All works by Conan Doyle Arthur. Biography of Arthur Conan Doyle


In the capital of Scotland, Edinburgh on Picardy Place.

As a child, Arthur read a lot, having completely varied interests. His favorite author was Myne Reed and his favorite book was Scalp Hunters.

After Arthur reached the age of nine, wealthy members of the Doyle family offered to pay for his education. Two years later he went to boarding school at Stonyhurst. Seven subjects were taught there: the alphabet, counting, basic rules, grammar, syntax, poetry, and rhetoric.

During his final year, Arthur edited the college magazine and wrote poetry. In addition, he was involved in sports, mainly cricket, in which he achieved good results. Then he went to Germany to Feldkirch to study German, where he continued to play sports with enthusiasm: football, football on stilts, sledding. In the summer of 1876, Doyle returned home.

In October 1876 he became a student at the medical university. While studying, Arthur met many future famous authors, such as James Barry and Robert Louis Stevenson, who also attended the university. But his greatest influence was one of his teachers, Dr. Joseph Bell, who was a master of observation, logic, inference, and error detection. In the future, he served as the prototype for Sherlock Holmes.

While studying, Doyle tried to help his family by earning money in his free time from studying. He worked both as a pharmacist and as an assistant to various doctors.

Two years after the start of his education, Doyle decided to try his hand at literature. In the spring of 1879, he wrote a short story, "The Mystery of Sasassa Valley", which was published in the Chamber's Journal in September 1879.

During this time, his father's health deteriorated and he was admitted to a psychiatric hospital. Thus, Doyle became the sole breadwinner for his family.

In 1880, Arthur received a position as a surgeon on the whaler Nadezhda under the command of John Gray, which was sailing to the Arctic Circle. This adventure found a place in his story “Captain of the Polar Star.”

In the fall of 1880, Conan Doyle returned to university studies.

In 1881 he graduated from the University of Edinburgh, where he received a Bachelor of Medicine and a Master of Surgery, and began to look for a place to work. The result of these searches was the position of ship's doctor on the ship "Mayuba", which sailed between Liverpool and the west coast of Africa, and on October 22, 1881, its next voyage began.

In July 1882, Doyle left for Portsmouth, where he opened his first practice. Initially there were no clients, and Doyle had the opportunity to devote his free time to literature. He wrote the stories “Bones”, “Bloomensdyke Gully”, “My Friend the Murderer”, which he published in the magazine “London Society” in the same 1882.

On August 6, 1885, Doyle married twenty-seven-year-old Louisa Hawkins. After his marriage, Doyle decided to pursue literature professionally.

In 1884 he wrote the book Girdlestones Trading House. But the book did not interest publishers. In March 1886, Conan Doyle began writing a novel that would lead to his popularity. It was originally called A Tangled Skein. Two years later, the novel was published in Beaton's Christmas Weekly for 1887 under the title A Study in Scarlet, which introduced readers to Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson. The novel was published as a separate edition in early 1888 and was accompanied by drawings by Doyle's father, Charles Doyle.

In February 1888, Doyle wrote the novel The Adventures of Micah Clark, which was published in February 1889 by Longman.

In January 1889, the Doyle couple had a daughter, Mary. Doyle left his practice in Portsmouth and went with his wife to Vienna, where he wanted to specialize in ophthalmology. Four months later, the Doyle couple returned to London, where Arthur opened his practice. During this time he began writing short stories about Sherlock Holmes.

In May 1891, Doyle decided to leave medical practice forever. At the end of the same year, his sixth story about Sherlock Holmes was published. At the same time, the editors of the Strand magazine ordered Doyle six more stories.

In 1892, Doyle wrote the novel Exiles. In November of the same year, his son was born, who was named Alleyn Kingeley.
At this time, Strand magazine again proposed writing a series of stories about Sherlock Holmes. Doyle set a condition - 1000 pounds for stories, and the magazine agreed to this amount.

From 1892 to 1896, Arthur traveled widely around the world with his family, while also working: during this time he lectured at various universities and began work on the novel Uncle Barnack. In May 1896 he returned to England. At the end of 1897 he wrote his first theatrical play, Sherlock Holmes.

In December 1899, the Boer War began, and Doyle volunteered there as a military doctor. Then, in 1902, he wrote the book The Great Boer War.

In 1902, King Edward VII awarded Conan Doyle a knighthood for services rendered to the Crown during the Boer War.
Doyle then decided to enter politics and took part in local elections in Edinburgh, but was defeated. At the same time, he completed work on another major work about the adventures of Sherlock Holmes - “The Hound of the Baskervilles”.

On July 4, 1906, his wife Louise died, and on September 18, 1907, Doyle married again - to Jean Leckie. The Doyle family had a daughter, Jean, and sons, Denis and Adrian.

A few years after his marriage, Doyle staged The Speckled Ribbon, Rodney Stone (under the title The House of Terperley), Glasses of Destiny, and Brigadier Gerard.

On August 4, 1914, Doyle joined the volunteer detachment, which was entirely civilian and was created in the event of an enemy invasion of England. During the First World War, Doyle lost many people close to him, including his brother Innes, who at his death had risen to the rank of Adjutant General of the Corps, and Kingsley's son from his first marriage, as well as two cousins ​​and two nephews.

In the last years of his life, Doyle became interested in the teachings of spiritualism and in the spring of 1922, he and his family went on a trip to America to promote this teaching. During the trip, he gave four lectures at New York's Carnegie Hall. In the spring of 1923, Doyle embarked on his second tour of America, where he visited Chicago and Salt Lake City. In the autumn of 1929 he went on his last tour of Holland, Denmark, Sweden and Norway. Also in 1929, his last book, The Maracot Deep and Other Stories, was published.
On July 7, 1930, Arthur Conan Doyle died.

The material was prepared based on information from open sources

Sir Arthur Ignatius Conan Doyle


The most famous are his detective works about Sherlock Holmes, adventure and science fiction books about Professor Challenger, humorous works about Brigadier Gerard, as well as historical novels (The White Squad). In addition, he wrote plays (“Waterloo”, “Angels of Darkness”, “Lights of Fate”, “The Speckled Ribbon”) and poems (collections of ballads “Songs of Action” (1898) and “Songs of the Road”), autobiographical essays (“Letters Stark Munro”, also known as “The Mystery of Stark Monroe”), domestic novels (“Duet, with an introduction by a choir”), and was a co-author and librettist of the operetta “Jane Annie” (1893).

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Biography


Doyle(eng. Sir Arthur Ignatius Conan Doyle)

Autograph. Sir Arthur Ignatius Conan Doyle(eng. Sir Arthur Ignatius Conan Doyle)


The writer's real name is Doyle. After the death of his beloved uncle named Conan (who actually raised him), he took his uncle’s surname as his middle name (in England this is possible, compare: Jerome Klapka Jerome, etc.). Thus, Conan is his "middle name", but in adulthood he began to use this name as a writer's pseudonym - Conan Doyle. In Russian texts there are also variants of the spelling Conan Doyle (which is more consistent with the rules for rendering proper names during translation - the transcriptive method), as well as Conan-Doyle and Conan-Doyle. It is a mistake to write with a hyphen (cf. Alexander-Pushkin). However, the correct spelling is Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. Arthur is the name at birth (named), Conan is adopted in memory of his uncle, Doyle (or Doyle) is the surname.

Early years

Sir Arthur Conan Doyle was born into an Irish Catholic family known for its achievements in art and literature. Father Charles Altamont Doyle, an architect and artist, at the age of 22 married 17-year-old Mary Foley, who passionately loved books and had a great talent for storytelling.

From her, Arthur inherited his interest in knightly traditions, exploits and adventures. “My true love for literature, my penchant for writing, I believe, comes from my mother,” Conan Doyle wrote in his autobiography. “The vivid images of the stories that she told me in early childhood completely replaced in my memory the memories of specific events in my life in those years.”

The family of the future writer experienced serious financial difficulties - solely because of the strange behavior of his father, who not only suffered from alcoholism, but also had an extremely unbalanced psyche. Arthur's school life was spent at Godder Preparatory School. When the boy was 9 years old, wealthy relatives offered to pay for his education and sent him for the next seven years to the Jesuit private college Stonyhurst (Lancashire), from where the future writer suffered hatred of religious and class prejudice, as well as physical punishment. The few happy moments of those years for him were associated with letters to his mother: he did not give up the habit of describing in detail to her the current events of his life for the rest of his life. In addition, at the boarding school, Doyle enjoyed playing sports, mainly cricket, and also discovered his talent as a storyteller, gathering peers around him who spent hours listening to stories he made up on the go.

In 1876, Arthur graduated from college and returned home: the first thing he had to do was rewrite the papers of his father, who by that time had almost completely lost his mind, in his name. The writer subsequently told about the dramatic circumstances of Doyle Sr.’s imprisonment in a psychiatric hospital in the story The Surgeon of Gaster Fell (1880). Doyle chose a medical career over art (to which his family tradition predisposed him) - largely under the influence of Brian C. Waller, a young doctor to whom his mother rented a room in the house. Dr. Waller was educated at the University of Edinburgh: Arthur Doyle went there to receive further education. Future writers he met here included James Barry and Robert Louis Stevenson.

As a third-year student, Doyle decided to try his hand at the literary field. His first story, The Mystery of Sasassa Valley, influenced by Edgar Allan Poe and Bret Harte (his favorite authors at the time), was published by the university's Chamber's Journal, where Thomas Hardy's first works appeared. That same year, Doyle's second story, The American Tale, appeared in the London Society magazine.

In February 1880, Doyle spent seven months as a ship's doctor in Arctic waters aboard the whaling ship Hope, receiving a total of 50 pounds for his work. “I boarded this ship as a big, clumsy youth, and came down the gangplank as a strong, grown man,” he later wrote in his autobiography. Impressions from the Arctic journey formed the basis of the story “Captain of the Pole-Star”. Two years later he made a similar voyage to the West Coast of Africa aboard the Mayumba, which sailed between Liverpool and the West Coast of Africa.

Having received a university diploma and a bachelor's degree in medicine in 1881, Conan Doyle began practicing medicine, first jointly (with an extremely unscrupulous partner - this experience was described in The Notes of Stark Munro), then individually, in Plymouth. Finally, in 1891, Doyle decided to make literature his main profession. In January 1884, Cornhill magazine published the story "The Message of Hebekuk Jephson." During those same days, he met his future wife, Louise "Tuya" Hawkins; the wedding took place on August 6, 1885.


Sir Arthur Ignatius Conan Doyle(eng. Sir Arthur Ignatius Conan Doyle)


In 1884, Conan Doyle began work on Girdlestone Trading House, a social and everyday novel with a crime-detective plot (written under the influence of Dickens) about cynical and cruel money-grubbing merchants. It was published in 1890.

In March 1886, Conan Doyle began, and by April had largely completed, work on A Study in Scarlet (originally titled A Tangled Skein, with the two main characters named Sheridan Hope and Ormond Sacker). The publisher Ward, Locke and Co. bought the rights to the novel for £25 and published it in Beeton's Christmas Annual in 1887, inviting the writer's father Charles Doyle to illustrate the novel.

A year later, Doyle's third (and perhaps strangest) novel, The Mystery of Cloomber, was published. The story of the "afterlife" of three vengeful Buddhist monks is the first literary evidence of the author's interest in the paranormal, which later made him a convinced follower of spiritualism.

Historical cycle

In February 1888, A. Conan Doyle completed work on the novel “The Adventures of Micah Clarke,” which told the story of the Monmouth Rebellion (1685), the purpose of which was to overthrow King James II. The novel was released in November and was warmly received by critics. From this moment on, a conflict arose in Conan Doyle's creative life: on the one hand, the public and publishers demanded new works about Sherlock Holmes; on the other hand, the writer himself increasingly sought to gain recognition as the author of serious novels (primarily historical ones), as well as plays and poems.

