1. Sherlock Holmes was originally going to be called Sherrinford. The name
was altered to Sherlock, possibly because of a cricketer who bore the
name. Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, who created Holmes (of course), was a fan
of cricket and the name ‘Sherlock’ appears to have stuck in his memory.
Doyle was also a keen cricketer himself, and between 1899 and 1907 he
played ten first-class matches for the Marylebone Cricket Club – quite
fitting, since Baker Street is situated in the Marylebone district of
London. For more on the creation of Holmes, see the detailed
‘Introduction’ in The Uncollected Sherlock Holmes.
2. The first Sherlock Holmes novel was something of a flop. The detective made his debut in the novel A Study in Scarlet
(1887), written by a twenty-seven-year-old Doyle in just three weeks.
Famously, Doyle was inspired by a real-life lecturer of his at the
University of Edinburgh, Dr Joseph Bell, who could diagnose patients
simply by looking at them when they walked into his surgery; the other
important influence on the creation of Sherlock Holmes was Edgar Allan
Poe’s fictional detective, C. Auguste Dupin (for more on this, see our post on Poe’s contribution to detective fiction here).
Doyle wrote the book while he was running a struggling doctor’s surgery
down in Portsmouth. The novel was rejected by many publishers and
eventually published in Beeton’s Christmas Annual (named after
the husband of Mrs Beeton, of the book of cookery and household
management). It didn’t sell well, and more or less sank without trace.
3. The second Sherlock Holmes novel was the result of a dinner party with Oscar Wilde. One person who had admired the first novel was the editor Joseph Stoddart, who edited Lippincott’s Monthly Magazine.
He convinced Doyle, at a dinner party in 1889, to write a second novel
featuring the detective, for serialisation in the magazine. Wilde, who
was also present, also agreed to write a novel for the magazine – his
only novel, The Picture of Dorian Gray, which appeared in 1890, the same year as The Sign of the Four, Doyle’s novel.
4. Sherlock Holmes didn’t wear a deerstalker. Much. The
famous image of Holmes wearing a deerstalker hat is a product of the
celebrated images which accompanied the short stories, which appeared in
the Strand magazine from 1891. It is when the stories began to
appear that Sherlock Holmes became a worldwide sensation. Sidney Paget,
who drew the illustrations, had Holmes wearing a deerstalker when the
detective went into the country to investigate mysteries at country
houses and in small rural villages, but most people think of the
detective as always donning the hat when off to investigate a case.
5. Sherlock Holmes is the most-filmed fictional character. According
to IMDb, Holmes has appeared in 226 films and been played by dozens of
different actors since the advent of cinema in the late nineteenth
century.
6. Sherlock Holmes is not the most-filmed fictional character. That
is, not if you include non-humans (or partial humans). Dracula has been
filmed more times than the great sleuth, at 239 times, but since
Dracula is part-man, part-vampire, Holmes is the most-filmed fully human
character.
7. Sherlock Holmes didn’t make deductions.
At least, not most of the time. Instead, and if we want to be
technically accurate, he used the logical process known as abduction.
The difference between deductive and abductive reasoning is that the
latter is based more on inference from observation, where the conclusion
drawn may not always necessarily be true. However, in deduction, the
conclusion drawn from the available data is always necessarily true. But
then again, since Holmes’s reasoning always seems to be correct,
perhaps it is deduction after all!
8. Holmes never says ‘Elementary, my dear Watson’. Not
in the ‘canon’ of original Conan Doyle novels and stories. Holmes says
‘Elementary!’ and ‘my dear Watson’ at various points, but the idea of
putting them together was a later meme, which possibly arose because it
neatly conveys Holmes’s effortless superiority to his ‘dear’ friend and
foil. The first recorded use of this exact phrase is actually in a P. G.
Wodehouse novel of 1915, Psmith, Journalist.
9. The Sherlock Holmes Museum both is and isn’t at 221B Baker Street.
Although the museum in London bears the official address ’221B’, in
line with the celebrated address from the stories, the museum’s building
lies between 237 and 241 Baker Street, making it physically – if not
officially – at number 239.
10. There’s more to Sir Arthur Conan Doyle than Sherlock Holmes.
Much more, in fact. Among other achievements, his legal campaigning led
to the establishment of the Court of Criminal Appeal. He was knighted
for his journalistic work during the Second Boer War, not for his
achievements in The Hound of the Baskervilles). He wrote historical novels (such as The White Company and Sir Nigel,
set during the fourteenth century) which he prized more highly than his
detective fiction. Winston Churchill agreed, and was a devoted fan of
the historical novels. Doyle also wrote science fiction romances, such
as The Lost World (1912), which would inspire Michael Crichton’s Jurassic Park, and, subsequently, Steven Spielberg’s film (the sequel to the novel and film being named, in homage to Doyle, The Lost World). Doyle also took up legal causes himself: read Julian Barnes’s novel Arthur and George for his most famous real-life case.
fiction, law, or medicine. We owe the word ‘grimpen’ to
him (from Grimpen Mire, in
Tuesday, 4 March 2014
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great posting!
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