Author(s)
|
Arthur Conan Doyle |
---|---|
Cover artist
|
Alfred Garth Jones |
Country
|
United Kingdom |
Language
|
English |
Series
|
Sherlock Holmes |
Genre(s)
|
Detective fiction |
Publisher
|
George Newnes |
Publication date
|
1902 |
Media type
|
Print (hardback) |
Pages
|
359 |
Preceded by
|
The Memoirs of Sherlock Holmes |
Followed by
|
The Return of Sherlock Holmes |
"The Hound of the Baskervilles"
|
|
---|---|
Author
|
Arthur Conan Doyle |
Series
|
The Hound of the Baskervilles |
Publication date
|
|
Client(s) | Sir Henry Baskerville |
Set in | 1889 |
The Hound of the Baskervilles is the third of four crime novels by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle featuring the detective Sherlock Holmes. Originally serialised in The Strand Magazine from August 1901 to April 1902, it is set largely on Dartmoor in Devon in England's West Country and tells the story of an attempted murder inspired by the legend of a fearsome, diabolical hound.
In 2003 the book was listed on the BBC's The Big Read poll of the UK's "best-loved novel."
Plot
Introduction
Sir Charles Baskerville is found lying dead on the grounds of his country house, Baskerville Hall. The cause is ascribed to a heart attack. Fearing for the safety of Sir Charles's nephew and only known heir, Sir Henry Baskerville, coming from America to claim his inheritance, Dr James Mortimer travels to London and asks Sherlock Holmes for help.Mortimer explains that the Baskerville family is afflicted by a curse. According to an old account, over two centuries ago Hugo Baskerville was infatuated with a farmer's daughter. He kidnapped her and imprisoned her in his bedroom. She escaped and the furious Baskerville offered his soul to the devil if he could recapture her. Aided by friends, he pursued the girl onto the desolate moor. Baskerville and his victim were found dead. She had died from fright, but a giant spectral hound stood guard over Baskerville's body. The hound tore out Baskerville's throat, then vanished into the night.
Sir Charles Baskerville had become fearful of the legendary curse and its hellhound. Mortimer decided that Sir Charles had been waiting for someone when he died. His face was contorted in a ghastly expression, while his footprints suggested he was running from something. The elderly man's heart was not strong, and he had planned to go to London the next day. Mortimer says he had seen the footprints of a "gigantic hound" near Sir Charles's body, something not revealed at the inquest.
In London
Intrigued by the case, Holmes meets with Sir Henry, newly arrived from America. Sir Henry is puzzled by an anonymous note delivered to his London hotel room, warning him to avoid the Devon moors. Holmes says that the note had been composed largely of letters cut from The Times, probably in a hotel, judging by other clues. The fact that the letters were cut with nail scissors suggested an authoress, as did a remnant whiff of perfume. Holmes keeps this last detail to himself. When Holmes and Watson later join Sir Henry at his hotel, they learn one of the baronet's new boots has gone missing. No good explanation can be found for the loss.Holmes asks if there were any other living relatives besides Sir Henry. Mortimer tells him that Charles had two brothers, Rodger and John. Sir Henry is the sole child of John, who settled in America and raised his son there. Another brother, Rodger, was known to be the black sheep of the family. A wastrel and inveterate gambler, he fled to South America to avoid creditors. He is believed to have died there alone.
Despite the note's warning, Sir Henry insists on visiting Baskerville Hall. As Sir Henry leaves Holmes' Baker Street apartment, Holmes and Doctor Watson follow him. They realise that a man with a fake-looking black beard in a cab is also following him. Holmes and Watson pursue this man, but he escapes; however, Holmes memorises the cab number. Holmes stops in at a messenger office and employs a young boy, Cartwright, to go visit London's hotels and look through wastepaper in search of cut-up copies of The Times.
By the time they return to the hotel, Sir Henry has had another, older boot stolen. When the first missing boot is discovered before the meeting is over, Holmes begins to realise they must be dealing with a real hound (hence the emphasis on the scent of the used boot). When conversation turns to the man in the cab, Mortimer says that Barrymore, the servant at Baskerville Hall, has a beard, and a telegram is sent to check on his whereabouts.
At Baskerville Hall
It is decided that, with Holmes being tied up in London
with other cases, Watson will accompany Sir Henry to Baskerville Hall
and report back by telegram in detail. Later that evening, telegrams
from Cartwright (who was unable to find the newspaper) and
Baskerville Hall (where Barrymore apparently is) bring an end to
those leads. A visit from John Clayton, who was driving the cab with
the black-bearded man, is of little help. He says that the man had
identified himself as Holmes, much to the surprise and amusement of
the actual Holmes.
The Great Bittern
Mortimer, Watson, and Sir Henry set off for Baskerville
Hall the following Saturday. The baronet is excited to see it and his
connection with the land is clear, but finds the moor dampened.
