Secondhand Sight
Jul. 24th, 2013 11:45 amTitle: Secondhand Sight
Author:
capt_facepalm
Rating: PG
Fandom: Sherlock Holmes (Gaslight)
Characters: Sherlock Holmes, Inspector Lestrade, Dr Watson
Summary: A vignette
Warnings: (what, no dialogue?)
Word Count: 100
Author's Notes: July 24th prompt: (The Self Portrait of Horace Vernet, Holmes' great-uncle)
The 1885 London Vernet showing featured several of the artist’s finest works including many depictions of the French military.
Watson stood transfixed before one of the smaller paintings of a battle scene featuring a fusilier and a drummer boy tending to a wounded dog.
Inspector Lestrade, who had accompanied Mr Holmes and Dr Watson, made some inane comment about how dangerous painting during a pitched battle would be.
Holmes glanced at Watson, who had not moved, and assured Lestrade that although the painter’s work was done in studio, one need not see war first-hand in order to understand its horrors.
Recommended Reading/Viewing:
Ruutz-Rees, Janet Emily; Horace Vernet and Paul Delaroche; Sampson Low, Marston, Searle, & Rivington, London 1880.
Vernet, Émile-Jean-Horace; Le Chien du regiment blesse; 1819.
Author:
Rating: PG
Fandom: Sherlock Holmes (Gaslight)
Characters: Sherlock Holmes, Inspector Lestrade, Dr Watson
Summary: A vignette
Warnings: (what, no dialogue?)
Word Count: 100
Author's Notes: July 24th prompt: (The Self Portrait of Horace Vernet, Holmes' great-uncle)
The 1885 London Vernet showing featured several of the artist’s finest works including many depictions of the French military.
Watson stood transfixed before one of the smaller paintings of a battle scene featuring a fusilier and a drummer boy tending to a wounded dog.
Inspector Lestrade, who had accompanied Mr Holmes and Dr Watson, made some inane comment about how dangerous painting during a pitched battle would be.
Holmes glanced at Watson, who had not moved, and assured Lestrade that although the painter’s work was done in studio, one need not see war first-hand in order to understand its horrors.
.oOOo.
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Recommended Reading/Viewing:
Ruutz-Rees, Janet Emily; Horace Vernet and Paul Delaroche; Sampson Low, Marston, Searle, & Rivington, London 1880.
Vernet, Émile-Jean-Horace; Le Chien du regiment blesse; 1819.
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Date: 2013-07-27 03:03 am (UTC):-)
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Date: 2013-07-31 03:33 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2013-08-05 04:48 pm (UTC)This one is one of my favourites this month!
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Date: 2013-08-06 02:22 am (UTC)I like the idea that Holmes has discovered many things about his Boswell, and one of them is that the war had a profound effect on him. This is especially true in an age before there was PTSD.
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Date: 2013-08-06 02:25 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2013-08-06 02:26 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2013-08-06 02:30 am (UTC)And you know my methods so well since you have correctly extrapolated that this little innocent visit to the gallery will cause Watson problems. After all, he hasn't moved from that painting in a long time.
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Date: 2013-08-06 02:32 am (UTC)I have no doubt that Holmes cares very much. It is the Victorian constraints that force us to read between the lines.
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Date: 2013-08-06 02:33 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2013-08-06 02:34 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2013-08-06 02:48 am (UTC)I'm glad you liked it. Sometimes I worry about subtlety: whether I am being clever and about as subtle as a hammer, or whether I have gone too far and am being obscure.
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Date: 2013-08-06 02:55 am (UTC)Holmes has come to face the fact that something is wrong with Watson. This was in the days before PTSD was invented, and his otherwise fine, upstanding fellow lodger definitely has a problem. In fact, neither of them understand it. Watson is sure that six months time and three continents distance would have relieved him of any war stress. Holmes is not so sure.
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Date: 2013-08-06 03:55 am (UTC)This is one of my favourites from this month!
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Date: 2013-08-07 04:59 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2013-08-09 01:00 am (UTC)