Monday 31 August 2015

Children's Classics

The Silver Lining in Treasure Island                                                                                      November 30, 2013.

               "Treasure Island" written by Robert Louis Stevenson is one of the great adventure tales of all times. It is a suspenseful story of tropical destinations, pesky pirates, and buried gold. It is a story of greed and treasure maps complete with the pirate's signature trademark "skull and crossbones."  Stevenson's novel is a romance, written specifically for a young audience. It is the story of one boy's coming of age. Jim Hawkins, the story's main protagonist and narrator is a timid boy at the beginning of the novel but as the tale unfolds he develops some of the essential characteristics of a swashbuckling sailor. "My curiosity, in a sense was stronger than my fear."(509)  By the end of the journey he has outwitted pirates, taken over a schooner, and saved many of his loyal shipmates from certain death. It might be an oversimplification to describe Jim as the hero in this novel, when in fact, "Treasure Island” is the story of Long John Silver.
               The one-legged marauding mariner is the indisputable villain of "Treasure Island." The quintessential fortune hunting pirate. Long John proves to be the most interesting of the book's main characters. Stevenson's well developed pirate persona is a true work of genius, not because he exemplifies everything that is exciting about boyhood adventure. Instead, it is Cap'n Silver the romantic character worthy of cult hero status that steals the show. He's not just a pirate, but he is everyone's favorite "Gentleman of Fortune." While other characters in the novel are presented in the simplest of description, Long John Silver is presented in precise detail. We know his age, his marital status, and his history. The shrewd Silver is a man of many ( ham sized) faces.
               Long before the personable John Silver is introduced in Chapter 7,  Captain Billy Bones pays Jim Hawkins a silver fourpenny to keep a " weather-eye open for the seafaring man with one leg."(498) The mere thought of Long John Silver being in close proximity sends Billy into bone rattling panic attacks.  Even Jim Hawkins has nightmares about the hideous one-legged monster. "How the personage haunted my dreams, I need scarcely tell you. On stormy nights, when the wind shock the four corners of the house and the surf roared along the cove and up the cliffs, I would see him in a thousand forms, and with a thousand diabolical expressions." (498) Stevenson's lead-in during the Part One of the novel is a brilliant portrayal of the novel's main antagonist. Without a definite identity but with a reputation for cruelty, John Silver becomes larger than life. Even though he still wants behind the curtain for his grand entrance, the tension created by this foreshadowing serves to heighten the readers curiosity about Stevenson's pirate.
               We first meet the enterprising Silver in Part Two of the Novel. He is a tavern owner that keeps a clear head at all times. He isn't given to drink and debauchery like the other pirates. He is the sober strategist staying alert, while his tavern's patrons drink to excess. Rum appears throughout the novel as a powerful symbol of the pirate's violence, recklessness, and uncontrolled behavior. In fact, the devil's grog is the pirates undoing.  Just as the pirate's shanty explains," ...dead men's chest, ho ho ho and a bottle of rum." Sailors drink themselves to death. Captain Billy is the first, followed by Mr. Arrow the first mate on the Hispaniola.  He is constantly tipsy until he falls overboard. Only Silver can keep his composure and stays the course. (The abstinence shown by the quartermaster was appealing to readers in the Victorian age. An era of acutely conservative morals.) It is not until near the end of the novel, when John Silver recognizes his imminent and inevitable defeat that he drinks cognac. "Well, I'll take a drain myself, Jim" said he. "I need a caulker, for there's trouble on hand."(586)
