The music video for Chapter 7 of Night tells the story from Sherlock Holmes? (Story title)

MV Story:

The detective Jay and his assistant Yuhao have been chasing the suspected murderer, Bullet, but Jay realizes in the end that the murderer who created this series of serial murders is no one else but his own detective assistant, Yuhao. Yuhao on the surface of the famous detective "Jay Holmes" assistant, in fact, is a murderous demon, every time after the murder necessary at the scene of the crime to leave a "Blue Monster" (blue roses). In one of the previous murders, it happened to be a hobby of photography Bullet photographed his murder, so in order to silence, Bullet became the target of the killings carried out by Yuhao (in the drama in the form of a flashback at the end of the performance). At the scene of one of the detective's investigations, Bullet passes by and sees the detective's assistant, Woo-ho, who is scared out of his wits and runs away out of fear of being killed. The strange behavior of running away when encountering a detective naturally makes Detective Jay take Bullet as a suspect in the crime, and then keeps chasing Bullet with Uhao. Of course, the two have different purposes, one to solve the case, the other to silence. And during one of the investigations, Jay Lun was hit on the back of the head and fainted. Afterward, Yuhao finds Bullet's place, burns the photos documenting his murder, and kills Bullet. He then returns to the scene where Jaylen was knocked out and pretends that he fainted. When Jay wakes up, he rescues Yuhao from the scene, and while carrying Yuhao on his back, Jay sees the ring on Yuhao's right index finger. In a flash between the brain and flashed a picture of himself before he was knocked unconscious: "from behind knocked him down a right hand with a ring on the index finger"

Lyrics Explanation:

1983 Alley December Sunny

1983: 1893, Mrs. Watson died, pretending to be dead Sherlock Holmes has finished his trip to Tibet and is traveling to Persia and Khartoum; readers are "outraged" by Conan Doyle's writing in The Last Case that Holmes and Moriarty fell off a cliff, and then bringing Holmes back to life in 1893 to write the rest of the story.

Chapter 7 of Night The typewriter continues to push the next line closer to the truth

The Typewriter: In "The Case of the Identity," Holmes deduces that Wendy Bank is Angel by the missing "e" and "r" on the typewritten note;

The Typewriter: In "The Case of the Identity," Holmes deduces that Wendy Bank is Angel by the missing "e" and "r" on the typewritten note.

The Fog of the Briar Pipe

The Briar Pipe: Holmes's favorite, a beloved possession that he carries with him everywhere he goes; Holmes says in The Masked Man that "the pipe is sometimes very important, and that, with the exception of the watch and the laces of one's shoes, there is nothing more expressive of a man's character than the pipe." a man's personality."

Drift to the withered tree, which cries out to me in silence

The withered tree: In the case of the Musgrave Rite, there was an old elm tree at Musgrave Hall which had been destroyed by lightning, and by measuring the tree, Holmes found the crown left by Charles I.

The round square by Baker Street

Baker Street: 1881-1904, Holmes's house, Baker Street, was the most important place in the world. -1904, Holmes and Watson **** rented 221B B Baker Street;

Round Square: Trafalgar Square, London's famous Trafalgar Square, where Stapledon (Roger?) sits in the Hound of the Baskervilles in The Hound of the Baskervilles, and where Holmes finds the crown left by Charles I;

Round Square by Baker Street. The Hound of the Baskervilles) rides here in coachman 2704 John? Clayton's carriage;

Knight in Armor on the Arm

Knight in Armor: "Three Men of the Same Name" Chineson introduces Sherlock Holmes, who refused the knighthood in June 1902;

Iris crest Shimmering

Iris crest: the iris (golden lily, or vetiver iris) was thought to have been given to the King of France by an Angel of God s angels bestowed upon the King of France, and the French royal family used the iris crest as a symbol; Holmes is 1/4 French, and his grandmother was the sister of the French fine artist Girne ("The Greek Interpreter");

Unmanned Carriage Sound

Unmanned Carriage:

Unmanned Carriage:

The Lone Ranger, in which Holmes and Watson found Violette Smith's empty carriage in the countryside at the border of Surrey, is the first time that a man has been in an empty carriage in the countryside of Surrey, and Holmes and Watson have been in the countryside of the Surrey border, but they are in the same place. Kate? Whitney pays a late-night visit to Watson, begging him to go to the Big Smoke to look for her husband, who has been missing for two days;

Evil in the bloody opening of Victoria

Victoria: Conan? Doyle, in the Preface to The Last Salutation, states, "Holmes began his career as a detective in the middle of the late Victorian dynasty, the Edwardian period of the Middle Passage Short."

The Scarlet Opening

The Scarlet Opening:

The first case Holmes and Watson*** handled together was The Study on Scarlet, which in English is The Study on Scarlett, and directly translates to the study of the dark red color (Scarlet), and Holmes and Watson met for the first time when Holmes was doing an experiment on the sedimentation of blood-colored proteins;

The Disappearing Pistols

Disappearing pistols: one of Gibson's two pistols disappears in The Mystery of Thor Bridge;

Scorched canes

Scorched canes: Holmes uses a cane to pound on the sidewalk in The Scarlet Pimpernel; in The Three-Masted Schooner Gloria Scott, old Trevor uses a lead-filled cane;

Melted wax figures Who wasn't there

The melting of the wax figure. Sir Henry;

The illusion of symbols on the jewel case

On the jewel case: the bulk of the Agra treasure in The Four Signatures multiplied in a heavy iron chest;

The illusion of symbols: the perpetrator of The Dancing Figures uses graffiti in the form of a figurine to send a message;

Conflicts leading to the dead-end street he has piled on top of each other

In Norwood's Architect," Holmes discovers that the second-floor corridor is six feet shorter than the first-floor one, leading to the discovery of a perfect secret room built at the end of the corridor by the architect Oldacre;

Evidence is perfectly buried

there are many cases in which Holmes can't find the evidence to bring the criminal to justice; in "The Milvertones" Holmes and Watson enter the Milvertones' house illegally and burn evidence in the possession of the Mee used to blackmail other people's letters and other evidence;

that mocking the Scottish police force corners of the mouth up

Holmes often mocked the Scottish police force official detectives to handle the case of incompetence;

If the evil is a magnificent and cruel music

"The Redheads," Watson writes, "My friend (Holmes) is a passionate and spirited musician, and he himself is not only a skillful musician, but also an accomplished one. He is himself not only a virtuoso performer, but also a composer of great talent ...... "Music was Holmes' great love, and sleuthing and the pursuit of criminals were once regarded by him as a larger-than-life activity;

(Then justice is a deep and hopeless despondency)

In many cases, Holmes felt the powerlessness of the so-called "justice" of the law; in "Grange Hall", Holmes says: "Watson, no, I cannot do that. Once the summons is issued it will be impossible to save him. Once or twice I have been made to realize that I have done more harm by discovering the culprit than by the crime itself. I have now learned the need of caution, and I had better cajole the laws of England than cajole my conscience." . In The Devil's Foot, again out of sympathy for justice, Holmes lets the murderer Dr. Sturdell go free.

I'll write the end of it myself

In "The Last Case," Holmes says to Professor Moriarty, the "Napoleon" of crime, "If I could be sure of destroying you, I would willingly die with you, for the good of society. " During a thrilling trip to the Continent, he said to Watson: "If the journey of my life ended tonight, I could die with a clear conscience. Thanks to me the air of London has been freshened. In the thousand or so cases I have handled, I believe that I have never put my powers to the wrong use. The day will come, Watson, when I have captured or eliminated that most dangerous and capable of criminals in Europe, when my career as a detective will be at an end, and your memoirs can be wound up."

(Then I'll light the ember in the ashes)

Holmes telegraphs to his brother Mycroft in "The Bruce-Partington Project", "A glimmer of light is seen in the darkness, but it may be extinguished."

Morning light Dries out the last of the sorrow

(Then the raindrops will wash away the high walls of darkness)

High Walls: a reference to prisons in general, Dartmoor Prison appears in The Hound of the Baskervilles.

