The inventor of Sherlock Holmes was the most commercially successful author of his time. Arthur Conan Doyle was a phenomenon: practising doctor, war correspondent, businessman, politician and a campaigner for legal and colonial reforms as well as a popular novelist. But he considered his fiction undervalued. Though he was known worldwide as the author of the Holmes stories and even sometimes addressed as Mr Sherlock Holmes, Doyle regarded himself as primarily a writer of uplifting historical fiction, usually with a medieval background. At first he considered Sherlock Holmes a pleasant diversion that filled a gap in his income. Eventually he came to think of the detective as an irksome burden: He keeps me from higher things, he wrote. The Sherlock Holmes stories continue to exercise extraordinary power. The writing is never more than efficient but the setting remains perennial: the comfortable, carpeted, fire-lit Baker Street sitting room shared by Holmes and Watson, the paradoxically womblike world of a Victorian bachelor set above an anarchic underworld full of violence and immorality. Doyles literary masterstroke was dividing the story between Holmes and Watson. It was a device the writer used frequently but never as effectively as here. Doyles true theme was division: between order and anarchy, reason and emotion, the material and the spiritual. He himself was a man divided, as two new biographical books make clear. The very picture of an upright Victorian gentleman, Doyle was not averse to fighting in the street when the mood took him. And in his late 30s, at the height of his fame, he ran a double life, conducting a largely secret affair with the woman who eventually became his second wife, while his first was gradually succumbing to tuberculosis. Much of this is revealed in detail in Andrew Lycetts biography and in a selection of Doyles letters edited by the present executor of the Doyle estate. The story behind the publication of these two books might make a Doylesque thriller in itself. Mr Lycett and the Doyle estate vied to gain control of newly discovered material, each trying to get to market first. Mr Lycetts book is a serious piece of work from an experienced professional biographer. If he never quite gets fully to grips with Doyles elusive personality, the author is particularly good on the intellectual background to Doyles work, both known and forgotten. The biography is hobbled by the Doyle estates refusal to permit quotation from numerous documents. But Mr Lycett makes the best of what he has and fills the gaps with insight. The selected letters by contrast are strictly an enthusiasts book. The editors comments are a bit haphazard and it is poorly presented. On the other hand, it does convey an almost physical presence of the author, with his strange mixture of kindness and carelessness, overbearing self-confidence and depressive self-doubt. Above all there is the impression of a man driven by internal forces. Since boyhood Doyle had been struggling with the consequences of his rationalist rejection of Catholicism and his growing conviction that there must be some kind of reality beyond the scientific. This was a division that in the end he could not manage. By the close of his life he was spending his diminishing energies defending not only the world of spiritualism but also the outermost fraudulent fringes of supernatural belief. It was a sorry ending. 1. Conan Doyle regarded Holmes as a burden because_____ he considered his fiction was of high level but was generally undervalued. he wrote the Holmes stories at the beginning for fun but later merely for the large income. the Holmes stories hindered him from writing historical fiction. the Holmes stories earned him the international fame as well as pressure. 2. The word averse most probably means_____ adverse. against. opposite. converse. 3. In Andrew Lycett s biography, Doyle is most probably described as_____ a reasonable gentleman. a man with doubtful life style. one with man divided psychological identities. a man of integrity and enthusiasm. 4. Doyle s divided personality was a result of _____ his own creation of the two opposite characters, Holmes and Watson. his paradoxical views on religion and science in boyhood. his confusion on reality and fiction all through his life driven by internal forces. his devotion to the world of spiritualism and his involvement in the secular society. 5. Doyle estate refused to permit Mr. Lycett to quotate from documents because_____ He was concerned with the protection of Doyle s privacy. Mr. Lycett was not the ideal biographer of Doyle. there was a kind of competition between the two parties in the publication of Doyle s biography. He was unsatisfied with Mr. Lycett s work which turns Doyle s life into a thriller story.
【大学英语六级考试拓展阅读练习(16)】相关文章:
最新
2016-10-18
2016-10-11
2016-10-11
2016-10-08
2016-09-30
2016-09-30