Treasure Island
Treasure
Island is an adventure
novel by Scottish author Robert Louis Stevenson, narrating a tale of "buccaneers and buried
gold." Its influence is enormous on
popular perceptions
of pirates, including such elements as treasure
maps marked with an “X”, schooners, the Black Spot, tropical
islands, and one-legged seamen bearing parrots on their shoulders.[1]
Treasure
Island was originally considered a coming-of-age
story and is noted for its atmosphere,
characters, and action. It is one of the most frequently dramatised of all
novels. It was originally serialised in the children's magazine Young Folks from 1881 through 1882 under the title Treasure
Island or the mutiny of the Hispaniola, credited to the pseudonym
"Captain George North". It was first published as a book on 14
November 1883, by Cassell & Co.
Plot
An
old sailor named Billy Bones comes to lodge in the rural Admiral Benbow Inn on
the West English coast.
He tells the innkeeper's son, Jim Hawkins, to keep a lookout for "a
one-legged seafaring man". A former shipmate, Black Dog, confronts Bones
and engages in a violent fight with him. After Black Dog is run off, a blind
beggar named Pew visits to give Bones "the black spot" as a summons
to share a map leading to buried treasure. Shortly thereafter, Bones suffers a
stroke and dies. Pew and his accomplices attack the inn, but Jim and his mother
save themselves while taking Bones's sea chest. Inside the chest, they find a
map of an island on which the infamous pirate Captain
Flint hid his treasure. Jim shows the map
to the local physician Dr. Livesey and the district
squire John Trelawney, and they decide to
make an expedition to the island, with Jim serving as a cabin boy. They set
sail on Trelawney's schooner,
the Hispaniola, under Captain Smollett. Much of the crew, as it is later
revealed, are pirates who served under Captain Flint, most notable of which is
the ship's one-legged chef "Long John" Silver. Jim, sitting in an
apple casket, overhears the conspirators' plan to mutiny after the salvage of
the treasure and to assassinate the skippers.
Arriving
off the coast of the island, Jim joins the shore party and begins to explore
the island. He meets a marooned
pirate named Ben Gunn, who was also a former member of Flint's crew. The
situation comes to a head after the mutineers arm themselves, and Smollett's
men take refuge in an abandoned stockade. During an attack on the stockade, Jim
finds his way there and rejoins the crew. Jim manages to make his way to the Hispaniola
and cuts the ship's anchorage, allowing the ship to drift along the ebb tide.
Jim boards the Hispaniola and encounters Israel Hands, who was severely
injured in a dispute with one of his companions. Hands helps Jim beach the
schooner in the northern bay, but then attempts to kill Jim with a knife. Jim
escapes, climbs into the shrouds of the ship and shoots his pursuer.
Jim
goes back ashore and returns to the stockade, where he is horrified to find
only Silver and the pirates. Silver prevents Jim's immediate death and tells
Jim that when everyone found the ship was gone, the captain's party agreed to a
treaty whereby they gave up the stockade and the map. In the morning, the
doctor arrives to treat the wounded and sick pirates and tells Silver to look
out for trouble when they find the site of the treasure. After he leaves,
Silver and the others set out with the map, taking Jim along as hostage. They
encounter a skeleton, arms oriented toward the treasure, which unnerves the
party. Eventually, they find the treasure cache empty. The pirates nearly
charge at Silver and Jim, but shots are fired by the ship's command along with
Gunn, from ambush. Livesey explains that Gunn had already found the treasure
and taken it to his cave. The expedition members load much of the treasure onto
the ship and sail away. At their first port in Spanish
America, where they will sign on more crew,
Silver steals a bag of money and escapes. The rest sail back to Bristol and divide up the treasure. Jim says there is more left on
the island, but he for one will not undertake another voyage to recover it.
Background
Stevenson
conceived the idea of Treasure Island (originally titled, The Sea
Cook: A Story for Boys) from a map of an imaginary, romantic island idly
drawn by Stevenson and his stepson Lloyd
Osbourne on a rainy day in Braemar,
Scotland. Stevenson had just returned from
his first stay in America, with memories of poverty, illness, and adventure
(including his recent marriage), and a warm reconciliation between his parents
had been established. Stevenson himself said in designing the idea of the story
that, "it was to be a story for boys; no need of psychology or fine
writing; and I had a boy at hand to be a touchstone. Women were excluded and
then I had an idea for Long
John Silver from which I promised myself funds
of entertainment; to take an admired friend of mine, to deprive him of all his
finer qualities and higher graces of temperament, and to leave him with nothing
but his strength, his courage, his quickness, and his magnificent geniality,
and to try to express these in terms of the culture of a raw tarpaulin".
