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- Essay Name : 685.txt
- Uploader :
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- Language : English
- Subject : Biography
- Title : The Life of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
- Grade : 94%
- School System : High School
- Country : USA
- Author Comments :
- Teacher Comments : Fairly in-depth. Good overall paper.
- Date : March 31, 93
- Site found at : Webcrawler
- --------------------------------------------------------------
- Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, a British physician who later devoted his life to writing,
- has become one of the most popular and widespread authors and creators of all time.
- Doyle's early childhood years to his later years in life have allowed him to observe many
- sophisticated yet adventurous paths, in which have inspired him greatly to become an
- influence on spiritualistic views as an author and crusader. His interests and
- achievements in medicine, politics, and spiritualism have allowed him to create the
- iridescent master detective of fiction, Sherlock Holmes. His creation of Sherlock Holmes
- in his mystery novels has brought him fame amongst many people, even so Sherlock
- Holmes may be one of the most popular and recognized characters of English Literature.
- On May 22nd, 1859, Arthur Conan Doyle was born at Picardy Place, in
- Edinburgh, Scotland. His father, Charles, was an architect-clerk at the Government
- Office of Works in Edinburgh where he married Mary Foley in1855. Arthur had three
- sisters and one brother, with quite a large family occasionally times got hard as money
- grew scarce, fortunately his father sold paintings on the side to earn extra money (Jaffe
- 3).
- When Arthur Doyle was seven years old he was sent to school and for two years
- he was toughened by the schoolmaster and his punishments of lacerations (Pearson 2).
- The schoolmaster wasn't the only thing that toughened him, he was also used to getting in
- quarrels with other children and became quite a fighter, especially if he saw a bully
- picking on someone smaller and weaker (Pearson 3). Along with his rugged
- characteristics, young Arthur loved to read. He found himself caught up in books of
- action and adventure, his favorite one being Scalp Hunters by Mayne Reid which he read
- numerous times. Arthur was also somewhat interested in poetry and he showed it by
- learning Macaulay's Lay of Horatius by heart. At the age of nine, Arthur went to Hodder
- the preparatory school for Stonyhurst College, which also was located in Edinburgh
- (Jaffe 8). On a journey to Preston, in Lancashire, he started to feel lonely and
- experienced homesickness. When he arrived at Preston, he joined a group of other kids
- and was driven the remaining twelve miles with a Jesuit, a follower of Jesus in Roman
- Catholicism. He stayed at Hodder for two years, where he was partially happy, then the
- Franco-German War had arisen and gave him something to dream about during his
- lessons. He would find himself daydreaming about fascinating adventures to escape his
- regular days of studies which constantly bored him (Pearson 4).
- He then went on to Stonyhurst College, where he found himself suffering in
- classes of Latin, Greek, and Algebra. Near the end of his life Arthur wrote "I can say
- with truth that my Latin and Greek ... have been little use to me in life, and that my
- mathematics have been no use at all."(Carr 10) Doyle may not have enjoyed Latin or
- Algebra, on the other hand he seemed to pick up reading and writing skills automatically.
- The Jesuits who were guarding and keeping Doyle and the boys in order believed that
- "dry knowledge could only be absorbed with dry food," so the nourishment they received
- was quite unappetizing (Jaffe 16). The discipline they received was pretty brutal,
- because if the demands for religion were unsatisfied, and if the young men's behavior was
- not well, the Jesuits applied a more encouraging correction. Doyle remembers this
- punishment quite well, through his own experience, he describes it as "the instrument of
- correction, it was a piece of India-rubber of the shape and size of a thick boot sole....One
- blow of this instrument, delivered with intent, would cause the palm of the hand to swell
- up and change color." Arthur had wondered if any other boys had endured more of the
- brutal punishment than he. Doyle wrote "I went out of my way to do really mischievous
- and outrageous things simply to show that my spirit was unbroken." (Pearson 5) During
- his stay at the college, Doyle wrote much verse that he thought was nothing but this
- showed to everyone else that he had a literary gift. He was also encouraged to tell stories
- to the other boys sitting in a circle, his favorite stories talking about murders and
- mysteries, and he was able to captivate his audiences with his ability. Upon his last year,
- he edited the College magazine, and amazed everyone by taking honors in the London
- Matric before he left Stonyhurst at the age of sixteen (Carr 13).
