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the majority of men。  But at least you are in the right to wonder 

and complain。



To 'say all'?  Stay here。  All at once?  That would require a word 

from the pen of Gargantua。  We say each particular thing as it 

comes up; and 'with that sort of emphasis that for the time there 

seems to be no other。'  Words will not otherwise serve us; no; nor 

even Shakespeare; who could not have put AS YOU LIKE IT and TIMON 

into one without ruinous loss both of emphasis and substance。  Is 

it quite fair then to keep your face so steadily on my most light…

hearted works; and then say I recognise no evil?  Yet in the paper 

on Burns; for instance; I show myself alive to some sorts of evil。  

But then; perhaps; they are not your sorts。



And again:  'to say all'?  All:  yes。  Everything:  no。  The task 

were endless; the effect nil。  But my all; in such a vast field as 

this of life; is what interests me; what stands out; what takes on 

itself a presence for my imagination or makes a figure in that 

little tricky abbreviation which is the best that my reason can 

conceive。  That I must treat; or I shall be fooling with my 

readers。  That; and not the all of some one else。



And here we come to the division:  not only do I believe that 

literature should give joy; but I see a universe; I suppose; 

eternally different from yours; a solemn; a terrible; but a very 

joyous and noble universe; where suffering is not at least wantonly 

inflicted; though it falls with dispassionate partiality; but where 

it may be and generally is nobly borne; where; above all (this I 

believe; probably you don't:  I think he may; with cancer); ANY 

BRAVE MAN MAY MAKE out a life which shall be happy for himself; 

and; by so being; beneficent to those about him。  And if he fails; 

why should I hear him weeping?  I mean if I fail; why should I 

weep?  Why should YOU hear ME?  Then to me morals; the conscience; 

the affections; and the passions are; I will own frankly and 

sweepingly; so infinitely more important than the other parts of 

life; that I conceive men rather triflers who become immersed in 

the latter; and I will always think the man who keeps his lip 

stiff; and makes 'a happy fireside clime;' and carries a pleasant 

face about to friends and neighbours; infinitely greater (in the 

abstract) than an atrabilious Shakespeare or a backbiting Kant or 

Darwin。  No offence to any of these gentlemen; two of whom probably 

(one for certain) came up to my standard。



And now enough said; it were hard if a poor man could not criticise 

another without having so much ink shed against him。  But I shall 

still regret you should have written on an hypothesis you knew to 

be untenable; and that you should thus have made your paper; for 

those who do not know me; essentially unfair。  The rich; fox…

hunting squire speaks with one voice; the sick man of letters with 

another。 … Yours very truly;



ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON



(PROMETHEUS…HEINE IN MINIMIS)。



P。S。 … Here I go again。  To me; the medicine bottles on my chimney 

and the blood on my handkerchief are accidents; they do not colour 

my view of life; as you would know; I think; if you had experience 

of sickness; they do not exist in my prospect; I would as soon drag 

them under the eyes of my readers as I would mention a pimple I 

might chance to have (saving your presence) on my posteriors。  What 

does it prove? what does it change? it has not hurt; it has not 

changed me in any essential part; and I should think myself a 

trifler and in bad taste if I introduced the world to these 

unimportant privacies。



But; again; there is this mountain…range between us … THAT YOU DO 

NOT BELIEVE ME。  It is not flattering; but the fault is probably in 

my literary art。







Letter:  TO W。 H。 LOW







SKERRYVORE; BOURNEMOUTH; DECEMBER 26; 1885。



MY DEAR LOW; … LAMIA has not yet turned up; but your letter came to 

me this evening with a scent of the Boulevard Montparnasse that was 

irresistible。  The sand of Lavenue's crumbled under my heel; and 

the bouquet of the old Fleury came back to me; and I remembered the 

day when I found a twenty franc piece under my fetish。  Have you 

that fetish still? and has it brought you luck?  I remembered; too; 

my first sight of you in a frock coat and a smoking…cap; when we 

passed the evening at the Cafe de Medicis; and my last when we sat 

and talked in the Parc Monceau; and all these things made me feel a 

little young again; which; to one who has been mostly in bed for a 

month; was a vivifying change。



Yes; you are lucky to have a bag that holds you comfortably。  Mine 

is a strange contrivance; I don't die; damme; and I can't get along 

on both feet to save my soul; I am a chronic sickist; and my work 

cripples along between bed and the parlour; between the medicine 

bottle and the cupping glass。  Well; I like my life all the same; 

and should like it none the worse if I could have another talk with 

you; though even my talks now are measured out to me by the minute 

hand like poisons in a minim glass。



A photograph will be taken of my ugly mug and sent to you for 

ulterior purposes:  I have another thing coming out; which I did 

not put in the way of the Scribners; I can scarce tell how; but I 

was sick and penniless and rather back on the world; and mismanaged 

it。  I trust they will forgive me。



I am sorry to hear of Mrs。 Low's illness; and glad to hear of her 

recovery。  I will announce the coming LAMIA to Bob:  he steams away 

at literature like smoke。  I have a beautiful Bob on my walls; and 

a good Sargent; and a delightful Lemon; and your etching now hangs 

framed in the dining…room。  So the arts surround me。 … Yours;



R。 L。 S。









End of Volume 1


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