of Robert Louis Stevenson from most of those who knew him. It is a
most grave and
dreadfulaccusation, and it is not minimised by Mr
Henley's
acknowledgment that Stevenson was a good fellow. We all
know the air of false
candour which lends a disputant so much
advantage in
debate. In Victor Hugo's
tremendousindictment of
Napoleon le Petit we remember the telling
allowance for fine
horsemanship. It spreads an air of impartiality over the most
mordant of Hugo's pages. It is meant to do that. An insignificant
praise is meant to show how a whole Niagara of blame is poured on
the
victim of invective in all
sincerity, and even with a touch of
reluctance.
"Mr Henley,
despite his absurdities of ''Tis' and 'it were,' is a
fairly
competentliterary craftsman, and he is quite
gifted enough
to make a plain man's plain meaning an
evident thing if he chose to
do it. But if for the friend for whom 'first and last he did
share' he can only show us the figure of one 'who was at bottom an
excellent fellow,' and who had 'an entire contempt' for the
consequences of his own acts, he presents a picture which can only
purposely be obscured. . . .
"All I know of Robert Louis Stevenson I have
learned from his
books, and from one
unexpected impromptu letter which he wrote to
me years ago in friendly
recognition of my own work. I add the
testimonies of friends who may have been of less
actual service to
him than Mr Henley, but who surely loved him better and more
lastingly. These do not represent him as the
victim of an
overweening personal
vanity, nor as a person
reckless of the
consequences of his own acts, nor as a Pecksniff who consoled
himself for moral
failure out of the Shorter Catechism. The books
and the friends
amongst them show me an erratic yet lovable
personality, a man of
devotion and courage, a loyal,
charming, and
rather irresponsible person whose very slight faults were counter-
balanced many times over by very solid
virtues....
"To put the thing
flatly, it is not a
heroism to cling to mere
existence. The basest of us can do that. But it is a
heroism to
maintain an equable and
unbrokencheerfulness in the face of death.
For my own part, I never bowed at the
literaryshrine Mr Henley and
his friends were at so great pains to rear. I am not disposed to
think more loftily than I ever thought of their idol. But the Man
- the Man was made of
enduringvalour and childlike charm, and
these will keep him alive when his detractors are dead and buried."
As to the Christian name, it is
notorious that he was christened
Robert Lewis - the Lewis being after his
maternalgrandfather - Dr
Lewis Balfour. Some attempt has been made to show that the Louis
was adopted because so many cousins and relatives had also been so
christened; but the most likely
explanation I have ever heard was
that his father changed the name to Louis, that there might be no
chance through it of any notion of association with a very
prominent noisy person of the name of Lewis, in Edinburgh, towards
whom Thomas Stevenson felt
dislike, if not
positive animosity.
Anyhow, it is clear from the entries in the
register of pupils at
the Edinburgh Academy, in the two years when Stevenson was there,
that in early youth he was called Robert only; for in the school
list for 1862 the name appears as Robert Stevenson, without the
Lewis, while in the 1883 list it is given as Lewis Robert
Stevenson. Clearly if in earlier years Stevenson was, in his
family and
elsewhere, called ROBERT, there could have then arisen
no risk of
confusion with any of his relatives who bore the name of
Lewis; and all this goes to support the view which I have given
above. Anyhow he ceased to be called Robert at home, and ceased in
1863 to be Robert on the Edinburgh Academy list, and became Lewis
Robert. Whether my view is right or not, he was thenceforward
called Louis in his family, and the name
uniformly spelt Louis.