Conan Doyle's first serious historical work is considered to be the novel "The White Squad". In it, the author turned to a critical stage in the history of feudal England, taking as a basis a real historical episode in 1366, when there was a lull in the Hundred Years' War and “white detachments” of volunteers and mercenaries began to emerge. Continuing the war on French territory, they played a decisive role in the struggle of contenders for the Spanish throne. Conan Doyle used this episode for his own artistic purpose: he resurrected the life and customs of that time, and most importantly, presented chivalry, which by that time was already in decline, in a heroic aura. The White Company was published in Cornhill magazine (whose publisher, James Penn, declared it “the best historical novel since Ivanhoe”), and was published as a separate book in 1891. Conan Doyle always said that he considered it one of his best works.

With some allowance, the novel “Rodney Stone” (1896) can also be classified as historical: the action here takes place at the beginning of the 19th century, Napoleon and Nelson, playwright Sheridan are mentioned. Initially, this work was conceived as a play with the working title “House of Temperley” and was written under the famous British actor Henry Irving at that time. While working on the novel, the writer studied a lot of scientific and historical literature (“History of the Navy”, “History of Boxing”, etc.).

Conan Doyle dedicated “The Exploits” and “Adventures” of Brigadier Gerard to the Napoleonic Wars, from Trafalgar to Waterloo. The birth of this character dates back, apparently, to 1892, when George Meredith handed Conan Doyle the three-volume “Memoirs” of Marbot: the latter became the prototype of Gerard. The first story of the new series, “Brigadier Gerard's Medal,” was first read by the writer from the stage in 1894 during a trip to the United States. In December of the same year, the story was published by Strand Magazine, after which the author continued work on the sequel in Davos. From April to September 1895, The Exploits of Brigadier Gerard was published in the Strand. “Adventures” were also published here for the first time (August 1902 - May 1903). Despite the fact that the plots of the stories about Gerard are fantastic, the historical era is depicted with great accuracy. “The spirit and flow of these stories are remarkable, the precision in keeping names and titles in itself demonstrates the magnitude of the work you have expended. Few would be able to find any errors here. And I, having a special nose for all sorts of mistakes, never found anything with insignificant exceptions,” the famous British historian Archibald Forbes wrote to Doyle.

In 1892, the “French-Canadian” adventure novel “Exiles” and the historical play “Waterloo” were completed, in which the main role was played by the then famous actor Henry Irving (who acquired all rights from the author).

Sherlock Holmes

"A Scandal in Bohemia", the first story in the "Adventures of Sherlock Holmes" series, was published in The Strand magazine in 1891. The prototype of the main character, who soon became a legendary consulting detective, was Joseph Bell, a professor at the University of Edinburgh, famous for his ability to guess the character and past of a person from the smallest details. For two years, Doyle created story after story, and eventually began to become burdened with his own character. His attempt to “finish off” Holmes in a fight with Professor Moriarty (“Holmes’ Last Case,” 1893) was unsuccessful: the hero, beloved by the reading public, had to be “resurrected.” Holmes's epic culminated in the novel The Hound of the Baskervilles (1900), which is considered a classic of the detective genre.

Four novels are dedicated to the adventures of Sherlock Holmes: A Study in Scarlet (1887), The Sign of Four (1890), The Hound of the Baskervilles, The Valley of Terror - and five collections of short stories, the most famous of which are The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes. (1892), Notes on Sherlock Holmes (1894) and The Return of Sherlock Holmes (1905). The writer's contemporaries tended to downplay the greatness of Holmes, seeing in him a kind of hybrid of Dupin (Edgar Allan Poe), Lecoq (Emile Gaboriau) and Cuff (Wilkie Collins). In retrospect, it became clear how different Holmes was from his predecessors: the combination of unusual qualities raised him above his time, making him relevant at all times. The extraordinary popularity of Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson gradually grew into a branch of new mythology, the center of which to this day remains an apartment in London at 221-b Baker Street.

1900-1910


Sir Arthur Ignatius Conan Doyle(eng. Sir Arthur Ignatius Conan Doyle)


In 1900, Conan Doyle returned to medical practice: as a surgeon at a military field hospital, he went to the Boer War. The book he published in 1902, “The War in South Africa,” met with warm approval from conservative circles, brought the writer closer to government spheres, after which he acquired the somewhat ironic nickname “Patriot,” which he himself, however, was proud of. At the beginning of the century, the writer received the title of nobility and knighthood and twice took part in local elections in Edinburgh (losing both times).

On July 4, 1906, Louise Doyle (with whom the writer had two children) died of tuberculosis. In 1907, he married Jean Leckie, with whom he had been secretly in love since they met in 1897.

At the end of the post-war debate, Conan Doyle launched extensive journalistic and (as they would say now) human rights activities. His attention was drawn to the so-called Edalji case, which centered on a young Parsi who was convicted on trumped-up charges (of mutilating horses). Conan Doyle, taking on the “role” of a consulting detective, thoroughly understood the intricacies of the case and, with just a long series of publications in the London Daily Telegraph newspaper (but with the involvement of forensic experts), proved his charge’s innocence. Beginning in June 1907, hearings on the Edalji case began in the House of Commons, during which the imperfections of the legal system, deprived of such an important tool as the court of appeal, were exposed. The latter was created in Britain - largely thanks to the activity of Conan Doyle.

In 1909, events in Africa again came into Conan Doyle's sphere of public and political interests. This time he exposed Belgium's brutal colonial policy in the Congo and criticized the British position on this issue. Conan Doyle's letters to The Times on this topic had the effect of a bomb exploding. The book “Crimes in the Congo” (1909) had an equally powerful resonance: it was thanks to it that many politicians were forced to become interested in the problem. Conan Doyle was supported by Joseph Conrad and Mark Twain. But Rudyard Kipling, a recent like-minded person, greeted the book with restraint, noting that, while criticizing Belgium, it indirectly undermined British positions in the colonies. In 1909, Conan Doyle also took up the defense of the Jew Oscar Slater, who was unjustly convicted of murder, and achieved his release, albeit after 18 years.

Relationships with fellow writers

In literature, Conan Doyle had several undoubted authorities: first of all, Walter Scott, on whose books he grew up, as well as George Meredith, Mine Reid, R. M. Ballantyne and R. L. Stevenson. The meeting with the already elderly Meredith in Box Hill made a depressing impression on the aspiring writer: he noted for himself that the master spoke disparagingly about his contemporaries and was delighted with himself. Conan Doyle only corresponded with Stevenson, but he took his death seriously, as a personal loss.

In the early 90s, Conan Doyle established friendly relations with the leaders and employees of Idler magazine: Jerome K. Jerome, Robert Barr and James M. Barry. The latter, having awakened in the writer a passion for theater, attracted him to (ultimately not very fruitful) collaboration in the dramaturgical field.

In 1893, Doyle's sister Constance married Ernst William Hornung. Having become relatives, the writers maintained friendly relations, although they did not always see eye to eye. Hornung's main character, the "noble burglar" Raffles, was very much like a parody of the "noble detective" Holmes.

A. Conan Doyle also highly appreciated the works of Kipling, in whom, in addition, he saw a political ally (both were fierce patriots). In 1895, he supported Kipling in disputes with American opponents and was invited to Vermont, where he lived with his American wife. Later (after Doyle’s critical publications on England’s policy in Africa), relations between the two writers became cooler.

Doyle's relationship with Bernard Shaw was strained, who once described Sherlock Holmes as "a drug addict without a single pleasant quality." There is reason to believe that the Irish playwright took the attacks of the former against (now little-known author) Hall Kane, who abused self-promotion, personally. In 1912, Conan Doyle and Shaw entered into a public squabble on the pages of newspapers: the first defended the crew of the Titanic, the second condemned the behavior of the officers of the sunken liner.


Sir Arthur Ignatius Conan Doyle(eng. Sir Arthur Ignatius Conan Doyle)


Conan Doyle knew H.G. Wells and outwardly maintained good relations with him, but internally he considered him an antipode. The conflict was aggravated by the fact that while Wells was one of the elite of “serious” British literature, Conan Doyle was considered, albeit talented, but a producer of entertaining reading for teenagers, with which he himself categorically disagreed. The confrontation took on open forms in a public discussion on the pages of the Daily Mail. In response to Wells's long article on labor unrest on June 20, 1912, Conan Doyle made a reasoned attack (“Labour Unrest. Reply to Mr. Wells”), showing the destructiveness of any revolutionary activity for Britain.

Mr. Wells gives the impression of a man who, while walking through the garden, would say: “I don’t like that fruit tree. It bears fruit not in the best way, does not shine with perfection of forms. Let’s cut it down and try to grow another, better tree in this place.” Is this what the British people expect from their genius? It would be much more natural to hear him say: “I don’t like this tree. Let's try to improve its viability without causing damage to the trunk. Maybe we can make it grow and bear fruit the way we would like it to. But let’s not destroy it, because then all past labors will be in vain, and it is still unknown what we will get in the future.”


Sir Arthur Ignatius Conan Doyle(eng. Sir Arthur Ignatius Conan Doyle)


Conan Doyle in his article calls on the people to express their protest democratically, during elections, noting that not only the proletariat is experiencing difficulties, but also the intelligentsia and the middle class, with whom Wells has no sympathy. Agreeing with Wells on the need for land reform (and even supporting the creation of farms in abandoned parks), Doyle rejects his hatred of the ruling class and concludes:

Our worker knows: he, like any other citizen, lives in accordance with certain social laws, and it is not in his interests to undermine the welfare of his state by sawing off the branch on which he himself sits.

1910-1913

In 1912, Conan Doyle published the science fiction novel The Lost World (subsequently adapted into films), followed by The Poison Belt (1913). The main character of both works was Professor Challenger, a fanatic scientist endowed with grotesque qualities, but at the same time humane and charming in his own way. At the same time, the last detective story, “The Valley of Horror,” appeared. This work, which many critics tend to underestimate, is considered by Doyle's biographer J. D. Carr to be one of his strongest.



The Lost World, although a resounding success, was not perceived by contemporaries as a serious science fiction work, despite the fact that the author described a real place: the Ricardo Franco Hills, located on the border of Bolivia and Brazil. The expedition of Colonel Fossett visited here: after meeting with him, Conan Doyle’s idea for the story was born. The story told in the story “The Poisoned Belt” seemed even less “scientific” to everyone. It is based on the hypothesis that the universal space environment is a certain ether that permeates space. The hypothesis was initially debunked, but subsequently underwent a rebirth - both in science fiction (A. Azimov, “Cosmic Currents”) and in science (“echo of the Big Bang”).

The main topics of Conan Doyle's journalism in 1911-1913 were: Britain's failure at the 1912 Olympic Games, Prince Henry's motor rally in Germany, the construction of sports facilities and preparations for the 1916 Olympic Games in Berlin (which never took place). In addition, sensing the approach of war, Conan Doyle in his newspaper speeches called for the revival of yeoman settlements, which could become the main force of the new motorcycle troops (Daily Express 1910: "Yeomen of the Future"). He was also occupied with the problem of urgent retraining of the British cavalry. In 1911-1913, the writer actively spoke out in favor of introducing Home Rule in Ireland, during the discussion more than once formulating his “imperialist” credo.

1914-1918

The outbreak of the First World War completely turned Conan Doyle's life upside down. At first, he volunteered for the front, confident that his mission was to set a personal example of heroism and service to his homeland. After this offer was rejected, he devoted himself to journalistic activities.

Beginning on August 8, 1914, Doyle's letters on military topics appeared in the London Times. First of all, he proposed creating a massive combat reserve and creating detachments of civilians to perform “protection services for railway stations and vital facilities, help in the construction of fortifications and perform many other combat tasks.” At home in Crowborough (Sussex County), Doyle personally began organizing such detachments and on the first day put 200 people under arms. He then expanded his practice to Eastbourne, Rotherford and Buxted. The writer came into contact with the Association for the Training of Volunteer Units (chaired by Lord Densborough), promising to create a gigantic united army of half a million volunteers. Among the innovations he proposed were the installation of mine-resistant tridents on board ships (The Times, September 8, 1914), the creation of individual life belts for sailors (Daily Mail, September 29, 1914), and the use of individual armored protective equipment (" Times", July 27, 1915). In a series of articles in the Daily Chronicle entitled "German Politics: Bet on Killing", Doyle described with his characteristic passion and force of conviction the atrocities of the German army in the air, at sea and in the occupied territories of France and Belgium. Responding to an American opponent (a certain Mr. Bennett), Doyle writes:

Yes, our pilots bombed Düsseldorf (as well as Friedrichshafen), but each time they attacked pre-planned strategic targets (aircraft hangars), to which they inflicted, as was recognized, significant damage. Even the enemy in his reports did not try to accuse us of indiscriminate bombing. Meanwhile, if we adopted German tactics, we could easily throw bombs at the crowded streets of Cologne and Frankfurt, which were also open to air strikes. - New York Times, February 6, 1915.