Soldiers are about the area, on the lookout for an escaped murderer
named Selden. Barrymore and his wife wish to depart Baskerville Hall
as soon as is convenient, and the Hall is, in general, a somber
place. Watson has trouble sleeping that night, and hears a woman
crying. The next morning Barrymore denies that it was his wife, who
is one of only two women in the house. Watson sees Mrs. Barrymore
later in the morning, however, and observes clear evidence that she
has indeed been weeping.
Watson checks with the postmaster in Coombe Tracey
and learns that the telegram was not actually delivered into the
hands of Barrymore, so it is no longer certain that he was at the
Hall, and not in London. On his way back, Watson meets Jack
Stapleton, a naturalist familiar with the moor even though he has
only been in the area for two years. They hear a moan that the
peasants attribute to the hound, but Stapleton attributes it to the
cry of a bittern,
or possibly the bog settling. He then runs off after a specimen of
the butterfly Cyclopedes,
which was still found on Dartmoor until the 1860s. Watson is not
alone for long before Beryl Stapleton, Jack's sister, approaches him.
Mistaking him for Sir Henry, she urgently warns him to leave the
area, but drops the subject when her brother returns. The three walk
to Merripit House (the Stapletons’ home), and during the
discussion, Watson learns that Stapleton used to run a school in
Yorkshire. Though he is offered lunch and a look at Stapleton’s
collections, Watson departs for the Hall. Before he gets far along
the path, Miss Stapleton overtakes him and retracts her warning.
Watson notices that the brother and sister don't look very much
alike.
Sir Henry soon meets Miss Stapleton and becomes
romantically interested, despite her brother’s intrusions. Watson
meets another neighbour, Mr. Frankland, an elderly lawyer. Barrymore
draws increasing suspicion, as Watson and Sir Henry see him late at
night walk with a candle into an empty room, hold it up to the
window, and then leave. Realising that the room has a view out on the
moor, Watson and Sir Henry determine to figure out what is going on.
Barrymore's wife confesses that her brother is Selden, the escaped
murderer, and that she was giving him food while he was out on the
moor.
Meanwhile, during the day, Sir Henry continues to pursue
Beryl Stapleton until her brother runs up on them and yells angrily.
He later explains to the disappointed baronet that it was not
personal, he was just afraid of losing his only companion so quickly.
To show there are no hard feelings, he invites Sir Henry to dine with
him and his sister on Friday.
Photograph of prisoners at Dartmoor
Prison tied together carrying a cart out the gates, circa 1900.The convict
Sir Henry then becomes the person doing the surprising, when he and Watson walk in on Barrymore, catching him at night in the room with a candle. Barrymore refuses to answer their questions, since it is not his secret to tell, but Mrs. Barrymore’s. She tells them that the runaway convict Selden is her brother and the candle is a signal to him that food has been left for him. When the couple return to their room, Sir Henry and Watson go off to find the convict, despite the poor weather and frightening sound of the hound. They see Selden by another candle, but are unable to catch him. Watson notices the outlined figure of another man standing on top of a tor with the moon behind him, but he likewise gets away.
Barrymore is upset when he finds out that they tried to
capture Selden, but when an agreement is reached to allow Selden to
flee the country, he is willing to repay the favour. He tells them of
finding a mostly burnt letter asking Sir Charles to be at the gate at
the time of his death. It was signed with the initials L.L. Mortimer
tells Watson the next day those initials could stand for Laura Lyons,
Frankland’s daughter. She lives in Coombe Tracey. When Watson goes
to talk to her, she admits to writing the letter in hopes that Sir
Charles would be willing to help finance her divorce, but says she
never kept the appointment.
The appearance of Holmes
Frankland has just won two law cases and invites Watson
in to help him celebrate. Barrymore had previously told Watson that
another man lived out on the moor besides Selden, and Frankland
unwittingly confirms this, when he shows Watson through his telescope
the figure of a boy carrying food. Watson departs the house and goes
in that direction. He finds the prehistoric stone dwelling where the
unknown man has been staying, goes in, and sees a message reporting
on his own activities. He waits, revolver at the ready, for the
unknown man to return.
The unknown man proves to be Holmes. He has kept his
location a secret so that Watson would not be tempted to come out and
so he would be able to appear on the scene of action at the critical
moment. Watson’s reports have been of much help to him, and he then
tells his friend some of the information he has uncovered –
Stapleton is actually married to the woman passing as Miss Stapleton,
and was also promising marriage to Laura Lyons to get her
cooperation. As they bring their conversation to an end, they hear a
ghastly scream.
