Kidnapped

by

Robert Louis Stevenson

Justice vs. Injustice Theme Analysis

Themes and Colors
Political Conflict and National Identity Theme Icon
Trust and Betrayal Theme Icon
Justice vs. Injustice Theme Icon
Coming of Age Theme Icon
LitCharts assigns a color and icon to each theme in Kidnapped, which you can use to track the themes throughout the work.
Justice vs. Injustice Theme Icon

At the start of Kidnapped, David believes that justice is tied to law, property, and family. But this belief quickly unravels when his own uncle, Ebenezer, instead of welcoming David, locks him in a dark room, tries to murder him, and arranges his kidnapping. In David’s time of need, the legal system is nowhere to be found. Instead of protecting David, it is distant, indifferent, or even complicit. Moreover, the deeper David moves into the Highlands, the more complicated justice becomes. There are no neutral parties in the struggle between Jacobites and supporters of King George. Men like Alan Breck live outside the law not because they lack values, but because the law refuses to see them as human. Alan follows his own code, one built on loyalty and pride, but he also demands payment and blood in ways David, who maintains to some degree the belief that the law should dictate what is right, cannot easily accept.

When Colin Campbell is murdered and David is falsely accused, the difference between official justice and personal revenge becomes dangerously thin. In the novel’s world, being right offers no protection, and guilt or innocence is often decided not by who’s legally right, but by who has power. By the end of the novel, David comes to see justice not as something given but something a person must work for and create for themselves. For instance, he pushes for a fair settlement with his uncle, not out of vengeance, but because silence would allow wrongdoing to go unchallenged. He also works to protect Alan, even when the law sees Alan only as a criminal. For David, doing what is just may mean breaking the law—and it may cost him his safety or his future. But through David’s choice to pursue it anyway, the novel suggests that getting true justice is sometimes an extrajudicial process, especially under politically fraught circumstances.

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Justice vs. Injustice Quotes in Kidnapped

Below you will find the important quotes in Kidnapped related to the theme of Justice vs. Injustice.
Chapter 7 Quotes

It was Mr. Riach (Heaven forgive him!) who gave the boy drink; and it was, doubtless, kindly meant; but besides that it was ruin to his health, it was the pitifullest thing in life to see this unhappy, unfriended creature staggering, and dancing, and talking he knew not what. Some of the men laughed, but not all; others would grow as black as thunder (thinking, perhaps, of their own childhood or their own children) and bid him stop that nonsense, and think what he was doing. As for me, I felt ashamed to look at him, and the poor child still comes about me in my dreams.

Related Characters: David Balfour (speaker), Ransome , Mr. Riach
Page Number: 53-54
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 8 Quotes

The shadow of poor Ransome, to be sure, lay on all four of us, and on me and Mr. Shuan in particular, most heavily. And then I had another trouble of my own. Here I was, doing dirty work for three men that I looked down upon, and one of whom, at least, should have hung upon a gallows; that was for the present; and as for the future, I could only see myself slaving alongside of negroes in the tobacco fields. Mr. Riach, perhaps from caution, would never suffer me to say another word about my story; the captain, whom I tried to approach, rebuffed me like a dog and would not hear a word; and as the days came and went, my heart sank lower and lower, till I was even glad of the work which kept me from thinking.

Related Characters: David Balfour (speaker), Ransome , Mr. Shuan
Page Number: 61
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 12 Quotes

“Why, Alan,” I cried, “what ails ye at the Campbells?”

“Well,” says he, “ye ken very well that I am an Appin Stewart, and the Campbells have long harried and wasted those of my name; ay, and got lands of us by treachery—but never with the sword,” he cried loudly, and with the word brought down his fist upon the table. But I paid the less attention to this, for I knew it was usually said by those who have the underhand. “There’s more than that,” he continued, “and all in the same story: lying words, lying papers, tricks fit for a peddler, and the show of what’s legal over all, to make a man the more angry.”

Related Characters: Alan Breck Stewart (speaker), David Balfour (speaker)
Page Number: 89
Explanation and Analysis:

“But when it came to Colin Roy, the black Campbell blood in him ran wild. He sat gnashing his teeth at the wine table. What! should a Stewart get a bite of bread, and him not be able to prevent it? Ah! Red Fox, if ever I hold you at a gun’s end, the Lord have pity upon ye!” (Alan stopped to swallow down his anger.) “Well, David, what does he do? He declares all the farms to let. And, thinks he, in his black heart, ‘I’ll soon get other tenants that’ll overbid these Stewarts, and Maccolls, and Macrobs’ (for these are all names in my clan, David); ‘and then,’ thinks he, ‘Ardshiel will have to hold his bonnet on a French roadside.’”

Related Characters: Alan Breck Stewart (speaker), David Balfour (speaker), Colin Roy Campbell/The Red Fox
Page Number: 94
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 16 Quotes

“However, as I was saying, this Alan Breck is a bold, desperate customer, and well kent to be James’s right hand. His life is forfeit already; he would boggle at naething; and maybe, if a tenant-body was to hang back he would get a dirk in his wame.”

“You make a poor story of it all, Mr. Henderland,” said I. “If it is all fear upon both sides, I care to hear no more of it.”

