The Adventure of the Second Stain

The Adventure of the Second Stain

The Adventure of the Second Stain, one of the 56 Sherlock Holmes short stories written by British author Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, is one of 13 stories in the cycle collected as "The Return of Sherlock Holmes".

ynopsis

Lord Bellinger, the Prime Minister, and Trelawney Hope, the Secretary of State for European Affairs, come to Holmes in the matter of a document stolen from Hope's dispatch box, which he kept at home in Whitehall Terrace when not at work. If divulged, this document could bring about very dire consequences for all Europe, even war. They are loath to tell Holmes at first the exact nature of the document's contents, but eventually they feel that they must tell him that it was a rather injudicious letter from a foreign potentate. It disappeared from the dispatch box one evening when Hope was out for four hours. No-one in the house knew about the document, not even the Secretary's wife, with whom he will not discuss his work. None of the servants could have guessed what was in the box.

Holmes decides to begin with some spies known to him, and is then astonished to hear from Dr. Watson that one of them that he names has been murdered. Eduardo Lucas of Godolphin Street, near Whitehall, was stabbed to death at his house last night. Holmes is sure that this is beyond coincidence.

Before Holmes has a chance to act, another piece of the puzzle arrives at 221B Baker Street in the form of Lady Hilda Trelawney Hope, the European Secretary's wife. She asks Holmes about the stolen document's contents, saying that it is in her husband's best interest for her to know. Holmes will only reveal that there would be very unfortunate consequences if the document were not found. Holmes reads terror in Lady Hilda's eyes. Lady Hilda also begs Holmes to tell her husband nothing of her visit.

Holmes’s spy hunt does not go well. It lasts days without result. As for the murder, the police arrest Mitton, Lucas’s valet, but soon release him as he has a solid alibi.

Four days after the murder, a newspaper report from Paris connects Madame Henri Fournaye to Lucas's death. A woman matching her description was seen in London, where Mme Fournaye has recently been. She is, it seems, Lucas's wife, Eduardo Lucas and Henri Fournaye having been the same person, as established by photographs. She is of no use as a witness, however, as she has gone insane.

Inspector Lestrade calls Holmes to the murder scene to examine something odd. Lucas bled over a drugget, and the blood soaked through it, but curiously, there is no bloodstain on the floor under the drugget. However, there is one under the opposite edge of the carpet. It can only mean that the constable guarding the crime scene has been foolish enough to let someone in, and leave them alone while they moved things in the room, including the carpet. Holmes tells Lestrade to take the constable to a back room and obtain a confession, which he does, vigorously.While Lestrade is remonstrating with his wayward constable, and therefore cannot learn anything about the other investigation involving the document, Holmes pulls the unfastened carpet aside and quickly finds a hiding place in the floor, but it is empty.

Lestrade and the constable come back, and the latter tells Holmes that the unauthorized visitor was a young woman. She apparently fainted at the sight of the blood, and the constable then actually went out to get some brandy to revive her, but she had left before he got back. As Holmes is leaving Lucas's house, he shows the constable a photograph, and he recognizes it as the visitor.

Holmes now knows where the stolen document is, but not why it was stolen. He goes to the Hope household and confronts Lady Hilda with the evidence. At first, she denies everything, but is forced to admit her wrongdoing under threat of certain scandal. She was a blackmail victim. Eduardo Lucas had got hold of a compromising letter written by Lady Hilda years earlier, and demanded the contents of her husband's dispatch box for the return thereof (a spy in her husband's office had made Lucas aware of the document). She went to his house to do the business when, as it happens, his wife from Paris showed up and confronted him about his affair, believing that Lady Hilda was his mistress. Lady Hilda hurriedly left.

She returned, however, to fetch the stolen document after her visit to Holmes convinced her that she needed to do this. She hands the document to Holmes. Her only problem is how to return it. Holmes suggests putting it back in the dispatch box using Lady Hilda’s duplicate key.

They do this, and when Hope arrives back home with the Prime Minister, Holmes pretends to believe that the evidence has convinced him that the document must still be in the box. It is soon found, and Hope rejoices that it was only a mistake.

In this way, the lost document is restored without Lady Hilda’s part in the affair being revealed - though at the possible price of making her husband look a bit stupid. The Prime Minister, however, is no fool. He can see that there is an underlying story. Holmes simply tells him that he also has diplomatic secrets.

Watson in the beginning mentions that publication of the affair was possible because "the times were ripe", but does not elaborate. it can be assumed, though he does not say so, that by the time of publication both Trelawney Hope and his wife Hilda are no longer alive - since the publication would most likely have ruined both their reputations and their marriage - and even so, Watson's indiscretion in publishing their names is not truly explained.

Background

This case was first mentioned in "The Adventure of the Naval Treaty", written 11 years earlier in 1893. In that story, Watson says that this case has "interest of such importance and implicates so many of the first families in the kingdom that for many years it will be impossible to make it public."

A reference in this same story makes it clear that "The Adventure of the Second Stain" is set in July 1888.

The British Cabinet never had such a position as "Secretary for European Affairs", and the post filled by Trelawney Hope is clearly that of Foreign Secretary. Evidently, Conan Doyle used a fictional term because the Foreign Secretary of the time (Henry Petty-Fitzmaurice, 5th Marquess of Lansdowne) might have objected to the less than flattering depiction of his fictional counterpart and especially of the fictional counterpart's wife and their married life.

Watson states that, due to Holmes' retirement, the detective has been trying to avoid publicity, and only allowed Watson to publish the story because the doctor had "promised" to in "The Adventure of the Naval Treaty."

