Tuesday, July 15, 2014

The Return of Arthur Conan Doyle - A Spiritual Journey Part 1

Sir Arthur Conan Doyle is best known as the creator of master consulting detective Sherlock Holmes. However, although the name Sherlock Holmes has entered into wide public awareness over the last century and more, the same cannot be said for Conan Doyle himself; or his direct connection with his renowned fictional character Holmes (and his trusted aide, Dr Watson) and the fact that he wrote a total of 56 Sherlock Holmes short stories and novels beginning with A Study in Scarlet, first published in Beeton's Christmas Annual of 1887. All these stories appeared in the Strand magazine in serialised form from 1891 to 1927, many illustrated by Sidney Paget's famous drawings.
The name of Sherlock Holmes has recently been boosted in the public psyche, particularly within the younger generation, with the two Guy Ritchie-directed films, Sherlock Holmes (2009) and Sherlock Holmes: A Game of Shadows (2011), with Robert Downey Jr and Jude Law in the lead roles of Holmes and Watson. There has also been a modern interpretation of the investigative duo with the BBC Television series Sherlock, starring Benedict Cumberbatch and Martin Freeman. Series 1 was televised in 2010 and the second series in 2012, with filming of a third currently under way.
So what of the great man himself, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle? There have been several excellent biographies written about him, and there are sure to be more to follow now that his personal archive of correspondence, diaries and original manuscripts has been released by his Estate. The first biography to use this newly available material was The Man Who Created Sherlock Holmes - The Life and Times of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle (2007) by Andrew Lycett.

Other significant developments in recent years, helping to promote the Conan Doyle legacy, have included the sale of 3,000 Conan Doyle papers and other memorabilia at a Christies auction sale in London in 2004, one item purchased by psychic medium Patrick McNamara leading to the publication of his book, Conan Doyle's Wallet - The Secrets Within, in 2008. The year 2011 saw the publication of Conan Doyle's previously unpublished first novel, The Narrative of John Smith, from an untitled manuscript acquired by the British Library at the same sale.
First and foremost Conan Doyle was a polymath, a qualified medical doctor, with one of the sharpest, critical thinking minds of his or any other era, a mind scientifically honed by his medical training at Edinburgh University - in the city where he was born on 22 May 1859 - under the watchful guidance and tutelage of his mentor Dr Joseph Bell. The clinical methodologies used by Bell were to become the major inspiration in the formation of the Sherlock Holmes character, and Bell's angular facial features, his "eagle face", influenced the development of Holmes's outward appearance as drawn by Sidney Paget and others.
The area of Conan Doyle's life which has been most markedly misunderstood and misinterpreted, was his advocacy of Spiritualism and what he called "the psychic question". Conventional wisdom almost universally appears to state that Sir Arthur Conan Doyle resorted to Spiritualism as a direct result of losing his son Kingsley and brother Innes during the First World War, the implication being that they were both killed in action. On closer examination we find that this consensus is fundamentally flawed on a number of counts.
Although Kingsley had been wounded in the war on the first day of the Battle of the Somme, July 1 1916, he was not severely hurt, and after hospital treatment to a neck wound was able to return to his unit a couple of months later. His death occurred unexpectedly on October 28 1918, just as the war was drawing to a close, from pneumonia brought on by the Spanish flu pandemic raging at the time. He was just twenty five.
Similarly, his brother Innes also succumbed to the deadly Spanish Flu epidemic, on February 19 1919, while helping to restore food supplies and other services in Belgium. Innes also died at a relatively young age, being only forty five at the time of his passing.
Those two devastating blows within a period of only a few short months would be a shock to anyone's system, and it is perhaps unsurprising that these events are widely assumed to be the trigger points for Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's immersion into Spiritualism, to provide solace as he grieved their loss. It sounds entirely plausible that this would be the case. There is only one problem. It simply isn't true.
Conan Doyle's eventual advocacy of Spiritualism took place in the form of an article in Light magazine on November 4 1916, fully two years prior to his son Kingsley's death. This explicit proclamation of his acceptance of the reality of Spiritualism came after three decades of painstaking, dedicated research into "the psychic question" as he referred to it, having initially been a skeptic. The start of his scientific investigation into Spiritualism began in the mid-1880's, around the time that the character of Sherlock Holmes was taking shape in his impressive mind.
A major influence in his commitment to get to the truth was his friendship with eminent scientist of the day, Sir Oliver Lodge, whose son Raymond was killed in action in Flanders in 1915. A confirmed Spiritualist in his own right, Lodge had written a book, Raymond or Life and Death, published in 1916, describing his communications with his dead son.
The inclusion of his narrative in Light magazine in 1916 was followed by two books, The New Revelation (1918) and The Vital Message (1919), the publication of which marked his commitment to take on a mission for the remainder of his life to become an advocate for Spiritualism and to get the message out to as many people as possible. He travelled extensively, both in the UK and overseas, talking to packed audiences.
He published his two-volume History of Spiritualism in 1926, and the following year was filmed in a Fox newsreel interview in his garden at his home, Windlesham, Crowborough in East Sussex. The first half of the talk focuses on how his character Sherlock Holmes came about, before he moves on to his work on Spiritualism, much more important in his view.
The constant strain of travelling, writing and giving lectures eventually took its toll on his health, and he passed away at his East Sussex home on 7 July 1930, aged only 71. The man who had achieved so much during his lifetime was now dead - or was he?
Part 2 to follow...
Do any of us know what twists and turns life is going to lead us, much of what starts to have meaning only making sense with the benefit of hindsight? Sir Arthur Conan Doyle (ACD) certainly had a major impact on my life's direction when I started taking a major interest in his life and works around ten years ago. Starting off with a desire to "set the record straight" about what had been written about him regarding his advocacy of Spiritualism and the "psychic question" during the latter part of his life, my initial research soon showed demonstrated that much of the accepted wisdom about this aspect of his life was erroneous, and it is possible that much of this obfuscation of the real facts about this area of his work was done deliberately. However, little was I to know at the time (around 2007) that this interest of mine would lead to the publication of what has now become 'The View' series of books - 'The View' (2009), 'The View Beyond' (2011) and 'The Cathar View' (2012) - with myself as Editor, and with over 25 contributors to each book writing on ACD, Sir Francis Bacon and the Cathars respectively. The unfolding synchronicity has been remarkable, leading me into the White Eagle Lodge, the Francis Bacon Society and regular visits to 'Cathar Country' in SW France. This, the first of a series of articles, is a call to you to pay attention to synchronicities which happen in your own lives. They may lead you, like in my own case, in directions which you couldn't even begin to imagine. If you dare...

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