we can do so, being both for a while longer
|
|
in the day. But, alas! when I see 'works of the late J. A. S.,' I
|
|
can see no help and no reconciliation possible. I wrote him a
|
|
letter, I think, three years ago, heard in some roundabout way that
|
|
he had received it, waited in vain for an answer (which had
|
|
probably miscarried), and in a humour between frowns and smiles
|
|
wrote to him no more. And now the strange, poignant, pathetic,
|
|
brilliant creature is gone into the night, and the voice is silent
|
|
that uttered so much excellent discourse; and I am sorry that I did
|
|
not write to him again. Yet I am glad for him; light lie the turf!
|
|
The SATURDAY is the only obituary I have seen, and I thought it
|
|
very good upon the whole. I should be half tempted to write an IN
|
|
MEMORIAM, but I am submerged with other work. Are you going to do
|
|
it? I very much admire your efforts that way; you are our only
|
|
academician.
|
|
|
|
So you have tried fiction? I will tell you the truth: when I saw
|
|
it announced, I was so sure you would send it to me, that I did not
|
|
order it! But the order goes this mail, and I will give you news
|
|
of it. Yes, honestly, fiction is very difficult; it is a terrible
|
|
strain to CARRY your characters all that time. And the difficulty
|
|
of according the narrative and the dialogue (in a work in the third
|
|
person) is extreme. That is one reason out of half a dozen why I
|
|
so often prefer the first. It is much in my mind just now, because
|
|
of my last work, just off the stocks three days ago, THE EBB TIDE:
|
|
a dreadful, grimy business in the third person, where the strain
|
|
between a vilely realistic dialogue and a narrative style pitched
|
|
about (in phrase) 'four notes higher' than it should have been, has
|
|
sown my head with grey hairs; or I believe so - if my head escaped,
|
|
my heart has them.
|
|
|
|
The truth is, I have a little lost my way, and stand bemused at the
|
|
cross-roads. A subject? Ay, I have dozens; I have at least four
|
|
novels begun, they are none good enough; and the mill waits, and
|
|
I'll have to take second best. THE EBB TIDE I make the world a
|
|
present of; I expect, and, I suppose, deserve to be torn to pieces;
|
|
but there was all that good work lying useless, and I had to finish
|
|
it!
|
|
|
|
All your news of your family is pleasant to hear. My wife has been
|
|
very ill, but is now better; I may say I am ditto, THE EBB TIDE
|
|
having left me high and dry, which is a good example of the mixed
|
|
metaphor. Our home, and estate, and our boys, and the politics of
|
|
the island, keep us perpetually amused and busy; and I grind away
|
|
with an odd, dogged, down sensation - and an idea IN PETTO that the
|
|
game is about played out. I have got too realistic, and I must
|
|
break the trammels - I mean I would if I could; but the yoke is
|
|
heavy. I saw with amusement that Zola says the same thing; and
|
|
truly the DEBACLE was a mighty big book, I have no need for a
|
|
bigger, though the last part is a mere mistake in my opinion. But
|
|
the Emperor, and Sedan, and the doctor at the ambulance, and the
|
|
horses in the field of battle, Lord, how gripped it is! What an
|
|
epical performance! According to my usual opinion, I believe I
|
|
could go over that book and leave a masterpiece by blotting and no
|
|
ulterior art. But that is an old story, ever new with me. Taine
|
|
gone, and Renan, and Symonds, and Tennyson, and Browning; the suns
|
|
go swiftly out, and I see no suns to follow, nothing but a
|
|
universal twilight of the demi-divinities, with parties like you
|
|
and me and Lang beating on toy drums and playing on penny whistles
|
|
about glow-worms. But Zola is big anyway; he has plenty in his
|
|
belly; too much, that is all; he wrote the DEBACLE and he wrote LA
|
|
BETE HUMAINE, perhaps the most excruciatingly silly book that I
|
|
ever read to an end. And why did I read it to an end, W. E. G.?
|
|
Because the animal in me was interested in the lewdness. Not
|
|
sincerely, of course, my mind refusing to partake in it; but the
|
|
flesh was slightly pleased. And when it was done, I cast it from
|
|
me with a peal of laughter, and forgot it, as I would forget a
|
|
Montepin. Taine is to me perhaps the chief of these losses; I did
|
|
luxuriate in his ORIGINES; it was something beyond literature, not
|
|
quite so good, if you please, but so much more systematic, and the
|
|
pages that had to be 'written' always so adequate. Robespierre,
|
|
Napoleon, were both excellent good.
|
|
|
|
JUNE 18TH, '93
|
|
|
|
Well, I have left fiction wholly, and gone to my GRANDFATHER, and
|
|
on the whole found peace. By next month my GRANDFATHER will begin
|
|
to be quite grown up. I have already three chapters about as good
|
|
as done; by which, of course, as you know, I mean till further
|
|
notice or the next discovery. I like biography far better than
|
|
fiction myself: fiction is too free. In biography you have your
|
|
little handful of facts, little bits of a puzzle, and you sit and
|
|
think, and fit 'em together this way and that, and get up and throw
|
|
'em down, and say damn, and go out for a walk. And it's real
|
|
soothing; and when done, gives an idea of finish to the writer that
|
|
is very peaceful. Of course, it's not really so finished as quite
|
|
a rotten novel; it always has and always must have the incurable
|
|
illogicalities of life about it, the fathoms of slack and the miles
|
|
of tedium. Still, that's where the fun comes in; and when you have
|
|
at last managed to shut up the castle spectre (dulness), the very
|
|
outside of his door looks beautiful by contrast. There are pages
|
|
in these books that may seem nothing to the reader; but you
|
|
REMEMBER WHAT THEY WERE, YOU KNOW WHAT THEY MIGHT HAVE BEEN, and
|
|
they seem to you witty beyond comparison. In my GRANDFATHER I've
|
|
had (for instance) to give up the temporal order almost entirely;
|
|
doubtless the temporal order is the great foe of the biographer; it
|
|
is so tempting, so easy, and lo! there you are in the bog! - Ever
|
|
yours,
|
|
|
|
R. L. STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
With all kind messages from self and wife to you and yours. My
|
|
wife is very much better, having been the early part of this year
|
|
alarmingly ill. She is now all right, only complaining of trifles,
|
|
annoying to her, but happily not interesting to her friends. I am
|
|
in a hideous state, having stopped drink and smoking; yes, both.
|
|
No wine, no tobacco; and the dreadful part of it is that - looking
|
|
forward - I have - what shall I say? - nauseating intimations that
|
|
it ought to be for ever.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO HENRY JAMES
|
|
|
|
VAILIMA PLANTATION, SAMOAN ISLANDS, JUNE 17TH, 1893.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR HENRY JAMES, - I believe I have neglected a mail in
|
|
answering yours. You will be very sorry to hear that my wife was
|
|
exceedingly ill, and very glad to hear that she is better. I
|
|
cannot say that I feel any more anxiety about her. We shall send
|
|
you a photograph of her taken in Sydney in her customary island
|
|
habit as she walks and gardens and shrilly drills her brown
|
|
assistants. She was very ill when she sat for it, which may a
|
|
little explain the appearance of the photograph. It reminds me of
|
|
a friend of my grandmother's who used to say when talking to
|
|
younger women, 'Aweel, when I was young, I wasnae just exactly what
|
|
ye wad call BONNY, but I was pale, penetratin', and interestin'.'
|
|
I would not venture to hint that Fanny is 'no bonny,' but there is
|
|
no doubt but that in this presentment she is 'pale, penetratin',
|
|
and interesting.'
|
|
|
|
As you are aware, I have been wading deep waters and contending
|
|
with the great ones of the earth, not wholly without success. It
|
|
is, you may be interested to hear, a dreary and infuriating
|
|
business. If you can get the fools to admit one thing, they will
|
|
always save their face by denying another. If you can induce them
|
|
to take a step to the right hand, they generally indemnify
|
|
themselves by cutting a caper to the left. I always held (upon no
|
|
evidence whatever, from a mere sentiment or intuition) that
|
|
politics was the dirtiest, the most foolish, and the most random of
|
|
human employments. I always held, but now I know it! Fortunately,
|
|
you have nothing to do with anything of the kind, and I may spare
|
|
you the horror of further details.
|
|
|
|
I received from you a book by a man by the name of Anatole France.
|
|
Why should I disguise it? I have no use for Anatole. He writes
|
|
very prettily, and then afterwards? Baron Marbot was a different
|
|
pair of shoes. So likewise is the Baron de Vitrolles, whom I am
|
|
now perusing with delight. His escape in 1814 is one of the best
|
|
pages I remember anywhere to have read. But Marbot and Vitrolles
|
|
are dead, and what has become of the living? It seems as if
|
|
literature were coming to a stand. I am sure it is with me; and I
|
|
am sure everybody will say so when they have the privilege of
|
|
reading THE EBB TIDE. My dear man, the grimness of that story is
|
|
not to be depicted in words. There are only four characters, to be
|
|
sure, but they are such a troop of swine! And their behaviour is
|
|
really so deeply beneath any possible standard, that on a
|
|
retrospect I wonder I have been able to endure them myself until
|
|
the yarn was finished. Well, there is always one thing; it will
|
|
serve as a touchstone. If the admirers of Zola admire him for his
|
|
pertinent ugliness and pessimism, I think they should admire this;
|
|
but if, as I have long suspected, they neither admire nor
|
|
understand the man's art, and only wallow in his rancidness like a
|
|
hound in offal, then they will certainly be disappointed in THE EBB
|
|
TIDE. ALAS! poor little tale, it is not EVEN rancid.
|
|
|
|
By way of an antidote or febrifuge, I am going on at a great rate
|
|
with my HISTORY OF THE STEVENSONS, which I hope may prove rather
|
|
amusing, in some parts at least. The excess of materials weighs
|
|
upon me. My grandfather is a delightful comedy part; and I have to
|
|
treat him besides as a serious and (in his way) a heroic figure,
|
|
and at times I lose my way, and I fear in the end will blur the
|
|
effect. However, A LA GRACE DE DIEU! I'll make a spoon or spoil a
|
|
horn. You see, I have to do the Building of the Bell Rock by
|
|
cutting down and packing my grandsire's book, which I rather hope I
|
|
have done, but do not know. And it makes a huge chunk of a very
|
|
different style and quality between Chapters II. and IV. And it
|
|
can't be helped! It is just a delightful and exasperating
|
|
necessity. You know, the stuff is really excellent narrative:
|
|
only, perhaps there's too much of it! There is the rub. Well,
|
|
well, it will be plain to you that my mind is affected; it might be
|
|
with less. THE EBB TIDE and NORTHERN LIGHTS are a full meal for
|
|
any plain man.
|
|
|
|
I have written and ordered your last book, THE REAL THING, so be
|
|
sure and don't send it. What else are you doing or thinking of
|
|
doing? News I have none, and don't want any. I have had to stop
|
|
all strong drink and all tobacco, and am now in a transition state
|
|
between the two, which seems to be near madness. You never smoked,
|
|
I think, so you can never taste the joys of stopping it. But at
|
|
least you have drunk, and you can enter perhaps into my annoyance
|
|
when I suddenly find a glass of claret or a brandy-and-water give
|
|
me a splitting headache the next morning. No mistake about it;
|
|
drink anything, and there's your headache. Tobacco just as bad for
|
|
me. If I live through this breach of habit, I shall be a white-
|
|
livered puppy indeed. Actually I am so made, or so twisted, that I
|
|
do not like to think of a life without the red wine on the table
|
|
and the tobacco with its lovely little coal of fire. It doesn't
|
|
amuse me from a distance. I may find it the Garden of Eden when I
|
|
go in, but I don't like the colour of the gate-posts. Suppose
|
|
somebody said to you, you are to leave your home, and your books,
|
|
and your clubs, and go out and camp in mid-Africa, and command an
|
|
expedition, you would howl, and kick, and flee. I think the same
|
|
of a life without wine and tobacco; and if this goes on, I've got
|
|
to go and do it, sir, in the living flesh!
|
|
|
|
I thought Bourget was a friend of yours? And I thought the French
|
|
were a polite race? He has taken my dedication with a stately
|
|
silence that has surprised me into apoplexy. Did I go and dedicate
|
|
my book to the nasty alien, and the 'norrid Frenchman, and the
|
|
Bloody Furrineer? Well, I wouldn't do it again; and unless his
|
|
case is susceptible of explanation, you might perhaps tell him so
|
|
over the walnuts and the wine, by way of speeding the gay hours.
|
|
Sincerely, I thought my dedication worth a letter.
|
|
|
|
If anything be worth anything here below! Do you know the story of
|
|
the man who found a button in his hash, and called the waiter?
|
|
'What do you call that?' says he. 'Well,' said the waiter, 'what
|
|
d'you expect? Expect to find a gold watch and chain?' Heavenly
|
|
apologue, is it not? I expected (rather) to find a gold watch and
|
|
chain; I expected to be able to smoke to excess and drink to
|
|
comfort all the days of my life; and I am still indignantly staring
|
|
on this button! It's not even a button; it's a teetotal badge! -
|
|
Ever yours,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO HENRY JAMES
|
|
|
|
APIA, JULY 1893.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR HENRY JAMES, - Yes. LES TROPHEES, on the whole, a book.
|
|
It is excellent; but is it a life's work? I always suspect YOU of
|
|
a volume of sonnets up your sleeve; when is it coming down? I am
|
|
in one of my moods of wholesale impatience with all fiction and all
|
|
verging on it, reading instead, with rapture, FOUNTAINHALL'S
|
|
DECISIONS. You never read it: well, it hasn't much form, and is
|
|
inexpressibly dreary, I should suppose, to others - and even to me
|
|
for pages. It's like walking in a mine underground, and with a
|
|
damned bad lantern, and picking out pieces of ore. This, and war,
|
|
will be my excuse for not having read your (doubtless) charming
|
|
work of fiction. The revolving year will bring me round to it; and
|
|
I know, when fiction shall begin to feel a little SOLID to me
|
|
again, that I shall love it, because it's James. Do you know, when
|
|
I am in this mood, I would rather try to read a bad book? It's not
|
|
so disappointing, anyway. And FOUNTAINHALL is prime, two big folio
|
|
volumes, and all dreary, and all true, and all as terse as an
|
|
obituary; and about one interesting fact on an average in twenty
|
|
pages, and ten of them unintelligible for technicalities. There's
|
|
literature, if you like! It feeds; it falls about you genuine like
|
|
rain. Rain: nobody has done justice to rain in literature yet:
|
|
surely a subject for a Scot. But then you can't do rain in that
|
|
ledger-book style that I am trying for - or between a ledger-book
|
|
and an old ballad. How to get over, how to escape from, the
|
|
besotting PARTICULARITY of fiction. 'Roland approached the house;
|
|
it had green doors and window blinds; and there was a scraper on
|
|
the upper step.' To hell with Roland and the scraper! - Yours
|
|
ever,
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO A. CONAN DOYLE
|
|
|
|
VAILIMA, JULY 12, 1893.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR DR. CONAN DOYLE, - The WHITE COMPANY has not yet turned up;
|
|
but when it does - which I suppose will be next mail - you shall
|
|
hear news of me. I have a great talent for compliment, accompanied
|
|
by a hateful, even a diabolic frankness.
|
|
|
|
Delighted to hear I have a chance of seeing you and Mrs. Doyle;
|
|
Mrs. Stevenson bids me say (what is too true) that our rations are
|
|
often spare. Are you Great Eaters? Please reply.
|
|
|
|
As to ways and means, here is what you will have to do. Leave San
|
|
Francisco by the down mail, get off at Samoa, and twelve days or a
|
|
fortnight later, you can continue your journey to Auckland per
|
|
Upolu, which will give you a look at Tonga and possibly Fiji by the
|
|
way. Make this a FIRST PART OF YOUR PLANS. A fortnight, even of
|
|
Vailima diet, could kill nobody.
|
|
|
|
We are in the midst of war here; rather a nasty business, with the
|
|
head-taking; and there seem signs of other trouble. But I believe
|
|
you need make no change in your design to visit us. All should be
|
|
well over; and if it were not, why! you need not leave the steamer.
|
|
- Yours very truly,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO CHARLES BAXTER
|
|
|
|
19TH JULY '93.
|
|
|
|
. . . We are in the thick of war - see ILLUSTRATED LONDON NEWS - we
|
|
have only two outside boys left to us. Nothing is doing, and PER
|
|
CONTRA little paying. . . My life here is dear; but I can live
|
|
within my income for a time at least - so long as my prices keep up
|
|
- and it seems a clear duty to waste none of it on gadding about. .
|
|
. . My life of my family fills up intervals, and should be an
|
|
excellent book when it is done, but big, damnably big.
|
|
|
|
My dear old man, I perceive by a thousand signs that we grow old,
|
|
and are soon to pass away! I hope with dignity; if not, with
|
|
courage at least. I am myself very ready; or would be - will be -
|
|
when I have made a little money for my folks. The blows that have
|
|
fallen upon you are truly terrifying; I wish you strength to bear
|
|
them. It is strange, I must seem to you to blaze in a Birmingham
|
|
prosperity and happiness; and to myself I seem a failure. The
|
|
truth is, I have never got over the last influenza yet, and am
|
|
miserably out of heart and out of kilter. Lungs pretty right,
|
|
stomach nowhere, spirits a good deal overshadowed; but we'll come
|
|
through it yet, and cock our bonnets. (I confess with sorrow that
|
|
I am not yet quite sure about the INTELLECTS; but I hope it is only
|
|
one of my usual periods of non-work. They are more unbearable now,
|
|
because I cannot rest. NO REST BUT THE GRAVE FOR SIR WALTER! O
|
|
the words ring in a man's head.)
