Conan Doyle 221BNews
Tuesday, 4 April 2023
On This Day 4th April
Saturday, 25 March 2023
On This Day 25th March
A Fishy Tale.
Conan Doyle OTD in 1885 attended the AGM of the Portsmouth Waltonian Angling Society and that is not some fish tale!
Thursday, 16 March 2023
On This Day 16th March
Songs of the Road
Songs of the Road is a volume collecting 33 poems written by Arthur Conan Doylefirst published by Smith, Elder & Co. on 16 march 1911.
The volume is divided in three parts:
- Narratives verses and songs
- Philosophic verses
- Miscellaneous verses
The book is dedicated: "To J. C. D. This-and All. February 1911."
Editions
- Songs of the Road (16 march 1911, Smith, Elder & Co. [UK])
- Songs of the Road (october 1911, Doubleday, Page & Co. [US])
- Songs of the Road (27 january 1920, John Murray [UK])
- Songs of the Road (february 1920, John Murray [UK])
- in The Poems of Arthur Conan Doyle (21 september 1922, John Murray [UK])
- in The Poems of Arthur Conan Doyle (14 september 1928, John Murray's Fiction Library [UK])
I. - Narrative Verses and Songs
- A Hymn of Empire
- Sir Nigel's Song
- The Arab Steed
- A Post-Impressionist
- Empire Builders
- The Groom's Encore
- The Bay Horse
- The Outcasts
- The End
- 1902-1909
- The Wanderer
- Bendy's Sermon
II. - Philosophic Verses
III. - Miscellaneous Verses
- A Woman's Love
- By the North Sea
- December's Snow
- Shakespeare's Expostulation
- The Empire
- A Voyage
- The Orphanage
- Sexagenarius Loquitur
- Night Voices
- The Message
- The Echo
- Advice to a Young Author
- A Lilt of the Road
Foreword
If it were not for the hillocks
You'd think little of the hills;
The rivers would seem tiny
If it were not for the rills.
If you never saw the brushwood
You would under-rate the trees;
And so you see the purpose
Of such little rhymes as these.
Crowborough
1911
On This Day 16th March
A World's Fair Suggestion
A World's Fair Suggestion is a letter written by Arthur Conan Doyle first published in The Daily Chronicle circa 16 march 1893.
Editions
- in The Daily Chronicle (circa 16 march 1893 [UK])
- in The Pall Mall Gazette (16 march 1893 [UK])
- in The Ipswich Journal (18 march 1893 [UK])
- in The Mid-Sussex Times (21 march 1893 [UK]) as The Two Great Homes of the Race: A World's Fair Suggestion
- in The Bognor Observer (22 march 1893 [UK]) as The Two Great Homes of the Race: A World's Fair Suggestion
- in The Chichester Observer (22 march 1893 [UK]) as The Two Great Homes of the Race: A World's Fair Suggestion
- in The Whitstable Times and Herne Bay Herald (25 march 1893 [UK])
Dr. Conan Doyle writes to the Daily Chronicle to urge the Government to send special representatives to the World's Fair. He says:— All plans for the future of our race which omit the United States are as vain as the planning of an arch without the keystone. No difference of government or manners can alter the fact that the largest collection of people of Anglo-Celtic descent in the world is to be found upon the other side of the Atlantic. If, therefore, the race is destined (as I firmly believe that it is) to become more homogeneous in the future, it is certain not only that this vast block of people must be regarded as a factor in the problem, but that their wishes will have a great deal to do with its solution. The centre of the race is shifting ever westward, until the British Isles represent its extreme fringe on one side, as Australia does on the other. If these world-wide communities are not to eternally oppose and neutralise each other, they must sooner or later be organized into a union of commonwealths which shall be founded upon no artificial treaty, but upon the permanent basis of common blood, and in the main of common traditions. But if this ideal is to be reached, then no opportunity should be lost of reminding the world that, in spite of the one great rift of the last century, the Anglo-Celtic rare is mindful of its common origin. The coming Chicago Exhibition affords an admirable opportunity for doing this... If four regimental bands, representing English, Scotch, Irish, and Welsh corps were to go, together with representatives of the Cape Mounted Rifles, or of the Victoria Rifles, or any other Australian corps, and of the Canadian Militia, it would, I think, meet the case.
Wednesday, 15 March 2023
On This Day 15th March
Arthur Conan Doyle Letter
Mr. A. L. Brown and Sir A. Conan Doyle is a letter written by Arthur Conan Doyle published in The Scotsman on 15 march 1904.
Sir, — I observe that Mr A. L. Brown, of Galashiels, has challenged some figures used in my address to the Imperial Union on March 4th. In that speech I compared the results of German and British trade between 1881 and 1901, showing that ours increased 37,000,000, while the German increased 77,000,000. In some extraordinary way Mr Brown seems to have supposed that I meant that trade increased to that extent in a single year. I was speaking of a series, and comparing the first with the last, so as to show the total result of the twenty years. I think my meaning must be perfectly plain to any unbiassed mind.
