Preview

Holmes's Story The Adventure Of The Speckled Band

Satisfactory Essays
Open Document
Open Document
300 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Holmes's Story The Adventure Of The Speckled Band
Holmes is correct in his conclusion that "doctors make the greatest criminals." In his story "The Adventure of the Speckled Band" we learn about a doctor who kills his one step daughter and is planning to kill his other step daughter to get this late wife's money all for himself. "When a doctor does go wrong he is the first of criminals He has nerve and he has knowledge" stated Holmes. I agree with this statement because physicians are experts in medication which can be toxic. Doctors also know about poisons. It is possible to poison someone and for the cause of death not to be know. They are very skilled with sharp objects such as a scalpel. Thy are experts in the human body and know what artery they can cut and you can die quickly.

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Powerful Essays

    The discovery of a murder in Philadelphia in October 1894 opened the door to a case that few could believe. Marion Hedgepeth, a one-time cellmate of a man who went by the name H.M. Howard, informed police about a recent scam. It involved insuring a man named Benjamin Pitezel for $10,000 with the Fidelity Mutual Life Association in 1893 in Chicago, and then faking his death in a laboratory explosion by substituting a cadaver. All participants were then to split the insurance payment, but Howard had reneged and run off with the money. Hedgepeth was informing on him as payback, and his detailed letter about the scheme was passed along to the company. In short order, they…

    • 5132 Words
    • 21 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Larson’s tone when describing Holmes’ background and his characteristics is an ambiguous tone because Holmes was perceived as charming, well looking, and genuine, but in reality everything was just an act, which covered his true identity. Holmes is not the handsome young man everyone thinks he is because according to previous pages, he left Mooers Fork without paying his lodging bill, which supports his true identity, a criminal. Especially now that Holmes is the new owner of the pharmacy, he does not need anything from Mrs. Holton, and therefore creates for her to disappear. Holmes is clearly responsible for the disappearance of Mrs. Holton because as neighbors ask for her, he changes a fraction of the story to explain her disappearance for…

    • 134 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    After being raised by loving strict religious parents and suffering from a somewhat troubling child hood and a very successful college career in medicine from one of the best medical colleges in the country at the time. Herman Webster Mudgett went on to become known as Henry Howard Holmes (H.H Holmes).H.H Holmes is one of the first recorded serial killers in America. Suspected of over 200 murders all over the country but mostly focused in Chicago during the 1893 World’s Fair. H.H Holmes designed and built a killing house known as the murder castle where he committed almost all of his murders. Aside from murdering people Holmes had committed many other crimes such as credit fraud, insurance scams, and sold phony inventions. Not all of these…

    • 155 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    H. H. Holmes was born in Gilmanton, New Hampshire to a privileged, methodist family, his original name being Herman Webster Mudgett. Herman was deemed an intellectual at an early age, expressing interest in medicine. After he graduated highschool at age 16, he went straight to medical school, where he began to steal deceased bodies and used the bodies to make false insurance claims and even experimenting on them. Later when he graduated he moved to Chicago under the false alias Henry H.…

    • 83 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    If we seem doubtful of the assumption that one is morally upright simply because he or she has a career in medicine, we are struck with a seemingly viable counterargument: all doctors must take the Hippocratic Oath in which they “solemnly” swear to “uphold a number of professional ethical standards” (www.nlm.nih.gov). If we still remain unconvinced as to the universal rectitude of all clinicians, we are belittled and then told that doctors do have our best intentions in mind, as they spent years and countless amounts of money thoroughly studying every aspect of the human body. For why would anyone spend 12 years and half a million dollars for any other reason than to carefully heal and nurture the body of his fellow man? Most of the time, our reliance on “authority heuristics” is rewarded as it is noted that the “majority of physicians” take the words of Hippocrates to heart and refrain from “abus[ing] their patients” (Pesta 4).…

    • 640 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Case Law Search

    • 950 Words
    • 4 Pages

    Physicians tend to do what they feel is right, and what might feel right or makes sense from a business or logical perspective could actually land them in jail.…

    • 950 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    And Then There Were None

    • 718 Words
    • 3 Pages

    Every doctor takes a Hippocratic oath which is an oath to practice medicine ethically and honestly.…

    • 718 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    When people skim through a magazine, their eyes usually only pass over the advertisements for a few seconds, increasing the need for companies to grab the viewer's attention quickly and effectively. For this reason, businesses use images in order to better reach their customers. In the ad for Nike, (a manufacturer of athletic clothing) a picture of record-breaking golfer Tiger Woods and one of his quotes is combined in an effort to convey their message more effectively: buy stuff from Nike.…

    • 375 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    H.H. Holmes

    • 3086 Words
    • 13 Pages

    The United States first known serial killer was named H. H. Holmes. H. H. Holmes would later be said to be an alias created by Herman Webster Mudgett who was a doctor. It was said that Herman as a child had a privileged childhood. As a young child Holmes appeared to be remarkably intellectual. According to Holmes’s personality traits; there were lingering signs of what was to come. It was at an early age Holmes had a connected curiosity of medicine, which was apparently directed to medicine. During much of Dr. Holmes life he started doing shady things at an early age and was considered a loner. According to research the starting point in H. H. Holmes spiral to murder would be as a child bullies initially wanted to scare Herman, his schoolmates forced human skeletons on him. Holmes was not scared actuality Holmes became fascinated. Holmes soon became obsessed with death. H. H. Holmes would later become a brilliant swindler, a petty cheat, who turned out to be a mass murderer; whom also had a tortuous mind. Holmes pyramided fraud upon fraud upon people who later became his victims of his crime. Holmes was a young, attractive, superficial man, who fascinated professional men and mesmerized nice young women, later three of whom he wedded bigamously. H.H. Holmes deserves to be one of the greatest criminals of time. Crime writers have reserved the word “monster” for murderers like H. H. Holmes. H. H. Holmes met these certain rigid requirements as seen later in his life.…

