1983 Alley December Sunny
1983: In 1893, Mrs. Watson dies, and Sherlock Holmes, who pretends to be dead, finishes his trip to Tibet and is traveling through Persia, Khartoum, and elsewhere;
Chapter 7 of the Night The typewriter continues to push closer to the truth on the next line of the line
Typewriter : Holmes in Identity Case deduces that Wendy Bank is Angel by the mutilated "e" and "r" on the typewritten note;
The Fog of the Briar Pipe
The Briar Pipe by Holmes
Drifting to the Withered Tree
Fog: London is famous for its fog, and Watson has described the thick yellow fog of late winter and early spring in London in stories such as The Case of the Copper Beeches;
Silence cries out to me
The Withered Tree: In the case of the Musgrave Salute there is an old elm tree in the Musgrave estate that has been destroyed by lightning, and through the measurements of the tree Holmes has found the Charles I's crown;
Round Square off Baker Street
Baker Street: 221B B Baker Street, rented by Holmes and Watson*** from 1881-1904;
Round Square: Trafalgar Square, the famous Trafalgar Square in London, where Stapledon (Rowan) is seen in the "Hound of the Baskervilles". The Hound of the Baskervilles" in which Steptoe Tun (Roger?) is shown sitting on a bench. The Hound of the Baskervilles) rides here in coachman 2704 John? Kretun's carriage;
Knight in Armor on the Arm
Knight in Armor: "Three Men of the Same Name" Chinese Sang introduces Holmes, who in June 1902 refused to be ennobled as a Knight of the Knighthood;
Iris crest Shimmering
Iris crest: the iris flower (the golden lily, or vetiver iris) was thought to have been given to the King of France by God's 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 by moonlight in 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
One of Gibson's two pistols disappears in "The Mystery of Thor Bridge";
Scorched canes
Holmes uses a cane to pound on the sidewalk in "The Redheads"; old Trevor uses a lead-filled cane in "The Three-Masted Schooner Gloria Scott"
I don't know what the word "Scorched Black "I don't know what "charred bones" signifies, but "charred bones" might as well be used here; "The Architect of Norwood," "The Apartment of Westria," and "Shawshome Villa" all refer to "charred bones."
Melted wax statues who is not present
Holmes uses wax figures to lure his enemies in The Empty House and The Case of the Crown Jewels; "who is not present" in this context may refer to the fact that the wax figure is in the house while Holmes waits for his prey in the empty house across the street from the house; "who is not present" is also is one of the effective methods of detection, "The Hound of the Baskervilles", Holmes had sent to investigate whether the estate steward Bryn Mawr was in the manor, in order to rule out the possibility that he had come to London to follow Sir Henry;
Jewelry box on the Symbol of the illusion of the symbols of
Jewelry box on the: "Four Signatures" in the bulk of the treasure of the Agra multiplied by a heavy box;
Symbol of the illusion of the symbols of the: the Dancing Villain" where the perpetrator uses graffiti in the form of a villain to send a message;
Contradictions leading up to the dead-end alley he's piled up
Feeling like the Musgrave Rite where Howells "seized the treasure and ran desperately up the winding steps, deaf to the muffled shouts coming from behind him and the frantic beating of his hands on the stone slab! ", the very slate that choked Brenton, the butler;
Evidence perfectly buried
There are many cases in which Holmes cannot find the evidence to bring the criminal to justice; in "Milverton," Holmes and Watson illegally enter the Milverton house and burn the evidence, such as letters, which Mee has in his possession and which are used to blackmail people;
That taunting Scottish police force with the corners of his mouth raised
Holmes often mocks the official detectives of the Scottish police force for their ineptitude in handling cases;
If Evil Were a Gorgeous and Cruel Music
Watson in "The Redheads" writes: "My friend (Holmes) is a passionate and exuberant musician, and is not only a skillful performer in his own right but also a superbly gifted composer," he says. but also a composer of exceptional talent. ...... "Music was Holmes' great love, and sleuthing and the pursuit of criminals were at one time regarded by him as larger-than-life activities;
2008-2-5 17:52 in reply to
Garolian
4 fans
2nd Floor
(Then justice is a deep and helpless despondency)
In many cases, Holmes feels the powerlessness of the so-called "justice" of the law; in "Grange Hall", Holmes says: "Watson, no, I can't 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.
