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- Robert Louis Stevenson
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- by Walter Raleigh
-
- September, 1995 [Etext #333]
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- Robert Louis Stevenson by Walter Raleigh. 1906 edition.
- Scanned and proofed by David Price, email ccx074@coventry.ac.uk
-
-
-
-
- WHEN a popular writer dies, the question it has become the fashion
- with a nervous generation to ask is the question, 'Will he live?'
- There was no idler question, none more hopelessly impossible and
- unprofitable to answer. It is one of the many vanities of
- criticism to promise immortality to the authors that it praises, to
- patronise a writer with the assurance that our great-grandchildren,
- whose time and tastes are thus frivolously mortgaged, will read his
- works with delight. But 'there is no antidote against the opium of
- time, which temporally considereth all things: our fathers find
- their graves in our short memories, and sadly tell us how we may be
- buried in our survivors.' Let us make sure that our sons will care
- for Homer before we pledge a more distant generation to a newer
- cult.
-
- Nevertheless, without handling the prickly question of literary
- immortality, it is easy to recognise that the literary reputation
- of Robert Louis Stevenson is made of good stuff. His fame has
- spread, as lasting fame is wont to do, from the few to the many.
- Fifteen years ago his essays and fanciful books of travel were
- treasured by a small and discerning company of admirers; long
- before he chanced to fell the British public with TREASURE ISLAND
- and DR. JEKYLL AND MR. HYDE he had shown himself a delicate
- marksman. And although large editions are nothing, standard
- editions, richly furnished and complete, are worthy of remark.
- Stevenson is one of the very few authors in our literary history
- who have been honoured during their lifetime by the appearance of
- such an edition; the best of his public, it would seem, do not only
- wish to read his works, but to possess them, and all of them, at
- the cost of many pounds, in library form. It would be easy to
- mention more voluminous and more popular authors than Stevenson
- whose publishers could not find five subscribers for an adventure
- like this. He has made a brave beginning in that race against Time
- which all must lose.
-
- It is not in the least necessary, after all, to fortify ourselves
- with the presumed consent of our poor descendants, who may have a
- world of other business to attend to, in order to establish
- Stevenson in the position of a great writer. Let us leave that
- foolish trick to the politicians, who never claim that they are
- right - merely that they will win at the next elections. Literary
- criticism has standards other than the suffrage; it is possible
- enough to say something of the literary quality of a work that
- appeared yesterday. Stevenson himself was singularly free from the
- vanity of fame; 'the best artist,' he says truly, 'is not the man
- who fixes his eye on posterity, but the one who loves the practice
- of his art.' He loved, if ever man did, the practice of his art;
- and those who find meat and drink in the delight of watching and
- appreciating the skilful practice of the literary art, will abandon
- themselves to the enjoyment of his masterstrokes without teasing
- their unborn and possibly illiterate posterity to answer solemn
- questions. Will a book live? Will a cricket match live? Perhaps
- not, and yet both be fine achievements.
-
- It is not easy to estimate the loss to letters by his early death.
- In the dedication of PRINCE OTTO he says, 'Well, we will not give
- in that we are finally beaten. . . . I still mean to get my health
- again; I still purpose, by hook or crook, this book or the next, to
- launch a masterpiece.' It would be a churlish or a very dainty
- critic who should deny that he has launched masterpieces, but
- whether he ever launched his masterpiece is an open question. Of
- the story that he was writing just before his death he is reported
- to have said that 'the goodness of it frightened him.' A goodness
- that frightened him will surely not be visible, like Banquo's
- ghost, to only one pair of eyes. His greatest was perhaps yet to
- come. Had Dryden died at his age, we should have had none of the
- great satires; had Scott died at his age, we should have had no
- Waverley Novels. Dying at the height of his power, and in the full
- tide of thought and activity, he seems almost to have fulfilled the
- aspiration and unconscious prophecy of one of the early essays:
-
-
-
- 'Does not life go down with a better grace foaming in full body
- over a precipice, than miserably straggling to an end in sandy
- deltas?
-
- 'When the Greeks made their fine saying that those whom the gods
- love die young, I cannot help believing that they had this sort of
- death also in their eye. For surely, at whatever age it overtake
- the man, this is to die young. Death has not been suffered to take
- so much as an illusion from his heart. In the hot-fit of life, a-
- tiptoe on the highest point of being, he passes at a bound on to
- the other side. The noise of the mallet and chisel is scarcely
- quenched, the trumpets are hardly done blowing, when, trailing with
- him clouds of glory, this happy starred, full-blooded spirit shoots
- into the spiritual land.'
-
-
- But we on this side are the poorer - by how much we can never know.
- What strengthens the conviction that he might yet have surpassed
- himself and dwarfed his own best work is, certainly no immaturity,
- for the flavour of wisdom and old experience hangs about his
- earliest writings, but a vague sense awakened by that brilliant
- series of books, so diverse in theme, so slight often in structure
- and occasions so gaily executed, that here was a finished literary
- craftsman, who had served his period of apprenticeship and was
- playing with his tools. The pleasure of wielding the graven tool,
- the itch of craftsmanship, was strong upon him, and many of the
- works he has left are the overflow of a laughing energy, arabesques
- carved on the rock in the artist's painless hours.
-
- All art, it is true, is play of a sort; the 'sport-impulse' (to
- translate a German phrase) is deep at the root of the artist's
- power; Sophocles, Shakespeare, Moliere, and Goethe, in a very
- profound sense, make game of life. But to make game of life was to
- each of these the very loftiest and most imperative employ to be
- found for him on this planet; to hold the mirror up to Nature so
- that for the first time she may see herself; to 'be a candle-holder
- and look on' at the pageantry which, but for the candle-holder,
- would huddle along in the undistinguishable blackness, filled them
- with the pride of place. Stevenson had the sport-impulse at the
- depths of his nature, but he also had, perhaps he had inherited, an
- instinct for work in more blockish material, for lighthouse-
- building and iron-founding. In a 'Letter to a Young Artist,'
- contributed to a magazine years ago, he compares the artist in
- paint or in words to the keeper of a booth at the world's fair,
- dependent for his bread on his success in amusing others. In his
- volume of poems he almost apologises for his excellence in
- literature:
-
-
-
- 'Say not of me, that weakly I declined
- The labours of my sires, and fled the sea,
- The towers we founded, and the lamps we lit,
- To play at home with paper like a child;
- But rather say: IN THE AFTERNOON OF TIME
- A STRENUOUS FAMILY DUSTED FROM ITS HANDS
- THE SAND OF GRANITE, AND BEHOLDING FAR
- ALONG THE SOUNDING COASTS ITS PYRAMIDS
- AND TALL MEMORIALS CATCH THE DYING SUN,
- SMILED WELL-CONTENT, AND TO THIS CHILDISH TASK
- AROUND THE FIRE ADDRESSED ITS EVENING HOURS.'
