Robert Louis Stevenson

@Poets, Birthday and Family

Robert Louis Stevenson was a famous Scottish poet, novelist and travel writer

Nov 13, 1850

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Biography

Personal Details

  • Birthday: November 13, 1850
  • Died on: December 3, 1894
  • Nationality: Scottish
  • Famous: Atheists, University Of Edinburgh, Writers, Poets, Novelists, Essayists
  • Spouses: Fanny Van de Grift Osbourne
  • Childrens: Isobel Osbourne Field, Lloyd Osbourne
  • Universities:
    • University Of Edinburgh
    • University of Edinburgh
    • Edinburgh Academy

Robert Louis Stevenson born at

Edinburgh, Scotland

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Birth Place

He fell in love with Fanny Van de Grift Osbourne in 1876, at a time when she was already married, with three children. However, the marriage fell apart due to Fanny’s husband’s infidelities.

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Personal Life

He met her once again in 1877 and love blossomed. After a brief separation and when Stevenson was ill, Fanny nursed him back to health and the two were married in 1880.

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Personal Life

He suffered from ill health through most part of his life and passed away due to cerebral hemorrhage.

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Personal Life

Robert Lewis Balfour Stevenson was born on November 13, 1850 to Thomas Stevenson and Margaret Isabella Balfour in Edinburgh, Scotland. He was the only child of the couple.

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Childhood & Early Life

From a very young age, he suffered from severe bouts of flu, due to a weak chest - a genetic problem. Thus, for most part of his early life, he remained sick and learnt to read and write very late.

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Childhood & Early Life

Despite the early health setbacks, he was often read to which eventually led him to develop a passion for literature from very early on. He started to pen his own stories from a young age, a quality his father was very proud of.

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Childhood & Early Life

In 1861, he was educated at the all-boys school, Edinburgh Academy, where he stayed for about fifteen months. Thereafter, he spent a term at a boarding school in Middlesex.

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Childhood & Early Life

In 1867, he enrolled at the University of Edinburgh to study engineering. He was not enthusiastic about studying and expressed his interest to ‘pursue a life of letters’. However, his family was adamant that he should study law and be called to the ‘Scottish bar’.

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Childhood & Early Life

After a period of poor health and eventual recuperation, he passed the Scottish bar in 1875, but never practiced law. Three years later, he penned his first book, ‘An Inland Voyage’.

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Career

During this time he wrote some of his best-known works, despite his ill health. In 1883, he wrote one of his greatest novels, ‘Treasure Island’, which was a coming-of-age book and was widely popular with the youth.

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Career

In 1885, a collection of poetry titled, ‘A Child’s Garden of Verses’ was published and first appeared under the title, ‘Penny Whistles’, but was later changed. This is regarded as one of his major works.

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Career

In 1886, he authored ‘Kidnapped’ and ‘Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr. Hyde’, both of which became extremely popular in their respective rights. Two years later, a historical adventure/romance novel ‘The Black Arrow: A Tale of the Two Roses’ was published.

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Career

After he moved to New York in 1887, he penned some of his best essays including ‘Pelvis et Umbra’. The ensuing year, he set sail on the yacht, ‘Casco’, journeying the Pacific, where according to him, his sense of adventure was ‘restored’.

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Career

‘Treasure Island’ is considered one of Steven’s grandest works. First published on May 23, 1883, it was originally printed in different episodes in a magazine called ‘Young Folks’. There have been a number of essays and sequels to the original including ‘Porto Bello’ and ‘Back to Treasure Island’. The book became so famous that it was adapted for television and films 50 times and for the theater and radio over 24 times. It has also been mentioned in songs like ‘Always Know Where You Are’ for Disney’s, ‘Treasure Planet’ and has also been made into video games.

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Major Works

In January 1886, Stevenson published ‘Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr. Hyde’, which attracted the praise of a number of his contemporaries. It became an immediate success upon its release and by 1901; it sold an estimated 250,000 copies. The novel has been adapted into 123 film versions and a number of stage and radio versions.

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Major Works