A spy called Oberstein appears both in this story and in The Adventure of the Bruce-Partington Plans (again listed as one of the three most prominent agents in London), set seven years later.

The device Lady Hilda uses in the story is mirrored in Agatha Christie's 1923 novel "The Murder on the Links", when a character acts very similarly in order to steal a knife.

The Granada TV Adaptation with Jeremy Brett is faithful to the original story except that Holmes slips the letter back into the dispatch box while Hope is reviewing the documents with the Prime Minister; it also has Holmes in Comic Relief-remarking to the report of the Valet out {"They Always Are} and the housekeeper hearing nothing {"They never do"}!

The International Situation

The international situation which forms an indispensable background to the story is that of 1904 when it was written, rather than of 1888 when it supposedly takes place - i.e., a time of fast escalating tensions between competing military alliances: "The whole of Europe is an armed camp. There is a double league which makes a fair balance of military power. Great Britain holds the scales. If Britain were driven into war with one confederacy, it would assure the supremacy of the other confederacy, whether they joined in the war or not."

Actually, shortly after the story was written Britain signed the Entente Cordiale and thereby joined one of the "confederacies" mentioned (i.e. France and Russia) against the other (Germany and Austro-Hungaria). However, the actual war was to show the two alliances evenly matched, also with Britain already committed to one of them, and the role of "holding the scales" and deciding the outcome by joining one side was to be eventually fulfilled by the United States.

The unnamed "foreign potentate" - who was "ruffled by some recent Colonial developments" of Britain and who without consulting his ministers wrote an undiplomatic and provocative personal note to the British government - is very likely to be Kaiser Wilhelm II of Germany. The fictional behavior attributed to him in this story closely anticipated his actual conduct a year later, when he was indeed "ruffled by some recent Colonial developments" (in that case, of France in Morocco) and made provocative statements which precipitated the First Moroccan Crisis.

In the story, the British Prime Minister talks of the possibility of Britain being plunged into "a great war" - a term which would a decade later be capitalized into "The Great War", a name commonly used for what is now usually remembered as The First World War. The fictional PM estimates that such a great war "may well mean "the expenditure of a thousand millions [pounds] and the lives of a hundred thousand men" - nightmare figures for the readers in the still peaceful Britain of 1904, but a gross underestimation of the price in money and lives which the actual war would exact. The figure for Great Britain's WWI deaths at Wikipedia {excepting Australia; Canada; Newfoundland; New Zealand} is 885,138 {military} + 109,000 {civilian}= 994,138 with an additional 1,663,435 military wounded.

Wikisource links


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем написать курсовую

Look at other dictionaries:

  • The Adventure of the Dancing Men — by Arthur Conan Doyle Released 1903 Series The Return of Sherlock Holmes Client(s) Hilton Cubitt Set in 1898 Villain(s) Abe Slaney The Adventure of the Dancing Men , one of the 56 Sherlock Holme …   Wikipedia

  • The Adventure of the Missing Three-Quarter — by Arthur Conan Doyle Released 1904 Series The Return of Sherlock Holmes Client(s) Cyril Overton Set in 1896 according to William S. Baring Gould Villain(s) Arguably Lord Mount James …   Wikipedia

  • The Adventure of the Priory School — by Arthur Conan Doyle Released 1903 Series The Return of Sherlock Holmes Client(s) Thorneycroft Huxtable The Duke of Holdernesse Set in 1903 Villain(s) James Wilder, Reuben Hayes, and the Duke as a complaisant conspirator and bankroll …   Wikipedia

  • The Adventure of Charles Augustus Milverton — by Arthur Conan Doyle Released 1904 Series The Return of Sherlock Holmes Client(s) Lady Eva Blackwell Set in 1899 Villain(s) Charles Augustus Milverton The Adventure of Charles Augustus Milverton is …   Wikipedia

  • The Adventure of the Naval Treaty — The Adventure of the Naval Treaty, one of the 56 Sherlock Holmes short stories written by British author Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, is one of 12 stories in the cycle collected as The Memoirs of Sherlock Holmes .ynopsisDr. Watson receives a letter,… …   Wikipedia

  • The Strand Magazine — La reliure du Strand pour l année 1894 The Strand Magazine est un mensuel anglais de nouvelles romanesques et d articles de presse généralistes fondé par Georges Newnes et publié de janvier 1891 à mars 1950 à raison de 711 numéros. C est la… …   Wikipédia en Français

  • The Further Adventures of Sherlock Holmes — This article is about the BBC Radio 4 series transmitted in 2002 and 2004. There is also a U.S. produced series, which began in 1998, that transmits under the same title. The Further Adventures of Sherlock Holmes is a series of radio dramas based …   Wikipedia

  • The Return of Sherlock Holmes — Infobox Book | name = The Return of Sherlock Holmes title orig = translator = image caption = Cover of the first edition of The Return of Sherlock Holmes author = Arthur Conan Doyle illustrator = Sidney Paget cover artist = country = United… …   Wikipedia

  • The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes (TV series) — Infobox British television show name = The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes caption = format = Mystery runtime = 50 to 120 minutes creator = Michael Cox starring = Jeremy Brett David Burke Edward Hardwicke Rosalie Williams channel = ITV first aired …   Wikipedia

  • The Twentieth Century Approaches (film) — Infobox Film name = Adventures of Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson: The Twentieth Century Approaches image size = caption = director = Igor Maslennikov producer = Lenfilm writer = A. Conan Doyle (novel) Igor Maslennikov Yuri Veksler narrator =… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”