-
-
- Some of his works are, no doubt, best described as paper-games. In
- THE WRONG BOX, for instance, there is something very like the card-
- game commonly called 'Old Maid'; the odd card is a superfluous
- corpse, and each dismayed recipient in turn assumes a disguise and
- a pseudonym and bravely passes on that uncomfortable inheritance.
- It is an admirable farce, hardly touched with grimness, unshaken by
- the breath of reality, full of fantastic character; the strange
- funeral procession is attended by shouts of glee at each of its
- stages, and finally melts into space.
-
- But, when all is said, it is not with work of this kind that
- Olympus is stormed; art must be brought closer into relation with
- life, these airy and delightful freaks of fancy must be subdued to
- a serious scheme if they are to serve as credentials for a seat
- among the immortals. The decorative painter, whose pencil runs so
- freely in limning these half-human processions of outlined fauns
- and wood-nymphs, is asked at last to paint an easel picture.
-
- Stevenson is best where he shows most restraint, and his peculiarly
- rich fancy, which ran riot at the suggestion of every passing whim,
- gave him, what many a modern writer sadly lacks, plenty to
- restrain, an exuberant field for self-denial. Here was an
- opportunity for art and labour; the luxuriance of the virgin
- forests of the West may be clipped and pruned for a lifetime with
- no fear of reducing them to the trim similitude of a Dutch garden.
- His bountiful and generous nature could profit by a spell of
- training that would emaciate a poorer stock. From the first, his
- delight in earth and the earth-born was keen and multiform; his
- zest in life
-
-
- 'put a spirit of youth in everything,
- That heavy Saturn laugh'd and leap'd with him;'
-
-
- and his fancy, light and quick as a child's, made of the world
- around him an enchanted pleasance. The realism, as it is called,
- that deals only with the banalities and squalors of life, and
- weaves into the mesh of its story no character but would make you
- yawn if you passed ten minutes with him in a railway-carriage,
- might well take a lesson from this man, if it had the brains.
- Picture to yourself (it is not hard) an average suburb of London.
- The long rows of identical bilious brick houses, with the
- inevitable lace curtains, a symbol merely of the will and power to
- wash; the awful nondescript object, generally under glass, in the
- front window - the shrine of the unknown god of art; the sombre
- invariable citizen, whose garb gives no suggestion of his
- occupation or his tastes - a person, it would seem, only by
- courtesy; the piano-organ the music of the day, and the hideous
- voice of the vendor of half-penny papers the music of the night;
- could anything be less promising than such a row of houses for the
- theatre of romance? Set a realist to walk down one of these
- streets: he will inquire about milk-bills and servants' wages,
- latch-keys and Sunday avocations, and come back with a tale of
- small meannesses and petty respectabilities, written in the
- approved modern fashion. Yet Stevenson, it seems likely, could not
- pass along such a line of brick bandboxes without having his pulses
- set a-throbbing by the imaginative possibilities of the place. Of
- his own Lieutenant Brackenbury Rich he says:
-
-
-
- 'The succession of faces in the lamplight stirred the lieutenant's
- imagination; and it seemed to him as if he could walk for ever in
- that stimulating city atmosphere and surrounded by the mystery of
- four million private lives. He glanced at the houses and marvelled
- what was passing behind those warmly lighted windows; he looked
- into face after face, and saw them each intent upon some unknown
- interest, criminal or kindly.'
-
-
- It was that same evening that Prince Florizel's friend, under the
- name of Mr. Morris, was giving a party in one of the houses of West
- Kensington. In one at least of the houses of that brick wilderness
- human spirits were being tested as on an anvil, and most of them
- tossed aside. So also, in, THE RAJAH'S DIAMOND, it was a quiet
- suburban garden that witnessed the sudden apparition of Mr. Harry
- Hartley and his treasures precipitated over the wall; it was in the
- same garden that the Rev. Simon Rolles suddenly, to his own
- surprise, became a thief. A monotony of bad building is no doubt a
- bad thing, but it cannot paralyse the activities or frustrate the
- agonies of the mind of man.
-
- To a man with Stevenson's live and searching imagination, every
- work of human hands became vocal with possible associations.
- Buildings positively chattered to him; the little inn at
- Queensferry, which even for Scott had meant only mutton and currant
- jelly, with cranberries 'vera weel preserved,' gave him the
- cardinal incident of KIDNAPPED. How should the world ever seem
- dull or sordid to one whom a railway-station would take into its
- confidence, to whom the very flagstones of the pavement told their
- story, in whose mind 'the effect of night, of any flowing water, of
- lighted cities, of the peep of day, of ships, of the open ocean,'
- called up 'an army of anonymous desires and pleasures'? To have
- the 'golden-tongued Romance with serene lute' for a mistress and
- familiar is to be fortified against the assaults of tedium.
-
- His attitude towards the surprising and momentous gifts of life was
- one prolonged passion of praise and joy. There is none of his
- books that reads like the meditations of an invalid. He has the
- readiest sympathy for all exhibitions of impulsive energy; his
- heart goes out to a sailor, and leaps into ecstasy over a generous
- adventurer or buccaneer. Of one of his earlier books he says:
- 'From the negative point of view I flatter myself this volume has a
- certain stamp. Although it runs to considerably upwards of two
- hundred pages, it contains not a single reference to the imbecility
- of God's universe, nor so much as a single hint that I could have
- made a better one myself.' And this was an omission that he never
- remedied in his later works. Indeed, his zest in life, whether
- lived in the back gardens of a town or on the high seas, was so
- great that it seems probable the writer would have been lost had
- the man been dowered with better health.
-
-
- 'Whereas my birth and spirit rather took
- The way that takes the town,
- Thou didst betray me to a ling'ring book,
- And wrap me in a gown,'
-
-
- says George Herbert, who, in his earlier ambitions, would fain have
- ruffled it with the best at the court of King James. But from
- Stevenson, although not only the town, but oceans and continents,
- beckoned him to deeds, no such wail escaped. His indomitable
- cheerfulness was never embarked in the cock-boat of his own
- prosperity. A high and simple courage shines through all his
- writings. It is supposed to be a normal human feeling for those
- who are hale to sympathize with others who are in pain. Stevenson
- reversed the position, and there is no braver spectacle in
- literature than to see him not asking others to lower their voices
- in his sick-room, but raising his own voice that he may make them
- feel at ease and avoid imposing his misfortunes on their notice.
- 'Once when I was groaning aloud with physical pain,' he says in the
- essay on CHILD'S PLAY, 'a young gentleman came into the room and
- nonchalantly inquired if I had seen his bow and arrow. He made no
- account of my groans, which he accepted, as he had to accept so
- much else, as a piece of the inexplicable conduct of his elders;
- and, like a wise young gentleman, he would waste no wonder on the
- subject.' Was there ever a passage like this? The sympathy of the
- writer is wholly with the child, and the child's absolute
- indifference to his own sufferings. It might have been safely
- predicted that this man, should he ever attain to pathos, would be
- free from the facile, maudlin pathos of the hired sentimentalist.