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO A. CONAN DOYLE
|
|
|
|
VAILIMA, AUGUST 23RD, 1893.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR DR. CONAN DOYLE, - I am reposing after a somewhat severe
|
|
experience upon which I think it my duty to report to you.
|
|
Immediately after dinner this evening it occurred to me to re-
|
|
narrate to my native overseer Simele your story of THE ENGINEER'S
|
|
THUMB. And, sir, I have done it. It was necessary, I need hardly
|
|
say, to go somewhat farther afield than you have done. To explain
|
|
(for instance) what a railway is, what a steam hammer, what a coach
|
|
and horse, what coining, what a criminal, and what the police. I
|
|
pass over other and no less necessary explanations. But I did
|
|
actually succeed; and if you could have seen the drawn, anxious
|
|
features and the bright, feverish eyes of Simele, you would have
|
|
(for the moment at least) tasted glory. You might perhaps think
|
|
that, were you to come to Samoa, you might be introduced as the
|
|
Author of THE ENGINEER'S THUMB. Disabuse yourself. They do not
|
|
know what it is to make up a story. THE ENGINEER'S THUMB (God
|
|
forgive me) was narrated as a piece of actual and factual history.
|
|
Nay, and more, I who write to you have had the indiscretion to
|
|
perpetrate a trifling piece of fiction entitled THE BOTTLE IMP.
|
|
Parties who come up to visit my unpretentious mansion, after having
|
|
admired the ceilings by Vanderputty and the tapestry by Gobbling,
|
|
manifest towards the end a certain uneasiness which proves them to
|
|
be fellows of an infinite delicacy. They may be seen to shrug a
|
|
brown shoulder, to roll up a speaking eye, and at last secret
|
|
bursts from them: 'Where is the bottle?' Alas, my friends (I feel
|
|
tempted to say), you will find it by the Engineer's Thumb! Talofa-
|
|
soifuia.
|
|
|
|
Oa'u, O lau no moni, O Tusitala.
|
|
|
|
More commonly known as,
|
|
|
|
R. L. STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Have read the REFUGEES; Conde and old P. Murat very good; Louis
|
|
XIV. and Louvois with the letter bag very rich. You have reached a
|
|
trifle wide perhaps; too MANY celebrities? Though I was delighted
|
|
to re-encounter my old friend Du Chaylu. Old Murat is perhaps your
|
|
high water mark; 'tis excellently human, cheerful and real. Do it
|
|
again. Madame de Maintenon struck me as quite good. Have you any
|
|
document for the decapitation? It sounds steepish. The devil of
|
|
all that first part is that you see old Dumas; yet your Louis XIV.
|
|
is DISTINCTLY GOOD. I am much interested with this book, which
|
|
fulfils a good deal, and promises more. Question: How far a
|
|
Historical Novel should be wholly episodic? I incline to that
|
|
view, with trembling. I shake hands with you on old Murat.
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO GEORGE MEREDITH
|
|
|
|
SEPT. 5TH, 1893, VAILIMA PLANTATION, UPOLU, SAMOA.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR MEREDITH, - I have again and again taken up the pen to
|
|
write to you, and many beginnings have gone into the waste paper
|
|
basket (I have one now - for the second time in my life - and feel
|
|
a big man on the strength of it). And no doubt it requires some
|
|
decision to break so long a silence. My health is vastly restored,
|
|
and I am now living patriarchally in this place six hundred feet
|
|
above the sea on the shoulder of a mountain of 1500. Behind me,
|
|
the unbroken bush slopes up to the backbone of the island (3 to
|
|
4000) without a house, with no inhabitants save a few runaway black
|
|
boys, wild pigs and cattle, and wild doves and flying foxes, and
|
|
many parti-coloured birds, and many black, and many white: a very
|
|
eerie, dim, strange place and hard to travel. I am the head of a
|
|
household of five whites, and of twelve Samoans, to all of whom I
|
|
am the chief and father: my cook comes to me and asks leave to
|
|
marry - and his mother, a fine old chief woman, who has never lived
|
|
here, does the same. You may be sure I granted the petition. It
|
|
is a life of great interest, complicated by the Tower of Babel,
|
|
that old enemy. And I have all the time on my hands for literary
|
|
work. My house is a great place; we have a hall fifty feet long
|
|
with a great red-wood stair ascending from it, where we dine in
|
|
state - myself usually dressed in a singlet and a pair of trousers
|
|
- and attended on by servants in a single garment, a kind of kilt -
|
|
also flowers and leaves - and their hair often powdered with lime.
|
|
The European who came upon it suddenly would think it was a dream.
|
|
We have prayers on Sunday night - I am a perfect pariah in the
|
|
island not to have them oftener, but the spirit is unwilling and
|
|
the flesh proud, and I cannot go it more. It is strange to see the
|
|
long line of the brown folk crouched along the wall with lanterns
|
|
at intervals before them in the big shadowy hall, with an oak
|
|
cabinet at one end of it and a group of Rodin's (which native taste
|
|
regards as PRODIGIEUSEMENT LESTE) presiding over all from the top -
|
|
and to hear the long rambling Samoan hymn rolling up (God bless me,
|
|
what style! But I am off business to-day, and this is not meant to
|
|
be literature.).
|
|
|
|
I have asked Colvin to send you a copy of CATRIONA, which I am
|
|
sometimes tempted to think is about my best work. I hear word
|
|
occasionally of the AMAZING MARRIAGE. It will be a brave day for
|
|
me when I get hold of it. Gower Woodseer is now an ancient, lean,
|
|
grim, exiled Scot, living and labouring as for a wager in the
|
|
tropics; still active, still with lots of fire in him, but the
|
|
youth - ah, the youth where is it? For years after I came here,
|
|
the critics (those genial gentlemen) used to deplore the relaxation
|
|
of my fibre and the idleness to which I had succumbed. I hear less
|
|
of this now; the next thing is they will tell me I am writing
|
|
myself out! and that my unconscientious conduct is bringing their
|
|
grey hairs with sorrow to the dust. I do not know - I mean I do
|
|
know one thing. For fourteen years I have not had a day's real
|
|
health; I have wakened sick and gone to bed weary; and I have done
|
|
my work unflinchingly. I have written in bed, and written out of
|
|
it, written in hemorrhages, written in sickness, written torn by
|
|
coughing, written when my head swam for weakness; and for so long,
|
|
it seems to me I have won my wager and recovered my glove. I am
|
|
better now, have been rightly speaking since first I came to the
|
|
Pacific; and still, few are the days when I am not in some physical
|
|
distress. And the battle goes on - ill or well, is a trifle; so as
|
|
it goes. I was made for a contest, and the Powers have so willed
|
|
that my battlefield should be this dingy, inglorious one of the bed
|
|
and the physic bottle. At least I have not failed, but I would
|
|
have preferred a place of trumpetings and the open air over my
|
|
head.
|
|
|
|
This is a devilish egotistical yarn. Will you try to imitate me in
|
|
that if the spirit ever moves you to reply? And meantime be sure
|
|
that away in the midst of the Pacific there is a house on a wooded
|
|
island where the name of George Meredith is very dear, and his
|
|
memory (since it must be no more) is continually honoured. - Ever
|
|
your friend,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Remember me to Mariette, if you please; and my wife sends her most
|
|
kind remembrances to yourself.
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO AUGUSTUS ST. GAUDENS
|
|
|
|
VAILIMA, SEPTEMBER 1893.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR ST. GAUDENS, - I had determined not to write to you till I
|
|
had seen the medallion, but it looks as if that might mean the
|
|
Greek Kalends or the day after to-morrow. Reassure yourself, your
|
|
part is done, it is ours that halts - the consideration of
|
|
conveyance over our sweet little road on boys' backs, for we cannot
|
|
very well apply the horses to this work; there is only one; you
|
|
cannot put it in a panier; to put it on the horse's back we have
|
|
not the heart. Beneath the beauty of R. L. S., to say nothing of
|
|
his verses, which the publishers find heavy enough, and the genius
|
|
of the god-like sculptor, the spine would snap and the well-knit
|
|
limbs of the (ahem) cart-horse would be loosed by death. So you
|
|
are to conceive me, sitting in my house, dubitative, and the
|
|
medallion chuckling in the warehouse of the German firm, for some
|
|
days longer; and hear me meanwhile on the golden letters.
|
|
|
|
Alas! they are all my fancy painted, but the price is prohibitive.
|
|
I cannot do it. It is another day-dream burst. Another gable of
|
|
Abbotsford has gone down, fortunately before it was builded, so
|
|
there's nobody injured - except me. I had a strong conviction that
|
|
I was a great hand at writing inscriptions, and meant to exhibit
|
|
and test my genius on the walls of my house; and now I see I can't.
|
|
It is generally thus. The Battle of the Golden Letters will never
|
|
be delivered. On making preparation to open the campaign, the King
|
|
found himself face to face with invincible difficulties, in which
|
|
the rapacity of a mercenary soldiery and the complaints of an
|
|
impoverished treasury played an equal part. - Ever yours,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
I enclose a bill for the medallion; have been trying to find your
|
|
letter, quite in vain, and therefore must request you to pay for
|
|
the bronze letters yourself and let me know the damage.
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO J. HORNE STEVENSON
|
|
|
|
VAILIMA, SAMOA, NOVEMBER 5TH, 1893.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR STEVENSON, - A thousand thanks for your voluminous and
|
|
delightful collections. Baxter - so soon as it is ready - will let
|
|
you see a proof of my introduction, which is only sent out as a
|
|
sprat to catch whales. And you will find I have a good deal of
|
|
what you have, only mine in a perfectly desultory manner, as is
|
|
necessary to an exile. My uncle's pedigree is wrong; there was
|
|
never a Stevenson of Caldwell, of course, but they were tenants of
|
|
the Muirs; the farm held by them is in my introduction; and I have
|
|
already written to Charles Baxter to have a search made in the
|
|
Register House. I hope he will have had the inspiration to put it
|
|
under your surveillance. Your information as to your own family is
|
|
intensely interesting, and I should not wonder but what you and we
|
|
and old John Stevenson, 'land labourer in the parish of Dailly,'
|
|
came all of the same stock. Ayrshire - and probably Cunningham -
|
|
seems to be the home of the race - our part of it. From the
|
|
distribution of the name - which your collections have so much
|
|
extended without essentially changing my knowledge of - we seem
|
|
rather pointed to a British origin. What you say of the Engineers
|
|
is fresh to me, and must be well thrashed out. This introduction
|
|
of it will take a long while to walk about! - as perhaps I may be
|
|
tempted to let it become long; after all, I am writing THIS for my
|
|
own pleasure solely. Greetings to you and other Speculatives of
|
|
our date, long bygone, alas! - Yours very sincerely,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
P.S. - I have a different version of my grandfather's arms - or my
|
|
father had if I could find it.
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO JOHN P-N
|
|
|
|
VAILIMA, SAMOA, DECEMBER 3RD, 1893.
|
|
|
|
DEAR JOHNNIE, - Well, I must say you seem to be a tremendous
|
|
fellow! Before I was eight I used to write stories - or dictate
|
|
them at least - and I had produced an excellent history of Moses,
|
|
for which I got 1 pound from an uncle; but I had never gone the
|
|
length of a play, so you have beaten me fairly on my own ground. I
|
|
hope you may continue to do so, and thanking you heartily for your
|
|
nice letter, I shall beg you to believe me yours truly,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO RUSSELL P-N
|
|
|
|
VAILIMA, SAMOA, DECEMBER 3RD, 1893.
|
|
|
|
DEAR RUSSELL, - I have to thank you very much for your capital
|
|
letter, which came to hand here in Samoa along with your mother's.
|
|
When you 'grow up and write stories like me,' you will be able to
|
|
understand that there is scarce anything more painful than for an
|
|
author to hold a pen; he has to do it so much that his heart
|
|
sickens and his fingers ache at the sight or touch of it; so that
|
|
you will excuse me if I do not write much, but remain (with
|
|
compliments and greetings from one Scot to another - though I was
|
|
not born in Ceylon - you're ahead of me there). - Yours very truly,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO ALISON CUNNINGHAM
|
|
|
|
VAILIMA, DECEMBER 5, 1893.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAREST CUMMY, - This goes to you with a Merry Christmas and a
|
|
Happy New Year. The Happy New Year anyway, for I think it should
|
|
reach you about NOOR'S DAY. I dare say it may be cold and frosty.
|
|
Do you remember when you used to take me out of bed in the early
|
|
morning, carry me to the back windows, show me the hills of Fife,
|
|
and quote to me.
|
|
|
|
'A' the hills are covered wi' snaw,
|
|
An' winter's noo come fairly'?
|
|
|
|
There is not much chance of that here! I wonder how my mother is
|
|
going to stand the winter. If she can, it will be a very good
|
|
thing for her. We are in that part of the year which I like the
|
|
best - the Rainy or Hurricane Season. 'When it is good, it is
|
|
very, very good; and when it is bad, it is horrid,' and our fine
|
|
days are certainly fine like heaven; such a blue of the sea, such
|
|
green of the trees, and such crimson of the hibiscus flowers, you
|
|
never saw; and the air as mild and gentle as a baby's breath, and
|
|
yet not hot!
|
|
|
|
The mail is on the move, and I must let up. - With much love, I am,
|
|
your laddie,
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO CHARLES BAXTER
|
|
|
|
6TH DECEMBER 1893.
|
|
|
|
'OCTOBER 25, 1685. - At Privy Council, George Murray, Lieutenant of
|
|
the King's Guard, and others, did, on the 21st of September last,
|
|
obtain a clandestine order of Privy Council to apprehend the person
|
|
of Janet Pringle, daughter to the late Clifton, and she having
|
|
retired out of the way upon information, he got an order against
|
|
Andrew Pringle, her uncle, to produce her. . . . But she having
|
|
married Andrew Pringle, her uncle's son (to disappoint all their
|
|
designs of selling her), a boy of thirteen years old.' But my boy
|
|
is to be fourteen, so I extract no further. - FOUNTAINHALL, i. 320.
|
|
|
|
'MAY 6, 1685. - Wappus Pringle of Clifton was still alive after
|
|
all, and in prison for debt, and transacts with Lieutenant Murray,
|
|
giving security for 7000 marks.' - i. 372.
|
|
|
|
No, it seems to have been HER brother who had succeeded.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR CHARLES, - The above is my story, and I wonder if any light
|
|
can be thrown on it. I prefer the girl's father dead; and the
|
|
question is, How in that case could Lieutenant George Murray get
|
|
his order to 'apprehend' and his power to 'sell' her in marriage?
|
|
|
|
Or - might Lieutenant G. be her tutor, and she fugitive to the
|
|
Pringles, and on the discovery of her whereabouts hastily married?
|
|
|
|
A good legal note on these points is very ardently desired by me;
|
|
it will be the corner-stone of my novel.
|
|
|
|
This is for - I am quite wrong to tell you - for you will tell
|
|
others - and nothing will teach you that all my schemes are in the
|
|
air, and vanish and reappear again like shapes in the clouds - it
|
|
is for HEATHERCAT: whereof the first volume will be called THE
|
|
KILLING TIME, and I believe I have authorities ample for that. But
|
|
the second volume is to be called (I believe) DARIEN, and for that
|
|
I want, I fear, a good deal of truck:-
|
|
|
|
DARIEN PAPERS,
|
|
CARSTAIRS PAPERS,
|
|
MARCHMONT PAPERS,
|
|
JERVISWOODE CORRESPONDENCE,
|
|
|
|
I hope may do me. Some sort of general history of the Darien
|
|
affair (if there is a decent one, which I misdoubt), it would also
|
|
be well to have - the one with most details, if possible. It is
|
|
singular how obscure to me this decade of Scots history remains,
|
|
1690-1700 - a deuce of a want of light and grouping to it!
|
|
However, I believe I shall be mostly out of Scotland in my tale;
|
|
first in Carolina, next in Darien. I want also - I am the daughter
|
|
of the horse-leech truly - 'Black's new large map of Scotland,'
|
|
sheets 3, 4, and 5, a 7s. 6d. touch. I believe, if you can get the
|
|
|
|
CALDWELL PAPERS,
|
|
|
|
they had better come also; and if there be any reasonable work -
|
|
but no, I must call a halt. . . .
|
|
|
|
I fear the song looks doubtful, but I'll consider of it, and I can
|
|
promise you some reminiscences which it will amuse me to write,
|
|
whether or not it will amuse the public to read of them. But it's
|
|
an unco business to SUPPLY deid-heid coapy.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO J. M. BARRIE
|
|
|
|
VAILIMA, SAMOA, DECEMBER 7TH, 1893.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR BARRIE, - I have received duly the MAGNUM OPUS, and it
|
|
really is a MAGNUM OPUS. It is a beautiful specimen of Clark's
|
|
printing, paper sufficient, and the illustrations all my fancy
|
|
painted. But the particular flower of the flock to whom I have
|
|
hopelessly lost my heart is Tibby Birse. I must have known Tibby
|
|
Birse when she was a servant's mantua-maker in Edinburgh and
|
|
answered to the name of Miss BRODDIE. She used to come and sew
|
|
with my nurse, sitting with her legs crossed in a masculine manner;
|
|
and swinging her foot emphatically, she used to pour forth a
|
|
perfectly unbroken stream of gossip. I didn't hear it, I was
|
|
immersed in far more important business with a box of bricks, but
|
|
the recollection of that thin, perpetual, shrill sound of a voice
|
|
has echoed in my ears sinsyne. I am bound to say she was younger
|
|
than Tibbie, but there is no mistaking that and the indescribable
|
|
and eminently Scottish expression.
|
|
|
|
I have been very much prevented of late, having carried out
|
|
thoroughly to my own satisfaction two considerable illnesses, had a
|
|
birthday, and visited Honolulu, where politics are (if possible) a
|
|
shade more exasperating than they are with us. I am told that it
|
|
was just when I was on the point of leaving that I received your
|
|
superlative epistle about the cricket eleven. In that case it is
|
|
impossible I should have answered it, which is inconsistent with my
|
|
own recollection of the fact. What I remember is, that I sat down
|
|
under your immediate inspiration and wrote an answer in every way
|
|
worthy. If I didn't, as it seems proved that I couldn't, it will
|
|
never be done now. However, I did the next best thing, I equipped
|
|
my cousin Graham Balfour with a letter of introduction, and from
|
|
him, if you know how - for he is rather of the Scottish character -
|
|
you may elicit all the information you can possibly wish to have as
|
|
to us and ours. Do not be bluffed off by the somewhat stern and
|
|
monumental first impression that he may make upon you. He is one
|
|
of the best fellows in the world, and the same sort of fool that we
|
|
are, only better-looking, with all the faults of Vailimans and some
|
|
of his own - I say nothing about virtues.
|
|
|
|
I have lately been returning to my wallowing in the mire. When I
|
|
was a child, and indeed until I was nearly a man, I consistently
|
|
read Covenanting books. Now that I am a grey-beard - or would be,
|
|
if I could raise the beard - I have returned, and for weeks back
|
|
have read little else but Wodrow, Walker, Shields, etc. Of course
|
|
this is with an idea of a novel, but in the course of it I made a
|
|
very curious discovery. I have been accustomed to hear refined and
|
|
intelligent critics - those who know so much better what we are
|
|
than we do ourselves, - trace down my literary descent from all
|
|
sorts of people, including Addison, of whom I could never read a
|
|
word. Well, laigh i' your lug, sir - the clue was found. My style
|
|
is from the Covenanting writers. Take a particular case - the
|
|
fondness for rhymes. I don't know of any English prose-writer who
|
|
rhymes except by accident, and then a stone had better be tied
|
|
around his neck and himself cast into the sea. But my Covenanting
|
|
buckies rhyme all the time - a beautiful example of the unconscious
|
|
rhyme above referred to.
|
|
|
|
Do you know, and have you really tasted, these delightful works?
|
|
If not, it should be remedied; there is enough of the Auld Licht in
|
|
you to be ravished.
|
|
|
|
I suppose you know that success has so far attended my banners - my
|
|
political banners I mean, and not my literary. In conjunction with
|
|
the Three Great Powers I have succeeded in getting rid of My
|
|
President and My Chief-Justice. They've gone home, the one to
|
|
Germany, the other to Souwegia. I hear little echoes of footfalls
|
|
of their departing footsteps through the medium of the newspapers.
|
|
. . .
|
|
|
|
Whereupon I make you my salute with the firm remark that it is time
|
|
to be done with trifling and give us a great book, and my ladies
|
|
fall into line with me to pay you a most respectful courtesy, and
|
|
we all join in the cry, 'Come to Vailima!'
|
|
|
|
My dear sir, your soul's health is in it - you will never do the
|
|
great book, you will never cease to work in L., etc., till you come
|
|
to Vailima.
