The Sunday Post (Inverness)

Letters reveal foiled plots of rompy Louis Stevenson

-

Robert Louis Stevenson. each other, well then I want them to go.”

Professor Joseph Farrell, whose new book Robert Louis Stevenson in Samoa unearthed the findings, said certain details would “surprise a lot of people”.

He said Stevenson’s time in the South Seas, where he spent his final years and eventually died, gave him distance to question “the limitation­s placed on a British writer by Victorian convention­s and the puritan attitudes of a largely middle-class readership”.

He added: “A restrictio­n which irked him greatly was the lack of freedom to discuss sexual matters. During his time in Samoa he sought authorisat­ion for a new frankness in his writing.”

But he insisted Stevenson was a “conservati­ve with a small and large c” and “retained the Calvinist ethical structures of his boyhood”.

Professor Farrell added: “He became convinced that, as an author, he should have the right to be able to depict sexual conduct honestly, even if he would not approve of such conduct himself.”

Stevenson is known to have visited prostitute­s during his time as a student in Edinburgh, but later said he regretted not being “more chaste in early youth”.

Tom Bateman starred in ITV’s version of Jekyll and Hyde, alongside Richard E Grant and Natalie Gumede.

Jeremy Hodges, a Stevenson biographer and member of the RLS Club, told The Sunday Post the writer “had a reputation as a children’s author to maintain”.

He added: “Parents and indulgent aunts and uncles would not go buying Tre a s u re Is l a n d and Kidnapped for their offspring if there was any kind of question about the moral fitness of the author.

“Stevenson’s wife was very careful about this. She had a pact with Stevenson’s father that whoever died first, the one who was still around would make sure Stevenson didn’t go publishing anything without them checking it out first.

“Famously, with the first version of Jekyll and Hyde, we don’t know what was in it. He wrote it, gave it to his wife and she said ‘you can’t publish this’. She said he needed to make it much less explicit.

“We don’t know what was in the first version but we suspect it was sex. He burnt it. He wasn’t pleased about that but he did what his wife wanted.

“If he hadn’t destroyed his first version and if it had got published it probably would have been regarded as somewhat disreputab­le. The version that did come out was fantastic.

“Jekyll and Hyde was like having your cake and eating it. You could hint at all sorts of things and people knew what he was talking about but nothing explicit was in it.”

Stevenson, whose novel Treasure Island propelled him to fame in 1883, died at the age of 44 in Samoa after suffering from poor health.

 ??  ?? ■
 ??  ?? ■
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom