Cabbies are everywhere in London – indeed, so common in some cases that they're simply overlooked (we see you, Jefferson Hope!). Could Sherlock Holmes have passed himself off as a cabby?
There are certainly points in his career when it would have made sense. And a paper given at a Sherlock Holmes society in Denmark points in that direction. Hop on board with us in this monthly travel series episode! It's just a Trifle.
You can make suggestions as well — if we choose a topic you recommend, we'll send you a Sherlockian prize. All of our supporters are eligible for our monthly drawings for Baker Street Journals and certain tiers receive thank you gifts. Join our community today. Become a Patron! Links / Notes- "The Thomas Hogram Letters" by Sven Ranild is an expanded and translated version of a paper delivered in Copenhagen on September 19, 1987, at the Centenary Dinner of the Sherlock Holmes Klubben i Danmark and it appeared in the Summer 1991 issue of The Sherlock Holmes Journal.
- Episode 124 - Odd Jobs
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Here's an interesting little subject that ought to intrigue many Sherlock Holmes fans: words. We are a literate bunch, and when we get to learn more about words — especially words with which we're unfamiliar — that makes us happy.
This topic was suggested by listener Jennifer Cassasanto, who was curious about some of the foreign and antiquated terms in the Canon. Fair warning, though: this is a pun-filled zone. Word nerds unite! It's just a Trifle.
You can make suggestions as well — if we choose a topic you recommend, we'll send you a Sherlockian prize. All of our supporters are eligible for our monthly drawings for Baker Street Journals and certain tiers receive thank you gifts. Join our community today. Links / Notes- An Irregular Anglo-American Glossary of More or Less Unfamiliar Words, Terms and Phrases in the Sherlock Holmes Saga by S. Tupper Bigelow
- Episode 124 - Odd Jobs
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Music credits Performers: Uncredited violinist, US Marine Chamber Orchestra Publisher Info.: Washington, DC: United States Marine Band Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0
When Dr. Leon Sterndale said there was only one known specimen of radix pedis dioaboli – devil's foot root – in a laboratory in Buda, it was clear that it was a poison unknown to science.
Just what was it that was "used as an ordeal poison by the medicine-men in certain districts of West Africa"? Dr. Robert Ennis had an idea related to a substance we know well today, based on his observations in emergency rooms. And it’s anything but a Trifle.
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Links / Notes
- The eBSJ
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Music credits Performers: Uncredited violinist, US Marine Chamber Orchestra Publisher Info.: Washington, DC: United States Marine Band Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0
There's a curious phrase in the beginning of A Study in Scarlet that requires a little more consideration. Do you know what it is? John Ball, Jr. did.
And his theory about what that phrase signified is an intelligent and plausible one, lifted from a 1954 issue of The Baker Street Journal and The Baker Street Reader. Along the way, we uncover a surprising fact about Ball. And it’s anything but a Trifle.
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- John Ball Jr. (Wikipedia)
- The Baker Street Reader (Abebooks)
- The eBSJ
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The latest in our travel series takes us to Norwood. In particular, the Norwood in The Sign of Four. Sherlock Holmes, Dr. Watson, and Mary Morstan take a cab to a seedier part of London, and then a four-wheeler south to Norwood.
How long would it have taken them? And what else might we find in this London suburb? Michael Harrison assists with an essay from In the Footsteps of Sherlock Holmes, and it’s just a Trifle.
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Links / Notes
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In the Footsteps of Sherlock Holmes by Michael Harrison
-
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Performers: Uncredited violinist, US Marine Chamber Orchestra
Publisher Info.: Washington, DC: United States Marine Band
Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0
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Find Trifles wherever you listen to podcasts. Links / Notes
- History of UK House Names
- English Country House Names Explained
- Experience Sherlock Holmes Filming Locations Up Close
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Find Trifles wherever you listen to podcasts. Links / Notes
- Playlist: Trifles episodes about food
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Don't miss the bonus material we have for you - available on both Patreon and Substack.
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Become a Patron!
Find Trifles wherever you listen to podcasts. Links / Notes
- Find Schenck's article in the eBSJ
- Episode 43 - Sherlock Holmes' Monographs
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Links / Notes
- Arthur Conan Doyle's Portable Writing Desk (I Hear of Sherlock Everywhere)
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Links / Notes
- Holmes and a Train Bluff (Simanaintis Says)
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Links / Notes
- Episode 266 - Final Illumination on the Lucca Code
- I Hear of Sherlock Everywhere Episode 30: The Sherlockian with Graham Moore
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Links / Notes- The Baker Street Journal
- Henry VIII, a turkey leg, and the Mandela Effect
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Links / Notes
- The Sherlock Holmes Journal
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Links / Notes
- "The Cuerious Incidence of Watson's Billiard Playing" by Donald Jewell, The Sherlock Holmes Journal, Vol. 20, No. 3 (Winter 1991)
- Other episodes mentioned
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- Sidney Paget's hunting crop
- Other episodes mentioned
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Links / Notes
- 221B: Studies in Sherlock Holmes by Vincent Starrett
- "Behind the Times" from Round the Red Lamp by Arthur Conan Doyle
- Other episodes mentioned (from Season 4)
- Episode 185: The Women of Influence
- Episode 190: The Working Girls
- Episode 194: Ladies of Title
- Episode 199: The Victims
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Links / Notes
- 221B: Studies in Sherlock Holmes by Vincent Starrett
- "Behind the Times" from Round the Red Lamp by Arthur Conan Doyle
- Other episodes mentioned:
- Episode 139: Music in the Canon, Part 1
- Episode 140: Music in the Canon, Part 2
- Episode 164: Was Sherlock Holmes an American?
- Episode 359: Dr. Watson's Secret
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- The Original Empty House: Mind the Gap (I Hear of Sherlock Everywhere)
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- Tactical Communication (I Hear of Sherlock Everywhere)
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- Playlists on SoundCloud
- Episode 352 – Lions
- Episode 356 – Tigers
- Episode 361 – Bears
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- The 12 Days of Christmas (Wikipedia)
- Some of our favorite variations:
- The 12 Gifts of Christmas (Allan Sherman)
- The 12 Days of Christmas (Bob & Doug McKenzie)
- The 12 Pains of Christmas (Bob Rivers)
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- Maimonidies and the need for hand washing (National Library of Medicine)
- Joseph Lister's contributions to hygiene (Science Museum)
- Ignaz Semmelweis (Wikipedia)
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- All of our social links: linktr.ee/ihearofsherlock
- This Here Is Your Life, Sherlock Holmes: Parody from the Voice of Yogi Bear
- Beargarden (Wikipedia)
- Henry III's Polar Bear (National Trust)
- Why a Bearskin Rug? (John H. Watson Society)
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- By Jove! Thor and Jupiter in the Sherlock Holmes Stories
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Find Trifles wherever you listen to podcasts:Listen to Sherlock Holmes: Trifles
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- This episode: ihose.co/trifles358
- The History of the Pencil (British Museum)
- The Pencil: A History of Design and Circumstance by Henry Petroski
- El Casco pencil sharpener (Amazon)
- Faber-Castell Perfect Pencil 9000 with Built-in Pencil Sharpener and Extender (Amazon)
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- Playlist: Animals
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- Related episodes: I Hear of Sherlock Everywhere Episode 272: Legends of the BSJ: Christopher Morley
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- By George! (Grammarphobia)
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- Oscar Wilde's Teeth (Writers in London in the 1890s)
- Testy Teeth! Dental Interventions in 19th Century London (Museum of London)
- "Teeth" by Spike Milligan (AllPoetry)
- Related episodes:
- Episode 206 - Smile When You Say That (Season 4)
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- Playlist: Animals (Season 5)
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Sponsor The eBSJ Music credits Performers: Uncredited violinist, US Marine Chamber Orchestra Publisher Info.: Washington, DC: United States Marine Band Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0
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- The World of Sherlock Holmes by Michael Harrison
- Clarence: Was He Jack the Ripper? by Michael Harrison
- Prince Albert Victor, Duke of Clarence and Avondale
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Sponsor The Baker Street Journal Music credits Performers: Uncredited violinist, US Marine Chamber Orchestra Publisher Info.: Washington, DC: United States Marine Band Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0
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- Suicide and Crisis Lifeline
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Sponsor The Baker Street Journal Music credits Performers: Uncredited violinist, US Marine Chamber Orchestra Publisher Info.: Washington, DC: United States Marine Band Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0
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- The Real House that Inspired Birlstone Manor
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- Previous episodes mentioned:
- I Hear of Sherlock Everywhere Episode 270: CrimeReads with Olivia Rutigliano
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Links / Notes- This episode: ihose.co/trifles345
- I Hear of Sherlock Everywhere Episode 48: Dangerous Work
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- "One Crowded Hour" (Arthur Conan Doyle Encyclopedia)
- "How It Happened" (Arthur Conan Doyle Encyclopedia)
- Conan Doyle's near-fatal automobile accident (Mental Floss)
- The Prince Henry Tour of 1911 (Arthur Conan Doyle Encyclopedia)
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- In the Footsteps of Sherlock Holmes by Michael Harrison
- Kingdom of Redonda (Wikipedia)
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- Episode 307 – The Boscombe Valley Mystery
- The Last Supper scene from History of the World Part I
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And we have a bonus track for our patrons, where the conversation continued.Links / Notes
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- Soundcloud playlist: Alcohol
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- Ice Cream: The Inside Scoop (British Museum)
- Why People in Victorian England Added Poisonous Acid to Milk (Tasting Table)
- Observations on London Milk (British Library)
- When Milk Was Full of Calf Brains (The Atlantic)
- Trout in the Milk (The Eagle's Call)
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Where in the stories can we find evidence or mentions of alcoholics? Why did Holmes ask Watson for permission to drink? And who drank like a fish? It's just a Trifle. If you have a suggestion for a Trifles episode, let us know at trifles @ ihearofsherlock.com. If you use your idea on the air, we'll send you some Sherlockian goodies.
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- Drinking in Victorian and Edwardian Britain: Beyond the Spectre of the Drunkard by Thora Hands (PDF)
- The Blue Ribbon Army: Gospel Temperance in England by Lilian Lewis Shiman (Historical Magazine of the Protestant Episcopal Church)
- Playlist: Alcohol (SoundCloud)
- Episode 21 - Pubs and Taverns, Part 1
- Episode 22 - Pubs and Taverns, Part 2
- Episode 63 - Inside 221B: Drink Up!
- Episode 86 - Wine and Spirits
- Episode 87 - The Good Doctor
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- Sherlock Holmes and the Fall River Tragedy by Owen Haskell
- Episode 332 - Police Precautions
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- Three Is a Magic Number (YouTube)
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- The Franco-Midland Hardware Company
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- Eggs - Some Victorian recipes (from The Dictionary of Daily Wants, 1859)
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- Alistair Cooke's Letter From America: Don't Name It, Cure it - 12 July 2002
- Dining with Sherlock Holmes by Julia Carlson Rosenblatt and Frederich Sonnenschmidt
- SoundCloud playlist: Food
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- I Hear of Sherlock Everywhere Episode 262: Embellishments in the Sherlockian Spring
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- "See My Vest"
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- This episode: ihose.co/trifles327
- Inspired by The Botanical Holmes: A Monograph on Plants in the Time of Sherlock Holmes, Volume 6 in The Sherlock Holmes Natural History Series by Donald Girard Jewell.
- Related Episodes:
- Episode 274 - Trees, Part 1: Over the Oak / Under the Elm
- Episode 276 - Trees, Part 2: Branching Out
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- Watson Was a Woman
- That Was No Lady
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- Sherlock Holmes: Ten Literary Studies by Trevor Hall
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- The Ides of March (HISTORY)
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- Smoot (Wikipedia)
- Baker Street Elementary: Hobby Horse
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- Nocturnal Surprises
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- A Study in Sources by Donald Redmond
- The Strange Reason Nearly Every Film Ends by Saying It’s Fiction (Slate)
- Karen Wilson on IHOSE Episode 111: Hip Hop Holmes
- About that famous meeting at the Langham Hotel
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- IHOSE Episode 182: The Polyphonic Motets of Lassus
- Sherlock Holmes: Ten Literary Studies by Trevor Hall
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- Arthur Conan Doyle's Family Tree
- A Study in Sources by Donald Redmond
- The Jeremy Brett Sherlock Holmes Podcast
- Eccles cakes
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Have you left us a rating and review on Apple Podcasts yet? You don't need to own an Apple device, and every review helps more people find the show.Links / Notes
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- The Life of a Victorian Detective
- "What Does It Mean to Be a Consulting Detective?" (The Shingle of Southsea)
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- Sherlock Holmes: Ten Literary Studies by Trevor Hall
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- The Social History of the Piano
- Victorian Women and the Piano: Domesticity and Transgression
- Woody Allen's marching cello (YouTube)
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Links / Notes- This episode: ihose.co/trifles314
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Links / Notes- This episode: ihose.co/trifles313
- Other episodes mentioned:
- Episode 313 – The Route of the Blue Carbuncle
- Episode 52 – The Second Morning After Christmas
- Playlist of Christmas episodes
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Sponsor The Baker Street Journal Music credits Performers: Uncredited violinist, US Marine Chamber Orchestra Publisher Info.: Washington, DC: United States Marine Band Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0
The answers to those are: no, not sure, and definitely not. Catherine Cooke's masterful article from the Summer 2005 Baker Street Journal combines the fanciful, the factual, and the historical to arrive at the truth. It's just a Trifle. If you have a suggestion for a Trifles episode, let us know at trifles @ ihearofsherlock.com. If you use your idea on the air, we'll send you some Sherlockian goodies.
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- A Remarkable Mixture
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But then we run across the name Lysander Starr in "The Three Garridebs." What gives? We track the history of the name and explore some possible origins for its use. It's just a Trifle. If you have a suggestion for a Trifles episode, let us know at trifles @ ihearofsherlock.com. If you use your idea on the air, we'll send you some Sherlockian goodies.
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- A Study in Sources by Donald Redmond
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But once it's in London and disappears from the Countess of Morcar's possession, where does it go? Gavin Brend takes us on the wild journey. It's just a Trifle. If you have a suggestion for a Trifles episode, let us know at trifles @ ihearofsherlock.com. If you use your idea on the air, we'll send you some Sherlockian goodies.
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- Seventeen Steps to 221B by James Edward Holroyd
- Related episodes:
- Episode 305 - Our Client's Foot Upon the Stair
- Episode 309 - Rambling About
- IHOSE Episode 243: On the Trail of Sherlock Holmes
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- "Occasionally to Embellish": Some Writings on Sherlock Holmes (Wessex Press)
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- The Best of the Pips Volume II: More Papers on the Sundial - The 1999 Baker Street Journal Christmas Annual
- The unsolved mystery of Skeleton Lake
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- Seventeen Steps to 221B by James Edward Holroyd
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- Candles of the Canon (and off to bed) (Sherlock Peoria)
- Closing soon: this brief survey about the availability of The Grand Game Volume One
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- Beyond Baker Street (Abebooks)
- Other episodes mentioned:
- I Hear of Sherlock Everywhere Episode 249: Remembering Nicholas Utechin
- I Hear of Sherlock Everywhere Episode 250: A Sherlockian Semiquincentennial
- Please take this brief survey about the availability of The Grand Game Volume One
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- The Anti-Society: An Account of the Victorian Underworld by Kellow Chesney
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- Brief survey about the availability of The Grand Game Volume One
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- Brief survey about the availability of The Grand Game Volume One
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- This episode: ihose.co/trifles299
- The eBSJ
- A Clever Publicity Play for 'The Creeping Man'
- Brief survey about the availability of The Grand Game Volume One
- The Morley-Montgomery Award
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- Queen Elizabeth II (1926 – 2022)
- British Monarchs in the Sherlock Holmes Stories
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- Sherlock Holmes Magazine
- Other episodes mentioned:
- Episode 183 - Justice, Part 1: Unresolved
- Episode 184 - Justice, Part 2: Disproportionate
- I Hear of Sherlock Everywhere Episode 206: Sherlock Holmes Magazine
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In the next episode we'll be holindg the drawing for our monthly prize: free back issues of The Baker Street Journal. Every Patreon supporter is eligible to win this random drawing. Join our community of patrons to be eligible.
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- The 12 Best Sherlock Holmes Stories, According to Arthur Conan Doyle (Lithub)
- The Best Sherlock Holmes Stories (Best of Sherlock Holmes)
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- “A Remarkable Mixture” by Steven Rothman
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- Royal Albert Hall
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- Baker Street and Beyond by Lord Donnegall
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- The Language of Flowers by Kate Greenaway
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- Baker Street and Beyond by Michael Harrison
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- Canadian Holmes
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- Sherlock Holmes: Ten Literary Studies by Trevor Hall
- Sherlock Holmes: Fact or Fiction? by T.S. Blakeney
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- The Best of the Pips (The Five Orange Pips)
- Seven on Sherlock (Thayer Cumings)
- Aboriginals (Linda & Harrison Hunt)
- Related episodes:
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Thank you to our sponsor, the BSI Press. Please support Trifles on Patreon: https://patreon.com/trifles
Thank you to our sponsor, The Baker Street Journal. Please support Trifles on Patreon: https://patreon.com/trifles
Thank you to our sponsor, The Baker Street Journal. Please support Trifles on Patreon: https://patreon.com/trifles
The last time we were together, we examined Sherlock Holmes's Tours de Force (Episode 282), in which we discussed a number of ways he wowed people with his unique skills.
As we look closer, there are instances when people accuse him of practicing magic, sorcery, or wizardry. What are those examples, and what might have happened to Sherlock Holmes, had he lived in a different era? It's just a Trifle.
