Robert Louis Stevenson: A Documentary Volume, edited by Patrick Scott

Caroline McCracken-Flesher
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Ross Roy as editor of Scottish literature’s first American journal (Studies in Scottish Literature), Scott has introduced the work of early career scholars and showcased research from far and wide.It is a pleasure, then, to see Scott’s encyclopedic knowledge present a sometimes-unexpected Robert Louis Stevenson in this “documentary” DLB volume from Gale and to know that this is yet another act of service to authors, readers, and critics.For a volume such as this and a modern, thoroughly published author like Stevenson, the challenge is not a paucity of materials but rather an excess. His thoughts and deeds, avidly recorded by an enthusiastic mother and nurse and elaborated by friends and fans, test an editor’s powers of selection.Scott, in this context, performs miracles of focusing yet redirecting our gaze. He honors well-established principles and narratives—sections track “Coming of Age in Edinburgh,” then “Bohemian and Belletrist.” At the same time, Scott prompts us to think about how these categories are constructed, and how far they derive from a later idea of the author. Thus, the section to follow Edinburgh and Stevenson’s youthful attitudes centers the author’s impact on the narratives of space: “Stevenson in America.”The book’s own structure—where volume parameters allow only excerpts, the telling image intervenes, and an unexpected context erupts—plays nicely within and against any tendency to coherent narrativization of Stevenson’s complex life. Scott’s interjections, too, set off in italics, are as prone to disconnect as to suture the stories that surround an author so borne up on myth. For instance, in a section on Stevenson’s university days, against a lively story of Stevenson’s canvassing against Thomas Carlyle as rector and nonetheless admiring his speech, Scott notes the unlikelihood that Stevenson, not yet a student, could have played much of a role (64).At the same time, this incident brings into surprising conjunction the somewhat checkered career of Stevenson as sometime engineer, actor, and student about town and the Sage of Chelsea. Stevenson’s friend is certain the yet-to-be author attended Carlyle’s speech and that he set aside his preference for Disraeli as rector to celebrate what he called “that glorious old Scot.” But what did Stevenson make of Carlyle’s exhortation to be “diligent” and to do “what you have heard from your advisors, —and among many counsellors there is wisdom—you will bitterly repent when it is too late” (65).One of the virtues of a book like this lies in such unpredictabilities and the sudden insights they bring. Here, the callouts and images play an important role. What merits a callout is often not the great work but its others, or an important detail. Consider this: when Stevenson first traveled to Saranac, he had to go by steamer up the Hudson, then rail, then buggy; after 1887, however, a railway extension allowed him access to a network of friends and publishers from the Eastern Seaboard (322). Images reveal a page of Jekyll and Hyde slashed by a major excision—Utterson could have lurked much longer waiting for Mr. Hyde (292); the unpublished “The Hair Trunk” bounces off the page with the promise of “An Extravaganza,” supported by epigraphs from Dr. Johnson—“Sir, said Doctor Johnson, let us make a society”—and, troublingly, Mephistopheles. Readers will surely find something here to shift a presumption or encourage an addition to their “must read” list (132).Other surprises include access to unexpected and provocative contexts. Who knew that Strathpeffer—where Stevenson began to imagine a history that would become Kidnapped—styled itself “the Harrogate of Scotland” (193)? The metal workman’s barrack at Dhu Heartach is here, its great drum on spindly legs reminiscent of a water tower that has wandered to the sea (73). Where the Stevensons would build a lighthouse, and Robert Louis imagine a castaway on neighboring Earraid, in this moment was an industrial zone. Or there is the “Rob Roy” canoe that Stevenson paddled through the canals and rivers of Belgium and France. A strange contraption it is, in its 1868 diagram from The Boy’s Own Book of Boats—complete with reclined seat, sail, pennant, and little dog (137). The latest design for an athletic young man on the move.And although the image quality is sometimes lacking, given the age of the photographs selected and the vagaries of in-text reproduction, we can only be fascinated—for the Stevensons and in the context of contemporary communities and work—to see the Stevenson family at Peebles in 1865, flanked by two maids and Cummy, the redoubtable nurse (57).If the opportunities of the internet make books like this less significant than they have been for reference, there is a lot to be gained here for Stevenson scholars and admirers alike. Patrick Scott’s careful curation, matched with his extensive knowledge and inclusive spirit, make an engaging and provocative book. 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Abstract

