Dr Adequate
Banned
- Joined
- Aug 31, 2004
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“Rubbish, Watson, rubbish! What have we to do with walking corpses who can only be held in their grave by stakes driven through their hearts? It’s pure lunacy.”
“But surely,” said I, “the vampire was not necessarily a dead man? A living person might have the habit. I have read, for example, of the old sucking the blood of the young in order to retain their youth.”
“You are right, Watson. It mentions the legend in one of these references. But are we to give serious attention to such things? This agency stands flat-footed upon the ground, and there it must remain. The world is big enough for us. No ghosts need apply.
The Adventure of the Sussex Vampire
The article fails to point out that Doyles active interest stems from the time that his son was killed in WWI.
Hmm I seem to recall suggestions that the fairy stuff may have had something to do with his father's mental illness.
Feel free to go on the wiki and amend it, but before you do, you might want to read Martin Gardner on the subject:The article fails to point out that Doyles active interest stems from the time that his son was killed in WWI. Further, it neglects to point out that Holmes had opinions on the matter:
I think that an interesting treatment was traded in for a sneering one. Sounds like a post here. Not that Doyle wasn't a woo, he was but the story is a bit more complicated than the article suggests. It might have served as a springboard for a discussion of why people believe.
I'd give it a c/c-.
For my part I think that the wiki should contain neither fiction nor amateur psychoanalysis.It has been said that Doyle's conversion to spiritualism, like the recent case of Bishop James Pike, was an emotional reaction to the death of his son. Not so. Even when he was a young Irish-Catholic, Doyle had a strong interest in psychic phenomena. His crusade for spiritualism began in 1916, two years before his son died.
Martin Gardner, The Irrelevance of Conan Doyle, in Science, Good, Bad and Bogus.
Feel free to go on the wiki and amend it, but before you do, you might want to read Martin Gardner on the subject: For my part I think that the wiki should contain neither fiction nor amateur psychoanalysis.
Oh and Ed, dear, if you're going to be patronizing, try not to be wrong at the same time. It does rather spoil the effect.
You mean like researching the essay on him that I quoted, rather than making it up as he went along? I'm guessing he did. Especially as he is noted as a Sherlockian scholar, and the article was first published in a collection of Holmsiana entitled Beyond Baker Street.I don't think that Gardner would be the guy to go to for biographical information about Doyle, unless he made some study of which I am unaware.
.... For my part I think that the wiki should contain neither fiction nor amateur psychoanalysis.For my part, professional psychoanalysis should be excluded, except under the heading of Pseudoscience.
Perhaps my reply needs a spoiler.Funny thing; Dorothy Sayers herself was quite religious. But earlier in the same book, Miss Climpson is on a jury and refuses to convict despite the evidence, saying that she just doesn't believe the woman did the crime. When told of how this got the trial dismissed, the advocate for the defense remarks as follows: "Very useful," said Sir Impey. "A person who can believe all the articles of the Christian faith is not going to boggle over a trifle of adverse evidence. But we can never hope for a whole jury-box full of ecclesiastical diehards."
As the article points out, you can't have a proper detective story if you can allow strange unknown spiritual forces as part of the solution, because there's no satisfaction to the reader in getting to the end of the story and finding out that the reason that the elderly millionaire was stabbed to death in the sealed room surrounded by policemen was that the Invisible Pink Unicorn transcended our mundane three dimensional space and impaled him with her Holy Horn. That's not a solution, that's a cop-out.I believe that his treatment of Holmes was a way to keep him in a certain character.
...
In real life, alas, Conan Doyle had no such scruples.
...snip... Although, in fairness, "The Lost World" could be considered to have started the Cryptozooligy movement.
"The Irrelevance of Conan Doyle", Martin Gardner, p 116In Memories and Adventures (pp 392-94), Doyle gives a dramatic summary of why he believes in spiritualism. He had seen his dead mother and nephew so plainly that he could have counted the wrinkles on one, the freckles on the other. He had conversed at length with spirit voices. He had smelled the "peculiar ozonelike smell of ectoplasm." Prophecies he heard were swiftly fulfilled. He had "seen the dead glimmer up upon a photographic plate" untouched by any hand but his own. His wife, a medium whose writing fingers would be seized by a spirit control, had produced "notebooks full of information...utterly beyond her ken." He had seen heavy objects "swimming in the air, untouched by human hand." He had seen "spirits walk around the room in fair light and join in the talk of the company." On his wall was a painting done by a woman with no artistic training, but who had been possessed by an artistic spirit.
He had read books written by unlettered mediums who transmitted the work of dead writers, and he had recognized the writer's style, "which no parodist could have copied, and which was written in his own handwriting." He had heard "singing beyond earthly power, and whistling done wiith no pause for the intake of breath." He had seen object "from a distance projected into a room with closed doors and windows."