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Father Damien's dresser; you are but new landed in yours; and my 

dear and kind adviser; I wish you; with all my soul; that patience 

and courage which you will require。  Think of me meanwhile on a 

trading schooner; bound for the Gilbert Islands; thereafter for the 

Marshalls; with a diet of fish and cocoanut before me; bound on a 

cruise of … well; of investigation to what islands we can reach; 

and to get (some day or other) to Sydney; where a letter addressed 

to the care of R。 Towns & Co。 will find me sooner or later; and if 

it contain any good news; whether of your welfare or the courage 

with which you bear the contrary; will do me good。 … Yours 

affectionately (although so near a stranger);



ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON。







Letter:  TO SIDNEY COLVIN







SCHOONER 'EQUATOR;' APAIANG LAGOON; AUGUST 22ND; 1889。



MY DEAR COLVIN; … The missionary ship is outside the reef trying 

(vainly) to get in; so I may have a chance to get a line off。  I am 

glad to say I shall be home by June next for the summer; or we 

shall know the reason why。  For God's sake be well and jolly for 

the meeting。  I shall be; I believe; a different character from 

what you have seen this long while。  This cruise is up to now a 

huge success; being interesting; pleasant; and profitable。  The 

beachcomber is perhaps the most interesting character here; the 

natives are very different; on the whole; from Polynesians:  they 

are moral; stand…offish (for good reasons); and protected by a dark 

tongue。  It is delightful to meet the few Hawaiians (mostly 

missionaries) that are dotted about; with their Italian BRIO and 

their ready friendliness。  The whites are a strange lot; many of 

them good; kind; pleasant fellows; others quite the lowest I have 

ever seen even in the slums of cities。  I wish I had time to 

narrate to you the doings and character of three white murderers 

(more or less proven) I have met。  One; the only undoubted assassin 

of the lot; quite gained my affection in his big home out of a 

wreck; with his New Hebrides wife in her savage turban of hair and 

yet a perfect lady; and his three adorable little girls in Rob Roy 

Macgregor dresses; dancing to the hand organ; performing circus on 

the floor with startling effects of nudity; and curling up together 

on a mat to sleep; three sizes; three attitudes; three Rob Roy 

dresses; and six little clenched fists:  the murderer meanwhile 

brooding and gloating over his chicks; till your whole heart went 

out to him; and yet his crime on the face of it was dark:  

disembowelling; in his own house; an old man of seventy; and him 

drunk。



It is lunch…time; I see; and I must close up with my warmest love 

to you。  I wish you were here to sit upon me when required。  Ah! if 

you were but a good sailor!  I will never leave the sea; I think; 

it is only there that a Briton lives:  my poor grandfather; it is 

from him I inherit the taste; I fancy; and he was round many 

islands in his day; but I; please God; shall beat him at that 

before the recall is sounded。  Would you be surprised to learn that 

I contemplate becoming a shipowner?  I do; but it is a secret。  

Life is far better fun than people dream who fall asleep among the 

chimney stacks and telegraph wires。



Love to Henry James and others near。 … Ever yours; my dear fellow;



ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSON。



EQUATOR TOWN;  APEMAMA; OCTOBER 1889。



No MORNING STAR came; however; and so now I try to send this to you 

by the schooner J。 L。 TIERNAN。  We have been about a month ashore; 

camping out in a kind of town the king set up for us:  on the idea 

that I was really a 'big chief' in England。  He dines with us 

sometimes; and sends up a cook for a share of our meals when he 

does not come himself。  This sounds like high living! alas; 

undeceive yourself。  Salt junk is the mainstay; a low island; 

except for cocoanuts; is just the same as a ship at sea:  brackish 

water; no supplies; and very little shelter。  The king is a great 

character … a thorough tyrant; very much of a gentleman; a poet; a 

musician; a historian; or perhaps rather more a genealogist … it is 

strange to see him lying in his house among a lot of wives (nominal 

wives) writing the History of Apemama in an account…book; his 

description of one of his own songs; which he sang to me himself; 

as 'about sweethearts; and trees; and the sea … and no true; all…

the…same lie;' seems about as compendious a definition of lyric 

poetry as a man could ask。  Tembinoka is here the great attraction:  

all the rest is heat and tedium and villainous dazzle; and yet more 

villainous mosquitoes。  We are like to be here; however; many a 

long week before we get away; and then whither?  A strange trade 

this voyaging:  so vague; so bound…down; so helpless。  Fanny has 

been planting some vegetables; and we have actually onions and 

radishes coming up:  ah; onion…despiser; were you but awhile in a 

low island; how your heart would leap at sight of a coster's 

barrow!  I think I could shed tears over a dish of turnips。  No 

doubt we shall all be glad to say farewell to low islands … I had 

near said for ever。  They are very tame; and I begin to read up the 

directory; and pine for an island with a profile; a running brook; 

or were it only a well among the rocks。  The thought of a mango 

came to me early this morning and set my greed on edge; but you do 

not know what a mango is; so …。



I have been thinking a great deal of you and the Monument of late; 

and even tried to get my thoughts into a poem; hitherto without 

success。  God knows how you are:  I begin to weary dreadfully to 

see you … well; in nine months; I hope; but that seems a long time。  

I wonder what has befallen me too; that flimsy part of me that 

lives (or dwindles) in the public mind; and what has befallen THE 

MASTER; and what kind of a Box the Merry Box has been found。  It is 

odd to know nothing of all this。  We had an old woman to do devil…

work for you about a month ago; in a Chinaman's house on Apaiang 

(August 23rd or 24th)。  You should have seen the crone with a noble 

masculine face; like that of an old crone 'SIC'; a body like a 

man's (naked all but the feathery female girdle); knotting cocoanut 

leaves and muttering spells:  Fanny and I; and the good captain of 

the EQUATOR; and the Chinaman and his native wife and sister…in…

law; all squatting on the floor about the sibyl; and a crowd of 

dark faces watching from behind her shoulder (she sat right in the 

doorway) and tittering aloud with strange; appalled; embarrassed 

laughter at each fresh adjuration。  She informed us you were in 

England; not travelling and now no longer sick; she promised us a 

fair wind the next day; and we had it; so I cherish the hope she 

was as right about Sidney Colvin。  The shipownering has rather 

petered out since I last wrote; and a good many other plans beside。



Health?  Fanny very so…so; I pretty right upon the whole; and 

getting through plenty work:  I know not quite how; but it seems to 

me not bad and in places funny。



South Sea Yarns:



1。 THE WRECKER       }

                     }     R。 L。 S。

2。 THE PEARL FISHER  } by    and

                     }     Lloyd O。

3。 THE BEACHCOMBERS  }



THE PEARL FISHER; part done; lies in Sydney。  It is THE WRECKER we 

are now engaged upon:  strange ways of life; I think; they set 

forth:  things that I can scarce touch upon; or even not at all; in 

my travel book; and the yarns are good; I do believe。  THE PEARL 

FISHER is for the NEW YORK LEDGER:  the yarn is a kind of Monte 

Cristo one。  THE WRECKER is the least good as a story; I think; but 

the characters seem to me good。  THE BEACHCOMBERS is more 

sentimental。  These three scarce touch the outskirts of the life we 

have been viewing; a hot…bed of strange characters and incidents:  

Lord; how different from Europe or the Pallid States!  Farewell。  

Heaven knows when this will get to you。  I burn to be in Sydney and 

have news。



R。 L。 S。







Letter:  TO SIDNEY COLVIN







SCHOONER 'EQUATOR;' AT SEA。 190 MILES OFF SAMOA。  MONDAY; DECEMBER 

2ND; 1889



MY DEAR COLVIN; … We are just nearing the end of our long cruise。  

Rain; calms; squalls; bang … there's the foretopmast gone; rain; 

calm; squalls; away with the staysail; more rain; more calm; more 

squalls; a prodigious heavy sea all the time; and the EQUATOR 

staggering and hovering like a swallow in a storm; and the cabin; a 

great square; crowded with wet human beings; and the rain 

avalanching on the deck; and the leaks dripping everywhere:  Fanny; 

in the midst of fifteen males; bearing up wonderfully。  But such 

voyages are at the best a trial。  We had one particularity:  coming 

down on Winslow Reef; p。 d。 (position doubtful):  two positions in 

the directory; a third (if you cared to count that) on the chart; 

heavy sea 

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