Arthur Conan Doyle’s literary output is
prodigious. During his writing career Sir Arthur wrote twenty-one novels and
over 150 short stories. He also published nonfiction, essays, articles, memoirs
and three volumes of poetry. He left thousands of letters to the press, his
mother (about 1500 letters), family, friends and acquaintances, including
Winston Churchill, P. G. Wodehouse, Theodore Roosevelt, and Oscar Wilde.
Jeffrey and Valerie Meyers, editors of The Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
Reader: From Sherlock Holmes to Spiritualism (2002) write:
He shared Dickens's sense of
justice and social responsibility, his warm humanity and delight in the lively
individuality of the characters he created. Like Dickens, he published his
stories and novels, often in serial form, in the weekly magazines that were the
staple of popular entertainment in the late nineteenth century. Like his
younger contemporary and friend, H. G. Wells, he used his scientific education
and medical training in his fiction and challenged the prevailing belief in the
idea of progress. Like Wells, he also became an important public figure whose
opinion was sought on the crucial issues of the day, an influential speaker at
a time when the lecture was a popular event.
The Sherlock
Holmes stories
Between 1887 and
1927, Doyle wrote four novels and fifty-six stories with Sherlock Holmes, a
brilliant London-based “consulting detective” famous for his astute
observation, deductive reasoning and forensic skills to solve difficult cases.
Holmes's fictional forefather was Edgar Allan Poe's detective C. Auguste Dupin,
but it was Conan Doyle who first introduced to literature the character of the
scientific detective. Holmes, one of the best known and most popular characters
in English literature, is not only a successful master detective, but he is the
epitome of the Victorian and imperial values.
Sherlock Holmes
embodies the system that he comes to protect. He is the man of reason, of
science, of technology; he is from the upper class and was educated at Oxford;
he eventually becomes rich; and he frequents best city clubs and other haunts
of the gentleman.
The first novel
that introduced Sherlock Holmes and Dr Watson of 221B Baker Street, London, A
Study in Scarlet, a tale of murder and revenge, appeared in Beaton’s Christmas
Annual in 1887, and the second, The Sign of the Four, in
Lippincott's Monthly Magazine in 1890. After publishing the
first set of Sherlock Holmes stories in the Strand Magazinebetween
1891 and 1893, Doyle was not particularly proud of his detective fiction. He
planned to write an opera, a book of medical short stories and a Napoleonic
saga. He believed that historical romances, and not his detective stories, were
his most important work. (Wilson 22) In 1893, he tried to kill off Holmes at
the height of his popularity by plunging him over the Reichenbach Falls with
Professor Moriarty, Holmes's greatest enemy, but in 1902 Holmes appeared in The
Hound of the Baskervilles because the reading public demanded further
adventures of the great detective. As a matter of fact, Doyle did not bring
Holmes back to life, but told a story that had taken place before his
disappearance at the Reichenbach Falls. (Redmond 24) However, there was such a
great public outcry that he eventually resurrected the master detective in “The
Adventure of the Empty House” in the 1903 October issue of the Strand
Magazine.
Doyle created the
first truly great detective in fiction and gave a great impetus to detective
story as a fictional form. The tremendous popularity of Sherlock Holmes in the
late Victorian and Edwardian periods can be explained by the fact that he not
only embodied the late Victorian faith in the power of logic and rationality,
but above all restored confidence that the British were capable to maintain law
and order not only in Britain but also in the Empire at large.
The Professor
Challenger stories
Although the
Sherlock Holmes stories are his best fiction, Conan Doyle wrote novels and
short stories in many genres. These include historical fiction, horror and
suspense, psychological thriller, science fiction, poetry, and plays for the
stage. In addition, Sir Arthur wrote nonfiction works on a variety of subjects:
essays on literature, accounts of England’s involvement in the South African
War and World War I, memoirs and diaries, writings about photography, works on
the paranormal, occult and Spiritualism.
