Arthur Conan Doyle — "I am not the law, but I represent justice so far as my feeble powers go."
I am not the law, but I represent justice so far as my feeble powers go.
I am not the law, but I represent justice so far as my feeble powers go.
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"Jealousy is a strange transformer of characters."
"Depend upon it there comes a time when for every addition of knowledge you forget something that you knew before. It is of the highest importance, therefore, not to have useless facts elbowing out the…"
"There is no death, only a change of vibrations."
"The little things are infinitely the most important."
"The chief proof of man's real greatness lies in his perception of his own smallness."
Scottish physician and author whose Sherlock Holmes (created 1887) became the most-portrayed literary character in film and television history. Closely associated with G.K. Chesterton (Father Brown detective creator and Edwardian contemporary) and Wilkie Collins (earlier detective-fiction predecessor (The Moonstone)). For an intellectual contrast, see Harry Houdini, American escape artist and skeptic — Houdini publicly debunked the spiritualist mediums Doyle endorsed; Doyle insisted Houdini was secretly using real psychic powers. Their 1920s friendship-then-feud is the cleanest 'magician's debunking vs Sherlock-Holmes-author's credulity' irony in cultural history — the rationalist's creator believed the impossible.
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