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A Defence of Detective Stories
From <The Defendant>
In attempting to reach the genuine psychological reason for the popularity
of detective stories, it is necessary to rid ourselves of many mere phrases.
It is not true, for example, that the populace prefer bad literature to
good, and accept detective stories because they are bad literature. The
mere absence of artistic subtlety does not make a book popular. Bradshaw's
Railway Guide contains few gleams of psychological comedy, yet it is not
read aloud uproariously on winter evenings. If detective stories are read
with more exuberance than railway guides, it is certainly because they
are more artistic. Many good books have fortunately been popular; many
bad books, still more fortunately, have been unpopular. A good detective
story would probably be even more popular than a bad one. The trouble
in this matter is that many people do not realize that there is such a
thing as a good detective story; it is to them like speaking of a good
devil. To write a story about a burglary is, in their eyes, a sort of
spiritual manner of committing it. To persons of somewhat weak sensibility
this is natural enough; it must be confessed that many detective stories
are as full of sensational crime as one of Shakespeare's plays.
There is, however, between a good detective story and a bad detective
story as much, or, rather more, difference than there is between a good
epic and a bad one. Not only is a detective story a perfectly legitimate
form of art, but it has certain definite and real advantages as an agent
of the public weal.
The first essential value of the detective story lies in this, that it
is the earliest and only form of popular literature in which is expressed
some sense of the poetry of modern life. Men lived among mighty mountains
and eternal forests for ages before they realized that they were poetical;
it may reasonably be inferred that some of our descendants may see the
chimney-pots as rich a purple as the mountain-peaks, and find the lamp-posts
as old and natural as the trees. Of this realization of a great city itself
as something wild and obvious the detective story is certainly the 'Iliad.'
No one can have failed to notice that in these stories the hero or the
investigator crosses London with something of the loneliness and liberty
of a prince in a tale of elfland, that in the course of that incalculable
journey the casual omnibus assumes the primal colours of a fairy ship.
The lights of the city begin to glow like innumerable goblin eyes, since
they are the guardians of some secret, however crude, which the writer
knows and the reader does not. Every twist of the
road is like a finger pointing to it; every fantastic skyline of chimney-pots
seems wildly and derisively signalling the meaning of the mystery.
This realization of the poetry of London is not a small thing. A city
is, properly speaking, more poetic even than a countryside, for while
Nature is a chaos of unconscious forces, a city is a chaos of conscious
ones. The crest of the flower or the pattern of the lichen may or may
not be significant symbols. But there is no stone in the street and no
brick in the wall that is not actually a deliberate symbol - a message
from some man, as much as if it were a telegram or a post-card. The narrowest
street possesses, in every crook and twist of its intention, the soul
of the man who built it, perhaps long in his grave. Every brick has as
human a hieroglyph as if it were a graven brick of Babylon; every late
on the roof is as educational a document as if it were a slate covered
with addition and subtraction sums. Anything which tends, even under the
fantastic form of the minutiae of Sherlock Holmes, to assert this romance
of detail in civilization, to emphasize this unfathomably human character
in flints and tiles, is a good thing. It is good that the average man
should fall into the habit of looking imaginatively at ten men in the
street even if it is only on
the chance that the eleventh might be a notorious thief. We may dream,
perhaps, that it might be possible to have another and higher romance
of London, that men's souls have stranger adventures than their bodies,
and that it would be harder and more exciting to hunt their virtues than
to hunt their crimes. But since our great authors (with the admirable
exception of Stevenson) decline to write of that thrilling mood and moment
when the eyes of the great city, like the eyes of a cat, begin to flame
in the dark, we must give fair credit to the popular literature which,
amid a babble of pedantry and preciosity, declines to regard the present
as prosaic or the common as commonplace. Popular art in all ages has been
interested in contemporary manners and costume; it dressed the groups
around the Crucifixion in the garb of Florentine gentlefolk or Flemish
burghers. In the last century it was the custom for distinguished actors
to present Macbeth in a powdered wig and ruffles. How far we are ourselves
in this age from such conviction of the poetry of our own life and manners
may easily be conceived by anyone who chooses to imagine a picture of
Alfred the Great toasting the cakes dressed in tourist s knickerbockers,
or a performance of 'Hamlet' in which the Prince appeared in a frock-coat,
with a crepe band round his hat. But this instinct of the age to look
back, like Lot's wife, could not go on for ever. A rude, popular literature
of the romantic possibilities of the modern city was bound to arise. It
has arisen in the popular detective stories, as rough and refreshing as
the ballads of Robin Hood.
There is, however, another good work that is done by detective stories.
While it is the constant tendency of the Old Adam to rebel against so
universal and automatic a thing as civilization, to preach departure and
rebellion, the romance of police activity keeps in some sense before the
mind the fact that civilization itself is the most sensational of departures
and the most romantic of rebellions. By dealing with the unsleeping sentinels
who guard the outposts of society, it tends to remind us that we live
in an armed camp,
making war with a chaotic world, and that the criminals, the children
of chaos, are nothing but the traitors within our gates. When the detective
in a police romance stands alone, and somewhat fatuously fearless amid
the knives and fists of a thieves' kitchen, it does certainly serve to
make us remember that it is the agent of social justice who is the original
and poetic figure; while the burglars and footpads are merely placid old
cosmic conservatives, happy in the immemorial respectability of apes and
wolves. The romance of the police force is thus the whole romance of man.
It is based on the fact that morality is the most dark and daring of conspiracies.
It reminds us that the whole noiseless and unnoticeable police management
by which we are ruled and protected is only a successful
knight-errantry.
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