Sherlock Holmes is, as before stated, a man of justice. He would do almost anything to solve a case, usually a criminal case. However, I sometimes think that it's much broader. As if Conan Doyle, the author, is trying to emphasize these cases and make them much more challenging. It leads from deduction to action, and soon goes from case to case.
Sherlock Holmes Volume One was about, obviously, a man named Sherlock Holmes and his sidekick, Dr. Watson. They go through a journey of adventureful criminal cases. Crime and death, which was the main themes, are also one of the major issues of this story.
It's clear that justice was served in the book. Well, Holmes served justice more than just once. Like, what. They even say it. He represents justice, but he's not a judge from court. It's very obvious to even figure out is he is the "justice man" - he's a detective! I even knew this back in childhood.
In reality, well, I really won't expect some detective agency appearing in New York. It's not...realistic. I've never seen a detective, detective agency, or incidents where a detective interfered, or what not. Never seen one in my entire life. And, at the same time, it'd probably change my aspect of what I currently think about them and that's not cool.
Reading this book makes me wonder about why we do such things. In the book, they make up reasons, sometimes excuses, about why they've done, say, a locked-room mystery. Most reasons are personal, however. Nonetheless, it makes me think more about Holmes himself. Starting with the basics, "how is he so smart? Where are his parents?" and so and so.
No comments:
Post a Comment