It's finale, I'll write it myself
In "The Last Case," Holmes tells Professor Moriarty, the "Napoleon" of crime, "If I could be assured of your destruction, then, for the good of the community, I would willingly go down with you. " 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 more than a thousand cases that I have handled, I believe that I have never put my powers to the wrong use. ...... Watson, the day will come when I have captured or eliminated that most dangerous and capable of criminals in Europe, and 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 air-dries the last of the sorrow
(Then raindrops will wash the high walls of darkness)
High walls: in general, a reference to prisons; Dartmoor Prison appears in The Hound of the Baskervilles, and The Mystery of the Bridge of Raisin
Black ink Stained with serenity
Adrian? Conan? Doyle's The Curious Case of the Two Women, in which Holmes discovers the evidence of the fraudster Von? evidence of Mrs. Lammermrein's crimes, and the Duchess of Carlingford is given peace of mind 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 soil without footprints
Adrian? Conan? Doyle's The Curious Case of the Black Angel, as no footprints were found next to Josua? In Adrian Conan Doyle's "The Curious Case of the Black Angel", Holmes thought that Josua Fellowes had committed suicide because no footprints were found beside his body, but Holmes discovered that the murderer had committed the crime in a tree; in "The Mysterious Case of the Boscombe Valley", Holmes judged that the murderer was a cripple by looking at the depths of the left and right foot prints;
The subtle and sudden scent of the flowers
"The Naval Accords", in which Holmes caresses the roses to deliver a passionate "Ode to the Rose", he says, "I'm not sure if you can tell me what happened to the roses. "Ode to a Rose";
deliberately conspicuous costumes
Holmes repeatedly uses masquerade to disguise himself for his investigations;
each person lies with a mask for a different reason
In "The Man in the Yellow Mask," Mrs. Munro conceals the truth of what happened from her husband in order to protect her husband and her newly built family. the truth of the matter, and puts a gray mask on her own daughter when she appears at the window;
Motivation, too, has only one name that is called desire
Crossing the swamps of human nature who can really do so without being soiled
Sherlock Holmes's most famous story about a swamp is "The Hound of the Baskervilles," in which a swamp engulfs the insidious Steeplejacks but is even more horrifying but the shadowy human heart;
We can forget, forgive, but we must know the truth
Sherlock Holmes believed that he could let the criminal go if it was justified by extenuating circumstances, but only if the criminal was honest with him, and told him the course and cause of the crime; in The Man in the Yellow Mask he said, "It is far better to get at the truth than to have an interminable suspicion. "
The Moved Iron Bed
In "The Case of the Speckled Tape," Miss Stoner's bed was screwed to the floor, and she could not move her bed; and this remark reminds me of an old case in which a man who was afraid of heights practiced yoga in a room closed all around, with only a skylight on the top, and died; and the detective, by observing the signs of the bed having been moved, judged that someone had used the The skylight lifted the bed so that the person in the bed was starved to death due to an agoraphobic attack and immobility;
That last piece of the puzzle finally fits together
The Lydgate Mystery, in which Sherlock Holmes risked everything to find the part of a post-it note that had been torn away, thus determining that the Cunningham father and son murdered their coachman, Kirwan;
I hear footsteps, the expected heel of the moccasins, and he pushes open the door. The evening breeze shook the kerosene lamp for a while
There seems to be a reference here to a visit of Watson's on a certain night, or perhaps to a visit of a certain client;
In "A Scandal in Bohemia" Watson visits Holmes at night, and not long afterward, pretending to be the Count Von? In The Scandal in Bohemia, Watson visits Holmes at night, and shortly after, the King of Bohemia, pretending to be Count von Kramm, arrives, wearing "a pair of calf-high leather boots, the cuffs of which were trimmed with dark-brown cowhide", and Holmes has already 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 boil over. boiling
That is, London's famous Westminster Abbey, located in the West End of London, adjacent to the Houses of Parliament and Downing Street, was built in 960, and has been the place where successive British kings have been crowned and enthroned, held their wedding celebrations, and is the site of royal tombs. 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 Lustrous death
The beautiful woman who mysteriously visits Milverton puts a bullet into Milverton's chest in Milverton;
I savor this last mouthful of sweet truth
Smiling in retrospect, Justice is but a quiet stretch
Holmes, who transferred the fruits of his countless cases to the official detectives for no compensation, once blandly He said that work is the best reward.
Fiddles roam the banks of the Thames
Holmes' fiddle skills were first-rate; the Thames is a famous river running through London;
2008-2-5 17:52 Reply
Garolian
4 Fans
3rd Floor
Briar Pipe: Holmes's usual pipe is generally thought to be an Irish Peterson brand cigarette. is an Irish Peterson brand pipe, belongs to the aristocracy of pipes;
2008-2-5 17:56 Reply
Garolian
4 fans
4th floor
Correction: the round square: the round square of Regens (The Greek Interpreter)
Addendum: In December 1893 Conan Doyle's "The Last Case" is published, in which a jaded Doyle lets his hero plummet to his death into the Reichenbach Falls;
Added again::
The light of the morning sun winds up the last of the sorrows
In The Mystery of the Bridge of Raisin
In The Mystery of Raisinbach, Sherlock Holmes says to Ms. Dunbar: "The dark clouds are being dispersed, and the bright prospect of the truth being revealed is approaching. "
(Then the raindrops will wash away the high walls of darkness)
High walls: generally speaking refers to prisons, Dartmoor Prison appeared in The Hound of the Baskervilles, and in The Mystery of Thornybridge, when Miss Dunbar, who was imprisoned, "learned that it was the celebrated Sherlock Holmes who had come to see and help her," her eyes took on a new look. "when she learned that it was the famous Sherlock Holmes who had come to see and help her;"
Then justice is a deep and helpless despondency)
In many cases, Holmes feels the powerlessness of the so-called "justice" of the law; Holmes says in "Grange Hall": "Watson, no, I cannot do this. Once the summons is issued it will be impossible to save him. Once or twice I have been acutely conscious that more harm has been done by my discovering the criminal than by the event of 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.
Posted from a posting, make do with what you've got hehehe