The South Seas: A Record of Three Cruises in the Islands ... Pt 1, The Marquesas, c. 1889
C 233
Manuscript
This manuscript comprises fifteen chapters based on a six-week visit to the Marquesas aboard the yacht Casco in July to September 1888. Robert Louis Stevenson (1850–1894) carefully penned the 89 pages of this manuscript in ink on one side of each page while on a four month cruise on the trading steamer Janet Nicoll in 1890. Departing Sydney in April 1890 with his wife and stepson, the Stevenson’s visited Samoa where they had bought land and were having a house built.
Footnotes
Roger G Swearingen, Robert Louis Stevenson in
Australia: Treasures in the State Library of New South Wales, 2013
Stevenson did not originally intend
to begin The South Seas with these chapters on the Marquesas. The first part
was to be panoramic and general – it was to look at the great importance of whites
in the Pacific.
The Marquesas Islands group is one
of the most remote in the world and forms part of French Polynesia. A Spanish
galleon fleet came across the Marquesas en route to the Philippines in the 16th century.
French
painter Paul Gauguin and Belgian singer Jacques Brel spent the last years of
their lives in the Marquesas, and are buried there. Brel composed a famous
song, Les Marquises, about the Marquesas Islands, his last home.
According to Cassell and Company
records, approximately 20 copies were printed on 2 November 1890 from the
manuscript of the first fifteen chapters sent from Sydney.
This manuscript contains the text of
all but the last chapter that Stevenson wrote on the Marquesas. Interestingly,
the contents list includes the titles of two additional chapters that appear
nowhere else in any of the papers and correspondence related to The South Seas.
Robert Louis Stevenson visited Sydney four times
between 1890 and 1893. Stevenson contemplated living in Sydney rather than
Samoa – but the weather and his illness made him decide to permanently settle
in Samoa.*
* AustLit http://www.austlit.edu.au/austlit/page/A58864
Stevenson sent these pages from
Sydney to London in the keeping of his 22-year-old stepson Lloyd Osbourne in
August 1890. Osbourne was traveling to England to sell the Stevensons’ former
home in Bournemouth on the south coast of England and to have the household
contents packed and shipped to Samoa.