John Thorndyke's Cases (1909)
by R. Austin Freeman
3911795John Thorndyke's Cases1909R. Austin Freeman

JOHN THORNDYKE'S
CASES


RELATED BY
CHRISTOPHER JERVIS, M.D.

AND EDITED BY
R. AUSTIN FREEMAN
AUTHOR OF "THE GOLDEN POOL" ETC

WITH SIX ILLUSTRATIONS BY H. M. BROCK, AND
NINE FROM PHOTOGRAPHS, ETC.

HYPERION PRESS, INC.
WESTPORT, CONNECTICUT

Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data

Freeman, Richard Austin, 1862-1943.
John Thorndyke's cases.

Reprint of the 1909 ed. published by Chatto & Windus, London.
CONTENTS: The man with the nailed shoes.--The stranger's
latchkey.--The anthropologist at large. [etc.]
I. Title.
PZ3.F8806J04 (PR6011.R43] 823'.9'12 74-10486
ISBN 0-88355-201-9

Published in 1909
by Chatto & Windus, London.

Hyperion reprint edition 1975.
Library of Congress Catalogue Number 74-10486

ISBN 0-88355-201-9

Printed in the United States of America

TO MY FRIEND

FRANK STANDFIELD

IN MEMORY OF MANY A PLEASANT EVENING

SPENT WITH MICROSCOPE AND CAMERA

THIS VOLUME IS DEDICATED

PREFACE

The stories in this collection, inasmuch as they constitute a somewhat new departure in this class of literature, require a few words of introduction. The primary function of all fiction is to furnish entertainment to the reader, and this fact has not been lost sight of. But the interest of so-called "detective" fiction is, I believe, greatly enhanced by a careful adherence to the probable, and a strict avoidance of physical impossibilities; and, in accordance with this belief, I have been scrupulous in confining myself to authentic facts and practicable methods. The stories have, for the most part, a medico-legal motive, and the methods of solution described in them are similar to those employed in actual practice by medical jurists. The stories illustrate, in fact, the application to the detection of crime of the ordinary methods of scientific research. I may add that the experiments described have in all cases been performed by me, and that the micro-photographs are, of course, from the actual specimens.

I take this opportunity of thanking those of my friends who have in various ways assisted me, and especially the friend to whom I have dedicated this book; by whom I have been relieved of the very considerable labour of making the micro-photographs, and greatly assisted in procuring and preparing specimens. I must also thank Messrs. Pearson for kindly allowing me the use of Mr. H. M. Brock's admirable and sympathetic drawings, and the artist himself for the care with which he has maintained strict fidelity to the text.

R. A. F.

Gravesend,

September 21, 1909.

CONTENTS


ILLUSTRATIONS


  1. Professor Popplebaum is enlightened, Frontispiece
  2. Plan of St. Bridget's Bay 9
  3. The Sergeant's Sketch 41
  4. Fluff from Key-Barrel To face 88
  5. The Stranger is run to Earth {{{1}}} 94
  6. Transverse Sections of Human Hair {{{1}}} 113
  7. Thorndyke's Strategy {{{1}}} 117
  8. The Discovery {{{1}}} 125
  9. The Moabite Ciphre 156
  10. The Professor's Analysis 171
  11. The Apparition in the Mirror To face 199
  12. The Aluminium Dagger {{{1}}} 240
  13. The Sand from the Murdered Woman's Pillow {{{1}}} 262
  14. Human Hair, Showing Roots {{{1}}} 282
  15. Superintendent Miller Rises to the Occasion {{{1}}} 286

 

This work is in the public domain in the United States because it was published in 1909, before the cutoff of January 1, 1929.


The longest-living author of this work died in 1943, so this work is in the public domain in countries and areas where the copyright term is the author's life plus 80 years or less. This work may be in the public domain in countries and areas with longer native copyright terms that apply the rule of the shorter term to foreign works.

 

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