Arthur Conan Doyle
is also the author of fantasy and science fiction, which includes three novels
and two short stories: The Lost World (1912), The
Poison Belt (1913), The Land of Mist (1926), “The
Disintegration Machine” (1928), and “When the World Screamed” (1929). The
Lost World introduced his second most famous character, Professor
George Edward Challenger, who guides an expedition deep into an isolated
plateau in the South American jungle where some prehistoric animals (dinosaurs)
and indigenous race of ape-like people still live. Challenger, a scientist of
enormous intellect and adventurer, was designed to be a character to rival
Holmes. The Poison Belt is an apocalyptic novel that features
the same characters who appear in The Lost World. Astronomers
discover that the Earth is about to be engulfed in a belt of poisonous gas
“ether” from outer space. Prior to (apparently) extinguishing all life on the
planet, the belt causes a mysterious outbreak of illness whose symptoms are
irritability, loss of inhibition, coma, and (pseudo) death. (Harris 453) In
span class ="book">The Land of Mist (1926) Professor Challenger is
converted to Spiritualism.
The Challenger
stories, which recall Jules Verne’s science fiction, are less popular of
Doyle's fictions than the Sherlock Holmes stories. However, they contain
interesting narrative structure and their themes concern imperialism,
positivist science, the male role, evolution, degeneration theory and atavism.
(Christensen 121)
Historical
romances
Arthur Conan Doyle
wrote several popular works of historical fiction. The first was Micah
Clarke (1889), which is set in the seventeenth century during the
Monmouth Rebellion. The White Company (1891) recounts the
history of a company of medieval English archers during the Hundred Years' War,
in the years 1366 and 1367. In 1906, Doyle published its prequel, Sir
Nigel, which is set in the early phase of the Hundred Years' War. Doyle
also wrote a series of short stories about a Napoleonic hussar named Etienne
Gerard, which were first published in magazines and eventually in book form:The
Exploits of Brigadier Gerard (1896) and Adventures of Gerard (1903).
They are “brilliant evocations of the Napoleonic ethos.” (Dirda 73) Earlier in
1892, he published The Great Shadow and Other Napoleonic Tales. It
should be noted that Conan Doyle was often disappointed at being famous chiefly
for the creation of the Sherlock Holmes character. He had a much higher esteem
of his historical novels than the Sherlock Holmes stories.
Nonfiction
Arthur Conan Doyle
also wrote nonfiction. In 1907, he published Through the Magic Door,
a long essay about the charisma and charm of books. He also wrote several books
dealing with public topics, such as The Crime of the Congo(1910).
He also published A History of the British Campaign in France and
Flanders ( 6 vols., 1916-1920), and A Visit to Three Fronts (1916).
In 1914, Doyle wrote several pamphlets about the war. In 1924, Doyle published
his excellent autobiography, Mysteries and Adventures, which
recounts his life from early childhood, education, voyages as a ship's doctor,
medical practice in Southsea, his literary endeavours, experiences from the
Boer war, legal and political campaigns, interests in sports, and commitment to
spiritualism.
Knighthood
In 1900, Doyle
served in the Boer War as a
volunteer doctor in the Langman Field Hospital at Bloemfontein between March
and June. After return home he wrote a lengthy book, The Great Boer War,
which sought to justify the British cause and to emphasise the great need for
army reform and modernisation. The book was hailed in the press for its
accuracy and fairness. (Pascal 99) In 1902, Doyle received his knighthood from
the British Crown for a pamphlet, The War in South Africa: Its Causes
and Conduct, in which he defended England's position in the Boer War in
South Africa and for his service to the nation. He was reluctant to accept the
title, but his mother talked him into it. (Pascal 103) There is also a theory
that king Edward VII, who was an avid reader of Sherlock Holmes stories,
knighted him to encourage him to write more stories about the 'master'
detective'.
Interest in
spiritualism
Arthur Conan Doyle
became interested in the paranormal in the late 1880s and studied it for the
rest of his life. In the last quarter of his life, he abandoned literary career
and devoted himself to spreading the spiritualist message throughout the world.
