“Our words are giants when they do
us an injury, and dwarfs when they do us a service.”
― Willkie Collins
Born
in London on this date in 1824, Collins was a novelist, playwright and short
story writer best known for The Woman in White and The Moonstone,
often called called the first modern English detective novel.
Collins grew up being groomed for the clergy, but by the
time he was in secondary school he was more interested in the law, for which he
studied and eventually passed the bar.
While he never practiced law, his knowledge of it stood him in great
stead in his writing, particularly for his detective stories.
Collins was a close friend of fellow writer Charles
Dickens. They collaborated on several works,
especially for the stage. After touring with
Dickens’ Theatrical Company as an actor, Collins’ wrote his first play, “The
Lighthouse,” which was popularized by Dickens’ company. In the late 1860s, the pair co-wrote “No
Thoroughfare,” one of the most popular shows on the British stage at the time.
His so-called “sensation” novels – precursors to modern
detective and suspense genres – established him among the era’s most
popular writers. A crusader on behalf of
many social and domestic issues, Collins used this writing celebrity to advocate
for reform, cloaking hard-hitting suggestions within his compelling
stories.
“I
say what other people only think,” he said.
“And when all the rest of the world is in a conspiracy to accept the
mask for the true face, mine is the rash hand that tears off the plump
pasteboard, and shows the bare bones beneath.”
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