SCOTS Project - www.scottishcorpus.ac.uk Document : 683 Title : The Strange Case of Mr Stevenson and Professor Smith Author(s): Gordon K Booth Copyright holder(s): Aberdeen University Review Gordon K Booth Text The High Victorian era produced three Scotsmen of indisputable genius: James Clerk Maxwell, Robert Louis Stevenson and William Robertson Smith. All three men died young - Maxwell in 1879 at the age of 48, and both Stevenson and Smith in 1894, at 44 and 48 respectively. Each left significant legacies to the twentieth century - Maxwell’s pioneering researches into electro-magnetism, for example, stamped their mark on every aspect of modern life. However, it is the interesting and largely unknown association between the other two which I want to consider here. The life and work of RLS are common knowledge to most Scots, at least in broad terms, and need not be rehearsed here; Robertson Smith is less familiar and some brief biographical details may be helpful. Following the Disruption of 1843, when the Free Church of Scotland came into being, Smith’s father, William Pirie Smith, was persuaded to leave his comfortable headmaster’s post at Aberdeen’s West End Academy in order to minister to the tiny Free Kirk congregation of Tough and Keig within the Howe of Alford in rural Aberdeenshire. William, the eldest son and second of seven children, was born in 1846 and educated at home, as were all the children, until he progressed to Aberdeen University at the age of 15, accompanied by his 14 year old brother George, who died shortly after the two graduated in 1865. A year later, Robertson Smith made his way to New College, the Free Kirk’s theological seminary in Edinburgh, already bearing a reputation for immense intellectual ability in every sphere of academic learning. By 1870, at the tender age of 24, he had been appointed Professor of Hebrew at the Aberdeen Free Church College and seemed destined for an uneventful life of scholarship in what many regarded as a northerly outpost of extreme Presbyterian orthodoxy. Surprisingly, Stevenson and Smith had encountered each other in Edinburgh by that time. Smith’s mathematical prowess had come to the attention of Peter Guthrie Tait, Professor of Natural Philosophy at Edinburgh, who invited the young prodigy to become his sole assistant (1) in the University’s Physics department. Tait’s letter offering WRS the post is still extant: “I don’t think the New College will in any way interfere with me. Your chief work will be looking over examination papers once a fortnight - (and that can be done at any hour) - and showing the students where and how they have blundered. As to the Physical Laboratory which I hope to open, I take it you will consider attendance there rather as a means of making yourself known by original investigation, than as daily toil.” (2) That was certainly an underestimate of the work involved, but Smith was possessed of inexhaustible mental energy - in addition to his own theological studies and Tait’s physics duties, he found time to act as paid tutor to the junior Hebrew class at New College. RLS meantime, as an unwilling engineering undergraduate at Edinburgh University, was fated to become one of those students whose blunders in maths and physics fell to be corrected by WRS. It is reported however that Stevenson found it all too easy to distract Robertson Smith from his duty by tempting him with innumerable questions on matters theological. That story (told by Donald Carswell (3) amongst others, but never mentioned by either of the participants) is circumstantial yet colourable, being entirely consistent with the characters of the two men. Much later, RLS was to write a rose-coloured, nostalgic account of his College days (4), wherein he reminiscences on Tait’s class-room - ‘cupola and all’ - and describes his practised end of term pleading to be granted a class attendance certificate despite his reckless and inveterate truancy: “But although I am the holder of a certificate of attendance in the professor’s own hand, I cannot remember to have been present in the Greek class above a dozen times. Professor Blackie was even kind enough to remark (more than once) while in the very act of writing the document above referred to, that he did not know my face … no one ever played the truant with more deliberate care, and none ever had more certificates for less education.” (5) RLS was a self-confessed ‘idler’ at University; WRS was a workaholic who throve on intellectual stimulation of all kinds. Stevenson’s school education had been patchy in the extreme, with long periods of absence due to his delicate health; Smith, though similarly an ailing child (6), had been brilliantly educated at home by a father who had a natural gift for pedagogy and who was as capable of imparting to his children the