Doyle becomes even more embittered when he becomes aware of the torture that English prisoners of war were subjected to in Germany.


Sir Arthur Ignatius Conan Doyle(eng. Sir Arthur Ignatius Conan Doyle)


...It is difficult to develop a line of conduct regarding the Red Indians of European descent who torture prisoners of war. It is clear that we ourselves cannot torture the Germans at our disposal in the same way. On the other hand, calls for good-heartedness are also meaningless, for the average German has the same concept of nobility as a cow has of mathematics... He is sincerely incapable of understanding, for example, what makes us speak warmly of von Müller of Weddingen and our other enemies who are trying at least to some extent preserve a human face... . The Times, April 13, 1915.



Sir Arthur Ignatius Conan Doyle(eng. Sir Arthur Ignatius Conan Doyle)


Soon Doyle calls for the organization of “retaliation raids” from the territory of eastern France and enters into a discussion with the Bishop of Winchester (the essence of whose position is that “it is not the sinner who is to be condemned, but his sin”):

Let sin fall on those who force us to sin. If we wage this war, guided by Christ’s commandments, there will be no point. If we, following a well-known recommendation taken out of context, had turned the “other cheek,” the Hohenzollern empire would have already spread across Europe, and instead of Christ’s teachings, Nietzscheanism would be preached here. - The Times, December 31, 1917, “On the Benefits of Hate.”


Sir Arthur Ignatius Conan Doyle(eng. Sir Arthur Ignatius Conan Doyle)


In 1916, Conan Doyle toured British battlefields and visited the Allied armies. The result of the trip was the book “On Three Fronts” (1916). Realizing that official reports significantly embellished the real state of affairs, he, nevertheless, refrained from any criticism, considering it his duty to maintain the morale of the soldiers. In 1916, his work “The History of the Actions of British Troops in France and Flanders” began to be published. By 1920, all 6 of its volumes were published.

Doyle's brother, son and two nephews went to the front and died there. This was a great shock for the writer and left a heavy mark on all his further literary, journalistic and social activities.

1918-1930

At the end of the war, as is commonly believed, under the influence of shocks associated with the death of loved ones, Conan Doyle became an active preacher of spiritualism, which he had been interested in since the 80s of the 19th century. Among the books that shaped his new worldview was “Human Personality and Its Subsequent Life after Corporeal Death” by F. W. G. Myers. K. Doyle’s main works on this topic are considered to be “The New Revelation” (1918), where he spoke about the history of the evolution of his views on the question of the posthumous existence of the individual, and the novel “The Land of Mist” (1926). The result of his many years of research into the “psychic” phenomenon was the fundamental work “The History of Spiritualism”, 1926.

Conan Doyle refuted claims that his interest in spiritualism arose only at the end of the war:


Sir Arthur Ignatius Conan Doyle(eng. Sir Arthur Ignatius Conan Doyle)


Many people had not encountered Spiritualism or even heard of it until 1914, when the angel of death came knocking on many homes. Opponents of Spiritualism believe that it was the social cataclysms that shook our world that caused such an increased interest in psychic research. These unprincipled opponents stated that the author's advocacy of Spiritualism and his friend Sir Oliver Lodge's defense of the Doctrine was due to the fact that both of them had lost sons in the 1914 war. The conclusion followed from this: grief darkened their minds, and they believed in what they would never have believed in peacetime. The author has refuted this shameless lie many times and emphasized the fact that his research began in 1886, long before the outbreak of the war. - (“History of Spiritualism”, Chapter 23, “Spiritism and War”)

Among Conan Doyle's most controversial works of the early 20s is the book The Coming of the Fairies (1921), in which he tried to prove the truth of photographs of the Cottingley fairies and put forward his own theories regarding the nature of this phenomenon.

In 1924, Conan Doyle's autobiographical book Memoirs and Adventures was published. The writer’s last major work was the science fiction story “Marakot’s Abyss” (1929).

Family life

In 1885, Conan Doyle married Louise "Thuye" Hawkins; She suffered from tuberculosis for many years and died in 1906.

In 1907, Doyle married Jean Leckie, with whom he had been secretly in love since they met in 1897. His wife shared his passion for spiritualism and was even considered a rather powerful medium.


Sir Arthur Ignatius Conan Doyle(eng. Sir Arthur Ignatius Conan Doyle)


Doyle had five children: two from his first wife - Mary and Kingsley, and three from his second - Jean Lena Annette, Denis Percy Stewart (March 17, 1909 - March 9, 1955; in 1936 he became the husband of the Georgian princess Nina Mdivani) and Adrian.

The famous writer of the early 20th century, Willy Hornung, became a relative of Conan Doyle in 1893: he married his sister, Connie (Constance) Doyle.


Sir Arthur Ignatius Conan Doyle(eng. Sir Arthur Ignatius Conan Doyle)


Adrian Conan Doyle, the author of his father’s biography “The True Conan Doyle,” wrote: “The very atmosphere of the house breathed a chivalrous spirit. Conan Doyle learned to understand coats of arms much earlier than he became acquainted with the Latin conjugation.”

Last years

The writer spent the entire second half of the 20s traveling, visiting all continents, without stopping his active journalistic activity. Having visited England only briefly in 1929 to celebrate his 70th birthday, Doyle went to Scandinavia with the same goal - to preach “... the revival of religion and that direct, practical spiritualism, which is the only antidote to scientific materialism.” This last trip undermined his health: he spent the following spring in bed, surrounded by loved ones. At some point, there was an improvement: the writer immediately went to London to, in a conversation with the Minister of the Interior, demand the abolition of laws that persecuted mediums. This effort turned out to be the last: in the early morning of July 7, 1930, Conan Doyle died of a heart attack at his home in Crowborough (Sussex). He was buried not far from his garden house. At the request of the widow, only the writer’s name, date of birth and four words were engraved on the tombstone: Steel True, Blade Straight (“True as steel, straight as a blade”).

Some works

Sherlock Holmes

Bibliography of Sherlock Holmes

The Lost World (1912)
- The Poison Belt (1913)
- The Land of Mists (1926)
- The Disintegration Machine (1927)
- When the World Screamed (When the World Screamed) (1928)

Historical novels

Micah Clarke (1888), a novel about the Monmouth Rebellion in 17th-century England.
- The White Company (1891)
- The Great Shadow (1892)
- The Refugees (published 1893, written 1892), a novel about the Huguenots in France in the 17th century, the French exploration of Canada, and the Indian Wars.
- Rodney Stone (1896)
- Uncle Bernac (1897), a story about a French emigrant during the French Revolution.
- Sir Nigel (1906)

Poetry

Songs of Action (1898)
- Songs of the Road (1911)
- (The Guards Came Through and Other Poems) (1919)

Dramaturgy

Jane Annie, or the Good Conduct Prize (1893)
- Duet (A Duet. A duologue) (1899)
- (A Pot of Caviare) (1912)
- (The Speckled Band) (1912)
- Waterloo (A drama in one act) (1919) This section is not completed.
- You will help the project by correcting and expanding it.

Other works

Works in the style of Arthur Conan Doyle

Arthur Conan Doyle's son Adrian wrote a number of stories featuring Sherlock Holmes.

Film adaptations of works

- The Lost World (silent film by Harry Hoyt, 1925)
- The Lost World (1998 film).
- and others, see The Lost World.

The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes series starring Basil Rathbone and Nigel Bruce, filmed between 1939 and 1946, produced 14 films, the first of which was The Hound of the Baskervilles.

The following films were released in the series “The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes and Doctor Watson” with Vasily Livanov and Vitaly Solomin:
- "Sherlock Holmes and Doctor Watson"
- “The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes and Doctor Watson”
- "The Hound of the Baskervilles"
- “Treasures of Agra”
- “The Twentieth Century Begins”

Museums

Sherlock Holmes House




Nakhodka 2004

On March 16, 2004, the personal papers of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle were discovered in London. More than three thousand sheets were found in the office of one law firm. The papers discovered include personal letters, including from Winston Churchill, Oscar Wilde, Bernard Shaw and President Roosevelt, diary entries, drafts and manuscripts of unpublished works by author Sherlock Holmes. The preliminary cost of the find is two million pounds sterling.

Arthur Conan Doyle in fiction

The life and work of Arthur Conan Doyle became an integral feature of the Victorian era, which naturally led to the appearance of works of art in which the writer acted as a character, and sometimes in an image very far from reality. For example, in the series of novels by Christopher Golden and Thomas E. Snigoski, “The Menagerie,” Conan Doyle appears as “the second most powerful magician of our world.”

In Mark Frost's mystical novel The List of Seven, Doyle helps the mysterious stranger Jack Sparks in the fight against the forces of evil trying to seize power over the world.


Sir Arthur Ignatius Conan Doyle(eng. Sir Arthur Ignatius Conan Doyle)


In a much more traditional vein, facts from the writer’s life were used in the British television series “Death Rooms.” The Dark Beginnings of Sherlock Holmes" ("Murder Rooms: The Dark Beginnings of Sherlock Holmes", 2000), where a young medical student Arthur Conan Doyle becomes an assistant to Professor Joseph Bell (the prototype of Sherlock Holmes) and helps him solve crimes.

Literature

Carr J.D., Pearson H. “Arthur Conan Doyle.” M.: Book, 1989.
- Conan Doyle, Arthur. Collected Works in eight volumes. M.: Pravda, Ogonyok Library, 1966.
- A. Conan Doyle. The Crowborough Edition of the Works. Garden City, New York, Doubleday, Doran and Company, Inc., 1906.
- Arthur Conan Doyle. Life lessons. Cycle “Symbols of Time” Translation from English. V.Polyakova, P.Gelevs. M.: Agraf, 2003.

Biography


Sir Arthur Ignatius Conan Doyle(eng. Sir Arthur Ignatius Conan Doyle)


Arthur Ignatius Conan Doyle was born on May 22, 1859 in the capital of Scotland, Edinburgh, on Picardy Place, in the family of an artist and architect. His father, Charles Altamont Doyle, married at the age of twenty-two to Mary Foley, a young woman of seventeen, in 1855. Mary Doyle had a passion for books and was the main storyteller in the family, which is probably why Arthur later remembered her very touchingly. Unfortunately, Arthur's father was a chronic alcoholic, and therefore the family was sometimes poor, although he was, according to his son, a very talented artist. As a child, Arthur read a lot, having completely varied interests. His favorite author was Myne Reed and his favorite book was Scalp Hunters.

After Arthur reached the age of nine, wealthy members of the Doyle family offered to pay for his education. For seven years he had to attend a Jesuit boarding school in England at Hodder, a preparatory school for Stonyhurst (a large boarding Catholic school in Lancashire). Two years later he moved from Hodder Arthur to Stonyhurst. Seven subjects were taught there: the alphabet, counting, basic rules, grammar, syntax, poetry, and rhetoric. The food there was rather meager and did not have much variety, which, however, did not affect health. Corporal punishment was severe. Arthur was often exposed to them at that time. The instrument of punishment was a piece of rubber, the size and shape of a thick galosh, which was used to hit the hands.

It was during these difficult years at boarding school that Arthur realized that he had a talent for writing stories, so he was often surrounded by a congregation of delighted young students listening to the amazing stories he made up to entertain them. During one of the Christmas holidays, in 1874, he went to London for three weeks, at the invitation of his relatives. There he visits: the theater, zoo, circus, Madame Tussauds Wax Museum. He remains very pleased with this trip and speaks warmly of his Aunt Annette, his father’s sister, as well as Uncle Dick, with whom he will subsequently be, to put it mildly, not on friendly terms due to the divergence of views on his, Arthur’s, place in medicine, in particular, will he have to become a Catholic doctor... But this is still a distant future, he still has to graduate from university...