Completing
15 chapters in as many days, Stevenson was interrupted by illness and, after
leaving Scotland, continued working on the first draft outside London. While
there, his father provided additional impetus, as the two discussed points of
the tale, and Stevenson's father was the one who suggested the scene of Jim in
the apple barrel and the name of Walrus for Captain Flint's ship.
Two
general types of sea novels were popular during the 19th century: the navy
yarn, which places a capable officer in adventurous situations amid realistic
settings and historical events; and the desert island romance, which features
shipwrecked or marooned characters confronted by treasure-seeking pirates or
angry natives. Around 1815, the latter genre became one of the most popular
fictional styles in Great Britain, perhaps because of the philosophical
interest in Rousseau
and Chateaubriand's
"noble savage".
Treasure Island was a climax of this development. The growth of the
desert island genre can be traced back to 1719 when Daniel
Defoe's legendary Robinson
Crusoe was published. A century later,
novels such as S. H. Burney's
The Shipwreck (1816), and Sir
Walter Scott's The Pirate
(1822) continued to expand upon the strong influence of Defoe's classic.
However, other authors, in the mid 19th-century, continued this work, including
James Fenimore Cooper's The Pilot (1823). During the same period, Edgar
Allan Poe wrote, "MS Found in a Bottle" (1833) and the intriguing tale of buried treasure,
"The Gold-Bug"
(1843). All of these works influenced Stevenson's end product.
However,
specifically, Stevenson consciously borrowed material from previous authors. In
a July 1884 letter to Sidney
Colvin, he writes "Treasure Island
came out of Kingsley's
At Last, where i got the Dead Man's Chest—and that was the seed - and
out of the great Captain Johnson's
History of the
Notorious Pirates". Stevenson also admits that
he took the idea of Captain Flint's pointing skeleton from Poe's The Gold-Bug
and he constructed Billy Bones'
history from the pages of Washington
Irving, one of his favorite writers.[2]
One
month after he conceived of The Sea Cook, chapters began to appear in
the pages of Young Folks magazine. Eventually, the entire novel ran in 17 weekly
instalments from October 1, 1881, through January 28, 1882. Later the book was
republished as the novel Treasure Island and the book proved to be
Stevenson's first financial and critical success. William
Gladstone (1809-1898) the zealous Liberal
politician who served four terms as British prime minister between 1868 and
1894, was one of the book's biggest fans.
Main characters
- Jim Hawkins: The first-person point of view, of almost the entire novel. Jim is the son of an innkeeper near Bristol, England, and is probably in his mid teens. He is eager and enthusiastic to go to sea and hunt for treasure. He is a modest narrator, never boasting of the remarkable courage and heroism he consistently displays. Jim is often impulsive and impetuous, but he exhibits increasing sensitivity and wisdom.
- Dr. David Livesey: The local doctor and magistrate. Dr. Livesey is wise and practical, and Jim respects but is not inspired by him. Livesey narrates a few chapters of the novel. Some years previously, he had been in the British Army which fought (and lost) the 1745 Battle of Fontenoy.[3] Livesey exhibits common sense and rational thought while on the island, and his idea to send Ben to spook the pirates reveals a deep understanding of human nature. He is fair-minded, magnanimously agreeing to treat the pirates with just as much care as his own wounded men. As his name suggests, Livesey represents the steady, modest virtues of everyday life rather than fantasy, dream, or adventure.
- Long John Silver: The cook on the voyage to Treasure Island. Silver is the secret ringleader of the pirate band. His physical and emotional strength are impressive. Silver is deceitful and disloyal, greedy and visceral, and does not care about human relations. Yet he is always kind toward Jim and genuinely fond of the boy. Silver is a powerful mixture of charisma and self-destructiveness, individualism and recklessness. The one-legged Silver was based in part on Stevenson's friend and mentor William Ernest Henley.
