How Is Sherlock Holmes A Hero

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Detective Sherlock Holmes always has a trick up his sleeve. Whether he is disguised as a Italian priest on a first class train or an elderly bookworm stumbling around a crime scene, Holmes always seems to end up in the right place at the right time. That’s what makes Sherlock so slippery to villains and legendary to millions of fans across the world. Since the first pairing of the dynamic duo consisting of Dr. Watson and Sherlock Holmes in 1887 novel A Study In Scarlet, Arthur Conan Doyle has crafted the perfect hero in his spy thrillers by not only making him intellectually superior to nearly anyone he is put up against, but also by revealing Holmes’ motivations so readers can understand what makes the cold and sarcastic genius tick. Holmes …show more content…

In fact, he was so good that even his own partner couldn’t even recognize him. In a crucial part of the story, Holmes tries to elude Moriarty by fleeing to the Continent, as he has tied a rope of justice around his henchmen back home in England that will soon put them in the dock to face trial for their crimes. But with all the eyes of Moriarty’s men on him like vultures, it seemed impossible for Holmes to make it out of the city unscathed. In an elaborate plan to take a train out of town, Dr. Watson finds himself accompanied in first class out of London by an “aged ecclesiastic” (“Final” 7) that spoke only pieces of broken …show more content…

In “The Final Problem”, Sherlock is seemingly thrown off a cliff with the “Napoleon of crime” (“Final”, 3) Moriarty as noted in his death letter addressed to Watson. What wasn’t in the story however, was the fact that Holmes “had no serious difficulty in getting out, for the very reason that I was never in it” (“Empty”, 3). Sherlock made it out of the falls by climbing up the side of the cliff, but knew that he was still being watched. Not taking any chances, he fled the country not to be seen again for two years. This is important to the character of Sherlock Holmes because it shows that no matter how surly he seems, he deeply cares about the safety of the people in his country. He cares so deeply that he went so far as to deceive his best friend to ensure the security of his fake death, because there is no better way to sell a lie than to have nobody important know the truth, as Holmes was scared that “[Watson] would not have written so convincing account of my unhappy end had you not yourself thought that it was true. After convincing the world of his death, his extra time away gave him time to tie up loose ends from Moriarty’s

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