Robert Louis Stevenson- Author

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Many innovations were created in the 1850s and 1860s. This was a time when submarines were invented, the first elevator was created, and solar flares were discovered. Through all of these discoveries that changed the world, one author was starting his illustrious career. Robert Louis Stevenson is a renowned British author who has written many fictitious novels. The most notable of his works include Treasure Island, A Child’s Garden of Verses, and The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. The majority of these stories contain traces of his pressured and misunderstood life. The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde was greatly influenced by Stevenson’s nightmares, illnesses, and great fascination with good versus evil.
Throughout Stevenson’s whole life, he had a vivid imagination and eventually contracted peculiar yet interesting dreams. One night, he is described to be having a horrific nightmare. “…having a nightmare. She woke him. He was indeed having a nightmare, but he complained, on being awakened, that he had not come to the end of what was proving to be a fascinating tale” (“Robert” Magill, 1860). The dream was described as dreaming about a transformation scene which was implanted in the novel, The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. His imagination was easily detectible in the story. Like The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, many settings from Stevenson’s other novels were once figments of his imagination (“Robert” Rollyson, 885).
There is undisputable evidence that Stevenson’s dreams were an influence in writing The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. In the sixth chapter of the novel, Enfield and Utterson are going on their weekly Sunday walk and they go past the door that the men once saw Hyde...

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