One of Grimspound's
hut circles where Holmes might have sought shelter
They run towards the sound and finding a body, mistake
it for Sir Henry. They realise it is actually the escaped convict
Selden, the brother of Mrs Barrymore, dressed in the baronet’s old
clothes (which had been given to Barrymore by way of further apology
for distrusting him). Then Stapleton appears, and while he makes
excuses for his presence, Holmes announces that he will return to
London the next day, his investigations having produced no result.
Climax
Holmes and Watson return to Baskerville Hall where, over
dinner, the detective stares at Hugo Baskerville's portrait. Calling
Watson over after dinner he covers the hair to show the face,
revealing its striking likeness to Stapleton. This provides the
motive in the crime – with Sir Henry gone, Stapleton could lay
claim to the Baskerville fortune, being clearly a Baskerville
himself. When they return to Mrs. Lyons’s apartment, Holmes'
questioning forces her to admit Stapleton’s role in the letter that
lured Sir Charles to his death. They go to the railway station to
meet Det. Inspector Lestrade, whom Holmes has called in by telegram.
Under the threat of advancing fog, Watson, Holmes,
and Lestrade lie in wait outside Merripit House, where Sir Henry has
been dining. When the baronet leaves and sets off across the moor,
Stapleton looses the hound. Holmes and Watson manage to shoot it
before it can hurt Sir Henry seriously, and discover that its hellish
appearance was acquired by means of phosphorus.
They find Mrs. Stapleton bound and gagged in an upstairs room of
Merripit House. When she is freed, she tells them of Stapleton’s
hideout; an island deep in the Great Grimpen Mire. They look for him
next day, unsuccessfully, and he is presumed dead, having lost his
footing and being sucked down into the foul and bottomless depths of
the mire. Holmes and Watson are only able to find and recover Sir
Henry's boot used by Stapleton to give the hound Sir Henry's scent
and find the remains of Dr Mortimer's dog in the mire.Epilogue
Some weeks later, Watson questions Holmes about the Baskerville case. Holmes reveals that although believed to have died unmarried, Sir Charles' younger brother Rodger Baskerville had married and had a son with the same name as his father. The son John Rodger Baskerville, after embezzling public money in Costa Rica, took the name Vandeleur and fled to England where he used the money to fund a Yorkshire school. Unfortunately for him, the tutor he had hired died of consumption, and after an epidemic of the disease killed three students the school itself failed. Now using the name Stapleton, Baskerville/Vandeleur fled with his wife to Dartmoor. He apparently supported himself by burglary, engaging in four large robberies and pistolling a page who surprised him.
Having learned the story of the hound, he resolved to
kill off the remaining Baskervilles so that he could come into the
inheritance as the last of the line. He had no interest in the estate
and simply wanted the inheritance money. He purchased the hound and
hid it in the mire at the site of an abandoned tin mine.
On the night of his death, Sir Charles had been waiting
for Laura Lyons. The cigar ash at the scene ("the ash had twice
dropped from his cigar") showed he had waited for some time.
Instead he met the hound that had been trained by Stapleton and
covered with phosphorus to give it an unearthly appearance. Sir
Charles ran for his life, but then had the fatal heart attack which
killed him. Since dogs do not eat or bite dead bodies, it left him
there untouched.
Stapleton followed Sir Henry in London, and also stole
his new boot but later returned it, since it had not been worn and
thus lacked Sir Henry's scent. Holmes speculated that the hotel
bootblack had been bribed to steal an old boot of Henry's instead.
The hound pursued Selden to his death in a fall because he was
wearing Sir Henry's old clothes.
On the night the hound attacked Sir Henry, Stapleton's
wife had refused to have any further part in Stapleton's plot, but
her abusive husband beat and tied her to a pole to prevent her from
warning him.
In Holmes' words: "..he (Stapleton) has for years
been a desperate and dangerous man.." It was his consuming
interest in entomology that allowed Holmes to identify him as the
same man as Vandeleur, the former schoolmaster.
Origins
Sir Arthur Conan Doyle wrote this story shortly after returning to his home Undershaw from South Africa, where he had worked as a volunteer physician at the Langman Field Hospital in Bloemfontein at the time of the Second Boer War.Conan Doyle had not written about Sherlock Holmes in eight years, having killed off the character in the 1893 story "The Final Problem". Although The Hound of the Baskervilles is set before the latter events, two years later Conan Doyle would bring Holmes back for good, explaining in "The Adventure of the Empty House" that Holmes had faked his own death.
He was assisted with the plot by a 30-year-old Daily Express journalist named Bertram Fletcher Robinson (1870–1907). His ideas came from the legend of Richard Cabell, which was the fundamental inspiration for the Baskerville tale of a hellish hound and a cursed country squire. Cabell's tomb can be seen in the Devon town of Buckfastleigh.
Squire Richard Cabell lived for hunting and was what in those days was described as a 'monstrously evil man'. He gained this reputation for, amongst other things, immorality and having sold his soul to the Devil. There was also a rumour that he had murdered his wife. On 5 July 1677, he died and was laid to rest in 'the sepulchre,' but that was only the beginning of the story. The night of his interment saw a phantom pack of hounds come baying across the moor to howl at his tomb. From that night onwards, he could be found leading the phantom pack across the moor, usually on the anniversary of his death. If the pack were not out hunting, they could be found ranging around his grave howling and shrieking. In an attempt to lay the soul to rest, the villagers built a large building around the tomb, and to be doubly sure a huge slab was placed .
Moreover, Devon's folklore includes tales of a fearsome supernatural dog known as the Yeth hound that Conan Doyle may have heard.
Main characters
Sherlock Holmes – Holmes is the famed 221B Baker Street detective with a keen eye, acute intelligence and a logical mind. He is observation and deduction personified, and although he takes a back seat to Watson for much of this particular adventure, we always feel his presence. In the end, it takes all of his crime-solving powers to identify an ingenious killer, save the life of his next intended victim, and solve the Baskerville mystery.Dr John Watson – The novel's narrator, Watson is Holmes's stalwart assistant at Baker Street and the chronicler of his triumphs as a private investigator. He steps into Holmes's boots for awhile, expressing his eagerness to impress his colleague by cracking this most baffling of cases before Holmes returns to the fray.
Sir Hugo Baskerville – The 17th-century
Baskerville who spawned the legend of the family curse. Sir Hugo was
a picture of aristocratic excess, drunkenness and debauchery until,
one night, he was reputedly killed near Baskerville Hall, in the
wilds of Dartmoor, by a demonic hound sent to punish his wickedness.
Sir Charles Baskerville – The recently deceased
owner of the Baskerville estates in Devon, Sir Charles was a
superstitious bachelor in waning health. Long terrified by the
Baskerville legend, his footprints show that he must have been
fleeing from something at the time of his death in the grounds of
Baskerville Hall. Furthermore, the paw-prints of a large dog marked
the soil near his corpse. Sir Charles had been a philanthropist. His
enlightened plans to invest funds in the isolated district
surrounding Baskerville Hall prompt his heir, Sir Henry, to want to
move there and continue his uncle's good works.
Sir Henry Baskerville
– The late Sir Charles's nephew and closest known relative, Henry
Baskerville inherits the baronetcy.
He is described as "a small, alert, dark-eyed man about thirty
years of age, very sturdily built." Sir Henry is introduced by
his doctor to Holmes and Watson, who travel to Devon in order protect
him from what may be a plot to kill him and thus eliminate the last
of the Baskervilles. At the climax of the story, Sir Henry is almost
killed, like his uncle, by a ferocious hound, kept hidden among the
mires of Dartmoor and trained by the villain of the story to prey on
selected victims.
Dr James Mortimer – A medical practitioner and
friend of the Baskervilles. Mortimer is tall, thin and good-natured
with rather eccentric habits. He is, nonetheless, a competent country
doctor who was made the executor of Sir Charles's will. He sets the
book's plot in train by travelling to London to inform Holmes and
Watson about the strange events surrounding Sir Charles's demise, and
alerting them to the dangerous situation that Sir Henry now faces as
Sir Charles's heir. Mortimer continues to assist Holmes and Watson in
their twin roles as investigators and bodyguards until the conclusion
of the case.
Jack Stapleton – A bookish former schoolmaster,
Stapleton chases butterflies on the moors and pursues antiquarian
interests. Outwardly a polished gentleman, he inwardly possesses a
hot temper which reveals itself at key moments. It transpires that
Stapleton—in reality a long-lost relative of Sir Henry's who stands
to inherit the Baskerville fortune—is a scheming, manipulative and
money-hungry criminal.
Miss Beryl Stapleton – Allegedly Stapleton's
sister, this dusky beauty turns out to be his wife. Eager to prevent
another death, but terrified of her violent spouse, she provides
enigmatic warnings to Sir Henry and Watson.
John and Eliza Barrymore – The longtime
domestic servants of the Baskervilles. Earnest and eager to please,
Mrs Barrymore and her husband harbour a dark family secret, however,
which temporarily misleads Watson about what is happening out on the
moors.
Laura Lyons – The attractive daughter of a
local crank who disowned her when she married against his wishes.
Subsequently abandoned by her husband, she turns to Stapleton and Sir
Charles Baskerville for help, with fatal consequences for the latter.
Selden – A dangerous criminal hiding from the
police on the moors. He has a link to the Barrymores, who
clandestinely supply him with food and clothing at night. Selden is
inadvertently killed by the hound while dressed in a discarded suit
of Sir Henry's clothes.
0 comments:
Post a Comment