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What do you think of Holmes' cocaine addiction?
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reading the stories I wasn't sophisticated enough to understand the references.
Later on when I understood what was going on I found the addiction to be a bit of his whole Personality...but I found his intense smoking to be more of a bothersome subject.

As for what I think of Holmes use of cocaine, it never really bothered me. Partly because I knew he was a character in a book and partly because I could see the good in the character. One thing I do have to ask, though, is whether Holmes actually was addicted. He only used the drug when he had no case. When he was working he felt no need for artificial stimulants. I'm no expert but it seems to me that he never developed a physical need for cocaine.

And as was the culture of that time - a whole cornucopia of pharma
was available through the local 'Chemist' shop. And Doyle started
some of Holmes adventures in local opium dens. Within that context
Holmes use of cocaine doesn't seem too much of an aberration.

In Holmes' day, cocaine was legal, as were alcohol and nicotine; he was a user of all three. Cocaine seems to have been the only one he eventually gave up.

In the new TV series, Elementary, the writes use addiction as the reason Watson comes into Holmes' life; an interesting idea but, but as a recovering addict, Holmes seems a bit more bland as a character compared to the original.

Because it's legal to drink, we don't think a lot about the serious negative impact alcoholism had on some societies.


There's only one way to find out...


Pipe smoking doesnt have quite the same level of inhalation as cigarettes do. I wouldn't be surprised if he lit it and just held it in his mouth.



So I wondered, what drugs might Holmes take just to see what the effects were - would he take LSD or fentanyl?

From The Devil's Foot, when Holmes burns the toxic "devil's foot root" to see its effects as an inhalant.
"A thick, black cloud swirled before my eyes, and my mind told me that in this cloud, unseen as yet, but about to spring out upon my appalled senses, lurked all that was vaguely horrible, all that was monstrous and inconceivably wicked in the universe. Vague shapes swirled and swam amid the dark cloud-bank, each a menace and a warning of something coming, the advent of some unspeakable dweller upon the threshold, whose very shadow would blast my soul. A freezing horror took possession of me. I felt that my hair was rising, that my eyes were protruding, that my mouth was opened, and my tongue like leather. The turmoil within my brain was such that something must surely snap. I tried to scream, and was vaguely aware of some hoarse croak which was my own voice, but distant and detached from myself. At the same moment, in some effort of escape, I broke through that cloud of despair, and had a glimpse of Holmes's face, white, rigid, and drawn with horror - the very look which I had seen upon the features of the dead."

Conan Doyle's matter-of-fact treatment of this subject anticipates the science of neurochemistry by seventy odd years. He bluntly (speaking as Holmes, of course) equates the artificially-induced high of cocaine with the thrill Holmes receives when the Game is Afoot. There is also the aforementioned Adventure of the Devil's Foot, where an unknown alkaloid (presumably) from Africa was used to madden and kill. Conan Doyle could not have known the the exact processes involved (indeed, in this age we have hardly scratched the surface), but he was obviously well aware of the mechanistic nature of the human mind.

We are introduced to this addiction in the sign of four, the book begins with the addiction and also ends with it. To say that the addiction fuels Holmes' work to me is an understatement, I believe without it...he would not even be the same person.