- Captain Alexander Smollett: The captain of the voyage to Treasure Island. Captain Smollett is savvy and is rightly suspicious of the crew Trelawney has hired. Smollett is a real professional, taking his job seriously and displaying significant skill as a negotiator. Like Livesey, Smollett is too competent and reliable to be an inspirational figure for Jim's teenage mind. Smollett believes in rules and does not like Jim's disobedience but later in the novel states that he and Jim shouldn't go to sea together again as Jim was too much of the born favorite for him.
- Squire John Trelawney: A local wealthy landowner; his name suggests he has Cornish origins (a traditional Cornish rhyme states "By Tre, Pol and Pen, Ye shall know all Cornishmen"). Trelawney arranges the voyage to the island to find the treasure. Trelawney is excessively trustful, and is duped by Silver into hiring pirates as his crew.
- Billy Bones: The old seaman who resides at Jim's parents' inn. Billy, who used to be Flint's first mate, is surly and rude. He hires Jim to be on the lookout for a one-legged man, thus involving the young Jim in the pirate life. Billy's sea chest and treasure map set the whole adventure in motion. His gruff refusal to pay his inn bills symbolizes the pirates' general opposition to law, order, and civilisation. His illness and his fondness for rum symbolise the weak and self-destructive aspects of the pirate lifestyle. He dies of a stroke as a result of drinking too much rum.
Minor characters
- Alan: A sailor who does not mutiny. He is killed by the mutineers for his loyalty and his dying scream is heard across the island.
- Allardyce: One of the six members of Flint's Crew who, after burying the treasure and silver and building the blockhouse on Treasure Island, are all killed by Flint. His body is lined up by Flint as a compass marker to the cache. According to The Adventures of Ben Gunn, his first name was Nic, he was surgeon on Flint's crew, and Ben Gunn was his servant and friend from back home.
- Job Anderson: The ship's boatswain and one of the leaders of the mutiny. He participates in the storming of the blockhouse and is killed by Gray while attacking Jim. He is probably one of Flint's old pirate hands, though this is never stated. Along with Hands and Merry, he tipped a Black Spot on Silver and forced Silver to start the mutiny before the treasure was found.
- Mr. Arrow: The first mate of the Hispaniola. He is an alcoholic and is useless as a first mate. He disappears before they get to the island and his position is filled by Job Anderson. (Silver had secretly given Mr. Arrow alcohol and he fell drunkenly overboard on a stormy night.) In his BBC adaptation of 1977, John Lucarotti gives him the first name 'Joshua'.
- Black Dog: Formerly a member of Flint's pirate crew, later one of Pew's companions who visits the Admiral Benbow to confront Billy Bones. He is spotted by Jim in Silver's tavern and slips out to be chased by two of Silver's men (in order to maintain the ruse that Silver and his men are not associated with him). Two fingers are missing from his left hand.
- Blind Pew: A vicious, deadly, and sinister blind beggar who served as a member of Flint's crew. Despite his blindness, he proves to be a dangerous fighter and can even be considered a ringleader amongst his fellow crewmen. He is the second messenger to approach Billy Bones and the one to deliver the Black Spot. He is trampled to death by the horses of revenue officers riding to assist Jim and his mother after the raid on their inn. Silver claims Pew spent his share of Flint's treasure at a rate of £ 1,200 per year and that for two years until his accident at the "Admiral Benbow" he begged, stole, and murdered. Stevenson avoided predictability by making the two most fearsome characters a blind man and an amputee. In the play Admiral Guinea (1892), Stevenson gives him the full name "David Pew". Stevenson's novel Kidnapped (1886) also features a dangerous blind man.
- Mr. Dance: Chief revenue officer (titled: Supervisor) who ascends with his men upon the Admiral Benbow, driving out the pirates, and saving Jim Hawkins and his mother. He then takes Hawkins to see the squire and the doctor.
- Dogger: One of Mr. Dance's associates, who doubles Hawkins on his horse to the squire's house.
- Captain Flint: John Flint, the pirate Captain of the Walrus. After robbing and looting towns and ships among the Spanish Main, in August 1750, he took six of his own crew onto Treasure Island. After building a stockade and burying the bulk of his looted treasure, he killed all six men. In July 1754, he died at Savannah, Georgia, of cyanosis, caused by drinking too much rum. While dying, he gave his treasure map to Billy Bones. Long John Silver's parrot is named after Captain Flint. Several members of his crew figure in the story.