-
- And so also with what Dr. Johnson has called 'metaphysical
- distresses.' It is striking enough to observe how differently the
- quiet monasteries of the Carthusian and Trappist brotherhoods
- affected Matthew Arnold and Robert Louis Stevenson. In his well-
- known elegiac stanzas Matthew Arnold likens his own state to that
- of the monks:
-
-
- 'Wandering between two worlds, one dead,
- The other powerless to be born,
- With nowhere yet to rest my head,
- Like these on earth I wait forlorn.
- Their faith, my tears, the world deride -
- I come to shed them at their side.'
-
-
-
- To Stevenson, on the other hand, our Lady of the Snows is a
- mistaken divinity, and the place a monument of chilly error, - for
- once in a way he takes it on himself to be a preacher, his
- temperament gives voice in a creed:
-
-
- 'And ye, O brethren, what if God,
- When from Heaven's top He spies abroad,
- And sees on this tormented stage
- The noble war of mankind rage,
- What if His vivifying eye,
- O monks, should pass your corner by?
- For still the Lord is Lord of might;
- In deeds, in deeds, He takes delight;
- The plough, the spear, the laden barks,
- The field, the founded city, marks;
- He marks the smiler of the streets,
- The singer upon garden seats;
- He sees the climber in the rocks;
- To Him, the shepherd folds his flocks;
- For those He loves that underprop
- With daily virtues Heaven's top,
- And bear the falling sky with ease,
- Unfrowning Caryatides.
- Those He approves that ply the trade,
- That rock the child, that wed the maid,
- That with weak virtues, weaker hands,
- Sow gladness on the peopled lands,
- And still with laughter, song, and shout
- Spin the great wheel of earth about.
-
- But ye? - O ye who linger still
- Here in your fortress on the hill,
- With placid face, with tranquil breath,
- The unsought volunteers of death,
- Our cheerful General on high
- With careless looks may pass you by!'
-
-
- And the fact of death, which has damped and darkened the writings
- of so many minor poets, does not cast a pallor on his conviction.
- Life is of value only because it can be spent, or given; and the
- love of God coveted the position, and assumed mortality. If a man
- treasure and hug his life, one thing only is certain, that he will
- be robbed some day, and cut the pitiable and futile figure of one
- who has been saving candle-ends in a house that is on fire. Better
- than this to have a foolish spendthrift blaze and the loving cup
- going round. Stevenson speaks almost with a personal envy of the
- conduct of the four marines of the WAGER. There was no room for
- them in the boat, and they were left on a desert island to a
- certain death. 'They were soldiers, they said, and knew well
- enough it was their business to die; and as their comrades pulled
- away, they stood upon the beach, gave three cheers, and cried, "God
- bless the King!" Now, one or two of those who were in the boat
- escaped, against all likelihood, to tell the story. That was a
- great thing for us' - even when life is extorted it may be given
- nobly, with ceremony and courtesy. So strong was Stevenson's
- admiration for heroic graces like these that in the requiem that
- appears in his poems he speaks of an ordinary death as of a hearty
- exploit, and draws his figures from lives of adventure and toil:
-
-
- 'Under the wide and starry sky
- Dig the grave and let me lie.
- Glad did I live and gladly die,
- And I laid me down with a will.
- This be the verse you grave for me:
- HERE HE LIES WHERE HE LONGED TO BE,
- HOME IS THE SAILOR, HOME FROM THE SEA,
- AND THE HUNTER HOME FROM THE HILL.'
-
-
- This man should surely have been honoured with the pomp and colour
- and music of a soldier's funeral.
-
- The most remarkable feature of the work he has left is its singular
- combination of style and romance. It has so happened, and the
- accident has gained almost the strength of a tradition, that the
- most assiduous followers of romance have been careless stylists.
- They have trusted to the efficacy of their situation and incident,
- and have too often cared little about the manner of its
- presentation. By an odd piece of irony style has been left to the
- cultivation of those who have little or nothing to tell. Sir
- Walter Scott himself, with all his splendid romantic and tragic
- gifts, often, in Stevenson's perfectly just phrase, 'fobs us off
- with languid and inarticulate twaddle.' He wrote carelessly and
- genially, and then breakfasted, and began the business of the day.
- But Stevenson, who had romance tingling in every vein of his body,
- set himself laboriously and patiently to train his other faculty,
- the faculty of style.
-
-
- I. STYLE. - Let no one say that 'reading and writing comes by
- nature,' unless he is prepared to be classed with the foolish
- burgess who said it first. A poet is born, not made, - so is every
- man, - but he is born raw. Stevenson's life was a grave devotion
- to the education of himself in the art of writing,
-
-
- 'The lyf so short, the craft so long to lerne,
- Thassay so hard, so sharp the conquering.'
-
-
- Those who deny the necessity, or decry the utility, of such an
- education, are generally deficient in a sense of what makes good
- literature - they are 'word-deaf,' as others are colour-blind. All
- writing is a kind of word-weaving; a skilful writer will make a
- splendid tissue out of the diverse fibres of words. But to care
- for words, to select them judiciously and lovingly, is not in the
- least essential to all writing, all speaking; for the sad fact is
- this, that most of us do our thinking, our writing, and our
- speaking in phrases, not in words. The work of a feeble writer is
- always a patchwork of phrases, some of them borrowed from the
- imperial texture of Shakespeare and Milton, others picked up from
- the rags in the street. We make our very kettle-holders of pieces
- of a king's carpet. How many overworn quotations from Shakespeare
- suddenly leap into meaning and brightness when they are seen in
- their context! 'The cry is still, "They come!" ' - 'More honoured
- in the breach than the observance,' - the sight of these phrases in
- the splendour of their dramatic context in MACBETH and HAMLET casts
- shame upon their daily degraded employments. But the man of
- affairs has neither the time to fashion his speech, nor the
- knowledge to choose his words, so he borrows his sentences ready-
- made, and applies them in rough haste to purposes that they do not
- exactly fit. Such a man inevitably repeats, like the cuckoo,
- monotonous catchwords, and lays his eggs of thought in the material
- that has been woven into consistency by others. It is a matter of
- natural taste, developed and strengthened by continual practice, to
- avoid being the unwitting slave of phrases.
-
- The artist in words, on the other hand, although he is a lover of
- fine phrases, in his word-weaving experiments uses no shoddy, but
- cultivates his senses of touch and sight until he can combine the
- raw fibres in novel and bewitching patterns. To this end he must
- have two things: a fine sense, in the first place, of the sound,
- value, meaning, and associations of individual words, and next, a
- sense of harmony, proportion, and effect in their combination. It
- is amazing what nobility a mere truism is often found to possess
- when it is clad with a garment thus woven.
