-Adrian Conan Doyle, "The Adventure of Arnsworth Castle" IN Richard Lancelyn Green (Ed.), The Further Adventures Of Sherlock Holmes (London, 1985), pp. 148-168 AT p. 164.
Pathetic Fallacy: the wind not only rises but even moans as a man is dying. Also, it underlines or emphasizes the silence that intervenes in the dialogue.
See:
- and also many other references to wind on the Poul Anderson Appreciation blog.
Adrian Conan Doyle writes a good pastiche, even including:
"'Elementary, my dear Watson.'" (p. 149) (See The Birth of a Quotation.)
Happy New Year.
(The woman in our corner shop is a Hindu and told me that their New Year is some time in March.)
This post has been copied from Personal And Literary Reflections.
Other postings on other blogs yesterday:
Kaor, Paul!
ReplyDeleteI did a quick google of this book and some readers believe the stories in it are, even though not by A. Conan Doyle himself, good apocryphal stories about Holmes and Watson. With "apocryphal" meaning they are better than simple pastiches.
Happy New Year! Sean