Robert Louis Stevenson

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Robert Louis Stevenson (1850-1894), born as Robert Lewis Balfour Stevenson, was a novelist, essayist, travel writer and poet. He was born in Edinburgh's New Town on November 13th 1850, and died 44 years later Stevenson of a brain haemorrhage, on December 3, 1894, on Upolu, a small Samoan island; there he was known as "Tusitala" ("Teller of Tales"). He was buried at the summit of Mount Vaea (475m). [1] When his wife, Fanny, died in 1914 in California, her ashes were brought to Samoa to be buried alonside her husband.

The Stevenson Family

"For love of lovely words, and for the sake
Of those, my kinsmen and my countrymen,
Who early and late in the windy ocean toiled
To plant a star for seamen, where was then
The surfy haunt of seals and cormorants:
I, on the lintel of this cot, inscribe
The name of a strong tower.

Skerryvore, by RL Stevenson; from Underwoods

Stevenson was born into a remarkable family of lighthouse engineers; five generations of the family produced eight lighthouse engineers for the Northern Lighthouse Board. His father, Thomas Stevenson was inventor of, among other things, the marine dynamometer, which measures the force of waves. In RL Stevenson's words, his father "was a man of a somewhat antique strain: with a blended sternness and softness that was wholly Scottish and at first somewhat bewildering; with a profound essential melancholy of disposition and (what often accompanies it) the most humorous geniality in company; shrewd and childish; passionately attached, passionately prejudiced; a man of many extremes, many faults of temper, and no very stable foothold for himself among life's troubles."[2]RL Stevenson's mother, Margaret Balfour, was the youngest of the thirteen children of a Scottish clergyman, the Reverend Lewis Balfour. His grandfather, Robert Stevenson was Britain's most famous builder of lighthouses, whose achievements include the Bell Rock Lighthouse off Arbroath, the world's oldest surviving sea-washed lighthouse, built in 1807-1811.[3] "Stevenson College" in Edinburgh is named after Robert Stevenson. [4].

Robert's eldest surviving son Alan Stevenson (1807-1865) built Skerryvore lighthouse, described by RLS as "the noblest of all extant deep-sea lights". 


From the age of six, Stevenson lived at 17 Heriot Row, an elegant Georgian house in Edinburgh's New Town. This home is now a hospitality venue known as "The Stevenson House"[5] There, he was educated at home because of his poor health,, with a Scottish nanny, Alison Cunningham (Cummy), who he later claimed was a major influence, and to whom he dedicated A child's garden of verses (1885). He developed an early interest in writing, dictating "A History of Moses" to his mother when he was six.[6]

Since his childhood Stevenson suffered from tuberculosis. In 1867 he entered Edinburgh University to study engineering, but changed to law and in 1875 was called to the Scottish bar. His first works were published in The Edinburgh University Magazine (1871).

Instead of practicing law, Stevenson turned to writing travel sketches, essays, and short stories. He published an account of his canoe tour of France and Belgiumin 1878 as An Inland Voyage, and Travels With A Donkey In The Cevennes was published in 1879. In France, Stevenson met Fanny Vandegrift Osbourne, a married American woman eleven years older, with two children, and separated from her husband. In 1879 he moved with her to California marrying her in 1880 after her divorce. After a short stay at Calistoga (recorded in The Silverado Squatters), they returned to Scotland, and then moved often, searching for a climate that would be better for Stevenson's precarious health.

In 1887, after the death of his father, Stevenson returned to the USA, living for a year at Saranac Lake, N.Y., in the Adirondacks. In 1889, he and his family set out on a cruise of the South Sea Islands, and he settled on the island of Upolu in Samoa, where he bought a plantation (Vailima) and built a house. Stevenson's observations on Samoan life were published in In the South Seas (1896) and in A Footnote to History (1892). In Samoa, Stevenson wrote Catriona (1893), an unfinished sequel to Kidnapped, and Weir of Hermiston also unfinished at his death.

His best known works are Treasure Island (1883) and The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde (1886).[7] His best known poem is the epitaph he wrote for himself, Requiem:

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

References