The Black Arrow: A Tale of the Two Roses
Author
Robert Louis Stevenson
Country
Scottish
Language
English
Genre(s)
Historical, Adventure, Romance novel
Publisher
Charles Scribner’s Sons (USA) & Cassell (UK)
Publication date
1888
For other uses see Black arrow (disambiguation)
The Black Arrow: A Tale of the Two Roses is an 1888 novel by the Scottish author Robert Louis Stevenson, which can be classed genre-wise as a historical adventure novel and a romance. It first appeared as a serial in 1883 with the subtitle “A Tale of Tunstall Forest” beginning in Young Folks; A Boys’ and Girls’ Paper of Instructive and Entertaining Literature, vol. XXII, no. 656 (Saturday, June 30, 1883)
Contents
- 1 Synopsis
- 2 Plot
- 3 Characters
- 4 Chronology and geography
- 5 Aspects and critique of the document
- 6 Latest annotated edition
- 7 Film, TV or theatrical adaptations
- 8 Editions
- 9 Sources, references, external links, quotations
- 10 Footnotes
//
Synopsis
The Black Arrow tells the story of Richard (Dick) Shelton during the Wars of the Roses: how he becomes a knight, rescues his lady Joanna Sedley, and obtains justice for the murder of his father, Sir Harry Shelton. Outlaws in Tunstall Forest organized by Ellis Duckworth, whose weapon and calling card is a black arrow, cause Dick to suspect that his guardian Sir Daniel Brackley and his retainers are responsible for his father’s murder. Dick’s suspicions are enough to turn Sir Daniel against him, so he has no recourse but to escape from Sir Daniel and join the outlaws of the Black Arrow against him. This struggle sweeps him up into the greater conflict surrounding them all. The story of the Wars of the Roses is told in miniature by The Black Arrow.
A crucial moment in the novel when Sir Oliver, Sir Daniel, and Dick Shelton are surprised by a black arrow in the Moat House refectory hall
Plot
In the reign of “old King Henry VI. (1422-1461, 1470-1471) and during the Wars of the Roses (1455-1487) the story begins with the Tunstall Moat House alarm bell being rung to begin mustering troops for its absent lord Sir Daniel Brackley, who intends to join the Battle of Risingham. It is then that the “fellowship” known as “The Black Arrow” headquartered in Tunstall Forest begins to strike with its “four black arrows” for the “four black hearts” of Brackley and three of his retainers: Nicholas Appleyard, Bennet Hatch, and Sir Oliver Oates, the parson. The rhyme that is posted in connection with this attack gets the protagonist Richard (Dick) Shelton, ward of Sir Daniel, to become curious about the fate of his father Sir Harry Shelton. Having been dispatched to Kettley, where Sir Daniel was quartered, and sent to Tunstall Moat House by return dispatch, he falls in with a fugitive from Sir Daniel, Joanna Sedley, disguised as a boy and going by the alias of John Matcham. She was an heiress kidnapped by Sir Daniel, who wanted to obtain guardianship over her. Coincidentally, Sir Daniel was intending to marry Joanna to Dick himself; and, in her male disguise, Joanna brings up the matter to Dick, affording her the opportunity of feeling him out on the subject. Dick says he is not interested, but he does ask her if his intended bride is good-looking and of pleasant disposition.
Wikisource has original text related to this article:
The Black Arrow
While making their way through Tunstall Forest that covers the better part of Book 1 Joanna tries to persuade Dick to turn against Sir Daniel in sympathy with the Black Arrow outlaws, whose hideout they discover. The next day they are met in the forest by Sir Daniel himself disguised as a leper and making his way back to the Moat House after his side was defeated at the Battle of Risingham. Dick and Joan then follow Sir Daniel to the Moat House. Here Dick changes sides when he finds out that Sir Daniel is the real murderer of his father, and escapes injured from the Moat House. He is rescued by the outlaws of the Black Arrow with whom he throws in his lot for the rest of the story.
The second half of the novel, Books 3-5, tells how Dick rescues his true love Joanna from the clutches of Sir Daniel with the help of both the Black Arrow fellowship and the Yorkist army led by Richard Crookback, the future Richard III of England.
