Now, as my essay-title portends, Robert
Louis Stevenson’s TREASURE ISLAND (published as a book in 1883 but
serialized in a kids’ magazine two years previous) is also
subcombative in terms of the dynamicity of its protagonist Jim
Hawkins. However, while not all readers may think of ROBINSON CRUSOE
as a pure adventure-novel, TREASURE ISLAND is practically a watchword
for the mythos. To be sure, it’s preceded by many other classics in
the same mythos, particularly the Big Three Perennials: Scott’s
IVANHOE, Dumas’s THREE MUSKETEERS, and Cooper’s LAST OF THE
MOHICANS. Yet though there had been numerous adventure-tales—now
mostly unread—that featured juveniles as protagonists, ISLAND seems
a breakthrough in terms of creating a true hero who simply happens to
be a juvenile. By “true hero” I mean the type of character who
fits the persona of “the hero,” more devoted to glory than
immediate survival.
Hawkins is not utterly without economic motive. As much as his “good mentors” Livesy and Trelawney, and his ‘bad mentor” Long John Silver, Hawkins wants to profit by uncovering the lost treasure of pirate captain Flint. But there’s a sense in which the treasure gives Jim an excuse to get away from the mundane life of running an inn with his widowed mother. To be sure, he doesn’t expect to meet danger during the voyage to the isle of treasure (called “Skeleton Island”). Peril only looms its head when Hawkins learns that Silver has brought hardened pirates into the crew, who are willing to murder or maroon all of the ship's honest citizens, once the pirates have acquired Flint’s treasure. Nevertheless, twice in the story Hawkins boldly strikes off on his own, first to explore the island, and then to recapture the ship when it’s set adrift. Hawkins can’t fight or shoot, and he’s saved from being killed in his only battle-scene by losing his footing and falling down a hill. Nevertheless, Hawkins displays both the honor and courage of a hero. The sense of honor extends even to the duplicitous Silver, for Hawkins refuses to break his word to the pirate even to save Hawkins’ own life, and his courage is all the more remarkable because of the very real fears he experiences. Cinematic adaptations sometimes are accurate in conjuring with the terror-aspects of the boy’s early encounter with the fearsome Blind Pew, or Hawkins’ life-or-death struggle against the murderous Israel Hands. But the island itself is rarely shown as Stevenson shows it, as a place of potential malarial sickness, inhabited by “huge slimy monsters” (sea lions, unfamiliar to the young Englishman). And I’ve never seen a film that ended as the novel ends; with Jim Hawkins, years later, still haunted by nightmares of piratical iniquity, summed up by the memory of Long John’s parrot, mindlessly screaming “Pieces of eight! Pieces of eight!”
Hawkins is not utterly without economic motive. As much as his “good mentors” Livesy and Trelawney, and his ‘bad mentor” Long John Silver, Hawkins wants to profit by uncovering the lost treasure of pirate captain Flint. But there’s a sense in which the treasure gives Jim an excuse to get away from the mundane life of running an inn with his widowed mother. To be sure, he doesn’t expect to meet danger during the voyage to the isle of treasure (called “Skeleton Island”). Peril only looms its head when Hawkins learns that Silver has brought hardened pirates into the crew, who are willing to murder or maroon all of the ship's honest citizens, once the pirates have acquired Flint’s treasure. Nevertheless, twice in the story Hawkins boldly strikes off on his own, first to explore the island, and then to recapture the ship when it’s set adrift. Hawkins can’t fight or shoot, and he’s saved from being killed in his only battle-scene by losing his footing and falling down a hill. Nevertheless, Hawkins displays both the honor and courage of a hero. The sense of honor extends even to the duplicitous Silver, for Hawkins refuses to break his word to the pirate even to save Hawkins’ own life, and his courage is all the more remarkable because of the very real fears he experiences. Cinematic adaptations sometimes are accurate in conjuring with the terror-aspects of the boy’s early encounter with the fearsome Blind Pew, or Hawkins’ life-or-death struggle against the murderous Israel Hands. But the island itself is rarely shown as Stevenson shows it, as a place of potential malarial sickness, inhabited by “huge slimy monsters” (sea lions, unfamiliar to the young Englishman). And I’ve never seen a film that ended as the novel ends; with Jim Hawkins, years later, still haunted by nightmares of piratical iniquity, summed up by the memory of Long John’s parrot, mindlessly screaming “Pieces of eight! Pieces of eight!”
Like many of Stevenson’s works,
TREASURE ISLAND was originally directed at young readers, for its
original title was THE SEA COOK: A STORY FOR BOYS. I for one did not
read the novel in my youth. My first memory was that of seeing a
thirty-minute cartoon adaptation as an episode of THE FAMOUS
ADVENTURES OF MISTER MAGOO, in which a version of Magoo, an actor
rather than a blind old coot, essayed the role of Long John. The
cartoon, like many live-action adaptations, played up Silver’s
charm and wit, and downplayed the consequences of his intentions
toward the honest treasure-seekers. I didn’t read the book until I
was in my fifties or thereabout, when I sought to sort out the book’s
relationship to the literary form of “the romance.” Indeed,
Stevenson’s epigraph alludes to “the old romance, retold exactly
in the ancient way,” which I take to be a reference to the
chivalric romances, whose spirit Scott had revived in IVANHOE. To be
sure, I doubt if any medieval romance ever had a villain as ambiguous
as Long John Silver, who is the dark side of Hawkins as much as Hyde,
five years later, would become the alter ego to Jekyll. Ironically,
while Jekyll and Hyde perish together, Stevenson allows Silver to
escape the fate he’s earned and to steal a sack of coins for his
trouble, while Hawkins on the contrary is too haunted by his
experience of “man’s inhumanity to man” to enjoy his share of
the pirate treasure.
Despite
the many horrific images in the novel, TREASURE ISLAND is entirely
naturalistic, just like the Big Three Perennials. However, the book
is indirectly responsible for spawning the cornerstone of the
nineteenth century’s formulation of the superhero idiom. After
reading ISLAND, H. Rider Haggard bet a friend that he Haggard could
write a novel as good as Stevenson’s work. While there had been
pirate adventures before ISLAND, KING SOLOMON’S MINES instituted
the subgenre known as the “lost race novel.” Perhaps more
importantly, MINES introduced one of the nineteenth century’s first
serial characters whose adventures were both (1) predominantly
metaphenomal in nature, and (2) predominantly based around the agon
of combat. Allen Quatermain, star of MINES and the eight books that
followed, does end up chasing a legendary treasure as does Hawkins.
But Quatermain is a seasoned campaigner rather than a beardless boy,
and though Haggard killed off his character in the second book, the
series was popular enough for the author to bring Quatermain back in
six “prequels.” To my knowledge Stevenson never wrote anything
that belongs to the superhero idiom, but TREASURE ISLAND remains an
important link in the chain of events that led to that idiom, ranging
from Nick Carter to Tarzan and John Carter and on through the
costumed offspring of four-color comics.
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