Full show notes: https://ihose.co/trifles283Thank you to our sponsor, The Baker Street Journal. Please support Trifles on Patreon: https://patreon.com/trifles
Thank you to our sponsor, The BSI Press. Please support Trifles on Patreon: https://patreon.com/trifles
"a remarkable cow" [PRIO]
The third week of the month means it's time for Master's Class: a look at an exemplary piece of Sherlockian scholarship from over the years. In this episode, we turn to an award-winning article in The Baker Street Journal. S. Tupper Bigelow pondered the patterns of hoof-marks as laid out in various editions of the Canon, and won the Morley-Montgomery Award in 1962 for it. It's just a Trifle. Full show notes: https://ihose.co/trifles281Thank you to our sponsor, The Baker Street Journal. Please support Trifles on Patreon: https://patreon.com/trifles
"A touch! A distinct touch!" [VALL]
Every author owes something to Shakespeare. His inventiveness with language has withstood the test of time, and many of the phrases he originated or popularized are still in use today.
We find Shakespeare's words dotted throughout the Sherlock Holmes stories, well beyond the usual quotes. A number of Shakespearean phrases are allusions in the Canon. It's just a Trifle.
Full show notes: https://ihose.co/trifles280Thank you to our sponsor, The Baker Street Journal. Please support Trifles on Patreon: https://patreon.com/trifles
Thank you to our sponsor, the BSI Press. Please support Trifles on Patreon: https://patreon.com/trifles
Thank you to our sponsor, The BSI Press. Please support Trifles on Patreon: https://patreon.com/trifles
Thank you to our sponsor, The Baker Street Journal. Please support Trifles on Patreon: https://patreon.com/trifles
Full show notes: https://ihose.co/trifles275
Thank you to our sponsor, the BSI Press. Please support Trifles on Patreon: https://patreon.com/trifles
Thank you to our sponsor, The Baker Street Journal. Please support Trifles on Patreon: https://patreon.com/trifles
Thank you to our sponsor, The BSI Press. Please support Trifles on Patreon: https://patreon.com/trifles
"I want that yellow diamond!” [MAZA]
The Masters Class series continues, and this time, Peter Blau instructs us on some finer points of geology and of geopolitical history.
"The Adventure of the Mazarin Stone" featured a yellow diamond, and yet, the Crown Jewels don't contain a diamond of that color. So what was the gem and where did it originate? It's just a Trifle.
Full show notes: https://ihose.co/trifles272
Thank you to our sponsor, The Baker Street Journal
We're back with the third and final installment in our series On the Scent with Sherlock Holmes, as we investigate the olfactory elements of the city.
This time, it's a matter of "obnoxious organic waste," and that encompasses pretty much what you think it does. And then some. We might call it just a Trifle.
And you don't want to miss the sound clip at the end.
Full show notes: https://ihose.co/trifles271
Thank you to our sponsor, The BSI Press. Please support Trifles on Patreon: https://patreon.com/trifles
Thank you to our sponsor, The BSI Press.
Please support us on Patreon at https://patreon.com/trifles
Thank you to our sponsor, The Baker Street Journal.
Full show notes: https://ihose.co/trifles267
Support Trifles: https://patreon.com/trifles
Sponsor: The Baker Street Journal
Sponsor: The Baker Street Journal Full show notes: ihose.co/trifles265
Sponsor: The Baker Street Journal Full show notes: ihose.co/trifles264
Full show notes: https://ihose.co/trifles263
Support Trifles: https://patreon.com/trifles
Sponsor: The eBSJ
"On the very day that I had come to this conclusion" [STUD]
It all began with a chance meeting between two medical school colleagues at the Criterion Bar. Stamford then took Watson to St Bartholomew's Hospital (aka "Barts"), where, in a chemical laboratory, he made the acquaintance of one Sherlock Holmes.
In Season 6, we're bringing back our monthly series "Mr. Sherlock Holmes the Theorist," in which we use historic Sherlockian scholarship as a discussion point. In this case, we were inspired by William S. Baring-Gould's "The London of Holmes and Watson" in Vol. 9, No. 3 (1959) of The Baker Street Journal.
We explore this fateful meeting, delve into the history of its time-honored location, and determine the exact date of its occurrence. It's just a Trifle.
NOTE: Be sure to catch the announcement of two regular drawings courtesy of our sponsor The Baker Street Journal, and how you can qualify.
Full show notes: https://ihose.co/trifles262
Support Trifles: https://patreon.com/trifles
- This episode: ihose.co/trifles260
- "The Friendship Club" by Charles E. Lauterbach, The 1958 Baker Street Journal Christmas Annual
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- This episode: ihose.co/trifles260
- Frog (fastening)
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- This episode: ihose.co/trifles259
- Data! (Futility Closet)
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- This episode: ihose.co/trifles258
- Boulevardier recipe
- Inspiration from "A Light on the Problem" by Nicholas Utechin from "Occasionally to Embellish"
- The gas-lamp scene in Charlie Chaplin's Easy Street
- A history of gas-lamps
- Find us on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and YouTube
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- This episode: ihose.co/trifles257
- Previous episodes mentioned:
-
- Episode 185 - The Women of Influence
- Episode 190 - The Working Girls
- Episode 194 - The Ladies in Waiting
- Episode 199 - The Victims
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- This episode: ihose.co/trifles256
- Find us on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and YouTube
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Have you left us a rating and review on Apple Podcasts yet? You don't need to own an Apple device, and every review helps more people find the show.
Links / Notes
- This episode: ihose.co/trifles255
- Inspired by Donald Jewell's A Few Hours to the Birds: A Monograph on Birds and Birding in the Time of Sherlock Holmes, Volume 2 in The Sherlock Holmes Natural History Series (Pinchin Lane Press, 1991)
- Find us on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and YouTube
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- This episode: ihose.co/trifles254
- Inspired by "Was Sherlock Holmes Crazy?" by Gideon Hill, BSI ("Dr. Hill Barton") in 70 Years By Gaslamp - The Illustrious Clients' Sixth Casebook
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- This episode: ihose.co/trifles253
- Inspired by "Meretricious Effects?" by Vincent W. Wright in 70 Years By Gaslamp - The Illustrious Clients' Sixth Casebook
- Find us on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and YouTube
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- This episode: ihose.co/trifles252
- Inspired by "Pooled Resources" on I Hear of Sherlock Everywhere
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Have you left us a rating and review on Apple Podcasts yet? You don't need to own an Apple device, and every review helps more people find the show.
Links / Notes
- This episode: ihose.co/trifles251
- Inspired by Donald Girard Jewell's Butterflies & Blind Beetles, #4 in the Sherlock Holmes Natural History Series
- Norm MacDonald's moth joke (YouTube)
- Other episodes mentioned:
-
- I Hear of Sherlock Everywhere Episode 226: Sherlockian Collecting
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Links / Notes
- This episode: ihose.co/trifles250
- Inspired by Ian McQueen's Sherlock Holmes Detected
- "Thinking About Money in the Sherlock Holmes Stories" by Christopher Redmond (I Hear of Sherlock Everywhere)
- Previous money-related episodes mentioned:
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- This episode: ihose.co/trifles249
- Inspired by Bob Byrnes' work in Baker Street Essays, Vol 1 No. 1
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Links / Notes
- This episode: ihose.co/trifles248
- Inspired by Bob Byrnes' work in Baker Street Essays, Vol 1 No. 1 and Vol II No. 1.
- Previous episodes mentioned:
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Have you left us a rating and review on Apple Podcasts yet? You don't need to own an Apple device, and every review helps more people find the show.
Links / Notes
- This episode: ihose.co/trifles247
- Sherlock Holmes: Rare Book Collector by Madeline Stern
- “Ex Libris Sherlock Holmes” by Howard Collins in Profile by Gaslight
- “The Empty Bookshelf: or, the Missing Three Quartos: Reasonable Editions at a Comfortable Price” by Robert D. Madison, The Baker Street Journal, Vol. 71, No. 2 (2021)
- Previous episode mentioned: Episode 62: Reference Sources
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Have you left us a rating and review on Apple Podcasts yet? You don't need to own an Apple device, and every review helps more people find the show.
Links / Notes
- This episode: ihose.co/trifles246
- Inspired by Donald Jewell's Butterflies and Blind Beetles: Vol. 4 of the Sherlock Holmes Natural History Series
- German cockroach (Wikipedia)
- Croton bug (Epehemeral New York)
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Have you left us a rating and review on Apple Podcasts yet? You don't need to own an Apple device, and every review helps more people find the show.
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- This episode: ihose.co/trifles245
- Inspired by Bob Byrnes' Baker Street Essays, Vol. II, Issue 1
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Have you left us a rating and review on Apple Podcasts yet? You don't need to own an Apple device, and every review helps more people find the show.
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- This episode: ihose.co/trifles244
- Baker Street Studies by H.W. Bell (Amazon)
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Links / Notes
- This episode: ihose.co/trifles243
- Episode 237: The Evolution of Sherlock Holmes, Part 1
- Episode 239: The Evolution of Sherlock Holmes, Part 2
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Links / Notes
- This episode: ihose.co/trifles242
- Poor Helpless Worms
- I Hear of Sherlock Everywhere Episode 158: The International Exhibition of Sherlock Holmes
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Windows are everywhere in the Sherlock Holmes stories. But in certain cases, they form an essential part of the plot. In some cases, it may be transparent. In others, not so much.
Whether they're decorative, a passage of one form or another, or are broken in the course of a crime, some windows serve a purpose in the Canon. It's just a Trifle.
Links / Notes
- This episode: ihose.co/trifles241
- Mullioned windows
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Sir Arthur Conan Doyle was a master storyteller. He gave us memorable characters and plots that painted a picture over the course of the entire Canon. But more than plot or characters, place played an outsized role. What does the geography in the Sherlock Holmes stories tell us? It's just a Trifle.
And for our Patreon supports, we have another bonus clip. For as little as $1 a month, you can join this growing group of insiders.
Links / Notes- This episode: ihose.co/trifles240
- Triangle Shirtwaist Fire
- A Quick Succession of Subjects
- David Hammer
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In Episode 237, we looked at how Holmes's personality traits changed over the course of his career. We're back for another look using four separate stories, each 10 years apart.
What can the Canon tell us about the ways Holmes's interests, tastes, enthusiasms, relationships, reputation, and more changed during his long career? It's just a Trifle.
Have you left us a rating and review on Apple Podcasts yet? You don't need to own an Apple device, and every review helps more people find the show.Links / Notes
- This episode: ihose.co/trifles239
- Other episodes mentioned:
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In the third week of every month in our fifth season, Trifles looks at exotic animals. We turn to the sea this time, examining jellyfish. And this episode brought us into contact with an old publication: the Catalogue of an Exhibition Held at Abbey House, Baker Street, London, May–September 1951.
For those intimately familiar with the Sherlock Holmes stories, there is only one story in which we find a jellyfish. For those not familiar, spoiler alert. It is just a Trifle.
And don't forget to check out the bonus audio content if you're a Patreon supporter. If you're not, what a great excuse to join us!
Links / Notes- This episode: ihose.co/trifles238
- Jellyfish (Wikipedia)
- Lion's mane jellyfish washed up on shore in Maine (Twitter)
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In our last episode, we discussed the subtle yet undeniable change in the nature of the relationship between Sherlock Holmes and Inspector Lestrade. But what about the evolution of Holmes himself?
What aspects of his character changed over the course of his career, from a 20-something during his first case at university to his final case four decades later? What remained the same? It's just a Trifle.
Links / Notes- This episode: ihose.co/trifles237
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"That you, Lestrade?" [EMPT] One might say that Sherlock Holmes and Inspector G. Lestrade had a contentious relationship. While this may be the popular stereotype between the two professionals, a long-term assessment doesn't bear this out. Listener Ron Lies has shared a paper of his that takes us through the Holmes-Lestrade relationship chronologically, and things may be a little different than they appear. It's just a Trifle.
Links / Notes- This episode: ihose.co/trifles236
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- Performers: Uncredited violinist, US Marine Chamber Orchestra
- Publisher Info.: Washington, DC: United States Marine Band
- Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0
Two stories. Two jewels. Two lady's maids. And two strikingly similar circumstances.
In "The Blue Carbuncle" and "The Six Napoleons," published just 11 years apart, we can find some remarkable parallels that result in the disappearance of minor players who were involved in critical plot points. It's just a Trifle.
Support us on Patreon: patreon.com/trifles
And leave us a rating and review on Apple Podcasts.
Links / Notes
- This episode: ihose.co/trifles234
- "Two Maids A-Milking" by William Hyder, The Baker Street Journal, Vol. 70, No. 4
- "The Twelve Gifts of Christmas" by Allan Sherman
We know the Mafia, the KKK, and other named secret societies permeate the Sherlock Holmes stories. They add to the mystery and mystique of the plots.
But what were some of the lesser-known secret societies? And were they really that secret? It's just a Trifle.
Have you left us a rating and review on Apple Podcasts yet? You don't need to own an Apple device, and every review helps more people find the show. Links / Notes
- This episode: ihose.co/trifles234
- Vehmgericht
- Carbonari
It's the third week of the month, and that means it's time for our Exotic Animals feature! When you hear "rat" anywhere near the Sherlock Holmes stories, there are three possible conclusions: the Giant Rat of Sumatra, Ballarat, or...
Lab rats, which is our topic of discussion. While lab rats aren't literally mentioned in the Canon, there are some figurative ones. What were they? We look at those, plus the history of animal experimentation in medicine. It's just a Trifle.
Oh, and check this out: we have a bonus audio track just for our Patreon supporters. Become one today to unlock it.
Have you left us a rating and review on Apple Podcasts yet? You don't need to own an Apple device, and every review helps more people find the show.
Links / Notes
- This episode: ihose.co/trifles232
- "Animal Testing and Medicine," by Rachel Hajar, M.D., Heart Views, Jan-Mar 2011, via National Library of Medicine
In Episode 231, we left you with a bit of a cliffhanger. The show was filled with answers to questions from listeners, and one asked about our favorite Sherlock Holmes stories.
Rather than boring you with only our personal preferences, we got into a history of the best Sherlock Holmes stories, first as judged by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle himself, and later by multitudes of Sherlockians. It's just a Trifle.
Have you left us a rating and review on Apple Podcasts yet? You don't need to own an Apple device, and every review helps more people find the show.
And please consider supporting our efforts through Patreon or PayPal. Links / Notes
- This episode: ihose.co/trifles232
- Randall Stock's The Best of Sherlock Holmes site
- Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's list of 12 best Sherlock Holmes stories (LitHub)
- Poll of the best Sherlock Holmes stories as run in The Baker Street Journal
We're doing something a little different for this episode. There are certain elements about the Sherlock Holmes stories that are just too trifling out of which to create an entire episode. So we turned to you.
We're answering questions that you have submitted, hopefully providing more clarity than less. If this works well, we'll do it again. It's just a Trifle.
Have you left us a rating and review on Apple Podcasts yet? You don't need to own an Apple device, and every review helps more people find the show.
And please consider supporting our efforts through Patreon or PayPal. Links / Notes
- This episode: ihose.co/trifles231
- "John Barrington Cowles" by Arthur Conan Doyle
- Schlock Holmes: The Complete Bagel Street Saga by Robert L. Fish
- I Hear of Sherlock Everywhere Episode 181: The Daily Sherlock Holmes (Sherlock Holmes quotes)
- The full I Hear of Sherlock Everywhere archive: ihose.co/ihoseshows
Sherlock Holmes didn't believe in superstition, the supernatural, or random guesses. He was a detective who dealt in facts and data.
And yet, the canon of Sherlock Holmes stories is littered with coincidences (happy or otherwise) and instances of luck. How did these play into the stories and Holmes's ability to solve them? It's just a Trifle.
Have you left us a rating and review on Apple Podcasts yet? You don't need to own an Apple device, and every review helps more people find the show.And please consider supporting our efforts through Patreon or PayPal. Links / Notes
- This episode: ihose.co/trifles230
- Scott's presentation to the Sherlockians of Baltimore (YouTube)
There is one scant mention of a cormorant in the Sherlock Holmes stories — in one of Watson's enticing throwaway lines of a case which we'll never read. In "The Veiled Lodger," he tells us about the case involving a trained cormorant that might be revealed to the public.
But what is a cormorant? Can it really be trained? It's the third week of the month, and that means we discuss exotic animals in the Canon. It's just a Trifle.
And please consider supporting our efforts through Patreon or PayPal. Links / Notes- This episode: ihose.co/trifles229
- Stunning images of Chinese fishermen using cormorants to catch fish (The Atlantic)
- More photos of cormorants catching fish (Arkin Space)
- Not mentioned in the episode, but The Further Adventures of Sherlock Holmes on Radio 4 featured this untold tale.
“I stooped to the eyepiece and focussed for my vision.” [SHOS]
Given Arthur Conan Doyle's training in the field of eye medicine, it's no surprise that we find a number of Sherlock Holmes characters who wear glasses.
In fact, an entire story is named after a set of eyewear. Who were some of the bespectacled band in the Sherlock Holmes stories? It's just a Trifle.
Links / Notes
- This episode: ihose.co/trifles228
- What Did Victorians Make of Spectacles? (Wellcome Library Blog via Wayback Machine)
- Arthur Conan Doyle's medical career (Wikipedia)
- "The Bespectacled Band" (I Hear of Sherlock Everywhere)
- Trifles Episode 46 - A History of Pince-Nez
Sherlock Holmes was an inveterate message sender and receiver. The many notes, letters, telegrams, cryptogram, and other forms of communication that passed by his view made for key clues in some cases.
We wondered how things might have turned out differently in certain cases if the frequency of messages were different. And how, in certain cases, Holmes duped the messengers. It's just a Trifle.
Find Trifles wherever you listen to podcasts:
Listen to Sherlock Holmes: Trifles
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- This episode: ihose.co/trifles227
Time and again, we find people in the Sherlock Holmes stories who are having money problems. As in money problems drastic enough to cause them to make unfortunate decisions.
Who were some of these people, and what hard choices did they make? We have a few of them; it's just a Trifle.Have you left us a rating and review on Apple Podcasts yet? You don't need to own an Apple device, and every review helps more people find the show.
And please consider supporting our efforts through Patreon or PayPal. Links / Notes
- This episode: ihose.co/trifles226
"like a viper’s tooth" [DYIN]
Here we are again, ready to tackle the monthly topic of exotic animals. So naturally, we turn to the wiper. Wait, the what?
Suffice it to say that the oddly-identified snake does have a place in the Sherlock Holmes stories, although way down at the East End. Oh, and there's the little matter of a Great War publishing machine. It's just a Trifle.
Support us on Patreon: patreon.com/trifles
Links / Notes
- This episode: ihose.co/trifles225
Performers: Uncredited violinist, US Marine Chamber Orchestra
Publisher Info.: Washington, DC: United States Marine Band
Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0
"It is fortunate for this community that I am not a criminal."[BRUC]
Sherlock Holmes certainly ran with a rough crowd. Burglars, murderers, blackmailers, thieves, spies, kidnappers, and even politicians. Given his store of criminal knowledge, what stopped him from becoming a criminal himself?Wait just a moment; while his cause was justice, his practice wasn't always on the right side of the law. Thanks to a suggestion from Erik Deckers, we're examining the criminality of Sherlock Holmes. It's just a Trifle. And please consider supporting our efforts through Patreon or PayPal. Links / Notes
- This episode: ihose.co/trifles224
- Performers: Uncredited violinist, US Marine Chamber Orchestra
- Publisher Info.: Washington, DC: United States Marine Band
- Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0
And why does it only rear its head in Victorian literature? Was it an actual affliction, or just a literary device? It's just a Trifle. Please consider supporting our efforts through Patreon or PayPal. Links / Notes
- This episode: ihose.co/trifles223
- Did Victorians Really Get Brain Fever? (JSTOR Daily)
- Reference: "Brain Fever" by Stephen Tolins, The Baker Street Journal, Vol. 41, No. 2 (1991)
- Nerve and Knowledge: Doctors, Medicine, and the Sherlockian Canon (BSI Press)
Listen to Sherlock Holmes: Trifles
Have you left us a rating and review on Apple Podcasts yet? You don't need to own an Apple device, and every review helps more people find the show.
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- This episode: ihose.co/trifles221b
- The Private Life of Sherlock Holmes by Vincent Starrett
Find Trifles wherever you listen to podcasts:
Listen to Sherlock Holmes: Trifles
Have you left us a rating and review on Apple Podcasts yet? You don't need to own an Apple device, and every review helps more people find the show.
And please consider supporting our efforts through Patreon or PayPal. Links / Notes Sponsor Music credits Performers: Uncredited violinist, US Marine Chamber Orchestra Publisher Info.: Washington, DC: United States Marine Band Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 --
There was a fad in mid-century Victorian England that led to pets becoming more common. But the third week of each month, our episodes focus not on everyday household animals but rare and unusual creatures. In this case, we focus on a member of the family Herpestidae. Namely, the mongoose. Making a few appearances in popular fiction, they're just a Trifle. Find Trifles wherever you listen to podcasts:
Listen to Sherlock Holmes: Trifles
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- This episode: ihose.co/trifles220
- Mongoose (Wikipedia)
Listen to Sherlock Holmes: Trifles
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- This episode: ihose.co/trifles219
- The Dynamics of an Asteroid
- The binomial theorem
- Previous episodes:
Listen to Sherlock Holmes: Trifles
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- This episode: ihose.co/trifles218
- Buffet (Wikipedia)
- Richard Doyle's depiction of a station buffet
- Previous food-related episodes:
Listen to Sherlock Holmes: Trifles
Have you left us a rating and review on Apple Podcasts yet? You don't need to own an Apple device, and every review helps more people find the show.
And please consider supporting our efforts through Patreon or PayPal. Links / Notes Sponsor Music credits Performers: Uncredited violinist, US Marine Chamber Orchestra Publisher Info.: Washington, DC: United States Marine Band Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 --
Listen to Sherlock Holmes: Trifles
Have you left us a rating and review on Apple Podcasts yet? You don't need to own an Apple device, and every review helps more people find the show.
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- This episode: ihose.co/trifles216
- Pets Peeved (I Hear of Sherlock Everywhere)
- Cheetah (Wikipedia)
- Victorian London: The London Zoo (Victorian Voices)
- Baboon (Wikipedia)
- How to Survive an Encounter with a Baboon (LiveAbout)
Listen to Sherlock Holmes: Trifles
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- This episode: ihose.co/trifles215
- The History of Walking Canes
- James Smith & Sons
- Penang lawyer (Language Hat)
Listen to Sherlock Holmes: Trifles
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- This episode: ihose.co/trifles214
- Soundcloud playlist: Appearance and Attire
- A Quick Succession of Subjects by Chris Redmond
Listen to Sherlock Holmes: Trifles
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- Colonel James Moriarty (Baker Street Fandom)
- "Moriarty Times Three" (Walter Jaffee, The Baker Street Journal Vol. 57, No. 2, 2007)
Listen to Sherlock Holmes: Trifles
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- Gray langur (Wikipedia)
- The Medical Casebook of Doctor Arthur Conan Doyle by Alvin Rodin and Jack Key (Amazon)
- Monkey Gland Cocktail (Spruce Eats)
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- Happy 167th Birthday, Sherlock Holmes (I Hear of Sherlock Everywhere)
- "What Was the Month?" by Nathan Bengis, BSJ Vol. 7, No. 4 (1957)
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- The Gorgeous Typeface that Drove Men Mad and Sparked a 100-Year Mystery (Gizmodo)
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- Graphology (Wikipedia)
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What can we tell about Sherlock Holmes's food habits from Earle Walbridge's essay from 1940 titled "The Care and Feeding of Sherlock Holmes"? It's the monthly installment of our "Mr. Sherlock Holmes the Theorist" theme, and it's just a Trifle.
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- "The Care and Feeding of Sherlock Holmes" by Earle F. Walbridge in 221B: Studies in Sherlock Holmes
- Previous episodes mentioned in this show:
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- The Big Book of British Smiles (YouTube)
- "The Dental Holmes" by Charles Goodman, D.D.S. in Profile by Gaslight
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- History of Cornwall (Wikipedia)
- The Game Is Afoot! by David Hamer (Amazon)
- "The Devil's Foot" episode of The Return of Sherlock Holmes by Granada (BritBox)
- Previous episodes mentioned:
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Listen to Sherlock Holmes: Trifles
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- "Dear Starrett" / "Dear Briggs" (The BSI Archival Series)
- The eBSJ
- I Hear of Sherlock Everywhere Episode 204: Frederic Dorr Steele
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- The Private Life of Sherlock Holmes by Vincent Starrett
- "The Street and the Detective" by A.J. Hearn from the 1957 Baker Street Journal Christmas Annual (available via the eBSJ)
- I Hear of Sherlock Everywhere Episode 204: Frederic Dorr Steele
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- Related episodes:
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- Episode 74 - The Administrative Side of Baker Street
- Episode 75 - Nummi in Arca, or The Fiscal Holmes
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- Agra Fort (Cultural India)
- Agra Fort (Wikipedia)
- Agra Fort (Lonely Planet)
- Battle of Agra (Wikipedia)
- Agra Fort Directory according to the Census taken on the 27th July 1857 by Asst Surgeon JP Walker, MD (Families in British India Society)
- Previous episodes in this series:
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- The Best of the Sherlock Holmes Journal, Vol. 2
- Previous episodes in this series:
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- Gaiters (Wikipedia)
- Shepherd's check
- The Best of the Sherlock Holmes Journal, Vol. 2
- Three previous episodes mention disguise:
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"Have you the dates of those letters?" [HOUN]
The Hound of the Baskervilles is one of Sherlock Holmes's most famous cases. But what can we say about the date of the case? Watson never specifically mentions a date, but many chronologists fix it in October 1889. How did they come to that conclusion? And what else do we know about Holmes and Watson that make such a date worthy of questioning? It's just a Trifle. Find Trifles wherever you listen to podcasts:Listen to Sherlock Holmes: Trifles
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- "The Date Being—?" by Andrew J. Peck and Leslie S. Klinger
- I Hear of Sherlock Everywhere Episode 144: The Chronologies of Sherlock Holmes
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Listen to Sherlock Holmes: Trifles
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"Title and money—who could carry them better than she?" [ABBE]
We've investigated which women were influential in their own right in the Sherlock Holmes stories, and then those who had to work for a living. Next up, we look at women with titles. In her article in The Sherlock Holmes Journal, Vol. 10, No. 3, Pat Dalton reviewed some such ladies. Of course the term "lady" is a title granted to a certain class, but in late Victorian times it was becoming a title based on behavior and deportment as well. Which characters might we be talking about here? It's just a Trifle. Find Trifles wherever you listen to podcasts: Listen to Sherlock Holmes: TriflesHave you left us a rating and review on Apple Podcasts yet? You don't need to own an Apple device, and every review helps more people find the show.
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- Episode 185: The Women of Influence
- Episode 190: The Working Girls
- The Sherlock Holmes Journal
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- William Palmer (Wikipedia)
- Edward Pritchard (Wikipedia)
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- Danites in popular culture
- Nonconformist
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"in the capacity of governess" [SIGN]
Sherlock Holmes had a number of clients who were women, and in certain cases, they were gainfully employed. In her article in The Sherlock Holmes Journal, Vol. 10, No. 2, Patsy Dalton takes us through some of these clients. What was the status of the "working girl" at the time, and what range of professions do we see from them? How do these roles bear on their consideration in society? It's just a Trifle.Find Trifles wherever you listen to podcasts: Listen to Sherlock Holmes: Trifles
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- Charles Peace (Wikipedia)
- Charlie Peace (History by the Yard)
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- History of tattooing (Wikipedia)
- Tattoos: The Ancient and Mysterious History (Smithsonian)
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- Previous episodes in this series:
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What is it about Holmes's personality that made him caustic? And about Watson's that allowed him to endure it. It's just a Trifle.
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- Also mentioned: Episode 130 - Watson's Club
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Hardwick thought it was worth delving into who some of the powerful women were who were not Irene Adler. Is one of your favorites discussed? It's just a Trifle. Find Trifles wherever you listen to podcasts:
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- Also by Mollie Hardwick: The Sherlock Holmes Companion (with Michael Hardwick)
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- Richard W. Clark's "On the Nomenclature of Watson's Ships" (BSJ Vol 1, No 2, 1946) and Donald Redmond's "Ship Ahoy, Captain Basil" (BSJ Vol 36, No 4, 1986)
- Mobile Holmes
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It's the third week of the month, which means it's our regular feature in Season 4: Mr. Sherlock Holmes the Theorist, the episode in which we investigate an old piece of Sherlockian scholarship and offer our commentary.
This month, we feature "The Historicity of Sherlock Holmes" by Prof. Dirk J. Struik. Presented to the Speckled Band of Boston, it first appeared in print in the 1947 publication The Second Cab. Professor Struik's own association with the Band is just as interesting as his paper. It's just a Trifle.
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- The Second Cab / The Best of the Cabs (AbeBooks)
- I Hear of Sherlock Everywhere Episode 135: Helene Yuhasova: Woman of Mystery
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"I have never loved" [DEVI]
When you think of crimes in the Sherlock Holmes stories, many of them were crimes of passion. In a 1981 article in The Baker Street Journal, Julie Maynard makes the case that as many as twenty-five percent of the Canon involves adultery or implied adultery.
What was going on here? Was it an unconscious attempt from Conan Doyle? Or perhaps a conscious one? It's just a Trifle.
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They say confession is good for the soul. It's also good for the detective story. Sherlock Holmes found the suspects he sought in many cases, but he didn't have the backstory for all of them.
The solution? A confession. Driven by fear, love or finality, a number of characters in the stories have reasons for confessing. And one was extracted by a clever trick by Holmes. It's just a Trifle.
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Have you had trouble sleeping lately? You're not alone. There were plenty of people in the Sherlock Holmes stories who struggled to sleep as well.
Whether it was because they were horrified by something that happened to them, troubled by something they did, or were determined to crack a problem, they lost sleep over it. It may not seem like it to you, but it's just a Trifle.
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- On the Sleepless Lives of Writers (LitHub)
- Charles Dickens: Observer of Sleep and Its Disorders (American Sleep Disorders Association and Sleep Research Society)
- Short film: Honoré de Balzac's 50 Cups of Coffee a Day (Amazon Prime Video)
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We're used to reading about Mrs. Hudson ushering clients in and out, and providing various domestic services for Sherlock Holmes. But now and again, we find ourselves in the presence of young Billy, the page.
What was a page? And was Billy the only one at 221B Baker Street? In Vol. 2, No. 3 of The Sherlock Holmes Journal, G.B. Newton made an assessment of who served and when in his article "Billy the Page," and in our monthly "Mr. Sherlock Holmes the Theorist" feature, we test his hypothesis. It's just a Trifle.
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- Page (servant) - Wikipedia
- The Sherlock Holmes Journal
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There are a handful of cases where Sherlock Holmes meets an opponent who is formidable and antagonistic, but where he later turns out to be an ally.
Who were some of these individuals? Which stories did they appear in? And just what was it that made them seem as if they were on he wrong side of the case? It's just a Trifle.
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Flowers appear in a handful of spots in the Sherlock Holmes stories. More than the famous rose scene from "The Naval Treaty," they literally dot the countryside and color the scenery.
From a flower that lent its name to one of the stories and a country house, to an obscure statesman, you may be surprised to discover the botanical connections in the Canon. It's just a Trifle.
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Having spent the last episode discussing the unusual setting and Holmes and Watson's friendship as displayed in "The Reigate Squires," our minds turned toward their host, Colonel Hayter. Or rather, of his fellow ranking military officers in the Canon.
In fact, we realized that in the Sherlock Holmes stories, the title “Colonel” usually means bad news. Consider with us the various colonels and see how it strikes you. It's just a Trifle.
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- Episode 45 - Military Morality
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--
In "The Reigate Squires," we find Sherlock Holmes ill and uprooted — staying in a country house — which, although it's a bachelor establishment, isn't quite what he's accustomed to. Although it may not be one of Holmes’s truly great cases, there is much to love in this story.
Watson was right there to back up Holmes in every way: reacting in horror to Holmes’s fainting fit, taking the blame for the overturned table, and even rescuing Holmes from the clutches of the murderers. It's just a Trifle.
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--
Watson returns from Afghanistan, recovering from a wound in the shoulder and the aftereffects of disease. But we later discover that he had a leg wound as well.
Could it be the delirium that caused him to misstate his injuries? Or was there another reason for his error? Two old pieces of Sherlockian scholarship – one from the 1940s and another from the 1950s – each have a different theory. Which is correct? It's just a Trifle.
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In "The Adventure of the Three Students," Holmes has a litany of clues at his disposal. From balls of doughy clay to a tear in the leather of a desk, and more.
And yet, he's fixated on this one clue that he claimed was "the best and only final clue." What was it? And was it truly the definitive clue in the story? It's just a Trifle.
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- The Pencil: A History of Design and Circumstance by Henry Petroski (Amazon)
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--
We commonly see clients who come to Sherlock Holmes riddled with despair and grief. But if we look closely enough, we can also find happiness and sheer joy in the Canon.
The Sherlock Holmes stories contain the full range of human emotion, from anger to relief and from anguish to jubilance. The more we looked for the upbeat, the more we found. It's just a Trifle.
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There are many tragic figures in the Sherlock Holmes stories, and more than a handful are lonely or isolated in some way. This is either features in their predicament or gives us a better understanding of their personality.
As many of us may be entering a period of isolation or loneliness now, we thought it was an apt topic to discuss. It's just a Trifle.
Bonus: We recorded this live while on video, and you can find the link below.
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- Our live episode, with bonus content (YouTube)
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There was a scandal in Sherlockian circles in the early 1940s. Author Rex Stout, BSI ("The Boscombe Valley Mystery"), creator of Nero Wolfe, after careful research, determined that Watson was a woman. He presented his facts in the Saturday Review of Literature and let them sit.
They didn't sit well with all Sherlockians, and Julian Wolff, BSI ("The Red-Headed League") took up his pen to offer a retort in "That Was No Lady." Both essays appeared in Edgar W. Smith's Profile By Gaslight, and we discussed them in our monthly feature "Mr. Sherlock Holmes the Theorist" episode. It's just a Trifle.
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- Watson Was Actually a Woman
- That Was No Lady
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--
After Holmes "died" at the Reichenbach Falls, wouldn't people have looked for a funeral or memorial service? Watson, in particular, would have expected to assist in such an arrangement.
As next of kin, Mycroft would have been expected to handle it, but that would have put him in an awkward position. If he was reluctant, that would have seemed suspect; but if he did, he knew how mischievous his younger brother could be, possibly disguising himself and witnessing his own funeral. What happened here? It's just a trifle.
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--
Dr. Watson was a general practitioner, and one "with very limited experience and mediocre qualifications," as Holmes blurted out in "The Dying Detective." It's the reason he called for a specialist in rare diseases.
With global news being filled with talk of coronavirus, we thought it might be the perfect time to reflect on what we know about infectious diseases in the Sherlock Holmes stories. It's just a trifle.
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--
"The Adventure of the Norwood Builder" first appeared in print in 1903 as part of The Return of Sherlock Holmes. It was the second story in the collection, after Sherlock Holmes was resurrected from what many thought was a watery grave.
We can forgive the muddled minds of the time then, for missing a couple of key points in "The Norwood Builder." Key points that, had Holmes been on his game, would have given the whole charade away. It's just a trifle.
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--
For all of his familiarity with American cities, American police forces, American language and attire, Sherlock Holmes may very well have been American.
A number of scholars have taken up the argument, including Christopher Morley in his famous essay. Even President Franklin Roosevelt tried his hand at it. It's just a trifle.
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- A Baker Street Folio: Five Letters About Sherlock Holmes from Franklin Delano Roosevelt (Abebooks.com)
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--
We have plenty of instances of animal flesh on the side-board, whether it's a couple of brace of grouse, Henry Baker's Christmas goose, or a joint of beef.
There was one lone vegetarian restaurant mentioned in the Canon. It had a real-life inspiration. But what else do we know about vegetarianism in Victorian times? It's just a trifle.
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- The Strand Magazine and Sherlock Holmes by Robert Veld (Wessex Press)
- Veggie Victorians (History Extra)
- The famous "pea-squashing" scene in Murder By Decree
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--
the neighborhood.” [YELL]
Steve Dixie in "The Three Gables," Lucy Hebron in "The Yellow Face," and the unnamed mulatto in "Wisteria Lodge" are notable black people in the Canon. Actually, they're the only ones. What does this say about Arthur Conan Doyle's attitude and treatment toward them?
We know about the shocking way he chose to portray Steve Dixie – at least shocking by our standards. What were prevailing attitudes of the day? And how does Conan Doyle fare? It's just a trifle.
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- This episode: ihose.co/trifles162
- Black British People in the 19th Century (Wikipedia)
- IHOSE Episode 44: Watson and Holmes (New Paradigm Studios)
- IHOSE Episode 81: Mycroft Holmes (Kareem Abdul Jabbar)
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Why did Mycroft put himself in harm's way for Sherlock Holmes when the latter faced his arch-nemesis Professor Moriarty? Mycroft put Sherlock up for a night, drove the brougham that took Watson to Waterloo, and kept the rooms up at 221B during the hiatus that ensued.
But why didn't Moriarty go after Mycroft? What made him think that "the British government" didn't know about his activities? We explore the role of Mycroft Holmes in "The Final Problem." It's more than a trifle.
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--
Here's one of those things that lends itself to the title of this podcast. We were thinking about Professor Moriarty and his ignominious fall from grace. After he left the university where he was Mathematical Chair, he came to London, where he became an army coach.
Army coach? That brought a number of things to mind. But surprisingly little has been written about it. We explore this trifle and reach a couple of reasonable conclusions.
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- British Army During the Victorian Era (Wikipedia)
- "Professor James Moriarty, 1836-91" by Nicholas Utechin (The Baker Street Journal, Vol. 24, No. 2)
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--
With Season 4, we're starting a new monthly series that we're calling "Mr. Sherlock Holmes the Theorist." Each month, we'll be taking a look at what some early Sherlockian scholars had to say about certain trifling elements in the Sherlock Holmes stories.
In this case, we're looking at "The Date of The Sign of Four" from H.W. Bell's Baker Street Studies, first published in 1934. It's more than a trifle.
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- Baker Street Studies by H.W. Bell
- The Grand Game from the BSI Press
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--
We find a smattering of food references throughout the Sherlock Holmes stories. But which can be considered consummate British dishes?
We don't come across toad in the hole, bubble and squeak, or cock-a-leekie soup, but there are other meals that are considered British. And by more than the virtue of appearing in British stories. Which food might this be? It's more than a trifle.
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- Episode 42: A Noble Supper
- I Hear of Sherlock Everywhere Episode 103: Al and Julie Rosenblatt
- Superb English Plum Pudding (Epicurious)
- William Banting (Wikipedia)
- Food Timeline: Sandwiches
- Dining With Sherlock Holmes by Julia Carlson Rosenblatt
- The Sherlock Holmes Cookbook by John Farrell and Sean Wright
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--
Weather conditions not only play a part in the settings of the Sherlock Holmes stories, but in some cases, they determine the plots as well.
Fog, London and Baker Street seem to go hand in hand in 1890s London, but London's fogs are more than weather conditions. How did fog color Sherlock Holmes's view of the criminal world, and which stories saw an impact from this misty and mysterious phenomenon? It's just a trifle.
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- Great Smog of London (Wikipedia)
- Pea-souper (Wikipedia)
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--
In a lifetime crammed with high adventure, his brilliant achievements in crime detection obscured his remarkable skills as an athlete. He was an expert with singlestick and foil, a fine boxer, equally accomplished with rifle and small arms and had a knowing eye for horseflesh.
In this final installment in our 2019 series on games and sports, we turn to William S. Baring-Gould, the subject of this year's Baker Street Journal Christmas Annual, and talk through his landmark article for Sports Illustrated article from 1963. It's just a trifle.
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- "Sherlock Holmes, Sportsman" by William S. Baring-Gould from May 25, 1963 (Sports Illustrated)
- William S. Baring-Gould (Wikipedia)
- The Baker Street Journal Christmas Annual
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--
The last in our series of episodes on international interactions with Sherlock Holmes brings us to the now-defunct kingdom of Bohemia. It was so important that it got its own scandal.
What do we know about this land from which the masked king came? And of the adjective "Bohemian"? How did Bohemians come to signify the unconventional? It's just a trifle.
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- Bohemia (Wikipedia)
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--
Sherlock Holmes was occasionally without his Boswell. Watson was married at least twice – some scholars even claim there was a third Mrs. Watson.
Was Holmes truly affected by Watson's absence? There is a subtle time lapse that may give away how Holmes dealt with a matrimonial Watson. And a look at how Holmes dealt with solitude earlier in his life. It's just a trifle.
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- Sherlock Holmes of Baker Street: A Life of the World's First Consulting Detective by William S. Baring-Gould
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--
Sherlock Holmes was a loner. An independent consultant. An automaton. But he also shared rooms with Dr. Watson off and on for over 20 years.
When Watson went off and got married, how did this affect Holmes, really? And Watson had how many wives? It's just a trifle.
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- Baker Street Elementary – One Is the Loneliest Number
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Sherlock Holmes is synonymous with a certain type of hat. We don't need to mention the kind. You know what it is.
But he never wore one in the stories, which you probably also know. But what about some of the other hats that were mentioned by name in the Canon? It's kind of a hat check name check in this episode. And it's just a trifle.
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- Bowler hat
- Wideawake hat
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--
"Asian" isn't a term that pops up in the Sherlock Holmes canon. And yet we meet a handful of individuals who lived in or interacted with residents of the largest continent on the planet.
We hear of Asian countries such as Japan, China, Afghanistan, Andaman Islands, Ceylon, the Dutch East Indies, India, Tibet, Nepal, Persia, Siam, Malay, Singapore, Turkey, and Syria. Who were some of these people and why do so many of their stories involve something nefarious? It's just a trifle.
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- Before the East India Company (Lapham's Quarterly)
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--
How many swimmers do we encounter in the Sherlock Holmes stories? Given that only one story is centered around an ill-fated swim, you might think you know the answer.
Then again, you might be mistaken. Allow us to turn over the Canon in our minds for other references to swimming. And what do we know about swimming habits in the late Victorian / early Edwardian era? It's just a trifle.
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- Bathing machine (Wikipedia)
- Swimming in the Victorian Era (PDF)
- A Social History of Swimming in England, 1800-1918 (Reviews in History)
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--
Think about the number of times we come across inclement weather in the Sherlock Holmes stories. It's almost like the cliched "It was a dark and stormy night."
How often do we find that harsh weather conditions run parallel to some tempestuous conditions in various Canonical households? It's just a trifle.
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--
"It is always awkward doing business with an alias." [BLUE]
Back in Episode 96, we chatted about the many disguises and other identities of Sherlock Holmes. But what about other people in the Canon who played dress-up?
Whether they were trying to dupe one of his clients or Sherlock Holmes himself, these individuals each had good reasons to be incognito. It's just a trifle.
Canadians are so polite. Why, Sir Henry barely complained of being killed by his family's legendary spectral hound.
Where do we find Canadians and Canadian influences in the Sherlock Holmes stories? There aren't terribly many instances, but there are just enough to be a Trifle.
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--
"The Adventure of the Dancing Men" has a similar theme to that of "The Adventure of the Noble Bachelor": a British gentleman and his flighty American bride with her checkered past.
Is there some lesson implied here about the importance of sticking with one's own tribe and class? And what other instances in the Sherlock Holmes stories stand out as examples of the separation of classes in Victorian society? It's just a Trifle.
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When we think of English country estates, it's only natural to think of outdoor activities. In many cases this included the pastimes of hunting and shooting.
Where in the Sherlock Holmes stories do we find the landed gentry headed off to bring down some quarry that the gamekeeper has stocked? Our monthly series on games and sports take us on this wild goose chase that's just a Trifle.
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There's a familiar plot device that runs throughout a number of Sherlock Holmes stories. That number is three, but do you know which stories make use of it?
We discuss this recurring theme, where it's the most convincing, and why humans get hoodwinked by such arrangements. It's just a Trifle.
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- Shakespeare's sources of inspiration
- I Hear of Sherlock Everywhere Episode 91: The Confidence Game
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--
"he was bearded" [SIGN]
Well this is embarrassing. As we finished our editing and prepared to leave for a business trip, we realized one critical fact about this topic: we've already talked about it (in Episode 105).
Nevertheless, we suggest you listen and perhaps compare and contrast the two episodes. Yes, there may be a little overlap, but the discussion goes to show how the Sherlock Holmes stories allow us to riff on one topic again and again. It's just a Trifle.
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India is a wonderful land. And it plays a part in a number of Sherlock Holmes stories. Certainly, it's a center point in The Sign of Four, but where else do we find the influence of India in the Canon?
In our regular feature of international influences in the Sherlock Holmes stories, we learn about battles, cities, districts and other Indian curiosities. It's just a Trifle.
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- Pondicherry (Wikipedia)
- Bhurtee - the Siege of Cawnpore (Wikipedia)
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--
In listing Sherlock Holmes's limits in A Study in Scarlet, Dr. Watson indicates that Holmes is something of an amateur sportsman: "11. Is an expert singlestick player, boxer, and swordsman."
In this latest entry in our Games and Sports series, we look at singlestick and its relation to other pastimes and run-ins in the Canon. It's just a Trifle.
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- Singlestick (Wikipedia)
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--
Sherlock Holmes took a great interest in musicians and concerts, mentioning a few by name in the Canon.
In the last episode, we discussed composers and their works; this time, it's off to violin-land where all is sweetness and light. We look at performers real and fictional, where they plied their trade, and what instruments they played, including musical families. It's just a Trifle.
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- Other episodes mentioned in this episode:
-
- Episode 40: Who Was Sarasate?
- IHOSE Episodes 68 and 69 with Burt Coules
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--
From the very beginning of the Sherlock Holmes stories, we know that Sherlock Holmes plays the violin. It's one of the personality traits he admits to Watson and that Watson later chronicles.
In addition to Holmes's own performances, we come across a number of other composers and their works in the Canon. Who and what were they? It's just a Trifle.
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- Les Huguenots by Meyerbeer (Wikipedia)
- "That little thing of Chopin" (Camden House)
- Offenbach - "Barcarolle" from The Tales of Hoffmann (YouTube)
- Other episodes mentioned in this episode:
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--
"a man might as well live in Russia" [VALL]
The connections between Sherlock Holmes an Russia—in the Sherlock Holmes stories themselves, as least—would seem to be limited. Yet it provides much information for a robust discussion.
From exported goods to crimes from two decades previous, we encounter a smattering of mentions of the Land of Rus. What do they tell us about Sherlock Holmes? And what was happening in the world at the time? It's just a Trifle.
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- Russia leather
- Little Russia
- The eBSJ
- A Russian Sherlock Holmes cartoon and another animated Russian Sherlock Holmes in translation
- The Wrong Passage
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There are plenty of instances of maritime transportation in the Sherlock Holmes stories. But when it comes to pleasure crafts, we're left with a scant few.
The use various boats for leisure and sporting activities is present sporadically throughout the Canon, so you have to pay attention. We investigate these few instances, plus a supposition. It is of course a trifle.
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- The Boat Race
- Interview with Robert Stephens in Michael Pointer's Playing Sherlock Holmes: Interviews with John Wood, Robert Stephens, and Christopher Lee. (Amazon)
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In the last episode, Robert Katz, BSI began to take us through his theory of where Dr. Watson spent his early years. He used the facts given to us by Watson himself, combined with the reasoning of Sherlock Holmes to arrive at some conclusions.
This week, he brings us the other half of the story: after Watson moved from Australia to America, he tells us about the connection with Henry Ward Beecher and Watson's heroics on U.S. soil.
It's just a trifle.
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--
We know little about Dr. Watson's life, aside from what he managed to tell us. Yes, he was in the Army's medical department. Yes, he was wounded. And he needed to find a flatmate to be able to afford London on his pension.
But what about beyond that? Sherlock Holmes was able to make some inferences from a watch that Watson's brother bequeathed to him. There are a few other clues here and there to give us a scent to pick up. And Robert Katz, BSI joins us to begin to weave those threads together.
It's just a trifle.
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--
South America and its exotic tropical climate is about as far removed from the dampness of England as one can find. Its collective countries stand in juxtaposition to proper Victorian customs, and anything in the Sherlock Holmes stories that touches South America is suspect.
We look at some of the men and women associated with the continent that is mostly in the Southern Hemisphere, and the implications for each story.
It's just a trifle.
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When traveling or settling into a city for a bit, Victorians had options. Hotels were commonplace, but could be expensive. So what's a reasonable alternative? A boarding house!
There were two stories in which mysterious boarders caught the attention of Sherlock Holmes, and his visits with their landladies proved fruitful for Watson's writing. What do we know about these, and other instances of boarding houses in the Sherlock Holmes stories?
It's just a trifle.
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- Boarding house (Wikipedia)
- Lodging Houses (The Dictionary of Victorian London)
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--
Rack 'em up! Our monthly discussion of games and sports turns to billiards.
While the game itself is mentioned once in a significant way, there are a number of times when a room dedicated to the activity pops up in the Sherlock Holmes stories. What is it about billiards that captured English attention during this time period?
It's just a trifle.
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- Cue sports (Wikipedia)
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Image credit
The Arthur Conan Doyle Encyclopedia
--
As early as A Study in Scarlet, we discover that Sherlock Holmes "was as sensitive to flattery on the score of his art as any girl could be of her beauty." Then once again toward the end of the Canon, in "The Red Circle," Watson reminds us that "Holmes was accessible upon the side of flattery."
We previously covered some of the insults and invective that Holmes had to endure. But what about praise? What about epithets that were acclamatory rather than derogatory. It is just a trifle.
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- Episode 91 - How Insulting
- Steve Clarkson's The Canonical Compendium
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--
From golf clubs to gentlemen's clubs...
Ask any Sherlockian to name a club in the Canon and they'll invariably say the Diogenes Club (that's right after Tonga's club. You don't have to be a Penang lawyer to get that one.). And there were a number of fictional clubs as well.
But one club that gets just a passing mention is Watson's club. Which one was it? Speculation abounds, so we gave it a shot. It's just a trifle.
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- The Gentlemen's Clubs of London (Amazon)
- List of gentlemen's clubs in London (Wikipedia)
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--
"It is always a joy to meet an American." [NOBL]
Americans have been avid fans of Sherlock Holmes since the earliest days. The novels were pirated and the short stories were syndicated to reach millions of American readers.
And Sherlock Holmes himself was a fan of Americans. There's a wide variety of Americans and American locales that popped up in the Canon quite frequently. And those are worth trifling over.
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Sherlock Holmes and golf don't necessarily go together. That is clearly represented by the few times that the sport is mentioned in the Sherlock Holmes stories.
His creator, Arthur Conan Doyle, had a few connections to golf. Together, we explore these scant details and come up with enough for another episode of Trifles in our monthly look at games and sports.
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- Victorian Schooling
- Board Schools
- Standards of Education from 1872
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We first hear of boarding-schools in "The Naval Treaty," in which Watson mentions his fellow alumnus Percy Phelps, who needs Sherlock Holmes's help. And of course, the Priory School (from the adventure of the same name) is private boarding school of some note.
When did boarding-schools come to be? What changed in the legislation of England at the time that made education more of a thing? We explore the societal forces that came to bear on schools at the time.
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- Victorian Schooling
- Board Schools
- Standards of Education from 1872
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The questions in the Musgrave Ritual lead us to answers that are nearly as cryptic as the questions themselves. Among the questions was "Where was the shadow?" The answer, of course, is "Under the elm."
But how was Sherlock Holmes able to calculate the location of the object of the Musgrave Ritual, given the lack of an elm and the passing of over 200 years? It's one of the trifles in the Canon.
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France and England have always had a close relationship, if contentious at times. Is it any small wonder that we find plenty of French influences in the Sherlock Holmes stories?
From quoting French philosophers to referencing French detectives and from earning French accolades and casually revealing French relatives, Sherlock Holmes was well versed with all things French. We investigate a few trifling examples.
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- Ken Ludwig on IHOSE
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There were scores of jobs mentioned in the Sherlock Holmes stories, but we focus on some of the more trifling titles in this episode.
You've heard of doctors and lawyers and even consulting detectives as professions. But what about gamekeepers? Or yeggmen? Mendicants (amateur or otherwise), tide-waiters and an abbess await your inquiry as well.
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- Episode 36 - Tradesmen in the Canon
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Eight episodes ago, we talked very specifically about a card game: whist. But we're aware that there's more to cards than whist, and there are additional references in the Sherlock Holmes Canon.
A brief review of a number of Sherlock Holmes stories will show "card playing" as well as one or two specifically named card games. Oh, and what about a card game specifically related to Sherlock Holmes? It's all here in Trifles.
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- Episode 115 - Whist
- Écarté
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From the very first Sherlock Holmes story, we're introduced to poisons and their role in crime and detective fiction. From there, it's a hopscotch of poisonings and poisons in the Canon.