latest ideas in geology, mathematics and physics as of teaching Greek, Latin, Hebrew and English literature (7). The relationship between Smith and his father, moreover, was always a warm and positive one: William Pirie Smith expected much of all his pupils but was quick to detect the eldest son’s potential and the boy himself drank insatiably at the well of knowledge. Stevenson, as we know, had an indulgent but curiously melancholic father, who possessed little taste for learning in itself. In childhood, both boys had been fed a diet of strict Calvinism and the fact that the two families were on opposite sides of the Scottish ecclesiastical divide - the one Established Church, the other Free Kirk - made little real difference to the content of that spiritual fare. But RLS was far more emotionally susceptible than Smith to its harsher aspects and describes vividly the mental torments he suffered: “I would not only lie awake to weep for Jesus, which I have done many a time, but I would fear to trust myself to slumber lest I was not accepted and should slip, ere I awoke, into eternal ruin. I remember repeatedly … waking from a dream of hell, clinging to the horizontal bar of the bed, with my knees and chin together, my soul shaken, my body convulsed with agony. It is not a pleasant subject.” (8) Robertson Smith suffered no such agonies as a child: his own perceptions, of God as a benevolent father-figure and of religion as a natural, joyous communion between man and his creator, were to dwell with him throughout life and unconsciously coloured all his anthropological descriptions of primal religion in later life: “Religion did not exist for the saving of souls but for the preservation and welfare of society, and in all that was necessary to this end every man had to take his part, or break with the domestic and political community to which he belonged.” (9) Those words come from Smith’s last book, “The Religion of the Semites”, based on his series of Burnett lectures delivered in Aberdeen during 1888, and they represent the surprisingly pragmatic and non-mystical view of religion which proved the eventual outcome of a uniquely enlightened upbringing. They contrast vividly with Stevenson’s life-long agonisings over matters of faith, for which he later was to blame in part his nurse, Alison Cunningham (‘Cummy’), but which must equally be attributed to his mother's physical and emotional remoteness and his father’s peculiar mixture of worldliness and dark Calvinism. Smith’s consciously harmonious relationship with his father similarly contrasts deeply with those long and stormy wranglings over religion between Thomas Stevenson and his son which are so graphically documented in the family correspondence. On the surface, it was Stevenson who turned pagan, while Smith held to the simple evangelical faith of his childhood until death. The truth is far more complicated, however. It was Stevenson who wrestled constantly with the torturing moral problems of good and evil, as his novels and essays so clearly illustrate; it was Smith, on the other hand, who became ever more rationalistic in his relentless analysis of the Biblical text, while simultaneously and somewhat paradoxically retaining faith in the beneficence of a divine Father. In terms of William James’ celebrated dichotomy (10), Smith’s religion was of the ‘healthy-minded’ kind while Stevenson’s was of the ‘soul-sick’ variety. Smith successfully adapted his Scottish Calvinist inheritance to meet the challenge of his intellectual explorations; Stevenson, on the other hand, never truly escaped its chill hand: “… all the rose-water theology in the world cannot quench the great fire of horror and terror that Christianity has kindled in the hearts of the Scottish people … but the Scots were perhaps strong enough to bear this cruel medicine … Calvinism is the religion of the strong; like the shrewd, hard climates of our northern coasts, it is fatal to the weakly but makes more manly and vigorous the selected few who can survive.” (11) RLS enjoyed only the fantasy of being ‘a bonny fighter’ and spent his life running from this ‘horror and terror’. Robertson Smith, physically small, fiercely pugnacious and (who knows?) an unconscious model for that ‘bold, desperate customer’, Alan Breck, was the real bonny fighter, as subsequent events were to prove dramatically. By 1871, the Edinburgh publishing firm of Messrs A. and C. Black were actively contemplating a new edition of their Encyclopaedia Britannica - to become the celebrated ninth edition - and in 1873 Thomas Spencer Baynes (12) was appointed chief editor. The plan, as set out in Baynes’ Prefatory Note to the first volume (published in 1875), was to provide an authoritative view of current knowledge by securing contributions from ‘the more independent and productive minds who were engaged in advancing their own departments of scientific enquiry’. (13) Taking part in this great enterprise, Baynes implied, would thereby bestow the status of being at the cutting edge of Victorian thought and critical discovery - a tempting inducement for young aspiring writers and scholars, eager to make their mark in contemporary society. It is hardly surprising, therefore, that both Smith and Stevenson were attracted by the proposition. In the case of RLS, it is clear that Sidney Colvin recommended him to Baynes. Colvin and Stevenson had met in 1873 through Frances Sitwell (14), and the latter’s youthful infatuation with the woman whom Colvin was eventually to marry is well-known. Already a journalist and art critic of some eminence, Colvin had just become Slade Professor of Fine Art at Cambridge and, though only five years older than RLS, gave him every support in the furtherance of a literary career. From the outset, Colvin was a contributor of articles for the new Britannica (15) and automatically became a talent-spotter for Baynes. Thus, by 1874, RLS was delighted to know he had been contracted to tackle two topics for the Encyclopaedia: ‘Béranger’ and ‘Burns’. For Robertson Smith similarly, it was a matter of personal recommendation. He had been introduced to Baynes in 1871 when holidaying with Professor Tait at St Andrews and it undoubtedly helped that he simultaneously met (and played golf with) Thomas Huxley and Clerk Maxwell, both of whom were to become semi-official scientific advisers to Baynes and the Britannica. (16) The definitive contact though was probably John F. McLennan, a young Edinburgh advocate, close friend of Robertson Smith, and the source of Smith’s emerging interest in anthropology.(17) Like Stevenson therefore, the young Robertson Smith was initially commissioned to tackle a variety of topics for the second and third volumes of the encyclopaedia - they comprised ‘Angel’, ‘Ark of the Covenant’, ‘Baal’ and (most notoriously) ‘Bible’. Pierre Jean de Béranger and Robert Burns seemed ideal subjects for RLS. His French was fluent and Béranger’s exuberant satirical songs appealed greatly to him. Both Béranger and Burns moreover had by now achieved popular recognition as national bards within their respective countries. Stevenson’s article on Béranger is carefully crafted to meet the needs of an encyclopaedia entry, being admirably factual and objective as well as exactly the right length (just three columns) relative to the importance of the topic. It is intriguing moreover to see how closely RLS empathises with his subject: “In 1802, in consequence of a distressing quarrel, he [Béranger] left his father and began life in the garret of his ever memorable song. For two years he did literary hackwork, when he could get it, and wrote pastorals, epics, and all manner of ambitious failures… He was then in bad health, and in the last state of misery.” (18) Stevenson goes on to describe how Béranger was “rescued” by Judith Frère, who became his life-long lover - just as RLS must in the beginning have fantasised the outcome of his own relationship with Fanny Sitwell. The biographical account of Béranger is followed by a shorter critical assessment (set in smaller print, in conformity with conventional EB practice). Stevenson’s review is a model of its kind and well illustrates the characteristic degree of assiduous polishing which RLS put into all his writings. Stevenson’s excitement at obtaining these two commissions for the Encyclopaedia Britannica is evident from his letters. In June, 1875, he wrote to Fanny Sitwell, ‘My father a little grumbly but pleased about the Burns’ (19); in July to Colvin, “Hoopla! I’ve got Burns and seemingly Béranger” (20); and, in August, enclosing the article to Baynes: ‘If necessary I could cut it down of course, a good bit; but it is cut to the quick already’ (21). The EB, after all, was only at the letter B and was to take up a further 21 volumes before reaching Z in 1888. (22) Prospectively therefore, the opportunity of becoming a regular contributor was a valuable investment for the future: not only would it provide a modest but steady income but - more importantly - the appended initials RLS would keep him in the public eye and guarantee an assured literary reputation by association with those who were established writers, whether specialist or generalist. (23) Stevenson’s hopes were to be rudely dashed with his second article, ‘Burns’. He had worked extremely hard at the commission throughout the autumn, (24) but early in 1876 the manuscript was returned to him with an apparently unequivocal rejection. All that we can deduce on the matter comes from the surviving correspondence: Stevenson wrote hotly to the publishers in March: “I beg to acknowledge receipt of the manuscript Burns. I am sorry too learn (this evening) you found means to communicate with others earlier than myself. You will excuse me if I express myself frankly. I regard this as bad usage. Whether or not my article was fitted for your enterprise, was a matter of interest to you and me - not to third parties.” (25) Who that ‘third party’ was remains a mystery - conceivably it was Colvin himself. At any rate, RLS wrote Colvin in June: “I am in a fine exercisy state. Baynes is gone to London. If you see him, enquire about my ‘Burns’. They have sent me £5:5 for it, which has mollified me horrid. £5:5 is a good deal to pay for a read of it in MS; I can’t complain.” (26) Baynes had in fact written an apology to RLS by then, explaining that he had been ill when the decision had been made to reject the article. (27) Stevenson’s reply is interesting: “I have to thank you for your kind letter; I perfectly well understand your silence and was sorry indeed for the cause. I hope you will now continue to gain strength. I suppose you are right in saying there was a want of enthusiasm about the article. I had, I fancy, an exaggerated idea of the gravity of an Encyclopaedia, and wished to give mere bones, and to make no statements that should seem even warm. And perhaps also, I may have a little latent cynicism, which comes out when I am at work. I believe you are right in saying I had not said enough of what is highest and best in him. Such a topic is disheartening: the clay feet are easier dealt with than the golden head.” (28) A certain amount can be inferred from these words but not as much as one would like. On the one hand, RLS seems to suggest that he had tried to maintain a properly objective and dispassionate tone throughout, as befitted an encyclopaedia article; on the other hand he had clearly made overmuch, for the EB’s liking, of Burns’ feet of clay, perhaps at the expense of his poetic merits and reputation as Scotland’s national poet. Three years later, Stevenson did publish an essay on Burns - ‘Some aspects of Robert Burns’ - but it is difficult to make any firm judgement as to how much of the original EB article is retained. (29) In the essay though, there is a clear echo of his words to Baynes: “Mr Carlyle made an inimitable bust of the poet’s head of gold; may I not be forgiven if my business should have more to do with the feet, which were of clay?” (30) It was the wild side, of course, that RLS found it most congenial to identify with; the hagiographic style in any case was not for him - and in the published essay he protests against Principal J.C. Shairp’s bourgeois attempt at a biography of Burns which regretted that the poet should have ever stooped so low as to pen ‘Holy Willie’s Prayer’ or ‘The Jolly Beggars’. Judging by the Béranger article, RLS would have striven to maintain an appropriate encyclopaedic objectivity; and if his Burns essay is an amplification of the Britannica article, then it is certain that he would have given a wholly balanced appraisal, ‘warts and all’. RLS unquestionably admired Burns’ talents, both as writer and as lover, yet his Calvinistic conditioning obliged him to protest against Burns’ ‘random affections’ (31), his ‘Don Juan character’ (32), his ‘idleness and dissipation’ (33). All those weaknesses constituted the Hyde-like elements which RLS recognised in himself and which both fascinated and terrified him. It is hardly surprising that he devotes so much space to them in his essay. Yet his succinct verdict on Burns is a just one: “There was never a man of letters with more absolute command of his means; and we may say of him, without excess, that his style was his slave.” (34) That same year, 1876, was to bring even greater distress to Robertson Smith - though in a completely different form. His first Britannica article, ‘Angel’, had raised a few eyebrows in seeming cautiously sceptical about the existence of angelic beings - but his sentiments in this regard were on the whole reasonably consonant with good Protestant theology, and it was to be the article ‘Bible’ which truly set the heather alight. Published in the same volume (ATH–BOI) as Stevenson’s ‘Béranger’, in December, 1875, ‘Bible’ carried an unmistakable whiff of heresy - first detected by the acute nose of an anonymous reviewer in the Scotsman of April 15, 1876 (35), who wrote, not without a distinct element of sectarian malice: “… as [the article ‘Bible’] is by a young Free Church professor … we expected something more in accordance with the ordinary opinions of men in this country - probably something orthodox, certainly something vigorous … But we extract from it a good many startling conclusions.” (36) The book of Deuteronomy, it appeared to the reviewer’s horror, was not written by Moses, nor indeed were any of the first five books of the Bible, as