-
- Stevenson had both these sensitive capabilities in a very high
- decree. His careful choice of epithet and name have even been
- criticised as lending to some of his narrative-writing an excessive
- air of deliberation. His daintiness of diction is best seen in his
- earlier work; thereafter his writing became more vigorous and
- direct, fitter for its later uses, but never unillumined by
- felicities that cause a thrill of pleasure to the reader. Of the
- value of words he had the acutest appreciation. VIRGINIBUS
- PUERISQUE, his first book of essays, is crowded with happy hits and
- subtle implications conveyed in a single word. 'We have all
- heard,' he says in one of these, 'of cities in South America built
- upon the side of fiery mountains, and how, even in this tremendous
- neighbourhood, the inhabitants are not a jot more impressed by the
- solemnity of mortal conditions than if they were delving gardens in
- the greenest corner of England.' You can feel the ground shake and
- see the volcano tower above you at that word 'TREMENDOUS
- neighbourhood.' Something of the same double reference to the
- original and acquired meanings of a word is to be found in such a
- phrase as 'sedate electrician,' for one who in a back office wields
- all the lights of a city; or in that description of one drawing
- near to death, who is spoken of as groping already with his hands
- 'on the face of the IMPASSABLE.'
-
- The likeness of this last word to a very different word,
- 'IMPASSIVE,' is made to do good literary service in suggesting the
- sphinx-like image of death. Sometimes, as here, this subtle sense
- of double meanings almost leads to punning. In ACROSS THE PLAINS
- Stevenson narrates how a bet was transacted at a railway-station,
- and subsequently, he supposes, 'LIQUIDATED at the bar.' This is
- perhaps an instance of the excess of a virtue, but it is an excess
- to be found plentifully in the works of Milton.
-
- His loving regard for words bears good fruit in his later and more
- stirring works. He has a quick ear and appreciation for live
- phrases on the lips of tramps, beach-combers, or Americans. In THE
- BEACH OF FALESA the sea-captain who introduces the new trader to
- the South Pacific island where the scene of the story is laid,
- gives a brief description of the fate of the last dealer in copra.
- It may serve as a single illustration of volumes of racy, humorous,
- and imaginative slang;
-
-
- ' "Do you catch a bit of white there to the east'ard?" the captain
- continued. "That's your house. . . . When old Adams saw it, he
- took and shook me by the hand. 'I've dropped into a soft thing
- here,' says he. 'So you have,' says I. . . . Poor Johnny! I never
- saw him again but the once . . . and the next time we came round
- there he was dead and buried. I took and put up a bit of stick to
- him: 'John Adams, OBIT eighteen and sixty-eight. Go thou and do
- likewise.' I missed that man. I never could see much harm in
- Johnny."
-
- ' "What did he die of ?" I inquired.
-
- ' "Some kind of sickness," says the captain. "It appears it took
- him sudden. Seems he got up in the night, and filled up on Pain-
- Killer and Kennedy's Discovery. No go - he was booked beyond
- Kennedy. Then he had tried to open a case of gin. No go again:
- not strong enough. . . . Poor John!" '
-
-
- There is a world of abrupt, homely talk like this to be found in
- the speech of Captain Nares and of Jim Pinkerton in THE WRECKER;
- and a wealth of Scottish dialect, similar in effect, in KIDNAPPED,
- CATRIONA, and many other stories. It was a delicate ear and a
- sense trained by practice that picked up these vivid turns of
- speech, some of them perhaps heard only once, and a mind given to
- dwell on words, that remembered them for years, and brought them
- out when occasion arose.
-
- But the praise of Stevenson's style cannot be exhausted in a
- description of his use of individual words or his memory of
- individual phrases. His mastery of syntax, the orderly and
- emphatic arrangement of words in sentences, a branch of art so
- seldom mastered, was even greater. And here he could owe no great
- debt to his romantic predecessors in prose. Dumas, it is true, is
- a master of narrative, but he wrote in French, and a style will
- hardly bear expatriation. Scott's sentences are, many of them,
- shambling, knock-kneed giants. Stevenson harked further back for
- his models, and fed his style on the most vigorous of the prose
- writers of the seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries, the
- golden age of English prose. 'What English those fellows wrote!'
- says Fitzgerald in one of his letters; 'I cannot read the modern
- mechanique after them.' And he quotes a passage from Harrington's
- OCEANA:
-
-
- 'This free-born Nation lives not upon the dole or Bounty of One
- Man, but distributing her Annual Magistracies and Honours with her
- own hand, is herself King People.'
-
-
- It was from writers of Harrington's time and later that Stevenson
- learned something of his craft. Bunyan and Defoe should be
- particularly mentioned, and that later excellent worthy, Captain
- Charles Johnson, who compiled the ever-memorable LIVES OF PIRATES
- AND HIGHWAYMEN. Mr. George Meredith is the chief of those very few
- modern writers whose influence may be detected in his style.
-
- However it was made, and whencesoever the material or suggestion
- borrowed, he came by a very admirable instrument for the telling of
- stories. Those touches of archaism that are so frequent with him,
- the slightly unusual phrasing, or unexpected inversion of the order
- of words, show a mind alert in its expression, and give the sting
- of novelty even to the commonplaces of narrative or conversation.
- A nimble literary tact will work its will on the phrases of current
- small-talk, remoulding them nearer to the heart's desire,
- transforming them to its own stamp. This was what Stevenson did,
- and the very conversations that pass between his characters have an
- air of distinction that is all his own. His books are full of
- brilliant talk - talk real and convincing enough in its purport and
- setting, but purged of the languors and fatuities of actual
- commonplace conversation. It is an enjoyment like that to be
- obtained from a brilliant exhibition of fencing, clean and
- dexterous, to assist at the talking bouts of David Balfour and Miss
- Grant, Captain Nares and Mr. Dodd, Alexander Mackellar and the
- Master of Ballantrae, Prince Otto and Sir John Crabtree, or those
- wholly admirable pieces of special pleading to be found in A
- LODGING FOR THE NIGHT and THE SIRE DE MALETROIT'S DOOR. But people
- do not talk like this in actual life- ' 'tis true, 'tis pity; and
- pity 'tis, 'tis true.' They do not; in actual life conversation is
- generally so smeared and blurred with stupidities, so invaded and
- dominated by the spirit of dulness, so liable to swoon into
- meaninglessness, that to turn to Stevenson's books is like an
- escape into mountain air from the stagnant vapours of a morass.
- The exact reproduction of conversation as it occurs in life can
- only be undertaken by one whose natural dulness feels itself
- incommoded by wit and fancy as by a grit in the eye. Conversation
- is often no more than a nervous habit of body, like twiddling the
- thumbs, and to record each particular remark is as much as to
- describe each particular twiddle. Or in its more intellectual
- uses, when speech is employed, for instance, to conceal our
- thoughts, how often is it a world too wide for the shrunken nudity
- of the thought it is meant to veil, and thrown over it, formless,
- flabby, and black - like a tarpaulin! It is pleasant to see
- thought and feeling dressed for once in the trim, bright raiment
- Stevenson devises for them.
