Robert Louis Stevenson: Dr. Jekyll and Hyde Robert Louis Stevenson, one of the most credited authors in American History. His work appeared all over the world. Stevenson left a huge impact on Scottish literature and American Literature and will always belong to fame.
On the day of November 13, 1850, one of the best authors in the that time period, Robert Louis Stevenson, born and raised in Edinburgh Scotland. Stevensons parents included Thomas Stevenson and Margaret Balfour Stevenson. His parents owned a lighthouse business and pushed the design on him. The lighthouse design seemed his parents possession and his parents loved it. Robert Louis Stevenson never really showed his love into the whole lighthouse engineering major, but his father
…show more content…
Stevenson wrote and published so many books. Not all his books appeared fictional, however. He had appeared intrigued by the idea of how personality can affect a human and how to put together the interplay of good and evil. (Stevenson, 2015) After a long thought by Stevenson, it finally came to him one night during a nightmare, When Stevensons wife, Fanny Osbourne, woke him from what she thought appeared a nightmare. Stevenson seemed upset for her waking him because he proclaimed she awoke him from this “fine bogey tale”. It evolved into the beginning of The Strange case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. It took Robert Stevenson 3 days to rewrite Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, after he had actually burned the first copy of the book. After he began writing this strange tale, his wife made him read the story to her and she gave him her input and made him change things around. Immediately upon its publishing, Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde appeared a grand work, published 1886. This book talks about a man named Gabriel Utterson who investigates very strange occurrences between his old friend Dr. Jekyll and the evil Henry Hyde. It appears theres two personalities within Dr. Henry Jekyll, one appears good and one appears evil. Dr. Jekyll had made this special kind of potion that makes him turn into this monster of a man, known as Henry Hyde. The monstrous man Mr. Hyde goes out and commits crimes and goes on a rampage. Towards the end of the book Dr. Jekyll runs out of his potion and something goes terribly wrong in the lab. Dr. Jekyll’s butler Mr. Poole and Mr. Utterson rush up to his laboratory and find the lab trashed and Jekyll laying on the ground. (Jekyll and