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO R. LE GALLIENNE
|
|
|
|
VAILIMA, SAMOA, DECEMBER 28TH, 1893.
|
|
|
|
DEAR MR. LE GALLIENNE, - I have received some time ago, through our
|
|
friend Miss Taylor, a book of yours. But that was by no means my
|
|
first introduction to your name. The same book had stood already
|
|
on my shelves; I had read articles of yours in the ACADEMY; and by
|
|
a piece of constructive criticism (which I trust was sound) had
|
|
arrived at the conclusion that you were 'Log-roller.' Since then I
|
|
have seen your beautiful verses to your wife. You are to conceive
|
|
me, then, as only too ready to make the acquaintance of a man who
|
|
loved good literature and could make it. I had to thank you,
|
|
besides, for a triumphant exposure of a paradox of my own: the
|
|
literary-prostitute disappeared from view at a phrase of yours -
|
|
'The essence is not in the pleasure but the sale.' True: you are
|
|
right, I was wrong; the author is not the whore, but the libertine;
|
|
and yet I shall let the passage stand. It is an error, but it
|
|
illustrated the truth for which I was contending, that literature -
|
|
painting - all art, are no other than pleasures, which we turn into
|
|
trades.
|
|
|
|
And more than all this, I had, and I have to thank you for the
|
|
intimate loyalty you have shown to myself; for the eager welcome
|
|
you give to what is good - for the courtly tenderness with which
|
|
you touch on my defects. I begin to grow old; I have given my top
|
|
note, I fancy; - and I have written too many books. The world
|
|
begins to be weary of the old booth; and if not weary, familiar
|
|
with the familiarity that breeds contempt. I do not know that I am
|
|
sensitive to criticism, if it be hostile; I am sensitive indeed,
|
|
when it is friendly; and when I read such criticism as yours, I am
|
|
emboldened to go on and praise God.
|
|
|
|
You are still young, and you may live to do much. The little,
|
|
artificial popularity of style in England tends, I think, to die
|
|
out; the British pig returns to his true love, the love of the
|
|
styleless, of the shapeless, of the slapdash and the disorderly.
|
|
There is trouble coming, I think; and you may have to hold the fort
|
|
for us in evil days.
|
|
|
|
Lastly, let me apologise for the crucifixion that I am inflicting
|
|
on you (BIEN A CONTRE-COEUR) by my bad writing. I was once the
|
|
best of writers; landladies, puzzled as to my 'trade,' used to have
|
|
their honest bosoms set at rest by a sight of a page of manuscript.
|
|
- 'Ah,' they would say, 'no wonder they pay you for that'; - and
|
|
when I sent it in to the printers, it was given to the boys! I was
|
|
about thirty-nine, I think, when I had a turn of scrivener's palsy;
|
|
my hand got worse; and for the first time, I received clean proofs.
|
|
But it has gone beyond that now, I know I am like my old friend
|
|
James Payn, a terror to correspondents; and you would not believe
|
|
the care with which this has been written. - Believe me to be, very
|
|
sincerely yours,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO MRS. A. BAKER
|
|
|
|
DECEMBER 1893.
|
|
|
|
DEAR MADAM, - There is no trouble, and I wish I could help instead.
|
|
As it is, I fear I am only going to put you to trouble and
|
|
vexation. This Braille writing is a kind of consecration, and I
|
|
would like if I could to have your copy perfect. The two volumes
|
|
are to be published as Vols. I. and II. of THE ADVENTURES OF DAVID
|
|
BALFOUR. 1st, KIDNAPPED; 2nd, CATRIONA. I am just sending home a
|
|
corrected KIDNAPPED for this purpose to Messrs. Cassell, and in
|
|
order that I may if possible be in time, I send it to you first of
|
|
all. Please, as soon as you have noted the changes, forward the
|
|
same to Cassell and Co., La Belle Sauvage Yard, Ludgate Hill.
|
|
|
|
I am writing to them by this mail to send you CATRIONA.
|
|
|
|
You say, dear madam, you are good enough to say, it is 'a keen
|
|
pleasure' to you to bring my book within the reach of the blind.
|
|
|
|
Conceive then what it is to me! and believe me, sincerely yours,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
I was a barren tree before,
|
|
I blew a quenched coal,
|
|
I could not, on their midnight shore,
|
|
The lonely blind console.
|
|
|
|
A moment, lend your hand, I bring
|
|
My sheaf for you to bind,
|
|
And you can teach my words to sing
|
|
In the darkness of the blind.
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO HENRY JAMES
|
|
|
|
APIA, DECEMBER 1893.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR HENRY JAMES, - The mail has come upon me like an armed man
|
|
three days earlier than was expected; and the Lord help me! It is
|
|
impossible I should answer anybody the way they should be. Your
|
|
jubilation over CATRIONA did me good, and still more the subtlety
|
|
and truth of your remark on the starving of the visual sense in
|
|
that book. 'Tis true, and unless I make the greater effort - and
|
|
am, as a step to that, convinced of its necessity - it will be more
|
|
true I fear in the future. I HEAR people talking, and I FEEL them
|
|
acting, and that seems to me to be fiction. My two aims may be
|
|
described as -
|
|
|
|
1ST. War to the adjective.
|
|
2ND. Death to the optic nerve.
|
|
|
|
Admitted we live in an age of the optic nerve in literature. For
|
|
how many centuries did literature get along without a sign of it?
|
|
However, I'll consider your letter.
|
|
|
|
How exquisite is your character of the critic in ESSAYS IN LONDON!
|
|
I doubt if you have done any single thing so satisfying as a piece
|
|
of style and of insight. - Yours ever,
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO CHARLES BAXTER
|
|
|
|
1ST JANUARY '94.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR CHARLES, - I am delighted with your idea, and first, I will
|
|
here give an amended plan and afterwards give you a note of some of
|
|
the difficulties.
|
|
|
|
[Plan of the Edinburgh edition - 14 vols.]
|
|
|
|
. . . It may be a question whether my TIMES letters might not be
|
|
appended to the 'Footnote' with a note of the dates of discharge of
|
|
Cedercrantz and Pilsach.
|
|
|
|
I am particularly pleased with this idea of yours, because I am
|
|
come to a dead stop. I never can remember how bad I have been
|
|
before, but at any rate I am bad enough just now, I mean as to
|
|
literature; in health I am well and strong. I take it I shall be
|
|
six months before I'm heard of again, and this time I could put in
|
|
to some advantage in revising the text and (if it were thought
|
|
desirable) writing prefaces. I do not know how many of them might
|
|
be thought desirable. I have written a paper on TREASURE ISLAND,
|
|
which is to appear shortly. MASTER OF BALLANTRAE - I have one
|
|
drafted. THE WRECKER is quite sufficiently done already with the
|
|
last chapter, but I suppose an historic introduction to DAVID
|
|
BALFOUR is quite unavoidable. PRINCE OTTO I don't think I could
|
|
say anything about, and BLACK ARROW don't want to. But it is
|
|
probable I could say something to the volume of TRAVELS. In the
|
|
verse business I can do just what I like better than anything else,
|
|
and extend UNDERWOODS with a lot of unpublished stuff. APROPOS, if
|
|
I were to get printed off a very few poems which are somewhat too
|
|
intimate for the public, could you get them run up in some luxuous
|
|
manner, so that fools might be induced to buy them in just a
|
|
sufficient quantity to pay expenses and the thing remain still in a
|
|
manner private? We could supply photographs of the illustrations -
|
|
and the poems are of Vailima and the family - I should much like to
|
|
get this done as a surprise for Fanny.
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO H. B. BAILDON
|
|
|
|
VAILIMA, JANUARY 15TH, 1894.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR BAILDON, - Last mail brought your book and its Dedication.
|
|
'Frederick Street and the gardens, and the short-lived Jack o'
|
|
Lantern,' are again with me - and the note of the east wind, and
|
|
Froebel's voice, and the smell of soup in Thomson's stair. Truly,
|
|
you had no need to put yourself under the protection of any other
|
|
saint, were that saint our Tamate himself! Yourself were enough,
|
|
and yourself coming with so rich a sheaf.
|
|
|
|
For what is this that you say about the Muses? They have certainly
|
|
never better inspired you than in 'Jael and Sisera,' and 'Herodias
|
|
and John the Baptist,' good stout poems, fiery and sound. ''Tis
|
|
but a mask and behind it chuckles the God of the Garden,' I shall
|
|
never forget. By the by, an error of the press, page 49, line 4,
|
|
'No infant's lesson are the ways of God.' THE is dropped.
|
|
|
|
And this reminds me you have a bad habit which is to be comminated
|
|
in my theory of letters. Same page, two lines lower: 'But the
|
|
vulture's track' is surely as fine to the ear as 'But vulture's
|
|
track,' and this latter version has a dreadful baldness. The
|
|
reader goes on with a sense of impoverishment, of unnecessary
|
|
sacrifice; he has been robbed by footpads, and goes scouting for
|
|
his lost article! Again, in the second Epode, these fine verses
|
|
would surely sound much finer if they began, 'As a hardy climber
|
|
who has set his heart,' than with the jejune 'As hardy climber.' I
|
|
do not know why you permit yourself this license with grammar; you
|
|
show, in so many pages, that you are superior to the paltry sense
|
|
of rhythm which usually dictates it - as though some poetaster had
|
|
been suffered to correct the poet's text. By the way, I confess to
|
|
a heartfelt weakness for AURICULAS. - Believe me the very grateful
|
|
and characteristic pick-thank, but still sincere and affectionate,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO W. H. LOW.
|
|
|
|
VAILIMA, JANUARY 15th, 1894.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR LOW, - . . . Pray you, stoop your proud head, and sell
|
|
yourself to some Jew magazine, and make the visit out. I assure
|
|
you, this is the spot for a sculptor or painter. This, and no
|
|
other - I don't say to stay there, but to come once and get the
|
|
living colour into them. I am used to it; I do not notice it;
|
|
rather prefer my grey, freezing recollections of Scotland; but
|
|
there it is, and every morning is a thing to give thanks for, and
|
|
every night another - bar when it rains, of course.
|
|
|
|
About THE WRECKER - rather late days, and I still suspect I had
|
|
somehow offended you; however, all's well that ends well, and I am
|
|
glad I am forgiven - did you not fail to appreciate the attitude of
|
|
Dodd? He was a fizzle and a stick, he knew it, he knew nothing
|
|
else, and there is an undercurrent of bitterness in him. And then
|
|
the problem that Pinkerton laid down: why the artist can DO
|
|
NOTHING ELSE? is one that continually exercises myself. He cannot:
|
|
granted. But Scott could. And Montaigne. And Julius Caesar. And
|
|
many more. And why can't R. L. S.? Does it not amaze you? It
|
|
does me. I think of the Renaissance fellows, and their all-round
|
|
human sufficiency, and compare it with the ineffable smallness of
|
|
the field in which we labour and in which we do so little. I think
|
|
DAVID BALFOUR a nice little book, and very artistic, and just the
|
|
thing to occupy the leisure of a busy man; but for the top flower
|
|
of a man's life it seems to me inadequate. Small is the word; it
|
|
is a small age, and I am of it. I could have wished to be
|
|
otherwise busy in this world. I ought to have been able to build
|
|
lighthouses and write DAVID BALFOURS too. HINC ILLAE LACRYMAE. I
|
|
take my own case as most handy, but it is as illustrative of my
|
|
quarrel with the age. We take all these pains, and we don't do as
|
|
well as Michael Angelo or Leonardo, or even Fielding, who was an
|
|
active magistrate, or Richardson, who was a busy bookseller. J'AI
|
|
HONTE POUR NOUS; my ears burn.
|
|
|
|
I am amazed at the effect which this Chicago exhibition has
|
|
produced upon you and others. It set Mrs. Fairchild literally mad
|
|
- to judge by her letters. And I wish I had seen anything so
|
|
influential. I suppose there was an aura, a halo, some sort of
|
|
effulgency about the place; for here I find you louder than the
|
|
rest. Well, it may be there is a time coming; and I wonder, when
|
|
it comes, whether it will be a time of little, exclusive, one-eyed
|
|
rascals like you and me, or parties of the old stamp who can paint
|
|
and fight, and write and keep books of double entry, and sculp, and
|
|
scalp. It might be. You have a lot of stuff in the kettle, and a
|
|
great deal of it Celtic. I have changed my mind progressively
|
|
about England, practically the whole of Scotland is Celtic, and the
|
|
western half of England, and all Ireland, and the Celtic blood
|
|
makes a rare blend for art. If it is stiffened up with Latin
|
|
blood, you get the French. We were less lucky: we had only
|
|
Scandinavians, themselves decidedly artistic, and the Low-German
|
|
lot. However, that is a good starting-point, and with all the
|
|
other elements in your crucible, it may come to something great
|
|
very easily. I wish you would hurry up and let me see it. Here is
|
|
a long while I have been waiting for something GOOD in art; and
|
|
what have I seen? Zola's DEBACLE and a few of Kipling's tales.
|
|
Are you a reader of Barbey d'Aurevilly? He is a never-failing
|
|
source of pleasure to me, for my sins, I suppose. What a work is
|
|
the RIDEAU CRAMOISI! and L'ENSORCELEE! and LE CHEVALIER DES
|
|
TOUCHES!
|
|
|
|
This is degenerating into mere twaddle. So please remember us all
|
|
most kindly to Mrs. Low, and believe me ever yours,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
P.S. - Were all your privateers voiceless in the war of 1812? Did
|
|
NO ONE of them write memoirs? I shall have to do my privateer from
|
|
chic, if you can't help me. My application to Scribner has been
|
|
quite in vain. See if you can get hold of some historic sharp in
|
|
the club, and tap him; they must some of them have written memoirs
|
|
or notes of some sort; perhaps still unprinted; if that be so, get
|
|
them copied for me.
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO H. B. BAILDON
|
|
|
|
VAILIMA, JANUARY 30TH, 1894.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR BAILDON, - 'Call not blessed.' - Yes, if I could die just
|
|
now, or say in half a year, I should have had a splendid time of it
|
|
on the whole. But it gets a little stale, and my work will begin
|
|
to senesce; and parties to shy bricks at me; and now it begins to
|
|
look as if I should survive to see myself impotent and forgotten.
|
|
It's a pity suicide is not thought the ticket in the best circles.
|
|
|
|
But your letter goes on to congratulate me on having done the one
|
|
thing I am a little sorry for; a little - not much - for my father
|
|
himself lived to think that I had been wiser than he. But the
|
|
cream of the jest is that I have lived to change my mind; and think
|
|
that he was wiser than I. Had I been an engineer, and literature
|
|
my amusement, it would have been better perhaps. I pulled it off,
|
|
of course, I won the wager, and it is pleasant while it lasts; but
|
|
how long will it last? I don't know, say the Bells of Old Bow.
|
|
|
|
All of which goes to show that nobody is quite sane in judging
|
|
himself. Truly, had I given way and gone in for engineering, I
|
|
should be dead by now. Well, the gods know best.
|
|
|
|
I hope you got my letter about the RESCUE. - Adieu,
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
|
|
|
|
True for you about the benefit: except by kisses, jests, song, ET
|
|
HOC GENUS OMNE, man CANNOT convey benefit to another. The
|
|
universal benefactor has been there before him.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO J. H. BATES
|
|
|
|
VAILIMA, SAMOA, MARCH 25TH, 1894.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR MR. JOE H. BATES, - I shall have the greatest pleasure in
|
|
acceding to your complimentary request. I shall think it an honour
|
|
to be associated with your chapter, and I need not remind you (for
|
|
you have said it yourself) how much depends upon your own exertions
|
|
whether to make it to me a real honour or only a derision. This is
|
|
to let you know that I accept the position that you have seriously
|
|
offered to me in a quite serious spirit. I need scarce tell you
|
|
that I shall always be pleased to receive reports of your
|
|
proceedings; and if I do not always acknowledge them, you are to
|
|
remember that I am a man very much occupied otherwise, and not at
|
|
all to suppose that I have lost interest in my chapter.
|
|
|
|
In this world, which (as you justly say) is so full of sorrow and
|
|
suffering, it will always please me to remember that my name is
|
|
connected with some efforts after alleviation, nor less so with
|
|
purposes of innocent recreation which, after all, are the only
|
|
certain means at our disposal for bettering human life.
|
|
|
|
With kind regards, to yourself, to Mr. L. C. Congdon, to E. M. G.