-
- There is an indescribable air of distinction, which is, and is not,
- one and the same thing with style, breathing from all his works.
- Even when he is least inspired, his bearing and gait could never be
- mistaken for another man's. All that he writes is removed by the
- width of the spheres from the possibility of commonplace, and he
- avoids most of the snares and pitfalls of genius with noble and
- unconscious skill.
-
- If he ever fell into one of these - which may perhaps be doubted -
- it was through too implicit a confidence in the powers of style.
- His open letter to the Rev. Dr. Hyde in vindication of Father
- Damien is perhaps his only literary mistake. It is a matchless
- piece of scorn and invective, not inferior in skill to anything he
- ever wrote. But that it was well done is no proof that it should
- have been done at all. 'I remember Uzzah and am afraid,' said the
- wise Erasmus, when he was urged to undertake the defence of Holy
- Church; 'it is not every one who is permitted to support the Ark of
- the Covenant.' And the only disquietude suggested by Stevenson's
- letter is a doubt whether he really has a claim to be Father
- Damien's defender, whether Father Damien had need of the assistance
- of a literary freelance. The Saint who was bitten in the hand by a
- serpent shook it off into the fire and stood unharmed. As it was
- in the Mediterranean so it was also in the Pacific, and there is
- something officious in the intrusion of a spectator, something
- irrelevant in the plentiful pronouns of the first person singular
- to be found sprinkled over Stevenson's letter. The curse spoken in
- Eden, 'Upon thy belly shalt thou go, and dust shalt thou eat all
- the days of thy life,' surely covered by anticipation the case of
- the Rev. Dr. Hyde.
-
-
- II. ROMANCE. - The faculty of romance, the greatest of the gifts
- showered on Stevenson's cradle by the fairies, will suffer no
- course of development; the most that can be done with it is to
- preserve it on from childhood unblemished and undiminished. It is
- of a piece with Stevenson's romantic ability that his own childhood
- never ended; he could pass back into that airy world without an
- effort. In his stories his imagination worked on the old lines,
- but it became conscious of its working. And the highest note of
- these stories is not drama, nor character, but romance. In one of
- his essays he defines the highest achievement of romance to be the
- embodiment of 'character, thought, or emotion in some act or
- attitude that shall be remarkably striking to the mind's eye.' His
- essay on Victor Hugo shows how keenly conscious he was that
- narrative romance can catch and embody emotions and effects that
- are for ever out of the reach of the drama proper, and of the essay
- or homily, just as they are out of the reach of sculpture and
- painting. Now, it is precisely in these effects that the chief
- excellence of romance resides; it was the discovery of a world of
- these effects, insusceptible of treatment by the drama, neglected
- entirely by the character-novel, which constituted the Romantic
- revival of the end of last century. 'The artistic result of a
- romance,' says Stevenson, 'what is left upon the memory by any
- powerful and artistic novel, is something so complicated and
- refined that it is difficult to put a name upon it, and yet
- something as simple as nature. . . . The fact is, that art is
- working far ahead of language as well as of science, realizing for
- us, by all manner of suggestions and exaggerations, effects for
- which as yet we have no direct name, for the reason that these
- effects do not enter very largely into the necessities of life.
- Hence alone is that suspicion of vagueness that often hangs about
- the purpose of a romance; it is clear enough to us in thought, but
- we are not used to consider anything clear until we are able to
- formulate it in words, and analytical language has not been
- sufficiently shaped to that end.' He goes on to point out that
- there is an epical value about every great romance, an underlying
- idea, not presentable always in abstract or critical terms, in the
- stories of such masters of pure romance as Victor Hugo and
- Nathaniel Hawthorne.
-
- The progress of romance in the present century has consisted
- chiefly in the discovery of new exercises of imagination and new
- subtle effects in story. Fielding, as Stevenson says, did not
- understand that the nature of a landscape or the spirit of the
- times could count for anything in a story; all his actions consist
- of a few simple personal elements. With Scott vague influences
- that qualify a man's personality begin to make a large claim; 'the
- individual characters begin to occupy a comparatively small
- proportion of that canvas on which armies manoeuvre and great hills
- pile themselves upon each other's shoulders.' And the achievements
- of the great masters since Scott - Hugo, Dumas, Hawthorne, to name
- only those in Stevenson's direct line of ancestry - have added new
- realms to the domain of romance.
-
- What are the indescribable effects that romance, casting far beyond
- problems of character and conduct, seeks to realise? What is the
- nature of the great informing, underlying idea that animates a
- truly great romance - THE BRIDE OF LAMMERMOOR, MONTE CRISTO, LES
- MISERABLES, THE SCARLET LETTER, THE MASTER OF BALLANTRAE? These
- questions can only be answered by de-forming the impression given
- by each of these works to present it in the chop-logic language of
- philosophy. But an approach to an answer may be made by
- illustration.
-
- In his AMERICAN NOTEBOOKS Nathaniel Hawthorne used to jot down
- subjects for stories as they struck him. His successive entries
- are like the souls of stories awaiting embodiment, which many of
- them never received; they bring us very near to the workings of the
- mind of a great master. Here are some of them:
-
-
- 'A sketch to be given of a modern reformer, a type of the extreme
- doctrines on the subject of slaves, cold water, and the like. He
- goes about the streets haranguing most eloquently, and is on the
- point of making many converts, when his labours are suddenly
- interrupted by the appearance of the keeper of a madhouse whence he
- has escaped. Much may be made of this idea.'
-
- 'The scene of a story or sketch to be laid within the light of a
- street lantern; the time when the lamp is near going out; and the
- catastrophe to be simultaneous with the last flickering gleam.'
-
- 'A person to be writing a tale and to find it shapes itself against
- his intentions; that the characters act otherwise than he thought,
- and a catastrophe comes which he strives in vain to avert. It
- might shadow forth his own fate - he having made himself one of the
- personages.'
-
- 'Two persons to be expecting some occurrence and watching for the
- two principal actors in it, and to find that the occurrence is even
- then passing, and that they themselves are the two actors.'
-
- 'A satire on ambition and fame from a statue of snow.'
-
-
- Hawthorne used this idea in one of his sketches.
-
-
- 'A moral philosopher to buy a slave, or otherwise get possession of
- a human being, and to use him for the sake of experiment by trying
- the operation of a certain vice on him.'
-
-
- M. Bourget, the French romancer, has made use of this idea in his
- novel called LE DISCIPLE. Only it is not a slave, but a young girl
- whom he pretends to love, that is the subject of the moral
- philosopher's experiment; and a noisy war has been waged round the
- book in France. Hawthorne would plainly have seized the romantic
- essence of the idea and would have avoided the boneyard of 'problem
- morality.'
-
-
- 'A story the principal personage of which shall seem always on the
- point of entering on the scene, but shall never appear.'
-
-
- This is the device that gives fascination to the figures of
- Richelieu in MARION DELORME, and of Captain Flint in TREASURE
- ISLAND.
