Sherlock Homes and Cocaine

Authored by conandoyleinfo.com and submitted by haddock420

A Seven-Percent Solution – Sherlock Homes and Cocaine

The notion that Sherlock Holmes could have been a cocaine addict seems absurd. However, even in A Study in Scarlet, the first work featuring Holmes, there were hints that Sherlock Holmes might have been using drugs.

” . . . for days on end he would lie upon the sofa in the sitting-room, hardly uttering a word or moving a muscle from morning to night. On these occasions I have noticed such a dreamy, vacant expression in his eyes, that I might have suspected him of being addicted to the use of some narcotic, had not the temperance and cleanliness of his whole life forbidden such a notion.”

Later it became quite clear that Sherlock Holmes was indeed using drugs. The Sign of Four opens with an alarming scene:

Sherlock Holmes took his bottle from the corner of the mantel-piece and his hypodermic syringe from its neat morocco case. With his long, white, nervous fingers he adjusted the delicate needle, and rolled back his left shirt-cuff. For some little time his eyes rested thoughtfully upon the sinewy forearm and wrist all dotted and scarred with innumerable puncture-marks. Finally he thrust the sharp point home, pressed down the tiny piston, and sank back into the velvet-lined arm-chair with a long sigh of satisfaction.

A little later in the story Holmes states,

“It is cocaine,” he said, “a seven-per-cent solution. Would you care to try it?”

Today we understand the horribly addictive qualities of cocaine.

However, Conan Doyle wrote these stories in the late 1880s. At that time cocaine was a new drug.

Cocaine was used as a local anesthetic and as a nerve tonic. Cocaine or cocaine derivatives were used in throat lozenges, gargles, wines, sherries and ports. It was thought to be perfectly harmless.

Also. at the time these stories were written artists were expected to have addictions.

Certainly, Sherlock Holmes was an artist skilled in the art of deduction. Holmes played the violin, kept his tobacco in a Persian slipper and had a cocaine addiction to help him “escape from the commonplaces of existence.”

As more was learned about cocaine and its dangers Conan Doyle recognized that Holmes would have to change his ways.

In The Adventure of the Missing Three-Quarter Dr. Watson states:

For years I had gradually weaned him from that drug mania which had threatened once to check his remarkable career. Now I knew that under ordinary conditions he no longer craved for this artificial stimulus, but I was well aware that the fiend was not dead, but sleeping;

It seems clear that Conan Doyle understood that addictions are never truly conquered, but are instead managed. With the help of his faithful friend, Dr. Watson, Sherlock Holmes was able to manage his need for the seven-percent solution.

jaycub2me on March 26th, 2021 at 23:45 UTC »

As the first Rathbone/Bruce/Sherlock film The Hound of the Baskervilles (1939) fades out, Holmes is heard exclaiming "oh, Watson, the needle!" The censors at the time removed the line, but it has since been restored.

wfaulk on March 26th, 2021 at 21:16 UTC »

The first apparent mention of his cocaine use was in The Sign of Four, which is only the second Holmes story. At its first mention, the very beginning of the novel, Watson was already upset at Holmes's use:

“But consider!” I said, earnestly. “Count the cost! Your brain may, as you say, be roused and excited, but it is a pathological and morbid process, which involves increased tissue-change and may at last leave a permanent weakness. You know, too, what a black reaction comes upon you. Surely the game is hardly worth the candle. Why should you, for a mere passing pleasure, risk the loss of those great powers with which you have been endowed? Remember that I speak not only as one comrade to another, but as a medical man to one for whose constitution he is to some extent answerable.”

He doesn't seem exactly unaware of the dangers of cocaine at this point.

ryschwith on March 26th, 2021 at 20:26 UTC »

Another fun one: Holmes was unaware that the Earth orbits the Sun until Watson mentioned it to him. Doyle very much conceived him as someone who was so wrapped up in detective work that nothing outside of it mattered to him.