- Abraham Gray: A ship's carpenter on the Hispaniola. He is almost incited to mutiny but remains loyal to the Squire's side when asked to do so by Captain Smollett. He saves Hawkins' life by killing Job Anderson during an attack on the stockade, and he helps shoot the mutineers at the rifled treasure cache. He later escapes the island together with Jim Hawkins, Dr. Livesey, Squire Trelawney, Captain Smollett, Long John Silver, and Ben Gunn. He spends his part of the treasure on his education, marries, and becomes part owner of a full-rigged ship.
- Benjamin "Ben" Gunn: A former member of Flint's crew who became half insane after being marooned for three years on Treasure Island, having convinced another ship's crew that he was capable of finding Flint's treasure. Helps Jim by giving him the location of his homemade boat and kills two of the mutineers. After Dr. Livesey gives him what he most craves (cheese), Gunn reveals that he has found the treasure. In Spanish America, he lets Silver escape, and in England spends his share of the treasure (£ 1,000) in 19 days, becoming a beggar until he becomes keeper at a lodge and a church singer "on Sundays and holy days".
- Israel Hands: The ship's coxswain and Flint's old gunner. He tries to murder Jim Hawkins and is shot in self-defense.
- Mr. and Mrs. Hawkins: The parents of Jim Hawkins. Mr. Hawkins dies shortly after the beginning of the story.
- John Hunter: The other manservant of Squire Trelawney. He also accompanies him to the island but is later knocked unconscious at an attack on the stockade. He dies of his injuries while unconscious.
- John: A mutineer who is injured while trying to storm the blockhouse. He is later shown with a bandaged head and ends up being killed at the rifled treasure cache.
- Dick Johnson: The youngest of the mutineers, who has a Bible. The pirates use one of its pages to make a Black Spot for Silver, only to have him predict bad luck on Dick for sacrilege. Soon becoming mortally ill with malaria, Dick ends up being marooned on the island after the deaths of George Merry and John.
- Richard Joyce: One of the manservants of Squire Trelawney, he accompanies him to the island. He is shot through the head and killed by a mutineer during an attack on the stockade.
- George Merry: A mutinous and hostile member of Silver's crew, who disobeys orders and occasionally challenges Silver's authority. He launches the mutiny prematurely, forcing Long John to flee to the island with Jim as an improvised hostage. With Anderson and Hands, he forces Silver to attack the blockhouse instead of waiting for the treasure to be found. Later killed at the empty cache just as he is about to kill both Silver and Hawkins.
- Tom Morgan: An ex-pirate from Flint's old crew. He ends up marooned on the island with Dick and one other mutineer.
- O'Brien: A mutineer who survives the attack on the boathouse and escapes. He is later killed by Israel Hands in a drunken fight on the Hispaniola.
- Tom Redruth: The gamekeeper of Squire Trelawney, he accompanies the Squire to the island but is shot and killed by the mutineers during an attack on the stockade.
- Tom: An honest sailor who is killed by Silver for refusing to join the mutiny.
Among
other minor characters whose names are not revealed are the four pirates who
were killed in an attack on the stockade along with Job Anderson; the pirate
killed by the honest men minus Jim Hawkins before the attack on the stockade;
the pirate shot by Squire Trelawney when aiming at Israel Hands, who later died
of his injuries; and the pirate marooned on the island along with Tom Morgan
and Dick.
Timeframe
Stevenson
deliberately leaves the exact date of the novel obscure, Hawkins writing that
he takes up his pen "in the year of grace 17—." Stevenson's map of
Treasure Island includes the annotations Treasure Island 1 August 1750 J.F.
and Given by above J.F. to Mr W. Bones Maste of ye
Walrus Savannah this twenty July 1754 W B. Other dates mentioned include
1745, the date Dr. Livesey served as a soldier at Fontenoy
and also a date appearing in Billy Bones' log.
Historical allusions
Real pirates and piracy
- Historian Luis Junco suggests that Treasure Island is in fact a marriage of the story of the murder of Captain George Glas on board the Earl of Sandwich in 1765 and the taking of the ship Walrus off the island of La Graciosa near Tenerife. The pirates of La Graciosa buried their treasure there before they were all killed during a bloody battle with the British navy. The treasure was never recovered.
David
Kelly in his book 'Pirates of the Carraigin' deals with the piracy and murder
of Captain Glas and others on board a ship travelling from Tenerife to London
by the Ship's Cook and his gang. The perpetrators of this crime also buried the
considerable treasure they had stolen but most of it was later recovered. They
were all executed in Dublin in 1766. In his research, Kelly proved that Stevenson
was a neighbour of the named victim in Edinburgh, and so was intimately aware
of what was a scandal at the time, from an early age. Stevenson and his family
were even members of the church congregation set up by the victim's father.