|
|
Bates, and to Mr. Edward Hugh Higlee Bates, and the heartiest
|
|
wishes for the future success of the chapter, believe me, yours
|
|
cordially,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO WILLIAM ARCHER
|
|
|
|
VAILIMA, SAMOA, MARCH 27TH, 1894.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR ARCHER, - Many thanks for your THEATRICAL WORLD. Do you
|
|
know, it strikes me as being really very good? I have not yet read
|
|
much of it, but so far as I have looked, there is not a dull and
|
|
not an empty page in it. Hazlitt, whom you must often have thought
|
|
of, would have been pleased. Come to think of it, I shall put this
|
|
book upon the Hazlitt shelf. You have acquired a manner that I can
|
|
only call august; otherwise, I should have to call it such amazing
|
|
impudence. The BAUBLE SHOP and BECKET are examples of what I mean.
|
|
But it 'sets you weel.'
|
|
|
|
Marjorie Fleming I have known, as you surmise, for long. She was
|
|
possibly - no, I take back possibly - she was one of the greatest
|
|
works of God. Your note about the resemblance of her verses to
|
|
mine gave me great joy, though it only proved me a plagiarist. By
|
|
the by, was it not over THE CHILD'S GARDEN OF VERSES that we first
|
|
scraped acquaintance? I am sorry indeed to hear that my esteemed
|
|
correspondent Tomarcher has such poor taste in literature. I fear
|
|
he cannot have inherited this trait from his dear papa. Indeed, I
|
|
may say I know it, for I remember the energy of papa's disapproval
|
|
when the work passed through his hands on its way to a second
|
|
birth, which none regrets more than myself. It is an odd fact, or
|
|
perhaps a very natural one; I find few greater pleasures than
|
|
reading my own works, but I never, O I never read THE BLACK ARROW.
|
|
In that country Tomarcher reigns supreme. Well, and after all, if
|
|
Tomarcher likes it, it has not been written in vain.
|
|
|
|
We have just now a curious breath from Europe. A young fellow just
|
|
beginning letters, and no fool, turned up here with a letter of
|
|
introduction in the well-known blue ink and decorative hieroglyphs
|
|
of George Meredith. His name may be known to you. It is Sidney
|
|
Lysaght. He is staying with us but a day or two, and it is strange
|
|
to me and not unpleasant to hear all the names, old and new, come
|
|
up again. But oddly the new are so much more in number. If I
|
|
revisited the glimpses of the moon on your side of the ocean, I
|
|
should know comparatively few of them.
|
|
|
|
My amanuensis deserts me - I should have said you, for yours is the
|
|
loss, my script having lost all bond with humanity. One touch of
|
|
nature makes the whole world kin: that nobody can read my hand.
|
|
It is a humiliating circumstance that thus evens us with printers!
|
|
|
|
You must sometimes think it strange - or perhaps it is only I that
|
|
should so think it - to be following the old round, in the gas
|
|
lamps and the crowded theatres, when I am away here in the tropical
|
|
forest and the vast silences!
|
|
|
|
My dear Archer, my wife joins me in the best wishes to yourself and
|
|
Mrs. Archer, not forgetting Tom; and I am yours very cordially,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO W. B. YEATS
|
|
|
|
VAILIMA, SAMOA, APRIL 14, 1894.
|
|
|
|
DEAR SIR, - Long since when I was a boy I remember the emotions
|
|
with which I repeated Swinburne's poems and ballads. Some ten
|
|
years ago, a similar spell was cast upon me by Meredith's LOVE IN
|
|
THE VALLEY; the stanzas beginning 'When her mother tends her'
|
|
haunted me and made me drunk like wine; and I remember waking with
|
|
them all the echoes of the hills about Hyeres. It may interest you
|
|
to hear that I have a third time fallen in slavery: this is to
|
|
your poem called the LAKE ISLE OF INNISFRAE. It is so quaint and
|
|
airy, simple, artful, and eloquent to the heart - but I seek words
|
|
in vain. Enough that 'always night and day I hear lake water
|
|
lapping with low sounds on the shore,' and am, yours gratefully,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO GEORGE MEREDITH
|
|
|
|
VAILIMA, SAMOA, APRIL 17TH, 1894.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR MEREDITH, - Many good things have the gods sent to me of
|
|
late. First of all there was a letter from you by the kind hand of
|
|
Mariette, if she is not too great a lady to be remembered in such a
|
|
style; and then there came one Lysaght with a charming note of
|
|
introduction in the well-known hand itself. We had but a few days
|
|
of him, and liked him well. There was a sort of geniality and
|
|
inward fire about him at which I warmed my hands. It is long since
|
|
I have seen a young man who has left in me such a favourable
|
|
impression; and I find myself telling myself, 'O, I must tell this
|
|
to Lysaght,' or, 'This will interest him,' in a manner very unusual
|
|
after so brief an acquaintance. The whole of my family shared in
|
|
this favourable impression, and my halls have re-echoed ever since,
|
|
I am sure he will be amused to know, with WIDDICOMBE FAIR.
|
|
|
|
He will have told you doubtless more of my news than I could tell
|
|
you myself; he has your European perspective, a thing long lost to
|
|
me. I heard with a great deal of interest the news of Box Hill.
|
|
And so I understand it is to be enclosed! Allow me to remark, that
|
|
seems a far more barbaric trait of manners than the most barbarous
|
|
of ours. We content ourselves with cutting off an occasional head.
|
|
|
|
I hear we may soon expect the AMAZING MARRIAGE. You know how long,
|
|
and with how much curiosity, I have looked forward to the book.
|
|
Now, in so far as you have adhered to your intention, Gower
|
|
Woodsere will be a family portrait, age twenty-five, of the highly
|
|
respectable and slightly influential and fairly aged TUSITALA. You
|
|
have not known that gentleman; console yourself, he is not worth
|
|
knowing. At the same time, my dear Meredith, he is very sincerely
|
|
yours - for what he is worth, for the memories of old times, and in
|
|
the expectation of many pleasures still to come. I suppose we
|
|
shall never see each other again; flitting youths of the Lysaght
|
|
species may occasionally cover these unconscionable leagues and
|
|
bear greetings to and fro. But we ourselves must be content to
|
|
converse on an occasional sheet of notepaper, and I shall never see
|
|
whether you have grown older, and you shall never deplore that
|
|
Gower Woodsere should have declined into the pantaloon TUSITALA.
|
|
It is perhaps better so. Let us continue to see each other as we
|
|
were, and accept, my dear Meredith, my love and respect.
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
P.S. - My wife joins me in the kindest messages to yourself and
|
|
Mariette.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO CHARLES BAXTER
|
|
|
|
[VAILIMA], APRIL 17, '94.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR CHARLES, - ST. IVES is now well on its way into the second
|
|
volume. There remains no mortal doubt that it will reach the three
|
|
volume standard.
|
|
|
|
I am very anxious that you should send me -
|
|
|
|
1ST. TOM AND JERRY, a cheap edition.
|
|
|
|
2nd. The book by Ashton - the DAWN OF THE CENTURY, I think it was
|
|
called - which Colvin sent me, and which has miscarried, and
|
|
|
|
3rd. If it is possible, a file of the EDINBURGH COURANT for the
|
|
years 1811, 1812, 1813, or 1814. I should not care for a whole
|
|
year. If it were possible to find me three months, winter months
|
|
by preference, it would do my business not only for ST. IVES, but
|
|
for the JUSTICE-CLERK as well. Suppose this to be impossible,
|
|
perhaps I could get the loan of it from somebody; or perhaps it
|
|
would be possible to have some one read a file for me and make
|
|
notes. This would be extremely bad, as unhappily one man's food is
|
|
another man's poison, and the reader would probably leave out
|
|
everything I should choose. But if you are reduced to that, you
|
|
might mention to the man who is to read for me that balloon
|
|
ascensions are in the order of the day.
|
|
|
|
4th. It might be as well to get a book on balloon ascension,
|
|
particularly in the early part of the century.
|
|
|
|
. . . . .
|
|
|
|
III. At last this book has come from Scribner, and, alas! I have
|
|
the first six or seven chapters of ST. IVES to recast entirely.
|
|
Who could foresee that they clothed the French prisoners in yellow?
|
|
But that one fatal fact - and also that they shaved them twice a
|
|
week - damns the whole beginning. If it had been sent in time, it
|
|
would have saved me a deal of trouble. . . .
|
|
|
|
I have had a long letter from Dr. Scott Dalgleish, 25 Mayfield
|
|
Terrace, asking me to put my name down to the Ballantyne Memorial
|
|
Committee. I have sent him a pretty sharp answer in favour of
|
|
cutting down the memorial and giving more to the widow and
|
|
children. If there is to be any foolery in the way of statues or
|
|
other trash, please send them a guinea; but if they are going to
|
|
take my advice and put up a simple tablet with a few heartfelt
|
|
words, and really devote the bulk of the subscriptions to the wife
|
|
and family, I will go to the length of twenty pounds, if you will
|
|
allow me (and if the case of the family be at all urgent), and at
|
|
least I direct you to send ten pounds. I suppose you had better
|
|
see Scott Dalgleish himself on the matter. I take the opportunity
|
|
here to warn you that my head is simply spinning with a multitude
|
|
of affairs, and I shall probably forget a half of my business at
|
|
last.
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO MRS. SITWELL
|
|
|
|
VAILIMA, APRIL 1894.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR FRIEND, - I have at last got some photographs, and hasten
|
|
to send you, as you asked, a portrait of Tusitala. He is a strange
|
|
person; not so lean, say experts, but infinitely battered; mighty
|
|
active again on the whole; going up and down our break-neck road at
|
|
all hours of the day and night on horseback; holding meetings with
|
|
all manner of chiefs; quite a political personage - God save the
|
|
mark! - in a small way, but at heart very conscious of the
|
|
inevitable flat failure that awaits every one. I shall never do a
|
|
better book than CATRIONA, that is my high-water mark, and the
|
|
trouble of production increases on me at a great rate - and mighty
|
|
anxious about how I am to leave my family: an elderly man, with
|
|
elderly preoccupations, whom I should be ashamed to show you for
|
|
your old friend; but not a hope of my dying soon and cleanly, and
|
|
'winning off the stage.' Rather I am daily better in physical
|
|
health. I shall have to see this business out, after all; and I
|
|
think, in that case, they should have - they might have - spared me
|
|
all my ill-health this decade past, if it were not to unbar the
|
|
doors. I have no taste for old age, and my nose is to be rubbed in
|
|
it in spite of my face. I was meant to die young, and the gods do
|
|
not love me.
|
|
|
|
This is very like an epitaph, bar the handwriting, which is
|
|
anything but monumental, and I dare say I had better stop. Fanny
|
|
is down at her own cottage planting or deplanting or replanting, I
|
|
know not which, and she will not be home till dinner, by which time
|
|
the mail will be all closed, else she would join me in all good
|
|
messages and remembrances of love. I hope you will congratulate
|
|
Burne Jones from me on his baronetcy. I cannot make out to be
|
|
anything but raspingly, harrowingly sad; so I will close, and not
|
|
affect levity which I cannot feel. Do not altogether forget me;
|
|
keep a corner of your memory for the exile
|
|
|
|
LOUIS.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO CHARLES BAXTER
|
|
|
|
[VAILIMA, MAY 1894.]
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR CHARLES, - My dear fellow, I wish to assure you of the
|
|
greatness of the pleasure that this Edinburgh Edition gives me. I
|
|
suppose it was your idea to give it that name. No other would have
|
|
affected me in the same manner. Do you remember, how many years
|
|
ago - I would be afraid to hazard a guess - one night when I
|
|
communicated to you certain intimations of early death and
|
|
aspirations after fame? I was particularly maudlin; and my remorse
|
|
the next morning on a review of my folly has written the matter
|
|
very deeply in my mind; from yours it may easily have fled. If any
|
|
one at that moment could have shown me the Edinburgh Edition, I
|
|
suppose I should have died. It is with gratitude and wonder that I
|
|
consider 'the way in which I have been led.' Could a more
|
|
preposterous idea have occurred to us in those days when we used to
|
|
search our pockets for coppers, too often in vain, and combine
|
|
forces to produce the threepence necessary for two glasses of beer,
|
|
or wander down the Lothian Road without any, than that I should be
|
|
strong and well at the age of forty-three in the island of Upolu,
|
|
and that you should be at home bringing out the Edinburgh Edition?
|
|
If it had been possible, I should almost have preferred the Lothian
|
|
Road Edition, say, with a picture of the old Dutch smuggler on the
|
|
covers. I have now something heavy on my mind. I had always a
|
|
great sense of kinship with poor Robert Fergusson - so clever a
|
|
boy, so wild, of such a mixed strain, so unfortunate, born in the
|
|
same town with me, and, as I always felt, rather by express
|
|
intimation than from evidence, so like myself. Now the injustice
|
|
with which the one Robert is rewarded and the other left out in the
|
|
cold sits heavy on me, and I wish you could think of some way in
|
|
which I could do honour to my unfortunate namesake. Do you think
|
|
it would look like affectation to dedicate the whole edition to his
|
|
memory? I think it would. The sentiment which would dictate it to
|
|
me is too abstruse; and besides, I think my wife is the proper
|
|
person to receive the dedication of my life's work. At the same
|
|
time, it is very odd - it really looks like the transmigration of
|
|
souls - I feel that I must do something for Fergusson; Burns has
|
|
been before me with the gravestone. It occurs to me you might take
|
|
a walk down the Canongate and see in what condition the stone is.
|
|
If it be at all uncared for, we might repair it, and perhaps add a
|
|
few words of inscription.
|
|
|
|
I must tell you, what I just remembered in a flash as I was walking
|
|
about dictating this letter - there was in the original plan of the
|
|
MASTER OF BALLANTRAE a sort of introduction describing my arrival
|
|
in Edinburgh on a visit to yourself and your placing in my hands
|
|
the papers of the story. I actually wrote it, and then condemned
|
|
the idea - as being a little too like Scott, I suppose. Now I must
|
|
really find the MS. and try to finish it for the E. E. It will
|
|
give you, what I should so much like you to have, another corner of
|
|
your own in that lofty monument.
|
|
|
|
Suppose we do what I have proposed about Fergusson's monument, I
|
|
wonder if an inscription like this would look arrogant -
|
|
|
|
This stone originally erected
|
|
by Robert Burns has been
|
|
repaired at the
|
|
charges of Robert Louis Stevenson,
|
|
and is by him re-dedicated to
|
|
the memory of Robert Fergusson,
|
|
as the gift of one Edinburgh
|
|
lad to another.
|
|
|
|
In spacing this inscription I would detach the names of Fergusson
|
|
and Burns, but leave mine in the text.
|
|
|
|
Or would that look like sham modesty, and is it better to bring out
|
|
the three Roberts?
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO R. A. M. STEVENSON
|
|
|
|
VAILIMA, JUNE 1894.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR BOB, - I must make out a letter this mail or perish in the
|
|
attempt. All the same, I am deeply stupid, in bed with a cold,
|
|
deprived of my amanuensis, and conscious of the wish but not the
|
|
furnished will. You may be interested to hear how the family
|
|
inquiries go. It is now quite certain that we are a second-rate
|
|
lot, and came out of Cunningham or Clydesdale, therefore BRITISH
|
|
folk; so that you are Cymry on both sides, and I Cymry and Pict.
|
|
We may have fought with King Arthur and known Merlin. The first of
|
|
the family, Stevenson of Stevenson, was quite a great party, and
|
|
dates back to the wars of Edward First. The last male heir of
|
|
Stevenson of Stevenson died 1670, 220 pounds, 10s. to the bad, from
|
|
drink. About the same time the Stevensons, who were mostly in
|
|
Cunningham before, crop up suddenly in the parish of Neilston, over
|
|
the border in Renfrewshire. Of course, they may have been there
|
|
before, but there is no word of them in that parish till 1675 in
|
|
any extracts I have. Our first traceable ancestor was a tenant
|
|
farmer of Muir of Cauldwells - James in Nether-Carsewell.
|
|
Presently two families of maltmen are found in Glasgow, both, by
|
|
re-duplicated proofs, related to James (the son of James) in Nether
|
|
Carsewell. We descend by his second marriage from Robert; one of
|
|
these died 1733. It is not very romantic up to now, but has
|
|
interested me surprisingly to fish out, always hoping for more -
|
|
and occasionally getting at least a little clearness and
|
|
confirmation. But the earliest date, 1655, apparently the marriage
|
|
of James in Nether Carsewell, cannot as yet be pushed back. From
|
|
which of any number of dozen little families in Cunningham we
|
|
should derive, God knows! Of course, it doesn't matter a hundred
|
|
years hence, an argument fatal to all human enterprise, industry,
|
|
or pleasure. And to me it will be a deadly disappointment if I
|
|
cannot roll this stone away! One generation further might be
|
|
nothing, but it is my present object of desire, and we are so near
|
|
it! There is a man in the same parish called Constantine; if I
|
|
could only trace to him, I could take you far afield by that one
|
|
talisman of the strange Christian name of Constantine. But no such
|
|
luck! And I kind of fear we shall stick at James.
|
|
|
|
So much, though all inchoate, I trouble you with, knowing that you,
|
|
at least, must take an interest in it. So much is certain of that
|
|
strange Celtic descent, that the past has an interest for it
|
|
apparently gratuitous, but fiercely strong. I wish to trace my
|
|
ancestors a thousand years, if I trace them by gallowses. It is
|
|
not love, not pride, not admiration; it is an expansion of the
|
|
identity, intimately pleasing, and wholly uncritical; I can expend
|
|
myself in the person of an inglorious ancestor with perfect
|
|
comfort; or a disgraced, if I could find one. I suppose, perhaps,
|
|
it is more to me who am childless, and refrain with a certain shock
|
|
from looking forwards. But, I am sure, in the solid grounds of
|
|
race, that you have it also in some degree.
|
|
|
|
I. JAMES, a tenant of the Muirs, in Nether-Carsewell,
|
|
Neilston, married (1665?) Jean Keir.
|
|
|| |
|
|
|| |
|
|
|| |
|
|
+-----------------------------------------+
|
|
II. ROBERT (Maltman in Glasgow), died 1733,
|
|
| married 1st; married second,
|
|
| Elizabeth Cumming.
|
|
| ||
|
|
| ||
|
|
William (Maltman in ||
|
|
Glasgow). +--------------+
|
|
| |
|
|
| |
|
|
+-------------+--------------+ III. ROBERT (Maltman
|
|
ROBERT, MARION, ELIZABETH. in Glasgow), married
|
|
Margaret Fulton (had
|
|
NOTE. - Between 1730-1766 flourished a large family).