From alkaloids to airborne toxins, we come across a variety of substances that cause harm, both intentionally and accidentally. What are they? Tune in and you may pick up a Trifle or two...
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This is National Coin Week, according to the American Numismatic Association. What better week to consider old money in the Sherlock Holmes stories?
The terminology and math can be confusing to us today. Quid? Sovereign? Shilling? How do these relate to each other and how much buying power did they have? Greg Ruby, BSI of The Fourth Garrideb put a bug in our ear and that became a Trifle...
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- So, How Much is a Quid, a Bob, and a Crown, Really?
- Old English Money
- British Currency System, Old British Money, and Slang
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To readers of the Sherlock Holmes stories in the late Victorian era, Australia was an exotic and dangerous place. It was not all that far removed from the days of transportation, when some criminals and the destitute were put on ships bound for the land Down Under.
Australia makes a number of appearances in the Canon. What do these have in common and what inferences can we make? These are but a Trifle...
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- Hyde Park Barracks (Sydney)
- Convict Sydney Exhibit
- I Hear of Sherlock Everywhere Episode 97: The Sydney Passengers
- Trifles Episode 27 - Rebellion!
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Sherlock Holmes and tennis — they go together like...like... Well, we're here to tell you that while combining the great detective with a lawn sport is actually elementary.
There are a handful of passing references to this sport in the Canon, and pointing them out is merely a Trifle...
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- History of Tennis
- History of Tennis Shoes
- Nicholas Meyer on I Hear of Sherlock Everywhere
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The beginning of April dependably brings April Fools' Day. And while there weren't outright hi-jinks in the Sherlock Holmes stories, there were a fair share of instances where individuals were fooled.
You might think that it's Watson who's fooled frequently, but there were a number of times when Sherlock Holmes himself had the wool pulled over his eyes. We explore examples that add up to a little more than a Trifle...
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The opening of The Valley of Fear introduced us to a mysterious individual: Porlock, who sent a cryptic note to Sherlock Holmes to warn him of doings afoot at Birlstone.
Sherlock Holmes didn't look into Porlock's identity too closely, but we do have a number of clues and inferences that may lead us to an identification. Or that may at least narrow things down a bit. It's just a Trifle...
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The Irish make scant appearances across the earlier Sherlock Holmes stories, but once we pass The Valley of Fear, it's as if Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's brogue has been released onto the pages.
We explore some of those instances — including the subtle and passing ones early on — and just how Sherlock Holmes found himself inside of an Irish secret society in America.
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- The Adventure of the Stalwart Companion by H. Paul Jeffers
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We continue our monthly investigation into Games and Sports in the Sherlock Holmes stories, and in this case, we turn our attention to a card game. Specifically, whist.
There aren't too many instances of card games in the Canon, but whist comes up a couple of times. How was it played? We discuss that, and something of a trifle with respect to the game of whist that was discovered in "The Devil's Foot."
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- Whist (Wikipedia)
- I Hear of Sherlock Everywhere
- Let's Make a Deal (George Carlin)
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“volumes of poetry” [ENGR]
When we think of poetry, it's a style of writing that transports us, particularly emotionally, to another plane of existence. Poetry is like the rose over which Sherlock Holmes had a moment of reverie in "The Naval Treaty":
"But this rose is an extra. Its smell and its color are an embellishment of life, not a condition of it."
Holmes wasn't known for his poetic moments. In the story that proceeded the excerpt above ("The Greek Interpreter"), Holmes admonished Watson for projecting humility onto Holmes:
"To the logician all things should be seen exactly as they are, and to underestimate one’s self is as much a departure from truth as to exaggerate one’s own powers."
So there wasn't much room for poetry in the Sherlock Holmes stories. We manage to pick out a few of the finer points. They are, as usual, a Trifle...
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- The Detective Who Will Never Die
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A look at some of the villains in the Sherlock Holmes stories, beginning with the first real heavy that we encounter.
Sherlock Holmes said "When a doctor goes wrong, he is the first of criminals." And Dr. Grimesby Roylott did not disappoint: he killed a man and served hard time for it, had a temper, kept wild animals, associated with gypsies, and more. Perhaps it's just a bit more than a Trifle...
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Italians seem to surround us in the Sherlock Holmes stories. Restaurants, music, artisans, and of course criminals.
But Sherlock Holmes himself had some familiarity with Italy, both before and after his experience at the Reichenbach Falls. How far does this association with Italy go? Well, it's just a Trifle...
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- The Napoleon Bust Business Again
- Italy and Sherlock Holmes
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Sherlock Holmes, boxer? We don't often consider Sherlock Holmes for his boxing abilities, yet Watson very clearly noted his talent in that field in the very first story.
But Holmes wasn't the only boxer in the Canon. We repeatedly see mentions of the sport made official by the Marquess of Queensbury, as both tangential mentions and more central parts of the stories. But we'll try to keep this discussion of boxers brief. After all, it is a Trifle...
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They pop up here and there around the Canon quite infrequently. However, you can be sure that when a governess is featured in a Sherlock Holmes story, she's part of the plot.
What was this profession, and what did the ladies in these roles do? What was their station in life? We explore these questions, which shed light on why they might have found themselves in sticky situations from time to time in this episode of Trifles.
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For well over 100 years, Sherlock Holmes has been seen in advertisements around the world. The fact is: Sherlock Holmes sells. He's good for brands.
There are a number of instances of brands that were mentioned within the Sherlock Holmes stories themselves. What are they? Well, we enumerate them, plus provide a few "what-ifs" ourselves in this episode of Trifles.
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Sherlock Holmes had a number of encounters with German people. Who were they, and how did these interactions reflect on international relations at the time?
This is the first in a new series on Trifles focusing on international elements of the Sherlock Holmes stories.
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If you ask anyone familiar with the Sherlock Holmes stories to name a Scotland Yard inspector, they'll invariably answer, "Inspector Lestrade."
But Sherlock Holmes had a healthy respect for a handful of other police inspectors, both from Scotland Yard and from the surrounding areas. Who were they, and in which stories did they appear?
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This marks the first in a semi-regular series on Trifles in which we spend time talking about sports and games in the Sherlock Holmes stories.
In this episode, we look specifically at board games that were mentioned in the Canon and discuss their history and origins.
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- Backgammon
- Draughts / Checkers
- Chess
- The Mansion of Happiness
- The Checkered Game of Life
- The Game of the District Messenger Boy
- Progress and Play: Board Games and the Meaning of History
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We begin our third season with a discussion of facial hair in the Sherlock Holmes stories. Specifically, beards. That's right, hipsters: you've got company. Very, very old company.
Interestingly, we found that many of the more famous bearded characters in the stories shared a similar character trait. Just what was it? It's just a trifle, but you'll have to tune in to find out.
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- E.J. Wagner in I Hear of Sherlock Everywhere: Episode 159
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The holidays typically bring a bounty of food, followed by solemn pledges to exercise and take better care of ourselves in the new year.
What do we know about Sherlock Holmes and his eating habits? He was thin, but did that mean he didn't have an appreciation for food? From fast food to fine dining, Sherlock Holmes displayed a wide range of culinary appreciation. And it's our topic for the final episode of Trifles for 2018.
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We often fixate on the famous cases like the Giant Rat of Sumatra, James Phillimore and his umbrella, or Wilson, the notorious canary trainer. But there are times when some trifling detail escapes our notice.
In this, the final episode of our Unpublished Cases series, we look at the tiniest bit of detail around a chemistry experiment that had to do with a man's life in the balance...
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It's not often that we have our eyes cast downward at 221B Baker Street. There are so many interesting things to see at eye-level: the Persian slipper, the chemistry set, the patriotic 'VR' on the wall. But there were floor coverings in the famous flat.
In this, the final episode of our Inside 221B series, we look at what was on the floor and the care that must have gone into them. They are just a Trifle...
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The Sherlock Holmes canon is a wonderful snapshot of the times. In particular, we get a good sense of the kinds of transportation that conveyed citizens around London and its environs.
The hansom cab is probably the most well-known, but there are a number of other types of horse-drawn vehicles that we find in the stories. What are they? Well, it's just a Trifle.
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- Hansom cab
- Four-wheeler / Clarence
- Transport and Carriages in the Victorian Era
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From the Gramophone to the telephone, November seems to be quite the month of technology here on Trifles.
Yes, even though Holmes did most of his work in the late 19th century, there were opportunities to use the newfangled voice-to-voice communications device known as the telephone. We explore just when and where, as well as certain supporting clues.
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The arrival of Dr. Thorneycroft Huxtable on the doorstep (and hearth rug!) of 221B Baker Street was dramatic. He collapsed like a beached whale, and Sherlock Holmes was able to infer a great deal about the reason for his visit.
And yet, Holmes gave an excuse for potentially turning down the case: he was involved with the Ferrers Documents. We're not told what that is, but we think it may just be a Trifle...
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- Les Klinger on Episode 155 of I Hear of Sherlock Everywhere
- The Alternative Sherlock Holmes: Pastiches, Parodies and Copies by Peter Ridgway Watt and Joseph Green
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When you glance across the Sherlock Holmes stories, there really aren't that many instances of children. Some of the tales are just not suitable for little ears, after all.
But there were key instances in which children played a vital role in the plot or moving the action forward. We explore some of those, as well as the warning signs that you might want to spend a little more (or less) time with the young ones. It is just a Trifle...
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- Trifles Episode 80
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When you glance across the Sherlock Holmes stories, there really aren't that many instances of children. Some of the tales are just not suitable for little ears, after all.
But there were key instances in which children played a vital role in the plot or moving the action forward. We explore some of those, as well as the warning signs that you might want to spend a little more (or less) time with the young ones. It is just a Trifle...
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- The Four Stages of Cruelty - William Hogarth
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Sherlock Holmes was a master of disguises. They allowed him to infiltrate areas that would have otherwise been off-limits or situations in which he would have been discovered.
What were some of the incarnations he undertook? Can you remember the four named aliases he assumed? It is just a Trifle...
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There are a handful of dogs sprinkled throughout the Sherlock Holmes stories. And while a few of them are used in a traditional police-tracking way, the great detective found other uses for them.
Whether friendly, hostile, or just plain silent, dogs were vital to helping Sherlock Holmes solve some of his cases. It's just a Trifle...
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- The Cynological Mr. Holmes: Conanical Canines Considered: Dog-Lore and Dog-Love in the Sherlockian Saga by Michael Harrison
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The famous year of 1895 holds many wonders. Many of the cases in The Return of Sherlock Holmes took place in this year, and as you would imagine, many of the untold tales are mentioned during that timeframe.
And it would seem that if one has three names — John Hector McFarlane, John Scott Eccles, or in this case John Vincent Harden — there's some dirty work afoot. How is it that a tobacco millionaire can come to be persecuted in a peculiar way? It's just a Trifle...
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- Sherlock Holmes: The Peculiar Persecution of John Vincent Harden by Dan Andriacco
- I Hear of Sherlock Everywhere Episode 141: Baker Street Beat
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As we glance around the sitting room at 221B Baker Street, the famous lodgings of Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson, there's no lack of seating. In fact, one might have the pick of any number of seating styles.
From armchair to basket chair, settees to sofas, we explore the seating arrangements found in Sherlock Holmes's flat. We discuss who sat where and when, and how one particular chair gave away a criminal. These are just Trifles...
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- Wessex Press
- Archie and Edith Bunker's chairs at the American History Museum
- Christopher Morley: Minty's Varsity Chair
- I Hear of Sherlock Everywhere Episode 153: The Rooms at 221B Baker Street
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"My correspondence certainly has the charm of variety," said Sherlock Holmes in "The Noble Bachelor." He could have been easily referring to the medium as well as the message.
For Holmes was an inveterate sender and receiver of telegrams. What was the messaging industry like in those days? And why did Holmes have Watson read his correspondence to him from time to time? That's what we explore in this episode of Trifles.
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We occasionally hear "Mr. Cocksure" and "jack-in-office" thrown about as epithets in the Sherlock Holmes stories. But by and large, there is very little profanity in these Victorian and early Edwardian detective tales.
But Sherlock Holmes manages to insult and put down some of his rivals, in a decidedly cool and casual way. Explore the sometimes harsh language that was meant to insult in this episode of Trifles.
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Watson occasionally accompanied Sherlock Holmes onto the Continent (i.e., Europe), but there were many other instances when Holmes's work took him there without Watson. And we, along with Watson, were later treated to tantalizing hints as to what happened.
What were some of these places and what were the untold and exotic tales that Sherlock Holmes was involved with? They are the topic of this episode of Trifles.
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- Episode 66: Sherlock Holmes's Honorifics
- The Alternative Sherlock Holmes: Pastiches, Parodies, and Copies
- The Island of Uffa identification by James O'Leary via Doyleockian
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One of the most off-hand but arresting comments that Sherlock Holmes made was that he owned a Stradivarius violin. That he had purchased for a mere 55 shillings!
What do we know of Stradivarius instruments, and about Holmes's own ability on the violin?
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- Stradivarius (Wikpedia)
- The tale of Roman Totenberg's stolen Stradivarius (NPR)
- Top image via the Falk Archive - KFA
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The Sherlock Holmes stories are told from the perspective of a doctor. So it only stands to reason that he would notice other medical men throughout his adventures with the great detective.
As we look at doctors across the Canon, we find heroes, villains, suspects, victims, clients and more. This episode takes a closer look at who some of these medical types were, and what roles they played in the plots.
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- Sherlock Holmes Reference Library: The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes
- William Palmer
- Edward Pritcher
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John H. Watson, M.D., late of the Army Medical Department, had a number of medical practices throughout the Sherlock Holmes stories. He waffled between being a flat-sharing colleague of Holmes and a doctor with his own thriving practice.
From Paddington to Queen Anne Street, we follow Watson's rise. But what of his methods? Did he dispense reasonable medical care of the age? Or was he too far removed from the practice of medicine by the time he took on his own practice in the mid- to late-Eighties?
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We're accustomed to thinking about Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson being associated with whiskey and brandy. But there are plenty of other kinds of alcohol in the Canon.
More than the infamous Imperial Tokay of "His Last Bow," or the ancient and cobwebby bottles, there are some curious references to wine and spirits that warrant your attention. Even if they're a trifle.
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We know what you're thinking: The Sign of Four wasn't an unpublished case. You, as a Trifles listener, are very astute. We should have expected nothing less.
However, within The Sign of Four, we do have a glimpse of a number of unpublished cases: including one with Mrs. Cecil Forrester, with whom Mary Morstan lives in Camberwell. Could this be a connection to a later case mentioned in "The Adventure of the Five Orange Pips"? Or perhaps it's a reference to "the most winning woman" Holmes ever knew, who is also mentioned in The Sign of Four? These trifles await your consideration.
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"neat morocco case" [SIGN]
We all know that Sherlock Holmes used drugs. "A seven-per-cent solution" of cocaine is what he recommended to Watson in The Sign of Four.
But in the prelude to that, we're told that Holmes took "his hypodermic syringe from its neat morocco case." This case must have graced the interior of 221B Baker Street. But just what is it? And what do we really know of Holmes's drug mania?
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- Morocco leather
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Sherlock Holmes is probably the most famous smoker in the world. But in popular culture, he's always pictured with a pipe. The Canon tells us that he also smoked cigars and cigarettes.
What was the frequency with which he smoked each? Did he tend to favor one form of smoking over another? And was there something that cause him to choose a pipe versus a cigarette versus a cigar? Step into the smoking room with us as we investigate.
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- The eBSJ
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Homeless children. A gossip columnist. A dog. What do all of these have in common? They're part of the underground network of helpers that Sherlock Holmes cobbled together.
With these individuals and more, Holmes was able to fan out across the great metropolis and gather information that helped him solve his cases. And they're the subject of this week's Trifles episode.
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- The Bakerloo line
- The Baker Street Irregulars
- Episode 58 - Sherlock Holmes's Index
- Episode 62 - Reference Sources
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We've previously covered the tantalizing cases that Sherlock Holmes pulled out of his tin box. This time, we spend time thinking about some of his other clients before he met Dr. Watson.
There's one we know by name, but the speculation begins fairly early on, as we try to use Holmes's methods to determine who some of his other clients might have been in those first years of his consultancy.
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- Tit-Bits (Wikipedia)
- Sherlock Holmes at Oxford by Nick Utechin (2nd edition 1981)
- "The Adventure of the Clapham Cook" by Agatha Christie
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One of the handiest items found at 221B Baker Street has to be the wax bust of Sherlock Holmes. More than once it played a role as a decoy for Sherlock Holmes.
But when did Holmes commission it and how did it get to Baker Street? And was it even the same bust between the two tales? These questions and more await in the latest edition of Trifles.
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"the streaming umbrella" [FIVE]
London is supposed to be a decidedly rainy place. The place where one might expect to find an umbrella or two carried about.
But only a handful of stories of Sherlock Holmes included the mention of umbrellas, galoshes, waterproofs or other rain gear. We investigate the trifling matter of the few umbrellas in the Canon.
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- Episode 60 - Unpublished Cases: James Phillimore
- Fox Umbrellas (London)
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"the smartest of the Scotland Yarders" [STUD]
When you think of a Scotland Yard inspector in the Sherlock Holmes stories, odds are your thoughts immediately go to Inspector Lestrade. He makes the most appearances in stories and certainly gets the most name recognition, in part thanks to Dennis Hoey's portrayal of the bumbling but capable policeman.
But what about good old Inspector Gregson, who appeared alongside Lestrade in the very first Sherlock Holmes story? He manages to make a number of appearances, but doesn't rise to the same level of household awareness. We look at his trifling (and non-trifling) appearances in the Sherlock Holmes stories.
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"pulling a large tin box behind him" [MUSG]
We're accustomed to referring to Watson's famous tin box, held in the vaults of Cox & Co. Inside were contents that we were not meant to see: heretofore unseen tales of Sherlock Holmes.