- When Doyle left Stonyhurst, he realized he had an interest and gift in writing, that
- would later on greatly influence his later career. Arthur enjoyed history and literature,
- and one day he was completely absorbed in a volume of Macaulay's Essays, giving him a
- new aspect of English Literature. Doyle's last year with the Jesuits was spent at Feldkirch
- in Austria, and on his way there he stopped in London to visit Westminster Abbey to see
- Macaulay's grave. Feldkirch was much kinder than Stonyhurst, so he eventually stopped
- being a troublesome youth. On the average, he enjoyed his years there playing football
- and tobogganing. When he left Austria in 1876, he stopped in Paris to visit an uncle,
- Michael Conan, from which he got his name. He saw many wonders including the Arc de
- Triomphe and other French landmarks (Wood 23).
- Arthur Doyle then returned to Edinburgh, the place of his birth, and saw his
- family. Soon after his arrival he decided to study medicine at Edinburgh University,
- which was widely known from its medical expertise. He entered the University in
- October 1876, and began studies in the "long weary grind at botany, chemistry, anatomy,
- physiology, and a whole list of compulsory subjects, many of which have a very indirect
- bearing upon the art of curing."(Pearson 11) Even with his medical studies he still had
- time to enjoy his interest in literature. He purchased and read many novels including;
- Thackeray's Esmond, Meredith's Richard Feverel, and Washington Irving's Conquest of
- Granada, and many others that inquired his taste for learning. Literature was not the
- only thing that impressed Doyle while attending the University, but the professors as
- well. Two of the professors that appealed to Arthur were Doctor Bell, a surgeon at the
- Edinburgh infirmary, and Professor Rutherford (Wood 31). What appeared to Doyle was
- that Doctor Bell could "glance at a corpse on the anatomy table and deduce that the
- person had been a left-handed shoemaker." (Carr 23) These professors at the University
- were a sure model for Doyle's creation of Moriarty, Maracot, Challenger, and Holmes,
- during his later writing career. Doyle's medical studies were interrupted twice, once in
- 1880 when he spent seven months as a ship's surgeon on a whaling ship in the Arctic, and
- again in 1881 when he worked as a medical officer on a cargo ship bound for Africa.
- During his last year at the University, Doyle met a new student by the name of George
- Budd. George Budd was a key part in Doyle's literary career, because he was amazed at
- Budd's extraordinary thinking while they were having conversations. Doyle explains that
- Budd could, "at a moments notice take up any subject with intense enthusiasm, weave the
- most amazing theories, carry his listeners away with him until they were gasping with
- excitement, drop the subject suddenly, take up another, and repeat the process." (Pearson
- 19) He then earned his Bachelor of Medicine in 1881, and setup a small medical practice
- in Southsea, England in 1882. His residence in Southsea was a house called Bush Villa,
- which he could live in and practice medicine. Doyle's medical practice only had a
- moderate income, but he did receive a wife from the business. He met Louise Hawkins
- "a very gentle and amiable girl," while the girls bother was suffering from cerebral
- meningitis and stayed with him at Bush Villa and they were soon engaged (Wood 48) In
- July of 1885, Doyle received his Doctor's Degree after hard studies through May and
- June, and on August 6th, 1885 Louise Hawkins and Arthur Conan Doyle were married.
- After the marriage he continued his practice at Bush Villa, and also worked on writing
- stories on the side which he could sell to magazines for a little extra money. He received
- no fame from his short stories so he decided to write a novel The Narrative of John Smith
- which mistakenly was lost in the mail on its way to the publisher. With the lost of his
- first novel, he decided to write a second called The Firm of Girdlestone (Wood 53).
