Description of Sherlock Holmes: It's your homework, not mine. Read the stories.
Landmarks in Holmes's career:
The layout of 221BProbably the most elegant re-creation of the sitting-room and adjacent rooms in Holmes and Watson's lodgings is the floor plan drawn by Ernest H. Short, circa 1948, and published in the Strand magazine in 1950. Click for a scan. |
Holmes's birthday: January 6, 1854 (according to Christopher Morley, pioneer American Sherlockian). At any rate apparently he was a Capricorn.
Holmes's family:
Holmes's companion: John H. Watson, late of the Army Medical Department
Holmes's arch-enemy: Professor James Moriarty -- see the Professor Moriarty page on Sherlockian.Net.
Holmes's love life: To Sherlock Holmes Irene Adler was always The Woman. The Irene Adler page on Sherlockian.Net. Besides her, there's always Maud Bellamy of "The Lion's Mane". And then there's Mary Russell.
Holmes's hobbies: Some sports ("an excellent boxer, singlestick player and swordsman"); music (played the violin, and wrote a monograph about Orlando di Lasso); obscure knowledge (the Buddhism of Ceylon, the warships of the future); tobacco.
When did the stories take place? About Sherlockian chronology
Holmes's retirement: To Sussex, to keep bees, according to a couple of the later stories. Jim Byrd has some speculations about the details.
The Ocular Helmsman: Personal effects and environs
Deerstalker (fore-and-aft) cap: never exactly mentioned in the stories. The original illustrator, Sidney Paget, interpreted the "ear-flapped travelling cap" mentioned in "Silver Blaze" as a deerstalker and drew it for that story and four subsequent times. Then the idea took off. Definition of a deerstalker . . . DeerStalker.com. Where can I buy a deerstalker hat? From many gentlemen's outfitters and shops that sell woollen goods. One that's near me, and that sells over the Internet, is Macleod's Scottish Shops.
Curved or calabash pipe: not clearly described in the stories, but attributed to actor William Gillette, who wanted a pipe that would not interfere with his famous profile or with clear articulation.
Stupid Watson: not justified by the text, except in the sense that everyone is stupider than Holmes; traceable to the buffoonish Watson played by Nigel Bruce in 1940s films.
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Copyright © Chris Redmond 2010