-
-
- 'The majesty of death to be exemplified in a beggar, who, after
- being seen humble and cringing in the streets of a city for many
- years, at length by some means or other gets admittance into a rich
- man's mansion, and there dies - assuming state, and striking awe
- into the breasts of those who had looked down upon him.'
-
-
- These are all excellent instances of the sort of idea that gives
- life to a romance - of acts or attitudes that stamp themselves upon
- the mind's eye. Some of them appeal chiefly to the mind's eye,
- others are of value chiefly as symbols. But, for the most part,
- the romantic kernel of a story is neither pure picture nor pure
- allegory, it can neither be painted nor moralised. It makes its
- most irresistible appeal neither to the eye that searches for form
- and colour, nor to the reason that seeks for abstract truth, but to
- the blood, to all that dim instinct of danger, mystery, and
- sympathy in things that is man's oldest inheritance - to the
- superstitions of the heart. Romance vindicates the supernatural
- against science and rescues it from the palsied tutelage of
- morality.
-
- Stevenson's work is a gallery of romantic effects that haunt the
- memory. Some of these are directly pictorial: the fight in the
- round-house on board the brig COVENANT; the duel between the two
- brothers of Ballantrae in the island of light thrown up by the
- candles from that abyss of windless night; the flight of the
- Princess Seraphina through the dark mazes of the wood, - all these,
- although they carry with them subtleties beyond the painter's art,
- yet have something of picture in them. But others make entrance to
- the corridors of the mind by blind and secret ways, and there
- awaken the echoes of primaeval fear. The cry of the parrot -
- 'Pieces of eight' - the tapping of the stick of the blind pirate
- Pew as he draws near the inn-parlour, and the similar effects of
- inexplicable terror wrought by the introduction of the blind
- catechist in KIDNAPPED, and of the disguise of a blind leper in THE
- BLACK ARROW, are beyond the reach of any but the literary form of
- romantic art. The last appearance of Pew, in the play of ADMIRAL
- GUINEA, written in collaboration with Mr. W. E. Henley, is perhaps
- the masterpiece of all the scenes of terror. The blind ruffian's
- scream of panic fear, when he puts his groping hand into the
- burning flame of the candle in the room where he believed that he
- was unseen, and so realises that his every movement is being
- silently watched, is indeed 'the horrors come alive.'
-
- The animating principle or idea of Stevenson's longer stories is
- never to be found in their plot, which is generally built
- carelessly and disjointedly enough around the central romantic
- situation or conception. The main situation in THE WRECKER is a
- splendid product of romantic aspiration, but the structure of the
- story is incoherent and ineffective, so that some of the best
- passages in the book - the scenes in Paris, for instance - have no
- business there at all. The story in KIDNAPPED and CATRIONA wanders
- on in a single thread, like the pageant of a dream, and the reader
- feels and sympathises with the author's obvious difficulty in
- leading it back to the scene of the trial and execution of James
- Stewart. THE MASTER OF BALLANTRAE is stamped with a magnificent
- unity of conception, but the story illuminates that conception by a
- series of scattered episodes.
-
- That lurid embodiment of fascinating evil, part vampire, part
- Mephistopheles, whose grand manner and heroic abilities might have
- made him a great and good man but for 'the malady of not wanting,'
- is the light and meaning of the whole book. Innocent and
- benevolent lives are thrown in his way that he may mock or distort
- or shatter them. Stevenson never came nearer than in this
- character to the sublime of power.
-
- But an informing principle of unity is more readily to be
- apprehended in the shorter stories, and it is a unity not so much
- of plot as of impression and atmosphere. His islands, whether
- situated in the Pacific or off the coast of Scotland, have each of
- them a climate of its own, and the character of the place seems to
- impose itself on the incidents that occur, dictating subordination
- or contrast. The events that happen within the limits of one of
- these magic isles could in every case be cut off from the rest of
- the story and framed as a separate work of art. The long
- starvation of David Balfour on the island of Earraid, the sharks of
- crime and monsters of blasphemy that break the peace of the shining
- tropical lagoons in TREASURE ISLAND and THE EBB TIDE, the captivity
- on the Bass Rock in CATRIONA, the supernatural terrors that hover
- and mutter over the island of THE MERRY MEN - these imaginations
- are plainly generated by the scenery against which they are thrown;
- each is in some sort the genius of the place it inhabits.
-
- In his search for the treasures of romance, Stevenson adventured
- freely enough into the realm of the supernatural.
-
- When he is handling the superstitions of the Scottish people, he
- allows his humorous enjoyment of their extravagance to peep out
- from behind the solemn dialect in which they are dressed. The
- brief tale of THRAWN JANET, and Black Andy's story of Tod Lapraik
- in CATRIONA, are grotesque imaginations of the school of TAM O'
- SHANTER rather than of the school of Shakespeare, who deals in no
- comedy ghosts. They are turnip-lanterns swayed by a laughing
- urchin, proud of the fears he can awaken. Even THE STRANGE CASE OF
- DR. JEKYLL AND MR. HYDE and the story of THE BOTTLE IMP are
- manufactured bogeys, that work on the nerves and not on the heart,
- whatever may be said by those who insist on seeing allegory in what
- is only dream-fantasy. The supernatural must be rooted deeper than
- these in life and experience if it is to reach an imposing stature:
- the true ghost is the shadow of a man. And Stevenson shows a sense
- of this in two of his very finest stories, the exquisite idyll of
- WILL O' THE MILL and the grim history of MARKHEIM. Each of these
- stories is the work of a poet, by no means of a goblin-fancier.
- The personification of Death is as old as poetry; it is wrought
- with moving gentleness in that last scene in the arbour of Will's
- inn. The wafted scent of the heliotropes, which had never been
- planted in the garden since Marjory's death, the light in the room
- that had been hers, prelude the arrival at the gate of the
- stranger's carriage, with the black pine tops standing above it
- like plumes. And Will o' the Mill makes the acquaintance of his
- physician and friend, and goes at last upon his travels. In the
- other story, Markheim meets with his own double in the house of the
- dealer in curiosities, whom he has murdered. It is not such a
- double as Rossetti prayed for to the god of Sleep:
-
-
- 'Ah! might I, by thy good grace,
- Groping in the windy stair
- (Darkness and the breath of space
- Like loud waters everywhere),
- Meeting mine own image there
- Face to face,
- Send it from that place to her!'
-
-
- but a clear-eyed critic of the murderer, not unfriendly, who lays
- bare before him his motives and history. At the close of that
- wonderful conversation, one of the most brilliant of its author's
- achievements, Markheim gives himself into the hands of the police.
- These two stories, when compared with the others, serve to show how
- Stevenson's imagination quickened and strengthened when it played
- full upon life. For his best romantic effects, like all great
- romance, are illuminative of life, and no mere idle games.
-
-
- III. MORALITY. - His genius, like the genius of Nathaniel
- Hawthorne, was doubly rich in the spirit of romance and in a wise
- and beautiful morality. But the irresponsible caprices of his
- narrative fancy prevented his tales from being the appropriate
- vehicles of his morality. He has left no work - unless the two
- short stories mentioned above be regarded as exceptions - in which
- romance and morality are welded into a single perfect whole,
- nothing that can be put beside THE SCARLET LETTER or THE MARBLE
- FAUN for deep insight and magic fancy joined in one. Hence his
- essays, containing as they do the gist of his reflective wisdom,
- are ranked by some critics above his stories.
-
- A novel cannot, of course, be moral as an action is moral; there is
- no question in art of police regulations or conformity to
- established codes, but rather of insight both deep and wide.
- Polygamy and monogamy, suttee, thuggism, and cannibalism, are all
- acceptable to the romancer, whose business is with the heart of a
- man in all times and places. He is not bound to display allegiance
- to particular moral laws of the kind that can be broken; he is
- bound to show his consciousness of that wider moral order which can
- no more be broken by crime than the law of gravitation can be
- broken by the fall of china - the morality without which life would
- be impossible; the relations, namely, of human beings to each
- other, the feelings, habits, and thoughts that are the web of
- society. For the appreciation of morality in this wider sense high
- gifts of imagination are necessary. Shakespeare could never have
- drawn Macbeth, and thereby made apparent the awfulness of murder,
- without some sympathy for the murderer - the sympathy of
- intelligence. These gifts of imagination and sympathy belong to
- Stevenson in a very high degree; in all his romances there are
- gleams from time to time of wise and subtle reflection upon life,
- from the eternal side of things, which shine the more luminously
- that they spring from the events and situations with no suspicion
- of homily. In THE BLACK ARROW, Dick Shelton begs from the Duke of
- Gloucester the life of the old shipmaster Arblaster, whose ship he
- had taken and accidentally wrecked earlier in the story. The Duke
- of Gloucester, who, in his own words, 'loves not mercy nor mercy-
- mongers,' yields the favour reluctantly. Then Dick turns to
- Arblaster.
-
-
- ' "Come," said Dick, "a life is a life, old shrew, and it is more
- than ships or liquor. Say you forgive me, for if your life is
- worth nothing to you, it hath cost me the beginnings of my fortune.
- Come, I have paid for it dearly, be not so churlish."
-
- ' "An I had my ship," said Arblaster, "I would 'a' been forth and
- safe on the high seas - I and my man Tom. But ye took my ship,
- gossip, and I'm a beggar; and for my man Tom, a knave fellow in
- russet shot him down, 'Murrain,' quoth he, and spake never again.
- 'Murrain' was the last of his words, and the poor spirit of him
- passed. 'A will never sail no more, will my Tom."
-
- 'Dick was seized with unavailing penitence and pity; he sought to
- take the skipper's hand, but Arblaster avoided his touch.
-
- ' "Nay," said he, "let be. Y' have played the devil with me, and
- let that content you."
-
- 'The words died in Richard's throat. He saw, through tears, the
- poor old man, bemused with liquor and sorrow, go shambling away,
- with bowed head, across the snow, and the unnoticed dog whimpering
- at his heels; and for the first time began to understand the
- desperate game that we play in life, and how a thing once done is
- not to be changed or remedied by any penitence.'
-
-
- A similar wisdom that goes to the heart of things is found on the
- lips of the spiritual visitant in Markheim.
-
-
- ' "Murder is to me no special category," replied the other. "All
- sins are murder, even as all life is war. I behold your race, like
- starving mariners on a raft, plucking crusts out of the hands of
- famine, and feeding on each other's lives. I follow sins beyond
- the moment of their acting; I find in all that the last consequence
- is death; and to my eyes the pretty maid, who thwarts her mother
- with such taking graces on a question of a ball, drips no less
- visibly with human gore than such a murderer as yourself." '
-
-
- The wide outlook on humanity that expresses itself in passages like
- these is combined in Stevenson with a vivid interest in, and quick
- appreciation of, character. The variety of the characters that he
- has essayed to draw is enormous, and his successes, for the
- purposes of his stories, are many. Yet with all this, the number
- of lifelike portraits, true to a hair, that are to be found in his
- works is very small indeed. In the golden glow of romance,
- character is always subject to be idealised; it is the effect of
- character seen at particular angles and in special lights, natural
- or artificial, that Stevenson paints; he does not attempt to
- analyse the complexity of its elements, but boldly projects into it
- certain principles, and works from those. It has often been said
- of Scott that he could not draw a lady who was young and beautiful;
- the glamour of chivalry blinded him, he lowered his eyes and
- described his emotions and aspirations. Something of the same
- disability afflicted Stevenson in the presence of a ruffian. He
- loved heroic vice only less than he loved heroic virtue, and was
- always ready to idealise his villains, to make of them men who,
- like the Master of Ballantrae, 'lived for an idea.' Even the low
- and lesser villainy of Israel Hands, in the great scene where he
- climbs the mast to murder the hero of TREASURE ISLAND, breathes out
- its soul in a creed:
-
-
- ' "For thirty years," he said, "I've sailed the seas, and seen good
- and bad, better and worse, provisions running out, knives going,
- and what not. Well, now I tell you, I never seen good come o'
- goodness yet. Him as strikes first is my fancy; dead men don't
- bite; them's my views - Amen, so be it." '
-
-
- John Silver, that memorable pirate, with a face like a ham and an
- eye like a fragment of glass stuck into it, leads a career of
- wholehearted crime that can only be described as sparkling. His
- unalloyed maleficence is adorned with a thousand graces of manner.
- Into the dark and fetid marsh that is an evil heart, where low
- forms of sentiency are hardly distinguishable from the all-
- pervading mud, Stevenson never peered, unless it were in the study
- of Huish in THE EBB TIDE.
-
- Of his women, let women speak. They are traditionally accredited
- with an intuition of one another's hearts, although why, if woman
- was created for man, as the Scriptures assure us, the impression
- that she makes on him should not count for as much as the
- impression she makes on some other woman, is a question that cries
- for solution. Perhaps the answer is that disinterested curiosity,
- which is one means of approach to the knowledge of character,
- although only one, is a rare attitude for man to assume towards the
- other sex. Stevenson's curiosity was late in awaking; the heroine
- of THE BLACK ARROW is dressed in boy's clothes throughout the
- course of the story, and the novelist thus saved the trouble of
- describing the demeanour of a girl. Mrs. Henry, in THE MASTER OF
- BALLANTRAE, is a charming veiled figure, drawn in the shadow; Miss
- Barbara Grant and Catriona in the continuation of KIDNAPPED are
- real enough to have made many suitors for their respective hands
- among male readers of the book; - but that is nothing, reply the
- critics of the other party: a walking doll will find suitors. The
- question must stand over until some definite principles of
- criticism have been discovered to guide us among these perilous
- passes.