What blame on Stevenson's part could be attached to this family
determination it is hard to see - people are
absolutely free to
spell their names as they please, and the matter would not be worth
a moment's attention, or the waste of one drop of ink, had not Mr
Henley chosen to be very nasty about the name, and in the PALL MALL
MAGAZINE article persisted in printing it Lewis as though that were
worthy of him and of it. That was not quite the
unkindest cut of
all, but it was as
unkind as it was trumpery. Mr Christie Murray
neatly set off the trumpery spite of this in the following passage:
"Stevenson, it appears, according to his friend's judgment, was
'
incessantly and
passionately interested in Stevenson,' but most of
us are
incessantly and
passionately interested in ourselves. 'He
could not be in the same room with a mirror but he must invite its
confidences every time he passed it.' I remember that George Sala,
who was certainly under no
illusion as to his own personal aspect,
made public
confession" target="_blank" title="n.招供;认错;交待">
confession of an
identical foible. Mr Henley may not
have an equal
affection for the looking-glass, but he is a very
poor and unimaginative reader who does not see him gloating over
the god-like proportions of the shadow he sends sprawling over his
own page. I make free to say that a more self-conscious person
than Mr Henley does not live. 'The best and most interesting part
of Stevenson's life will never get written - even by me,' says Mr
Henley.
"There is one curious little mark of animus, or one
equally curious
affectation - I do not
profess to know which, and it is most
probably a
compound of the two - in Mr Henley's guardedly spiteful
essay which asks for notice. The dead
novelist signed his second
name on his title-pages and his private
correspondence 'Louis.' Mr
Henley spells it 'Lewis.' Is this intended to say that Stevenson
took an ornamenting liberty with his own baptismal appellation? If
so, why not say the thing and have done with it? Or is it one of
Mr Henley's wilful ridiculosities? It seems to stand for some sort
of meaning, and to me, at least, it offers a jarring hint of small
spitefulness which might go for nothing if it were not so well
borne out by the general tone of Mr Henley's article. It is a
small matter enough, God knows, but it is
precisely because it is
so very small that it irritates."
CHAPTER XXVI - HERO-VILLAINS
IN truth, it must indeed be here
repeated that Stevenson for the
reason he himself gave about DEACON BRODIE utterly fails in that
healthy
hatred of "fools and scoundrels" on which Carlyle somewhat
incontinently dilated. Nor does he, as we have seen, draw the line
between hero and
villain of the piece, as he ought to have done;
and, even for his own
artistic purposes, has it too much all on one
side, to express it simply. Art demands
relief from any one phase
of human nature, more especially of that phase, and even from what
is morbid or
exceptional. Admitting that such natures, say as
Huish, the cockney, in the EBB-TIDE on the one side, and Prince
Otto on the other are possible, it is yet
absolutely demanded that
they should not stand ALONE, but have their due complement and
balance present in the piece also to deter and finally to tell on
them in the action. If "a knave or
villain," as George Eliot aptly
said, is but a fool with a circumbendibus, this not only wants to
be shown, but to have that
definite human counterpart and
corrective; and this not in any
indirect and perfunctory way, but
in a direct and
effective sense. It is here that Stevenson fails -
fails
absolutely in most of his work, save the very latest - fails,
as has been shown, in THE MASTER OF BALLANTRAE, as it were almost
of perverse and set purpose, in lack of what one might call ethical
decision which causes him to waver or seem to waver and wobble in
his judgment of his
characters or in his
sympathy with them or for
them. Thus he fails to give his readers the proper cue which was
his duty both as man and artist to have given. The highest art and
the lowest are indeed here at one in demanding moral poise, if we
may call it so, that however crudely in the low, and however
artistically and refinedly in the high, vice should not only not be
set forth as
absolutely triumphing, nor
virtue as being
absolutely,
outwardly, and
inwardly defeated. It is here the same in the
melodrama of the transpontine theatre as in the tragedies of the
Greek dramatists and Shakespeare. "The evening brings a' 'hame'"
and the end ought to show something to satisfy the innate craving
(for it is innate, thank Heaven! and low and high alike in moments
of ELEVATED IMPRESSION,
acknowledge it and bow to it) else there
can
scarce be true DENOUEMENT and the sense of any moral rectitude
or law remain as felt or
acknowledged in human nature or in the
Universe itself.
Stevenson's toleration and
constant sermonising in the essays - his
desire to make us yield
allowances all round is so far, it may be,
there in place; but it will not work out in story or play, and