But Holmes himself was in possession of his own tin box, and boy did it contain a few surprises. We take an inventory and surmise what some of the contents meant.
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It's June, which is the month of the Queen's birthday. What a perfect time to look at the "patriotic V.R." that Sherlock Holmes adorned the wall of 221B Baker Street with.
But Sherlock Holmes didn't stop there. He had some other habits that were rather destructive when it came to his rooms. What were they and why did Holmes do that? We discuss these in the latest episode of Trifles.
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How much money did Sherlock Holmes make from his clients? And when did he begin making money?
We went back to an early piece of Sherlockian scholarship by Robert Keith Leavitt, first published in Vincent Starrett's 221B: Studies in Sherlock Holmes for inspiration. We run through Leavitt's assessment, commenting on certain cases and even finding a few points where we disagree with his analysis.
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- "Nummi in Arca, or The Fiscal Holmes" by Robert Keith Leavitt, as originally appeared in 221B: Studies in Sherlock Holmes
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Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0
Sherlock Holmes was a consultant—or more properly, a consulting detective—but he was a consultant, nonetheless. And consultants need clients, who in turn pay the bills.
But have you ever stopped to think about how Holmes went about collecting his fees? We don't know anything about his fees, other than a handful of high profile cases with rewards, and that (he says) he didn't vary them save for when he remitted them altogether.
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Links / Notes
- This episode: ihose.co/trifles74
- I Hear of Sherlock Everywhere Episode 140: Sherlock Holmes and the Elusive Ear
Music credits
Performers: Uncredited violinist, US Marine Chamber Orchestra
Publisher Info.: Washington, DC: United States Marine Band
Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0
- This episode: ihose.co/trifles73
- A Scintillation of Scions
- I Hear of Sherlock Everywhere Episode 52: Sherlockian Mythbusters
"the dreadful affair of the Abernetty family" [SIXN]
Among the published cases, there are a handful that can be identified by a simple reference. If we said "a tale for which the world is not yet prepared," you'd say the Giant Rat of Sumatra.
Similarly, if we mention "the depth to which the butter had sunk on a hot day," you'd think of the Abernetty family, as mentioned in the opening of "The Six Napoleons." But what was going on there? And what have scholars said about it over the years?
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Links
- This episode: ihose.co/trifles72
- "The Adventure of the Six Napoleons"
- Sherlock Holmes of Baker Street by William S. Baring-Gould
- Parsely (Wikipedia)
Credits
Performers: Uncredited violinist, US Marine Chamber Orchestra Publisher Info.: Washington, DC: United States Marine Band Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0
Sherlock Holmes is possibly the most famous smoker in literature. But more than his ubiquitous pipe, his manner of supporting his habit within his rooms at 221B Baker Street was a bit odd, shall we say.
From his placement of cigars and tobacco, to what he did with his pipe remnants, the trimmings around his flat were quite unique, if trifling.
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Links / Notes
- This episode: ihose.co/trifles71
- Our other show: I Hear of Sherlock Everywhere
- My Lady Nicotine by J.M. Barrie
- Dunhill tobacco
Music credits
Performers: Uncredited violinist, US Marine Chamber Orchestra
Publisher Info.: Washington, DC: United States Marine Band
Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0
We're coming up on Mother's Day in the United States, and that made us think about parents. We've covered mothers in the Canon discussed alternative parents in previous episodes.
But now let's take a look at the most corrosive parental relationships in the Sherlock Holmes stories. After reading Jenn Eaker's article on "A Case of Identity" in the Autumn 2017 issue of The Baker Street Journal, we thought a look at the top 5 worst parents would be in order. In this episode, we go from bad to worst.
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Links / Notes
- This episode: ihose.co/trifles70
- Maker Faire
- Raspberry Pi
- Antique whaling harpoon (eBay)
- Episode 19 - Mothers in the Canon
- Episode 24 - Heads of Household
- The Baker Street Journal
Music credits
Performers: Uncredited violinist, US Marine Chamber Orchestra
Publisher Info.: Washington, DC: United States Marine Band
Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0
In the 60 tales that comprise the complete Sherlock Holmes stories, we come across a variety of jobs. Certainly there are the garden variety: cab drivers, butlers, governesses. But what about the more rare?
Sherlock Holmes billed himself as the world's only unofficial consulting detective, but he interacted with people whose jobs were out of the ordinary - at least by today's standards. So we decided to spend some time talking about what some of these occupations were.
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Links / Notes
- This episode: ihose.co/trifles69
- Yeggman
- Commissionaire
- Stevedore
- Stoker
Music credits
Performers: Uncredited violinist, US Marine Chamber Orchestra
Publisher Info.: Washington, DC: United States Marine Band
Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0
Among the cases that Watson tantalizingly dangles before us, "The Adventure of the Sussex Vampire" offers the Matilda Briggs and the giant rat of Sumatra (one of the tales we mentioned in Episode 55 concerning Weird Animals), one of the most famous of the untold adventures.
But it also offers up a handful of others in quick succession, coming from the 'V' volume of Sherlock Holmes's index, rather than from the tin box mentioned in "Thor Bridge," and they are worthy of discussion. Along the way, we question why some of these cases find their way into this volume.
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Links / Notes
- This episode: ihose.co/trifles68
- "The Adventure of the Sussex Vampire"
Music credits
Performers: Uncredited violinist, US Marine Chamber Orchestra
Publisher Info.: Washington, DC: United States Marine Band
Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0
Along with the deerstalker, Inverness cloak, magnifying glass and curved pipe, Sherlock Holmes is most often associated with chemistry – chemical compounds as well as chemistry equipment.
In this installment of our Inside 221B series, we take a look at Sherlock Holmes's experience with chemistry and other laboratory setups we encounter in the stories.
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Music credits
Performers: Uncredited violinist, US Marine Chamber Orchestra
Publisher Info.: Washington, DC: United States Marine Band
Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0
Sherlock Holmes was a well-known public figure. But he was also a known and sought-after expert specifically by other well-known public figures and entities.
Which notable public figures sought and received Holmes's services and then bestowed upon him some gift other than cash?
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Links / Notes
- This episode: ihose.co/trifles66
- The Legion of Honor
Music credits
Performers: Uncredited violinist, US Marine Chamber Orchestra
Publisher Info.: Washington, DC: United States Marine Band
Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0
From the first cricket match in England in 1877 to the wireless mentioned in 1914, there are numerous things connected to Sherlock Holmes that happened in the month of March.
As the month draws to a close, we reflect on happenings historical and Canonical. Let's see if our bluster lives up to the weather this month is known for.
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Links / Notes
- This episode: ihose.co/trifles65
- History of cricket
- The Boat Race
- The Mikado by Gilbert and Sullivan
- Jean Leckie
- Guglielmo Marconi
Music credits
Performers: Uncredited violinist, US Marine Chamber Orchestra
Publisher Info.: Washington, DC: United States Marine BandCopyright: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0
When Watson glances across his notes and teases us with adventures that he and Sherlock Holmes have experienced, but only gives us a topic with only the barest of details, it makes us wonder exactly what happened.
So is the case in this episode as we talk about the Amateur Mendicant Society and its rather unique meeting location — which in this case coincides with a real-life Sherlock Holmes society.
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Links / Notes
- This episode: ihose.co/trifles64
- "The Adventure of the Five Orange Pips"
- Mendicant (Wikipedia)
- The Amateur Mendicant Society of Detroit
Performers: Uncredited violinist, US Marine Chamber Orchestra
Publisher Info.: Washington, DC: United States Marine Band
Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0
--
Step into the sitting room at 221B Baker Street with us again and look around, as we take in the sights, smells and sounds within that most famous of addresses.
This time, we investigate the physical elements that accompany alcoholic drinks within the walls of Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson's abode. Namely: the gasogene and tantalus. We explore the origins of those phrases and discuss them in detail.
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Links / Notes
- This episode: ihose.co/trifles63
- Tantalus (spirit case)
- Tantalus (Greek god)
- Gasogene
- "A little song, a little dance..."
- I Hear of Sherlock Everywhere Episode 132: Unquiet Spirits (Bonnie MacBird)
Performers: Uncredited violinist, US Marine Chamber Orchestra
Publisher Info.: Washington, DC: United States Marine Band
Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0
In Episode 58, we discussed Sherlock Holmes's index books – those collections in which he tracked criminal cases, looked up necessary trivia, etc. But this time, we reach a little deeper and discuss some of the actual named reference books at 221B Baker Street.
Which publications were these and how did they help Holmes and Watson connect the dots and solve some cases? It's a trifle, certainly, but there's nothing so important as trifles.
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Links / Notes
- This episode: ihose.co/trifles62
- "The Noble Bachelor"
- "The Red Headed League"
- "The Five Orange Pips"
- The Valley of Fear
- "The Copper Beeches"
- "The Retired Colourman"
- "Shoscombe Old Place"
- I Hear of Sherlock Everywhere Episode 54: How to Think Like Sherlock Holmes
Performers: Uncredited violinist, US Marine Chamber Orchestra
Publisher Info.: Washington, DC: United States Marine Band
Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0
Image credit: Special Collections Toronto Public Library (Flickr)
--
John Watson knew women; Holmes tells us so. And Watson certainly tells us so, in his admiration of Mary Morstan as well as his description of some of the leading ladies of the Canon. He also told us outright in The Sign of Four that he's managed to get around:
"In an experience of women which extends over many nations and three separate continents..."
But three? We know for certain he's been to Europe an Asia. But which of the other five might be the one to round out Watson's travels? We investigate the lively love life of Dr. John H. Watson, MD.
Links / Notes
- This episode: ihose.co/trifles61
- The Private Life of Dr. Watson
- "Watson Was a Woman"
- "That Was No Lady" ("Nuts to Rex Stout")
- They Might be Giants
Music credits
Performers: Uncredited violinist, US Marine Chamber Orchestra
Publisher Info.: Washington, DC: United States Marine Band
Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0
--
In "The Problem of Thor Bridge," Watson treats us to a tantalizing look at the possibilities that lie before us as readers:
"Somewhere in the vaults of the bank of Cox and Co., at Charing Cross, there is a travelworn and battered tin dispatch-box with my name, John H. Watson, M.D., Late Indian Army, painted upon the lid. It is crammed with papers, nearly all of which are records of cases to illustrate the curious problems which Mr. Sherlock Holmes had at various times to examine."Possibly one of the most intriguing of the untold tales was "that of Mr. James Phillimore, who, stepping back into his own house to get his umbrella, was never more seen in this world," as the setup was so stark, so mysterious, and so final.
What are some possible explanations of what happened? And how does this untold tale rank among the many that were mentioned? In this latest episode in our Unpublished Cases series, we delve into the rich history of the strange disappearance of James Phillimore.
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Links / Notes
- This episode: ihose.co/trifles60
- "The Problem of Thor Bridge"
- The Best Untold Tales of Sherlock Holmes compiled by Randall Stock
- The Alternative Sherlock Holmes: Pastiches, Parodies and Copies
- BBC Sherlock tie-in
- The Disappearance of Mr. James Phillimore by Dan Andriacco
Music credits
Performers: Uncredited violinist, US Marine Chamber Orchestra
Publisher Info.: Washington, DC: United States Marine Band
Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0
--
"applying his tape to the walls" [STUD]
There's quite a bit we know about the inner sanctum of Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson at 221B Baker Street. The cozy sitting room with its fireplace and windows at once beckons us in to look around.
Upon glancing at the walls, though: what do we see? Is it typical of Victorian bachelor decor? Or is there hidden meaning behind any of the wall hangings? We investigate the trifling matter of the walls of the sitting room at 221B.
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Links / Notes
- This episode: ihose.co/trifles59
- "The Cardboard Box"
Music credits
Performers: Uncredited violinist, US Marine Chamber Orchestra
Publisher Info.: Washington, DC: United States Marine Band
Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0
--
"Good old index. You can't beat it." [SUSS]
Sherlock Holmes had quite the index. We get glimpses of it in use at various times throughout the Canon, from a biographical reference to a logging of crime. Was Holmes's index a single large volume, or many smaller volumes? Was it hardbound or simply an assembly of files?
And it never quite seemed like it was organized in a sensible way. How did Holmes manage to call to mind whatever he needed to find in this index?
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Show notes available at ihose.co/trifles58
Music: Beethoven's Violin Concerto performed by the US Marine Chamber Orchestra, public domain.
When it comes to British mysteries, tea is like aqua vitae. It's a given that it's part of the scenery. And of course we do come across tea a number of times in the Sherlock Holmes stories.
But have you ever taken a tally of how many times we witness tea being served versus coffee? Or of the therapeutic uses of either? Grab a cup (or a cuppa) and pull up a chair - we're about to have a coffee klatch on Trifles.
Or as one entertainer might put it: Sherlockians in Cars Getting Coffee. Or is it tea?
Links / Notes
- This episode: ihose.co/trifles57
- A Cup of Coffee, a Sandwich, and You
Performers: Uncredited violinist, US Marine Chamber Orchestra
Publisher Info.: Washington, DC: United States Marine Band
Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0
"it is surely Hudson" [GLOR]
One of the most enduring figures of the Canon after Sherlock Holmes, Dr. Watson, Mycroft Holmes and Inspector Lestrade is Mrs. Hudson. We know a little about her, but how did she happen to become the landlady of 221B Baker Street? And what were the "princely" rent payments that Holmes made?
As we make our way across the Sherlock Holmes stories, we do come across one or two other Hudsons as well. What is their relationship to the landlady? These questions await your attention in the latest episode of Trifles.
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Links / Notes Music credits
Performers: Uncredited violinist, US Marine Chamber Orchestra
Publisher Info.: Washington, DC: United States Marine Band
Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0
"it is a nice household" [SPEC]
We've got another recurring feature for you here on Trifles: seeing as there were so many unpublished cases that Watson mentioned, we find that there are plenty of trifles to discuss with regard to those. We're calling this series of episodes Unpublished Cases and we'll regularly revisit the topic.
When we glance across a number of such cases that Watson mentioned in stories like "The Sussex Vampire," "The Problem of Thor Bridge," "The Golden Pince-Nez," "Black Peter," and "The Veiled Lodger," we find some unusual animals mentioned — animals that would not commonly be found in the home or on the farm. Just what are some of these species?
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Links / Notes
- The giant rat of Sumatra
- The Sherlock Holmes International Exhibition
- The Canary Trainer by Nicholas Meyer
Performers: Uncredited violinist, US Marine Chamber Orchestra
Publisher Info.: Washington, DC: United States Marine Band
Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0
In this episode of Trifles, we're starting what will become a recurring feature over the course of a few episodes: namely, we're looking at some of the things you'll find in Sherlock Holmes's sitting room at 221B Baker Street. We're calling the series Inside 221B.
The sideboard makes a number of appearances in the Canon, and serves as a solemn but essential member of the Baker Street set as it features beef and fowl, drinks and related accouterments, and as a resting place for various objects. But just what is a sideboard and in which stories do we find it?
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Performers: Uncredited violinist, US Marine Chamber Orchestra
Publisher Info.: Washington, DC: United States Marine Band
Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0
Welcome to Season 2 of Trifles. We'll be working through some of the questions we ask in our show introductions this season, including a number of recurring themes. We hope you'll subscribe.
In Episode 48 ("Gotcha!") we discussed times when Sherlock Holmes caught his criminal red-handed, dead to rights. But what about the times that he caught criminals but let them go?
Was it solely his strong sense of right and wrong that caused Holmes to allow them to go free? Or was he simply disdainful of the official police? And what was it that he was doing with regard to felonies - compounding, commuting, or condoning? It's just a Trifle.
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Links / Notes
- The Hero's Journey
- A Sherlock Holmes Handbook by Christopher Redmond
- The Encyclopedia Sherlockiana by Jack Tracy
Performers: Uncredited violinist, US Marine Chamber Orchestra
Publisher Info.: Washington, DC: United States Marine Band
Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0
--
"compliments of the season" [BLUE]
"The Adventure of the Blue Carbuncle" is one of the more well-known stories in the Canon. And yet we're presented with a few trifling issues, including the color of the gem.
But beyond that, we have a victim and perpetrators who didn't seem to have thought through things to their logical conclusion. How else can we factor in the use of poultry as a hiding place? And animal anatomy lessons indicate that that place didn't even exist...
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Links / Notes
- "The Blue Carbuncle"
- Line O' Type, Chicago Tribune - December 1946
- More Leaves from the Copper Beeches
Performers: Uncredited violinist, US Marine Chamber Orchestra
Publisher Info.: Washington, DC: United States Marine Band
Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0
Peace in the canon. Reading the Sherlock Holmes stories to find peace is something like going to Casablanca for the water.
"But there are no waters in Casablanca."
"I was misinformed."
Regardless, during this season of peace, we reflect on moments — even if they're glimpses — of bucolic, peaceful moments we find scattered throughout the Sherlock Holmes canon. They're there, if you look for them — trifling as they may be.
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Links / Notes
- Christmas Peace (Wikipedia)
Performers: Uncredited violinist, US Marine Chamber Orchestra
Publisher Info.: Washington, DC: United States Marine Band
Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0
"what a chorus of groans, cries and bleatings" [REDC]
Agony column. Agony column? To the modern reader, that term might be unfamiliar. Well, at least it would be unfamiliar with the reader who is new to the Sherlock Holmes stories. The first time we come across Holmes using the agony column is in The Sign of Four when he advertised for the Aurora in the agony column of the Standard.
Holmes regularly used newspaper classified ads and personal columns to track down criminals and surface clues. But just what is an agony column, how did it help Sherlock Holmes, and in which stories did he and others find a use for it?
