The Adventure of the Speckled Band

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"The Adventure of the Speckled Band"
Author Arthur Conan Doyle
Released 1892
Series The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes
Client(s) Miss Helen Stoner
Set in 1883
Villain(s) Dr. Grimesby Roylott

"The Adventure of the Speckled Band" is one of the 56 short Sherlock Holmes stories written by British author Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. It is the eighth of the twelve stories collected in The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes. The story was first published in Strand Magazine in February 1892, with illustrations by Sidney Paget. It was published under the different title "The Spotted Band" in New York World in August 1905. Doyle later revealed that he thought this was his best Holmes story.[1]

Doyle wrote and produced a play based on the story. It premiered at the Adelphi Theatre, London on 4 June 1910, with H. A. Saintsbury as Sherlock Holmes and Lyn Harding as Dr. Grimesby Roylott. The play, originally called The Stonor Case, differs from the story in several details, such as the names of some of the characters.[1]

Contents

[edit] Plot summary

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

A young woman named Helen Stoner consults the detective Sherlock Holmes about her ill-tempered and immensely strong stepfather, Dr. Grimesby Roylott. He has required her to move into a particular room of his heavily mortgaged ancestral home, Stoke Moran. The room has some very odd features, such as a bed bolted to the floor. It is also the room that Stoner's twin sister, Julia, had slept in when she died under suspicious circumstances. Julia had been engaged to be married and had she lived would have received a L250 pound annuity from her late mother's income. Now Helen is enguaged to be married.

A number of other details about the place are mysterious and disturbing. A low whistling sound is heard late at night, as well as a metallic clank. There is a strange bell cord over the bed, and it does not seem to work any bell. There are also Julia's dying words about a "speckled band." Stoner surmises that Julia might have been referring to the Gypsies whom Dr. Roylott permits to live on the grounds, which is patrolled by a dog named Siva. A cheetah and a baboon also have the run of the property. Helen feels reluctant to sleep in the room.

After arranging for Helen Stoner to spend the night somewhere else, Holmes and Watson sneak in her room that night without Dr. Roylott's knowledge. Holmes says that he has already deduced the solution to the mystery, and that this test of his theory turns out to be successful. They hear the whistle, and Holmes also sees what the bell cord is really for, although Watson does not. Julia's last words about a "speckled band" was in fact describing a "swamp adder, the deadliest snake in India." The venomous snake had been sent to Julia's room by Dr. Roylott to murder her. After the swamp adder bit Julia he called off the snake with the whistling, which made the snake climb up through the bell cord, disappearing from the scene.

Now the swamp adder is sent again to kill Julia's sister Helen, and Holmes attacks the snake, sending it back up the rope. It goes back through an air ventilator connected to the next room and bites Dr. Roylott instead, killing the perpetrator.

Spoilers end here.

[edit] Inspirations

Richard Lancelyn Green, the editor of the 1998 Oxford paperback edition of The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes, surmises that Doyle's source for the story appears to have been the article named "Called on by a Boa Constrictor. A West African Adventure" in Cassell's Saturday Journal, published in February 1891.[1] In the article, a captain tells how he was dispatched to a remote camp in West Africa where the only house was a tumbledown cabin that belonged to a Portuguese trader. On the first night in the cabin, he is awoken by a creaking sound, and sees "a dark queer-looking thing hanging down through the ventilator above it". It turns out to be the largest Boa constrictor he has seen. He is paralysed with fear as the serpent comes down into the room. Unable to cry out for help, the captain spots an old bell that hung from a projecting beam above one of the windows. The bell cord had rotten away, but by means of a stick he manages to ring it and raise the alarm.

[edit] Swamp adder

Naja naja, the Indian cobra
Naja naja, the Indian cobra

The name swamp adder is an invented one,[1] and the scientific treatises of Doyle's time do not mention any kind of adder of India.[2] To fans of Sherlock Holmes, who enjoy treating the stories as altered accounts of real events, the true identity of this snake has been a puzzle since the publication of the story, even to professional herpetologists.[2] Many species of snakes have been proposed for it, and Richard Lancelyn Green concludes the Indian cobra (Naja naja) is the snake which most closely resembles, rather than Boa constrictor, which is not venomous.[1] The Indian cobra has black and white speckled marks, and is one of the most lethal of the Indian venomous snakes with a neurotoxin which will often provoke a fatal death in a few minutes. It is also a good climber and is used by snake charmers in India.

Bitis arietans from Africa, Russell's viper and saw-scaled viper also bear resemblance to the swamp adder of the story, but they have hemotoxin — slow working venoms.[1]

Heloderma suspectum, the Mexican Gila monster
Heloderma suspectum, the Mexican Gila monster

The herpetologist Laurence Monroe Klauber proposed a theory that the swamp adder was an artificial hybrid between the Mexican Gila monster (Heloderma suspectum) and Naja naja.[2] His speculation suggests that Doyle might have hidden a double-meaning in Holmes' words. What Holmes said, reported by Watson, was "It is a swamp adder, the deadliest snake in India"; but Klauber suggested what Holmes did really say was "It is a samp-aderm, the deadliest skink in India." Samp-aderm can be translated "snake-Gila-monster"; Samp, is Hindustani for snake, and the suffix aderm is derived from heloderm, the common or vernacular name of the Gila monster generally used by European naturalists.[2] Skinks are lizards of the family Scincidae, many of which are snake-like in form. Such hybrid reptile will have a venom incomparably strengthened by hybridization, assuring the almost instant demise of the victim. And it will also have ears like any lizard, so it could hear the whistle, and legs and claws allowing it to run up and down the bell cord with a swift ease.

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ a b c d e f Green, Richard Lancelyn (1998). "Explanatory Notes", The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes. Oxford University Press, pp. 361-367. ISBN 0192835084. 
  2. ^ a b c d Klauber, Laurence M. (1948). "The Truth About the Speckled Band". The Baker Street Journal, an Irregular Quarterly of Sherlockiana 3 (2): 149-157. Retrieved on 2007-02-16. 

[edit] External links


The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes by Arthur Conan Doyle
"A Scandal in Bohemia" — "The Red-Headed League" — "A Case of Identity"

"The Boscombe Valley Mystery" — "The Five Orange Pips" — "The Man with the Twisted Lip"
"The Blue Carbuncle" — "The Speckled Band" — "The Engineer's Thumb"
"The Noble Bachelor" — "The Beryl Coronet" — "The Copper Beeches"

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