Myself and the other fellow A life of Robert Louis Stevenson

Claire Harman

Book - 2005

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BIOGRAPHY/Stevenson, Robert Louis
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Subjects
Published
New York : HarperCollins 2005.
Language
English
Main Author
Claire Harman (-)
Edition
First edition
Item Description
First published in Great Britain in 2005 as: Robert Louis Stevenson : a biography.
Physical Description
xix, 503 pages, 16 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages [483]-489) and index.
ISBN
9780066209845
  • List of Illustrations
  • Acknowledgements
  • Preface
  • 1. Baron Broadnose
  • 2. Velvet Coat
  • 3. The Careless Infidel
  • 4. Ah Welless
  • 5. Stennis Frere
  • 6. The Amateur Emigrant
  • 7. The Professional Sickist
  • 8. Uxorious Billy
  • 9. A Weevil in a Biscuit
  • 10. The Dreamer
  • 11. Below Zero
  • 12. Ona
  • 13. Tusi Tala
  • 14. The Tame Celebrity
  • Postscripts
  • Notes
  • Select Bibliography
  • Index
Review by Booklist Review

There are many Stevenson biographies, recently including Philip Callow's Louis0 (2001), Frank McLynn's Robert Louis Stevenson 0 (1994), and Ian Bell's Dreams of Exile0 (1993). Do we need another? In the view of the biographer of Sylvia Townsend Warner0 (1995) and Fanny Burney0 (2001), yes, for exiled Scot and quintessential storyteller Stevenson has been underappreciated. He was, she says, an influential thinker often wildly ahead of his time. So she offers a deeply nuanced portrait of an amazingly complex figure. As she notes, Stevenson was an iconoclast and one of the least "Victorian" of Victorian authors. His interest in psychology anticipated the psychology craze of the twentieth century. Moreover, the form of writing he preferred--the short story and the novella--gained in popularity only after he died. Much of what Harman writes about will be familiar to anyone knowledgeable about Stevenson's life and work, but she offers her own interpretations. She is especially interested in Stevenson's preoccupation with the "double," the collaboration of his conscious and unconscious selves. Meticulously researched and well written, Harman's book presents Stevenson as both artist and man: brilliant and quirky, frail and indestructible, likable and exasperating, forever the outcast. One suspects that RLS, a thoroughly modern figure caught in the time warp of the wrong century, would have flourished in our own day. Myself & the Other Fellow0 is a worthy addition to the Stevenson canon. --June Sawyers Copyright 2005 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Harman, the skillful biographer of Fanny Burney and editor of Stevenson's poems, stories and essays, writes, "some things become less knowable about a subject the more data accrues around them." Stevenson's short life (1850-1894), plagued by ill health, took him from Edinburgh to California and finally to the South Seas, creating a romanticized reputation along the way. Celebrated as the accomplished essayist of Virginibus Puerisque and the bestselling author of Treasure Island and A Child's Garden of Verses, Stevenson frustrated his literary friends W.E. Henley and Sidney Colvin with a creative output that never produced their expected masterpiece. He also estranged them with his uxorious marriage to a strong-willed older American divorcEe, Fanny Osbourne, whom Harman portrays sympathetically enough (especially the possibility of a failed pregnancy early in their relationship). Harman doesn't delve too deeply into the psychology of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde's author. In interpreting Stevenson the writer, she emphasizes his restless, multigenre dilettantism, which resulted in many false starts and incomplete plays, stories and novels. Stevenson's popularity as an author may always outstrip the biographical record, but this readable narrative of his kaleidoscopically colorful life helps narrow the gap. (Nov.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

In striking and at times excessive detail, Harman (Sylvia Townsend Warner: A Biography) traces the pampered, sickly life of British writer Robert Louis Stevenson (1850-94). Weighing a mere 116 pounds at one point and struggling through a tempestuous second marriage, Stevenson was saved by a faithful group of friends that included Sidney Colvin, William Ernest Henley, and Henry James Jr., all of whom sensed that the man was doomed to die young. Because of their intervention and with funds from his most popular works-Treasure Island, The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, and The Master of Ballantrae-Stevenson's health recovered, and he spent the remainder of his short life on the primitive South Seas island of Samoa. In Stevenson, Harman discovers an inborn and abiding attraction to polar opposites of character that would eventually show itself in his fiction, most notably The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. He also cites Stevenson's capacity for starting but failing to finish his works as the hallmark of his creative life. This comprehensive and insightful volume is highly recommended for large academic libraries.-Charles C. Nash, formerly with Cottey Coll., Nevada, MO (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Myself and the Other Fellow A Life of Robert Louis Stevenson Chapter One Baron Broadnose Born 1850 at Edinburgh. Pure Scotch blood; descended from the Scotch Lighthouse Engineers, three generations. Himself educated for the family profession . . . But the marrow of the family was worked out, and he declined into the man of letters. Robert Louis Stevenson, 'Autobiographical Note'1 In 1884 or thereabouts, Robert Louis Stevenson purchased a copy of a slim booklet by the scientist Francis Galton (grandson of Erasmus Darwin and inventor of the term 'eugenics'), that purported to help members of the public forecast the mental and physical faculties of their children by arranging in tabular form as much data as could be gathered about their ancestors. No clear way of making deductions from this process was indicated; Galton seemed merely to be suggesting that the Record of Family Faculties would serve as a sort of life album for future perusal. In fact his design was more 'to further the science of heredity' than to enlighten individuals about their genes, for Galton was offering a prize of £500 to whichever reader compiled 'the best extracts' from the point of view of 'completeness', 'character of evidence', 'cleanness' and 'conciseness', to be sent, with accompanying documentation if possible, to his London address. Robert Louis Stevenson did not oblige the insatiable statistician by posting off his copy of the booklet, and only filled in two pages of information, one for each of his parents. Like so many of his own books, this was one he couldn't quite finish. But Galton's introductory remarks, full of provocative assumptions about race, personality, inherited and acquired behaviour, touched subjects of perennial fascination to the scientist-turned-literary man. 'We do not yet know whether any given group of different faculties which may converge by inheritance upon the same family will blend, neutralise, or intensify one another,' Galton had written, 'nor whether they will be metamorphosed and issue in some new form.' The year in which the project was advertised, 1883, was a time when Stevenson himself thought he was going to be a father, an eventuality he had tried to avoid on the grounds of his poor health. But whether or not Stevenson bought Galton's book in order to predict his expected child's chances in the lottery of family attributes, the author's words certainly resonated for himself. Robert Louis Stevenson characterised his paternal ancestors as 'a family of engineers', which they were for the two generations preceding his own, but in the seventeenth century they had been farmers and maltsters near Glasgow, 'following honest trades [ . . . ], playing the character parts in the Waverley Novels with propriety, if without distinction', as Stevenson wrote satirically. 2 In the mid-eighteenth century two Stevenson brothers, working in partnership as traders between Glasgow and the West Indies, both died suddenly from tropical fever within six weeks of each other while in pursuit of an agent who had cheated them. Jean, the twenty-three-year-old widow of the younger brother, was left almost destitute by his death, as her father also died in the same month and she had an infant son to support. Her second marriage, to a man called Hogg, produced two more sons but ended in desertion and divorce. By this time, Jean was living in Edinburgh and there met and married her third husband, a ship-owner, ironmonger and underwriter called Thomas Smith. Smith was the founder of the 'family of engineers', or rather, the step-family, since it was his new wife's teenaged son Robert Stevenson, not his own son, James Smith, who was grafted onto his thriving enterprise as heir. Thomas Smith seems to have been a man of enormous industry and ingenuity, setting up a business in lamps and oils, running something called the Greenside Company's Works in Edinburgh (a kind of super-smithy) and inventing a new system of oil lamps for lighthouses to replace the old coal-lit beacons like that on the Isle of May. The lights of 'lights' remained a source of fascination in the step-branch of the family: Robert Stevenson experimented with revolving devices, his son Thomas developed both holophotal and condensing lights, and Robert Louis Stevenson's one and only contribution to the Royal Scottish Society of Arts was a paper on a proposed new device to make lighthouse lights flash. But there was another reminder of this heritage, closer to home. One of Thomas Smith's lamp-making projects was the design of the street lighting in Edinburgh's New Town at the end of the eighteenth century. His parabolic reflector system quadrupled the power of oil-lit lamps and focused their beams, a revolutionary innovation that must have made the elegant Georgian streets look even more modern and sleek, even more of a contrast to the dark, narrow closes and wynds of the Old Town. And it was the successor to one of these lamps, just outside 17 Heriot Row, that Robert Louis Stevenson celebrated many years later in his poem about Leerie the Lamp-Lighter from A Child's Garden of Verses : For we are very lucky, with a lamp before the door, And Leerie stops to light it as he lights so many more; And O! before you hurry by with ladder and with light, O Leerie, see a little child and nod to him tonight! 3 But the original lighter of the lamps had been the poet's ingenious forebear. Thomas Smith's involvement in lighthouse-building began in 1787, five years before marrying Jean Stevenson, when he was appointed engineer to the new Board of Northern Lighthouses, a post his stepson and three grandsons would hold after him. Until this time, the Scottish coastline had been one of the most dangerous in the world, so jagged and treacherous that mariners used to steer well clear of it, keeping north of Orkney and Shetland and west of the Hebrides. There were no maps or charts of the coastline before the late sixteenth century, and the first lighthouse, built in 1636 on the Isle of May in the Firth of Forth, was one of . . . Myself and the Other Fellow A Life of Robert Louis Stevenson . Copyright © by Claire Harman. Reprinted by permission of HarperCollins Publishers, Inc. All rights reserved. Available now wherever books are sold. Excerpted from Myself and the Other Fellow: A Life of Robert Louis Stevenson by Claire Harman All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.