- Arthur Doyle has earned his fame and glory from his creation of Sherlock Holmes
- and the other characters who modeled from the professors and doctors at Edinburgh
- University. The first Holmes novel being A Study in Scarlet which Doyle wrote in 1886
- reflected his acquaintance with Dr. Bell. Although A Study in Scarlet was not sure of
- publication because it was being rejected by the publishers, and when it did Doyle didn't
- receive much compensation for the novel which first debuted in "Beetons Xmas Annual"
- in 1887. While waiting for it to be published by itself, Doyle decided to write on a
- historical theme (Jaffe 37). He first started and finished Micah Clarke early in 1888, and
- during his writing time A Study in Scarlet had been published and released. A Study in
- Scarlet had great reviews and was cherished in the United States at the time, but Doyle
- continued writing historical novels like, The White Company (Jaffe 41). Doyle believed
- that Charles Reade's The Cloister and the Hearth was the greatest novel in the English
- Language, mainly because the author takes the reader by the hand and leads him through
- the Middle Ages, "and not a conventional study-built Middle Ages, but a period quivering
- with life, full of folk who are as human and real as a bus-load in Oxford Street."(Pearson
- 79) In many of Doyle's works he tried to incorporate Reade's talents at writing, and he
- wrote a lot of short stories, which eventually appeared in The Captain of the Polestar as a
- collection. In 1890, the birth of his daughter Mary was also in good times for he was
- happy with his literature, his practice, and his marriage (Wood 67). In 1890, Doyle
- returned to his old home in Devonshire Terrace where his character Sherlock Holmes
- began in his tales to earn world wide fame, after he gave up the medical profession for
- good. He continued writing about Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson's adventures in The
- Sign of Four and a collection of short stories gathered together to make The Strand which
- made Holmes a household name (Higham 71). In 1891, Doyle was sickened with
- influenza, and upon his recovery decided to move to South Norwood. This was where
- Doyle's son Kingsley was born in 1892. Arthur Doyle went traveling from 1893 to 1897,
- when he went to the United States and gave speeches from Boston to
- Washington(Higham 89). Doyle learned many new things about the rest of the world. In
- June 1897 they moved back to "Undershaw" or so he called it because "it stood under a
- hanging grove of trees," in England. He continued his writing and found himself
- involved in the Boer War as a civilian doctor. After he defended British policy in the
- Boer War by writing two works, one entitled The Cause and Conduct of the War in South
- Africa, he was knighted in 1902 and appointed Deputy-Lieutenant of Surrey (Pearson
- 131). His wife's health had been failing and in 1906 she died. He remarried in
- September 1907 to Jean Leckie, whose family he had known for sometime. He then
- decided to move again to be near his wife's people so they moved to Crowborough (Jaffe
- 101). Arthur and his wife lived happily and had three children; Denis, Adrian, and Lena
- Jean. Doyle realized he would have to support two families so he soon started writing for
- plays in theaters (Wood 113). Doyle then continued his family life and occasionally
- traveled abroad to different countries. When his son died in World War I, Arthur began
- to have an interest in spiritualism and life after death. He went on believing and writing
- for spiritualism and he soon fell to illness. Arthur Conan Doyle died on July 7th, 1930,
- but to him it was not death but the start of the grandest adventure ever. Eighteen years
- before he died, he wrote his own epitaph without intending it as such:(Pearson 188)
- I have wrought my simple plan
- If I give one hour of joy
- To the boy who's half a man,
- Or the man who's half a boy.
- Sir Arthur Conan Doyle literary works have been fully influenced throughout his
- entire life. From his early childhood of adventure and wonder, to his schooling at
- Stonyhurst and Edinburgh, to all the people he has met, including the most important Dr.
- Bell who was later made into Sherlock Holmes in his writing. His unique ability to
- create a living character and also a living author as Dr. John H. Watson from which view
- the mysteries are told will leave him a permanent mark in English Literature.
-
- Works Consulted
-
- Carr, John Dickson. The Life of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. New York: Harper &
- Brothers, 1949.
- Costello, Peter. The Real World of Sherlock Holmes. New York: Carroll & Graf
- Publishers Inc., 1991.
- Harrison, Michael. In the Footsteps of Sherlock Holmes. New York: Drake Publishers,
- 1972.
- Higham, Charles. The Aventures of Conan Doyle. New York, Norton Publishers, 1976.
- Jaffe, Jacqueline A. Arthur Conan Doyle. Boston: Twayne Publishers, 1987.
- Keating, H.R.F. Sherlock Holmes/The Man and His World. New York: Charles
- Scribners Sons, 1979.
- Pearson, Hesketh. Conan Doyle/His Life and Art. New York: Taplinger Publishing Co.,
- 1977.
- Rosenberg, Samuel. Naked is the Best Disguise:The Death and Ressurection of Sherlock
- Holmes. London: Arlington Books, 1975.
- Wood, James Playsted. The Man who Hated Sherlock Holmes; A Life of Sir Arthur
- Conan Doyle. New York: Pantheon Books, 1965.
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