A VISIT TO THREE FRONTS - June 1916 -
Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
[ww1 0011] $2.99

Adobe PDF Ebook - suitable for PC Windows or Apple Mac: Will be sent
promptly by email upon order being place.
A VISIT TO THREE FRONTS
June 1916
BY
ARTHUR CONAN DOYLE
AUTHOR OF
"THE GREAT BOER WAR"
PREFACE
In the course of May 1916, the Italian authorities expressed a desire that
some independent observer from Great Britain should visit their lines and
report his impressions. It was at the time when our brave and capable
allies had sustained a set-back in the Trentino owing to a sudden
concentration of the Austrians, supported by very heavy artillery. I was
asked to undertake this mission. In order to carry it out properly, I
stipulated that I should be allowed to visit the British lines first, so
that I might have some standard of comparison. The War Office kindly
assented to my request. Later I obtained permission to pay a visit to the
French front as well. Thus it was my great good fortune, at the very
crisis of the war, to visit the battle line of each of the three great
Western allies. I only wish that it had been within my power to complete
my experiences in this seat of war by seeing the gallant little Belgian
army which has done so remarkably well upon the extreme left wing of the
hosts of freedom.
My experiences and impressions are here set down, and may have some small
effect in counteracting those mischievous misunderstandings and mutual
belittlements which are eagerly fomented by our cunning enemy.
Arthur Conan Doyle.
Crowborough,
July 1916.
CONTENTS
A GLIMPSE OF THE BRITISH ARMY.
A GLIMPSE OF THE ITALIAN ARMY.
A GLIMPSE OF THE FRENCH LINE.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, DL (22 May 1859 – 7 July 1930) was a Scottish
author most noted for his stories about the detective Sherlock Holmes,
which are generally considered a major innovation in the field of crime
fiction, and the adventures of Professor Challenger. He was a prolific
writer whose other works include science fiction stories, historical
novels, plays and romances, poetry, and non-fiction.
Conan was originally a middle name but he used it as part of his surname
in his later years.
Arthur Conan Doyle was born on 22 May 1859, in Edinburgh, to Irish parents
Charles Altamont Doyle and Mary Doyle. He was sent to the Jesuit
preparatory school Stonyhurst at the age of nine, and by the time he left
the school in 1875 he rejected Christianity to become an agnostic.
From 1876 to 1881 he studied medicine at the University of Edinburgh,
including a period working in the town of Aston (now a district of
Birmingham). Following his term at university he served as a ship's doctor
on a voyage to the West African coast, and then in 1882 he set up a
practice in Plymouth. He achieved his doctorate concerning Tabes Dorsalis
in 1885 (available in the Edinburgh Research Archive [2]).
His medical practice was not very successful, so while waiting for
patients, he began writing stories. His first literary experience came in
Chambers's Edinburgh Journal before he was 20.
It was only after he subsequently moved his practice to Portsmouth that he
began to indulge more extensively in literature. His first significant
work was A Study in Scarlet, which appeared in Beeton's Christmas Annual
for 1887 and featured the first appearance of Sherlock Holmes, who was
modelled after Doyle's former university professor, Joseph Bell.
Interestingly, Rudyard Kipling congratulated Doyle on his success, asking
"Could this be my old friend, Dr. Joe?". While living in Southsea he
helped form Portsmouth AFC, the city's first football club. Common myth
holds that Doyle played as Portsmouth F.C.'s first goalkeeper; however,
Doyle played for an amateur side that disbanded in 1894 and had no
connection to the Portsmouth F.C. of today which was not formed until 1898
(the first goalkeeper of the professional team was Matt Reilly).
In 1885 he married Louisa (or Louise) Hawkins, known as "Touie", who
suffered from tuberculosis and eventually died in 1906.[1] He married Jean
Leckie in 1907, whom he had first met and fallen in love with in 1897 but
had maintained a platonic relationship with her out of loyalty to his
first wife. Doyle had five children, two with his first wife (Mary and
Kingsley), and three with his second wife (Jean, Denis, and Adrian).
In 1890 Doyle studied the eye in Vienna; he moved to London in 1891 to set
up a practice as an ophthalmologist. He wrote in his autobiography that
not a single patient crossed his door. This gave him more time for
writing, and in November 1891 he wrote to his mother: "I think of slaying
Holmes... and winding him up for good and all. He takes my mind from
better things." In December 1893, he did so in order to dedicate more of
his time to more "important" works (namely his historical novels), pitting
Holmes against his arch-nemesis Professor Moriarty.
They apparently plunged to their deaths together down a waterfall in the
story "The Final Problem". Public outcry led him to bring the character
back; Doyle returned to the story in "The Adventure of the Empty House",
with the ingenious explanation that only Moriarty had fallen, but, since
Holmes had other dangerous enemies, he had arranged to be temporarily
"dead" also. Holmes eventually appears in a total of 56 short stories and
four Doyle novels (he has since appeared in many novels and stories by
other authors).
Following the Boer War in South Africa at the turn of the 20th century and
the condemnation from around the world over the United Kingdom's conduct,
Doyle wrote a short pamphlet titled The War in South Africa: Its Cause and
Conduct which justified the UK's role in the Boer war, and was widely
translated.
