Doyle was aware that
his convictions sometimes left him open to ridicule, but, as his last
surviving daughter, Dame Jean Conan Doyle said in an interview in 1990,
his perseverance demonstrated great moral courage. Dame Doyle, who passed
away in 1997, said people like her father "knew
that the world would ridicule them, but they had the guts to stand by what
they believed in."
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The famous mystery
writer was also respected for his efforts for Britain during the Boer War
and World War I. Not accepted for active duty, Doyle served in the Boer
War as a physician. Later, he founded the volunteer forces and the Rifle
Societies, and wrote about both wars. Of course, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle is
best known around the world as the creator of master detective Sherlock
Holmes and his sidekick, Dr. Watson. The first Holmes book was
'A Study
in Scarlet', which was sold for 25 pounds. By 1891, six Holmes novels
had been published in Stand magazine, and Doyle gave up his medical
practice to write full-time.
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When Doyle killed off
the meticulous Holmes twelve years later, the outcry was so great that he
was forced to bring his hero back to the land of the living. Some fans
actually believed that Holmes was real instead of fictional, and sent
letters and packages to him at Doyle's address! The much-loved detective
was famous for his deductive reasoning, which Doyle modelled after a
real-life professor he had worked with in university.
'The Literature of Crime and Detection'
says that it was Holmes personality "with his keen
sense of observation, his lean face and hooked nose, his long legs, his
deerstalker hat, his magnifying glass, and his ever-present pipe that
captured readers' hearts."
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Interestingly, the well-known
expression, "Elementary, my dear Watson"
never appears in Doyle's stories. It probably came from one of the
Sherlock Holmes movies.
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Sherlock Holmes fans
remain enthusiastic, and there are a number of active websites devoted to
him.
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