In his senior year, he edits the college magazine and writes poetry. In addition, he was involved in sports, mainly cricket, in which he achieved good results. He goes to Germany to Feldkirch to study German, where he continues to play sports with passion: football, stilt football, sledding. In the summer of 1876, Doyle was traveling home, but on the way he stopped in Paris, where he lived for several weeks with his uncle. Thus, in 1876, he was educated and ready to face the world, and also wished to make up for some of the shortcomings of his father, who by then had become insane.

The traditions of the Doyle family dictated that he follow an artistic career, but still Arthur decided to take up medicine. This decision was made under the influence of Dr. Brian Charles, a sedate, young lodger whom Arthur's mother took in to help make ends meet. Dr. Waller was educated at the University of Edinburgh, and so Arthur decided to study there. In October 1876, Arthur became a student at the medical university, having previously encountered another problem - not receiving the scholarship he deserved, which he and his family so needed. While studying, Arthur met many future famous authors, such as James Barry and Robert Louis Stevenson, who also attended the university. But his greatest influence was one of his teachers, Dr. Joseph Bell, who was a master of observation, logic, inference and error detection. In the future, he served as the prototype for Sherlock Holmes.

While studying, Doyle tried to help his family, which consisted of seven children: Annette, Constance, Caroline, Ida, Innes and Arthur, who earned money in his free time, which he found through accelerated study of disciplines. He worked both as a pharmacist and as an assistant to various doctors... In particular, in the early summer of 1878, Arthur was hired as a student and pharmacist by a doctor from the poorest quarter of Sheffield. But after three weeks, Dr. Richadson, that was his name, broke up with him. Arthur does not give up trying to earn extra money while he has the opportunity, the summer holidays are on, and after a while he ends up with Dr. Elliot Hoare from the village of Rayton in Shronshire. This attempt turned out to be more successful; this time he worked for 4 months until October 1878, when it was necessary to start classes. This doctor treated Arthur well, and so he again spent the next summer working with him as an assistant.

Doyle reads a lot and two years after the start of his education he decides to try his hand at literature. In the spring of 1879, he wrote a short story, “The Mystery of Sasassa Valley,” which was published in Chamber’s Journal in September 1879. The story comes out badly cut, which upsets Arthur, but the 3 guineas received for it inspire him to write further. He sends a few more stories. But only “The American’s Tale” can be published in the London Society magazine. And yet he understands that this way he too can make money. His father's health deteriorates and he is admitted to a mental institution. Thus, Doyle becomes the sole breadwinner for his family.

Twenty years old, while studying in his third year at university, in 1880, Arthur's friend Claude Augustus Currier invited him to accept the position of surgeon, which he himself applied for, but was unable to for personal reasons, on the whaler "Nadezhda" under the command of John Gray in the North Polar region Circle. First, "Nadezhda" stopped near the shores of the island of Greenland, where the crew began hunting seals. The young medical student was shocked by the brutality of it. But at the same time, he enjoyed the camaraderie on board the ship and the subsequent whale hunt that fascinated him. This adventure found its way into his first sea story, the frightening tale "The Captain of the Pole-star." Without much enthusiasm, Conan Doyle returned to his studies in the autumn of 1880, having sailed for a total of 7 months, earning about 50 pounds.

In 1881 he graduated from the University of Edinburgh, where he received a Bachelor of Medicine and a Master of Surgery, and began looking for employment, again spending the summer working for Dr Hoare. The result of these searches was a position as a ship's doctor on the ship "Mayuba", which sailed between Liverpool and the west coast of Africa, and on October 22, 1881, its next voyage began.

While swimming, he found Africa as disgusting as the Arctic was seductive.

Therefore, he leaves the ship in mid-January 1882, and moves to England to Plymouth, where he works together with a certain Cullingworth, whom he met during his last courses of study in Edinburgh, namely from the end of spring to the beginning of summer of 1882, for 6 weeks . (These first years of practice are well described in his book “The Stark Munro Letters.”) In which, in addition to describing life, the author’s reflections on religious issues and forecasts for the future are presented in large quantities. One of these forecasts is the possibility building a united Europe, as well as the unification of English-speaking countries around the United States. The first forecast came true not long ago, but the second is unlikely to come true. Also, this book talks about the possible victory over diseases through their prevention. Unfortunately, the only country, in my opinion opinion, which was moving towards this, changed its internal structure (meaning Russia).)

Over time, disagreements arise between former classmates, after which Doyle leaves for Portsmouth (July 1882), where he opens his first practice, located in a house for 40 pounds per annum, which began to generate income only by the end of the third year. Initially, there were no clients and therefore Doyle had the opportunity to devote his free time to literature. He writes stories: “Bones”, “Bloomensdyke Ravine”, “My Friend is a Murderer”, which he published in the magazine “London Society” in the same 1882. While living in Portsmouth, he meets Elma Welden, whom he promises to marry if he earns £2 a week. But in 1882, after repeated quarrels, he broke up with her, and she left for Switzerland.

In order to somehow help his mother, Arthur invites his brother Innes to stay with him, who brightens up the gray everyday life of an aspiring doctor from August 1882 to 1885 (Innes goes to study at a boarding school in Yorkshire). During these years, our hero is torn between literature and medicine.

One day in March 1885, Dr. Pike, his friend and neighbor, invited Doyle to consult on the illness of Jack Hawkins, the son of the widow Emily Hawkins from Gloucestershire. He had meningitis and was hopeless. Arthur offered to place him in his home for his constant care, but Jack died a few days later. This death made it possible to meet his sister Louisa (or Tooey) Hawkins, aged 27, to whom he became engaged in April and married on August 6, 1885. His income at that time was approximately 300, and hers 100 pounds per year.

After his marriage, Doyle was actively involved in literature and wanted to make it his profession. It is published in Cornhill magazine. His stories come out one after another: “J. Habakuk Jephson's Statement, John Huxford's Hiatus, The Ring of Thoth. But stories are stories, and Doyle wants more, he wants to be noticed, and for this he needs to write something more serious. And so in 1884 he wrote the book “The Firm of Girdlestone: a romance of the unromantic” (“Girdlestones Trading House”). But to his great regret, the book did not interest publishers. In March 1886, Conan Doyle began writing a novel that would lead to his popularity. It was originally called A Tangled Skein. In April, he finishes it and sends it to Cornhill to James Payne, who in May of the same year speaks very warmly about it, but refuses to publish it, since, in his opinion, it deserves a separate publication. Thus began the ordeal of the author, trying to find a home for his brainchild. Doyle sends the manuscript to Arrowsmith in Bristol, and while waiting for a response to it, he participates in political events, where for the first time he successfully speaks in front of an audience of thousands. Political passions fade, and in July a negative review of the novel comes. Arthur does not despair and sends the manuscript to Fred Warne and Co. But they weren’t interested in their romance either. Next come Messrs. Ward, Locky and Co. They reluctantly agree, but set a number of conditions: the novel will be published no earlier than next year, the fee for it will be 25 pounds, and the author will transfer all rights to the work to the publisher. Doyle reluctantly agrees, as he wants his first novel to be judged by readers. And so, two years later, this novel was published in Beeton's Christmas Annual for 1887 under the title "A Study in Scarlet", which introduced readers to Sherlock Holmes (prototypes: Professor Joseph Bell, writer Oliver Holmes) and Doctor Watson (prototype Major Wood), who soon became famous. The novel was published as a separate edition in early 1888 and was accompanied by drawings by Doyle's father, Charles Doyle.

The beginning of 1887 marked the beginning of the study and research of such a concept as “life after death.” Together with his friend Ball from Portsmouth, he conducts a spiritualistic seance, which, however, did not allow them to fully understand this issue, which he continued to study throughout his subsequent life.

As soon as Doyle sent out A Study in Scarlet, he began a new book, and at the end of February 1888 he completed Micah Clarke (The Adventures of Micah Clarke), which was published only at the end of February 1889 by the Longman publishing house. Arthur has always been drawn to historical novels. His favorite authors were: Meredith, Stevenson and, of course, Walter Scott. It was under their influence that Doyle wrote this and a number of other historical works. While working on The White Company in 1889, riding the wave of positive reviews for Mickey Clark, Doyle unexpectedly receives a dinner invitation from the American editor of Lippincott's Magazine to discuss writing another Sherlock Holmes story. Arthur meets him and also meets Oscar Wilde and eventually agrees to their proposal. And in 1890, “The Sign of Four” appeared in the American and English editions of this magazine.

Despite his literary success and thriving medical practice, the harmonious life of the Conan Doyle family, expanded by the birth of his daughter Mary (born January 1889), was turbulent. The year 1890 was no less productive than the previous one, although it began with the death of his sister Annette. By the middle of this year he has completed The White Company, which is taken up for publication by James Payne in Cornhill and declared to be the best historical novel since Ivanhoe. By the end of the same year, under the influence of the German microbiologist Robert Koch and even more Malcolm Robert, he decides to leave his practice in Portsmouth and travels with his wife to Vienna, leaving his daughter Mary with his grandmother, where he wants to specialize in ophthalmology in order to later find work in London . However, having encountered the specialized German language and having studied for 4 months in Vienna, he realizes that his time was wasted. During his studies, he wrote the book “The Doings of Raffles Haw”, which, according to Doyle, “... is not a very significant thing...”. In the spring of the same year, Doyle visited Paris and quickly returned to London, where he opened a practice on Upper Wimpole Street. The practice was not successful (there were no patients), but during this time short stories about Sherlock Holmes were written for the Strand magazine. And with the help of Sidney Paget the image of Holmes is created.

In May 1891, Doyle fell ill with influenza and was near death for several days. When he recovered, he decided to leave medical practice and devote himself to literature. This takes place in August 1891. By the end of 1891, Doyle had become a very popular figure due to the appearance of the sixth Sherlock Holmes story, The Man with the Twisted Lip. But after writing these six stories, the editor of the Strand in October 1891 asked for six more, agreeing to any conditions on the part of the author. And Doyle asked for, as it seemed to him, the same amount, 50 pounds, having heard about which the deal should not have taken place, since he no longer wanted to deal with this character. But to his great surprise, it turned out that the editors agreed. And stories were written. Doyle begins work for the Exiles (graduated in early 1892) and unexpectedly receives an invitation to dinner from the Idler (lazy) magazine, where he meets Jerome K. Jerome, Robert Barr, with whom he later becomes friends. Doyle continues his friendly relationship with Barry and holidays with him in Scotland from March to April 1892. Having visited Edinburgh, Kirriemuir, Alford along the way. Upon returning to Norwood, he begins work on “The Great Shadow” (Napoleonic era), which he completes by the middle of that year.

In November of the same 1892, while living in Norwood, Louise gave birth to a son, whom they named Alleyn Kingeley. Doyle writes the story “Survivor from '15,” which, under the influence of Robert Barr, is remade into the one-act play “Waterloo,” which is successfully staged in many theaters (Brem Stoker bought the rights to this play.). In 1892, Strand magazine again proposed writing another series of stories about Sherlock Holmes. Doyle, in the hope that the magazine will refuse, sets a condition - 1000 pounds and ... the magazine agrees. Doyle is already tired of his hero. After all, every time you need to come up with a new plot. Therefore, when at the beginning of 1893 Doyle and his wife go on vacation to Switzerland and visit the Reichenbach Falls, he decides to put an end to this annoying hero. (Between 1889 and 1890, Doyle wrote a three-act play, Angels of Darkness (based on the plot of A Study in Scarlet). The main character in it is Dr. Watson. Holmes is not even mentioned in it. The action takes place in USA in San Francisco. We learn many details about his life there, and also that at the time of his marriage to Mary Morstan he was already married! This work was not published during the author’s lifetime. However, later it was published, but in Russian the language has not yet been translated!) As a result, twenty thousand subscribers refused to subscribe to The Strand magazine. Now freed from his medical career and from the fictional character (The Field Bazaar, the only parody of Holmes, written for Edinburgh University's magazine, The Student, to raise funds for the reconstruction of the croquet field.), which depressed him and obscured what What he considered more important, Conan Doyle absorbed himself into more intense activity. This frantic life may explain why the previous doctor did not pay attention to the serious deterioration in his wife's health. In May 1893, the operetta Jane Annie: or, the Good Conduct prize (with J. M. Barrie) was staged at the Savoy Theater. But she failed. Doyle is very worried and begins to think about whether he is capable of writing for the theater? In the summer of the same year, Arthur's sister Constance married Ernest William Horning. And in August, he and Tui go to Switzerland to give a lecture on the topic “Fiction as part of literature.” He liked this activity and he did it more than once before, and even after that. Therefore, when, upon returning from Switzerland, he was offered a lecture tour in England, he took it up with enthusiasm.