The second half of the narrative centers around Shoreby, where the Lancastrian forces are well entrenched. Robert Louis Stevenson inserts seafaring adventure in chapters 4-6 of Book 3 as Dick and the outlaws steal a ship and attempt a seaside rescue of Joanna, who is being kept in a house by the sea. They are unsuccessful, and after Joanna is moved to Sir Daniel’s main quarters in Shoreby, Dick then visits her in the guise of a Franciscan friar, which was a disguise used during the Wars of the Roses. Stevenson, the popularizer of the tales of the Arabian nights, has Dick tell the tale of Ali Baba and the Forty Thieves in Book 4, chapter 6 to help him escape from the ruined sea captain Arblaster, whose ship Dick and the outlaws had stolen.
Richard Crookback, Duke of Gloucester, makes his appearance in Book 5, with whom Dick keeps his rendezvous. Dick’s accurate knowledge of the Lancastrian forces in Shoreby aid Crookback in winning the battle. Dick is also fortunate as a successful commander in this battle. A delighted Crookback accordingly knights Dick, and after the battle gives him 50 horsemen to pursue Sir Daniel, who has escaped Shoreby with Joanna. Dick succeeds in rescuing Joanna, but loses his men in the process. He, Joanna, and Alicia Risingham travel to Holywood where he and Joanna are finally married. In this way he keeps his initial pledge to Joanna to see her safe to Holywood.
Just before the wedding on the outskirts of Holywood Dick encounters a fugitive Sir Daniel, whom he keeps from entering the city and spoiling his wedding. While Sir Daniel slinks away he is shot by the final black arrow from the bow of Ellis Duckworth, who tells Dick, “But be at rest; the Black Arrow flieth nevermore – the fellowship is broken.”
Sir Richard and Lady Shelton live in Tunstall Moat House untroubled by the rest of the Wars of the Roses. They provide for both Captain Arblaster and the outlaw Lawless by pensioning them and settling them in Tunstall hamlet. Lawless does a volte face by taking the name of Brother Honestus, a Franciscan friar.
Title page of the first edition of 1888, US edition a few weeks before the UK edition
Characters
- Richard (Dick) Shelton – (the protagonist) son of the late Sir Harry Shelton, heir of Tunstall. He is “not yet eighteen” in May, 1460, the time period of the first part of the narrative. He is described as “sun-browned and grey-eyed.”
- Clipsby – a saucy Tunstall peasant. He is the first to alert Dick to the dishonesty of his guardian Daniel Brackley: “Y’are a lad; but when ye come to a man’s inches, ye will find ye have an empty pocket.”
- Bennet Hatch – a middle aged retainer of Sir Daniel Brackley, and bailiff of the Tunstall hundred. He is described as “a brown-faced, grizzled fellow, heavy of hand and grim of mein.”
- Nicholas Appleyard – a septuagenarian veteran of the Battle of Agincourt (1415): “his face was like a walnut-shell, both for colour and wrinkles; but his old grey eye was still clear enough, and his sight unabated.”
- Sir Oliver Oates – the local Tunstall parson and Sir Daniel’s clerk. A “tall, portly, ruddy, black-eyed man of near fifty.” He is portrayed in the novel as a cowardly sychophant of Sir Daniel Brackley. His knowledge of the law facilitates Sir Daniel’s political and financial gain.
- Sir Daniel Brackley – (the antagonist) a self-serving, unscrupulous knight, who sides with either York or Lancaster as it brought him “some increase of fortune.” He also garnered income by taking rents from lands that came into his hands. He enriched himself by obtaining wardships of rich heirs in their minority such as Dick Shelton and procuring rich marriages for them. His vacillating character resembles that of the historic Earl Thomas Stanley and his brother Sir William Stanley in the Wars of the Roses. The ending of the respective sir names is the same: “-ley.” Sir Daniel was different from the Stanleys in that he was not a simple opportunist but a devious, avaricious villain. He is described by the author as having a bald head and a “thin, dark visage.”
- The Walsinghams– Stevenson’s renaming of the Woodvilles of the Wars of the Roses. They do not play a part in the narrative of The Black Arrow, but it is intimated that in the recent past they had exercised lordship and received rents in Tunstall and Kettley. They are described as “poor as thieves.” The Woodville family during the Wars of the Roses was poor in being composed largely of commoners, ennobled by marriage under Edward IV of England.