He lectured on spiritualism in Great Britain, Australia, and South Africa, and
the United States, during which he covered 55,000 miles and addressed a quarter
of a million people. In 1926, he published The History of Spiritualism in
two volumes at his own expense.
Other
accomplishments
Sir Arthur was a
large, vigorous, active man, with all of the Englishman's traditional fondness
for sports. Throughout all his adult life he wore the “walrus” moustache of the
late Victorian era. He was an outstanding sportsman; he played football, and billiards.
While living in Southsea he was a goalkeeper for Portsmouth Association
Football Club. He was also a keen cricketeer. “For many years Conan Doyle even
belonged to a rather literary cricket team called the Allahakbarries, its name
punningly combining the Arabic formula praising God with a nod to the team’s
captain J. M. Barrie (creator of Peter Pan).” (Dirda 13) Between 1899 and 1907,
he played 10 first-class matches for the Marylebone Cricket Club. He also
practised boxing and was a pioneer motorist and a rally-driver. In the 1890s,
he started ski-touring to Switzerland. He was an occasional bowler and keen
golfer. In 1910, he was elected captain of the Crowborough Beacon Golf Club,
East Sussex.
Conan Doyle was
always a partisan of the underdog. He campaigned successfully against
miscarriages of justice. He conducted a long campaign to defend the
half-British and half-Indian solicitor George Edaljii, who had been accused of
mutilating animals. Julian Barnes' novel, Arthur and George (2005)
recounts this episode in his life. Conan Doyle also campaigned for the release
of Oscar Slater, a German Jew born in Upper Silesia, who was accused of
murdering an old woman in Glasgow. Doyle exposed inconsistencies in the police
investigation and Slater was finally freed.
Conan Doyle was
also an early champion of building the Channel Tunnel, which, he believed, was
necessary, “for the deployment of troops and armaments in France in an
anticipation a German war.” (Wynne 21) For his various accomplishments he
received the honorary degree of LL.D. from the university of Edinburgh in 1905,
and was a knight of grace of the order of St. John of Jerusalem.
Death and legacy
Towards the end of
his life Sir Arthur suffered angina which he contracted during his exhausting
world tours. He died of heart failure on July 7, 1930, in Crowborough, East
Sussex, leaving his widow Jean, their three children, Dennis, Adrian and Jean,
and his daughter Mary, by his first wife. His eldest son, Kingsley, who served
in World War One, was seriously wounded at the 1916 Battle of the Somme; later
he developed pneumonia which he contracted during his convalescence and died in
1918 aged 25.
The last words of
Conan Doyle were addressed to his wife. He whispered smiling to her: “You are
wonderful.” (Davis xvi) He was 71 years old. Sir Arthur and his second wife are
buried at the New Forest Church of All Saints, Minstead. Legend has it that as
a devoted spiritualist, he was first buried in an upright position in the
garden of his home at Crowborough. The house in Crowborough was sold, but the
graves remained until 1955, when the Doyle family decided to fulfil Lady Jean's
original wish that they be buried together at All Saints. The remains of Sir
Arthur and Lady Jean were exhumed from the garden and reinterred in the
churchyard. After a short private ceremony the couple were laid horizontally to
rest. The epitaph on the gravestone in the churchyard at Minstead in the New
Forest, Hampshire, reads: “Steel True, Blade Straight, Arthur Conan Doyle,
Knight, Patriot, Physician & Man of Letters.”
Sir Arthur Conan
Doyle was a versatile and complex personality; he was physician by education,
keen sportsman, war correspondent, campaigner for social justice, creator of
the world's most famous fictional detective Sherlock Holmes, author of
historical and social novels, and active Spiritualist. As Douglas Kerr has
written in his recent book: “Arthur Conan Doyle was, arguably, Britain's last
national writer.” (13) An Irish by ancestry, Scottish by birth and upbringing,
and British by choice, devoted to Crown and Empire, he still remains one of the
most popular British authors and a national icon.
Information from http://www.victorianweb.org/authors/doyle/bio2.html
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