
Robert Louis Stevenson at age 7.
I’ve been thinking how different poets speak to us at different times in our lives.
Take Robert Louis Stevenson, for example. “My Shadow,” from A Child’s Garden of Verses, was the first poem I truly loved. I picked it out of a library book when I was 8 or 9, and was convinced it was written just for me.
I memorized the poem and never took my shadow for granted ever again. She was much better than an imaginary friend, but what a copycat! ☺
When I had lunch at the Wai’oli Tea Room recently, I was fascinated by a picture I saw of Stevenson with King Kalakaua (the “Merrie Monarch”). I knew that Louis, as he liked to be called, spent about three years (1888-90) sailing around the eastern and central Pacific, visiting the Marquesas, Society Islands, Tahiti, etc., with an extended stay (5 months) in Hawai’i, before purchasing 400+ acres and building a home in Samoa (where he is buried). I wanted to know more.

RLS and his wife Fanny in the Gilbert Islands.
After a little digging, I stumbled upon an online exhibit at the Edinburgh City Libraries website, featuring a scrapbook of Louis’s South Sea adventures which belonged to his stepson, Lloyd Osbourne. What a treasure trove of goodies!