But unexpectedly, although everyone was expecting this, Arthur's father, Charles Doyle, dies. And over time, he finally finds out that Louise has tuberculosis (consumption) and again goes to Switzerland. (There he writes "The Stark Munro Letters", which is published by Jerome K. Jerome in Lazy Man.) Although she was given only a few months, Doyle begins a belated departure and manages to delay her death. for more than 10 years, from 1893 to 1906. He and his wife move to Davos, located in the Alps. In Davos, Doyle is actively involved in sports and begins to write stories about Brigadier Gerard, based mainly on the book “Memoirs of General Marbeau.”

While being treated in the Alps, Tui gets better (this happens in April 1894) and she decides to go to England for a few days to their Norwood house. And Doyle, at the suggestion of Major Pond, should tour the United States reading excerpts from his works. And so, at the end of September 1894, together with his brother Innes, who by that time was graduating from a closed school in Richmond, the Royal Military School in Woolwich, becoming an officer, he went on the Elba liner of the Norddeilcher-Lloyd company from Southampton to America. There he visited more than 30 cities in the United States. His lectures were a success, but Doyle himself was very tired of them, although he received great satisfaction from this journey. By the way, it was to the American public that he first read his first story about Brigadier Gerard - “The Medal of Brigadier Gerard”. At the beginning of 1895, he returned to Davos to his wife, who by that time was feeling well. At the same time, The Strand magazine began publishing the first stories from “The Exploits of Brigadier Gerard” (“The Exploits of Brigadier Gerard”) and the magazine immediately increased the number of subscribers.

Due to his wife’s illness, Doyle is very burdened by constant travel, as well as by the fact that for this reason he cannot live in England. And then suddenly he meets Grant Allen, who, ill like Tuya, continued to live in England. So he decides to sell the house in Norwood and build a luxurious mansion in Hindhead in Surrey. In the fall of 1895, Arthur Conan Doyle travels to Egypt with Louise and his sister Lottie and spends the winter of 1896 there hoping for a warm climate that will be beneficial for her. Before this trip, he finishes the book “Rodney Stone”. In Egypt, he lives near Cairo, entertaining himself with golf, tennis, billiards, and horse riding. But one day, during one of the horse rides, the horse throws him off, and even hits him in the head with his hoof. To commemorate this trip, he receives five stitches above his right eye. Also, together with his family, he takes part in a trip by steamship to the upper Nile.

In May 1896, he returns to England to find that his new house is still unbuilt. Therefore, he rents another house in Greywood Beaches and all further construction takes place under his constant supervision. Doyle continues to work on Uncle Bernac: A Memory of the Empire, which he began in Egypt, but the book is difficult. At the end of 1896, he began writing “The Tragedy Of The Korosko,” which was created based on the impressions received in Egypt. And by the summer of 1897, he settled in his own house in Surrey, in Undershaw, where Doyle had his own office for a long time, in which he could work calmly, and it was in it that he came up with the idea of ​​​​resurrecting his sworn enemy Sherlock Holmes, due to the improvement of his financial situation, which had somewhat worsened due to the high costs of building a house. At the end of 1897, he wrote the play Sherlock Holmes and sent it to Beerbohm Tree. But he wanted to significantly remake it to suit himself, and as a result, the author sent it to Charles Frohman in New York, and he, in turn, handed it over to William Gillett, who wanted to remake it to his liking. This time the long-suffering author gave up on everything and gave his consent. As a result, Holmes was married, and a new manuscript was sent to the author for approval. And in November 1899, Hiller's Sherlock Holmes was well received in Buffalo.

In the spring of 1898, before traveling to Italy, he completed three stories: “The Bug Hunter,” “The Man with the Clock,” and “The Disappearing Emergency Train.” In the last of them, Sherlock Holmes was invisibly present.

The year 1897 was significant in that the Diamond Jubilee (70 years) of Queen Victoria of England was celebrated. In honor of this event, an all-empire festival is organized. In connection with this event, about two thousand soldiers of all colors from all over the empire gathered in London, who marched through London on June 25 to the jubilation of residents. And on June 26, the Prince of Wales hosted a fleet parade in Spinhead: warships stretched out over 30 miles in four lines on the roadstead. This event caused an explosion of wild enthusiasm, but the approach of war was already felt, although the victories of the army were not at all unusual. On the evening of June 25, a screening of Conan Doyle’s “Waterloo” took place at the Lyceum Theater, which was received in the ecstasy of loyal feelings.

It is believed that Conan Doyle was a man with the highest moral principles, who did not change Louise during their life together. However, this did not prevent him from falling in love with Jean Leckie the first time he saw her on March 15, 1897. At the age of twenty-four, she was a strikingly beautiful woman, with blond hair and bright green eyes. Her many achievements were very unusual at that time: she was an intellectual, a good athlete. They fell in love with each other. The only obstacle that held Doyle back from his love affair was the health condition of his wife Tui. Surprisingly, Jean turned out to be an intelligent woman and did not demand anything that contradicted his knightly upbringing, but nevertheless, Doyle meets the parents of his chosen one, and she, in turn, introduces her to his mother, who invites Jean to stay with her. She agrees and lives with her brother for several days with Arthur’s mother. A warm relationship develops between them - Jean was accepted by Doyle’s mother, and became his wife only 10 years after Tui’s death. Arthur and Jean meet often. Having learned that his beloved is interested in hunting and sings well, Conan Doyle also begins to become interested in hunting and learns to play the banjo. From October to December 1898, Doyle wrote the book “Duet with a Choir,” which tells the story of the life of an ordinary married couple. The publication of this book was received ambiguously by the public, who expected something completely different from the famous writer, intrigue, adventure, and not a description of the lives of Frank Cross and Maud Selby. But the author had a special affection for this book, which simply describes love.

When the Boer War began in December 1899, Conan Doyle announced to his fearful family that he was volunteering. Having written relatively many battles, without the opportunity to test his skills as a soldier, he felt that this would be his last opportunity to credit them. Not surprisingly, he was considered unfit for military service due to his somewhat overweight and forty years of age. Therefore, he goes there as a medical doctor and sails to Africa on February 28, 1900. On April 2, 1900, he arrived on site and set up a field hospital with 50 beds. But there are many times more wounded. Drinking water shortages begin, leading to an epidemic of intestinal diseases, and therefore, instead of fighting markers, Conan Doyle had to wage a fierce battle against microbes. Up to a hundred patients died a day. And this continued for 4 weeks. Fighting followed, allowing the Boers to gain the upper hand and on July 11 Doyle sailed back to England. For several months he was in Africa, where he saw more soldiers die from fever and typhus than from war wounds. The book he wrote, which underwent changes until 1902, “The Great Boer War” html (The Great Boer War), a five hundred page chronicle published in October 1900, was a masterpiece of military scholarship. It was not only a report on the war, but also a highly intelligent and knowledgeable commentary on some of the organizational shortcomings of the British forces at the time. He then threw himself headlong into politics, standing for a seat at Central Edinburgh. But he was wrongfully accused of being a Catholic fanatic, remembering his boarding school education by the Jesuits. Therefore, he was defeated, but he was more happy about it than if he had won.

In 1902, Doyle completed work on another major work about the adventures of Sherlock Holmes - “The Hound of the Baskervilles”. And almost immediately there is talk that the author of this sensational novel stole his idea from his friend, journalist Fletcher Robinson. These conversations are still ongoing.

In 1902, King Edward VII awarded Conan Doyle a knighthood for services rendered to the Crown during the Boer War. Doyle continues to be burdened by stories about Sherlock Holmes and Brigadier Gerard, so he writes “Sir Nigel” (“Sir Nigel Loring”), which, in his opinion, “... is a high literary achievement...” Literature, caring for Louise, courting Jean Leckie are so Playing golf as carefully as possible, driving fast cars, flying into the sky in hot air balloons and early, archaic airplanes, and spending time developing muscles did not bring Conan Doyle satisfaction. He again entered politics in 1906, but this time he was defeated.

After Louise died in his arms on July 4th, 1906, Conan Doyle was depressed for many months. He is trying to help someone who is in a worse situation than him. Continuing the stories about Sherlock Holmes, he comes into contact with Scotland Yard to point out errors of justice. This exonerates a young man named George Edalji, who was convicted of slaughtering many horses and cows. Conan Doyle proved that Edalji's eyesight was so poor that he would not have been physically able to commit this terrible act. The result was the release of an innocent man who managed to serve part of his sentence.

After nine years of secret courtship, Conan Doyle and Jean Leckie married publicly in front of 250 guests on September 18, 1907. With their two daughters, they moved to a new home called Windlesham, in Sussex. Doyle lives happily with his new wife and actively begins to work, which brings him a lot of money.

Immediately after his marriage, Doyle tries to help another convict, Oscar Slater, but is defeated. And only many years later, in the fall of 1928 (he was released in 1927), he ends this case successfully, thanks to the help of a witness who initially slandered the convict, but, unfortunately, he parted with Oscar himself on bad terms on financial grounds. This was due to the fact that it was necessary to cover Doyle's financial costs and he suggested that Slater would pay them from the compensation given to him of 6,000 pounds for the years he spent in prison, to which he replied that let the Ministry of Justice pay, since it was at fault.

A few years after his marriage, Doyle staged the following works: “The Speckled Ribbon”, “Rodney Stone”, published under the title “Turperley House”, “Glasses of Fate”, “Brigadier Gerard”. After the success of The Speckled Band, Conan Doyle wanted to retire from work, but the birth of his two sons, Denis in 1909 and Adrian in 1910, prevented him from doing so. The last child, their daughter Jean, was born in 1912. In 1910, Doyle published the book “The Crime of the Congo”, about the atrocities committed in the Congo by the Belgians. The works he wrote about Professor Challenger (“The lost world”, “The Poison Belt”) were no less successful than Sherlock Holmes.

In May 1914, Sir Arthur, along with Lady Conan Doyle and the children, went to inspect the Jesier Park National Forest in the northern Rocky Mountains (Canada). On the way, he stops in New York, where he visits two prisons: Toombs and Sing Sing, where he examines the cells, the electric chair, and talks with prisoners. The author found the city unfavorably changed from his first visit twenty years earlier. Canada, where they spent some time, was found charming and Doyle regretted that its pristine grandeur would soon be gone. While in Canada, Doyle gives a series of lectures.

They arrived home a month later, probably because for a long time, Conan Doyle had been convinced of the impending war with Germany. Doyle reads Bernardi's book "Germany and the Next War" and understands the seriousness of the situation and writes a response article, "England and the Next War", which was published in the Fortnightly Review in the summer of 1913. He sends numerous articles to newspapers about the upcoming war and military preparedness for it. But his warnings were regarded as fantasies. Realizing that England is only 1/6 self-sufficient, Doyle proposes to build a tunnel under the English Channel to provide itself with food in case of a blockade of England by German submarines. In addition, he proposes to provide all sailors in the navy with rubber rings (to keep their heads above water) and rubber vests. Few people listened to his proposal, but after another tragedy at sea, the mass implementation of this idea began.

Before the start of the war (August 4, 1914), Doyle joined a detachment of volunteers, which was entirely civilian and was created in the event of an enemy invasion of England. During the war, Doyle also makes suggestions for protecting soldiers and suggests something similar to armor, that is, shoulder pads, as well as plates that protect vital organs. During the war, Doyle lost many people close to him, including his brother Innes, who at his death had risen to the rank of Adjutant General of the Corps, and Kingsley's son from his first marriage, as well as two cousins ​​and two nephews.

On September 26, 1918, Doyle travels to the mainland to witness the battle that took place on September 28 on the French front.