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Links / Notes
- Stories mentioned in this episode: A Study in Scarlet, The Sign of Four, "The Engineer's Thumb," "The Noble Bachelor," "The Red Circle," "The Bruce-Partington Plans"
- Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson: A Textbook of Friendship by Christopher Morley
- The Agony Column of The Times: 1800-1881, edited by Alice Clay, London: Chatto & Windus, 1881
Performers: Uncredited violinist, US Marine Chamber Orchestra
Publisher Info.: Washington, DC: United States Marine Band
Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0
--
When Cyril Overton sent a telegram to Sherlock Holmes, proclaiming the status of Godfrey Staunton, it was met with puzzlement. And even after Overton arrived at Baker Street, Holmes was still puzzled. We know that he had his "limits," based on Watson's famous list from A Study in Scarlet.
But Watson sat in silence as Holmes twisted in the wind, his ignorance of popular rugby laid bare. Why was this? Was it for the sake of his readers, or did Watson have other intentions in mind?
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Links / Notes Music credits
Performers: Uncredited violinist, US Marine Chamber Orchestra
Publisher Info.: Washington, DC: United States Marine Band
Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0
"you have been caught in the act" [BERY]
One of the general bits of enjoyment of the Sherlock Holmes stories is the denouement in which Sherlock Holmes apprehends the criminal. In some instances, he does so after the crime has been committed; in other instances, no crime has been committed.
But what about those delicious times when the criminals are caught in the act? Or even better, those instances when they greeted with sweet, swift justice. It's just a Trifle.
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Performers: Uncredited violinist, US Marine Chamber Orchestra
Publisher Info.: Washington, DC: United States Marine Band
Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0
Family. For many, it's a part of the holiday season. And with Thanksgiving coming up tomorrow in the United States, it's a perfect opportunity to reflect on families in the Sherlock Holmes stories.
And in doing so, we come to a rather sad conclusion: that many of the families in the Canon were not happy ones at all. Just what was it about these familial situations that caused things to go awry? We explore that question in this episode of Trifles.
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Links / Notes
- I Hear of Sherlock Everywhere Episode 58: Thankful for Sherlock Holmes
Performers: Uncredited violinist, US Marine Chamber Orchestra
Publisher Info.: Washington, DC: United States Marine Band
Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0
For many of us, the first time we encounter the word "pince-nez" is in the Sherlock Holmes stories. But for many of us, we very likely saw pince-nez on characters in movies, cartoons or the theater before we knew exactly what they were called.
Mentioned in three separate stories (do you know which three?), the eyewear is most closely associated with the adventure that contains its name. But what about the history of these peculiar glasses? We explore the various forms of pince-nez and how Sherlock Holmes came to make his deductions from a pair.
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Links / Notes
- Pince-nez (Wikipedia)
- "The Golden Pince-Nez"
- Colonel Ross in a monocle in "Silver Blaze"
Performers: Uncredited violinist, US Marine Chamber Orchestra
Publisher Info.: Washington, DC: United States Marine Band
Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0
"his military challenge" [STUD]
November 11 marks Veterans Day in the United States, when we honor our men and women who have served in the military. From the very first Sherlock Holmes story, we're exposed to the military: A Study in Scarlet opens with "(Being a reprint from the reminiscences of John H. Watson, M.D., late of the Army Medical Department.)"
And from there, we find other members of the military who make questionable decisions in their lives. We explore some of the more notable cases, and we give you a trivia question that might possibly stump your Sherlockian friends at your next meeting.
Links / Notes
- A Study in Scarlet
- The Sign of Four
- "The Crooked Man"
- "The Empty House"
Performers: Uncredited violinist, US Marine Chamber Orchestra
Publisher Info.: Washington, DC: United States Marine Band
Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0
--
"The world is big enough for us." [SUSS]
With Halloween just behind us, it's natural to reflect on the supernatural. The Hound of the Baskervilles and "The Adventure of the Sussex Vampire" loom large in our consciousness as stories whose central premise was focused on spectral occurrences.
But what of other references? And of the most curious case of all: Arthur Conan Doyle's belief in otherworldly things (such as spiritualism) juxtaposed with his most famous creation, who was steeped in facts and logic.
Have you left us a rating and review on the podcast player of your choice yet? We could really use your help.
And please consider supporting our efforts through Patreon or PayPal. Links / Notes Music creditsPerformers: Uncredited violinist, US Marine Chamber Orchestra
Publisher Info.: Washington, DC: United States Marine Band
Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0
--
"Why do you not write them yourself?" [ABBE]
Aside from the untold tales which are hinted at occasionally by Watson, the most intriguing writings in the Canon are those penned by Sherlock Holmes himself. We of course refer to his famous monographs.
In his earliest published cases, Holmes himself admits "in fact, I have written a monograph on the subject" [STUD] and "I have been guilty of several monographs" [SIGN], seemingly qualifying himself in the good doctor's (and our) eyes.
How many monographs were there and what were they? We sum them up and categorize them, with the help of T.S. Blakeney and S.C. Roberts.
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Links / Notes
- Sherlock Holmes: Fact or Fiction by T.S. Blakeney (1932, John Murray)
- Dr. Watson by S.C. Roberts (1931, Faber & Faber)
Performers: Uncredited violinist, US Marine Chamber Orchestra
Publisher Info.: Washington, DC: United States Marine Band
Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0
--
In "The Adventure of the Noble Bachelor," Lord Robert St. Simon assumed that Holmes was going up in the world by taking him on as a client; Holmes replied that he was actually descending, as his previous client was something of a king. But it was still a royal feast set out at 221B Baker Street for Lord Robert and the assembled guests.
Just what was in that supper for five, and what did it say about Holmes and his guests?
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Links / Notes
- "The Noble Bachelor"
- "221B Baker Street: Certain Physical Details" by Paul McPharlin, The Baker Street Journal, Vol. 2, No. 2 (OS) 1947, pp. 180-194
- Dining with Sherlock Holmes by Julia Carlson Rosenblatt and Fritz Sonnenschmidt
- I Hear of Sherlock Everywhere Episode 103: Al & Julie Rosenblatt
Performers: Uncredited violinist, US Marine Chamber Orchestra
Publisher Info.: Washington, DC: United States Marine Band
Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0
--
The second week of October marks the remembrance of Christopher Columbus in the U.S.. Long thought to be the individual who "discovered" America, we've come to understand that claim to be overblown and his tendencies less than flawless.
Still, he was a brave voyager. What about some of the great voyages we know that took place in the Sherlock Holmes stories? From traversing the Atlantic and Indian oceans to travel to the deepest regions of Africa, we find ourselves among adventurers, tourists and immigrants alike.
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Links
- Queen Mary 2
- IHOSE Episode 122: Basil Rathbone and Nigel Bruce
- A Study in Scarlet
- "The Gloria Scott"
- Trifles Episode 27 - Rebellion!
- "The Priory School"
- "The Devil's Foot"
- "The Sussex Vampire"
- "The Empty House"
- "His Last Bow"
- Sherlock Holmes and the Titanic Tragedy by William Seil
Music credits
Performers: Uncredited violinist, US Marine Chamber Orchestra
Publisher Info.: Washington, DC: United States Marine Band
Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0
--
We know Sherlock Holmes enjoyed music. From his own violin playing to a few mentions of concerts he attended, he often escaped from the woes of the world and the problems he was trying to solve through music.
In "The Adventure of the Red Headed League," he says "Sarasate plays at St. James's Hall this afternoon," and he and Watson make their way to the concert, where Holmes clearly enjoyed himself, "wrapped in the most perfect happiness, gently waving his long, thin fingers in time to the music."
But what do we know about Sarasate? Who was this performer who was able to distract Holmes for a few hours?
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Links
- Pablo de Sarasate (Wikipedia)
- Anthony Burgess's Murder to Music
- A recording of Sarasate playing Zigeunerweisen from 1904 in Paris
--
"this terrible secret society" [FIVE]
The Ku Klux Klan famously plays a role in "The Adventure of the Five Orange Pips." To British audiences, the 'K.K.K.' note would have seemed mysterious - something along the lines of a Dancing Men code. But to American audiences, it was a known entity.
The KKK was a secret society founded in the southern United States following the Civil War, which committed many outrages. But the KKK as portrayed in this particular Sherlock Holmes story: was it true to life? Or was it a case of literary license?
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Links
- "The Adventure of the Five Orange Pips"
- "Two Southern Exposures of Sherlock Holmes," Manly Wade Wellman, The Baker Street Journal, Vol 2. No. 4 (1947) - available on the eBSJ.
Music credits
Performers: Uncredited violinist, US Marine Chamber Orchestra
Publisher Info.: Washington, DC: United States Marine Band
Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0
--
During the earliest days of the Sherlock Holmes stories, photography was still in its infancy. And yet, we are greeted with a number of instances in which photography plays a central or partial role in the plot.
Who were the Canonical photographers and why did they pursue this hobby? And how did photographs play into Sherlock Holmes's ability to solve crimes?
We also have a follow-up item from Episode 37, thanks to some listener feedback.
Please leave us a rating and review on the podcast player of your choice, and consider supporting our efforts through Patreon or PayPal.
Links
- Stories mentioned in this episode:
- Arthur Conan Doyle, Photographer and the tale of "Chawles" - The British Journal of Photography
- Evidence of Holmes's studies: Sherlock Holmes at Oxford (2nd edition 1981)
- Fibber McGee and Molly
- Walter Paget
Music credits
Performers: Uncredited violinist, US Marine Chamber Orchestra
Publisher Info.: Washington, DC: United States Marine Band
Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0
--
"I have no idea what he intends to go in for" [STUD]
It's our Back to School Blowout Sale! Okay, not really. But since it's September and class is in session, we thought it would be the perfect time to talk about Sherlock Holmes's school days.
In his student days, Holmes said that he considered his habit of observation and deduction to be "the merest hobby." What subjects was he studying at college? What profession did he propose to follow before detective work lured him away? Wouldn't he have considered his skills at observation to be an asset in his main course of study, rather than a hobby unto itself? Or was he studying something where observation and deduction were not particularly useful to him?
And listen closely — particularly if you're Nick Utechin — there is a listener challenge.
Links
Music credits
Performers: Uncredited violinist, US Marine Chamber Orchestra
Publisher Info.: Washington, DC: United States Marine Band
Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0
"I was already in debt to my tradesmen" [COPP]
With Labor Day just behind us, what do we find in the Sherlock Holmes stories in the ways of the working class? Holmes said that the public could hardly tell "a weaver by his tooth or a compositor by his left thumb," [COPP] as two examples of the working class.
Certainly, Sherlock Holmes himself took on the guise of workers, such as "a drunken-looking groom" [SCAN] and "a plumber with a rising business." [MILV] And the Molly Maguires played a role in VALL. What other Canonical tradesmen were we exposed to?
Please leave us a rating and review on the podcast player of your choice, and consider supporting our efforts through Patreon or PayPal.
Links
- The Encyclopedia Sherlockiana by Jack Tracy
- The famous sniffing scene in Fast Times at Ridgemont High
Music credits
Performers: Uncredited violinist, US Marine Chamber Orchestra
Publisher Info.: Washington, DC: United States Marine Band
Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0
--
"The Greek Interpreter" gives us our first glimpse of Mycroft Holmes, through the meeting with him at the Diogenes Club. But it's the introduction of the peculiar Mr. Melas, the Greek interpreter, that sets things in motion.
When you think about all of the activity in this case, couldn't we argue that Melas was really the hero of this story? Or was it Holmes, with his deductions and bravery? Or was it Paul Kratides, who endured torture in order to protect his sister?
We address the premise of the Greek hero in this episode of Trifles.
Please leave us a rating and review on the podcast player of your choice, and consider supporting our efforts through Patreon or PayPal.
Links
Music credits
Performers: Uncredited violinist, US Marine Chamber Orchestra
Publisher Info.: Washington, DC: United States Marine Band
Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0
--
"The Cardboard Box" opens with an iconic diversion on a hot August day on Baker Street. And while the story was published in The Strand Magazine just following "Silver Blaze" and just prior to "The Yellow Face." And yet when the second collection of short stories was published in book form as The Memoirs of Sherlock Holmes in 1894, "The Cardboard Box" did not appear (at least in British editions) until it was included the collection of short stories titled His Last Bow in 1917.
What's more, the famous "mind reading scene" originally included in "The Cardboard Box" was then inserted into "The Resident Patient" when The Memoirs were published. Just what is going on here?
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Links
Music credits
Performers: Uncredited violinist, US Marine Chamber Orchestra
Publisher Info.: Washington, DC: United States Marine Band
Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0
"The Adventure of the Engineer's Thumb" marks the only time that Watson has been responsible for bringing a case to Sherlock Holmes. Go ahead and look it up. We'll wait.
Meanwhile, the few engineers we meet in the Canon are of varied types. But Bliss Austin, BSI, in his masterful magnum opus "Thumbing His Way to Fame," from the Baker Street Journal Vol. 1, No. 4 (Old Series) draws out one or two scientific details that seemed to have escaped Holmes but that may have been more apparent to a trained engineer.
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Links
- The Engineer's Thumb
- I Hear of Sherlock Everywhere Episode 75: Bliss Austin
Music credits
Performers: Uncredited violinist, US Marine Chamber Orchestra
Publisher Info.: Washington, DC: United States Marine Band
Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0
--
Music credits
Performers: Uncredited violinist, US Marine Chamber Orchestra
Publisher Info.: Washington, DC: United States Marine Band
Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0
--
Sidney Paget was the illustrator who first brought widespread visual recognition of Sherlock Holmes to the public. His American counterpart Frederic Dorr Steele got a later start, but made a lasting impact as well.
We discuss Steele's inspiration and the ultimate gift that he left us: an indelible impression of Sherlock Holmes through various publications for the better part of his career.
Please leave us a rating and review on the podcast player of your choice, and consider supporting our efforts through Patreon or PayPal.
Links
- Frederic Dorr Steele (Wikipedia)
- The Players
Music credits
Performers: Uncredited violinist, US Marine Chamber Orchestra
Publisher Info.: Washington, DC: United States Marine Band
Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0
"The chain of events is certainly one of extraordinary interest." [NAVA]
Nepotism, bullying, carelessness and a locked room mystery — "The Naval Treaty" has it all. A young government employee is given a top secret assignment that keeps him at his desk late at night, but the document he was working on goes missing. And it's up to Sherlock Holmes to find the culprit.
Clocking in at 12,701 words, this story is the longest of the 56 short stories in the Sherlock Holmes canon. But should it really have taken Holmes that long to figure out the mystery? We discuss some of the finer points of the story, including glaring plot point that you may have missed before.
Please leave us a rating and review on the podcast player of your choice, and consider supporting our efforts through Patreon or PayPal.
Links
- Please nominate us for a People's Choice Award or in the Arts category in the 2017 Podcast Awards
- "The Naval Treaty"
- "Bob's your uncle"
Music credits
Performers: Uncredited violinist, US Marine Chamber Orchestra
Publisher Info.: Washington, DC: United States Marine Band
Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0
"there can be no question as to the authorship" [SIGN]
"The Adventure of the Mazarin Stone" took place in July 1903 and it shares a distinction with one other Sherlock Holmes story: like "The Adventure of the Lion's Mane," this is the only other story that is told by a third person.
We review some theories, summed up by Leslie Klinger, BSI ("The Abbey Grange") in his Daypark Press publication of a Baker Street Irregulars dinner memento in 2001. From Christopher Morley to O.F. Grazebrook, Gavin Brend, Martin Dakin and more, there are clever and preposterous suggestions as to whose pen was behind this story.
Not to mention the question of the layout of 221B Baker Street, the mysterious bay window, the condition of the wax bust, and more.
See which theory you side with in this episode of Trifles...
Links
- Please nominate us for a People's Choice Award or in the Arts category in the 2017 Podcast Awards
- "The Adventure of the Mazarin Stone"
- Tim Greer on I Hear of Sherlock Everywhere Episode 115: Sherlock Holmes in the Theater
- There was a connection between Charlie McCarthy / Edgar Bergen and Sherlock Holmes:
Music credits
Performers: Uncredited violinist, US Marine Chamber Orchestra
Publisher Info.: Washington, DC: United States Marine Band
Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0
"among the harpooners my research was nearing its end" [BLAC]
We have one of the most iconic openings in the Sherlock Holmes stories in "The Adventure of Black Peter" - the year '95, Holmes in disguise, returning from the butcher's with his weapon of choice: a harpoon.
Sir Arthur Conan Doyle pulled on his own knowledge of whaling vessels and voyages (as referenced in an earlier IHOSE episode), but how likely was the occurrence which we learned of in this story? The era of hand-held harpooning was over by that time. How does one go about practice-harpooning a pig in polite London society? And what of the physics of the demonstration?
These questions and more await in this episode of Trifles...
Please leave us a rating and review on the podcast player of your choice, and consider supporting our efforts through Patreon or PayPal.
Links
- Please nominate us for a People's Choice Award or in the Arts category in the 2017 Podcast Awards
- "The Adventure of Black Peter"
- I Hear of Sherlock Everywhere Episode 48: Dangerous Work
Music credits
Performers: Uncredited violinist, US Marine Chamber Orchestra
Publisher Info.: Washington, DC: United States Marine Band
Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0
--
Independence Day is celebrated in the United States on July 4. It marks the date of the signing of the Declaration of Independence, a document that preceeded the American Revolution. This, as well as numerous other acts of rebellion in the years leading up to the war, represented a principled stand against British authority.
And we have rebellion against British authority aptly represented in "The Gloria Scott," which William Baring-Gould placed in July of 1874. Trevor Sr. was sentenced to transportation for "breaking my country's laws" while he was a banker - namely, embezzlement. And perhaps the rebellious streak continued with Trevor, Jr. as he brought his dog on campus, to which we offer a toast penned by John Baesch, BSI, ASH.
Please leave us a rating and review on the podcast player of your choice, and consider supporting our efforts through Patreon or PayPal.