Although he never visited Ireland, Stevenson based at least two other books, Kidnapped
and Catriona
on real crimes that were perpetrated in Dublin. These were all reported in
detail in the Gentleman’s Magazine, published in Dublin and Edinburgh.[4]
- Five real-life pirates mentioned are William Kidd (active 1696–99), Blackbeard (1716–18), Edward England (1717–20), Howell Davis (1718–19), and Bartholomew Roberts (1718–22). Kidd buried treasure on Gardiners Island, though the booty was recovered by authorities soon afterwards.[5]
- The name "Israel Hands" was taken from that of a real pirate in Blackbeard's crew, whom Blackbeard maimed (by shooting him in the knee) simply to ensure that his crew remained in terror of him. Allegedly, Hands was taken ashore to be treated for his injury and was not at Blackbeard's last fight (the incident is depicted in Tim Powers' novel On Stranger Tides), and this alone saved him from the gallows. Supposedly, he later became a beggar in England.
- Silver refers to "three hundred and fifty thousand" pieces of eight at the "fishing up of the wrecked plate ships". This remark conflates two related events: first, the salvage of treasure from the 1715 Treasure Fleet which was wrecked off the coast of Florida in a hurricane; second, the seizure of 350,000 salvaged pieces of eight the following year (out of several million) by privateer Henry Jennings. This event is mentioned in the introduction to Johnson's General History of the Pyrates.
- Silver refers to a ship's surgeon from Roberts' crew who amputated his leg and was later hanged at Cape Coast Castle, a British fortification on the Gold Coast of Africa. The records of the trial of Roberts' men list Peter Scudamore as the chief surgeon of Roberts' ship Royal Fortune. Scudamore was found guilty of willingly serving with Roberts' pirates and various related criminal acts, as well as attempting to lead a rebellion to escape once he had been apprehended. He was, as Silver relates, hanged, in 1722.
- Stevenson refers to the Viceroy of the Indies, a ship sailing from Goa, India (then a Portuguese colony), which was taken by Edward England off Malabar while John Silver was serving aboard England's ship the Cassandra. No such exploit of England's is known, nor any ship by the name of the Viceroy of the Indies. However, in April 1721, the captain of the Cassandra, John Taylor (originally England's second in command who had marooned him for being insufficiently ruthless), together with his pirate partner, Olivier Levasseur, captured the vessel Nostra Senhora do Cabo near RĂ©union island in the Indian Ocean. The Portuguese galleon was returning from Goa to Lisbon with the Conde da Ericeira, the recently retired Viceroy of Portuguese India, aboard. The viceroy had much of his treasure with him, making this capture one of the richest pirate hauls ever. This is possibly the event that Stevenson referred to, though his (or Silver's) memory of the event seems to be slightly confused. The Cassandra was last heard of in 1723 at Portobelo, Panama, a place that also briefly figures in Treasure Island as "Portobello".
- The preceding two references are inconsistent, as the Cassandra (and presumably Silver) was in the Indian Ocean during the time that Scudamore was surgeon on board the Royal Fortune, in the Gulf of Guinea.
Other allusions
- 1689: A pirate whistles "Lillibullero" (1689).
- 1702: The Admiral Benbow Inn where Jim and his mother live is named after the real life Admiral John Benbow (1653–1702).
- 1733: Foundation of Savannah, Georgia where Captain Flint died in 1754.
- 1745: Doctor Livesey was at the Battle of Fontenoy (1745).
- 1747: Squire Trelawney and Long John Silver both mention "Admiral Hawke", i.e. Edward Hawke, 1st Baron Hawke (1705–81), promoted to Rear Admiral in 1747.
- 1749: The novel refers to the Bow Street Runners (1749).
- Treasure Island was in part inspired by R. M. Ballantyne's The Coral Island,[6] which Stevenson admired for its "better qualities."[7] Stevenson alludes to Ballantyne in the epigraph at the beginning of Treasure Island, "To the Hesitating Purchaser", "...If studious youth no longer crave, His ancient appetites forgot, Kingston, or Ballantyne the brave, Or Cooper of the wood and wave..."
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