Discussion Topic
Summary of Sherlock Holmes' identity, his client's identity, and the case in "The Red-Headed League"
Summary:
Sherlock Holmes, the renowned detective, is approached by Jabez Wilson, a pawnbroker with striking red hair. Wilson seeks Holmes' help to understand the mysterious dissolution of the Red-Headed League, a peculiar organization that hired him for a well-paid but seemingly trivial job. Holmes uncovers that the league was a ruse to distract Wilson while criminals attempted to rob a nearby bank.
Who was Sherlock Holmes' client and what was his case in "The Red-Headed League"?
In the story, “The Red-Headed League,” Sherlock Holmes’ client is a man named Jabez Wilson. He is about 60 years old and he runs a small pawn shop. He is a bachelor and does not have much of a life outside of his business. He is very overweight and not in great shape.
Wilson’s case is a very unusual one. Normally, a person would engage Holmes’s services if they felt they were in danger or if they had been victim of a crime. With Wilson, no harm has come to him. Indeed, he has actually made a good sum of money for very little work at all. However, the circumstances in which he has made the money are so odd that he has come to Holmes.
Wilson has recently hired an assistant in his pawn shop who is a very good worker and who has agreed to work...
Unlock
This Answer NowStart your 48-hour free trial and get ahead in class. Boost your grades with access to expert answers and top-tier study guides. Thousands of students are already mastering their assignments—don't miss out. Cancel anytime.
Already a member? Log in here.
for half price so he can learn the business. The assistant, Vincent Spaulding, is a very good worker, but whenever possible he does tend to disappear into the shop’s basement (Wilson is not in shape to go down there much, if at all) to work in a dark room that he has set up.
Spaulding has pointed out an advertisement to Wilson. The ad asks for red-headed men to come apply for a job that would pay them a decent amount of money for “purely nominal services.” Since Wilson has very red hair, Spaulding suggests he should apply. Wilson does, and gets the position. He then “works” for eight weeks, copying from an encyclopedia a few hours a day during the slow time at his shop. At the end of the eight weeks, the Red-Headed League (the organization that has been “employing” him) folds up and disappears without warning. Wilson is curious about the whole matter and that is why he comes to hire Holmes.