traditionally believed. Indeed, the whole Hebrew Bible had, according to this young professor, been subjected to a long process of editing, reordering and revision, giving rise ultimately to a compilation that possessed the quality (in the reviewer’s words) of ‘a religious magazine’. The prophets, mirabile dictu, were simply religious reformers rather than makers of long-term predictions - and the Scotsman’s reviewer wondered caustically: “Does the writer of the article [‘Bible’] believe that prophets could predict? Those who are acquainted with the subject will easily understand the position of a man who says of the prophets - ‘There is no reason to think that a prophet even received a revelation which was not spoken directly and pointedly of his own time’.” (37) None of this was new in academic circles. Such views were already entertained widely by certain Continental theologians and even closer at hand the Anglican Bishop of Natal, John William Colenso, had precipitated ecclesiastical panic in England a decade previously by raising questions over the Mosaic authorship and factual accuracy of the Pentateuch. Robertson Smith himself had been quietly teaching his students the elements of this revolutionary ‘higher criticism’ ever since his inauguration to the Aberdeen professorship in 1870, and had even voiced those views discreetly within scholarly journals. But the Free Kirk of Scotland was a bastion of orthodoxy - some on the other side called it ‘hyper-orthodoxy’ - and was acutely sensitive to any questioning of traditional beliefs from within its own ranks, particularly if such issues were given public prominence. And the Courant reviewer unerringly put his finger on that aspect of the matter: “This article which we are discussing is objectionable in itself; but our chief objection to it is, that it should be sent far and wide over English-speaking countries as an impartial account of the present state of our knowledge of the Bible. We regret that a publication which will be admitted without suspicion into many a religious household, and many a carefully-guarded public library, should, upon so all-important a matter as the records of our faith, take a stand - a decided stand - on the wrong side. We hope the publishers and the editor will look after the contributors - or after each other - and cease to pass off rationalistic speculation as ascertained fact.” (38) All this was bitterly embarrassing for the Free Kirk, which promptly initiated an ‘inquiry’, or heresy hunt, through its College Committee. The cumbersome legal process appeared at length to have reached a conclusion in 1880, when Smith’s forensic brilliance enabled him to escape with no more than a formal admonition that he should be more ‘guarded’ in future. But only three weeks later, volume eleven of the Encyclopaedia Britannica appeared, with Smith’s latest article, ‘Hebrew Language and Literature’. A year later, the Free Church General Assembly formally dismissed Robertson Smith from his professorial post in Aberdeen. The five years’ trial at the bar of the General Assembly of the Free Kirk wore WRS down, both mentally and physically, but the publicity value was tremendous. Stevenson would have revelled in such public notoriety. Robertson Smith immediately became joint editor (with Baynes) of the Britannica and, as Baynes’ health worsened, the younger man gradually assumed full responsibility for the editorial work, while contributing countless articles, small and large, signed and unsigned, to its pages. After Baynes’ death, Smith became Editor-in-Chief until the encyclopaedia’s completion in February, 1889. In 1883, he moved to Cambridge as Lord Almoner’s Reader in Arabic; in 1885, he was appointed Cambridge University Librarian; and in 1889, five years before his death, he became Professor of Arabic at Cambridge. Today, Robertson Smith is remembered with gratitude by most (but not all!) theological scholars as the man who liberated British biblical criticism from the straitjacket of traditional literalism. Still more importantly, he is regarded as the founding father, in this country, of comparative religion and religious anthropology. Emile Durkheim, pioneer of modern sociology, acknowledged his personal debt to him, while Sigmund Freud hailed him as the man whose last book, “The Religion of the Semites”, had given him the final clue to workings of the Oedipus complex. Intellectually, Robertson Smith towers (with Clerk Maxwell) over his Scottish Victorian contemporaries. Only Robert Louis Stevenson, for very different reasons, has the same claim to our lasting admiration and affection. If RLS’s flirtation with the Encyclopaedia Britannica ended with a rude jilting, Smith became progressively more firmly wedded to it. Robertson Smith never married, and in a very real sense the Encyclopaedia became surrogate lover and mistress to him over a span of thirteen years. Beyond his mother and sisters, Smith seldom had contact of any kind with women, and seems to have successfully sublimated his sexual drive into intellectual pursuits. For Stevenson, as we know, it was quite otherwise. In Smith’s case, one may infer an early resolution of the unconscious Oedipal struggle with his father that re-emerged at adulthood (as Freud would have predicted) in the form of fierce intellectual controversy with the elders of his tribe, by whom he was in the end ritually sacrificed - only to rise again in the apotheosis of Cambridge Fellow and encyclopaedist par excéllence. Stevenson’s own Oedipal struggles were woefully protracted: indeed they were never successfully worked through and are all too plainly documented in his letters - the on-going battle against old Thomas on the one hand, and the life-long desire to possess a mother-figure to compensate for his childhood abandonment by the distant Margaret Stevenson. For as long as his father remained alive, RLS was trapped in an angry, helpless state of child-like dependency upon his parents. Robertson Smith, in contrast, quickly become wholly independent of parental support, both at Aberdeen University and at New College, through the many scholarships he gained and the remunerative work in teaching (Physics and Hebrew) he was so readily offered at Edinburgh. Both WRS and RLS were ambitious, striving men but Smith’s rise to eminence seems at first sight to have been the more rapid. Intellectually, he had matured quickly - indeed his father said of him that he was ‘never young in the ordinary sense’(39) - and he rapidly acquired the art of penning incisive scholarly papers which bore from the outset the stamp of a lucid and remorselessly analytic style. Stevenson, as we know, found it hard to develop his literary art, although his potential was detected - by Leslie Stephen and Sidney Colvin for example - from the moment he came under Fanny Sitwell’s spell. RLS, after all, was four years younger than Robertson Smith and was only 24 when George Grove published (in Macmillan’s Magazine) that fine essay on invalidism, ‘Ordered South’ – Stevenson’s first real literary breakthrough. Smith in fact was the same age when he became Professor of Hebrew at Aberdeen Free College, and had his first major theological paper published in the British Quarterly Review. There is no record of any contact between Stevenson and Smith in later days; but there exists one suggestive clue. By 1875, both men had been elected members of the Savile Club in London, and we know that both stayed at the Club during their visits to London (40). Robertson Smith (probably nominated by A. P. Stanley, Dean of Westminster) became a member of the Savile after his appointment in 1874 to the Old Testament Review Committee, which met at Jerusalem Chambers in Westminster; RLS was almost certainly nominated by Colvin, who had been a founder member of the Club from 1868. Writing to his mother from the Savile Club in July, 1879, RLS adds a terse postscript: ‘N.B. Robertson Smith is great fun’. (41) Perhaps Stevenson was simply owning, with a certain schadenfreude, to his enjoyment in reading press accounts of the heresy trial, then at its height; but I would prefer to believe that the two had spent a convivial evening at the Savile Club and that RLS had at last discovered something of Smith’s brilliant though often cutting wit and repartee. Both men certainly sparkled in congenial company and Stevenson would have found that Smith was no longer the priggish young physics tutor who had written to his father in 1868 of his Hebrew students: “The Juniors are perhaps improving a little; but that is doubtful. I think I have considerably modified their open profanity in my presence; but I do not know if I have touched their consciences — if indeed they have any.” (42) Yet, if indeed the two men did meet again at the Savile Club, as seems very probable, how are we to account for the seemingly contemptuous tone of Stevenson’s couplet in ‘The Scotsman’s Return from Abroad’? “A bletherin’ clan, no warth a preen As bad as Smith o’ Aiberdeen!” (43) Those lines, however, are always taken out of context. The whole poem is one of RLS’s role-playing games of versification with Charles Baxter, ‘from Mr Thomson to Mr Johnstone’ and it satirises, not Robertson Smith, but the sectarian prejudices of the Scottish church-going public, epitomised in the dour intolerance of Stevenson’s own father: “The gangrel Scot uplifts his hands At lack o a’ sectarian fush’n He rins, puir man, frae place to place, Tries a’ their graceless means o’ grace, Preacher on preacher, kirk on kirk - This yin’s a stot an’ thon a stirk - A blethrin’ clan, no worth a preen, As bad as Smith o’ Aiberdeen!” And so I propose that Stevenson and Smith, outwardly such contrasts in temperament, born on opposite sides of the great ecclesiastical divide of Victorian Scotland, and fated to have such different careers, had far more in common than would first appear. Ironically, both men came to be pilloried cruelly in their later days by W.E. Henley, who had been Stevenson’s close friend for so many years before the explosive quarrel in 1888. Of Robertson Smith, Henley wrote in 1889: “All Scotland held him in flattering respect, or still more flattering horror… How could he be so desperately wicked (it was urged) when he was so desperately dull? Or was he a theological hybrid, part Voltaire without wit and part Spurgeon without eloquence.” (44) And of RLS, Henley contended: “Withal, if he wanted a thing, he went after it with an entire contempt for the consequences. For these, indeed, the Shorter Catechist was ever prepared to answer; so that, whether he did well or badly, he was sure to come out unabashed and cheerful.” (45) It is a sad epilogue that the embittered, limping Henley chose to use his undoubted talents to malign both men at the close of their short lives. Certainly he possessed the shrewdness to detect their respective vulnerabilities, charging Robertson Smith with lacking ‘tact and patience’ (46), and deriding Stevenson for being ‘a Seraph in Chocolate’ and a ‘barley-sugar effigy’ (47); but those bitterly vindictive character distortions perhaps serve only to highlight the true stature of the men and, more than a century on, help to bring them together as figures worthy of our continuing admiration. ___ Notes 1. Not to be confused with the job of laboratory technician or ‘mechanical assistant’. 2. Cambridge University Library, Add. Mss 7449, D70. 3. In “Brother Scots” (London: Constable and Co., 1927) p.68: ‘Robert Louis Stevenson … a pupil who regarded the physical laboratory as a suitable forum for theological discussion’. 4. ‘Some College Memories’ (1886), in Memories and Portraits (London: Heinemann, 1924) Skerryvore Edition of the Works of Robert Louis Stevenson, vol. xxv., p,18. RLS describes himself as ‘a certain lean, ugly, idle, unpopular student’. 5. ‘Some College Memories’, p. 20. 6. To use Stevenson’s description of himself, both were ‘intelligent and sickly’ (‘Memoirs of Himself’, in “Other Essays”, Skerryvore edn, vol.xxv, p.220). 7. William Pirie Smith (WRS’s father) supplemented a meagre income by accepting boarding pupils at the manse of Keig and there exist at Cambridge University Library several manuscript accounts written by former pupils which vividly illustrate the breadth and brilliance of the father’s teaching style. 8. ‘Memoirs of Himself’, p.224. 9. William Robertson Smith, “The Religion of the Semites” (London: Adam and Charles Black, 1927) p.29. 10. William James, “The Varieties of Religious Experience” (London: Longmans, Green and Co., 1902). 11. Stevenson, ‘Selections from his Note book’; Skerryvore edn, vol.xxv, p.270. 12. Baynes (1823-1887) was Professor of Logic and Rhetoric at St Andrews. 13. ‘Prefatory Notice’, Encyclopaedia Britannica (9th edn) 1875, p.v. 14. RLS met Francis Sitwell fortuitously in the summer of 1873, when both were guests at Cockfield Rectory in Suffolk, the home of his cousin, Maud Babington. 15. Colvin’s articles for the Britannica include ‘Art’, ‘Botticelli’ and ‘Leonardo’. 16. Tait was president of Section A (Mathematics and Physics) at the British Association meeting held at Edinburgh in 1871 and played host (with Smith’s help) to a variety of visiting scientists, including Heinrich Helmholtz - almost the only contemporary German scientist of whom he was not deeply jealous. 17. McLennan wrote in September to Smith (who was back in Aberdeen) describing a convivial ‘gathering of philosophers’ at St Andrews: the party included Baynes, Huxley, and Tait. (C.U.L. Add. Mss 7449 D451). Tait as well as McLennan would have sung Robertson Smith’s praises loudly. 18. Encyclopaedia Britannica (9th edn) vol. iii, pp.581f. 19. “The Letters of Robert Louis Stevenson”, Bradford Booth and Ernest Mehew eds. (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1994) vol.ii, p.144 (21.06.75). 20. Letters, vol ii, p.149 (07.07.75). 21. Letters, vol ii, p.156 (22.08.75). 22. The last volume, the Index, came out early in 1889. 23. The probability that Stevenson had subsequent articles for Britannica in mind is indicated by his beginning work in 1875 on ‘Charles of Orleans’: cf. Letters, vol.ii, p.159 (to Colvin): ‘I have written a very mean thing about Béranger; but I am going to write a capital article about Charles d’Orleans - a sort of thing that people don’t get every day’. Of course, it never appeared in the EB, only as an essay in “Familiar Studies of Men and Books”. The encyclopaedia article on Charles d’Orleans was eventually written by George Saintsbury, appearing under ‘Orleans, Charles d’ ’. 