by Michael Sims
The Scotsman said that it was a fine book: Ibid., 30.
“Very interesting and very readable”: Ibid., 32.
“There is an Irish lilt in this shamrock”: Baker, 28.
“I am certain if my many Vols”: Baker, 56, and transcription 87; undated but from Charles Doyle diary entry surrounded by drawings dated June and July 1889.
At about the same time as these private complaints: Beveridge, 267.
CHAPTER 27: DREAD OF MADHOUSES
“I was now once more at a crossroads”: ACD, Memories and Adventures, chap. 10.
“Is there anything being done with this?”: Kernahan.
Arthur’s contract with Lippincott’s gave the magazine three months of exclusivity: Donald A. Redmond 14.
the Bristol Observer . . . deerstalker hat: Ibid., 1993, 87. You can see the illustrations reprinted at www.arthur-conan-doyle.com/index.php?title=The_Sign_of_Four#Illustrations.
Deer stalking: See MacRae; Scrope.
Charles was transferred to the Royal Edinburgh Asylum: Beveridge, 267.
“He has an intense dread of madhouses”: ACD, “Surgeon of Gaster Fell.”
“Dr. Conan Doyle appears to be equally at home”: Boström and Laffey, 65–66.
A single recurring character of proven popularity: ACD, Memories and Adventures, chap. 10.
CHAPTER 28: ADVENTURES IN THE STRAND
“I should at last be my own master”: ACD, Memories and Adventures, chap. 10.
George Newnes: Background information on Newnes derives from Jackson and Welch.
considered naming it The Burleigh Street Magazine: Newnes, 363.
“I stood in the Strand and beheld it and blessed God!”: Quoted in Tames, xxiii.
“because,” wrote Newnes later, “they were smarter”: Newnes, 364.
Herbert Greenhough Smith, a Cambridge man: McDonald, 152.
To Newnes’s dream of an eye-catching innovation: Ibid.
The first issues sold two hundred thousand copies: Ibid., 156.
When, in early 1891, an envelope containing: Herbert Greenhough Smith, 171–173.
Watt seems to have been the first to establish himself as a respected professional: In making this point I rely upon the extensive discussion of it in Gillies, “Watt.” For background on Watt, see Gillies, Professional Literary Agent.
“I really do not know how a busy man like myself”: Quoted within the Watt interview in Bookman, October 1892.
Watt claimed that he did not advertise: Gillies, “Watt,” nn. 35, 36.
they could farm out to Watt the task of selling serial rights: Interview with A. P. Watt, Bookman, October 1892, 21.
“Mr. A. Conan Doyle, a popular American writer”: Boström and Laffey, 102.
The author’s handwriting across these neat pages: Herbert Greenhough Smith, 171–173. All details about Smith’s early response to ACD’s writing derive from this source.
CHAPTER 29: DEERSTALKER
All the drawings are very unlike”: ACD, Memories and Adventures, chap. 11.
But it was the middle brother, Sidney: Anonymous, “Artists,” 786.
he often wore a deerstalker himself: See Paget.
Arthur found time to write six Sherlock Holmes stories in quick succession: Composition and mailing details in this paragraph derive from Baring-Gould, 1;14.
“And do you suppose he wouldn’t discover this surveillance?”: Gaboriau, anonymous translation of Monsieur Lecoq, chap. 19.
“I have been a detective fifteen years”: Gaboriau, The Mystery of Orcival, chap. 11.
“The many friends in Portsmouth”: Boström and Laffey, 112.
McClure read them and judged them: McClure, 203–205.
CHAPTER 30: TO MY OLD TEACHER
Still resenting the exploitative contract: ACD, A Life in Letters, 312.
“Facile and childish”: Details of Charles Doyle’s death derive from extensive quotations from Crichton medical records, reproduced in Norman, 159–161.
evolved out of his “own inner consciousness”: Blathwayt. I have slightly changed some of the punctuation within dialogue.
“It is most certainly to you that I owe Sherlock Holmes”: Baring-Gould, 1:8.
Arthur was astonished when he saw a listing for it: ACD, A Life in Letters, 315 (letter to Mary Doyle dated November 1892).
“I should just like to say this about my friend Doyle’s stories”: Anonymous, “Original of ‘Sherlock Holmes.’”
illustrated with more than one hundred of Sidney Paget’s pictures: Baring-Gould, 1:14 n. 26.
“Dear Sir, — You have taken many occasions”: Stevenson, Letters, 4:186–187 (letter to ACD, dated April 5, 1893).
“To my old Teacher”: ACD, Adventures of Sherlock Holmes.
Bibliography and Further Reading
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Anonymous. “Booksellers of To-Day.” Publishers’ Circular, July 25, 1891.
Anonymous. Druggists Circular and Chemical Gazette: A Practical Journal of Chemistry as Applied to Pharmacy, Vol. 41. New York: William O. Allison, 1897.
Anonymous. “George Thomas Bettany (1850–1891).” Obituary in Times, 4 December 1891.
Anonymous, “The Literature of Bohemia.” Westminster Review, January 1863.
Anonymous. Obituary of Joseph Bell, M. D. New York Times, 19 October 1911.
Anonymous. “Obituary, Joseph Bell.” Edinburgh Medical Journal. Vol. 7 (1911), 454–463.
Anonymous. “The Original of ‘Sherlock Holmes’: An Interview with Dr. Joseph Bell.” Pall Mall Gazette, 28 December 1893.
Anonymous. “The Original Prophet, by a Visitor to Salt Lake City.” Eclectic Magazine of Foreign Literature, Science, and Art, April 1873.
Anonymous. Sewage Disposal: Report of a Committee Appointed by the President of the Local Government Board to Inquire into the Several Modes of Treating Town Sewage. London: Eyre & Spottiswoode, 1876.
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Anonymous. Westminster Abbey. Radnor, Pennsylvania: Annenberg School Press/Doubleday, 1972.
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Bell, Joseph. “The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes.” Bookman (London), December 1892. Reprinted under the title “Mr. Sherlock Holmes” as introduction to Ward, Lock & Company’s 1892 edition of A Study in Scarlet.
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