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
romanticessence of the idea and would have avoided the boneyard of 'problem
morality.'
'A story the
principalpersonage 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
appealchiefly to the mind's eye,
others are of value
chiefly as symbols. But, for the most part,
the
romantickernel of a story is neither pure picture nor pure
allegory, it can neither be painted nor moralised. It makes its
most
irresistibleappeal 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
terrorwrought 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
romanticsituation or
conception. The main situation in THE WRECKER is a
splendid product of
romanticaspiration, 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
humorousenjoyment of their
extravagance to peep out
from behind the
solemndialect in which they are dressed. The
brief tale of THRAWN JANET, and Black Andy's story of Tod Lapraik
in CATRIONA, are
grotesqueimaginations 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
wroughtwith 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