Doyle believed that it was this pamphlet that resulted in his being
knighted and appointed as Deputy-Lieutenant of Surrey in 1902. He also
wrote the longer book The Great Boer War in 1900. During the early years
of the 20th century Sir Arthur twice ran for Parliament as a Liberal
Unionist, once in Edinburgh and once in the Border Burghs, but although he
received a respectable vote he was not elected.
Arthur Conan Doyle statue in Crowborough
Conan Doyle was involved in the campaign for the reform of the Congo Free
State, led by the journalist E. D. Morel and the diplomat Roger Casement.
He wrote The Crime of the Congo in 1909, a long pamphlet in which he
denounced the horrors in Congo. He become acquainted with Morel and
Casement, taking inspiration from them for two of the main characters of
the novel The Lost World (1912).
He broke with both when Morel (who was rather left-wing) became one of the
leaders of the pacifist movement during the First World War, and when
Casement committed treason against the UK during the Easter Rising out of
conviction for his Irish nationalist views. Doyle tried, unsuccessfully,
to save Casement from the death penalty, arguing that he had been driven
mad and was not responsible for his actions.
Doyle was also a fervent advocate of justice, and personally investigated
two closed cases, which led to two imprisoned men being released. The
first case, in 1906, involved a shy half-British, half-Indian lawyer named
George Edalji, who had allegedly penned threatening letters and mutilated
animals. Police were set on Edalji's conviction, even though the
mutilations continued even after their suspect was jailed.
It was partially as a result of this case that the Court of Criminal
Appeal was established in 1907, so not only did Conan Doyle help George
Edalji, his work helped to establish a way to correct other miscarriages
of justice. The story of Conan Doyle and Edalji is told in fictional form
in Julian Barnes's 2005 novel, Arthur & George.
The second case, that of Oscar Slater, a German Jew and gambling-den
operator convicted of bludgeoning an 82-year-old woman in Glasgow in 1908,
excited Doyle's curiosity because of inconsistencies in the prosecution
case and a general sense that Slater was framed.
In his later years, Doyle became involved with spiritualism, to the extent
that he wrote a Professor Challenger novel on the subject, The Land of
Mist. One of the odder aspects of this period of his life was his book The
Coming of the Fairies (1921). He was apparently totally convinced of the
veracity of the Cottingley fairy photographs, which he reproduced in the
book, together with theories about the nature and existence of fairies and
spirits. In his The History of Spiritualism (1926) Doyle highly praised
the psychic phenomena and spirit materializations produced by Eusapia
Palladino and "Margery," (Mina Crandon), based on the investigations of
scientists who refused to listen to well-informed conjurors.
After the death of his wife Louisa in 1906, and the deaths of his son
Kingsley, his brother, his two brothers-in-law, and his two nephews in
World War I, Doyle sank into depression. He found solace supporting
spiritualism and its alleged scientific proof of existence beyond the
grave.
His work on this topic was one of the reasons that one of his short story
collections, The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes, was banned in the Soviet
Union in 1929 for supposed occultism. This ban was later lifted.
Doyle was friends for a time with the American magician Harry Houdini, a
prominent opponent of the Spiritualist movement. Although Houdini insisted
that Spiritualist mediums employed trickery (and consistently attempted to
expose them as frauds), Doyle became convinced that Houdini himself
possessed supernatural powers, a view expressed in Doyle's The Edge of the
Unknown. Houdini was apparently unable to convince Doyle that his feats
were simply magic tricks, leading to a bitter, public, falling-out between
the two.
Richard Milner, an American historian of science, has presented a case
that Doyle may have been the perpetrator of the Piltdown man hoax of 1912,
creating the counterfeit hominid fossil that fooled the scientific world
for over 40 years. Milner says that Doyle had a motive, namely revenge on
the scientific establishment for debunking one of his favourite psychics,
and that The Lost World contains several encrypted clues regarding his
involvement in the hoax (see [3]).
Samuel Rosenberg's 1974 book Naked is the Best Disguise purports to
explain how Doyle left, throughout his writings, open clues that related
to hidden and suppressed aspects of his mentality.
Sir Arthur Conan Doyle died of a heart attack in 1930, aged 71, and is
buried in the Church Yard at Minstead in the New Forest, Hampshire,
England. There is an interesting aside here as at the church in Minstead
there is a note that Arthur Conan Doyle wanted to be buried at this little
village graveyard in the heart of the new Forest but because of his belief
in spiritualism and fairies etc the church was very unwilling. In the end
they agreed to his burial in the churchyard but at the very far end of the
graveyard under a tree. the sign in the church then gravely advises that
since Conan-Doyle was buried in that plot, the tree has been struck by
lightning twice! Form your own conclusions obviously.


Undershaw, the home Doyle had built near Hindhead, south of London, and
lived in for at least a decade, was a hotel and restaurant from 1924 until
2004. It was then bought by a developer, and has sat empty since then
while conservationists and Doyle fans fight to preserve it.
A statue has been erected in Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's honour at
Crowborough Cross in Crowborough, East Sussex, England, where Sir Arthur
lived for 23 years. There is also a statue of Sherlock Holmes in Picardy
Place, Edinburgh, Scotland—close to the house where Conan Doyle was born.--o--
Available
in PDF for
Windows and Apple Mac
Click on the Paypal buttons below to order this
rare book in PDF format.