Sherlock Holmes Paper
There is no doubt that Sherlock Holmes is a memorable story character. His intriguing wit, arrogance, sidekick Dr. Watson, and extraordinary observation of life to solve a crime, all combine together to create a skilled detective who can capture the attention of undying attention of readers everywhere. Although there are many key examples of Sherlock Holmes’s brilliance and exuberant personalities throughout the book, The Hound of the Baskervilles, there are seven that stood out to me in this gripping mystery. The first example occurred in the very first chapter of the book, when Holmes and Watson are trying to figure out what mysterious man would leave his walking stick on their doorstep. Holmes discovers bite marks on the cane, and decides through his skilled sense of observation, that somehow the carrier of the item had a dog who toted around the stick in its mouth. Not only a dog, but judging from the bite marks, one “To be bigger than a terrier but slightly smaller than a mastiff” (10) this example clearly shows Holmes’s knack for observing every single little detail, even ones that most common people would find unimportant. In a scene early on in the book, when Dr. Mortimer enters the office Homes announces to him that judging by his forefinger, he rolled his own cigarettes. (14) Another example of Holmes’s memorable sense of observation, was when he was reading the warning note sent from the anonymous messenger, and concluded it came from a New York Times paper, and sends Cartwright to check twenty-three hotels for the specific new paper (52) Holmes also observed that the Times paper excerpt “Had been cut by women’s nail scissors, judging by the two cuts.” (37) Holmes is also very sneaky in his detective work, which some may argue to be part of his large ego. An example of that was when he snuck out to the shack to fend for himself and observe the residents of the moor, mainly to catch Stapleton in the act of somehow