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Sir Arthur Conan Doyle

’s Influence On Twentieth Century Detective Literature Essay, Research Paper


There are many different books, in many different genres. There are


horror novels, love stories, suspenseful books, and detective stories. The


detective story’s evolution has been a long and eventful process. The man


responsible for the biggest leap in the detective story was Arthur Conan


Doyle. He gave the world Sherlock Holmes, who could be considered the


greatest investigator in detective story history. Holmes was unique in


detective story history. “… The reader’s interest is captivated not only by


the detective’s “unique methods,” but to perhaps to even a greater degree


by “the singular personality of this remarkable man” (Sayers 10). Doyle


also gave the world Dr. Watson, Holmes’ sidekick. Other authors could


have written about this pair, but none could match Doyle. “Doyle was a


master storyteller” (Snow, 8). Without Doyle the detective story would


never have been what it is now. Cresterton states, “With Conan Doyle, the


detective story at last came to full fruition” (Cresterton, 170). This


statement is true. All detective stories after Doyle’s had some of the


aspects of his stories. Sir Arthur Conan Doyle shaped the way detective


stories were written in the twentieth century by using a third person limited


perspective, using a structured plot line, and by having Holmes investigate


crimes other than murder.


Sir Arthur Conan Doyle was the first detective story author to make


good use of the third person limited perspective. Holmes’ sidekick Watson


is a smart man, but he could not compare to the brilliance of Holmes.


When Holmes was figuring out a mystery, he often left Watson very


confused. Holmes would do things that, to Watson, would make no sense.


At the end of the story, however, Watson would see the logic behind


Holmes’ actions. This quote is Watson thinking about the case he and


Holmes were working on. “Here I had heard what he had heard, I had seen


what he had seen, and yet from his words it was evident that he saw clearly


not only what happened, but what was about to happen, while to me the


whole business was still confused and grotesque” (Doyle, 35). This displays


Watson’s confusion over the case of “The Red-Headed League.”


In “The Red-Headed League”, the case is so bizarre that most of the


readers, like Watson, don’t have a clue as to what is going on. It is


comforting to know that Watson is as confused as the readers are. In “The


Red-Headed League” there is a point in the story where Holmes and Watson


walk up to the pawn shop and talk to Mr. Wilson’s assistant. After he shuts


the door Watson asks Holmes why he wanted to see the assistant. Holmes


says that he wanted to see the knees of the assistants trousers (Doyle, 34).


It is obvious by Watson’s reaction that he has know idea why Holmes


wanted to see the assistants knees. At the same time the readers are left


pondering that very question.


The whole scene in front of the pawnshop also display another way


that Doyle uses the third person limited perspective well. At that point in


the story Holmes has pretty much figured out what happened. By telling


Watson where he was looking, Holmes was dropping a hint to Watson to see


if he could figure out what Holmes already had. During his stories Doyle


would leave hints as to who committed the crime. This made the story


more interesting for the readers.


Another way Doyle uses Holmes in his stories is as a teacher to


Watson. In the very beginning of “A Scandal in Bohemia” Holmes deduces,


from a quick glance, that Watson had gotten wet lately, and had a clumsy


servant girl. He deduced all of this by merely looking at Watson’s shoes.


He then asked Watson how many steps led up to his apartment. Watson


could not say, even though he had walked up those stairs countless times


(Doyle, 12). This is one of the examples of Holmes teaching Watson about


observation.


The only way that Holmes’ observations make sense in the story is if


the story has a structured plot line. Doyle made all of Holmes’ stories have


plots that follow a logical structure. “You have reasoned it out


beautifully…It is so long a chain, and yet every link rings true” (Doyle 40).


In the story Holmes figured out that Mr. Wilson’s assistant was using his


pawn shop to tunnel his way into a nearby bank and rob it. Holmes figured


out all of this just by looking at the assistants pants and pounding his


walking stick in front of the pawn shop (Doyle 26-40). If Holmes had not


done this during the story, both Watson and the readers would be left


having no idea as to how Holmes figured out who committed the felony. By


putting clues into the story, Doyle distanced him self from the other


detective story writers of the time.