    • 3086 Words
    • 13 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    The article “Girl Moved To Tears By ‘Of Mice and Men’ Cliffs Notes” from The Onion is a satirical passage criticizing students and the way they read assigned novels; by not actually reading it but by looking at someone else’s notes on it. The literary element of satire uses irony, sarcasm, parody, hyperbole, or other methods of ridicule and humor that criticizes, but also attempts to improve human institutions or human follies. In this article, the use of situational irony is used to support the satire by making it appear as if the character, Grace Weaver, has actually read the book but in reality has not. The way that Weaver reacts to the cliffs notes about Of Mice and Men by Steinbeck, one would usually expect that she read through the novel and not only understood it but connected to it. However, Weaver did not read the novel at all and only read through cliffs notes of it. In the article Weaver says “I’m also going to find that book about rabbits that George was always reading to Lennie, so that I can really understand that important allusion.” The irony in this statement that Weaver makes is extremely evident to the whole satirical aspect of this article. Weaver wants to learn more about the story; to get more in depth, but the option of actually reading the novel isn’t there in her mind. She thinks of other things to do to get a better understanding of the book, but the best option she doesn’t think of; reading the book. Weaver’s professor says in the article after knowing that Weaver chose to read cliffs notes instead of the novel, “I look forward to skimming her essay on the importance of following your dreams and randomly assigning it a grade.” This quote shows that Weaver is not, necessarily, going to get a good grade on the assignment because she never actually read through the book and so doesn’t really know what it’s about. The satire of the article criticizes the way students choose to do book projects, but then attempts to reform that folly by…

    • 369 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    John Locke and Thomas Hobbes were two main political philosophers during the seventeenth century. Hobbes is largely known for his writing of the “Leviathan”, and Locke for authoring "An Essay Concerning Human Understanding." Included in their essays, both men discuss the purpose and structure of government, natural law, and the characteristics of man in and out of the state of nature. The two men's opinion of man vary widely. Hobbes sees man as being evil, whereas Locke views man in a much more optimistic light. While in the state of nature and under natural law, they both agree that man is equal. However, their ideas of natural law differ greatly. Hobbes positions himself with the view that the state of nature is a state of war where every man is for himself and loyalty to another being will only bring dismay. Contrastingly, Locke sees natural law and the state of nature as a place of equality and freedom for all. Locke therefore believes that government is necessary in order to preserve natural law, and on the contrary, Hobbes sees government as necessary in order to control natural law.…

    • 1028 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Doctors make mistakes in a patient’s medical care. Doctors are not perfect because they’re human and, as a result, they misdiagnose patients. For example, a woman was diagnosed with cancer, then she decided to take a lethal dose of painkillers which led to her death. However, during her autopsy the medical examiner found she never had cancer (St. Clair). In a study by John Hopkins Medicine more than 250,000 Americans die each year due to medical errors (Allen and Pierce). Doctors make mistakes all the time and this results in patients dying without being diagnosed with a terminally ill illness.…

    • 729 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Coder Interview

    • 1008 Words
    • 5 Pages

    doctors learn in the profession of medicine. Doctors have to be paid which requires a different skill that…

    • 1008 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Unlike today, the Ancient Roman doctors received no respect, because they were considered to be fraudilant. This reputation was caused by the doctors magical tricks, and the lack of useful treatments. The job required minimal training, as they only had to apprentice with their senior. Thus, many free slaves and people who had failed at everything else filled this profession. Some did try to find new remedies; however, others used medicine to con people. Public surgeries were done to attract audiences as an advertisement. Doctors would even become beauticians providing perfumes, cosmetics, and even hairdressing. When wives wanted their husbands gone, they would say, ¡§put the patient out of his misery¡¨ and the doctors would be the murderers. However, as wars began to break out, there were improvements because medicine was needed to treat the many casualities of war. Thus as a result, military doctors discovered new techniques for treatment. Hospitals also developed as a result of military influence. Civilian doctors worked out of their home or storefronts. Like all cities, the wealthier members of society could afford the best treatments. Therefore, they usually had personal doctors. The Emperors had doctors and several times they proved useful.…

    • 927 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    As students works towards their Ph.D., they are often reminded of the things that are expected from them as they enter the workforce. One expectation that the future physicians in the United States of America are to know, is the Principles of Medical Ethics, a list of ethics adopted by the American Medical Association in June of 1957 and most recently revised in June 2001. In addition to the ethics adopted by the American Medical Association, an upcoming physician should also be aware of the World Medical Association Code of Medical Ethics. Combining both codes of ethics results in an honest and moral physician, whereas breaking the law results in serious consequences.…

    • 546 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays