Crime and law not only
impacts on lgbt lives in real life but also in fiction. There’s a large amount
of lgbt crime and detective novels. Crime detection itself has been a popular genre
in literature for over a century. Whether it’s a whodunit thriller, mystery or
police detective story there are many lgbt writers who have made a career out
crime.
The modern crime novel
traces its roots back to the gothic novels of the 18th and 19th centuries.
Perhaps the first that can be called a mystery novel is Edgar Allen Poe’s 1841
novel “The Murders in the Rue Morgue”. Some of the early modern crime novels
that include lgbt characters mirrored their portrayal in film and television.
Gay men were seen as victims, or devious criminals. The film “Victim” starring
Dirk Bogarde in 1961, released during the process of discussion into
decriminalising some homosexual activity, helped to give the general public a
more sympathetic face to gay men.
One sympathetic gay male
detective in fiction appeared before the Wolfenden Report was published in
1956. In “The Heart in Exile” written by Rodney Garland, published in 1953, a
London psychiatrist becomes amateur detective in a quest to find the truth
behind the death of his male partner. He may have been the first gay amateur
sleuth.
Which brings me on to one
specific character whom I’m sure has already sprung into your mind, and a
character who has been beset with gay speculation for decades – Sherlock Holmes.
I am not one of those who thinks there was anything remotely homosexual about
the relationship between Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson. That doesn’t stop
other others from hinting or speculating, particularly film and television.
Even though there were no
gay detectives in the 19th century there were some lgbt authors writing crime
fiction. I don’t know if you can really call the gothic novels of Horace
Walpole (1717-1797) as crime or mystery novels, but they belong to the literary
group which evolved into them via “The Murders in the Rue Morgue”. Wilkie
Collins’s 1868 novel “The Moonstone” was an early form of the classic crime
detective mystery. The stories of the afore-mentioned Sherlock Holmes became
the most famous of the Victorian crime detectives, but sandwiched in between
them was the biggest best-selling whodunit of the era, “The Mystery of a Hansom
Cab” by Fergus Hume.
Fergus Hume (1859-1932)
was British ex-pat in New Zealand whose parents ran a lunatic asylum. Moving to
Melbourne, Australia, in 1885 he hoped to kick-start his play-writing career by
penning “The Mystery of a Hanson Cab” and establishing his writing credentials.
To his surprise it became a blockbuster when published in London the following
year. One of the people who read the novel was Arthur Conan Doyle. It probably
partly inspired him to create Sherlock Holmes. Both Hume and Conan Doyle saw
their original detective novels as one-off put their popularity meant that the
public clamoured for more of the same. Both authors supplied that demand and it
would be Sherlock Holmes’s popularity that would overshadow that of any other
literary detective of that era.
Hume returned to his
native England and continued to write and churn out 140 novels, most of them
mystery and crime fiction. Very little of his personal life is known. He is not
known to have kept a diary or journal. A couple of experiences may have exposed
the young Fergus Hume to homosexuality, even though it was illegal at the time.
First there was the
lunatic asylum run by his parents in which they also lived. A government report
at the time mentioned that the “abominable vice”, the phrase frequently
encountered when homosexuality is discussed, was present in many asylums.
Second, Hume went to a traditionally English public school in New Zealand where
all the Greek classics and Greek love were major parts of his education.
Schoolboy crushes between the boys often developed into physical relationships.
Fergus Hume never married
and no romantic involvement with women are known. His biographer, Lucy Sussex,
speculates on his sexuality, citing his association with a couple of antipodean
actors in who were imprisoned for homosexual offences. Hume was considered a
dandy, someone who paraded in his finery in the streets. One of Hume’s later
books was a Utopian novel in which the ancient Greek civilisation is recreated
on an island.
There is much homoerotic
content and Hume said he had researched the era extensively. The novel also
included a poem entitled “Venus Urania”, a name which inspired a group of Victorian poets. Hume also said he studied the Uranian
poetry of John Addington Symonds, one of the pioneers of gay rights.
There is a tantalising
suggestion here. Would Fergus Hume have become one of the individuals whose
sexuality was an “open secret” but never admitted? Taking it further, did
Arthur Conan Doyle unwittingly put some of Fergus Hume’s own flamboyant
character into his later Sherlock Holmes novels? Hume was enough of a celebrity
to have met most of Victorian society when he arrived back in England in the
1880s, even Conan Doyle.
In the words of Lucy
Sussex, “Ultimately, though, Hume tantalises but never reveals his personal
mystery.”
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