After such an amazingly full and constructive life, it is difficult to understand why such a person retreated into the imaginary world of science fiction and spiritualism. Conan Doyle was not a man who was satisfied with dreams and wishes; he needed to make them come true. He was manic and did it with the same dogged energy that he showed in all his endeavors when he was younger. As a result, the press laughed at him and the clergy did not approve of him. But nothing could hold him back. His wife does this with him.

After 1918, due to his deepening involvement in the occult, Conan Doyle wrote little fiction. Their subsequent trips to America (April 1, 1922, March 1923), Australia (August 1920) and Africa, accompanied by their three daughters, were also similar to psychic crusades. After spending up to a quarter of a million pounds in pursuit of his secret dreams, Conan Doyle was faced with the need for money. In 1926 he wrote “When the World Screamed”, “The Land of Mist”, “The Disintegration Machine”.

In the fall of 1929, he went on his last tour of Holland, Denmark, Sweden and Norway. He was already sick with Angina Pectoris.

Also in 1929, The Maracot Deep and Other Stories was published. Doyle's works have been translated in Russia before, but this time there was some inconsistency, apparently for ideological reasons.

In 1930, already bedridden, he made his last journey. Arthur rose from his bed and went into the garden. When he was found, he was on the ground, one of his hands was squeezing it, the other was holding a white snowdrop.

Arthur Conan Doyle died on Monday July 7, 1930, surrounded by his family. His last words before his death were addressed to his wife. He whispered, “You are wonderful.” He is buried in Minstead Hampshire Cemetery.

On the writer’s grave are carved the words bequeathed to him personally:

“Don’t remember me with reproach,
If you're interested in the story even a little
And a husband who has seen enough of life,
And boy, before whom else is the road..."

Biography


English writer Arthur Conan Doyle was born in the capital of Scotland, Edinburgh, on May 22, 1859. His father was an artist.

In 1881, Conan Doyle graduated from the Faculty of Medicine at the University of Edinburgh and traveled to Africa as a ship's doctor.

Returning home, he began medical practice in one of the districts of London. He defended his dissertation and became a doctor of medicine. But gradually he began to write stories and essays for local magazines.

Sir Arthur Ignatius Conan Doyle(eng. Sir Arthur Ignatius Conan Doyle)


Once he remembered one eccentric, a certain Joseph Bell, who was a teacher at the University of Edinburgh and periodically amazed his students with his excessive observation and ability, using the “deductive method,” to understand the most complex and confusing problems. So Joseph Bell, under the fictitious name of amateur detective Sherlock Holmes, appeared in one of the author’s stories. True, this story went unnoticed, but the next one - “The Sign of Four” (1890) - brought him popularity. In the early 90s of the 19th century, collections of stories “The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes”, “Memoirs of Sherlock Holmes”, “The Return of Sherlock Holmes” were published one after another.
The “highlight” of the image of Sherlock Holmes was his intellectuality, irony and spiritual aristocracy, which give a special shine to the solving of complicated crimes.

Readers demanded from the author more and more new works about their favorite hero, but Conan Doyle understood that his imagination was gradually fading and wrote several works with other main characters - Brigadier Gerard and Professor Challenger.

Throughout his long life, Doyle traveled a lot, sailed as a ship's doctor to the Arctic on a whaling ship, to South and West Africa, and served as a field surgeon during the Boer War.

In the last years of his life, Conan Doyle was engaged in spiritualism, and even published a two-volume work, “The History of Spiritualism” (1926), at his own expense. Three volumes of his poems have also been published.

For his literary and journalistic activities, the writer was awarded a peerage and should now be called “Sir Doyle.”

Conan Doyle died in 1930 at the age of 71. He himself wrote his epitaph:
I have completed my simple task,
If you gave me at least an hour of joy
To a boy who is already half a man,
Or a man who is still half a boy.

Bibliography

The Canon of Sherlock Holmes bibliography includes 56 short stories and 4 novels written by the character's original creator, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle:

1. Study in Scarlet (1887)

2. The Sign of Four (1890)

3. The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes (collection, 1891–1892)
- Scandal in Bohemia
- Union of Redheads
- Identification
- The Boscombe Valley Mystery
- Five orange seeds
- Man with a split lip
- Blue carbuncle
- Variegated ribbon
- Engineer's Finger
- A distinguished bachelor
- Beryl tiara
- Copper beech trees

4. Memoirs of Sherlock Holmes (collection, 1892–1893)
- Silver
- Yellow face
- The Clerk's Adventure
- Gloria Scott
- Rite of the House of Musgrave
- Reigate Squires
- Hunchback
- Regular patient
- The Case of the Translator
- Naval Treaty
- Holmes's Last Case

5. The Hound of the Baskervilles (1901–1902)

6. The Return of Sherlock Holmes (collection, 1903–1904)
- Empty house
- Norwood Contractor
- Dancing men
- Lonely female cyclist
- Incident at the boarding school
- Black Peter
- The End of Charles Auguster Milverton
- Six Napoleons
- Three students
- Pince-nez in gold frame
- Missing Rugby Player
- Murder at Abbey Grange
- Second spot

7. Valley of Terror (1914–1915)

8. His farewell bow (1908–1913, 1917)
- At the Lilac Lodge / Incident at Wisteria Lodge
- Cardboard box
- Scarlet Ring
- Bruce-Partington drawings
- Sherlock Holmes dying
- The Disappearance of Lady Frances Carfax
- Devil's foot
- His farewell bow

9. Sherlock Holmes Archive (1921–1927)
- Mazarin Stone
- The Mystery of Torsky Bridge
- Man on all fours
- Vampire in Sussex
- Three Garridebs
- Notable client
- Incident at the Three Skates Villa
- A man with a white face
- Lion's mane
- The moscatelist is retired
- The history of the dwelling under the veil
- The Mystery of Shoscombe Manor

Series about Professor Challenger:

1. The Lost World (1912)

2. Poison Belt (1913)

3. Land of Mists (1926)

4. Disintegration Machine (1927)

5. When the Earth Screamed (1928)

Sherlock Holmes
*"Notes about Sherlock Holmes"

Cycle about Professor Challenger
*The Lost World (1912)
*The Poison Belt (1913)
*The Land of Mists (1926)
*The Disintegration Machine (1927)
*When the World Screamed (1928)

Historical novels
*Micah Clarke (1888), a novel about the Monmouth Rebellion in 17th-century England.
*The White Company (1891)
*The Great Shadow (1892)
*The Refugees (published 1893, written 1892), a novel about the Huguenots in France in the 17th century, the French exploration of Canada, and the Indian Wars.
*Rodney Stone (1896)
*Uncle Bernac (1897), a story about a French emigrant during the French Revolution.
*Sir Nigel (1906)

Poetry
*Songs of Action (1898)
*Songs of the Road (1911)
*The Guards Came Through and Other Poems (1919)

Dramaturgy
*Jane Annie, or the Good Conduct Prize (1893)
*Duet (A Duet. A duologue) (1899)
*A Pot of Caviare (1912)
*The Speckled Band (1912)
*Waterloo (A drama in one act) (1919)

The Lost World (silent film by Harry Hoyt, 1925)
The Lost World (1998 film).

The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes series starring Basil Rathbone and Nigel Bruce, filmed between 1939 and 1946, produced 14 films, the first of which was The Hound of the Baskervilles.

The following films were released in the series “The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes and Doctor Watson” with Vasily Livanov and Vitaly Solomin:
"Sherlock Holmes and Doctor Watson"
"The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes and Doctor Watson"
"The Hound of the Baskervilles"
"Treasures of Agra"
"The Twentieth Century Begins"
Interesting Facts

Arthur Conan Doyle was an ophthalmologist by profession.

Back in 1908, sensational news circulated in English newspapers: during excavations on the estate of lawyer Richard Dewson, near the city of Piltdown, the skull of a prehistoric man was found, which complements the chain of evolution passed by an intelligent creature from ape to man.
The “Piltdown Skull,” as this find was called, became a sensation in the scientific world. Numerous articles and weighty monographs appeared there. Meanwhile, from the very beginning there were scientists who doubted its authenticity.
The skull and everything connected with its discovery was carefully studied. There was even an attempt to organize an official investigation with the participation of members of Parliament, but it was indignantly rejected as “a slander against British science.” For decades since then, most anthropologists around the world have considered the Piltdown Skull a remarkable scientific discovery. Only in 1953, after X-ray and chemical analyzes carried out in the laboratories of Scotland Yard, was the version of skeptic scientists about falsification confirmed. According to experts, it was made by a very highly qualified specialist." He skillfully connected the upper part of the human skull with the jaw of an orangutan.
But the story of the discovery did not end there. American scientist John Hathaway-Winalow, who is keen on studying historical falsifications, recently published the results of his research. According to him, the hoax was conceived and carried out by none other than the world famous English writer Arthur Conan Doyle. According to evidence from the time, lawyer Richard Dewson, passionate about archeology, spoke disapprovingly of the areas of Conan Doyle, whose country house was adjacent to his estate. Stung, Conan Doyle decided to play a joke on the offender.
According to evidence from that time, lawyer Richard Dewson, passionate about archeology, spoke disapprovingly of the novels of Conan Doyle, whose country house was adjacent to his estate. Stung, Conan Doyle decided to play a joke on the offender.
An acquaintance of the writer, Jessie Fowless, who owned an antique store, gave him a skull found in an ancient Roman tomb. Conan Doyle bought an orangutan jaw from another friend, a doctor and amateur zoologist from the island of Borneo. Using needle files and a drill, the writer ground the skull to attach the monkey's jaw to it.
Then he treated the resulting compound with chemicals so that the skull of the “proto-human” looked quite “ancient”.
Knowing about his neighbor Deuson’s habit of excavating in a nearby abandoned mine, the writer buried his surprise there. The lawyer took the bait. He presented the found skull to the scientific society of the British Museum. This is how the fame of the “Piltdown Man” arose. The general enthusiasm for this was so great that Doyle did not dare to openly declare his falsification. But in his diary he wrote: “Instead of dumping the ignorant in the pit of their ignorance, I myself buried science there.” Until his death, he never learned that science would discover the truth.

Arthur Ignatius Conan Doyle born on May 22, 1859 in the capital of Scotland, Edinburgh, in the family of an artist and architect.

After Arthur reached the age of nine, he went to Hodder Boarding School, a preparatory school for Stonyhurst (a large boarding Catholic school in Lancashire). Two years later, Arthur moved from Hodder to Stonyhurst. It was during these difficult years at boarding school that Arthur realized he had a talent for writing stories. In his senior year, he edits the college magazine and writes poetry. In addition, he was involved in sports, mainly cricket, in which he achieved good results. Thus, by 1876 he was educated and ready to face the world.

Arthur decided to go into medicine. In October 1876, Arthur became a medical student at the University of Edinburgh. While studying, Arthur was able to meet many future famous authors, such as James Barry and Robert Louis Stevenson, who also attended the university. But his greatest influence was one of his teachers, Dr. Joseph Bell, who was a master of observation, logic, inference and error detection. In the future, he served as the prototype for Sherlock Holmes.

Two years after starting his studies at the university, Doyle decides to try his hand at literature. In the spring of 1879, he wrote a short story, “The Secret of the Sesassa Valley,” which was published in September 1879. He sends a few more stories. But only “An American's Tale” can be published in the London Society magazine. And yet he understands that this way he too can make money.

Twenty years old, while studying in his third year at university, in 1880, a friend of Arthur invited him to accept the position of surgeon on the whaler Nadezhda under the command of John Gray in the Arctic Circle. This adventure found a place in his first story concerning the sea ("Captain of the Polar Star"). In the fall of 1880, Conan Doyle returned to his studies. In 1881, he graduated from the University of Edinburgh, where he received a bachelor's degree in medicine and a master's degree in surgery, and began to look for work. The result of these searches was the position of ship's doctor on the ship "Mayuba", which sailed between Liverpool and the west coast of Africa, and on October 22, 1881, its next voyage began.

He left the ship in mid-January 1882 and moved to England to Plymouth, where he worked with a certain Cullingworth, whom he met during his final courses in Edinburgh. These first years of practice are well described in his book “Letters from Stark to Monroe,” which, in addition to describing his life, contains a large number of the author’s thoughts on religious issues and forecasts for the future.