|
|
in Glasgow Alan the Coppersmith, who ||
|
|
acts as a kind of a pin to the whole ||
|
|
Stevenson system there. He was caution IV. ALAN, West India
|
|
to Robert the Second's will, and to merchant, married
|
|
William's will, and to the will of a Jean Lillie.
|
|
John, another maltman. ||
|
|
||
|
|
V. ROBERT, married
|
|
Jean Smith.
|
|
|
|
|
VI. ALAN. - Margaret
|
|
Jones
|
|
|
|
|
VII. R. A. M. S.
|
|
|
|
Enough genealogy. I do not know if you will be able to read my
|
|
hand. Unhappily, Belle, who is my amanuensis, is out of the way on
|
|
other affairs, and I have to make the unwelcome effort. (O this is
|
|
beautiful, I am quite pleased with myself.) Graham has just
|
|
arrived last night (my mother is coming by the other steamer in
|
|
three days), and has told me of your meeting, and he said you
|
|
looked a little older than I did; so that I suppose we keep step
|
|
fairly on the downward side of the hill. He thought you looked
|
|
harassed, and I could imagine that too. I sometimes feel harassed.
|
|
I have a great family here about me, a great anxiety. The loss (to
|
|
use my grandfather's expression), the 'loss' of our family is that
|
|
we are disbelievers in the morrow - perhaps I should say, rather,
|
|
in next year. The future is ALWAYS black to us; it was to Robert
|
|
Stevenson; to Thomas; I suspect to Alan; to R. A. M. S. it was so
|
|
almost to his ruin in youth; to R. L. S., who had a hard hopeful
|
|
strain in him from his mother, it was not so much so once, but
|
|
becomes daily more so. Daily so much more so, that I have a
|
|
painful difficulty in believing I can ever finish another book, or
|
|
that the public will ever read it.
|
|
|
|
I have so huge a desire to know exactly what you are doing, that I
|
|
suppose I should tell you what I am doing by way of an example. I
|
|
have a room now, a part of the twelve-foot verandah sparred in, at
|
|
the most inaccessible end of the house. Daily I see the sunrise
|
|
out of my bed, which I still value as a tonic, a perpetual tuning
|
|
fork, a look of God's face once in the day. At six my breakfast
|
|
comes up to me here, and I work till eleven. If I am quite well, I
|
|
sometimes go out and bathe in the river before lunch, twelve. In
|
|
the afternoon I generally work again, now alone drafting, now with
|
|
Belle dictating. Dinner is at six, and I am often in bed by eight.
|
|
This is supposing me to stay at home. But I must often be away,
|
|
sometimes all day long, sometimes till twelve, one, or two at
|
|
night, when you might see me coming home to the sleeping house,
|
|
sometimes in a trackless darkness, sometimes with a glorious tropic
|
|
moon, everything drenched with dew - unsaddling and creeping to
|
|
bed; and you would no longer be surprised that I live out in this
|
|
country, and not in Bournemouth - in bed.
|
|
|
|
My great recent interruptions have (as you know) come from
|
|
politics; not much in my line, you will say. But it is impossible
|
|
to live here and not feel very sorely the consequences of the
|
|
horrid white mismanagement. I tried standing by and looking on,
|
|
and it became too much for me. They are such illogical fools; a
|
|
logical fool in an office, with a lot of red tape, is conceivable.
|
|
Furthermore, he is as much as we have any reason to expect of
|
|
officials - a thoroughly common-place, unintellectual lot. But
|
|
these people are wholly on wires; laying their ears down, skimming
|
|
away, pausing as though shot, and presto! full spread on the other
|
|
tack. I observe in the official class mostly an insane jealousy of
|
|
the smallest kind, as compared to which the artist's is of a grave,
|
|
modest character - the actor's, even; a desire to extend his little
|
|
authority, and to relish it like a glass of wine, that is
|
|
IMPAYABLE. Sometimes, when I see one of these little kings
|
|
strutting over one of his victories - wholly illegal, perhaps, and
|
|
certain to be reversed to his shame if his superiors ever heard of
|
|
it - I could weep. The strange thing is that they HAVE NOTHING
|
|
ELSE. I auscultate them in vain; no real sense of duty, no real
|
|
comprehension, no real attempt to comprehend, no wish for
|
|
information - you cannot offend one of them more bitterly than by
|
|
offering information, though it is certain that you have MORE, and
|
|
obvious that you have OTHER, information than they have; and
|
|
talking of policy, they could not play a better stroke than by
|
|
listening to you, and it need by no means influence their action.
|
|
TENEZ, you know what a French post office or railway official is?
|
|
That is the diplomatic card to the life. Dickens is not in it;
|
|
caricature fails.
|
|
|
|
All this keeps me from my work, and gives me the unpleasant side of
|
|
the world. When your letters are disbelieved it makes you angry,
|
|
and that is rot; and I wish I could keep out of it with all my
|
|
soul. But I have just got into it again, and farewell peace!
|
|
|
|
My work goes along but slowly. I have got to a crossing place, I
|
|
suppose; the present book, SAINT IVES, is nothing; it is in no
|
|
style in particular, a tissue of adventures, the central character
|
|
not very well done, no philosophic pith under the yarn; and, in
|
|
short, if people will read it, that's all I ask; and if they won't,
|
|
damn them! I like doing it though; and if you ask me why! - after
|
|
that I am on WEIR OF HERMISTON and HEATHERCAT, two Scotch stories,
|
|
which will either be something different, or I shall have failed.
|
|
The first is generally designed, and is a private story of two or
|
|
three characters in a very grim vein. The second - alas! the
|
|
thought - is an attempt at a real historical novel, to present a
|
|
whole field of time; the race - our own race - the west land and
|
|
Clydesdale blue bonnets, under the influence of their last trial,
|
|
when they got to a pitch of organisation in madness that no other
|
|
peasantry has ever made an offer at. I was going to call it THE
|
|
KILLING TIME, but this man Crockett has forestalled me in that.
|
|
Well, it'll be a big smash if I fail in it; but a gallant attempt.
|
|
All my weary reading as a boy, which you remember well enough, will
|
|
come to bear on it; and if my mind will keep up to the point it was
|
|
in a while back, perhaps I can pull it through.
|
|
|
|
For two months past, Fanny, Belle, Austin (her child), and I have
|
|
been alone; but yesterday, as I mentioned, Graham Balfour arrived,
|
|
and on Wednesday my mother and Lloyd will make up the party to its
|
|
full strength. I wish you could drop in for a month or a week, or
|
|
two hours. That is my chief want. On the whole, it is an
|
|
unexpectedly pleasant corner I have dropped into for an end of it,
|
|
which I could scarcely have foreseen from Wilson's shop, or the
|
|
Princes Street Gardens, or the Portobello Road. Still, I would
|
|
like to hear what my ALTER EGO thought of it; and I would sometimes
|
|
like to have my old MAITRE ES ARTS express an opinion on what I do.
|
|
I put this very tamely, being on the whole a quiet elderly man; but
|
|
it is a strong passion with me, though intermittent. Now, try to
|
|
follow my example and tell me something about yourself, Louisa, the
|
|
Bab, and your work; and kindly send me some specimens of what
|
|
you're about. I have only seen one thing by you, about Notre Dame
|
|
in the WESTMINSTER or ST. JAMES'S, since I left England, now I
|
|
suppose six years ago.
|
|
|
|
I have looked this trash over, and it is not at all the letter I
|
|
wanted to write - not truck about officials, ancestors, and the
|
|
like rancidness - but you have to let your pen go in its own
|
|
broken-down gait, like an old butcher's pony, stop when it pleases,
|
|
and go on again as it will. - Ever, my dear Bob, your affectionate
|
|
cousin,
|
|
|
|
R. L. STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO HENRY JAMES
|
|
|
|
VAILIMA, JULY 7TH, 1894.
|
|
|
|
DEAR HENRY JAMES, - I am going to try and dictate to you a letter
|
|
or a note, and begin the same without any spark of hope, my mind
|
|
being entirely in abeyance. This malady is very bitter on the
|
|
literary man. I have had it now coming on for a month, and it
|
|
seems to get worse instead of better. If it should prove to be
|
|
softening of the brain, a melancholy interest will attach to the
|
|
present document. I heard a great deal about you from my mother
|
|
and Graham Balfour; the latter declares that you could take a First
|
|
in any Samoan subject. If that be so, I should like to hear you on
|
|
the theory of the constitution. Also to consult you on the force
|
|
of the particles O LO 'O and UA, which are the subject of a dispute
|
|
among local pundits. You might, if you ever answer this, give me
|
|
your opinion on the origin of the Samoan race, just to complete the
|
|
favour.
|
|
|
|
They both say that you are looking well, and I suppose I may
|
|
conclude from that that you are feeling passably. I wish I was.
|
|
Do not suppose from this that I am ill in body; it is the numskull
|
|
that I complain of. And when that is wrong, as you must be very
|
|
keenly aware, you begin every day with a smarting disappointment,
|
|
which is not good for the temper. I am in one of the humours when
|
|
a man wonders how any one can be such an ass as to embrace the
|
|
profession of letters, and not get apprenticed to a barber or keep
|
|
a baked-potato stall. But I have no doubt in the course of a week,
|
|
or perhaps to-morrow, things will look better.
|
|
|
|
We have at present in port the model warship of Great Britain. She
|
|
is called the CURACOA, and has the nicest set of officers and men
|
|
conceivable. They, the officers, are all very intimate with us,
|
|
and the front verandah is known as the Curacoa Club, and the road
|
|
up to Vailima is known as the Curacoa Track. It was rather a
|
|
surprise to me; many naval officers have I known, and somehow had
|
|
not learned to think entirely well of them, and perhaps sometimes
|
|
ask myself a little uneasily how that kind of men could do great
|
|
actions? and behold! the answer comes to me, and I see a ship that
|
|
I would guarantee to go anywhere it was possible for men to go, and
|
|
accomplish anything it was permitted man to attempt. I had a
|
|
cruise on board of her not long ago to Manu'a, and was delighted.
|
|
The goodwill of all on board; the grim playfulness of - quarters,
|
|
with the wounded falling down at the word; the ambulances hastening
|
|
up and carrying them away; the Captain suddenly crying, 'Fire in
|
|
the ward-room!' and the squad hastening forward with the hose; and,
|
|
last and most curious spectacle of all, all the men in their dust-
|
|
coloured fatigue clothes, at a note of the bugle, falling
|
|
simultaneously flat on deck, and the ship proceeding with its
|
|
prostrate crew - QUASI to ram an enemy; our dinner at night in a
|
|
wild open anchorage, the ship rolling almost to her gunwales, and
|
|
showing us alternately her bulwarks up in the sky, and then the
|
|
wild broken cliffy palm-crested shores of the island with the surf
|
|
thundering and leaping close aboard. We had the ward-room mess on
|
|
deck, lit by pink wax tapers, everybody, of course, in uniform but
|
|
myself, and the first lieutenant (who is a rheumaticky body)
|
|
wrapped in a boat cloak. Gradually the sunset faded out, the
|
|
island disappeared from the eye, though it remained menacingly
|
|
present to the ear with the voice of the surf; and then the captain
|
|
turned on the searchlight and gave us the coast, the beach, the
|
|
trees, the native houses, and the cliffs by glimpses of daylight, a
|
|
kind of deliberate lightning. About which time, I suppose, we must
|
|
have come as far as the dessert, and were probably drinking our
|
|
first glass of port to Her Majesty. We stayed two days at the
|
|
island, and had, in addition, a very picturesque snapshot at the
|
|
native life. The three islands of Manu'a are independent, and are
|
|
ruled over by a little slip of a half-caste girl about twenty, who
|
|
sits all day in a pink gown, in a little white European house with
|
|
about a quarter of an acre of roses in front of it, looking at the
|
|
palm-trees on the village street, and listening to the surf. This,
|
|
so far as I could discover, was all she had to do. 'This is a very
|
|
dull place,' she said. It appears she could go to no other village
|
|
for fear of raising the jealousy of her own people in the capital.
|
|
And as for going about 'tafatafaoing,' as we say here, its cost was
|
|
too enormous. A strong able-bodied native must walk in front of
|
|
her and blow the conch shell continuously from the moment she
|
|
leaves one house until the moment she enters another. Did you ever
|
|
blow the conch shell? I presume not; but the sweat literally
|
|
hailed off that man, and I expected every moment to see him burst a
|
|
blood-vessel. We were entertained to kava in the guest-house with
|
|
some very original features. The young men who run for the KAVA
|
|
have a right to misconduct themselves AD LIBITUM on the way back;
|
|
and though they were told to restrain themselves on the occasion of
|
|
our visit, there was a strange hurly-burly at their return, when
|
|
they came beating the trees and the posts of the houses, leaping,
|
|
shouting, and yelling like Bacchants.
|
|
|
|
I tasted on that occasion what it is to be great. My name was
|
|
called next after the captain's, and several chiefs (a thing quite
|
|
new to me, and not at all Samoan practice) drank to me by name.
|
|
|
|
And now, if you are not sick of the CURACOA and Manu'a, I am, at
|
|
least on paper. And I decline any longer to give you examples of
|
|
how not to write.
|
|
|
|
By the by, you sent me long ago a work by Anatole France, which I
|
|
confess I did not TASTE. Since then I have made the acquaintance
|
|
of the ABBE COIGNARD, and have become a faithful adorer. I don't
|
|
think a better book was ever written.
|
|
|
|
And I have no idea what I have said, and I have no idea what I
|
|
ought to have said, and I am a total ass, but my heart is in the
|
|
right place, and I am, my dear Henry James, yours,
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO MR. MARCEL SCHWOB
|
|
|
|
VAILIMA, UPOLU, SAMOA, JULY 7, 1894.
|
|
|
|
DEAR MR. MARCEL SCHWOB, - Thank you for having remembered me in my
|
|
exile. I have read MIMES twice as a whole; and now, as I write, I
|
|
am reading it again as it were by accident, and a piece at a time,
|
|
my eye catching a word and travelling obediently on through the
|
|
whole number. It is a graceful book, essentially graceful, with
|
|
its haunting agreeable melancholy, its pleasing savour of
|
|
antiquity. At the same time, by its merits, it shows itself rather
|
|
as the promise of something else to come than a thing final in
|
|
itself. You have yet to give us - and I am expecting it with
|
|
impatience - something of a larger gait; something daylit, not
|
|
twilit; something with the colours of life, not the flat tints of a
|
|
temple illumination; something that shall be SAID with all the
|
|
clearnesses and the trivialities of speech, not SUNG like a semi-
|
|
articulate lullaby. It will not please yourself as well, when you
|
|
come to give it us, but it will please others better. It will be
|
|
more of a whole, more worldly, more nourished, more commonplace -
|
|
and not so pretty, perhaps not even so beautiful. No man knows
|
|
better than I that, as we go on in life, we must part from
|
|
prettiness and the graces. We but attain qualities to lose them;
|
|
life is a series of farewells, even in art; even our proficiencies
|
|
are deciduous and evanescent. So here with these exquisite pieces
|
|
the XVIIth, XVIIIth, and IVth of the present collection. You will
|
|
perhaps never excel them; I should think the 'Hermes,' never.
|
|
Well, you will do something else, and of that I am in expectation.
|
|
- Yours cordially,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO A. ST. GAUDENS
|
|
|
|
VAILIMA, SAMOA, JULY 8, 1894.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR ST. GAUDENS, - This is to tell you that the medallion has
|
|
been at last triumphantly transported up the hill and placed over
|
|
my smoking-room mantelpiece. It is considered by everybody a
|
|
first-rate but flattering portrait. We have it in a very good
|
|
light, which brings out the artistic merits of the god-like
|
|
sculptor to great advantage. As for my own opinion, I believe it
|
|
to be a speaking likeness, and not flattered at all; possibly a
|
|
little the reverse. The verses (curse the rhyme) look remarkably
|
|
well.
|
|
|
|
Please do not longer delay, but send me an account for the expense
|
|
of the gilt letters. I was sorry indeed that they proved beyond
|
|
the means of a small farmer. - Yours very sincerely,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO MISS ADELAIDE BOODLE
|
|
|
|
VAILIMA, JULY 14, 1894.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR ADELAIDE, - . . . So, at last, you are going into mission
|
|
work? where I think your heart always was. You will like it in a
|
|
way, but remember it is dreary long. Do you know the story of the
|
|
American tramp who was offered meals and a day's wage to chop with
|
|
the back of an axe on a fallen trunk. 'Damned if I can go on
|
|
chopping when I can't see the chips fly!' You will never see the
|
|
chips fly in mission work, never; and be sure you know it
|
|
beforehand. The work is one long dull disappointment, varied by
|
|
acute revulsions; and those who are by nature courageous and
|
|
cheerful and have grown old in experience, learn to rub their hands
|
|
over infinitesimal successes. However, as I really believe there
|
|
is some good done in the long run - GUTTA CAVAT LAPIDEM NON VI in
|
|
this business - it is a useful and honourable career in which no
|
|
one should be ashamed to embark. Always remember the fable of the
|
|
sun, the storm, and the traveller's cloak. Forget wholly and for
|
|
ever all small pruderies, and remember that YOU CANNOT CHANGE
|
|
ANCESTRAL FEELINGS OF RIGHT AND WRONG WITHOUT WHAT IS PRACTICALLY
|
|
SOUL-MURDER. Barbarous as the customs may seem, always hear them
|
|
with patience, always judge them with gentleness, always find in
|
|
them some seed of good; see that you always develop them; remember
|
|
that all you can do is to civilise the man in the line of his own
|
|
civilisation, such as it is. And never expect, never believe in,
|
|
thaumaturgic conversions. They may do very well for St. Paul; in
|
|
the case of an Andaman islander they mean less than nothing. In
|
|
fact, what you have to do is to teach the parents in the interests
|
|
of their great-grandchildren.