Patrick Scott is famed through Scottish literary studies for his remarkable service as director of Rare Books and Special Collections at the University of South Carolina. Numerous critics and editors have depended on him for access to the rare or the obscure. Is there a little-known poem or an unfindable play? We all turn to Scott and the Thomas Cooper Library. Scott is, too, a scholar of distinction, with numerous edited volumes, editions, and important analyses to his credit. He is particularly distinguished as a Burnsean and as a scholar of Robert Louis Stevenson. Moreover, as successor, with Tony Jarrells, to G. Ross Roy as editor of Scottish literature’s first American journal (Studies in Scottish Literature), Scott has introduced the work of early career scholars and showcased research from far and wide.It is a pleasure, then, to see Scott’s encyclopedic knowledge present a sometimes-unexpected Robert Louis Stevenson in this “documentary” DLB volume from Gale and to know that this is yet another act of service to authors, readers, and critics.For a volume such as this and a modern, thoroughly published author like Stevenson, the challenge is not a paucity of materials but rather an excess. His thoughts and deeds, avidly recorded by an enthusiastic mother and nurse and elaborated by friends and fans, test an editor’s powers of selection.Scott, in this context, performs miracles of focusing yet redirecting our gaze. He honors well-established principles and narratives—sections track “Coming of Age in Edinburgh,” then “Bohemian and Belletrist.” At the same time, Scott prompts us to think about how these categories are constructed, and how far they derive from a later idea of the author. Thus, the section to follow Edinburgh and Stevenson’s youthful attitudes centers the author’s impact on the narratives of space: “Stevenson in America.”The book’s own structure—where volume parameters allow only excerpts, the telling image intervenes, and an unexpected context erupts—plays nicely within and against any tendency to coherent narrativization of Stevenson’s complex life. Scott’s interjections, too, set off in italics, are as prone to disconnect as to suture the stories that surround an author so borne up on myth. For instance, in a section on Stevenson’s university days, against a lively story of Stevenson’s canvassing against Thomas Carlyle as rector and nonetheless admiring his speech, Scott notes the unlikelihood that Stevenson, not yet a student, could have played much of a role (64).At the same time, this incident brings into surprising conjunction the somewhat checkered career of Stevenson as sometime engineer, actor, and student about town and the Sage of Chelsea. Stevenson’s friend is certain the yet-to-be author attended Carlyle’s speech and that he set aside his preference for Disraeli as rector to celebrate what he called “that glorious old Scot.” But what did Stevenson make of Carlyle’s exhortation to be “diligent” and to do “what you have heard from your advisors, —and among many counsellors there is wisdom—you will bitterly repent when it is too late” (65).One of the virtues of a book like this lies in such unpredictabilities and the sudden insights they bring. Here, the callouts and images play an important role. What merits a callout is often not the great work but its others, or an important detail. Consider this: when Stevenson first traveled to Saranac, he had to go by steamer up the Hudson, then rail, then buggy; after 1887, however, a railway extension allowed him access to a network of friends and publishers from the Eastern Seaboard (322). Images reveal a page of Jekyll and Hyde slashed by a major excision—Utterson could have lurked much longer waiting for Mr. Hyde (292); the unpublished “The Hair Trunk” bounces off the page with the promise of “An Extravaganza,” supported by epigraphs from Dr. Johnson—“Sir, said Doctor Johnson, let us make a society”—and, troublingly, Mephistopheles. Readers will surely find something here to shift a presumption or encourage an addition to their “must read” list (132).Other surprises include access to unexpected and provocative contexts. Who knew that Strathpeffer—where Stevenson began to imagine a history that would become Kidnapped—styled itself “the Harrogate of Scotland” (193)? The metal workman’s barrack at Dhu Heartach is here, its great drum on spindly legs reminiscent of a water tower that has wandered to the sea (73). Where the Stevensons would build a lighthouse, and Robert Louis imagine a castaway on neighboring Earraid, in this moment was an industrial zone. Or there is the “Rob Roy” canoe that Stevenson paddled through the canals and rivers of Belgium and France. A strange contraption it is, in its 1868 diagram from The Boy’s Own Book of Boats—complete with reclined seat, sail, pennant, and little dog (137). The latest design for an athletic young man on the move.And although the image quality is sometimes lacking, given the age of the photographs selected and the vagaries of in-text reproduction, we can only be fascinated—for the Stevensons and in the context of contemporary communities and work—to see the Stevenson family at Peebles in 1865, flanked by two maids and Cummy, the redoubtable nurse (57).If the opportunities of the internet make books like this less significant than they have been for reference, there is a lot to be gained here for Stevenson scholars and admirers alike. Patrick Scott’s careful curation, matched with his extensive knowledge and inclusive spirit, make an engaging and provocative book. It is a good place to start for any of us eager to meet an author, be guided through their work, learn a period, or launch a scholarly project.