Over time, disagreements arise between former classmates, after which Doyle leaves for Portsmouth (July 1882), where he opens his first practice. Initially, there were no clients and therefore Doyle had the opportunity to devote his free time to literature. He writes several stories, which he publishes in the same 1882. During 1882-1885, Doyle was torn between literature and medicine.

One day in March 1885, Doyle was invited to consult on the illness of Jack Hawkins. He had meningitis and was hopeless. Arthur offered to place him in his home for his constant care, but Jack died a few days later. This death made it possible to meet his sister Louisa Hawkins, to whom he became engaged in April and married on August 6, 1885.

After marriage, Doyle was actively involved in literature. One after another, his stories “The Message of Hebekuk Jephson,” “The Gap in the Life of John Huxford,” and “The Ring of Thoth” were published in the Cornhill magazine. But stories are stories, and Doyle wants more, he wants to be noticed, and for this he needs to write something more serious. And so in 1884 he wrote the book “Girdleston Trading House”. But the book did not interest publishers. In March 1886, Conan Doyle began writing a novel that would lead to his popularity. In April, he finishes it and sends it to Cornhill to James Payne, who in May of the same year speaks very warmly about it, but refuses to publish it, since, in his opinion, it deserves a separate publication. Doyle sends the manuscript to Arrowsmith in Bristol, and in July a negative review of the novel arrives. Arthur does not despair and sends the manuscript to Fred Warne and Co. But they weren’t interested in their romance either. Next come Messrs. Ward, Locky and Co. They reluctantly agree, but set a number of conditions: the novel will be published no earlier than next year, the fee for it will be 25 pounds, and the author will transfer all rights to the work to the publisher. Doyle reluctantly agrees, as he wants his first novel to be judged by readers. And so, two years later, the novel “A Study in Scarlet” was published in Beaton’s Christmas Weekly for 1887, which introduced readers to Sherlock Holmes. The novel was published as a separate edition in early 1888.

The beginning of 1887 marked the beginning of the study and research of such a concept as “life after death.” Doyle continued to study this question for the rest of his life.

As soon as Doyle sent out A Study in Scarlet, he began a new book, and at the end of February 1888 he completed the novel Micah Clark. Arthur has always been drawn to historical novels. It was under their influence that Doyle wrote this and a number of other historical works. While working on The White Company in 1889, in the wake of positive reviews for Micah Clark, Doyle unexpectedly receives an invitation to lunch from the American editor of Lippincott's Magazine to discuss writing another Sherlock Holmes work. Arthur meets him and also meets Oscar Wilde and eventually agrees to their proposal. And in 1890, “The Sign of Four” appeared in the American and English editions of this magazine.

The year 1890 was no less productive than the previous one. By the middle of this year, Doyle is finishing The White Company, which James Payne takes up for publication in Cornhill and declares it the best historical novel since Ivanhoe. In the spring of 1891, Doyle arrived in London, where he opened a practice. The practice was not successful (there were no patients), but at this time stories about Sherlock Holmes were written for the Strand magazine.

In May 1891, Doyle fell ill with influenza and was near death for several days. When he recovered, he decided to leave medical practice and devote himself to literature. By the end of 1891, Doyle became a very popular person in connection with the appearance of the sixth Sherlock Holmes story. But after writing these six stories, the editor of the Strand in October 1891 asked for six more, agreeing to any conditions on the part of the author. And Doyle asked for, as it seemed to him, the same amount, 50 pounds, having heard about which the deal should not have taken place, since he no longer wanted to deal with this character. But to his great surprise, it turned out that the editors agreed. And stories were written. Doyle begins work on "Exiles" (finished in early 1892). From March to April 1892, Doyle vacationed in Scotland. Upon his return, he began work on The Great Shadow, which he completed by the middle of that year.

In 1892, Strand magazine again proposed writing another series of stories about Sherlock Holmes. Doyle, in the hope that the magazine will refuse, sets a condition - 1000 pounds and... the magazine agrees. Doyle is already tired of his hero. After all, every time you need to come up with a new plot. Therefore, when at the beginning of 1893 Doyle and his wife go on vacation to Switzerland and visit the Reichenbach Falls, he decides to put an end to this annoying hero. As a result, twenty thousand subscribers canceled their subscription to Strand magazine.

This frantic life may explain why the previous doctor did not pay attention to the serious deterioration in his wife's health. And over time, he finally finds out that Louise has tuberculosis (consumption). Although she was given only a few months, Doyle begins his belated departure and manages to delay her death by more than 10 years, from 1893 to 1906. He and his wife move to Davos, located in the Alps. In Davos, Doyle is actively involved in sports and begins writing stories about foreman Gerard.

Due to his wife’s illness, Doyle is very burdened by constant travel, as well as by the fact that for this reason he cannot live in England. And then suddenly he meets Grant Allen, who, ill like Louise, continued to live in England. So Doyle decides to sell the house in Norwood and build a luxurious mansion in Hindhead in Surrey. In the fall of 1895, Arthur Conan Doyle goes to Egypt with Louise and spends the winter of 1896 there, where he hopes for a warm climate that will be beneficial for her. Before this trip he finishes the book "Rodney Stone".

In May 1896 he returned to England. Doyle continues to work on "Uncle Bernak", which was begun in Egypt, but the book is difficult. At the end of 1896, he began writing “The Tragedy of Korosko,” which was created on the basis of impressions received in Egypt. In 1897, Doyle came up with the idea of ​​​​resurrecting his sworn enemy Sherlock Holmes to improve his financial situation, which had somewhat worsened due to the high costs of building a house. At the end of 1897, he wrote the play Sherlock Holmes and sent it to Beerbohm Tree. But he wanted to significantly remake it to suit himself, and as a result, the author sent it to Charles Frohman in New York, and he, in turn, handed it over to William Gillett, who also wanted to remake it to his liking. This time the author gave up on everything and gave his consent. As a result, Holmes was married, and a new manuscript was sent to the author for approval. And in November 1899, Hiller's Sherlock Holmes was well received in Buffalo.

Conan Doyle was a man with the highest moral principles and did not cheat on Louise during their life together. However, he fell in love with Jean Leckie when he saw her on March 15, 1897. They fell in love. The only obstacle that held Doyle back from his love affair was the health condition of his wife Louise. Doyle meets Jean's parents, and she, in turn, introduces her to his mother. Arthur and Jean meet often. Having learned that his beloved is interested in hunting and sings well, Conan Doyle also begins to become interested in hunting and learns to play the banjo. From October to December 1898, Doyle wrote the book "Duet with a Random Choir", which tells the story of the life of an ordinary married couple.

When the Boer War began in December 1899, Conan Doyle decided to volunteer for it. He was considered unfit for military service, so he is sent there as a doctor. On April 2, 1900, he arrived on site and set up a field hospital with 50 beds. But there are many times more wounded. Over the course of several months in Africa, Doyle saw more soldiers die from fever and typhus than from war wounds. Following the defeat of the Boers, Doyle sailed back to England on 11 July. He wrote a book about this war, “The Great Boer War,” which underwent changes until 1902.

In 1902, Doyle completed work on another major work about the adventures of Sherlock Holmes (The Hound of the Baskervilles). And almost immediately there is talk that the author of this sensational novel stole his idea from his friend, journalist Fletcher Robinson. These conversations are still ongoing.

In 1902, Doyle was awarded a knighthood for services rendered during the Boer War. Doyle continues to be burdened by stories about Sherlock Holmes and Brigadier Gerard, so he writes Sir Nigel, which, in his opinion, “is a high literary achievement.”

Louise died in Doyle's arms on July 4, 1906. After nine years of secret courtship, Conan Doyle and Jean Leckie married on September 18, 1907.

Before the outbreak of the First World War (August 4, 1914), Doyle joined a detachment of volunteers, which was entirely civilian and was created in the event of an enemy invasion of England. During the war, Doyle lost many people close to him.

In the fall of 1929, Doyle went on a final tour of Holland, Denmark, Sweden and Norway. He was already sick. Arthur Conan Doyle died on Monday, July 7, 1930.

in Wikisource.

Doyle also wrote historical novels (“The White Squad”, etc.), plays (“Waterloo”, “Angels of Darkness”, “Lights of Destiny”, “The Speckled Ribbon”), poems (collections of ballads “Songs of Action” (1898) and “Songs of the Road”), autobiographical essays (“Notes of Stark Monroe” or “The Mystery of Stark Monroe”) and “everyday” novels (“Duet accompanied by a random choir”), libretto of the operetta “Jane Annie” (1893, co-authored).

Biography

Sir Arthur Conan Doyle was born into an Irish Catholic family renowned for its achievements in the arts and literature. The name Conan was given to him in honor of his father's uncle, artist and writer Michel Conan. Father - Charles Altamont Doyle, an architect and artist, at the age of 23 married 17-year-old Mary Foley, who passionately loved books and had a great talent as a storyteller. From her, Arthur inherited his interest in knightly traditions, exploits and adventures. “My true love for literature, my penchant for writing, I believe, comes from my mother,” Conan Doyle wrote in his autobiography. - “Vivid images of the stories that she told me in early childhood completely replaced in my memory memories of specific events in my life of those years.”

The family of the future writer experienced serious financial difficulties - solely because of the strange behavior of his father, who not only suffered from alcoholism, but also had an extremely unbalanced psyche. Arthur's school life was spent at Godder Preparatory School. When the boy was 9 years old, wealthy relatives offered to pay for his education and sent him for the next seven years to the Jesuit private college Stonyhurst (Lancashire), from where the future writer suffered hatred of religious and class prejudice, as well as physical punishment. The few happy moments of those years for him were associated with letters to his mother: he did not give up the habit of describing in detail to her the current events of his life for the rest of his life. In addition, at the boarding school, Doyle enjoyed playing sports, mainly cricket, and also discovered his talent as a storyteller, gathering around him peers who spent hours listening to stories made up on the go.

A. Conan Doyle, 1893. Photographic portrait by G. S. Berro

As a third-year student, Doyle decided to try his hand at the literary field. His first story, “The Secret of the Sesas Valley” (eng. The Mystery of Sasassa Valley), created under the influence of Edgar Allan Poe and Bret Harte (his favorite authors at that time), was published by the university Chamber's Journal, where the first works of Thomas Hardy appeared. That same year, Doyle's second story, An American Story, The American Tale) appeared in the magazine London Society .

In 1884, Conan Doyle began work on Girdlestone Trading House, a social and everyday novel with a crime-detective plot (written under the influence of Dickens) about cynical and cruel money-grubbing merchants. It was published in 1890.

In 1889, Doyle's third (and perhaps strangest) novel, Clumber's Mystery, was published. The Mystery of Cloud). The story of the "afterlife" of three vengeful Buddhist monks - the first literary evidence of the author's interest in the paranormal - subsequently made him a staunch follower of spiritualism.

Historical cycle

In February 1888, A. Conan Doyle completed work on the novel The Adventures of Micah Clarke, which told the story of the Monmouth Rebellion (1685), the purpose of which was to overthrow King James II. The novel was released in November and was warmly received by critics. From this moment on, a conflict arose in Conan Doyle's creative life: on the one hand, the public and publishers demanded new works about Sherlock Holmes; on the other hand, the writer himself increasingly sought to gain recognition as the author of serious novels (primarily historical ones), as well as plays and poems.

Conan Doyle's first serious historical work is considered to be the novel "The White Squad". In it, the author turned to a critical stage in the history of feudal England, taking as a basis a real historical episode in 1366, when there was a lull in the Hundred Years' War and “white detachments” of volunteers and mercenaries began to emerge. Continuing the war on French territory, they played a decisive role in the struggle of contenders for the Spanish throne. Conan Doyle used this episode for his own artistic purpose: he resurrected the life and customs of that time, and most importantly, presented knighthood, which by that time was already in decline, in a heroic aura. “The White Company” was published in Cornhill magazine (whose publisher, James Penn, declared it “the best historical novel since Ivanhoe”), and was published as a separate book in 1891. Conan Doyle always said that he considered it one of his best works.