|
|
|
|
Now, my dear Adelaide, dismiss from your mind the least idea of
|
|
fault upon your side; nothing is further from the fact. I cannot
|
|
forgive you, for I do not know your fault. My own is plain enough,
|
|
and the name of it is cold-hearted neglect; and you may busy
|
|
yourself more usefully in trying to forgive me. But ugly as my
|
|
fault is, you must not suppose it to mean more than it does; it
|
|
does not mean that we have at all forgotten you, that we have
|
|
become at all indifferent to the thought of you. See, in my life
|
|
of Jenkin, a remark of his, very well expressed, on the friendships
|
|
of men who do not write to each other. I can honestly say that I
|
|
have not changed to you in any way; though I have behaved thus ill,
|
|
thus cruelly. Evil is done by want of - well, principally by want
|
|
of industry. You can imagine what I would say (in a novel) of any
|
|
one who had behaved as I have done, DETERIORA SEQUOR. And you must
|
|
somehow manage to forgive your old friend; and if you will be so
|
|
very good, continue to give us news of you, and let us share the
|
|
knowledge of your adventures, sure that it will be always followed
|
|
with interest - even if it is answered with the silence of
|
|
ingratitude. For I am not a fool; I know my faults, I know they
|
|
are ineluctable, I know they are growing on me. I know I may
|
|
offend again, and I warn you of it. But the next time I offend,
|
|
tell me so plainly and frankly like a lady, and don't lacerate my
|
|
heart and bludgeon my vanity with imaginary faults of your own and
|
|
purely gratuitous penitence. I might suspect you of irony!
|
|
|
|
We are all fairly well, though I have been off work and off - as
|
|
you know very well - letter-writing. Yet I have sometimes more
|
|
than twenty letters, and sometimes more than thirty, going out each
|
|
mail. And Fanny has had a most distressing bronchitis for some
|
|
time, which she is only now beginning to get over. I have just
|
|
been to see her; she is lying - though she had breakfast an hour
|
|
ago, about seven - in her big cool, mosquito-proof room,
|
|
ingloriously asleep. As for me, you see that a doom has come upon
|
|
me: I cannot make marks with a pen - witness 'ingloriously' above;
|
|
and my amanuensis not appearing so early in the day, for she is
|
|
then immersed in household affairs, and I can hear her 'steering
|
|
the boys' up and down the verandahs - you must decipher this
|
|
unhappy letter for yourself and, I fully admit, with everything
|
|
against you. A letter should be always well written; how much more
|
|
a letter of apology! Legibility is the politeness of men of
|
|
letters, as punctuality of kings and beggars. By the punctuality
|
|
of my replies, and the beauty of my hand-writing, judge what a fine
|
|
conscience I must have!
|
|
|
|
Now, my dear gamekeeper, I must really draw to a close. For I have
|
|
much else to write before the mail goes out three days hence.
|
|
Fanny being asleep, it would not be conscientious to invent a
|
|
message from her, so you must just imagine her sentiments. I find
|
|
I have not the heart to speak of your recent loss. You remember
|
|
perhaps, when my father died, you told me those ugly images of
|
|
sickness, decline, and impaired reason, which then haunted me day
|
|
and night, would pass away and be succeeded by things more happily
|
|
characteristic. I have found it so. He now haunts me, strangely
|
|
enough, in two guises; as a man of fifty, lying on a hillside and
|
|
carving mottoes on a stick, strong and well; and as a younger man,
|
|
running down the sands into the sea near North Berwick, myself -
|
|
AETAT. II - somewhat horrified at finding him so beautiful when
|
|
stripped! I hand on your own advice to you in case you have
|
|
forgotten it, as I know one is apt to do in seasons of bereavement.
|
|
- Ever yours, with much love and sympathy,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO MRS. BAKER
|
|
|
|
VAILIMA, SAMOA, JULY 16, 1894.
|
|
|
|
DEAR MRS. BAKER, - I am very much obliged to you for your letter
|
|
and the enclosure from Mr. Skinner. Mr. Skinner says he 'thinks
|
|
Mr. Stevenson must be a very kind man'; he little knows me. But I
|
|
am very sure of one thing, that you are a very kind woman. I envy
|
|
you - my amanuensis being called away, I continue in my own hand,
|
|
or what is left of it - unusually legible, I am thankful to see - I
|
|
envy you your beautiful choice of an employment. There must be no
|
|
regrets at least for a day so spent; and when the night falls you
|
|
need ask no blessing on your work.
|
|
|
|
'Inasmuch as ye have done it unto one of these.' - Yours truly,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO J. M. BARRIE
|
|
|
|
VAILIMA, JULY 13, 1894.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR BARRIE, - This is the last effort of an ulcerated
|
|
conscience. I have been so long owing you a letter, I have heard
|
|
so much of you, fresh from the press, from my mother and Graham
|
|
Balfour, that I have to write a letter no later than to-day, or
|
|
perish in my shame. But the deuce of it is, my dear fellow, that
|
|
you write such a very good letter that I am ashamed to exhibit
|
|
myself before my junior (which you are, after all) in the light of
|
|
the dreary idiot I feel. Understand that there will be nothing
|
|
funny in the following pages. If I can manage to be rationally
|
|
coherent, I shall be more than satisfied.
|
|
|
|
In the first place, I have had the extreme satisfaction to be shown
|
|
that photograph of your mother. It bears evident traces of the
|
|
hand of an amateur. How is it that amateurs invariably take better
|
|
photographs than professionals? I must qualify invariably. My own
|
|
negatives have always represented a province of chaos and old night
|
|
in which you might dimly perceive fleecy spots of twilight,
|
|
representing nothing; so that, if I am right in supposing the
|
|
portrait of your mother to be yours, I must salute you as my
|
|
superior. Is that your mother's breakfast? Or is it only
|
|
afternoon tea? If the first, do let me recommend to Mrs. Barrie to
|
|
add an egg to her ordinary. Which, if you please, I will ask her
|
|
to eat to the honour of her son, and I am sure she will live much
|
|
longer for it, to enjoy his fresh successes. I never in my life
|
|
saw anything more deliciously characteristic. I declare I can hear
|
|
her speak. I wonder my mother could resist the temptation of your
|
|
proposed visit to Kirriemuir, which it was like your kindness to
|
|
propose. By the way, I was twice in Kirriemuir, I believe in the
|
|
year '71, when I was going on a visit to Glenogil. It was
|
|
Kirriemuir, was it not? I have a distinct recollection of an inn
|
|
at the end - I think the upper end - of an irregular open place or
|
|
square, in which I always see your characters evolve. But, indeed,
|
|
I did not pay much attention; being all bent upon my visit to a
|
|
shooting-box, where I should fish a real trout-stream, and I
|
|
believe preserved. I did, too, and it was a charming stream, clear
|
|
as crystal, without a trace of peat - a strange thing in Scotland -
|
|
and alive with trout; the name of it I cannot remember, it was
|
|
something like the Queen's River, and in some hazy way connected
|
|
with memories of Mary Queen of Scots. It formed an epoch in my
|
|
life, being the end of all my trout-fishing. I had always been
|
|
accustomed to pause and very laboriously to kill every fish as I
|
|
took it. But in the Queen's River I took so good a basket that I
|
|
forgot these niceties; and when I sat down, in a hard rain shower,
|
|
under a bank, to take my sandwiches and sherry, lo! and behold,
|
|
there was the basketful of trouts still kicking in their agony. I
|
|
had a very unpleasant conversation with my conscience. All that
|
|
afternoon I persevered in fishing, brought home my basket in
|
|
triumph, and sometime that night, 'in the wee sma' hours ayont the
|
|
twal,' I finally forswore the gentle craft of fishing. I dare say
|
|
your local knowledge may identify this historic river; I wish it
|
|
could go farther and identify also that particular Free kirk in
|
|
which I sat and groaned on Sunday. While my hand is in I must tell
|
|
you a story. At that antique epoch you must not fall into the
|
|
vulgar error that I was myself ancient. I was, on the contrary,
|
|
very young, very green, and (what you will appreciate, Mr. Barrie)
|
|
very shy. There came one day to lunch at the house two very
|
|
formidable old ladies - or one very formidable, and the other what
|
|
you please - answering to the honoured and historic name of the
|
|
Miss C- A-'s of Balnamoon. At table I was exceedingly funny, and
|
|
entertained the company with tales of geese and bubbly-jocks. I
|
|
was great in the expression of my terror for these bipeds, and
|
|
suddenly this horrid, severe, and eminently matronly old lady put
|
|
up a pair of gold eye-glasses, looked at me awhile in silence, and
|
|
pronounced in a clangorous voice her verdict. 'You give me very
|
|
much the effect of a coward, Mr. Stevenson!' I had very nearly
|
|
left two vices behind me at Glenogil - fishing and jesting at
|
|
table. And of one thing you may be very sure, my lips were no more
|
|
opened at that meal.
|
|
|
|
JULY 29TH
|
|
|
|
No, Barrie, 'tis in vain they try to alarm me with their bulletins.
|
|
No doubt, you're ill, and unco ill, I believe; but I have been so
|
|
often in the same case that I know pleurisy and pneumonia are in
|
|
vain against Scotsmen who can write, (I once could.) You cannot
|
|
imagine probably how near me this common calamity brings you. CE
|
|
QUE J'AI TOUSSE DANS MA VIE! How often and how long have I been on
|
|
the rack at night and learned to appreciate that noble passage in
|
|
the Psalms when somebody or other is said to be more set on
|
|
something than they 'who dig for hid treasures - yea, than those
|
|
who long for the morning' - for all the world, as you have been
|
|
racked and you have longed. Keep your heart up, and you'll do.
|
|
Tell that to your mother, if you are still in any danger or
|
|
suffering. And by the way, if you are at all like me - and I tell
|
|
myself you are very like me - be sure there is only one thing good
|
|
for you, and that is the sea in hot climates. Mount, sir, into 'a
|
|
little frigot' of 5000 tons or so, and steer peremptorily for the
|
|
tropics; and what if the ancient mariner, who guides your frigot,
|
|
should startle the silence of the ocean with the cry of land ho! -
|
|
say, when the day is dawning - and you should see the turquoise
|
|
mountain tops of Upolu coming hand over fist above the horizon?
|
|
Mr. Barrie, sir, 'tis then there would be larks! And though I
|
|
cannot be certain that our climate would suit you (for it does not
|
|
suit some), I am sure as death the voyage would do you good - would
|
|
do you BEST - and if Samoa didn't do, you needn't stay beyond the
|
|
month, and I should have had another pleasure in my life, which is
|
|
a serious consideration for me. I take this as the hand of the
|
|
Lord preparing your way to Vailima - in the desert, certainly - in
|
|
the desert of Cough and by the ghoul-haunted woodland of Fever -
|
|
but whither that way points there can be no question - and there
|
|
will be a meeting of the twa Hoasting Scots Makers in spite of
|
|
fate, fortune, and the Devil. ABSIT OMEN!
|
|
|
|
My dear Barrie, I am a little in the dark about this new work of
|
|
yours: what is to become of me afterwards? You say carefully -
|
|
methought anxiously - that I was no longer me when I grew up? I
|
|
cannot bear this suspense: what is it? It's no forgery? And AM I
|
|
HANGIT? These are the elements of a very pretty lawsuit which you
|
|
had better come to Samoa to compromise. I am enjoying a great
|
|
pleasure that I had long looked forward to, reading Orme's HISTORY
|
|
OF INDOSTAN; I had been looking out for it everywhere; but at last,
|
|
in four volumes, large quarto, beautiful type and page, and with a
|
|
delectable set of maps and plans, and all the names of the places
|
|
wrongly spelled - it came to Samoa, little Barrie. I tell you
|
|
frankly, you had better come soon. I am sair failed a'ready; and
|
|
what I may be if you continue to dally, I dread to conceive. I may
|
|
be speechless; already, or at least for a month or so, I'm little
|
|
better than a teetoller - I beg pardon, a teetotaller. It is not
|
|
exactly physical, for I am in good health, working four or five
|
|
hours a day in my plantation, and intending to ride a paper-chase
|
|
next Sunday - ay, man, that's a fact, and I havena had the hert to
|
|
breathe it to my mother yet - the obligation's poleetical, for I am
|
|
trying every means to live well with my German neighbours - and, O
|
|
Barrie, but it's no easy! To be sure, there are many exceptions.
|
|
And the whole of the above must be regarded as private - strictly
|
|
private. Breathe it not in Kirriemuir: tell it not to the
|
|
daughters of Dundee! What a nice extract this would make for the
|
|
daily papers! and how it would facilitate my position here! . . .
|
|
|
|
AUGUST 5TH.
|
|
|
|
This is Sunday, the Lord's Day. 'The hour of attack approaches.'
|
|
And it is a singular consideration what I risk; I may yet be the
|
|
subject of a tract, and a good tract too - such as one which I
|
|
remember reading with recreant awe and rising hair in my youth, of
|
|
a boy who was a very good boy, and went to Sunday Schule, and one
|
|
day kipped from it, and went and actually bathed, and was dashed
|
|
over a waterfall, and he was the only son of his mother, and she
|
|
was a widow. A dangerous trade, that, and one that I have to
|
|
practise. I'll put in a word when I get home again, to tell you
|
|
whether I'm killed or not. 'Accident in the (Paper) Hunting Field:
|
|
death of a notorious author. We deeply regret to announce the
|
|
death of the most unpopular man in Samoa, who broke his neck at the
|
|
descent of Magagi, from the misconduct of his little raving lunatic
|
|
of an old beast of a pony. It is proposed to commemorate the
|
|
incident by the erection of a suitable pile. The design (by our
|
|
local architect, Mr. Walker) is highly artificial, with a rich and
|
|
voluminous Crockett at each corner, a small but impervious Barrieer
|
|
at the entrance, an arch at the top, an Archer of a pleasing but
|
|
solid character at the bottom; the colour will be genuine William-
|
|
Black; and Lang, lang may the ladies sit wi' their fans in their
|
|
hands.' Well, well, they may sit as they sat for me, and little
|
|
they'll reck, the ungrateful jauds! Muckle they cared about
|
|
Tusitala when they had him! But now ye can see the difference;
|
|
now, leddies, ye can repent, when ower late, o' your former
|
|
cauldness and what ye'll perhaps allow me to ca' your TEPEEDITY!
|
|
He was beautiful as the day, but his day is done! And perhaps, as
|
|
he was maybe gettin' a wee thing fly-blawn, it's nane too shune.
|
|
|
|
MONDAY, AUGUST 6TH.
|
|
|
|
Well, sir, I have escaped the dangerous conjunction of the widow's
|
|
only son and the Sabbath Day. We had a most enjoyable time, and
|
|
Lloyd and I were 3 and 4 to arrive; I will not tell here what
|
|
interval had elapsed between our arrival and the arrival of 1 and
|
|
2; the question, sir, is otiose and malign; it deserves, it shall
|
|
have no answer. And now without further delay to the main purpose
|
|
of this hasty note. We received and we have already in fact
|
|
distributed the gorgeous fahbrics of Kirriemuir. Whether from the
|
|
splendour of the robes themselves, or from the direct nature of the
|
|
compliments with which you had directed us to accompany the
|
|
presentations, one young lady blushed as she received the proofs of
|
|
your munificence. . . . Bad ink, and the dregs of it at that, but
|
|
the heart in the right place. Still very cordially interested in
|
|
my Barrie and wishing him well through his sickness, which is of
|
|
the body, and long defended from mine, which is of the head, and by
|
|
the impolite might be described as idiocy. The whole head is
|
|
useless, and the whole sitting part painful: reason, the recent
|
|
Paper Chase.
|
|
|
|
There was racing and chasing in Vailile plantation,
|
|
And vastly we enjoyed it,
|
|
But, alas! for the state of my foundation,
|
|
For it wholly has destroyed it.
|
|
|
|
Come, my mind is looking up. The above is wholly impromptu. - On
|
|
oath,
|
|
|
|
TUSITALA.
|
|
|
|
AUGUST 12, 1894
|
|
|
|
And here, Mr. Barrie, is news with a vengeance. Mother Hubbard's
|
|
dog is well again - what did I tell you? Pleurisy, pneumonia, and
|
|
all that kind of truck is quite unavailing against a Scotchman who
|
|
can write - and not only that, but it appears the perfidious dog is
|
|
married. This incident, so far as I remember, is omitted from the
|
|
original epic -
|
|
|
|
She went to the graveyard
|
|
To see him get him buried,
|
|
And when she came back
|
|
The Deil had got merried.
|
|
|
|
It now remains to inform you that I have taken what we call here
|
|
'German offence' at not receiving cards, and that the only
|
|
reparation I will accept is that Mrs. Barrie shall incontinently
|
|
upon the receipt of this Take and Bring you to Vailima in order to
|
|
apologise and be pardoned for this offence. The commentary of
|
|
Tamaitai upon the event was brief but pregnant: 'Well, it's a
|
|
comfort our guest-room is furnished for two.'
|
|
|
|
This letter, about nothing, has already endured too long. I shall
|
|
just present the family to Mrs. Barrie - Tamaitai, Tamaitai Matua,
|
|
Teuila, Palema, Loia, and with an extra low bow, Yours,
|
|
|
|
TUSITALA.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO DR. BAKEWELL
|
|
|
|
VAILIMA, AUGUST 7, 1894.
|
|
|
|
DEAR DR. BAKEWELL, - I am not more than human. I am more human
|
|
than is wholly convenient, and your anecdote was welcome. What you
|
|
say about UNWILLING WORK, my dear sir, is a consideration always
|
|
present with me, and yet not easy to give its due weight to. You
|
|
grow gradually into a certain income; without spending a penny
|
|
more, with the same sense of restriction as before when you
|
|
painfully scraped two hundred a year together, you find you have
|
|
spent, and you cannot well stop spending, a far larger sum; and
|
|
this expense can only be supported by a certain production.
|
|
However, I am off work this month, and occupy myself instead in
|
|
weeding my cacao, paper chases, and the like. I may tell you, my
|
|
average of work in favourable circumstances is far greater than you
|
|
suppose: from six o'clock till eleven at latest, and often till
|
|
twelve, and again in the afternoon from two to four. My hand is
|
|
quite destroyed, as you may perceive, to-day to a really unusual
|
|
extent. I can sometimes write a decent fist still; but I have just
|
|
returned with my arms all stung from three hours' work in the
|
|
cacao. - Yours, etc.,
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO JAMES PAYN
|
|
|
|
VAILIMA, UPOLU, SAMOA [AUGUST 11, 1894].