- Joanna Sedley – (the heroine) also known as John Matcham, the ward of the Lord Foxham but kidnapped by Sir Daniel. She is sixteen in May, 1460. Her softness and diminutive frame are constantly alluded to in Book 1 as unbecoming to her masculine attire, but later this is set in contrast to her appearance and bearing as a noble young lady: “she, who had seemed so little and so awkward in the attire of Matcham, was now tall like a young willow, and swam across the floor as though she scorned the drudgery of walking.”
- Will Lawless – a “Friar Tuck” type of outlaw, member of the Black Arrow Fellowship, who has been many things in life, including a Franciscan friar. He helps Dick Shelton visit his beloved Joanna by disguising him as a friar. The final paragraph tells how he ended life as a friar.
- Ellis Duckworth – organiser of the Black Arrow Fellowship to avenge Harry Shelton, Simon Malmesbury, and himself. He was rumored to be an agent of Richard Neville, Earl of Warwick.
- Kit (Christopher) Greensheve– a Black Arrow outlaw
- John Capper – a Black Arrow outlaw
- Goody Hatch – wife of Bennet Hatch
- Lord Foxham– a local Yorkist magnate, guardian of Joanna Sedley.
- Sir John Hamley– kinsman of Lord Foxham and bridegroom intended by him for Joanna Sedley. At the end of the novel he becomes betrothed to Alicia Risingham.
- Hawksley – Lord Foxham’s retainer. He cares for his master on the Good Hope after the failed attempt to rescue Joanna Sedley from the house by the sea.
- Earl Risingham – a local Lancastrian magnate, uncle of Alicia Risingham, killed in the Battle of Shoreby.
- Alicia Risingham – niece of Earl Risingham and friend, confidant, and companion of Joanna Sedley. She coquettishly poses herself for romantic consideration by Dick Shelton, who graciously declines in favor of his true love Joanna.
- Lord Shoreby – a local Lancastrian magnate, killed by Black Arrow outlaws in Shoreby Abbey Church to prevent his marriage to Joanna Sedley.
- Captain Arblaster – the owner of the ship The Good Hope, stolen by Shelton and the Black Arrow Fellowship. He ends life as a pensioner in Tunstall Hamlet.
- Tom – Captain Arblaster’s first mate killed in the Battle of Shoreby
- Richard Crookback – Richard Plantagenet, Duke of Gloucester, future Richard III of England (a real historical person)
- Sir William Catesby – Richard Crookback’s retainer (a real historical person).
Chronology and geography
From the information given in the novel two time references for the two blocks of action that constitute the narrative can be pinpointed: May, 1460 and January, 1461. The important time indicator is the Battle of Wakefield, December 30, 1460, mentioned in the first paragraph of Book 3, Chapter 1:
“
Months had passed away since Richard Shelton made his escape from the hands of his guardian. These months had been eventful for England. The party of Lancaster, which was then in the very article of death, had once more raised its head. The Yorkists defeated and dispersed, their leader butchered on the field, it seemed, – for a very brief season in the winter following upon the events already recorded, as if the House of Lancaster had finally triumphed over its foes.
”
It is because Richard Crookback, Richard III of England, is presented as an adult active in the Wars of the Roses in January, 1461 that Stevenson points out in a footnote in Book 3, Chapter 6: “At the date of this story, Richard Crookback could not have been created Duke of Gloucester; but for clearness, with the reader’s leave, he shall so be called.” Richard was born in 1452, so he would have been merely 8 years old at the time of this story. A footnote in Book 5, Chapter 1 reads: “Richard Crookback would have been really far younger at this date .” Stevenson follows William Shakespeare in retrojecting Richard of Gloucester into an earlier period of the Wars of the Roses and portraying him as a dour hunchback—Stevenson: “the formidable hunchback” (Book 5, Chapter 2). (See Henry VI, part 2; Henry VI, part 3; and Richard III (play).) This characterization closely follows the Tudor myth, a tradition that overly vilified Richard of Gloucester and cast the entire English Fifteenth Century as a bloody, barbaric chaos in contrast to the Tudor era of law and order.
