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  1. Katharine de Mattos. She was there when, directly after the dream, Louis poured out the first draft of Jekyll and Hyde in just three days, a tour de force totalling more than 30,000 words. One assumes Katharine made herself scarce during the blazing row that followed after Fanny told her husband he had missed the allegorical point of the story and

  2. Katharine Elizabeth Alan de Mattos (née Stevenson; 1851–1939) was a Scottish author and journalist. She was the youngest daughter of Margaret Scott Jones, daughter of Humphrey Herbert Jones of Anglesey and the lighthouse engineer, Alan Stevenson.

  3. Katharine Elizabeth Alan Stevenson de Mattos (1851-1939) was RLS’s cousin and Bob Stevenson’s sister. She was born to Alan Stevenson and Margaret Scott Jones. She married William Sydney de Mattos (b. 1851) and the couple had two surviving children.

  4. 22 de may. de 2023 · KATHARINE DE MATTOS. Its ill to loose the bands that God decreed to bind; Still will we be the children of the heather and the wind. Far away from home, O it’s still for you and me That the broom is blowing bonnie in the north countrie.

  5. Katharine de Mattos, née Stevenson, remains a relatively obscure figure in the Robert Louis Stevenson saga, despite being the dedi- catee of Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, as well as the unwitting catalyst of the celebrated 1888 quarrel between him and his friend William Ernest Henley.

  6. 6 de nov. de 2016 · During the last week in August 1885, RLS and his wife, stepson and cousin Katharine de Mattos set off to stay in a farmohouse on Dartmoor. The author was taken with a violent hemorrhage and they had to stop at Exeter, according to the doctor’s advice.

  7. Cousin of Robert Louis Stevenson, whose novella The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde (1886) was dedicated to her. Married William Sydney de Mattos on 25 June 1874, and separated in 1881.