Popular Culture Review Vol. 21, No. 2, Summer 2010 | Page 21

Mary Russell’s Bleak House 17 must be plenty o f . . . older men . . . who mightn’t normally expect to marry again . . . Doing their part for England’s ‘surplus women’,” (111)? Perhaps the presence of a great detective makes this slight feminist transgression more forgivable. In looking at the larger-than-life Holmes, lines have been drawn from him in Regiment to Jamdyce as guardian and mentor (and eventually fiance), but his most obvious counterpart is Inspector Bucket. Although Holmes, “has a foothold in both the amateur and private investigator worlds . . (Ball 27) and Bucket is a professional police investigator, there are character links that are irrefutable. Bucket is frequently described as a diviner who seems to pull conclusions out of thin air: “This ‘magic lanthom’ performance is a fitting symbol f or . . . Bucket’s impressive visualizing p o w e rs...” (Thomas 131). When first we meet Mr. Bucket, he isn’t seen entering and is described as having a “ghostly manner of appearing” (Dickens 355), exemplifying his “almost magical” expertise (Bradbury xxvi). Holmes’s eerie and inherent powers of detection are often referenced in both the original Doyle stories and in King’s presentation. Much of the time the context for such praise is in the form of rebuking Watson’s narration. For example, in “Silver Blaze” Holmes remarks, “Because I made a blunder, my dear Watson—which is, I am afraid, a more common occurrence than anyone would think who only knew me through your memoirs” (Doyle 84). Mary Russell is immediately impressed with Holmes’s magical skills, “Two hundred years ago you would have been burnt.. . . a person who achieves knowledge and power . . . a sorcerer” (King Beekeeper’s 18). In addition to seemingly magical powers of divining, the two characters share an omnipresence that is nearly ethereal for the times: Holmes with his Baker Street Irregulars and disguises that allow him to exercise “his all-seeing gaze” (Regiment 75) and Bucket with “his mind an observation tower, his unlimited vision . . . ” (Thomas 143). Much is also made of both of their hands and fingers as powerful and enigmatic personifications of their larger characters. Bucket is always in consult with his forefinger when he’s working over a case in his mind and about to have an epiphany. Dickens writes, “He puts [his finger] to his ears, and it whispers information. . . he shakes it before a guilty man, and it charms him to his destruction” (803). Likewise Holmes’s fingers are always forming a steeple when he is in deepest concentration. In addition to Regiment, numerous King and Doyle stories allude to the power of Holmes’s hands as “so clever” and “extraordinary” (King Letter 23, 24). His hands are spoken about as having powers inherent to them independent of the man to whom they belong. Both men’s powers are described as not merely uncanny, but otherworldly. This otherworldliness turns out to be on the side of what’s just, but not without some ambiguity. Bucket works in concert with Tulkinghom at first, which is antithetical to a reader’s perception that he is an honest character given Tulkinghom’s role (as his name suggests) as a pseudo-villain. However, we eventually discover that Bucket is after the truth out of a sense of duty.