Black ink Stained with serenity

In The Curious Case of the Two Women, Sherlock Holmes discovers by identifying black ink and blue-black indigo ink that the fraudster Von? evidence of Mrs. Lammermrein's crimes, and the Duchess of Carlingford gains peace as a result;

(Scattered lights off Red curtain descends)

Conan? Doyle says in the "Preface" to "The Last Salutation", "It is time to close the show, real or fictional, and Holmes must not fail to retire."

Facts can only penetrate to the soil where there are no footprints

In The Curious Case of the Black Angel, as no footprints were found near the body of Josua? Fells' body, no footprints were found beside his body, and it was thought that he had died by suicide, but Holmes discovered that the murderer had committed the deed in a tree; in "The Secret Case of Boscombe Creek Valley," Holmes judged the murderer to be a cripple by observing the depth of the left and right footprints;

The Sudden Subtle Floral Fragrance

"The Naval Accord," in which Holmes, caressing the roses with his hand, delivers a large and passionate "Ode to a Rose";

Deliberately conspicuous costumes

Several times Holmes utilizes disguises to disguise himself for his investigations (e.g., in "The Four Autographs" Holmes dresses up as an old sailor, so that no one can even get out of Watson's way, and in "The Last Case" Holmes disguises himself to escape Moriarty's pursuit as an Italian (the missionary);

Everyone lies with a mask for different reasons

In "The Masked Man" Mrs. Munro hides the truth of the matter from her husband to protect him and the newly built family, and when her own daughter appears at the window she puts a gray mask on her;

Motivation also has only one name and that's called desire

Crossing the human nature of the swamp who can really not be soiled

Holmes' most famous story about the swamp is "The Hound of the Baskervilles", where the swamp engulfs the sinister murderer, Stapleton, but even more horrifying is the dark heart;

We can forget, forgive, but the truth must be known

Holmes believes that he can let the criminal go, if it is justified by extenuating circumstances, but only if the The criminal must be honest with him, telling him the course and cause of the crime; in The Masked Man, he says, "It is much better to get at the truth than to have endless suspicions."

The Moved Iron Bed That Last Piece of the Picture Finally Pieced Together

"The Case of the Speckled Tape," in which Miss Stoner can't move her bed because it's fastened to the floor with screws;

"The Mystery of Lydgate," in which Sherlock Holmes risks his own life to find the part of a post-it note that's been torn away, thereby determining that the Cunninghams murdered their coachman, William Kirwan;

I heard footsteps anticipating moccasin heels He pushed open the door The evening breeze shook the kerosene lamp for a while

In "A Scandal in Bohemia," Watson pays a nighttime visit to Sherlock Holmes, and not long afterward, the man pretending to be Von? The King of Bohemia, pretending to be Count von Kramm, also happens to be visiting, wearing "a pair of calf-high leather boots, the cuffs of which were inlaid with dark brown cowhide", but Holmes has long since surmised that the visitor is, in fact, the hereditary King of Bohemia;

The typewriter stops at the name of the murderer and I turn around.

The night sky over Westminster Abbey begins to boiling

Westminster Abbey: that is, London's famous Westminster Abbey (Westminster Abbey), located in London's West End, adjacent to the Houses of Parliament and Downing Street, was built in 960, is the successive British kings crowned on the throne, held a wedding celebration, but also the royal tomb site. In addition to Princess Diana, Newton, Darwin and Churchill are buried here. The central London area is divided into several districts, one of which is called Westminster. 221B Baker Street is located in the Westminster district.

Blooming in the chest of the voluptuous death

"Milverton", the mysterious visit of the beautiful woman put a bullet into the chest of Milverton;

I taste this last bite of the sweet truth

Smile back to think of the justice is just a quiet stretch

Sherlock Holmes to countless cases are the fruits of the transfer of the official detectives free of charge, he had blandly said, work is the best reward.

Fiddle in the Thames

Sherlock Holmes was a first-rate fiddler; the Thames is the famous river that runs through London (in "The Four Signatures," Holmes and the Crown Detective venture out on the Thames in pursuit of the murderer Jonnozan Shaw, who employs what is claimed to be the fastest boat on the Thames, the Aurora);

Holmes was a great fiddler, and he was a good one. ");