24. RLS wrote to Colvin in November: ‘No - my “Burns” is not done yet, it has led me so far afield that I cannot finish it … And then again, to be plain, I shirk the work of the critical part, shirk it as a man shirks a long jump. It is awful to have to express and differentiate Burns, in a column or two. O golly, I say you know, it can’t be done at the money’ (Letters, vol.ii, p.165). 25. Letters, vol ii, p.173. 26. Letters, vol ii, pp.174f. 27. Baynes, in effect, gave a curate’s egg judgment: it was very good in parts and could be accepted perhaps with some amendment; but he felt the article lacked ‘enthusiasm’ and placed too much emphasis on Burns’ weaknesses. RLS did not of course take up the suggestion that he rewrite the article. 28. Letters, vol ii, p.175 (18.06.75). 29. First published in the Cornhill Magazine, October, 1879 but included in “Familiar Studies of Men and Books” (Skerryvore edn, vol.xxiii, pp.29-65). 30. “Familiar Studies”, p.30. 31. “Familiar Studies”, p.47. 32. “Familiar Studies”, p. 50. 33. “Familiar Studies”, p. 53. 34. “Familiar Studies”, p.61. 35. There is unanimous agreement, however, that the author of the review was A.H. Charteris, Professor of Biblical Criticism at Edinburgh University and a pillar of the Established Church. 36. Edinburgh Courant (15.04.76): ‘The New Encyclopaedia Britannica on Theology’. 37. Courant review: Smith was doubly misquoted by the reviewer. His article actually said, ‘There is no reason to think that a prophet ever received a revelation which was not spoken directly and pointedly to his own time’. 38. Courant review 39. CUL Add. Mss 7449 F90 (11.6.1877) 40. In a fragment entitled “Diogenes at the Savile Club”, RLS gives a whimsical but revealing description of the Club: ‘Here gather daily those young eaglets, the swordsmen of the pen, who are the pride and wonder of the world, and the effete pensionnaires of the Athenaeum. They are all young … and they are all Rising.’ (Skerryvore edn, vol.xiv, p.349). Stevenson and Smith both wrote frequently to correspondents from the Savile Club - Stevenson from 1875 and Smith from 1879. 41. Letters, vol.ii, p.327. 42. CUL Add. Mss 7449 C99 (11.05.1868). 43. Underwoods xii (said by Fanny Stevenson to have been written in 1880). 44. The Scots Observer, May 25, 1889. Henley had been an editorial assistant for some time with the Encyclopaedia Britannica and was jealous of Smith’s success, as he was of Stevenson’s. 45. Pall-Mall Magazine, vol. 25 (1901) pp.505-514: quoted by McLynn (1993) p.510. 46. The Scots Observer (25.5.1889). Henley went on to claim of Smith’s editorial work for the Encyclopaedia Britannica that: ‘… no such vast heap of valuable stuff could have been worse arranged, or proportioned with less art’. 47. Frank McLynn, “Robert Louis Stevenson: a Biography” (London: Hutchinson, 1993) ad.loc. This work is protected by copyright. All rights reserved. The SCOTS Project and the University of Glasgow do not necessarily endorse, support or recommend the views expressed in this document. Information about document and author: Text Text audience Specialists: Audience size: 100+ Text details Method of composition: Wordprocessed Year of composition: 2001 Word count: 6157 General description: The contrasting personalities of R L Stevenson and W Robertson Smith Text medium Periodical/journal: Text publication details Published: Publisher: Aberdeen University Alumnus Association Publication year: 2001 Place of publication: Aberdeen ISBN/ISSN: 0001-320X Edition: LVIV 1 Part of larger text: Contained in: Aberdeen University Review, 2001, LVIV 1 Editor: Colin Milton Page numbers: 386-397 Text setting Education: Text type Article: Author Author details Author id: 723 Forenames: Gordon Initials: K Surname: Booth Gender: Male Decade of birth: 1930 Educational attainment: University Age left school: 17 Upbringing/religious beliefs: Protestantism Occupation: Retired psychologist Place of birth: Cults Region of birth: Aberdeen Birthplace CSD dialect area: Abd Country of birth: Scotland Place of residence: Edinburgh Region of residence: Edinburgh Residence CSD dialect area: Edb Country of residence: Scotland Father's occupation: Bank Clerk Father's place of birth: Aberdeen Father's region of birth: Aberdeen Father's birthplace CSD dialect area: Abd Father's country of birth: Scotland Mother's occupation: Bookkeeper Mother's place of birth: Aberdeen Mother's region of birth: Aberdeen Mother's birthplace CSD dialect area: Abd Mother's country of birth: Scotland Languages: Language: English Speak: Yes Read: Yes Write: Yes Understand: Yes Circumstances: Generally Language: Scots Speak: Yes Read: Yes Write: Yes Understand: Yes Circumstances: In appropriate social context