Helen Stoner is a typical young middle-class Victorian woman. She has always led a sheltered, protected, domestic life. She comes to Sherlock Holmes because she wants guidance. The fact that she is so frightened and helpless appeals to the compassionate side of Holmes' nature. He will help her even though she can't afford to pay him. Her stepfather, Dr. Grimesby Roylott, controls most of her resources. Helen Stoner might be termed "a maiden in distress."...
Helen Stoner is a typical young middle-class Victorian woman. She has always led a sheltered, protected, domestic life. She comes to Sherlock Holmes because she wants guidance. The fact that she is so frightened and helpless appeals to the compassionate side of Holmes' nature. He will help her even though she can't afford to pay him. Her stepfather, Dr. Grimesby Roylott, controls most of her resources. Helen Stoner might be termed "a maiden in distress." Holmes often gets involved with young women who are in need of help. His desire to help them provides his motivation which drives the story. Other examples of maidens in distress in Sherlock Holmes stories can be found in: "The Adventure of the Solitary Cyclist," "The Adventure of the Copper Beeches," and "A Case of Identity."
Helen Stoner is not a particularly well-rounded character. She serves mainly to involve the great detective in a perplexing case. She also gives Holmes a great deal of information in the backstory she tells when she first comes to Baker Street. Holmes not only saves Helen's life but solves the "locked room murder mystery" of her sister Julia's death two years earlier.
No comments:
Post a Comment