Thursday, 09 May 2024

 

 

LATEST NEWS Bhagwant Mann campaigned for Dr. Balbir Singh in Patiala Mann campaigned for Meet Hayer in Malerkotla AAP gives a jolt to Akali Dal in Amritsar Bolaria said South Constituency is ready for hat-trick Believe in politics of issues Sukhpal Singh Khaira And Dr. Dharamvir Gandhi File Nomination For Patiala And Sangrur LPU Hosts Mega Reunion: Thousands of LPU Alumni Relive Cherished Campus Memories CEO Maneesh Garg Releases Cycling T-Shirt containing message for voters Parth Jindal Net Worth [May 2024]: Know The Income of Delhi Capital Co-owner & Scion of JSW Group Gurjeet Singh Aujla took time out from the elections to meet the wrestlers Aam Aadmi Party got a big boost in Doaba, well-known Dalit leader and BSP candidate from Hoshiarpur Rakesh Soman joined the AAP Karan Kundrra has an amazing car collection. Let us know about Karan's car collection Armaan Malik reveals American singer Lauv’s role in his ‘Lauv Story’ with fiancée Aashna Shroff Mona Patel Net Worth 2024 | Unveiling the Net Worth of a Fashion Icon Is Aadhar Housing Finance IPO Worth Your Investment? Let’s Explore ME students from CGC Landran devise innovative Electric Wheelbarrow Clove Dental, India’s Largest Dental Chain opens 12 new Clinics in a single day to reach a milestone number of 500 Clinics in the Country President Droupadi Murmu given warm send off Synchrony Announces Rachana Bahadur as Senior Vice President, Country Head – India Cherished Moments: A Mother's Day Getaway at Fairmont Jaipur Mohnish Pabrai Net Worth (May 2024): Know The Wealth Of Indian-American Businessman We are working on the concept of 'Ek desh - Shresth desh'- Vij

 

Solving crime and murder the Scotland Yard way

Listen to this article

Web Admin

Web Admin

5 Dariya News

04 Dec 2016

The London policeman, a member of the modern world's first professional law and order enforcement force, has long been a model for his counterparts and a subject for crime novelists. However, the crime-solving skills of Scotland Yard's finest were initially not very high and amateur sleuths -- Sherlock Holmes, for example -- easily upstaged them, though not for very long.But while Holmes and his biographer didn't have much regard for their official colleagues' acumen, they acknowledged their bravery. "Our official detectives may blunder in the matter of intelligence, but never in that of courage. Gregson climbed the stair to arrest this desperate murderer with the same absolutely quiet and businesslike bearing with which he would have ascended the official staircase of Scotland Yard..." wrote Dr Watson in "The Adventure of the Red Circle".Less than two decades later, in another set of tales, their capability is beyond reproach. The British Ambassador in Paris seeks Scotland Yard detectives when a subordinate is found murdered. Two are dispatched, who solve the case, arresting the murderer and securing a confession in 10 days flat, and are ready to go home. They are taken to meet the envoy who, informed they are leaving, splutters: "You've had to give the case up?" Told of their success, he says: "Thank heavens I sent for you."

This could be because these tales -- among the first police procedurals -- were written by a policeman himself, and a remarkable one. Sir Basil Home Thomson (1861-1939) was also a colonial administrator, prison governor, intelligence officer, writer -- and one of the first victims of an alleged sting.After Eton, he went to Oxford, but left after two terms due to "depression" and spent the next two years farming in the US. Joining the Colonial Service, he spent about a decade in Fiji and Tonga. Back in Britain, he was called to the Bar, but chose to become Deputy Governor of Liverpool prison and spent a decade in prison administration. In 1913, Thomson became Assistant Commissioner "C" (Crime) of Metropolitan Police, or head of the CID at New Scotland Yard. When World War I broke out, the CID was MI5's enforcement arm, and Thomson led its fights against spies (he personally interrogated Mata Hari) and Irish and Indian revolutionaries. In 1919, he was also made overall charge of all intelligence agencies, but two years later, removed without explanation. 

Thomson, writing for nearly a quarter century now -- about his experiences in South Pacific ("South Sea Yarns") in policing and counter-intelligence ("Queer People", re-titled "Odd People" in modern reprint), now turned to crime fiction.In 1925, came a volume of stories -- and he was arrested for "public indecency" in a London park. His defence was not helped by his vague explanations about why he met the woman and he was fined five pounds (however, there are many questions about the case -- the woman was a prostitute and her fine was paid by a journalist). But, two years hence, Thomson was back in action, advising on Siamese police reforms.It is crime fiction that accounts for most of his two-dozen-odd books and the most engaging are the eight-installment Richardson series (all appearing within four years) with their varied premises, unique characters, and maintaining suspense with plenty of red herrings, twists and turns, but all in a brisk, sparkling style.

The crimes are mostly murder, usually with robbery and later drugs, around England, as well as France, solved through collecting clues and evidence, interrogating suspects, and checking alibis.

The focus is on hard work -- as a team. "Real life is quite unlike detective fiction; in fact, in detective work fiction is stranger than truth. Mr Sherlock Holmes, to whom I take off my hat with a silent prayer that he may never appear in the flesh, worked by induction, but not, so far as I am able to judge, by the only method which gets home, namely organisation and team work," he wrote in "Odd People".The series features a remarkable career progression for the hero, who begins as a beat constable in "Richardson's First Case" (1933) but impresses superiors with his quick thinking to be taken into the CID, is soon an inspector and ends up Chief Constable. However, not much is told about his background, save that he is Scottish, and finds his wife in his sixth outing ("Who Killed Stella Pomeroy?").And he is not always in the thick of things. In "The Case of the Dead Diplomat", it is his better French-speaking sergeant who plays a bigger role, while in his last two outings -- "The Milliner's Hat Mystery" and "A Murder is Arranged" -- Richardson only guides his subordinates. In quite a few, young publisher Jim Milsom also lends a hand.A classic of "Golden Age Crime", the series is a treat for those fond of mental puzzles in bygone eras and after long unavailability, easily and reasonably obtainable online (less than Rs 50 each).

 

Tags: BOOK

 

 

related news

 

 

 

Photo Gallery

 

 

Video Gallery

 

 

5 Dariya News RNI Code: PUNMUL/2011/49000
© 2011-2024 | 5 Dariya News | All Rights Reserved
Powered by: CDS PVT LTD