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 The Hound of the Baskervilles: Conan Doyle's Own Murder Mystery?
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A masterful Sherlock Holmes parody/pastiche (I'm never sure which is the right word) the other day by my friend Anexplorer sent me back to my all-time favorite of the Holmes works: the novel THE HOUND OF THE BASKERVILLES, originally published in serial form in STRAND Magazine from August 1901 through April 1902. The plot turns on how an outcast member of a Devonshire family named Baskerville uses a legend of a death omen to try to eliminate the two lives that stand between him and a considerable estate.

When the novel was published in book form, Arthur Conan Doyle wrote the following dedication:

MY DEAR ROBINSON: It was your account of a west country legend which first suggested the idea of this little tale to my mind. For this, and for the help which you gave me in its evolution, all thanks.

"Robinson", it transpires, was a journalist friend of Doyle's: Bertram Fletcher Robinson, whom Doyle first met in early 1901. In the course of their friendship, Robinson is said to have told Doyle legends from his own Devonshire boyhood, including several from the complex of tales featuring Black Shuck, a giant ghostly black dog. There is some evidence to suggest that Robinson acted as Doyle's secretary during the composition of the novel. He almost certainly introduced Doyle to a driver named Harry Baskerville, whose family name was used in the novel as that of the doomed family haunted by a demonic hound.

Robinson died in 1907 at the age of thirty-six. At the time it was reported that he died of typhoid. And there the story ended.

Or did it?

The first hints that have led to speculation that Robinson may have been murdered, at Doyle's behest, surfaced in 1959. An enterprising reporter had traced the driver, Harry Baskerville, who was then in his eighties. Baskerville apparently proudly showed off an autographed copy of the novel--inscribed with apologies for the use of the Baskerville name--and told the reporter rather carelessly that Doyle had not written the novel at all; that he had stolen it from one Robinson had written on the same theme.

Still, the matter more or less lay for another thirty years, until a researcher named Rodger Garrick-Steele began an eleven-year investigation of the relationship between Robinson and Doyle. In the year 2000, Garrick-Steele voiced his suspicions that Robinson's death was not a natural one, and with several people who found his arguments persuasive, began a campaign to get Robinson's body exhumed for autopsy. It was covered at the time by CNN. (See http://archives.cnn.com/2000/books/news/09/11/uk.conandoyle/index.html)

Garrick-Steele's argument goes something like this: by 1907, Robinson had begun to resent that Doyle's plagiarism, as he allegedly saw it, had become so popular, a resentment heightened by the fact that Doyle was carrying on an affair with Robinson's wife, Gladys. When Robinson threatened Doyle with exposure and legal action, Doyle persuaded Gladys to poison Robinson with the potent painkiller/sedative laudanum. Doyle, a medical doctor as well as a writer, knew that the symptoms of laudanum poisoning were very similar to those of typhoid.

If--a very big if--this were true, the plan went awry almost the moment Robinson died. In 1907 England, it's said, the law required victims of typhoid to be cremated. Robinson was not cremated; he was buried at St. Andrew's church in the town of Ipplepen. Moreover, his wife Gladys was later to claim that he died, not of typhoid, but of food poisoning following a visit to Paris.

Okay, you may ask: Fairweather, where do you come into the story?

I'm a devoted watcher of a BBC/LivingTV show called MOST HAUNTED, in which a team of mediums, parapsychologists and true believers investigate allegedly haunted sites. During their 2005 season the team went to the Old Church House Inn in Devonshire, which has some connection to the story of Bertram Fletcher Robinson. The show's medium, David Wells, corroborated Garrick-Steele's account of Robinson's grudge against Doyle and his death.

I frankly rolled in the floor over that one; this is after all the same medium who, during a visit to a pub at Haworth in Yorkshire, repeated the vile canard that Branwell Bronte, not his sister Emily, actually wrote WUTHERING HEIGHTS. (I don't believe that one either.) I was intrigued enough, though, to ask Willard (I didn't have a puter then) to do some research. It's for real--at least the suggestion that Robinson was murdered at Doyle's behest.

I've done some research of my own since then. It doesn't appear very likely to me at all, particularly in the supposition of an affair with Gladys Robinson. In 1907, following a conventional year of mourning for his late wife Louise, Doyle remarried--to a woman with whom he had been platonically involved for the last ten years of Louise's life. He and Jean, his second wife, were a deeply devoted couple for the remaining years of his life; when, after his son Kingsley died in World War I, Doyle became an avid if gullible researcher in spiritualism, Jean worked with him, exhibiting mediumistic abilities herself. Surely, if Robinson had had something to say from beyond the grave, he would have done so. Not to mention that there seems, from what I can find, no evidence before Harry Baskerville's 1959 bombshell of such rumors.

For more information, check out these sites:

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/uk/article567525.ece

http://welcometolimbo.blogspot.com/2005/07/quite-three-pipe-
problem.html

http://www.bfronline.biz/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=108&Itemid=9

As of January 2008, the Church of England has refused to allow the exhumation of Robinson's body.

What do you all think?

For that matter, what would Sherlock Holmes think?

Till somebody figures that out, I'll be in a corner somewhere with a book.
Posted by Fairweather Lewis at 5:22 PM - 4 Comments   Add a Comment  
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Comments:

wow, very interesting, Fairweather. Now you've got my curiosity up. I didn't know you had another blog! Geeze, I've been out of circulation haven't I?  
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by Bella (PM , CC ) on Sunday March 9, 2008 @ 5:49 PM




ACK!! I should have told you, Miss B, but I just kinda got busy I guess. Anyway, welcome to Gimme! I'm wondering how this one will play out. According to one article I read, the Church of England is involved because, in order for the body to be exhumed, the grave or churchyard--I forget which--has to be deconsecrated, because otherwise they would be desecrating holy ground. Not like here, huh? Thanks for stopping by!  
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by Fairweather Lewis (PM , CC ) on Sunday March 9, 2008 @ 6:06 PM




Hi Fairweather, and thank you for the kind words, especially since they led you posting today's interesting blog.

Strangely enough it's easy to say what Holmes would have thought, but harder to figure out what Conan Doyle would have to say.

Sherlock Holmes once declared: “This world is big enough for us. No ghosts need apply.” And when Dr. Mortimer asked if the legend of the Hound of the Baskervilles was not of interest, Holmes said only: “To a collector of fairy-tales.” So there's no way he'd accept a medium at face value.

Doyle, on the other hand, after the death of his son, took quite an interest in the supernatural.

While I'd hate to think Doyle responsible for a crime, it makes for a heck of a good story!
 
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by Anexplorer (PM , CC ) on Saturday March 22, 2008 @ 2:51 PM




That it does, Anex! Thanks for stopping by!  
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by Fairweather Lewis (PM , CC ) on Monday March 24, 2008 @ 11:42 PM


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

   
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