With some allowance, the novel “Rodney Stone” (1896) can also be classified as historical: the action here takes place at the beginning of the 19th century, Napoleon and Nelson, playwright Sheridan are mentioned. Initially, this work was conceived as a play with the working title “House of Temperley” and was written under the famous British actor Henry Irving at the time. While working on the novel, the writer studied a lot of scientific and historical literature (“History of the Navy”, “History of Boxing”, etc.).

In 1892, the “French-Canadian” adventure novel “Exiles” and the historical play “Waterloo” were completed, in which the main role was played by the then famous actor Henry Irving (who acquired all rights from the author).

Sherlock Holmes

1900-1910

In 1900, Conan Doyle returned to medical practice: as a field hospital surgeon, he went to the Boer War. The book he published in 1902, “The Anglo-Boer War,” met with warm approval from conservative circles, brought the writer closer to government spheres, after which he acquired the somewhat ironic nickname “Patriot,” which he himself, however, was proud of. At the beginning of the century, the writer received the title of nobility and knighthood and twice took part in local elections in Edinburgh (both times he was defeated).

In the early 90s, Conan Doyle established friendly relations with the leaders and employees of Idler magazine: Jerome K. Jerome, Robert Barr and James M. Barry. The latter, having awakened in the writer a passion for theater, attracted him to (ultimately not very fruitful) collaboration in the dramaturgical field.

In 1893, Doyle's sister Constance married Ernst William Hornung. Having become relatives, the writers maintained friendly relations, although they did not always see eye to eye. Hornung's main character, the "noble burglar" Raffles, was very much like a parody of the "noble detective" Holmes.

A. Conan Doyle also highly appreciated the works of Kipling, in whom, in addition, he saw a political ally (both were fierce patriots). In 1895, he supported Kipling in disputes with American opponents and was invited to Vermont, where he lived with his American wife. Later (after Doyle’s critical publications on England’s policy in Africa), relations between the two writers became cooler.

Doyle's relationship with Bernard Shaw was strained, who once described Sherlock Holmes as "a drug addict who has not a single pleasant quality." There is reason to believe that the Irish playwright took the attacks of the former against (now little-known author) Hall Kane, who abused self-promotion, personally. In 1912, Conan Doyle and Shaw entered into a public squabble on the pages of newspapers: the first defended the crew of the Titanic, the second condemned the behavior of the officers of the sunken liner.

Conan Doyle in his article called on the people to express their protest democratically, during the elections, noting that not only the proletariat is experiencing difficulties, but also the intelligentsia and the middle class, with whom Wells has no sympathy. While agreeing with Wells on the need for land reform (and even supporting the creation of farms on the sites of abandoned parks), Doyle rejects his hatred of the ruling class and concludes: “Our worker knows that he, like any other citizen, lives in accordance with certain social laws , and it is not in his interests to undermine the welfare of his state by sawing off the branch on which he himself sits.”

1910-1913

In 1912, Conan Doyle published the science fiction story “The Lost World” (subsequently filmed more than once), followed by “The Poison Belt” (1913). The main character of both works was Professor Challenger, a fanatic scientist endowed with grotesque qualities, but at the same time humane and charming in his own way. At the same time, the last detective story “Valley of Horror” appeared. This work, which many critics tend to underestimate, is considered by Doyle's biographer J. D. Carr to be one of his strongest.

Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, 1913

1914-1918

Doyle becomes even more embittered when he becomes aware of the torture that English prisoners of war were subjected to in Germany.

...It is difficult to develop a line of conduct regarding the Red Indians of European descent who torture prisoners of war. It is clear that we ourselves cannot torture the Germans at our disposal in the same way. On the other hand, calls for good-heartedness are also meaningless, for the average German has the same concept of nobility as a cow has of mathematics... He is sincerely incapable of understanding, for example, what makes us speak warmly of von Müller of Weddingen and our other enemies who are trying at least to some extent preserve a human face...

Soon Doyle calls for the organization of “retribution raids” from the territory of eastern France and enters into a discussion with the Bishop of Winchester (the essence of whose position is that “it is not the sinner who is to be condemned, but his sin”): “Let sin fall on those who force us to sin. If we wage this war, guided by Christ’s commandments, there will be no point. If we, following the well-known recommendation taken out of context, turned the “other cheek,” the Hohenzollern empire would have already spread across Europe, and instead of Christ’s teachings, Nietzscheanism would be preached here,” he wrote in The Times, December 31, 1917.

Conan Doyle refuted claims that his interest in spiritualism arose only at the end of the war:

Many people had not encountered Spiritualism or even heard of it until 1914, when the angel of death came knocking on many homes. Opponents of Spiritualism believe that it was the social cataclysms that shook our world that caused such an increased interest in psychic research. These unprincipled opponents stated that the author's advocacy of Spiritualism and his friend Sir Oliver Lodge's defense of the Doctrine was due to the fact that both of them had lost sons in the 1914 war. The conclusion followed from this: grief darkened their minds, and they believed in what they would never have believed in peacetime. The author has refuted this shameless lie many times and emphasized the fact that his research began in 1886, long before the outbreak of the war.. - (“History of Spiritualism”, Chapter 23, “Spiritism and War”)

Among the most controversial works of Conan Doyle in the early 20s is the book “The Phenomenon of the Fairies” ( The Coming of the Fairies, 1921), in which he attempted to prove the truth of the photographs of the Cottingley fairies and put forward his own theories regarding the nature of this phenomenon.

Last years

Sir A. Conan Doyle's grave at Minstead

The writer spent the entire second half of the 20s traveling, visiting all continents, without stopping his active journalistic activity. Having visited England only briefly in 1929 to celebrate his 70th birthday, Doyle went to Scandinavia with the same goal - to preach “... the revival of religion and that direct, practical spiritualism, which is the only antidote to scientific materialism.” This last trip undermined his health: he spent the spring of the next year in bed, surrounded by loved ones.

At some point, there was an improvement: the writer immediately went to London to, in a conversation with the Minister of the Interior, demand the abolition of laws that persecuted mediums. This effort turned out to be the last: in the early morning of July 7, 1930, Conan Doyle died of a heart attack at his home in Crowborough (Sussex). He was buried not far from his garden house. At the request of the widow, the knightly motto is engraved on the tombstone: Steel True, Blade Straight(“Loyal as steel, straight as a blade”).

Family

Doyle had five children: two from his first wife - Mary and Kingsley, and three from his second - Jean Lena Annette, Denis Percy Stewart (17 March 1909 - 9 March 1955; in 1936 he became the husband of the Georgian princess Nina Mdivani ) and Adrian.

The famous writer of the early 20th century, Willy Hornung, became a relative of Conan Doyle in 1893: he married his sister, Connie (Constance) Doyle.

Works (favorites)

Sherlock Holmes series

  • The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes (collection of stories, 1891-1892)
  • Notes on Sherlock Holmes (collection of stories, 1892-1893)
  • The Hound of the Baskervilles (1901-1902)
  • The Return of Sherlock Holmes (collection of stories, 1903-1904)
  • Valley of Terror (1914-1915)
  • His farewell bow (collection of stories, 1908-1913, 1917)
  • Sherlock Holmes Archive (collection of stories, 1921-1927)

Conan Doyle Arthur

Romantic stories

How Signor Lambert left the stage

Sir William Sparter was a man who needed a quarter of a century to transform himself from a simple apprentice on the Plymouth docks with a salary of 24 shillings a week into the owner of his own dock and a whole flotilla of ships.

To this day, the curious are also shown a house in Lack Road in Ladport, in which Sir William, while still a simple worker, invented the boiler that received his name.

Now, at the age of fifty, he has a residence in Leinster Gardens, a country manor at Taplow, a hunting ground in the County of Argyll, an excellent cellar and the most beautiful woman in the whole city.

Tireless, unshakable, like any of the machines he built, he devoted his entire life to one goal - the acquisition of everything that is best on earth.

The owner of a square skull, powerful shoulders, a massive figure, deep-set slow eyes, he seemed to be the personification of energy and perseverance.

Throughout his entire career, the latter was not overshadowed by the slightest failure of a public nature.

And, despite this, he still stumbled on one point, and on the most sensitive of all.

He failed to win his wife's affections.

When he married her, she was the daughter of a surgeon and the first beauty of one of the cities of the north.

Even at that time he was rich and influential, and this circumstance made him forget the twenty-year difference between himself and the young girl.

But since then he has come far, far ahead.

A grand enterprise in Brazil, turning his entire company into a joint-stock company, receiving the title of baronet - all this happened after the wedding.

He could instill fear in his wife, terrorize her, arouse surprise with his energy, respect for perseverance, but he could not force her to love him.

And it's not that he didn't strive for it.

With tireless patience, which was his main strength in business, he tried for several years to achieve her reciprocity.

But it was precisely those qualities that were so useful to him in public life that made him an intolerable person in private.

He lacked tact, the art of gaining sympathy. Sometimes he turned out to be completely rude and did not at all know how to find subtle nuances in actions and speech, which are valued by most women much higher than all material benefits.

A check for a hundred pounds sterling, thrown across the table at breakfast, is not worth five shillings in the eyes of a woman, when the latter testifies that the giver took pains to get it for “her.”

Sparter made a mistake - he never thought about it.

Constantly immersed in his thoughts, always thinking about the docks and shipyards, he had no time for subtleties and compensated for their lack with periodic generosity in money.

Five years later, he realized that he had lost even more than won in the heart of his lady.

And so the feeling of disappointment awakened in him the worst sides of his soul. He began to feel danger approaching.

But he saw and became convinced of her only when he received into his hands, thanks to a traitorous servant, a letter from his wife, from which he was convinced that, despite her coldness towards him, she had a fairly strong passion for another.

From that moment on, his home, cruisers, patents no longer occupied his thoughts, and he devoted all his enormous energy to the death of the man whom he hated with all his soul.

That evening at dinner he was cold and silent. His wife was amazed that such a thing could happen, that it would produce such a change in him.

He didn't say a word during the entire time they spent in the salon over coffee.

She glanced at him two or three times; they were met point-blank by deep-set gray eyes, directed at her with some special, completely unusual expression.

Her thoughts were occupied with some foreign subject, but little by little the silence of her husband and that stubborn stony expression on his face attracted her attention.

Is there anything I can do for you, William? What's happened? she asked. - I hope there are no troubles?

He didn't answer.

He sat back in his chair, watching this woman of rare beauty, who began to turn pale, sensing an imminent catastrophe.

Is there anything I can do for you, William?

Yes, write one letter.

Which letter?

I'll tell you now.

The room fell into dead silence again.

But then there were the quiet steps of head waiter Peterson and the sound of his key turning in the well; As usual, he locked all the doors.

Sir William listened for a minute.

Then he stood up.

Come to my office,” he said.

It was dark in the office, but he turned the button on the green-shaded electric lamp that stood on the desk.

Sit down at this table.

He closed the door and sat down next to her.

I just wanted to tell you, Jackie, that I know everything about Lambert.

She opened her mouth, shuddered, moved away from him and extended her arms, as if expecting a blow.

Yes, I know everything,” he repeated.

His tone was completely calm. He sounded so confident that she did not have the strength to deny the truth of his words.

She did not answer and sat silently, not taking her eyes off the serious, massive figure of her husband.

A large clock ticked noisily on the fireplace; Apart from this sound, there was absolute silence in the house.

She hadn't heard the ticking until now; now his sounds seemed to her like a series of blows of a hammer hammering a nail into her head.

He stood up and placed a piece of paper in front of her.

Then he took another sheet from his pocket and laid it on the corner of the table.

This is a draft of the letter I will ask you to write,” he said. - If you like, I will read it to you:

“Dear, dear Cecil, I will be at No. 29 at half past seven; It is extremely important for me that you come before you leave for the opera. Be sure - I have serious reasons why I need to see you. Always yours Jackie."

Take a pen and rewrite this letter,” he finished.

William, you are planning revenge. Oh, William, I have insulted you, I am in despair, and...

Rewrite this letter.

What do you want to do? Why do you want him to come at this hour?

Rewrite this letter.

How can you be so cruel, William? You know very well...

Rewrite this letter.

I'm starting to hate you, William. I'm starting to think I married a demon, not a human.

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