awanderingbard (
awanderingbard) wrote2012-08-13 09:52 am
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Opinion Time!
Does anyone have any thoughts on what flavour of fencing Sherlock Holmes might pursue? Foil, epée or sabre? I've done some research on wiki because I don't know much about fencing and I've watched the different types on youtube, but I'm still a bit unsure as to which one he'd prefer. I know in the original stories he is a 'singlestick' player, which seems to be a practice sword for the sabre, but the sabre fencing seems less about defense than offense and more about flying at each other and trying to hit than fending off attacks. The epée style was created to make it feel more like a 'real' duel, but the foil fencing looks to be more what a pirate would use, which we all know Sherlock wanted to be.
Anyone out there more familliar with the sport to know what would suit him best? Whatever would require the most concentration and cleverness to be good at, I suppose. Or does anyone know if it actually states anywhere which style Holmes uses in the stories?
Anyone out there more familliar with the sport to know what would suit him best? Whatever would require the most concentration and cleverness to be good at, I suppose. Or does anyone know if it actually states anywhere which style Holmes uses in the stories?
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From a character point of view, I would think Sherlock dabbles in all three forms. As in, if he had to give a demo or list the rules, he could do all three and have moderate skill with the epee, foil, and sabre. If he was going to lean toward one, based on your descriptions I'd say that he'd be best physically with the sabre.
It fits the classic!Holmes canon as well as the idea that modern!Sherlock is aggressive and can actually strategize to attack very well under pressure in that calculating, cold sort of way.
I also amuse myself with the idea that he'd be less good at foil fencing because he would get too caught up in the fun of it (probably because in the deepest, darkest part of his mind he imagines himself as a pirate which can get distracting with all the joy he gets out of that image).
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