|
Arthur Conan Doyle
|
I lived from 1859-1930.
I was from England, and am in the English category.
British physician, novelist, and detective-story writer, creator of the unforgettable master sleuth Sherlock Holmes.
Read full description...
Conan Doyle was born on May 22, 1859, in Edinburgh and educated at Stonyhurst College and later the University of Edinburgh. From 1882 to 1890 he practiced medicine in Southsea, England. A Study in Scarlet, the first of 60 stories featuring Sherlock Holmes, first appeared in 1887. The characterisation of Holmes, his ability of ingenious deductive reasoning, was based on one of the author's own university professors. Equally brilliant creations are those of Holmes's companions: his friend Dr. Watson, the good-natured if bumbling narrator of the stories, and the master criminal Professor Moriarty. Conan Doyle was so immediately successful in his literary career that approximately five years later he abandoned his medical practice to devote his entire time to writing.
Some of the best known of the Holmes stories are The Sign of the Four (1890), The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes (1892), The Hound of the Baskervilles (1902), and His Last Bow (1917). They made Conan Doyle internationally famous and served to popularise the detective-story genre (Detective Story; Mystery Story). A Holmes cult arose and still flourishes, notably through clubs of devotees such as the Baker Street Irregulars. Conan Doyle's literary versatility brought him almost equal fame for his historical romances such as Micah Clarke (1888), The White Company (1890), Rodney Stone (1896), and Sir Nigel (1906), and for his play A Story of Waterloo (1894).
Conan Doyle served in the Boer War as a physician, and on his return to England wrote one of his few non-fiction books The Great Boer War (1900) and The War in South Africa: Its Causes and Conduct (1902), justifying England's participation. For these works he was knighted in 1902. During World War I he wrote History of the British Campaign in France and Flanders (6 volumes, 1916-20) as a tribute to British bravery. An advocate of spiritualism since the late 1880s, his lectures and writings on the subject increased markedly after the death of his eldest son during the first world War. His autobiography, Memories and Adventures, was published in 1924. Conan Doyle died in Crowborough, Sussex, England, on July 7, 1930.
Popular poetry
What of the bow? The bow was made in England:
38 lines
The cheese-mites asked how the cheese got there,
And warmly debated the matter;
8 lines, 2 comments
Faith may break on reason,
Faith may prove a treason
40 lines
Sportin' death! My word it was!
An' taken in a sportin' way.
69 lines
Put the saddle on the mare,
For the wet winds blow;
26 lines, 1 comment
It was the hour of dawn,
When the heart beats thin and small,
194 lines, 1 comment
It's up and away from our work to-day, For the breeze sweeps over the down; And it's hey for a game where the gorse blossoms flame, And the bracken is bronzing
4 lines
It is mine – the little chamber,
Mine alone.
64 lines, 1 comment
Said the king to the colonel, 'The complaints are eternal, That you Irish give more trouble Than any other corps.'
Said the colonel to the king, 'This compl
3 lines
Ten mile in twenty minutes! 'E done it, sir. That's true.
The big bay 'orse in the further stall--the one wot's next to you.
103 lines, 1 comment
Start a forum topic about this poet
|
|
| |