Links
- Please nominate us for a People's Choice Award or in the Arts category in the 2017 Podcast Awards
- "The Gloria Scott"
- A history of transportation in Australia
- The Hyde Parks Barracks Museum in Sydney
Performers: Uncredited violinist, US Marine Chamber Orchestra
Publisher Info.: Washington, DC: United States Marine Band
Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0
--
Once again, we have a con man at work, eager to enrich himself. He finds his mark, manages to get him away from the scene where his work needs to happen, and is eventually caught red-handed by Sherlock Holmes. Does this plot device sound familar? It should. Or at least it did, once we got the names of the minor characters straight...
This tale has been recognized as sharing the plot of "The Red-Headed League" and "The Stock-Broker's Clerk". If indeed the plot is strong enough to be employed three times, which story makes the best use of it, and why?
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Links
- "The Adventure of the Three Garridebs"
- "The Adventure of the Red Headed League"
- "The Stock-broker's Clerk"
- I Hear of Sherlock Everywhere Episode 91: The Confidence Game
Music credits
Performers: Uncredited violinist, US Marine Chamber Orchestra
Publisher Info.: Washington, DC: United States Marine Band
Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0
In the early stories in The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes, Dr. Watson was admittedly new to the bio-docu-drama genre that he was creating. And while we've gotten comfortable with putting "The Adventure of..." in front of nearly every short story about Sherlock Holmes, a handful of these early stories were not titled that way. "A Scandal in Bohemia" and "A Case of Identity" were the first and third stories to be published in The Strand and did not carry that title.
But aside from that difference, "A Case of Identity" stands out. Not because it was devoid of a crime, but because its premise seemed inherently unbelievable. A young lady not recognizing her own stepfather? How is it that Watson (and Arthur Conan Doyle) managed to pull this off?
Links
Music credits
Performers: Uncredited violinist, US Marine Chamber Orchestra
Publisher Info.: Washington, DC: United States Marine Band.
Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0
"He had described his household" [WIST]
We're acutely aware of some of the fathers in the Sherlock Holmes stories, and the dastardly deeds associated with them. Individuals such as Jephro Rucastle and Grimesby Roylott spring to mind.
But what about figures who occupied a position as head of the household who weren't necessarily fathers themselves? With Fathers Day coming up this weekend, we thought this was an excellent time to take a moment and reflect on who these individuals are and what their role in the Canon was.
Please leave us a rating and review on iTunes or Google Play, and consider supporting our efforts through Patreon or PayPal.
Links
- I Hear of Sherlock Everywhere Episode 43: Fathers in the Canon
Music credits
Performers: Uncredited violinist, US Marine Chamber Orchestra
Publisher Info.: Washington, DC: United States Marine Band.
Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0
In this episode, we look at how married life was treating Dr. Watson in "The Adventure of the Boscombe Valley Mystery." William S. Baring-Gould placed this at June 6 or June 8, 1889. It was published as the fourth short story in the collection known as The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes.
In the opening scene, Holmes sends for the recently married Watson to accompany him on a case, and Mary Watson, far from nagging her husband about his penchant for dashing off with his friend, actually urges Watson to go. Watson gives her a charming compliment in return by alluding to their romantic meeting in The Sign of Four. The affectionate circle is completed when Holmes gives Watson very gracious thanks for agreeing to come along on the trip.
What are we to make of Watson's home life? Is he simply using a literary technique by making his marriage seem able to weather the storm of Holmes? Or was Mary genuinely understanding of the push-pull relationship between the doctor and the detective?
A tribute to the late Peter Sallis, an appearance by Felix Unger and Oscar Madison, and more surprises await.
Links
- Remembering Peter Sallis
- "A Married Man"
- IHOSE Episode 26: A Musical Stroll Down Baker Street
- The Odd Couple
Music credits
Performers: Uncredited violinist, US Marine Chamber Orchestra
Publisher Info.: Washington, DC: United States Marine Band.
Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0
"back to the same establishment" [GOLD]
The last time we met, we were in the middle of a pub quiz. How were you doing? We're going to pick up where we left off, talking about various public houses, bars, taverns and inns that were mentioned in the Sherlock Holmes stories. Each played an important role in the story in which it was set.
And as a bonus, we'll get you inside some of the real-life establishments* that you might stroll past the next time you're in London.
*We're pleased to report that the Criterion is open, but under the name Savini at Criterion.
Please leave us a rating and review on iTunes or Google Play, and consider supporting our efforts through Patreon or PayPal.
Links
- Episode 21 - Pubs and Taverns, Part 1
- The Criterion - now Savini at Criterion
- The Criterion as seen in The Dark Knight
- The Sherlock Holmes Pub
Music credits
Performers: Uncredited violinist, US Marine Chamber Orchestra
Publisher Info.: Washington, DC: United States Marine Band.
Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0
"gone to the nearest public house" [SOLI]
We owe the entire Canon to Watson's drinking habits. Because he found himself at the Criterion Bar, he eventually found his way to Holmes. And just as importantly, public houses, taverns and bars play a role throughout the Sherlock Holmes stories.
These locations are where they gathered intelligence, and met clients, or simply refreshed themselves. In the spirit of British pubs, we'll treat you to a bit of a pub quiz. Let's see how you do.
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Links
- Academic Festival Overture by Johannes Brahms
- Gaudeamus igitur
- Bright College Days by Tom Lehrer
Music credits
Performers: Uncredited violinist, US Marine Chamber Orchestra
Publisher Info.: Washington, DC: United States Marine Band.
Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0
"His Grace is surprised, Dr. Huxtable" [PRIO]
The opening of "The Adventure of the Priory School" is one of the best in the entirety of the Sherlock Holmes stories by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. Dr. Huxtable lands on the bearskin rug and from Watson's brandy administration to Holmes helping himself to the contents of Huxtable's pockets, it's vintage Sherlock Holmes.
What do we know of Dr. Huxtable, and more importantly, what did he know about the Duke of Holdernesse? His days-long delay in seeking help meant that the trail was slightly cold for Holmes — a strange priority, even if His Grace was concerned about publicity. Just when did Dr. Huxtable first get to know the Duke and what did his station require?
From tennis to tails, and Monty Python to Morgan Freeman reading the Canon, we've got it all.
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LinksMusic credits
Performers: Uncredited violinist, US Marine Chamber Orchestra
Publisher Info.: Washington, DC: United States Marine Band.
Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0
"by the honour of your mother" [SIGN]
There's no question that fathers play a significant role in many of the Sherlock Holmes stories. But what about mothers? As Mothers Day will be celebrated on May 14 in the United States, we thought it was an appropriate time to look at mothers and motherly figures in the Canon.
From independent women to those who tragically lost their mothers, we see a common thread of strength. Where did Conan Doyle draw his examples from? And what did Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson make of such women? Its all here in Trifles.
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Music credits
Performers: Uncredited violinist, US Marine Chamber Orchestra
Publisher Info.: Washington, DC: United States Marine Band.
Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0
"have a look at the horse" [SILV]
One of the best regarded stories in the Sherlock Holmes canon is "Silver Blaze." The story has so many elements to it that lend themselves to the lore of Sherlock Holmes: the Baker Street opening, the image of Holmes and Watson in the railway carriage, a number of famous quotes. We'll be revisiting this story again in Trifles.
But for this time, our focus is on the horse. With the Kentucky Derby approaching on May 6, it's an apt time to consider the heritage of Silver Blaze and the associated activities that were happening during that time. Noted sports columnist Red Smith had some thoughts about Holmes's actions and the racetrack bookie, and S. Tupper Bigelow took an opposite tack. Who was right? You'll have to tune in to hear.
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Hop on board with us as we explore the glimpses we have of Sherlock Holmes in "The Adventure of the Copper Beeches," the story that originally appeared in the Strand Magazine in June 1892 and was the final story in the Adventures.
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Links
Music credits
Performers: Uncredited violinist, US Marine Chamber Orchestra
Publisher Info.: Washington, DC: United States Marine Band.
Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0
"it is with a heavy heart" [FINA]
"The Final Problem" is a shocking tale, both for contemporaries of the Strand Magazine as well as for first-time readers of The Memoirs of Sherlock Holmes. Christopher Morley wrote: "Devoted readers have rarely had such a shock as the opening words of this story when it first appeared in the Strand Magazine."
And so too did we. Some reflections on the drastic turn of events and of the reactions to readers around the world.
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Links
Music credits
Performers: Uncredited violinist, US Marine Chamber Orchestra
Publisher Info.: Washington, DC: United States Marine Band.
Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0
While there is no explicit mention of Easter in the Sherlock Holmes story, we do have a story arc that follows the Easter mystery.
While Holmes himself may not have been terribly religious (although he did express some acknowledgement of a higher power from time to time), he respected the tradition and the necessary belief in resurrection.
"roused its snakish temper" [SPEC]
"The Adventure of the Speckled Band" is consistently ranked as one of the most popular Sherlock Holmes stories written by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. And in it, there are so many gems, so many possibilities to explore.
We manage to delve into a few of them, including Dr. Roylott's clever yet poorly executed plan, the seemingly disparate time it took for victims to die, a passing glance at scores of untold cases accumulated during those early years, and more.
Please leave us a rating and review on iTunes or Google Play, or the listening platform of your choice, and consider supporting our efforts through Patreon or PayPal.
Links Music credits
Performers: Uncredited violinist, US Marine Chamber Orchestra
Publisher Info.: Washington, DC: United States Marine Band.
Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0
"quarter day is at hand" [WIST]
There are at least two instances in the Sherlock Holmes stories when we come across a mention of quarter day. Just what is quarter day, and what is the significance with regard to these two stories?
We delve into the history of quarter days, cross-quarter days and why the real estate market had such an impact on calendars and ultimately played into the plots of "Wisteria Lodge" and "The Resident Patient."
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Links Music credits
Performers: Uncredited violinist, US Marine Chamber Orchestra
Publisher Info.: Washington, DC: United States Marine Band.
Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0
"To Sherlock Holmes, she is always the woman" [SCAN]
It is the first story in The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes, and it is also the first of what we might call the stories of legend: those Canonical tales that have inspired our imaginations far beyond the events that Watson wrote down.
We already have Holmes and Watson, legends enough for anyone, but just as "The Greek Interpreter" reveals brother Mycroft Holmes, and "The Final Problem" outlines the evil figure of Moriarty, "A Scandal in Bohemia" introduces a character so compelling that she pervades our image of Sherlock Holmes forever after. Irene Adler, of dubious and questionable memory — to us, she is always "the woman!"
Please leave us a rating and review on iTunes or Google Play, and consider supporting our efforts through Patreon or PayPal.
Links Music credits
Performers: Uncredited violinist, US Marine Chamber Orchestra
Publisher Info.: Washington, DC: United States Marine Band.
Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0
"you could not celebrate him without being known yourself" [HOUN]
With mid-March upon us, we thought it was high time to investigate some of the Irish connections in the Sherlock Holmes stories. From the obvious to the subtle, we go from Belfast to Waterford to Skibbereen, across the pond to America, and back again.
Short stories and novels alike, there are glimpses of the Emerald Isle in a number of hiding places in the Canon. Did we miss any? Well, you'll just have to tell us.
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Links
- No links this episode
Performers: Uncredited violinist, US Marine Chamber Orchestra
Publisher Info.: Washington, DC: United States Marine Band.
Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0
--
"He was clad in his dressing gown" [CREE]
You'll find Sherlock Holmes lounging in his dressing gown in no fewer than 14 of the original stories. And yet, its color changed from story to story. Sherlock Holmes's dressing gown was alternatively purple, blue and mouse — how can this be?
We discuss the possibilities that scholars have put forth over the course of many decades and even add our own conjecture. Add in a quick primer on what dressing gowns are and what Victorian / Edwardian habits were that required them, and you've got the best podcast episode about dressing gowns and Sherlock Holmes you've ever heard.
A tip of the deerstalker goes to Bill Hyder, BSI, whose 1995 BSI Dinner publication "TRIFLES" contained this very topic.
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Links
Music credits
Performers: Uncredited violinist, US Marine Chamber Orchestra
Publisher Info.: Washington, DC: United States Marine Band.
Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0
--
"embrace the true faith" [STUD]
We see glimpses of religion in a number of stories, from plot devices to red herrings, saintly inferences to clever disguises. What role did religion play in the Sherlock Holmes stories?
And Arthur Conan Doyle's own faith had some bearing on what we see as well. It's a chat about religion, faith, and their multitude of instances in the Canon.
Links Music credits
Performers: Uncredited violinist, US Marine Chamber Orchestra
Publisher Info.: Washington, DC: United States Marine Band.
Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0
"it is a very sweet little problem" [BERY]
One of the more comical openings to a story occurred in "The Adventure of the Beryl Coronet," in which the banker Alexander Holder raced his way through to snow to 221B Baker Street, which he followed by beating his head against the wall.
You don't get much more dramatic than that. But when it comes to reporting the crime, would the criminal, Holder, or the owner of the beryl coronet have been more at risk if the details came to light? After all, the coronet was a public holding and its absence could have been an embarrassment.
Links
Music credits
Performers: Uncredited violinist, US Marine Chamber Orchestra
Publisher Info.: Washington, DC: United States Marine Band.
Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0
"what's amiss with the names?" [VALL]
One of the most puzzling passages in the Sherlock Holmes stories is when Mrs. Watson referred to her husband, the good Doctor, as "James." However, we know that his given name is John. What could be afoot here?
Was it a typo? An impostor? A slip of the tongue? We review some of the longstanding theories and even provide a few of our own to see if we might get to the bottom of this mystery.
Links- "The Adventure of the Man with the Twisted Lip"
- Sherlock Holmes: A Study in Sources by Donald A. Redmond
Music credits
Performers: Uncredited violinist, US Marine Chamber Orchestra
Publisher Info.: Washington, DC: United States Marine Band.
Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0
"a puzzled quarter of an hour" [MISS]
The Sherlock Holmes stories are filled with hints of dates, places and people that cause them to be intertwined with reality. It is therefore natural to think that we can arrive at some certainty as to the date of an adventure when Watson gives us a specific month in which a case begins. It is also wrong to think so.
"The Adventure of the Missing Three-Quarter" is one such example. We're given a February date (hence the release date of this episode) and yet, as we can plainly see, that date is impossible, given other facts. So we follow the path of many Canonical chronologists who attempted to determine the actual date of this adventure, using logic and history as our guide. Were they right? Tune in to find out.
Links
- "The Adventure of the Missing Three-Quarter"
- An online version of some of the chronologies of the stories
- "The Date Being—?"
- The Annotated Sherlock Holmes by William S. Baring-Gould
- The New Annotated Sherlock Holmes by Leslie S. Klinger
- The Sherlock Holmes Reference Library: The Return of Sherlock Holmes
Music credits
Performers: Uncredited violinist, US Marine Chamber Orchestra
Publisher Info.: Washington, DC: United States Marine Band.
Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0
Charles Augustus Milverton was considered by Sherlock Holmes to be "the worst man in London." Watson tried to shield the date of the case — not to protect Milverton, but to protect his victims.
And Holmes and Watson went to extraordinary lengths to defeat the odious blackmailer, from burglary to destruction of property, and even a faux engagement by Holmes. While reputation was everything in Victorian times, did the pair go too far? Their willingness to break the law was in service of victims, but what about their own reputations and adherence to the law?
Please subscribe to us on iTunes or Google Play, and consider supporting our efforts through Patreon or PayPal.
Music credits
Performers: Uncredited violinist, US Marine Chamber Orchestra
Publisher Info.: Washington, DC: United States Marine Band.
Copyright: Creative Commons Attribution 3.0
Sir Eustace Brackenstall met with a grisly, if appropriate end in "The Abbey Grange." Ultimately, Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson let his killer go free.
But was Captain Crocker solely responsible for Brackenstall's death? Other individuals were involved with the calm plotting of the aftermath of the death — but whose shoulders bear the ultimate brunt of the guilt in the end?
Links
- "The Abbey Grange"
- "The game's afoot" as found in King Henry's speech "Once more unto the breach" in Henry V.
Dr. Watson tells us that he and Sherlock Holmes visited one London restaurant two times. And while the gustatory habits of the famed Baker Street duo are not entirely well-documented, we have a good sense as to what they must have eaten at the famed Simpson's in-the-Strand.
This is a case of fact meeting fiction, as Simpson's is very much a real establishment in London — one that was recently in danger of losing its identity. We bring you inside this gem that dates from the 1820s as a cigar and chess divan and explore what dining like Sherlock Holmes was like.
Links
- Simpson's in-the-Strand
- Restaurant Frequented by Sherlock Holmes May Vanish — I Hear of Sherlock Everywhere
- "The Illustrious Client"
- "The Dying Detective"
--
The opening lines of A Study in Scarlet are rich with details about Dr. Watson's past. His medical degree, his army service, even his injury. He recalls how he came to London without knowing anyone in the city and proceeded to blow through his cash reserves.
Just how far could one get on 11s. 6p. per day in 1881? And how fortunate we are that Watson couldn't keep to his budget. For his cash situation is what required him to find a flatmate...
Links
- The Man Who Created Sherlock Holmes: the Life and Times of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle by Andrew Lycett
- Teller of Tales: The Life of Arthur Conan Doyle by Daniel Shashower
- A Study in Scarlet
The new year usually brings resolutions and offers a new beginning. In our new podcast which begins in January 2017, we thought it was the ideal time to look at optimism in the Sherlock Holmes stories.
Was there more hope or despair in the Canon? Certainly, many cases began with despair, but which ones ended in optimism?
From "The Stockbroker's Clerk" to "The Copper Beeches," we have clients who were optimistically heading into new jobs. But all was not as it seemed... And what ends well for Sherlock Holmes does not always mean the same thing for his clients.
Links
- Maria Konnikova on Episode 91 of I Hear of Sherlock Everywhere, discussing The Confidence Game.
- The Sherlock Holmes stories online