Related Characters: Mr. Henderland (speaker), David Balfour (speaker), Alan Breck Stewart
Page Number: 132
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 17 Quotes

At that word (which I could hear quite plainly, though it was to the soldiers and not to me that he was crying it) my heart came in my mouth with quite a new kind of terror. Indeed, it is one thing to stand the danger of your life, and quite another to run the peril of both life and character. The thing, besides, had come so suddenly, like thunder out of a clear sky, that I was all amazed and helpless.

Related Characters: David Balfour (speaker), Alan Breck Stewart , Colin Roy Campbell/The Red Fox
Page Number: 141
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 18 Quotes

I said nothing, nor so much as lifted my face. I had seen murder done, and a great, ruddy, jovial gentleman struck out of life in a moment; the pity of that sight was still sore within me, and yet that was but a part of my concern. Here was murder done upon the man Alan hated; here was Alan skulking in the trees and running from the troops; and whether his was the hand that fired or only the head that ordered, signified but little. By my way of it, my only friend in that wild country was blood-guilty in the first degree; I held him in horror; I could not look upon his face; I would have rather lain alone in the rain on my cold isle, than in that warm wood beside a murderer.

Related Characters: David Balfour (speaker), Alan Breck Stewart , Colin Roy Campbell/The Red Fox
Page Number: 143
Explanation and Analysis:

“And do you know who did it?” I added. “Do you know that man in the black coat?”

“I have nae clear mind about his coat,” said Alan cunningly, “but it sticks in my head that it was blue.”

“Blue or black, did ye know him?” said I.

“I couldnae just conscientiously swear to him,” says Alan. “He gaed very close by me, to be sure, but it’s a strange thing that I should just have been tying my brogues.”

“Can you swear that you don’t know him, Alan?” I cried, half angered, half in a mind to laugh at his evasions.

“Not yet,” says he; “but I’ve a grand memory for forgetting, David.”

Related Characters: Alan Breck Stewart (speaker), David Balfour (speaker), Colin Roy Campbell/The Red Fox
Page Number: 145-146
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 26 Quotes

“It is a very fine lass,” he said at last. “David, it is a very fine lass.” And a matter of an hour later, as we were lying in a den on the sea-shore and I had been already dozing, he broke out again in commendations of her character. For my part, I could say nothing, she was so simple a creature that my heart smote me both with remorse and fear: remorse because we had traded upon her ignorance; and fear lest we should have anyway involved her in the dangers of our situation.

Related Characters: David Balfour (speaker), Alan Breck Stewart (speaker)
Page Number: 232
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 27 Quotes

Thereupon I told him my story from the first, he listening with his spectacles thrust up and his eyes closed, so that I sometimes feared he was asleep. But no such matter! he heard every word (as I found afterward) with such quickness of hearing and precision of memory as often surprised me. Even strange outlandish Gaelic names, heard for that time only, he remembered and would remind me of, years after. Yet when I called Alan Breck in full, we had an odd scene. The name of Alan had of course rung through Scotland, with the news of the Appin murder and the offer of the reward; and it had no sooner escaped me than the lawyer moved in his seat and opened his eyes.

“I would name no unnecessary names, Mr. Balfour,” said he; “above all of Highlanders, many of whom are obnoxious to the law.”

Related Characters: Mr. Rankeillor (speaker), David Balfour (speaker), Alan Breck Stewart
Page Number: 239-240
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 28 Quotes

“And yet that is certainly the strangest part of all,” said I, “that a man’s nature should thus change.”

“True,” said Mr. Rankeillor. “And yet I imagine it was natural enough. He could not think that he had played a handsome part. Those who knew the story gave him the cold shoulder; those who knew it not, seeing one brother disappear, and the other succeed in the estate, raised a cry of murder; so that upon all sides he found himself evited. Money was all he got by his bargain; well, he came to think the more of money. He was selfish when he was young, he is selfish now that he is old; and the latter end of all these pretty manners and fine feelings you have seen for yourself.”

Related Characters: Mr. Rankeillor (speaker), David Balfour (speaker), Ebenezer Balfour
Page Number: 244
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 29 Quotes

So the beggar in the ballad had come home; and when I lay down that night on the kitchen chests, I was a man of means and had a name in the country. Alan and Torrance and Rankeillor slept and snored on their hard beds; but for me who had lain out under heaven and upon dirt and stones, so many days and nights, and often with an empty belly, and in fear of death, this good change in my case unmanned me more than any of the former evil ones; and I lay till dawn, looking at the fire on the roof and planning the future.

Related Characters: David Balfour (speaker)
Page Number: 258
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 30 Quotes

It was coming near noon when I passed in by the West Kirk and the Grassmarket into the streets of the capital. The huge height of the buildings, running up to ten and fifteen storeys, the narrow arched entries that continually vomited passengers, the wares of the merchants in their windows, the hubbub and endless stir, the foul smells and the fine clothes, and a hundred other particulars too small to mention, struck me into a kind of stupor of surprise, so that I let the crowd carry me to and fro; and yet all the time what I was thinking of was Alan at Rest-and-be-Thankful; and all the time (although you would think I would not choose but be delighted with these braws and novelties) there was a cold gnawing in my inside like a remorse for something wrong.

Related Characters: David Balfour (speaker), Alan Breck Stewart
Page Number: 262-263
Explanation and Analysis: