Julian
Symons, the late mystery writer and critic, understood Sherlock Holmes – but not
Sherlockians.
Last
week in these precincts we looked at my recent re-reading of his novel, A Three-Pipe Problem. Insightful comments
in response from Bob Katz had me running to Symons’ 1972 historical-critical
book Mortal Consequences.
In
this history of crime fiction, subtitled “From the Detective Story to the Crime
Novel,” Symons inevitably devotes a chapter to the Great Detective of Baker
Street. The acid that often flowed out of the Symons pen is nowhere in evidence
as he displays an undiluted and apologetic admiration of Holmes.
“Sherlock
Holmes triumphs as a character from the moment we meet him,” he writes. Conan
Doyle doesn’t just tell us that Holmes is superior, Symons says – he shows it
again and again.
Symons
defends the Holmes stories from the criticism by fellow mystery historian Howard
Haycraft (a member of the Baker Street Irregulars!) that the Holmes stories are
“all too frequently loose, obvious, imitative, trite, and repetitious in device
and theme.” Symons pushes back that “some of Haycraft’s objections are wrong
and others are of little importance.”
He
lauds Conan Doyle (correctly, in my view), as “a fine story teller.” And therein
lies his rub, apparently, with Sherlockians. In a section called “The Myth of
Sherlock Holmes,” he writes that he has an uneasy feeling that members of
Sherlockian societies “are more interested in having fun with Sherlock Holmes
than in the merits of the stories.”
This
seems to me a snobbish objection. Perhaps, though, it is not a surprising one
from a writer who brands Conan Doyle a “Victorian philistine.” Certainly,
Sherlockians have fun with Sherlock Holmes! We do so in many ways. Some of us
even enjoy the essays that Symons smugly considers “high among the most tedious
pieces of their kind ever written.”
Surely
tediousness, like beauty, is in the eye (or mind) of the beholder.
Disagreements
about that aside, probably none of us who wear the Sherlockian label would quarrel
with Symons’s chapter-closing comment, still true 46 years later: “that if one
were choosing the best twenty short detective stories ever written, at least
half a dozen of them would be about Sherlock Holmes.”
Thanks to Dan for this posting. Yes, the commentary by Symons is at first gratifying and then maddening. But it remains worth reading for his own insights into the stories and their significance.
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