In the story “A Scandal in Bohemia” Holmes did not rely as much on


his powers of deduction, as he did in “The Red-Headed League.” Instead


Holmes relied more on good old fashioned detective legwork. He also had


to rely on his brilliance. In the story the king told Holmes that Irene Adler


was blackmailing him and that he needed the pictures that she was


blackmailing him with. Holmes went to Irene Adler’s home and followed her


to a church. There she and her boyfriend got married. Holmes later asked


Watson to help him figure out where she was hiding the pictures. He asked


Watson to throw a smoke bomb into her house and he would to the rest


(Doyle 11-25). “When a woman thinks her house is on fire, her instinct is


at once to rush to the thing she values most” (Doyle 22). He used this to


find where Mrs. Adler was hiding the pictures. In both of these stories


Doyle used logical plot lines in which the reader could guess as to who


committed the crime. This made detective stories much more interesting.


Another way Doyle made his stories more interesting was by focusing


on crimes other than murder. “Some of the most interesting (of Holmes’


stories) do not treat of crime in the legal sense at all, but with human


perplexities outside the scope of the law” (Symons 20). This is most aptly


displayed in “The Red-Headed League.” In this story Holmes says “As far as


I have heard, it is impossible for me to say whether the present case is an


instance of crime or not, but the course of events is among the most


singular that I have listened to” (Doyle 27). This makes the story a lot


more interesting because if the crime was mundane, it would have been a


lot easier for Holmes to figure out who the criminal was. That’s why Doyle


used more structured plot lines then the rest of the detective stories of the


time. Those stories were more mundane and unexciting, and that is one


reason that Doyle’s stories stood out above the rest.


In the story “A Scandal in Bohemia” it was obvious that there was


actually being a crime committed, and that crime was blackmail. While


blackmail is a serious crime, it is not considered as severe as murder. This


time, however, it was very severe because it involved the King of Bohemia.


This was another way that Doyle interested the readers. He would use


uncommon crimes in his stories, and have them involve high ranking


officials. In “A Scandal in Bohemia” the King was being blackmailed by a


woman with whom he had an affair with many years earlier. She had


pictures of them together, and the King hired Holmes to retrieve those


pictures (Doyle 11-25). This is one of the more unusual setups that Doyle


has created. These unusual setups are one of the many things that has


made Doyle one of the most beloved authors of all time.


Detective stories today would be nothing without Sir Arthur Conan


Doyle’s influence. There is no doubt that he shaped the way detective


stories have been written in the twentieth century. As Murch said,


“…(Sherlock Holmes) became the ancestor of almost all the outstanding


twentieth-century detective heroes in English fiction” (Murch 167). All


detective heroes in the twentieth century have some aspect of Sherlock


Holmes in them. With Doyle, the detective story form was nearly perfected.


He Helped bring the detective story more respect as actual literature.


Without Sir Arthur Conan Doyle the detective story would still be considered


a lower form of literature and would be an unimportant part of the literary


world.


Bibliography


Cresterton, G. K. “Sherlock Holmes.” A Handful of Authors: Essays


on Books and Writers. Ed. by Dorothy Collins. N.p.: Sheed and


Wand, 1953.


Doyle, Sir Arthur Conan. The Classic Illustrated Sherlock Holmes.


Stamford, CT: Longmeadow Press, 1987.


Murch, A. E. “Sherlock Holmes.” The Development of the Detective


Novel. N. p.: Philosophical Library Inc. ,1958. 167-91.


Sayers, Dorothy. “Introduction.” The Omnibus of Crime. N. P.:


Harcourt, 1961. 9-38. Discovering Authors. Vers. 1.1.


CD-ROM. Detroit: Gale, 1996.


Snow, C. P. The Case-Book of Sherlock Holmes. N.p.: Jonathan


Cape, 1974. 7-12.


Symons, Gulian. Portrait of an Artist: Conan Doyle. N.p.: Whizzard


Press, 1979.

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