Curiously, the 1948 film portrays Richard Gloucester in a more favorable light than in the novel, somewhat anticipating the work of Paul Murray Kendall to rehabilitate him (Kendall, Richard III, 1956). When Gloucester is told he is “more than kind,” he replies jokingly that such rumors would ruin his “reputation”: the revision of the Tudor myth?
The Battle of Shoreby, a fictitious battle that is the main event of Book 5, is modeled after the First Battle of St Albans in the Wars of the Roses. This battle in history as in the novel is a victory for the House of York. The presence of an abbey church in Shoreby is reminiscient of the abbey church of Tewkesbury to which the Lancastrians fled for sanctuary after the battle on May 4, 1471.
Robert Louis Stevenson indicates that Tunstall of The Black Arrow is a real place by writing in the Prologue: John Amend-All: “Tunstall hamlet at that period, in the reign of old King Henry VI., wore much the same appearance as it wears today.” In south-east Suffolk, England, 18 miles NE of Ipswich, less than 10 miles from the North Sea a “Tunstall” is located with an accompanying forest. Stevenson and his family had visited Suffolk County in 1873. Orford is on the North Sea and has a road going to the northwest to Framlingham (the “highroad from Risingham to Shoreby”), and Leiston is also on the North Sea with a medieval abbey like Holywood of the novel. The River Till, which figures largely in Book 1 of the novel, would then be the River Deben in actuality. The River Deben flows near Kettleburgh.
The name of the main character Richard Shelton and his inheritance, Tunstall, were the name and title of an actual historical personage, Sir Richard Tunstall. He, as a Lancastrian and ardent supporter of King Henry VI of England, held Harlech Castle against the Yorkists through most of the 1460s when Edward IV of England ruled. In contrast, Richard Shelton, who becomes the knight of Tunstall at the end of The Black Arrow, is a staunch Yorkist.
Two other anachronisms of Stevenson are in having Sir Oliver and others speak of “Simnel” and “the Walsinghams” as the ones behind the Black Arrow fellowship in the narrative. Lambert Simnel is the focus of rebellion in Henry VII’s reign (1485-1509), and “the Walsinghams,” Stevenson’s renaming of the Woodvilles, would have played a part only after May, 1464, when Edward IV married Elizabeth Woodville.
Aspects and critique of the document
Stevenson himself was the first critic of his Black Arrow, referring to it as “tushery” with reference to his use of archaic English dialogue.
His wife Fanny was anonymously acknowledged in the “fly-leaf” as the “critic on the hearth”—this offers an explanation for this critic and the author having “joint lives” and being on the “hearth,” emblematic of home. For the planned fourteen-volume Edinburgh edition of his works, Stevenson indicated that he did not want to write an introduction to The Black Arrow—his wife Fanny, however, did so for the 1905 Biographical Edition of his works. The Black Arrow is in good company as Stevenson also did not like his The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (see below: links to the two volumes of his correspondence). The Black Arrow consists of 79,658 words, so it can be classified a novel rather than a novella, novelette, short story, or flash fiction.
Latest annotated edition
On December 18, 2007 Penguin Books issued the latest annotated edition of The Black Arrow with the introduction and notes by Professor John A. Sutherland, Emeritus Lord Northcliffe Professor of Modern English Literature at University College London and visiting professor of literature at the California Institute of Technology.
Film, TV or theatrical adaptations
The Black Arrow (1911)
Directed by
Oscar Apfel
Written by
Adapted by Charles M. Seay
Starring
Charles Ogle
Nathalie Jerome
Release date(s)
10 November 1911
Language
Silent film
English intertitles
IMDb profile
The Black Arrow has been adapted for film and television several times, including a 1911 film short starring Charles Ogle, a 1948 film starring Louis Hayward, a 1984 film starring Oliver Reed and Benedict Taylor, a Russian film Chyornaya strela 1985, a 1951 two-part British TV serial starring Denis Quilley, a 1968 seven-part Italian TV production entitled La freccia nera, and a British TV series running from 1972-1975 starring successively Robin Langford and Simon Cuff as Richard Shelton during its run.
Editions
This list is incomplete; you can help by expanding it.
