If you mean in 'The Musgrave Ritual', they found ". . . a linen bag, which contained within it a mass of old rusted and discoloured metal and several dull-coloured pieces of pebble or glass."
Jabez Wilson wanted Sherlock Holmes to find out why the Red-Headed League [which for a while he had belonged too] has suddenly disappeared.Caroline
If you are referring to the cabinet photograph of Irene Adler, Holmes never did find that, but he did find a replacement photograph in the original hiding place when he went back to Briony Lodge the next morning.
maybe if you read the book......you would find out more -_-'The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes' is a collection of 12 short stories, so there are 12 endings.
There are five Sherlock Holmes stories where a rope is used, and there are a couple of more with a bell-pull or bell-rope. If you are referring to the story where a bell-pull is nothing more than a rope, then you are looking for 'The Adventure of the Speckled Band.'
The Sherlock Holmes illustrations of Sidney Paget are considered the best by many. He illustrated the first 37 short stories and 'The Hound of the Baskervilles' for The Strand Magazine before his untimely death, and the link below shows some of them. There is also a Sidney Paget Facebook page with all of his Sherlock Holmes drawings along with some of the others.
Sherlock Holmes was referenced in "The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time" as a famous fictional detective. The protagonist, Christopher Boone, admires Sherlock Holmes and tries to emulate his deductive reasoning skills in solving mysteries throughout the novel. This connection serves to highlight Christopher's unique perspective on the world and his approach to problem-solving.
Jabez Wilson wanted Sherlock Holmes to find out why the Red-Headed League [which for a while he had belonged too] has suddenly disappeared.Caroline
You can find it in manhattan 34th street 8th avenue
Basil Rathbone did play Sherlock Holmes in the television series "Suspense". I could find no record of a television series titled "The New Adventures of Sherlock Holmes". Below are his theatrical Holmes films: "The Hound of the Baskervilles" (1939) "The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes" (1939) "Sherlock Holmes and the Voice of Terror" (1942) "Sherlock Holmes and the Secret Weapon" (1943) "Sherlock Holmes in Washington" (1943) "Sherlock Holmes Faces Death" (1943) "The Spider Woman" (1944) "The Scarlet Claw" (1944) "The Pearl of Death" (1944) "The House of Fear" (1945) "The Woman in Green" (1945) "Pursuit to Algiers" (1945) "Terror by Night" (1946) "Dressed to Kill" (1946)
Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson are famous fictional characters. Holmes is a detective who solves crimes and Watson is his companion and friend who writes the stories. If you cannot find a Sherlock Holmes, there is nobody smart enough in the crowd, and if you cannot even find a Dr. Watson, you're really looking at a dumb crowd.
Frank Langella played Sherlock Holmes in a 1981 episode of "Standing Room Only".
You can do a search on Ebay and try to find something vintage.
On the moor near Dartmoor just outside Merripit House.
Probably the easiest and quickest place to find a Sherlock Holmes anthology would be Amazon. Other web based book retailers would be equally good, but may take more research.
If you are referring to the cabinet photograph of Irene Adler, Holmes never did find that, but he did find a replacement photograph in the original hiding place when he went back to Briony Lodge the next morning.
maybe if you read the book......you would find out more -_-'The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes' is a collection of 12 short stories, so there are 12 endings.
There are five Sherlock Holmes stories where a rope is used, and there are a couple of more with a bell-pull or bell-rope. If you are referring to the story where a bell-pull is nothing more than a rope, then you are looking for 'The Adventure of the Speckled Band.'