Vengeance! that is the first, the only thought, when a man finds
himself victimized, when his honor and fortune, his present and
future, are wrecked by a vile conspiracy! The torment he endures
under such circumstances can only be alleviated by the prospect of
inflicting them a hundredfold upon ...
The cold on the 8th of February, 186-, was more intense than the
Parisians had experienced during the whole of the severe winter which
had preceded it, for at twelve o'clock on that day Chevalier's
thermometer, so well known by the denizens of Paris, registered three
degrees below zero. The sky ...
The traveller who wishes to go from Poitiers to London by the shortest
route will find that the simplest way is to take a seat in the stage-
coach which runs to Saumur; and when you book your place, the polite
clerk tells you that you must take your seat punctually at six
o'clock. The next morn ...
It was a Thursday evening, the fifteenth of October; and although
only half-past six o'clock, it had been dark for some time
already. The weather was cold, and the sky was as black as ink,
while the wind blew tempestuously, and the rain fell in torrents.
On the first Sunday in the month of August, 1815, at ten o'clock
precisely--as on every Sunday morning--the sacristan of the parish
church at Sairmeuse sounded the three strokes of the bell which warn
the faithful that the priest is ascending the steps of the altar to
celebrate high mass.
On Thursday, the 9th of July, 186-, Jean Bertaud and his son, well
known at Orcival as living by poaching and marauding, rose at three
o'clock in the morning, just at daybreak, to go fishing.
There is not, perhaps, in all Paris, a quieter street than the Rue
St. Gilles in the Marais, within a step of the Place Royale. No
carriages there; never a crowd. Hardly is the silence broken by
the regulation drums of the Minims Barracks near by, by the chimes
of the Church of St. Louis, o ...
On Thursday, the 6th of March, 1862, two days after Shrove Tuesday,
five women belonging to the village of La Jonchere presented
themselves at the police station at Bougival.
French 19th century mystery writer, novelist, and journalist, one of the pioneers of the modern roman
policier. Gaboriau's first book of the genre, L'Affaire Lerouge (1866) introduced an amateur detective,
who works logically. In the same book appeared also a young policeman named Lecoq, the hero in three of Gaboriau's
detective novels. Lecoq was based on a real-life thief turned a police, François Vidocq (1775-1857), whose
memoirs, Les Vrais Mémoires de Vidocq, mixed fiction and fact. In his own time Gaboriau gained a huge
popularity, but when Arthur Conan Doyle created Sherlock Holmes, Lecoq's international fame declined.
"When I examined the lawn," pursued M. Lecoq, "I found the parallel trails of the feet, but yet
the grass was crushed over a rather wide space. How was that? Because it was the body, not of a man, but of a woman,
which was dragged across the lawn - of a woman full-dressed, with heavy petticoats; that, in short, of the countess,
and not of the count." (from The Mystery of Orcival, 1867)
Émile Gaboriau was born in the small town of Saujon, Charente-Martime, as the son of Charles-Gabriel
Gaboriau, a minor public official, and Marguerite-Stéphanie Gaboriau (née Magistrel). The family moved
in 1833 to Saint-Pierre d'Oleron and four years later to La Rochelle, where Émile's sister, Amélie, was
born. Gaboriau studied in Tarasconsur-Rhône at the community secondary school, where he met Alphonse Millaud,
whose uncle later published in his daily, Le Soleil, Gaboriau's novels in serialized form. After studies at a
secondary school in Saumur, he entered the military service in 1851, serving in the Fifth Regiment as a second-class
infantryman until the end of 1853. Perhaps following his father's wishes, he apprenticed himself to a notary.
However, Gaboriau was more interested in writing, and he published a volume of poetry that went unnoticed.
After settling in Paris in 1856, Gaboriau worked as a journalist, writing columns for the short-lived weekly
journal La Vérité. He became a secretary, assistant, and ghost writer to Paul Féval, a
newspaper editor, dramatist, and author of criminal romances for feuilletons, serial leaflets of French daily
newspapers. For his stories Gaboriau gathered material in police courts, morgues, and prisons. In the early 1860s
Gaboriau published his first books, but it was not until L'Affaire Lerouge when he started to gain success.
His works were translated into English, German, and Italian. In Japan Gaboriau enjoyed great popularity in Ruiko
Kuriowa's translations. During the Franco-Prussian war of 1870-1871 Gaboriau was in Paris. He married in 1873
Amélie Rogelet, who had been his companion of eleven years, but the marriage ended abruptly. Gaboriau died of
pulmonary apoplexy on 28 September, 1873. His last detective character was Goudar. He saves an innocent man from a
sentence of twenty years of hard labor in La Corde au cou (1873). The protagonist of the story is M. Galpin,
a magistrate.
Lecoq model, Vidocq began as a criminal during the times of the French Revolution. He spent much time is prison,
escaped, turned informed and eventually became Chef de la Sûrete, who boasted: "It always astonished people
reporting a theft, for example, that, given some detail which seemed insignificant to them, I could reconstruct the
entire crime, or say: 'That man is the criminal.'" Self-confidence was also one of Lecoq personal traits. In his
youth Lecoq was forced to take menial jobs to continue his legal studied. There are shady spots in his past, but
after joining the Sûrete he becomes its best detective, a master of disguise, and developer of the method of
using plaster to make impressions of footprints.
"I know the goings on in your establishment. It isn't always to talk about dress that ladies
stop at your place on returning from the Bois. You sell silks and satins no doubt; but you sell Madeira, and
excellent cigarettes as well, and there are some who don't walk very straight on leaving your establishment, but
smell suspiciously of tobacco and absinthe. Oh, yes, let us go to law, by all means! I shall have an advocate who
will know how to explain the parts your customers pay, and who will reveal how, with your assistance, they obtain
money from other sources than their husband's cash-box." (from Baron Trigault's Vengeance, 1870)
Gaboriau emphasized more the work of detection, gathering and interpreting of evidence, than the crime or the
criminal. He knew the work of Edgar Allan Poe, considering himself as a discipline of the American writer. Like Poe's
hero the Chevalier C. Auguste Dupin, Lecoq was a sharp analyst, and he could astonish his companions with his skills.
As a detective Lecoq matched Holmes in interpreting the meaning of small details. Lecoq has only to look at the
snow-covered ground outside an inn to describe the man who passed by half an hour earlier - he is middle-aged, very
tall, wears a shaggy overcoat and is married. This did not prevent Sherlock Holmes from describing his French rival
as "a miserable bungler" in A Study in Scarlet (1886) "...he had only one thing to recommend him, and that was
his energy. That book made me positively ill," Holmes mocked Gaboriau's Monsieur Lecoq (1869). Doyle himself
was impressed by the work of Gaboriau, writing in Memories and Adventures (1924), "Gaboriau had rather
attracted me by the neat dovetailing of his plots."
Lecoq's companion in solving crimes, Pére Tabaret, formerly a pawnbroker's clerk, was the central character
in L'Affaire Lerouge. It was first published in installments in Le Pays in 1865, and then reprinted in
Le Soleil in 1866. The story involved family secrets, illegitimate children, aristocrats, and murder. Lecoq
had the central role in Le crime d'Orcival (1867), in which the dead body of the charming Countess de Tremorel
prompts a murder investigation, Le dossier no. 113 (1867), a story of a bank robbery and false identities, and
Monsieur Lecoq. Gaboriau also published melodramatic mystery stories, historical studies, biographies of
famous actresses, and novels examining contemporary way of life in the footsteps of Balzac's La Comédie
humaine.
Author biographies courtesy of Author's Calendar. Used with permission.