               Early in the novel, Robert Louis Stevenson represents John Silver with enough pleasing character traits to make the Bristol, tavern owner seem convincing enough to fool the suspicious, yet naive, Jim Hawkins, " he was too deep, and too ready, and too clever for me,..., I would have gone bail for the innocence of Long John Silver."(521) Stevenson has created a charmingly complex yet morally flawed character. On one hand, he is a cold hearted killer and devious manipulator with no real sense of loyalty to anything but "that blunt" money. On the other hand, he displays admirable qualities that inspire the gentry to trust his good sensibilities. The success of Stevenson's novel is due, in part, to Jim's heroic actions that are inspired by the crafty John Silver.  His positive character traits don't save him from being a tragic character. Instead, Stevenson novel is an exploration of what it means to be human.  Even in the end, when all seems lost for the crooked cook, Silver still has the cunning, cleverness, and foresight to plan his next move, and escape the hangman's noose. "Jim, " he whispered, "take that , and stand by for trouble. ' And he passed me a double-barreled pistol." (600) Long John is the opportunist at every turn. By giving Jim a pistol he is, in fact, trading his freedom for a chance to rejoin the gentry and escape the other pirates deadly fate.  " I am on your side now, hand and glove; and I shouldn't wish for to see the party weakened, let alone yourself, seeing as I know what I owes you." (605)  The convincing conman is always scheming and plotting for a way to gain an advantage, and live to fight another day.
               The pirates die out rapidly over the course of the novel and are continually associated with defeat and deformity. The pirate's skeleton found near the treasure symbolizes the superstitious pirates impending doom.  Long John Silver hasn't avoided the pirates curse but he has defied the dire consequences of his buccaneering. He is deformed yet "agile as a monkey even without leg or crutch." (540)  his brutality is swift when he kills Tom.  His physical defects showcase his strength of character. Although he is rough and rugged, he is also well spoken and gentlemanly. As the name Silver suggests, there is something valuable in the tarnished sailor. His silver tongue "he can speak like a book when so minded," and powers of persuasion contrast the crew of misfits that follow his leadership. One by one they walk their own plank. Only the charismatic long shot Silver has the skills to survive with "three or four hundred Guinness, to help him on his further wanderings." (606)  The ability of slippery John Silver to avoid prison or worse is what makes Stevenson's novel so attractive. Be his name Sparrow or Silver, the immortal character lives on today in modern films like, "Pirates of the Caribbean."
               Silver is much more than just the villain in a children's novel. The ever decisive, impressively astute, and uncommonly hell singed "barbeque" leaves a lasting impression. One minute he is heartlessly cruel and treacherous. The next, he is the consummate politician ready to win a pirate's election (chapter 29), and in doing so, wins favor with adventure tale afficionados of all ages. Be it when he negotiates his way out of potential disaster by patronizing young Jim Hawkins.  " I know when a game is up, I do; and I know a lad that is staunch. Ah, you that's young - you and me might have done a power of good together. "(583)  Or when, despite his formidable and frightening appearance, he is quick to inspire trust in the gentry. Captain Smollett and Dr. Livesey have great confidence in the princely pirate's character at the outset of the voyage. "Well, squire, "said Dr, Livesey," I don't put much faith in your discoveries, as a general thing; but I will say this, John Silver suits me." (523)  At every turn, Silver has outsmarted his rivals, anticipated every changing tide of the story's choppy plot, and planned for every conceivable outcome. He might not be a hero, but Silver's survival skills make him a favorite among readers of adventure tales.
               To enjoy "Treasure Island" one must suspend any notion of morality in favor of the broader ideals of romantic individualism. Right and wrong don't serve Stevenson's humanist motives. Instead, the novelist's true intention was to create a seascape of excitement and fantasy. "What might be taken as a moral confusion in the story is better viewed as a clue to the essential nature of the adventure tale." * In the end, Long John Silver, with the help of Ben Gunn, is allowed to escape. He jumps ship in a Spanish American port with a bag of gold and his faithful travelling companion; the (200 year old) parrot, Cap'n Flint. Maybe, "we were all pleased to be quit of him." However, "the bar silver and the arms still lie, where Flint buried them...,"(606) and every young pirate with dreams of sailing the seven seas has only to reach for a copy of "Treasure Island," to enlist with "The Sea Cook" on his next mutinous adventure.


* Lesson Three: Treasure Island. Learning Objectives. John W. Griffith.

No comments:

Post a Comment