Wednesday, 18 September 2019

Singular Contents

("GOLD" seems to be an abbreviation for "The Golden Pince-Nez.")

When I look at the three massive manuscript volumes which contain our work for the year 1894 I confess that it is very difficult for me, out of such a wealth of material, to select the cases which are most interesting in themselves and at the same time most conducive to a display of those peculiar powers for which my friend was famous. As I turn over the pages I see my notes upon the repulsive story of the red leech and the terrible death of Crosby the banker. Here also I find an account of the Addleton tragedy and the singular contents of the ancient British barrow. The famous Smith-Mortimer succession case comes also within this period, and so does the tracking and arrest of Huret, the Boulevard assassin - an exploit which won for Holmes an autograph letter of thanks from the French President and the Order of the Legion of Honour. Each of these would furnish a narrative, but on the whole I am of opinion that none of them unite so many singular points of interest as the episode of Yoxley Old Place, which includes, not only the lamentable death of young Willoughby Smith, but also those subsequent developments which threw so curious a light upon the causes of the crime.
It was a wild, tempestuous night towards the close of November. Holmes and I sat together in silence all the evening, he engaged with a powerful lens deciphering the remains of the original inscription upon a palimpsest, I deep in a recent treatise upon surgery. Outside the wind howled down Baker Street, while the rain beat fiercely against the windows. It was strange there in the very depths of the town, with ten miles of man's handiwork on every side of us, to feel the iron grip of Nature, and to be conscious that to the huge elemental forces all London was no more than the molehills that dot the fields. I walked to the window and looked out on the deserted street. The occasional lamps gleamed on the expanse of muddy road and shining pavement. A single cab was splashing its way from the Oxford Street end.
-copied from here.

"He went over to the bookshelf, picked out a volume more or less at random, and started to read. It was a collection of Victorian and Edwardian stories.
"A passing reference struck him. Something about a tragedy at Addleton and the singular contents of an ancient British barrow. Nothing more. Hm. Time travel? He smiled to himself."
-Poul Anderson, "Time Patrol" IN Anderson, The Guardians Of Time (New York, 1981), 3, p. 27.

(I dislike the adoption of "Hm" and its variants as an English word.)

After reading his "Victorian and Edwardian stories," Manse Everard, Time Patrol recruit, does something that we cannot. He visits the public library and reads the accounts of the Addleton tragedy in the London Times, starting from June 25, 1894.

3 comments:

Sean M. Brooks said...

Kaor, Paul!

All regular readers of the works of Poul Anderson know he was a fan of writers like Kipling and A. Conan Doyle! Here we see Anderson using the bit about "...the Addleton tragedy and the singular contents of the ancient British barrow..." around which he wrote "Time Patrol." The twist being that in the Patrol's timeline Sherlock Holmes is a real person.

Ad astra! Sean

S.M. Stirling said...

I confess that this was the bit of business that inspired me to make Modesty Blaise real in the Change novels. Similarly unnamed -- a conversation in which a British character mentions a conversation about her with someone who's obviously Willie Garvin at the pub "The Treadmill".

Sean M. Brooks said...

Kaor, Mr. Stirling!

Unfortunately, I completely missed your hints and allusions to Modesty Blaise and Willie Garvin in your Change books. Drat!

Ad astra! Sean