martes, 26 de mayo de 2020

martes, 19 de mayo de 2020

FIELD TRIP

Where the story is set?

the story is set in the moors at Baskerville Hall and the nearby Grimpen Mire, and the action takes place mostly at night, when the terrifying hound howls for blood.


How the action is
ordered? 

As soon as Dr. Mortimer arrives to unveil the mysterious curse of the Baskervilles, Hound wrestles with questions of natural and supernatural occurrences. The doctor himself decides that the marauding hound in question is a supernatural beast, and all he wants to ask Sherlock Holmes is what to do with the next of kin.
From Holmes' point of view, every set of clues points toward a logical, real- world solution. Considering the supernatural explanation, Holmes decides to consider all other options before falling back on that one. Sherlock Holmes personifies the intellectual's faith in logic, and on examining facts to find the answers.
In this sense, the story takes on the Gothic tradition, a brand of storytelling that highlights the bizarre and unexplained. Doyles' mysterious hound, an ancient family curse, even the ominous Baskerville Hall all set up a Gothic- style mystery that, in the end, will fall victim to Holmes' powerful logic.
Doyle's own faith in spiritualism, a doctrine of life after death and psychic powers, might at first seem to contradict a Sherlockian belief in logical solutions and real world answers. Holmes is probably based more on Doyle's scientific training than his belief system. But the struggle for understanding, the search for a coherent conception of the world we live in, links the spiritualist Doyle with his fictional counterpart. Throughout the novel, Holmes is able to come up with far-flung if ultimately true accounts of the world around him, much as his author strove for understanding in fiction and in fact.

How the characters areintroduced and developed?

Sherlock Holmes

The novel's protagonist. Holmes is the famed 221b Baker Street detective with a keen eye, hawked nose, and the trademark hat and pipe. Holmes is observation and intuition personified, and though he takes a bit of a back seat to Watson in this story, we always feel his presence. It takes his legendary powers to decipher the mystifying threads of the case.

Dr. Watson

The novel's other protagonist and narrator. Dr. Watson is the stout sidekick to Holmes and longtime chronicler of the detective's adventures. In Hound, Watson tries his hand at Holmes' game, expressing his eagerness to please and impress the master by solving such a baffling case. As sidekick and apprentice to Holmes, Watson acts as a foil for Holmes' genius and as a stand-in for us, the awestruck audience.

Sir Henry Baskerville

The late Sir Charles's nephew and closet living relative. Sir Henry is hale and hearty, described as "a small, alert, dark-eyed man about thirty years of age, very sturdily built." By the end of the story, Henry is as worn out and shell-shocked as his late uncle was before his death.

Sir Charles Baskerville

The head of the Baskerville estate. Sir Charles was a superstitious man, and terrified of the Baskerville curse and his waning health at the time of his death. Sir Charles was also a well-known philanthropist, and his plans to invest in the regions surrounding his estate make it essential that Sir Henry move to Baskerville Hall to continue his uncle's good works.

Sir Hugo Baskerville

A debaucherous and shadowy Baskerville ancestor, Sir Hugo is the picture of aristocratic excess, drinking and pursuing pleasures of the flesh until it killed him.

Mortimer

Family friend and doctor to the Baskervilles. Mortimer is a tall, thin man who dresses sloppily but is an all-around nice guy and the executor of Charles's estate. Mortimer is also a phrenology enthusiast, and he wishes and hopes to some day have the opportunity to study Holmes' head.

Mr. Jack Stapleton

A thin and bookish-looking entomologist and one-time schoolmaster, Stapleton chases butterflies and reveals his short temper only at key moments. A calm façade masks the scheming, manipulative villain that Holmes and Watson come to respect and fear.

Miss Stapleton

Allegedly Stapleton's sister, this dusky Latin beauty turns out to be his wife. Eager to prevent another death but terrified of her husband, she provides enigmatic warnings to Sir Henry and Watson.

  • Mr. John Barrymore and Mrs. Eliza Barrymore

    The longtime domestic help of the Baskerville clan. Earnest and eager to please, the portly Mrs. Barrymore and her gaunt husband figure as a kind of red herring for the detectives, in league with their convict brother but ultimately no more suspicious than Sir Henry.
  • Laura Lyons

    A local young woman. Laura Lyons is the beautiful brunette daughter of "Frankland the crank," the local litigator who disowned her when she married against his will. Subsequently abandoned by her husband, the credulous Laura turns to Mr. Stapleton and Charles for help.
  • The convict

    A murderous villain, whose crimes defy description. The convict is nonetheless humanized by his association with the Barrymores. He has a rodent-like, haggardly appearance. His only wish is to flee his persecutors in Devonshire and escape to South America.
  • Mr. Frankland

    Laura's father. Frankland is a man who likes to sue, a sort of comic relief with a chip on his shoulder about every infringement on what he sees as his rights. Villainized due to his one-time harsh treatment of Laura, Frankland is for the most part a laughable jester in the context of this story.
https://www.powtoon.com/c/dsFnGuSZG4C/1/m

martes, 14 de abril de 2020

OUR BOOK

Hound of the baskervilles


SUMMARY:  Sherlock Holmes and Doctor John Watson are hanging across the rental that they share (as platonic bros) while Doctor James Mortimer appears to consult Holmes about a very unusual remember that took place in his town of Dartmoor. While Baskerville Hall may be fictional, Dartmoor—with its beautiful, barren, boggy, hilly countryside—is definitely a actual region.
Apparently, in the 1640s, a bad man named Hugo Baskerville kidnapped a young girl and glued her in his castle. When she escaped, he rode out after her. And when his buddies went to discover Hugo to forestall him, they determined two dead bodies. The girl had died of exhaustion and worry at being ridden down through a creepy madman at the moors (wetlands) at night. But Hugo Baskerville suffered a worse fate: his drinking pals discovered him getting his throat torn out by a giant black canine from hell. Supposedly, this demon hound haunts the Baskerville circle of relatives to this day.
The cutting-edge Baskerville, Sir Charles, has also simply died underneath Mysterious Circumstances. Sir Charles turned into recognized to be frightened of the Hound, and he was discovered lying dead just beyond his own driveway with an expression of horror on his face. Doctor Mortimer strongly suspects that the ghost canine—the Hound—had something to do with it.
Doctor Mortimer doesn't need Holmes to investigate; he simply wants to understand if he must inform this to Sir Henry Baskerville, the new heir. He doesn't want to frighten the guy, but he doesn't need Sir Henry to turn out to be Devil Dog Chow, either. Holmes agrees to satisfy Sir Charles.
When Sir Henry arrives at Holmes' rental with Doctor Mortimer, he has his personal information. Someone has sent him a warning telling him to "avoid the moor" (4.11). Someone took one in all his new brown boots and later on, one of his antique black boots went missing. Holmes and Watson additionally discover a atypical-looking guy with a massive beard following Sir Henry
Holmes sends Sir Henry returned to Baskerville Hall and asks Watson to go with him to investigate. Once they arrive, they find the location to be (a) huge, (b) rich, (c) antique, and (d) gloomy.
Here are just multiple reasons why nobody in their right thoughts would need to be at Baskerville Hall: first, Sir Henry's butler Barrymore plans to stop his job and depart Sir Henry on his very own. Barrymore's a high suspect for Sir Charles' murder, on account that he and his spouse benefited from Sir Charles' will; he additionally has a massive beard. If that is now not bad enough, there's information that a homicidal maniac named Selden has escaped from the close by prison (a real prison). Between the crazed assassin and the butler, Sir Henry isn't always exactly overjoyed with his new digs.
When Watson's out for a stroll, a man sporting a butterfly net (yeah, we realize—weird) introduces himself as Stapleton, a neighbor of Sir Henry. He appears to recognize a lot about the Hound and Sir Charles' fear of it. He's additionally aware of Watson's dating with Holmes.
When Stapleton runs off to trap a butterfly, a woman suddenly techniques Watson, whom she mistakes for Sir Henry, and warns him to move returned to London proper away. When Stapleton returns, she immediately changes the subject. Turns out she's Stapleton's sister Beryl. When she figures out that Watson is not Sir Henry Baskerville she refuses to inform Watson why it is so vital for Sir Henry to go away Baskerville Hall. Not looking top for Sir Henry.
Watson reviews to Holmes that Sir Henry seems to be falling for Beryl Stapleton, which is provoking Stapleton for a few reason. And something else: at approximately 2:00AM, Watson noticed Barrymore searching out at the moors and keeping a candle as much as the window. That guy is obviously hiding some thing. Could he be our murderer? (Cue the creepy organ music.)
A couple of nights later, Watson and Sir Henry locate the butler status on the identical window with his candle. And there, out at the moors, they spot—any other candle! Yep, the candle is some sort of signal. Sir Henry fires Barrymore on the spot for plotting in opposition to him, however Barrymore's spouse seems and tells all. The candle out at the moor belongs to her brother, Selden, the psychotic assassin. They've been feeding him while he signals, due to the fact she can not endure to allow him starve, no matter what lousy things he's done. Watson and Barrymore attempt to music Selden down but he manages to escape. But Watson spots yet any other unknown guy at the moors.
Barrymore tells Watson he knows why Sir Charles changed into in his driveway so past due at night, despite his worry of the moors and the Hound. He got a letter signed "L.L." from a girl asking to meet him at that precise spot. Doctor Mortimer tells Watson there may be a girl named Laura Lyons living nearby in Coombe Tracy. She's the disowned daughter of Mr. Frankland. Watson visits Laura Lyons, and even as she sooner or later admits to writing the note, she swears she never went to satisfy Sir Charles that fateful night.
But wait, there is more! Mr. Frankland tells Watson he is seen a boy bringing meals to one of the Stone Age huts at the moors. He believes it is Selden, the murderer. But Watson guesses it is his mysterious man from the night earlier than. Watson is going to the hut and lies in wait, only to locate the man is Sherlock Holmes.
Holmes apologizes to Watson for maintaining him inside the dark. His observations relied on secrecy, and feared that Watson couldn't help but provide away Holmes' location. Holmes has located that Laura Lyons has been seeing Stapleton, and that she hopes to marry him. But she can't: the female who Stapleton's dwelling with as his sister? She's without a doubt his wife. (Ick.) Suddenly, Holmes and Watson listen a horrible scream and rush out to find a corpse with a crushed skull at the bottom of a cliff. They think it is Sir Henry Baskerville, however in fact, it's Selden wearing Sir Henry's clothing. Stapleton comes through and appears visibly shaken to see a useless body that's now not Sir Henry. (More organ music.)
To show that Stapleton is attached to the murders, Holmes lays a trap. He claims that he and Watson are going lower back to London however insists that Sir Henry go to Stapleton's residence for dinner that night. Holmes and Watson plan to ambush Stapleton when he tries to kill Sir Henry.
Holmes and Watson visit Laura Lyons again. When she hears that Stapleton has a spouse, she tells Holmes everything: that Stapleton dictated the letter she sent to Sir Charles, that he then insisted that she now not keep the appointment, and that he bullied her into keeping silent approximately Sir Charles' death. They return to Stapleton's house to installation their trap.
As Sir Henry leaves the house, a massive black canine with flames leaping from its mouth and eyes gallops after him. The canine manages to convey down Sir Henry and to chunk his throat. Holmes finally kills the canine, and they locate Sir Henry freaked out but usually okay thinking about he's just been mauled with the aid of Cujo's great-great-great-great-grandfather.
The useless dog's fur had been coated in phosphorus. It become the terrifying sight of the glowing dog that apprehensive Sir Charles into a heart attack and drove Selden off the cliff to his death. Inside the house, they discover Beryl Stapleton tied up and gagged. She leads them to his hiding vicinity in a dangerous bog, but he's not there. They locate Sir Henry's black boot sunk within the lavatory —Stapleton has been the use of it to train the Hound to observe Sir Henry's scent. Watson suspects that Stapleton lost his footing inside the bathroom and wound up being sucked down, by no means to be seen again.
Back in London, Holmes ties up the loose ends for Watson: Stapleton turned into absolutely the long-misplaced son of Rodger Baskerville, Sir Charles' brother. Old Rodger had moved to South America many years earlier than and died there. Young Rodger—a.K.A. Stapleton—moved to England along with his spouse and found out that he changed into in line to inherit the Baskerville fortune if he could only do away with Sirs Charles and Henry. He used the legend of the Hound to try and do just that.
So that's it—Stapleton is mendacity at the bottom of the bathroom and Holmes and Watson are lower back in London. Score: Logic 1, Superstition 0.


All this speak of devil dogs is making us hungry. We'll be proper again.

GOALS

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