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    CATRIONA

    CATRIONA

    3.6 7

    by Robert Louis Stevenson


    eBook

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    Customer Reviews

      BN ID: 2940013106123
    • Publisher: SAP
    • Publication date: 07/26/2011
    • Sold by: Barnes & Noble
    • Format: eBook
    • File size: 276 KB

    Robert Louis Stevenson was born in 1850 in Edinburgh. His father was an engineer, the head of a family firm that had constructed most of Scotland's lighthouses, and the family had a comfortable income. Stevenson was an only child and was often ill; as a result, he was much coddled by both his parents and his long-time nurse. The family took frequent trips to southern Europe to escape the cruel Edinburgh winters, trips that, along with his many illnesses, caused Stevenson to miss much of his formal schooling. He entered Edinburgh University in 1867, intending to become an engineer and enter the family business, but he was a desultory, disengaged student and never took a degree. In 1871, Stevenson switched his study to law, a profession which would leave time for his already-budding literary ambitions, and he managed to pass the bar in 1875.

    Illness put an end to his legal career before it had even started, and Stevenson spent the next few years traveling in Europe and writing travel essays and literary criticism. In 1876, Stevenson fell in love with Fanny Vandergrift Osbourne, a married American woman more than ten years his senior, and returned with her to London, where he published his first fiction, "The Suicide Club." In 1879, Stevenson set sail for America, apparently in response to a telegram from Fanny, who had returned to California in an attempt to reconcile with her husband. Fanny obtained a divorce and the couple married in 1880, eventually returning to Europe, where they lived for the next several years. Stevenson was by this time beset by terrifying lung hemorrhages that would appear without warning and required months of convalescence in a healthy climate. Despite his periodic illnesses and his peripatetic life, Stevenson completed some of his most enduring works during this period: Treasure Island (1883), A Child's Garden of Verses (1885), Kidnapped (1886), and Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1886).

    After his father's death and a trip to Edinburgh which he knew would be his last, Stevenson set sail once more for America in 1887 with his wife, mother, and stepson. In 1888, after spending a frigid winter in the Adirondack Mountains, Stevenson chartered a yacht and set sail from California bound for the South Pacific. The Stevensons spent time in Tahiti, Hawaii, Micronesia, and Australia, before settling in Samoa, where Stevenson bought a plantation called Vailima. Though he kept up a vigorous publishing schedule, Stevenson never returned to Europe. He died of a sudden brain hemorrhage on December 3, 1894.

    Author biography from the Barnes & Noble Classics edition of The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde.

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    Brief Biography

    Date of Birth:
    November 13, 1850
    Date of Death:
    December 3, 1894
    Place of Birth:
    Edinburgh, Scotland
    Place of Death:
    Vailima, Samoa
    Education:
    Edinburgh University, 1875

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    CHAPTER I--A BEGGAR ON HORSEBACK







    The 25th day of August, 1751, about two in the afternoon, I, David

    Balfour, came forth of the British Linen Company, a porter

    attending me with a bag of money, and some of the chief of these

    merchants bowing me from their doors. Two days before, and even so

    late as yestermorning, I was like a beggar-man by the wayside, clad

    in rags, brought down to my last shillings, my companion a

    condemned traitor, a price set on my own head for a crime with the

    news of which the country rang. To-day I was served heir to my

    position in life, a landed laird, a bank porter by me carrying my

    gold, recommendations in my pocket, and (in the words of the

    saying) the ball directly at my foot.



    There were two circumstances that served me as ballast to so much

    sail. The first was the very difficult and deadly business I had

    still to handle; the second, the place that I was in. The tall,

    black city, and the numbers and movement and noise of so many folk,

    made a new world for me, after the moorland braes, the sea-sands

    and the still country-sides that I had frequented up to then. The

    throng of the citizens in particular abashed me. Rankeillor's son

    was short and small in the girth; his clothes scarce held on me;

    and it was plain I was ill qualified to strut in the front of a

    bank-porter. It was plain, if I did so, I should but set folk

    laughing, and (what was worse in my case) set them asking

    questions. So that I behooved to come by some clothes of my own,

    and in the meanwhile to walk by the porter's side, and put my hand

    on his arm as though we were a pair of friends.

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