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR JAMES PAYN, - I hear from Lang that you are unwell, and it
|
|
reminds me of two circumstances: First, that it is a very long
|
|
time since you had the exquisite pleasure of hearing from me; and
|
|
second, that I have been very often unwell myself, and sometimes
|
|
had to thank you for a grateful anodyne.
|
|
|
|
They are not good, the circumstances, to write an anodyne letter.
|
|
The hills and my house at less than (boom) a minute's interval
|
|
quake with thunder; and though I cannot hear that part of it,
|
|
shells are falling thick into the fort of Luatuanu'u (boom). It is
|
|
my friends of the CURACOA, the FALKE, and the BUSSARD bombarding
|
|
(after all these - boom - months) the rebels of Atua. (Boom-boom.)
|
|
It is most distracting in itself; and the thought of the poor
|
|
devils in their fort (boom) with their bits of rifles far from
|
|
pleasant. (Boom-boom.) You can see how quick it goes, and I'll
|
|
say no more about Mr. Bow-wow, only you must understand the
|
|
perpetual accompaniment of this discomfortable sound, and make
|
|
allowances for the value of my copy. It is odd, though, I can well
|
|
remember, when the Franco-Prussian war began, and I was in Eilean
|
|
Earraid, far enough from the sound of the loudest cannonade, I
|
|
could HEAR the shots fired, and I felt the pang in my breast of a
|
|
man struck. It was sometimes so distressing, so instant, that I
|
|
lay in the heather on the top of the island, with my face hid,
|
|
kicking my heels for agony. And now, when I can hear the actual
|
|
concussion of the air and hills, when I KNOW personally the people
|
|
who stand exposed to it, I am able to go on TANT BIEN QUE MAL with
|
|
a letter to James Payn! The blessings of age, though mighty small,
|
|
are tangible. I have heard a great deal of them since I came into
|
|
the world, and now that I begin to taste of them - Well! But this
|
|
is one, that people do get cured of the excess of sensibility; and
|
|
I had as lief these people were shot at as myself - or almost, for
|
|
then I should have some of the fun, such as it is.
|
|
|
|
You are to conceive me, then, sitting in my little gallery room,
|
|
shaken by these continual spasms of cannon, and with my eye more or
|
|
less singly fixed on the imaginary figure of my dear James Payn. I
|
|
try to see him in bed; no go. I see him instead jumping up in his
|
|
room in Waterloo Place (where EX HYPOTHESI he is not), sitting on
|
|
the table, drawing out a very black briar-root pipe, and beginning
|
|
to talk to a slim and ill-dressed visitor in a voice that is good
|
|
to hear and with a smile that is pleasant to see. (After a little
|
|
more than half an hour, the voice that was ill to hear has ceased,
|
|
the cannonade is over.) And I am thinking how I can get an
|
|
answering smile wafted over so many leagues of land and water, and
|
|
can find no way.
|
|
|
|
I have always been a great visitor of the sick; and one of the sick
|
|
I visited was W. E. Henley, which did not make very tedious visits,
|
|
so I'll not get off much purgatory for them. That was in the
|
|
Edinburgh Infirmary, the old one, the true one, with Georgius
|
|
Secundus standing and pointing his toe in a niche of the facade;
|
|
and a mighty fine building it was! And I remember one winter's
|
|
afternoon, in that place of misery, that Henley and I chanced to
|
|
fall in talk about James Payn himself. I am wishing you could have
|
|
heard that talk! I think that would make you smile. We had mixed
|
|
you up with John Payne, for one thing, and stood amazed at your
|
|
extraordinary, even painful, versatility; and for another, we found
|
|
ourselves each students so well prepared for examinations on the
|
|
novels of the real Mackay. Perhaps, after all, this is worth
|
|
something in life - to have given so much pleasure to a pair so
|
|
different in every way as were Henley and I, and to be talked of
|
|
with so much interest by two such (beg pardon) clever lads!
|
|
|
|
The cheerful Lang has neglected to tell me what is the matter with
|
|
you; so, I'm sorry to say, I am cut off from all the customary
|
|
consolations. I can't say, 'Think how much worse it would be if
|
|
you had a broken leg!' when you may have the crushing repartee up
|
|
your sleeve, 'But it is my leg that is broken.' This is a pity.
|
|
But there are consolations. You are an Englishman (I believe); you
|
|
are a man of letters; you have never been made C.B.; your hair was
|
|
not red; you have played cribbage and whist; you did not play
|
|
either the fiddle or the banjo; you were never an aesthete; you
|
|
never contributed to -'S JOURNAL; your name is not Jabez Balfour;
|
|
you are totally unconnected with the Army and Navy departments; I
|
|
understand you to have lived within your income - why, cheer up!
|
|
here are many legitimate causes of congratulation. I seem to be
|
|
writing an obituary notice. ABSIT OMEN! But I feel very sure that
|
|
these considerations will have done you more good than medicine.
|
|
|
|
By the by, did you ever play piquet? I have fallen a victim to
|
|
this debilitating game. It is supposed to be scientific; God save
|
|
the mark, what self-deceivers men are! It is distinctly less so
|
|
than cribbage. But how fascinating! There is such material
|
|
opulence about it, such vast ambitions may be realised - and are
|
|
not; it may be called the Monte Cristo of games. And the thrill
|
|
with which you take five cards partakes of the nature of lust - and
|
|
you draw four sevens and a nine, and the seven and nine of a suit
|
|
that you discarded, and O! but the world is a desert! You may see
|
|
traces of discouragement in my letter: all due to piquet! There
|
|
has been a disastrous turn of the luck against me; a month or two
|
|
ago I was two thousand ahead; now, and for a week back, I have been
|
|
anything from four thousand eight hundred to five thousand two
|
|
hundred astern. If I have a sixieme, my beast of a partner has a
|
|
septieme; and if I have three aces, three kings, three queens, and
|
|
three knaves (excuse the slight exaggeration), the devil holds
|
|
quatorze of tens! - I remain, my dear James Payn, your sincere and
|
|
obliged friend - old friend let me say,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO MISS MIDDLETON
|
|
|
|
VAILIMA, SAMOA, SEPTEMBER 9, 1894.
|
|
|
|
DEAR MISS MIDDLETON, - Your letter has been like the drawing up of
|
|
a curtain. Of course I remember you very well, and the Skye
|
|
terrier to which you refer - a heavy, dull, fatted, graceless
|
|
creature he grew up to be - was my own particular pet. It may
|
|
amuse you, perhaps, as much as 'The Inn' amused me, if I tell you
|
|
what made this dog particularly mine. My father was the natural
|
|
god of all the dogs in our house, and poor Jura took to him of
|
|
course. Jura was stolen, and kept in prison somewhere for more
|
|
than a week, as I remember. When he came back Smeoroch had come
|
|
and taken my father's heart from him. He took his stand like a
|
|
man, and positively never spoke to my father again from that day
|
|
until the day of his death. It was the only sign of character he
|
|
ever showed. I took him up to my room and to be my dog in
|
|
consequence, partly because I was sorry for him, and partly because
|
|
I admired his dignity in misfortune.
|
|
|
|
With best regards and thanks for having reminded me of so many
|
|
pleasant days, old acquaintances, dead friends, and - what is
|
|
perhaps as pathetic as any of them - dead dogs, I remain, yours
|
|
truly,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO A. CONAN DOYLE
|
|
|
|
VAILIMA, SAMOA, SEPTEMBER 9, 1894.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR CONAN DOYLE, - If you found anything to entertain you in my
|
|
TREASURE ISLAND article, it may amuse you to know that you owe it
|
|
entirely to yourself. YOUR 'First Book' was by some accident read
|
|
aloud one night in my Baronial 'All. I was consumedly amused by
|
|
it, so was the whole family, and we proceeded to hunt up back
|
|
IDLERS and read the whole series. It is a rattling good series,
|
|
even people whom you would not expect came in quite the proper tone
|
|
- Miss Braddon, for instance, who was really one of the best where
|
|
all are good - or all but one! ... In short, I fell in love with
|
|
'The First Book' series, and determined that it should be all our
|
|
first books, and that I could not hold back where the white plume
|
|
of Conan Doyle waved gallantly in the front. I hope they will
|
|
republish them, though it's a grievous thought to me that that
|
|
effigy in the German cap - likewise the other effigy of the noisome
|
|
old man with the long hair, telling indelicate stories to a couple
|
|
of deformed negresses in a rancid shanty full of wreckage - should
|
|
be perpetuated. I may seem to speak in pleasantry - it is only a
|
|
seeming - that German cap, sir, would be found, when I come to die,
|
|
imprinted on my heart. Enough - my heart is too full. Adieu. -
|
|
Yours very truly,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON
|
|
|
|
(in a German cap, damn 'em!)
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO CHARLES BAXTER
|
|
|
|
[VAILIMA, SEPTEMBER 1894.]
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR CHARLES, - . . . Well, there is no more Edmund Baxter now;
|
|
and I think I may say I know how you feel. He was one of the best,
|
|
the kindest, and the most genial men I ever knew. I shall always
|
|
remember his brisk, cordial ways and the essential goodness which
|
|
he showed me whenever we met with gratitude. And the always is
|
|
such a little while now! He is another of the landmarks gone; when
|
|
it comes to my own turn to lay my weapons down, I shall do so with
|
|
thankfulness and fatigue; and whatever be my destiny afterward, I
|
|
shall be glad to lie down with my fathers in honour. It is human
|
|
at least, if not divine. And these deaths make me think of it with
|
|
an ever greater readiness. Strange that you should be beginning a
|
|
new life, when I, who am a little your junior, am thinking of the
|
|
end of mine. But I have had hard lines; I have been so long
|
|
waiting for death, I have unwrapped my thoughts from about life so
|
|
long, that I have not a filament left to hold by; I have done my
|
|
fiddling so long under Vesuvius, that I have almost forgotten to
|
|
play, and can only wait for the eruption, and think it long of
|
|
coming. Literally, no man has more wholly outlived life than I.
|
|
And still it's good fun.
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO R. A. M. STEVENSON
|
|
|
|
[VAILIMA, SEPTEMBER 1894.]
|
|
|
|
DEAR BOB, - You are in error about the Picts. They were a Gaelic
|
|
race, spoke a Celtic tongue, and we have no evidence that I know of
|
|
that they were blacker than other Celts. The Balfours, I take it,
|
|
were plainly Celts; their name shows it - the 'cold croft,' it
|
|
means; so does their country. Where the BLACK Scotch come from
|
|
nobody knows; but I recognise with you the fact that the whole of
|
|
Britain is rapidly and progressively becoming more pigmented;
|
|
already in one man's life I can decidedly trace a difference in the
|
|
children about a school door. But colour is not an essential part
|
|
of a man or a race. Take my Polynesians, an Asiatic people
|
|
probably from the neighbourhood of the Persian gulf. They range
|
|
through any amount of shades, from the burnt hue of the Low
|
|
Archipelago islander, which seems half negro, to the 'bleached'
|
|
pretty women of the Marquesas (close by on the map), who come out
|
|
for a festival no darker than an Italian; their colour seems to
|
|
vary directly with the degree of exposure to the sun. And, as with
|
|
negroes, the babes are born white; only it should seem a LITTLE
|
|
SACK of pigment at the lower part of the spine, which presently
|
|
spreads over the whole field. Very puzzling. But to return. The
|
|
Picts furnish to-day perhaps a third of the population of Scotland,
|
|
say another third for Scots and Britons, and the third for Norse
|
|
and Angles is a bad third. Edinburgh was a Pictish place. But the
|
|
fact is, we don't know their frontiers. Tell some of your
|
|
journalist friends with a good style to popularise old Skene; or
|
|
say your prayers, and read him for yourself; he was a Great
|
|
Historian, and I was his blessed clerk, and did not know it; and
|
|
you will not be in a state of grace about the Picts till you have
|
|
studied him. J. Horne Stevenson (do you know him?) is working this
|
|
up with me, and the fact is - it's not interesting to the public -
|
|
but it's interesting, and very interesting, in itself, and just now
|
|
very embarrassing - this rural parish supplied Glasgow with such a
|
|
quantity of Stevensons in the beginning of last century! There is
|
|
just a link wanting; and we might be able to go back to the
|
|
eleventh century, always undistinguished, but clearly traceable.
|
|
When I say just a link, I guess I may be taken to mean a dozen.
|
|
What a singular thing is this undistinguished perpetuation of a
|
|
family throughout the centuries, and the sudden bursting forth of
|
|
character and capacity that began with our grandfather! But as I
|
|
go on in life, day by day, I become more of a bewildered child; I
|
|
cannot get used to this world, to procreation, to heredity, to
|
|
sight, to hearing; the commonest things are a burthen. The prim
|
|
obliterated polite face of life, and the broad, bawdy, and
|
|
orgiastic - or maenadic - foundations, form a spectacle to which no
|
|
habit reconciles me; and 'I could wish my days to be bound each to
|
|
each' by the same open-mouthed wonder. They ARE anyway, and
|
|
whether I wish it or not.
|
|
|
|
I remember very well your attitude to life, this conventional
|
|
surface of it. You had none of that curiosity for the social stage
|
|
directions, the trivial FICELLES of the business; it is simian, but
|
|
that is how the wild youth of man is captured; you wouldn't
|
|
imitate, hence you kept free - a wild dog, outside the kennel - and
|
|
came dam' near starving for your pains. The key to the business is
|
|
of course the belly; difficult as it is to keep that in view in the
|
|
zone of three miraculous meals a day in which we were brought up.
|
|
Civilisation has become reflex with us; you might think that hunger
|
|
was the name of the best sauce; but hunger to the cold solitary
|
|
under a bush of a rainy night is the name of something quite
|
|
different. I defend civilisation for the thing it is, for the
|
|
thing it has COME to be, the standpoint of a real old Tory. My
|
|
ideal would be the Female Clan. But how can you turn these
|
|
crowding dumb multitudes BACK? They don't do anything BECAUSE;
|
|
they do things, write able articles, stitch shoes, dig, from the
|
|
purely simian impulse. Go and reason with monkeys!
|
|
|
|
No, I am right about Jean Lillie. Jean Lillie, our double great-
|
|
grandmother, the daughter of David Lillie, sometime Deacon of the
|
|
Wrights, married, first, Alan Stevenson, who died May 26, 1774, 'at
|
|
Santt Kittes of a fiver,' by whom she had Robert Stevenson, born
|
|
8th June 1772; and, second, in May or June 1787, Thomas Smith, a
|
|
widower, and already the father of our grandmother. This
|
|
improbable double connection always tends to confuse a student of
|
|
the family, Thomas Smith being doubly our great-grandfather.
|
|
|
|
I looked on the perpetuation of our honoured name with veneration.
|
|
My mother collared one of the photos, of course; the other is stuck
|
|
up on my wall as the chief of our sept. Do you know any of the
|
|
Gaelic-Celtic sharps? you might ask what the name means. It
|
|
puzzles me. I find a M'STEIN and a MACSTEPHANE; and our own great-
|
|
grandfather always called himself Steenson, though he wrote it
|
|
Stevenson. There are at least three PLACES called Stevenson -
|
|
STEVENSON in Cunningham, STEVENSON in Peebles, and STEVENSON in
|
|
Haddington. And it was not the Celtic trick, I understand, to call
|
|
places after people. I am going to write to Sir Herbert Maxwell
|
|
about the name, but you might find some one.
|
|
|
|
Get the Anglo-Saxon heresy out of your head; they superimposed
|
|
their language, they scarce modified the race; only in Berwickshire
|
|
and Roxburgh have they very largely affected the place names. The
|
|
Scandinavians did much more to Scotland than the Angles. The
|
|
Saxons didn't come.
|
|
|
|
Enough of this sham antiquarianism. Yes, it is in the matter of
|
|
the book, of course, that collaboration shows; as for the manner,
|
|
it is superficially all mine, in the sense that the last copy is
|
|
all in my hand. Lloyd did not even put pen to paper in the Paris
|
|
scenes or the Barbizon scene; it was no good; he wrote and often
|
|
rewrote all the rest; I had the best service from him on the
|
|
character of Nares. You see, we had been just meeting the man, and
|
|
his memory was full of the man's words and ways. And Lloyd is an
|
|
impressionist, pure and simple. The great difficulty of
|
|
collaboration is that you can't explain what you mean. I know what
|
|
kind of effect I mean a character to give - what kind of TACHE he
|
|
is to make; but how am I to tell my collaborator in words? Hence
|
|
it was necessary to say, 'Make him So-and-so'; and this was all
|
|
right for Nares and Pinkerton and Loudon Dodd, whom we both knew,
|
|
but for Bellairs, for instance - a man with whom I passed ten
|
|
minutes fifteen years ago - what was I to say? and what could Lloyd
|
|
do? I, as a personal artist, can begin a character with only a
|
|
haze in my head, but how if I have to translate the haze into words
|
|
before I begin? In our manner of collaboration (which I think the
|
|
only possible - I mean that of one person being responsible, and
|
|
giving the COUP DE POUCE to every part of the work) I was spared
|
|
the obviously hopeless business of trying to explain to my
|
|
collaborator what STYLE I wished a passage to be treated in. These
|
|
are the times that illustrate to a man the inadequacy of spoken
|
|
language. Now - to be just to written language - I can (or could)
|
|
find a language for my every mood, but how could I TELL any one
|
|
beforehand what this effect was to be, which it would take every
|
|
art that I possessed, and hours and hours of deliberate labour and
|
|
selection and rejection, to produce? These are the impossibilities
|
|
of collaboration. Its immediate advantage is to focus two minds
|
|
together on the stuff, and to produce in consequence an
|
|
extraordinarily greater richness of purview, consideration, and
|
|
invention. The hardest chapter of all was 'Cross Questions and
|
|
Crooked Answers.' You would not believe what that cost us before
|
|
it assumed the least unity and colour. Lloyd wrote it at least
|
|
thrice, and I at least five times - this is from memory. And was
|
|
that last chapter worth the trouble it cost? Alas, that I should
|
|
ask the question! Two classes of men - the artist and the
|
|
educationalist - are sworn, on soul and conscience, not to ask it.
|
|
You get an ordinary, grinning, red-headed boy, and you have to
|
|
educate him. Faith supports you; you give your valuable hours, the
|
|
boy does not seem to profit, but that way your duty lies, for which
|
|
you are paid, and you must persevere. Education has always seemed
|
|
to me one of the few possible and dignified ways of life. A
|
|
sailor, a shepherd, a schoolmaster - to a less degree, a soldier -
|
|
and (I don't know why, upon my soul, except as a sort of
|
|
schoolmaster's unofficial assistant, and a kind of acrobat in
|
|
tights) an artist, almost exhaust the category.
|
|
|
|
If I had to begin again - I know not - SI JEUNESSE SAVAIT, SI
|
|
VIEILLESSE POUVAIT . . . I know not at all - I believe I should try
|
|
to honour Sex more religiously. The worst of our education is that
|
|
Christianity does not recognise and hallow Sex. It looks askance
|
|
at it, over its shoulder, oppressed as it is by reminiscences of
|
|
hermits and Asiatic self-tortures. It is a terrible hiatus in our
|
|
modern religions that they cannot see and make venerable that which
|
|
they ought to see first and hallow most. Well, it is so; I cannot
|
|
be wiser than my generation.
|
|
|
|
But no doubt there is something great in the half-success that has
|
|
attended the effort of turning into an emotional religion, Bald
|
|
Conduct, without any appeal, or almost none, to the figurative,
|
|
mysterious, and constitutive facts of life. Not that conduct is
|
|
not constitutive, but dear! it's dreary! On the whole, conduct is
|
|
better dealt with on the cast-iron 'gentleman' and duty formula,
|
|
with as little fervour and poetry as possible; stoical and short.
|
|
|
|
. . . There is a new something or other in the wind, which
|
|
exercises me hugely: anarchy, - I mean, anarchism. People who
|
|
(for pity's sake) commit dastardly murders very basely, die like
|
|
saints, and leave beautiful letters behind 'em (did you see
|
|
Vaillant to his daughter? it was the New Testament over again);
|
|
people whose conduct is inexplicable to me, and yet their spiritual
|
|
life higher than that of most. This is just what the early
|
|
Christians must have seemed to the Romans. Is this, then, a new
|
|
DRIVE among the monkeys? Mind you, Bob, if they go on being
|
|
martyred a few years more, the gross, dull, not unkindly bourgeois
|
|
may get tired or ashamed or afraid of going on martyring; and the
|
|
anarchists come out at the top just like the early Christians.
|
|
That is, of course, they will step into power as a PERSONNEL, but
|
|
God knows what they may believe when they come to do so; it can't
|
|
be stranger or more improbable than what Christianity had come to
|
|
be by the same time.
|
|
|
|
Your letter was easily read, the pagination presented no
|
|
difficulty, and I read it with much edification and gusto. To look
|
|
back, and to stereotype one bygone humour - what a hopeless thing!
|
|
The mind runs ever in a thousand eddies like a river between
|
|
cliffs. You (the ego) are always spinning round in it, east, west,
|
|
north, and south. You are twenty years old, and forty, and five,
|
|
and the next moment you are freezing at an imaginary eighty; you
|
|
are never the plain forty-four that you should be by dates. (The
|
|
most philosophical language is the Gaelic, which has NO PRESENT
|
|
TENSE - and the most useless.) How, then, to choose some former
|
|
age, and stick there?
