Friday, November 8, 2019

Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde essays

Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde essays Robert Louis Stevenson was born kin to Thomas Stevenson in Edinburgh in 1850. His original plans in life were to follow his fathers footsteps as a joint-engineer of the Board of Northern Lighthouses, but being a sickly child prevented him from doing so. After abandoning the degree is engineering at the University of Edinburgh, he then decided to pursue writing in 1875. In this same year he was introduced to a life long friend, W.E. Henley. This friendship would later lead the pair to create four undistinguishable plays throughout the early 1880s. Stevenson traveled about for several years in pursuit of a cure for his ailments, until he then met his future wife, Fanny Osbourne, in France in 1876. From this point up through 1880 when he married Fanny, he wrote two novels: An Island Voyage and Travels with a Donkey in the Cevennes. In 1879 he traveled to California by immigrant ship to be with Fanny who would divorce in 1880, then remarry Robert Stevenson in that same year. Mr s. Fanny Osbourne was ten years older than Stevenson, but she proved to have a kind heart and cared for Robert throughout many bouts of illness. In 1884 the couple moved back to Bournemouth after staying in Calistoga for several years. His most famous works of literature began to spring up in 1883, including: Treasure Island in 1883, The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde in 1886, Kidnapped in 1886, its sequel Catriona in 1893, and then The Master of Ballantrae in 1889. In 1888 R.L. Stevenson along with his family traveled to the South Seas where he gained the legendary aspect of his life. This was where Stevenson met up with Father Damien, a Belgian priest who devoted his life to caring for over 700 lepers at the colony of Molokai, who then died of leprosy in 1889. In 1890, after settling down in Samoa at Vailima, he published his popular defense of Father Damien, Father Damien: an open letter to the Reverend Dr. Hyde of Honolulu. After ...

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