-
- One character must never be passed over in an estimate of
- Stevenson's work. The hero of his longest work is not David
- Balfour, in whom the pawky Lowland lad, proud and precise, but 'a
- very pretty gentleman,' is transfigured at times by traits that he
- catches, as narrator of the story, from its author himself. But
- Alan Breek Stewart is a greater creation, and a fine instance of
- that wider morality that can seize by sympathy the soul of a wild
- Highland clansman. 'Impetuous, insolent, unquenchable,' a condoner
- of murder (for 'them that havenae dipped their hands in any little
- difficulty should be very mindful of the case of them that have'),
- a confirmed gambler, as quarrel-some as a turkey-cock, and as vain
- and sensitive as a child, Alan Breek is one of the most lovable
- characters in all literature; and his penetration - a great part of
- which he learned, to take his own account of it, by driving cattle
- 'through a throng lowland country with the black soldiers at his
- tail' - blossoms into the most delightful reflections upon men and
- things.
-
- The highest ambitions of a novelist are not easily attainable. To
- combine incident, character, and romance in a uniform whole, to
- alternate telling dramatic situation with effects of poetry and
- suggestion, to breathe into the entire conception a profound
- wisdom, construct it with absolute unity, and express it in perfect
- style, - this thing has never yet been done. A great part of
- Stevenson's subtle wisdom of life finds its readiest outlet in his
- essays. In these, whatever their occasion, he shows himself the
- clearest-eyed critic of human life, never the dupe of the phrases
- and pretences, the theories and conventions, that distort the
- vision of most writers and thinkers. He has an unerring instinct
- for realities, and brushes aside all else with rapid grace. In his
- lately published AMATEUR EMIGRANT he describes one of his fellow-
- passengers to America:
-
-
- 'In truth it was not whisky that had ruined him; he was ruined long
- before for all good human purposes but conversation. His eyes were
- sealed by a cheap school-book materialism. He could see nothing in
- the world but money and steam engines. He did not know what you
- meant by the word happiness. He had forgotten the simple emotions
- of childhood, and perhaps never encountered the delights of youth.
- He believed in production, that useful figment of economy, as if it
- had been real, like laughter; and production, without prejudice to
- liquor, was his god and guide.'
-
-
- This sense of the realities of the world, - laughter, happiness,
- the simple emotions of childhood, and others, - makes Stevenson an
- admirable critic of those social pretences that ape the native
- qualities of the heart. The criticism on organised philanthropy
- contained in the essay on BEGGARS is not exhaustive, it is
- expressed paradoxically, but is it untrue?
-
-
- 'We should wipe two words from our vocabulary: gratitude and
- charity. In real life, help is given out of friendship, or it is
- not valued; it is received from the hand of friendship, or it is
- resented. We are all too proud to take a naked gift; we must seem
- to pay it, if in nothing else, then with the delights of our
- society. Here, then, is the pitiful fix of the rich man; here is
- that needle's eye in which he stuck already in the days of Christ,
- and still sticks to-day, firmer, if possible, than ever; that he
- has the money, and lacks the love which should make his money
- acceptable. Here and now, just as of old in Palestine, he has the
- rich to dinner, it is with the rich that he takes his pleasure: and
- when his turn comes to be charitable, he looks in vain for a
- recipient. His friends are not poor, they do not want; the poor
- are not his friends, they will not take. To whom is he to give?
- Where to find - note this phrase - the Deserving Poor? Charity is
- (what they call) centralised; offices are hired; societies founded,
- with secretaries paid or unpaid: the hunt of the Deserving Poor
- goes merrily forward. I think it will take a more than merely
- human secretary to disinter that character. What! a class that is
- to be in want from no fault of its own, and yet greedily eager to
- receive from strangers; and to be quite respectable, and at the
- same time quite devoid of self-respect; and play the most delicate
- part of friendship, and yet never be seen; and wear the form of
- man, and yet fly in the face of all the laws of human nature: - and
- all this, in the hope of getting a belly-god burgess through a
- needle's eye! Oh, let him stick, by all means; and let his polity
- tumble in the dust; and let his epitaph and all his literature (of
- which my own works begin to form no inconsiderable part) be
- abolished even from the history of man! For a fool of this
- monstrosity of dulness there can be no salvation; and the fool who
- looked for the elixir of life was an angel of reason to the fool
- who looks for the Deserving Poor.'
-
-
- An equal sense of the realities of life and death gives the force
- of a natural law to the pathos of OLD MORTALITY, that essay in
- which Stevenson pays passionate tribute to the memory of his early
- friend, who 'had gone to ruin with a kingly abandon, like one who
- condescended; but once ruined, with the lights all out, he fought
- as for a kingdom.' The whole description, down to the marvellous
- quotation from Bunyan that closes it, is one of the sovereign
- passages of modern literature; the pathos of it is pure and
- elemental, like the rush of a cleansing wind, or the onset of the
- legions commanded by
-
-
- 'The mighty Mahmud, Allah-breathing Lord,
- That all the misbelieving and black Horde
- Of Fears and Sorrows that infest the Soul
- Scatters before him with his whirlwind Sword.'
-
-
- Lastly, to bring to an end this imperfect review of the works of a
- writer who has left none greater behind him, Stevenson excels at
- what is perhaps the most delicate of literary tasks and the utmost
- test, where it is successfully encountered, of nobility, - the
- practice, namely, of self-revelation and self-delineation. To talk
- much about oneself with detail, composure, and ease, with no shadow
- of hypocrisy and no whiff or taint of indecent familiarity, no
- puling and no posing, - the shores of the sea of literature are
- strewn with the wrecks and forlorn properties of those who have
- adventured on this dangerous attempt. But a criticism of Stevenson
- is happy in this, that from the writer it can pass with perfect
- trust and perfect fluency to the man. He shares with Goldsmith and
- Montaigne, his own favourite, the happy privilege of making lovers
- among his readers. 'To be the most beloved of English writers -
- what a title that is for a man!' says Thackeray of Goldsmith. In
- such matters, a dispute for pre-eminence in the captivation of
- hearts would be unseemly; it is enough to say that Stevenson too
- has his lovers among those who have accompanied him on his INLAND
- VOYAGE, or through the fastnesses of the Cevennes in the wake of
- Modestine. He is loved by those that never saw his face; and one
- who has sealed that dizzy height of ambition may well be content,
- without the impertinent assurance that, when the Japanese have
- taken London and revised the contents of the British Museum, the
- yellow scribes whom they shall set to produce a new edition of the
- BIOGRAPHIE UNIVERSELLE will include in their entries the following
- item: - 'STEVENSON, R. L. A PROLIFIC WRITER OF STORIES AMONG THE
- ABORIGINES. FLOURISHED BEFORE THE COMING OF THE JAPANESE. HIS
- WORKS ARE LOST.'
-
-
-
-
-
- End of this Project Gutenberg Etext of Robert Louis Stevenson
-
-