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO SIR HERBERT MAXWELL
|
|
|
|
VAILIMA, SAMOA, SEPTEMBER 10, 1894.
|
|
|
|
DEAR SIR HERBERT MAXWELL, - I am emboldened by reading your very
|
|
interesting Rhind Lectures to put to you a question: What is my
|
|
name, Stevenson?
|
|
|
|
I find it in the forms Stevinetoun, Stevensoune, Stevensonne,
|
|
Stenesone, Stewinsoune, M'Stein, and MacStephane. My family, and
|
|
(as far as I can gather) the majority of the inglorious clan,
|
|
hailed from the borders of Cunningham and Renfrew, and the upper
|
|
waters of the Clyde. In the Barony of Bothwell was the seat of the
|
|
laird Stevenson of Stevenson; but, as of course you know, there is
|
|
a parish in Cunningham and places in Peebles and Haddington bearing
|
|
the same name.
|
|
|
|
If you can at all help me, you will render me a real service which
|
|
I wish I could think of some manner to repay. - Believe me, yours
|
|
truly,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
P.S. - I should have added that I have perfect evidence before me
|
|
that (for some obscure reason) Stevenson was a favourite alias with
|
|
the M'Gregors.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO ALISON CUNNINGHAM
|
|
|
|
[VAILIMA], OCTOBER 8TH 1894.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR CUMMY, - So I hear you are ailing? Think shame to
|
|
yourself! So you think there is nothing better to be done with
|
|
time than that? and be sure we can all do much ourselves to decide
|
|
whether we are to be ill or well! like a man on the gymnastic bars.
|
|
We are all pretty well. As for me, there is nothing the matter
|
|
with me in the world, beyond the disgusting circumstance that I am
|
|
not so young as once I was. Lloyd has a gymnastic machine, and
|
|
practises upon it every morning for an hour: he is beginning to be
|
|
a kind of young Samson. Austin grows fat and brown, and gets on
|
|
not so ill with his lessons, and my mother is in great price. We
|
|
are having knock-me-down weather for heat; I never remember it so
|
|
hot before, and I fancy it means we are to have a hurricane again
|
|
this year, I think; since we came here, we have not had a single
|
|
gale of wind! The Pacific is but a child to the North Sea; but
|
|
when she does get excited, and gets up and girds herself, she can
|
|
do something good. We have had a very interesting business here.
|
|
I helped the chiefs who were in prison; and when they were set
|
|
free, what should they do but offer to make a part of my road for
|
|
me out of gratitude? Well, I was ashamed to refuse, and the trumps
|
|
dug my road for me, and put up this inscription on a board:-
|
|
|
|
'CONSIDERING THE GREAT LOVE OF HIS EXCELLENCY TUSITALA IN HIS
|
|
LOVING CARE OF US IN OUR TRIBULATION IN THE PRISON WE HAVE MADE
|
|
THIS GREAT GIFT; IT SHALL NEVER BE MUDDY, IT SHALL GO ON FOR EVER,
|
|
THIS ROAD THAT WE HAVE DUG!' We had a great feast when it was
|
|
done, and I read them a kind of lecture, which I dare say Auntie
|
|
will have, and can let you see. Weel, guid bye to ye, and joy be
|
|
wi' ye! I hae nae time to say mair. They say I'm gettin' FAT - a
|
|
fact! - Your laddie, with all love,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO JAMES PAYN
|
|
|
|
VAILIMA, SAMOA, NOV. 4, 1894.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR JAMES PAYN, - I am asked to relate to you a little incident
|
|
of domestic life at Vailima. I had read your GLEAMS OF MEMORY, No.
|
|
1; it then went to my wife, to Osbourne, to the cousin that is
|
|
within my gates, and to my respected amanuensis, Mrs. Strong.
|
|
Sunday approached. In the course of the afternoon I was attracted
|
|
to the great 'all - the winders is by Vanderputty, which upon
|
|
entering I beheld a memorable scene. The floor was bestrewn with
|
|
the forms of midshipmen from the CURACOA - 'boldly say a wilderness
|
|
of gunroom' - and in the midst of this sat Mrs. Strong throned on
|
|
the sofa and reading aloud GLEAMS OF MEMORY. They had just come
|
|
the length of your immortal definition of boyhood in the concrete,
|
|
and I had the pleasure to see the whole party dissolve under its
|
|
influence with inextinguishable laughter. I thought this was not
|
|
half bad for arthritic gout! Depend upon it, sir, when I go into
|
|
the arthritic gout business, I shall be done with literature, or at
|
|
least with the funny business. It is quite true I have my
|
|
battlefields behind me. I have done perhaps as much work as
|
|
anybody else under the most deplorable conditions. But two things
|
|
fall to be noticed: In the first place, I never was in actual
|
|
pain; and in the second, I was never funny. I'll tell you the
|
|
worst day that I remember. I had a haemorrhage, and was not
|
|
allowed to speak; then, induced by the devil, or an errant doctor,
|
|
I was led to partake of that bowl which neither cheers nor
|
|
inebriates - the castor-oil bowl. Now, when castor-oil goes right,
|
|
it is one thing; but when it goes wrong, it is another. And it
|
|
went WRONG with me that day. The waves of faintness and nausea
|
|
succeeded each other for twelve hours, and I do feel a legitimate
|
|
pride in thinking that I stuck to my work all through and wrote a
|
|
good deal of Admiral Guinea (which I might just as well not have
|
|
written for all the reward it ever brought me) in spite of the
|
|
barbarous bad conditions. I think that is my great boast; and it
|
|
seems a little thing alongside of your GLEAMS OF MEMORY illustrated
|
|
by spasms of arthritic gout. We really should have an order of
|
|
merit in the trade of letters. For valour, Scott would have had
|
|
it; Pope too; myself on the strength of that castor-oil; and James
|
|
Payn would be a Knight Commander. The worst of it is, though Lang
|
|
tells me you exhibit the courage of Huish, that not even an order
|
|
can alleviate the wretched annoyance of the business. I have
|
|
always said that there is nothing like pain; toothache, dumb-ague,
|
|
arthritic gout, it does not matter what you call it, if the screw
|
|
is put upon the nerves sufficiently strong, there is nothing left
|
|
in heaven or in earth that can interest the sufferer. Still, even
|
|
to this there is the consolation that it cannot last for ever.
|
|
Either you will be relieved and have a good hour again before the
|
|
sun goes down, or else you will be liberated. It is something
|
|
after all (although not much) to think that you are leaving a brave
|
|
example; that other literary men love to remember, as I am sure
|
|
they will love to remember, everything about you - your sweetness,
|
|
your brightness, your helpfulness to all of us, and in particular
|
|
those one or two really adequate and noble papers which you have
|
|
been privileged to write during these last years. - With the
|
|
heartiest and kindest good-will, I remain, yours ever,
|
|
|
|
R. L. S.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO LIEUTENANT EELES
|
|
|
|
VAILIMA, SAMOA, NOVEMBER 24, 1894.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR EELES, - The hand, as you will perceive (and also the
|
|
spelling!), is Teuila's, but the scrannel voice is what remains of
|
|
Tusitala's. First of all, for business. When you go to London you
|
|
are to charter a hansom cab and proceed to the Museum. It is
|
|
particular fun to do this on Sundays when the Monument is shut up.
|
|
Your cabman expostulates with you, you persist. The cabman drives
|
|
up in front of the closed gates and says, 'I told you so, sir.'
|
|
You breathe in the porter's ears the mystic name of COLVIN, and he
|
|
immediately unfolds the iron barrier. You drive in, and doesn't
|
|
your cabman think you're a swell. A lord mayor is nothing to it.
|
|
Colvin's door is the only one in the eastern gable of the building.
|
|
Send in your card to him with 'From R. L. S.' in the corner, and
|
|
the machinery will do the rest. Henry James's address is 34 De
|
|
Vere Mansions West. I cannot remember where the place is; I cannot
|
|
even remember on which side of the park. But it's one of those big
|
|
Cromwell Road-looking deserted thoroughfares out west in Kensington
|
|
or Bayswater, or between the two; and anyway, Colvin will be able
|
|
to put you on the direct track for Henry James. I do not send
|
|
formal introductions, as I have taken the liberty to prepare both
|
|
of them for seeing you already.
|
|
|
|
Hoskyn is staying with us.
|
|
|
|
It is raining dismally. The Curacoa track is hardly passable, but
|
|
it must be trod to-morrow by the degenerate feet of their successor
|
|
the Wallaroos. I think it a very good account of these last that
|
|
we don't think them either deformed or habitual criminals - they
|
|
seem to be a kindly lot.
|
|
|
|
The doctor will give you all the gossip. I have preferred in this
|
|
letter to stick to the strictly solid and necessary. With kind
|
|
messages from all in the house to all in the wardroom, all in the
|
|
gunroom, and (may we dare to breathe it) to him who walks abaft,
|
|
believe me, my dear Eeles, yours ever,
|
|
|
|
R. L. STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO SIR HERBERT MAXWELL
|
|
|
|
VAILIMA, SAMOA, DECEMBER 1, 1894.
|
|
|
|
DEAR SIR HERBERT, - Thank you very much for your long and kind
|
|
letter. I shall certainly take your advice and call my cousin, the
|
|
Lyon King, into council. It is certainly a very interesting
|
|
subject, though I don't suppose it can possibly lead to anything,
|
|
this connection between the Stevensons and M'Gregors. Alas! your
|
|
invitation is to me a mere derision. My chances of visiting Heaven
|
|
are about as valid as my chances of visiting Monreith. Though I
|
|
should like well to see you, shrunken into a cottage, a literary
|
|
Lord of Ravenscraig. I suppose it is the inevitable doom of all
|
|
those who dabble in Scotch soil; but really your fate is the more
|
|
blessed. I cannot conceive anything more grateful to me, or more
|
|
amusing or more picturesque, than to live in a cottage outside your
|
|
own park-walls. - With renewed thanks, believe me, dear Sir
|
|
Herbert, yours very truly,
|
|
|
|
ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO ANDREW LANG
|
|
|
|
VAILIMA, SAMOA, DECEMBER 1, 1894.
|
|
|
|
MY DEAR LANG, - For the portrait of Braxfield, much thanks! It is
|
|
engraved from the same Raeburn portrait that I saw in '76 or '77
|
|
with so extreme a gusto that I have ever since been Braxfield's
|
|
humble servant, and am now trying, as you know, to stick him into a
|
|
novel. Alas! one might as well try to stick in Napoleon. The
|
|
picture shall be framed and hung up in my study. Not only as a
|
|
memento of you, but as a perpetual encouragement to do better with
|
|
his Lordship. I have not yet received the transcripts. They must
|
|
be very interesting. Do you know, I picked up the other day an old
|
|
LONGMAN'S, where I found an article of yours that I had missed,
|
|
about Christie's? I read it with great delight. The year ends
|
|
with us pretty much as it began, among wars and rumours of wars,
|
|
and a vast and splendid exhibition of official incompetence. -
|
|
Yours ever,
|
|
|
|
R. L. STEVENSON.
|
|
|
|
Letter: TO EDMUND GOSSE
|
|
|
|
VAILIMA, SAMOA, DECEMBER 1, 1894.
|
|
|
|
I AM afraid, MY DEAR WEG, that this must be the result of bribery
|
|
and corruption! The volume to which the dedication stands as
|
|
preface seems to me to stand alone in your work; it is so natural,
|
|
so personal, so sincere, so articulate in substance, and what you
|
|
always were sure of - so rich in adornment.
|
|
|
|
Let me speak first of the dedication. I thank you for it from the
|
|
heart. It is beautifully said, beautifully and kindly felt; and I
|
|
should be a churl indeed if I were not grateful, and an ass if I
|
|
were not proud. I remember when Symonds dedicated a book to me; I
|
|
wrote and told him of 'the pang of gratified vanity' with which I
|
|
had read it. The pang was present again, but how much more sober
|
|
and autumnal - like your volume. Let me tell you a story, or
|
|
remind you of a story. In the year of grace something or other,
|
|
anything between '76 and '78 I mentioned to you in my usual
|
|
autobiographical and inconsiderate manner that I was hard up. You
|
|
said promptly that you had a balance at your banker's, and could
|
|
make it convenient to let me have a cheque, and I accepted and got
|
|
the money - how much was it? - twenty or perhaps thirty pounds? I
|
|
know not - but it was a great convenience. The same evening, or
|
|
the next day, I fell in conversation (in my usual autobiographical
|
|
and . . . see above) with a denizen of the Savile Club, name now
|
|
gone from me, only his figure and a dim three-quarter view of his
|
|
face remaining. To him I mentioned that you had given me a loan,
|
|
remarking easily that of course it didn't matter to you. Whereupon
|
|
he read me a lecture, and told me how it really stood with you
|
|
financially. He was pretty serious; fearing, as I could not help
|
|
perceiving, that I should take too light a view of the
|
|
responsibility and the service (I was always thought too light -
|
|
the irresponsible jester - you remember. O, QUANTUM MUTATUS AB
|
|
ILLO!) If I remember rightly, the money was repaid before the end
|
|
of the week - or, to be more exact and a trifle pedantic, the
|
|
sennight - but the service has never been forgotten; and I send you
|
|
back this piece of ancient history, CONSULE PLANCO, as a salute for
|
|
your dedication, and propose that we should drink the health of the
|
|
nameless one, who opened my eyes as to the true nature of what you
|
|
did for me on that occasion.
|
|
|
|
But here comes my Amanuensis, so we'll get on more swimmingly now.
|
|
You will understand perhaps that what so particularly pleased me in
|
|
the new volume, what seems to me to have so personal and original a
|
|
note, are the middle-aged pieces in the beginning. The whole of
|
|
them, I may say, though I must own an especial liking to -
|
|
|
|
'I yearn not for the fighting fate,
|
|
That holds and hath achieved;
|
|
I live to watch and meditate
|
|
And dream - and be deceived.'
|
|
|
|
You take the change gallantly. Not I, I must confess. It is all
|
|
very well to talk of renunciation, and of course it has to be done.
|
|
But, for my part, give me a roaring toothache! I do like to be
|
|
deceived and to dream, but I have very little use for either
|
|
watching or meditation. I was not born for age. And, curiously
|
|
enough, I seem to see a contrary drift in my work from that which
|
|
is so remarkable in yours. You are going on sedately travelling
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through your ages, decently changing with the years to the proper
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tune. And here am I, quite out of my true course, and with nothing
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in my foolish elderly head but love-stories. This must repose upon
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some curious distinction of temperaments. I gather from a phrase,
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boldly autobiographical, that you are - well, not precisely growing
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thin. Can that be the difference?
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It is rather funny that this matter should come up just now, as I
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am at present engaged in treating a severe case of middle age in
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one of my stories - 'The Justice-Clerk.' The case is that of a
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woman, and I think that I am doing her justice. You will be
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interested, I believe, to see the difference in our treatments.
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SECRETA VITAE, comes nearer to the case of my poor Kirstie. Come
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to think of it, Gosse, I believe the main distinction is that you
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have a family growing up around you, and I am a childless, rather
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bitter, very clear-eyed, blighted youth. I have, in fact, lost the
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path that makes it easy and natural for you to descend the hill. I
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am going at it straight. And where I have to go down it is a
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precipice.
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I must not forget to give you a word of thanks for AN ENGLISH
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VILLAGE. It reminds me strongly of Keats, which is enough to say;
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and I was particularly pleased with the petulant sincerity of the
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concluding sentiment.
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Well, my dear Gosse, here's wishing you all health and prosperity,
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as well as to the mistress and the bairns. May you live long,
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since it seems as if you would continue to enjoy life. May you
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write many more books as good as this one - only there's one thing
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impossible, you can never write another dedication that can give
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the same pleasure to the vanished
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TUSITALA.
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End of the Project Gutenberg eText The Letters of Robert Louis
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Stevenson, Volume 2
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