^^^clicky-click - tumblr res killed meI’m here with my DGS oc again. Now I’m
^^^clicky-click - tumblr res killed meI’m here with my DGS oc again. Now I’m going to get into the nitty gritty with his relations to canon. part 1: Sherlock Holmes. We’ll say it’s a rivalry more than anything, which is more or less one-sided. It’s more or less based from the reference made in A Study in Scarlet, as it solidifies Sherlock Holmes view on Auguste Dupin in a form of criticism. So, he will constantly test Auguste’s skills in deduction to prove himself the superior detective, or simply likes to pick at his rival’s brain and experience a fellow amateur detective’s process in person. For Auguste, he is somewhat detached despite being intrigued by the mystery and undecodable mind of Holmes. After associating with Holmes for long enough, he would end up caving in to these little games and will end up teaching Holmes the small tricks to sound deduction-making in the process. It is a moment that humbles the both of them, and Holmes plays on this trick from time to time to others, including Iris ( The Adventure of The Cardboard Box aka the story in which Sherlock canonically uses the trick he previously criticized Auguste for is the only story in the His Last Bow collection written in the late 1800′s, the times DGS takes place, so there’s your obligatory reference. ) In terms of story, a pinnacle point would be Auguste relying on Holmes to analyze a letter that had been recovered from a case in France ( aka The Purloined Letter ), which has undoubted evidence to further implicate the big bad. This act fully reveals that Auguste does in fact have a high level of trust in Sherlock to do the job over the investigators. -- source link
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