ROUND THE RED LAMP:

being facts and fancies of a medical life,

 (co) London: Methuen & Co., 23 Oct 1894, viii+328pp;

NY: D. Appleton & Co., Nov 1894, vi+307(5)pp;

The Preface, v-vi

[Being an extract from a long and animated correspondence with a friend in America.]

 

`I quite recognise the force of your objection that an invalid or a woman in weak health would get no good from stories which attempt to treat some features of medical life with a certain amount of realism. If you deal with this life at all, however, and if you are anxious to make your doctors something more than marionettes, it is quite essential that you should paint the darker side, since it is that which is principally presented to the Surgeon or Physician. He sees many beautiful things, it is true, fortitude and heroism, self-sacrifice and love; but they are all called forth (as our nobler qualities are always called forth) by bitter sorrow and trial. One cannot write of medical life and be merry over it.



`Then why write of it, you may ask? If a subject is painful why treat it at all? I answer that it is the province of fiction to treat painful things as
well as cheerful ones. The story which wiles away a weary hour fulfils an obviously good purpose, but not more so, I hold, than that which helps to emphasise the graver side of life. A tale which may startle the reader out of his usual grooves of thought, and shocks him into seriousness, plays the part of the alterative and tonic in medicine, bitter to the taste but bracing in its result. There are a few stories in this little collection which might have such an effect, and I have so far shared in your feeling that I have reserved them from serial publication. In book form the reader can see that they are medical stories, and can, if he or she be so minded, avoid them.—Yours very truly,

`A. Conan Doyle.

`P. S.—You will see that nearly half of the contents have not appeared before.'