01 1983 Alley December Sunny
1983: the year Jay started practicing the piano
02 Night's Chapter 7 The Typewriter Continues to Push Toward the Next Line Close to the Truth
The Typewriter: the typewritten note in Identity, in which Holmes deduces that Wendy Banker is Angel by the typewritten notes with the stumps of the " e" and "r" on the typewriter's note, Holmes deduces that Wendy Bank is Angel;
03 The Fog of the Briar Pipe
The Briar Pipe: Holmes's favorite, a beloved contraption he carries with him; Holmes says in the case of the "Masked Man" that the "Masked Man" is the "Masked Man"; and he says in the case of the "Masked Man" that the Masked Man is the "Masked Man". "case," said Holmes, "the pipe is sometimes very important, and apart from watches and shoelaces, there is nothing that expresses a man's personality more than a pipe."
04 Drift to the withered tree Silence cries to me
The withered tree: there is an old elm tree destroyed by lightning in Musgrave Manor in the case of the Musgrave Rite, and by measuring the tree, Holmes finds the crown left behind by Charles I.;
05 The rotunda by Baker Street
Baker Street: 1881 -1904, Holmes and Watson **** rented 221 B Baker Street apartment;
Round Square: Trafalgar Square, London's famous Trafalgar Square, where Stapledon (Roger Baskerville) rides in the carriage of the coachman, John Crichton, No. 2704, in The Hound of the Baskervilles;
06 The Gauntlet: The Gauntlet, where Holmes finds the crown left by Charles I;
05 Baker Street. p>
06 Knight in Armor on Arm
Knight in Armor: "Three Men of the Same Name" Watson introduces Sherlock Holmes, who in June 1902 refused to be ennobled as a Knight of the Knighthood;
07 Iris crest Shimmering
Iris crest: the iris (golden lily, or vetiver iris) was considered to have been given by an angel of God to the bestowed by an angel of God on the King of France, and the French royal family used the iris badge as a symbol; Holmes is 1/4 French, and his grandmother was the sister of the French fine artist Girne (The Greek Interpreter);
08 The sound of an unoccupied carriage
Undoccupied Carriage:
Unoccupied Carriage:
The Lone Ranger, in which Holmes and Watson find Violet Smith's empty carriage in the countryside on the Surrey border In The Lone Rider, Holmes and Watson find Violet Smith's empty carriage in the countryside on the Surrey border, and conclude that Miss Smith has suffered a misfortune; in A Study in the Scarlet Letter, Holmes follows the suspect, "Mrs. Sawyer," in her carriage, only to discover that it is empty and that the suspect has already jumped out midway through the journey;
09 Late-Night Visit
Late-night visit: in The Man with the Crooked Lip Kate Whitney Watson in the case of "The Man with the Crooked Lip", asking him to go to the Big Smoke to find her husband, who has been missing for two days; John Openshaw in the case of "The Five Orange Kernels", who meets Sherlock Holmes late at night in the rain;
10 Evil in the Victorian Moonlight
Victoria: Conan Doyle, in the "Prologue" to The Last Tribute, states that "Sherlock Holmes began his career as a detective in the middle of the late Victorian dynasty, in the middle of the short Edwardian period."
11 The Scarlet Opening
The Scarlet Opening:
The first case Holmes and Watson*** worked on together was The Study on Scarlet, which in English is The Study on Scarlett, which directly translates to the study of the dark red color (Scarlet), and Holmes was doing an experiment on the sedimentation of blood proteins when Holmes and Watson met for the first time;
12 Disappearing pistols
Disappearing pistols: one of Gibson's two pistols disappears in The Mystery of Thor Bridge;
13 Scorched canes
Scorched canes: Holmes beats the sidewalk with a cane in The Redbreast Society; in The Three-Masted Ship Gloria Scott, old Trevor uses a lead-filled cane; in The Greek Interpreter, Mellas is being Latimer coerced with a lead-filled cane;
14 Melted wax figures 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" refers to the fact that the wax figures are in the house while Holmes waits for his prey in the empty house across the street from the house; The Hound of the Baskervilles, where Holmes has sent someone to investigate whether the estate steward, Bryn Mawr, is on the estate to rule out the possibility that he has come to London to follow Sir Henry;
15 The illusion of symbols on the jewel case
On the jewel case: the bulk of Agra's treasure in The Four Signatures rides in a heavy iron chest;
The illusion of symbols: the perpetrators of The Dancing Villain use the villainous form of graffiti to convey a message;
16 Contradictions Lead to a Dead End Alley He Stacked Up
In "The Architect of Norwood" Holmes discovers that the second floor corridor is six feet shorter than the one on the first floor, leading to the discovery of a perfect secret room built by the architect, Oldacre, at the end of the corridor;
17 Evidence Perfectly BURIED
There have been many cases in which Holmes couldn't find the evidence to bring a criminal to brought to justice;
In "Milverton" Holmes and Watson enter the Milverton house illegally and burn the letters and other evidence that Mee has in his possession that are used to blackmail people;
18 The corners of the mouth that mock Scotland Yard rise up
Sherlock Holmes often laughs at the ineptitude of the official detectives of Scotland Yard in handling their cases;
19 If Evil be the score of a magnificent cruelty
20 (then justice is a deep and helpless despair)
In many cases, Holmes felt the powerlessness of the so-called "justice" from the law; in "Grange Hall" Holmes said: " Watson, no, I can't do it. Once the summons is issued it will be impossible to save him. Once or twice I have been y 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.
21 Its Finale I'll Write It Myself
In "The Last Case," Holmes tells 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."
22 (Then I'll light the ember in the ashes)
Sherlock 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."
23 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, and Dartmoor Prison appears in The Hound of the Baskervilles.
24 Black ink Stained with peace
In The Curious Case of the Two Women, Sherlock Holmes discovers evidence of the crimes of the swindler Mrs. Von Lammermrein by identifying the black ink with the blue-black indigo ink, and the Duchess of Carlingford finds peace as a result;
25 (Scattered lights off Red curtain descends)
Conan Doyle, in his The Final Salutation's Preface, "It is time to close the show, real or fictional, and Holmes must not fail to retire."
26 Facts can only penetrate to the soil where there are no footprints
In "The Curious Case of the Black Angel," it was assumed that Josua Fellows had died by suicide because no footprints were found next to his body, but Holmes discovered that the murderer had committed the deed from 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;
27 sudden subtle floral scent
"The Hound of the Baskervilles", Sir Henry received an anonymous warning letter, Holmes put the letter paper close to the nostrils, smelled the subtle jasmine, he judged that this is a perfume smell, and therefore guessed that this matter should be related to a certain lady, and later proved that this lady is the murderer Stapleton's wife.
28 Deliberately conspicuous costumes
Holmes has repeatedly used disguise to disguise himself in his investigations (e.g., in The Four Autographs, Holmes dresses up as an old sailor, so that Watson does not even recognize him, and in The Last Case, Holmes disguises himself as an Italian missionary in order to escape Moriarty); in A Scandal in Bohemia, Holmes disguises himself as an old clergyman in order to get the photographs;
This is a very good example of the use of disguise in the murder of a woman, who is the wife of Stapleton. old priest;
29 Everyone lies with a mask for different reasons
In "The Masked Man", Mrs. Munro hides the truth of the matter from her husband in order to protect him and the newly built family, and when her own daughter appears at the window, she puts a gray mask on her;
30 Motive, too, has only one name and that's called desire To pass through the swamp of humanity who can really go unsoiled
Holmes' most famous story about a swamp is "The Hound of the Baskervilles," in which the swamp engulfs the sinister murderer Stapleton, but what is even more frightening is the darkness of the human heart;
31 We can forget, forgive, but we must know the truth
Holmes believes that he can let the criminal go if it is justified by extenuating circumstances, but only if 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."
32 The Moved Iron Bed That Last Piece of the Picture Finally Pieced Together
In "The Case of the Speckled Tape," Miss Stoner's bed is screwed to the floor, and she can't move her bed;
In "The Rygate Mystery," Sherlock Holmes risks his own life to find the part of a post-it note that has been torn away, and thus determines that the Cunningham father and son have murdered their coachman, William Kirwan;
33 I heard footsteps anticipating the heel of a moccasin, and he pushed open the door, and the evening breeze shook the kerosene lamp for a while
In A Scandal in Bohemia, Holmes is visited by Watson at night, and shortly thereafter by the King of Bohemia, who is pretending to be the Count of Von Kramm, and who is wearing "a pair of boots of leather, high up to the calves, and with a cuff of dark brown cowhide", but Holmes is wearing a "pair of leather boots, high up to the calves, and with a cuff of dark brown cowhide", but Holmes is not. "
34 Typewriter stops at murderer's name I turn around
The night sky over Westminster Abbey begins to boil
Westminster Abbey: London's famous Westminster Abbey is located in the West End of London, close to the Houses of Parliament and Downing Street. Adjacent to the Houses of Parliament and Downing Street, it was built in 960 and has been the place where successive British kings have been crowned and enthroned, held their wedding celebrations, and is also the location of the 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. In the case of The Second Bloodstain Case, one of the suspects who lived in Westminster was assassinated;
35 Blooming Brilliant Death in the Chest
The beautiful woman who mysteriously visits Milverton puts a bullet into Milverton's chest in Milverton;
; Woodley is shot in the forearm with a gun by Carrathers in The Lone Cyclist:
36 I savor this last sweet mouthful of of the truth with a smile recalling that justice is only quietly served
Holmes, who transferred the fruits of his countless cases to official detectives without compensation, once blandly said that the work was the best reward of all.
37 Fiddling in the Thames
Holmes is a first-rate fiddler; the Thames is a 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 Smew, who has hired the Aurora, the claimed fastest boat on the Thames. ");