I may add that my other figures as to the decline in particular trades are taken from Mr Bolt Schooling's tables in his book "Mr Chamberlain's Proposal." Mr Schooling is a statistician of repute, and an accountant by profession, and his figures have never been shaken. It is a weak case which defends itself by misrepresenting its opponent. — I am, &c.
ARTHUR CONAN DOYLE.
Tuesday, 14 March 2023
On This Day 14th March
This Month March
Monday, 6 March 2023
On This Day 6th March
The Captain of the Polestar and Other Tales
The Captain of the Polestar and Other Tales is a volume collecting 10 short stories written by Arthur Conan Doyle first published by Longmans, Green & Co. on 6 march 1890.
Stories
- dedication by Arthur Conan Doyle
- Preface by Arthur Conan Doyle
- The Captain of the "Pole-Star"
- J. Habakuk Jephson's Statement
- The Great Keinplatz Experiment
- The Man from Archangel
- That Little Square Box
- John Huxford's Hiatus
- A Literary Mosaic
- John Barrington Cowles
- The Parson of Jackman's Gulch
- The Ring of Thoth
Editions
- The Captain of the Polestar and Other Tales (6 march 1890, Longmans, Green & Co. [UK/US])
- The Captain of the Polestar and Other Tales (april 1890, Longmans, Green & Co. [US])
- The Captain of the Polestar and Other Tales (august 1891, Bernhard Tauchnitz No. 2762 [DE])
- Captain of the Pole Star (1891, Homewood Publishing Co. [US])
- The Captain of the "Pole-Star" (1894-1896, George Munro's Sons Library of Popular Novels No. 167 [US])
- Captain of the Pole Star (1895, Homewood Publishing Co. [US])
- The Captain of the Polestar and Other Tales (1895-1897, E. A. Weeks & Co. Marguerite series No. 43 [US])
- The Captain of the "Pole-Star" (1896, George Munro's Sons Seaside Library No. 2077 [US])
- The Captain of the Polestar and Other Tales (october 1896, Longmans, Green & Co. colonial [UK/US]) 1 front. by Charles Kerr
- Captain of the Pole Star (1899, F. Tennyson Neely [UK/US])
- The Captain of the "Pole-Star" (1900, George Munro's Sons Savoy series No. 220 [US])
- The Captain of the "Pole-Star" (1900, George Munro's Sons Majestic series No. 59 [US])
- The Captain of the "Pole-Star" (1900, George Munro's Sons Crescent edition [US])
- The Captain of the Pole-Star (1900, Hodder & Stoughton Ltd. [UK])
- Le Capitaine de "l'Étoile-Polaire" (1907, Jules Tallandier [FR]) 6 short stories only
- The Captain of the Polestar (1912, Smith, Elder & Co. [UK])
- in The Crowborough Edition of the Works of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle vol. 23 (1930, Doubleday, Doran & Co. [US])
Sunday, 5 March 2023
On This Day 5th March
The Iconoclast
OTD in 1911, the New York Tribune first published ACD's short story 'The Iconoclast' (later 'An Iconoclast') which was included in the collection 'Tales of Long Ago' (1922).
An Iconoclast is a short story written by Arthur Conan Doyle first published in the Associated Sunday Magazines (New-York Tribune, etc) on 5 march 1911.
Originally published as The Iconoclast then as An Iconoclast in collected volumes.
Editions
in New-York Tribune, Sunday Magazine (5 march 1911 [US]) as The Iconoclast, 2 illustrations by Joseph Clement Coll
in The Sun (Baltimore), Sunday Magazine (5 march 1911 [US]) "
in Buffalo Courier, Sunday Magazine (5 march 1911 [US]) "
in Denver Rocky Mountain Tribune
in Chicago Record-Herald
in Washington D.C. Star
in Minneapolis Journal
in Philadelphia Press
in St. Louis Republic
in The Boston Post
in Pittsburg Post
in The Last Galley: Impressions and Tales (1911) as An Iconoclast
in Мир Приключений (Adventure World) No. 6 (1912 [RU]) as Христианин (Christian)
in Tales of Long Ago (2 november 1922, John Murray's Fiction Library [UK])
in The Last of the Legions and Other Tales of Long Ago (autumn 1925, George H. Doran Co. [US])

On This Day 5th March
Friday, 3 March 2023
On This Day 4th March
On This Day 4th April
Home Rule OTD in 1912, the Daily Mail published a letter from ACD on the subject of Home Rule in which he expresses sympathy for the positio...
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Jean Leckie, ACD’s second wife, born #OTD 1874. Was hers the hand that rocked the planchette? Jean Elizabeth Leckie (14 march 18...
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Constance Amelia Monica (Connie) Doyle Hornung  Constance Amelia Monica (Connie) Doyle Hornung MARCH 4, 1868 - JUNE 8, 1924 The...