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罗伯特·路易斯·史蒂文森:纪录片卷,由帕特里克·斯科特编辑
帕特里克·斯科特在南卡罗莱纳大学担任珍本和特别收藏主任期间,因其卓越的服务而在苏格兰文学研究中闻名。许多评论家和编辑都依赖他来获取稀有或晦涩的作品。是否有不为人知的诗歌或找不到的戏剧?我们都求助于斯科特和托马斯·库珀图书馆。斯科特也是一位杰出的学者,他有许多编辑过的书籍、版本和重要的分析。他作为伯恩肖恩和罗伯特·路易斯·史蒂文森的学者尤其杰出。此外,作为继托尼·贾雷尔斯(Tony Jarrells)之后,g·罗斯·罗伊(G. Ross Roy)担任苏格兰文学第一本美国期刊(苏格兰文学研究)的编辑,斯科特介绍了早期职业学者的作品,并展示了来自各地的研究。因此,看到斯科特的百科全书式的知识在盖尔出版社出版的这本“纪实”DLB卷中呈现出一个有时出乎意料的罗伯特·路易斯·史蒂文森,并知道这是对作者、读者和评论家的又一次服务,这是一件令人高兴的事。对于这样一本书,以及像史蒂文森这样一个现代的、彻底出版的作者来说,挑战不是材料的缺乏,而是材料的过剩。他的思想和行为,被一位热心的母亲和护士热切地记录下来,并被朋友和粉丝详细阐述,考验着编辑的选择能力。在这种情况下,斯科特创造了奇迹,他既能集中注意力,又能重新引导我们的目光。他尊重已经确立的原则和叙述——包括《爱丁堡的成年》和《波西米亚与贝勒特》。与此同时,斯科特促使我们思考这些类别是如何构建的,以及它们在多大程度上源自后来对作者的看法。因此,跟随爱丁堡和史蒂文森的年轻态度的部分集中了作者对空间叙事的影响:“史蒂文森在美国”。这本书本身的结构——体积参数只允许摘录,生动的图像介入,一个意想不到的背景爆发——在史蒂文森复杂生活的连贯叙述中发挥了很好的作用,也反对任何倾向。斯科特的感叹词也是用斜体字写的,既容易断开,也容易将围绕着一个如此依赖神话的作者的故事串联起来。例如,在关于史蒂文森大学时代的一节中,在一个生动的故事中,史蒂文森游说反对托马斯·卡莱尔担任校长,但仍然钦佩他的演讲,斯科特指出,当时还不是学生的史蒂文森不可能发挥多大作用(64)。与此同时,这一事件出人意料地将史蒂文森曲折的职业生涯联系在一起,他曾是工程师、演员、小镇学生和切尔西圣人。史蒂文森的朋友确信,这位即将成为作家的人出席了卡莱尔的演讲,他放弃了对迪斯雷利担任校长的偏爱,以庆祝他所说的“那位光荣的老苏格兰人”。但是斯蒂文森如何理解卡莱尔的劝告:要“勤奋”,并去做“你从你的顾问那里听到的,在许多顾问中有智慧——当你后悔的时候为时已晚”(65)。像这样的书的优点之一就在于它的不可预测性以及由此带来的突如其来的洞见。在这里,标注和图像起着重要的作用。值得表扬的往往不是伟大的作品,而是它的其他作品,或者是一个重要的细节。想想看:当史蒂文森第一次去萨拉纳克旅行时,他不得不乘轮船沿着哈德逊河而上,然后坐火车,然后坐马车;然而,1887年以后,铁路的延伸使他能够接触到东海岸的朋友和出版商。图片显示了一页被大切除的化身——厄特森本可以潜伏更长的时间等待海德先生(292);未出版的《发干》与《一场狂欢》的承诺一起从纸上蹦了出来,约翰逊博士的题词——“先生,约翰逊博士说,让我们建立一个社会吧”——以及令人不安的梅菲斯托菲勒斯。读者肯定会在这里找到一些东西来改变他们的假设,或者鼓励他们在“必读”清单上增加一些东西(132)。其他惊喜还包括进入意想不到的、具有挑衅性的环境。谁知道斯特拉斯佩弗——史蒂文森开始想象一段将成为《绑架》的历史的地方——把自己称为“苏格兰的哈罗盖特”(193)?图中是胡·哈塔奇(Dhu Heartach)的金属工人营房,它的大鼓装在细长的腿上,让人想起一座漂流到海里的水塔(73)。史蒂文森一家将在那里建造一座灯塔,罗伯特·路易斯想象着邻近的厄瑞德岛上的一个漂流者,此时这里是一个工业区。还有史蒂文森在比利时和法国的运河和河流中划着的“罗布·罗伊”独木舟。从1868年《男孩自己的船书》中的图表来看,这是一个奇怪的装置——包括躺椅、帆、三角旗和小狗(137页)。这是为运动中的年轻人设计的最新款式。 虽然照片的质量有时会有所欠缺,但考虑到所选照片的年代和文字复制的变幻莫测,我们只能着迷于1865年史蒂文森一家在皮布尔斯的生活,以及在当代社区和工作的背景下,看到两个女仆和令人敬畏的护士卡米(57岁)在旁边。如果互联网的机会使这类书籍的参考价值不如以前那么重要,那么对于史蒂文森的学者和仰慕者来说,还有很多东西可以从中获得。帕特里克·斯科特的精心策划,加上他广博的知识和包容的精神,使这本书引人入胜,引人入胜。对于我们这些渴望认识一位作家、在他们的作品中获得指导、了解一个时期或启动一个学术项目的人来说,这是一个很好的起点。
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