The Adventure Of The Copper Beeches was first published in the Strand Magazine, June 1892
"TO THE man who loves art for its own sake," remarked Sherlock Holmes, tossing
aside the advertisement sheet of the Daily Telegraph, "it is frequently in its
least important and lowliest manifestations that the keenest pleasure is to be
derived. It is pleasant to me to observe, Watson, that you have so far
grasped this truth that in these little records of our cases which you have
been good enough to draw up, and, I am bound to say, occasionally to
embellish, you have given prominence not so much to the many causes celebres
and sensational trials in which I have figured but rather to those incidents
which may have been trivial in themselves, but which have given room for those
faculties of deduction and of logical synthesis which I have made my special
province."
"And yet," said I, smiling, "I cannot quite hold myself absolved from the
charge of sensationalism which has been urged against my records."
"You have erred, perhaps," he observed, taking up a glowing cinder with
the tongs and lighting with it the long cherry-wood pipe which was wont to
replace his clay when he was in a disputatious rather than a meditative
mood--"you have erred perhaps in attempting to put colour and life into each
of your statements instead of confining yourself to the task of placing upon
record that severe reasoning from cause to effect which is really the only
notable feature about the thing."
"It seems to me that I have done you full justice in the matter," I
remarked with some coldness, for I was repelled by the egotism which I had
more than once observed to be a strong factor in my friend's singular
character.
"No, it is not selfishness or conceit," said he, answering, as was his
wont, my thoughts rather than my words. "If I claim full justice for my art,
it is because it is an impersonal thing--a thing beyond myself. Crime is
common. Logic is rare. Therefore it is upon the logic rather than upon the
crime that you should dwell. You have degraded what should have been a course
of lectures into a series of tales."
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