- 1888, USA, Charles Scribner’s Sons, Pub date: 1888, Hardback first edition
- 1888, UK, Cassell, Pub date: 1888, Hardback
- 1930, UK/US, Standard Book Company, Hardback
- 2005, USA, Kessinger Publishing ISBN 0-7661-9477-9 , Pub date 30 April 2005, paperback
- 2007, UK & US, Penguin Books ISBN 978-0-141-44139-9, Pub date 18 December 2007, paperback
Sources, references, external links, quotations
- Wikisource text of The Black Arrow.
- The Black Arrow, available as a printer-ready PDF from Ria Press.
- Project Gutenberg etext of volume one of Robert Louis Stevenson’s correspondence in which he speaks of The Black Arrow as “tushery” at Project Gutenberg
- Project Gutenberg etext of volume two of Robert Louis Stevenson’s correspondence in which he discusses The Black Arrow at Project Gutenberg
- The Black Arrow: A Tale of the Two Roses (1911 movie)) at the Internet Movie Database
- The Black Arrow: A Tale of the Two Roses (1948 movie) at the Internet Movie Database
- The Black Arrow: A Tale of the Two Roses (1973 TV film) at the Internet Movie Database
- The Black Arrow: A Tale of the Two Roses (Chyornaya strela) (1985 Russian movie) at the Internet Movie Database
- The Black Arrow: A Tale of the Two Roses (1988 TV film) at the Internet Movie Database
Footnotes
- ^ clip of the first installment of The Black Arrow
- ^ Robert Louis Stevenson, The Works of Robert Louis Stevenson, Charles Curtis Bigelow and Temple Scott, eds., 10 vols. (Philadelphia: John D. Morris and Company, 1906), 3:xi: “EDITORIAL NOTE Under the title of The Black Arrow: A Tale of Tunstall Forest, by Captain George North, this story ran serially in Young Folks from June 30 to October 20, 1883.”
- ^ “With the end of the summer came the last chapter of The Black Arrow and our return to Hyères, where my husband took up other more exciting work” {Robert Louis Stevenson, The Black Arrow: A Tale of the Two Roses, Biographical Edition with a preface by Mrs. Stevenson, (New York: Charles Scribners Sons, 1905), xii}.
- ^ description of the clip of the first installment of The Black Arrow
- ^ Stevenson, op. cit., xvii.
- ^ Robert Louis Stevenson, The Black Arrow: A Tale of the Two Roses, edited with an introduction and notes by Robert Sutherland, (London: Penguin Books, 2007), 168.
- ^ Ibidem, 119, 262.
- ^ Ibidem, xxvii.
- ^ Ibidem, xxvii-xxviii.
- ^ Ibidem, xlvii, xix-xx, 255; Robert Louis Stevenson, The Works of Robert Louis Stevenson, Charles Curtis Bigelow and Temple Scott, eds., 10 vols. (Philadelphia: John D. Morris and Company, 1906), 3:xi: “The work is dedicated to his wife, ‘The Critic on the Hearth,’ yet she never read the book. Mrs. Stevenson once said, … ‘I always make it a rule never to read a novel the scene of which is laid in a bygone age. I would never read The Black Arrow and Mr. Stevenson thought it such a good joke that he insisted upon dedicating it to me.’”
- ^ Ibidem, i-ii.
Works by Robert Louis Stevenson
Novels:
Treasure Island (1883) • Prince Otto (1885) • Kidnapped (1886) • The Black Arrow (1888) • The Master of Ballantrae (1889) • The Wrong Box (1889) • The Wrecker (1892) • Catriona (1893) • The Ebb-Tide (1894) • Weir of Hermiston (1896) • St. Ives (1897)
New Arabian Nights (1882) • The Dynamiter (1885) • The Merry Men (1887) • Island Nights’ Entertainments (1893)
Short stories:
“The Body Snatcher” (1881) • “Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde” (1886)
Other works:
An Inland Voyage (1878) • Travels with a Donkey in the Cévennes (1879) • The Silverado Squatters (1883) • Memories and Portraits (1887) • Across the Plains (1892) • The Amateur Emigrant (1895)
Poetry:
A Child’s Garden of Verses (1885) • Underwoods (1887) • Ballads (1890) • Songs of Travel and Other Verses (1896)
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Categories: 1888 novels | Novels by Robert Louis Stevenson | Adventure novels | Romance novels | Historical novels | 1911 films | 1948 films | 1984 films | 1985 films | Black and white filmsHidden category: Incomplete lists
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