Find Articles in Magazines

 Sections
Current Issues
The Arts
Life
Natural Science
Culture
Book World
Modern Thought
 Additional Resources
 
 
Treasured Islands
Section: CULTURE / CROSSROADS
Author: Lowell D. Holmes
Publication: The World & I Online
Issue Date: 1/1/1988
Size: 6,061 Words, 35,584 Characters

At the precise moment the tide turned, the schooner Casco, casting off her bow and stern lines, was towed away from the pier. Her foresail, main, and two headsails hoisted and sheeted in, the graceful windship--ninety-four feet in length and of seventy-four ton registry--heeled to leeward and pointed her bow toward the Golden Gate, San Francisco's portal to the open sea. Once outside the bay, with the wind freshened and the seas increased, the Casco set its course southwest by south, and her rail dug deep in the tumbling seas as they sped astern. Again and again, her plunging bow sent showers of spray back along the deck. The passengers and most of the crew sought shelter below decks, leaving only a forward lookout and a helmsman aft to brave the elements and see to the ship's safety.

Below, in a handsomely appointed forward cabin, five passengers huddled together experiencing doubts about the wisdom of undertaking an extended ocean voyage in such a "tiny boat." They also wondered how soon seasickness would take hold. Only one of them, Louis, was having the time of his life, observing--much to the disgust of the rest--how good it was to be out on the open sea, where the air was fresh and the ocean was an exquisite blue.

While these passengers were behaving much like any others might on their first day at sea, this collection of voyagers was hardly commonplace. They were the Stevenson family, comprised of author Robert Louis, his wife Fanny, his mother Margaret, his stepson Lloyd, and Fanny's French maid Valentine. The date was June 27, 1888, and the Stevensons were on their way to the Marquesas, the first of their many ports of call on this sea venture among the fabled islands in the South Seas.

The idea for the Pacific cruise originated with Stevenson and his wife several months earlier, during an exceptionally cold and raw winter in Saranac, New York. He was not only progressing poorly with his new book, The Master of Ballantrae, but his health had been bad. His chronic ailment, which he called "Bluidy Jack"--probably tuberculosis--threatened him constantly with pulmonary hemorrhage, which drained his strength and made it difficult for him to work. To add insult to injury, one particularly raw night his ink froze solid. These conditions--and having just finished reading Charles Warren Stoddard's South Sea Idyls--prompted Stevenson to think more and more seriously of a sojourn in some tropical place. After all, he and Fanny had often fantasized about a visit to a balmy Pacific island world.

In March, Fanny prepared to visit friends in California, and as Stevenson was saying farewell, he commented as an afterthought, "If you find a yacht out there, mind you take it." Just six weeks later a telegram arrived in Saranac, reading:

Can secure splendid sea-going yacht Casco for seven hundred and fifty a month with most comfortable accommodations for six aft and six forward. Can be ready for sea in ten days. Reply immediately.

Reply he did:

Blessed girl, take the yacht and expect us in ten days.
Louis.

The voyage of the Casco

Stevenson was thirty-eight at the beginning of this adventure. He had already authored five adventure novels, the most famous being Treasure Island, as well as numerous volumes of essays, short stories, and poems. Born in Edinburgh, Scotland, he was tall but slight, even frail, and his pallid complexion belied his view of himself as a man of action. A chain smoker and a more than moderate drinker, Stevenson tended to r...


Read Full Article

Low Discount Magazine Prices at MagazineCity.com! ...ver the grave. A bronze plate carried the epitaph that Stevenson himself had written. It read:

Under the wide and starry sky,
Dig the grave and let me lie.
Glad did I live and gladly die,
And laid me down with a will.
Here be the verse you gave for me;
Here he lies where he longed to be;
Home is the sailor, home from the sea.
And the hunter home from the hill.



(3,615 of 35,584 characters)
 

Publication Details (The World & I Online)
The World & I Online is a comprehensive academic resource that encompasses a broad range of articles by scholars and experts in the areas of Global Studies, Liberal Arts, Fine & Applied Arts, General Science, and Spanish. Originally published monthly in print as The World & I, our site includes the complete contents since 1986 and continues to publish a new issue online each month.
Ordering by Internet  
College Orders (based on full-time enrollment)
  Site License
      - Up to 999 Students
      - 1,000 to 4,999 Students
      - 5,000 to 9,999 Students
      - 10,000 or More Students
  Limited Access
      - Economy (5 computer accesses)
      - Individual (1 computer access)
Public Library Orders
  Site License
      - Up to 50 Computers
      - 51 - 100 Computers
      For over 100 computers, call 866-211-6040.
  Limited Access
      - Economy (5 computer accesses)
      - Individual (1 computer access)
 
 Search by Issues
2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001
2000 1999 1998 1997 1996 1995 1994 1993
1992 1991 1990 1989 1988 1987 1986  

Copyright 2008 Articles In Magazines.