Sherlock Holmes Short Stories - The Adventure of the Resident Patient: Part One
Episode Date: February 5, 2026Holmes and Watson receive a house call... from a very agitated physician. Dr Percy Trevelyan’s wealthy benefactor, a man by the name of Blessington, has been spooked by a visit to the surgery f...rom a pair of mysterious Russians. Can Holmes diagnose the case correctly? And what’s the prognosis for Blessington? A Noiser podcast production. Narrated by Hugh Bonneville Written by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle Produced by Duncan Barrett Sound Design and Audio Editing: Tony Onuchukwu Sound Supervisor: Tom Pink Compositions: Dorry Macaulay and Oliver Baines Mix & Mastering: Ralph Tittley Series Consultant: Dan Smith Executive Producer: Katrina Hughes For ad-free listening and early access to new episodes, join Noiser+. Just click the subscription banner at the top of the feed to get started. Or go to noiser.com/subscriptions Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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listeners, some eagle-eared detectives amongst you might notice that the first few minutes of this
episode bear a striking similarity to the opening of The Adventure of the Cardboard Box, which we
released a few months ago. That's the rather gruesome tale featuring the two severed ears
delivered to a lady in Croydon. But we aren't investigating a mysterious case of Dejaven,
it's just a quirk of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's writing process. The cardboard box was originally
published in The Strand magazine in January 1893. But when Doyle's next short story collection,
the memoirs of Sherlock Holmes, was released later that year, it was deemed too horrific to inflict
upon readers again. Doyle put the story away, and it wasn't seen again for another quarter-century,
when it was included in the final Holmes collection, his last bow. But in the meantime, the author
had lifted a brief section of it to bulk out the story you're going to.
to hear today, the adventure of the resident patient. So it is that the Holmesian canon contains two
stories in which Holmes and Watson have the exact same conversation with each other,
ironically about Edgar Allan Poe's fictional detective Auguste DuPin, who was a key influence on the
character of Sherlock Holmes. I'm Hugh Bonneville and welcome to Sherlock Holmes short stories,
the series where we delve into the files of fiction's most brilliant
detective, following his keen mind and unerring instincts from the first subtle clue to the final
dramatic revelation. This time, Holmes and Watson receive a house call from a very agitated physician.
Dr. Peter Trevelyne's wealthy benefactor, a man by the name of Blessington, has been spooked by a visit
to the surgery from a pair of mysterious Russians. Can Holmes diagnose the case correctly,
and what's the prognosis for Blessington?
From the Noiser podcast network, this is The Adventure of the Resident Patient, part one.
Glancing over the somewhat incoherent series of memoirs,
with which I have endeavored to illustrate a few of the mental peculiarities of my friend,
Mr. Sherlock Holmes,
I have been struck by the difficulty which I have experienced
in picking out examples which shall in every way answer my purpose.
For in those cases in which Holmes has performed some two,
toward a force of analytical reasoning, and has demonstrated the value of his peculiar methods of
investigation, the facts themselves have often been so slight or so commonplace that I could
not feel justified in laying them before the public. On the other hand, it has frequently
happened that he has been concerned in some research where the facts have been of the most
remarkable and dramatic character, but where the share which he has himself taken in
determining their causes has been less pronounced than I, as his biographer could wish.
The small matter which I have chronicled under the heading of A Study in Scarlet, and that other
later one connected with the loss of the glorious Scott, may serve as examples of this Silla and
Charybdis, which are forever threatening the historian. It may be that, in the business of which
I am now about to write, the part which my friend played is not sufficiently accentuated.
And yet the whole train of circumstances is so remarkable
that I cannot bring myself to omit it entirely from this series.
It had been a close rainy day in October.
Our blinds were half drawn, and homes lay curled upon the sofa,
reading and rereading a letter which he had received by the morning post.
For myself, my term of service in India had trained me to stand heat better than cold,
and a thermometer of 90 was no hardship.
But the paper was uninteresting.
Parliament had risen, everybody was out of town,
and I yearned for the glades of the new forest or the shingle of South Sea.
A depleted bank account had caused me to postpone my holiday,
and as to my companion, neither the country nor the sea presented the slightest attraction to him.
He loved to lie in the very centre of five millions of people,
with his filaments stretching out and running through them,
responsive to every little rumour or suspicion of unsolved crime.
Appreciation of nature found no place among his many gifts,
and his only change was when he turned his mind from the evildoer of the town
to track down his brother of the country.
Finding that Holmes was too absorbed for conversation,
I had tossed aside the barren paper,
and, leaning back in my chair, I fell into a brown study.
Suddenly, my companion's voice broke in upon my thoughts.
"'You are right, Watson,' said he.
"'It does seem a very preposterous way of settling a dispute.'
"'Most preposterous,' I exclaimed.
"'And then, suddenly realizing how he had echoed the inmost thought of my soul,
"'I sat up in my chair and stared at him in blank amazement.
"'What is this, Holmes?' I cried.
"'This is beyond anything which I could have imagined.'
He laughed heartily at my perplexity.
You remember, said he, that some little time ago when I read you the passage in one of Poe's sketches,
in which a close reasoner follows the unspoken thought of his companion,
you were inclined to treat the matter as a mere toward a force of the author.
On my remarking that I was constantly in the habit of doing the same thing,
you expressed incredulity.
Oh, no.
Perhaps not with your tongue, my dear Watson, but certainly with your eyebrows.
So, when I saw you throw down your paper and enter upon a train of thought,
I was very happy to have the opportunity of reading it off,
and eventually of breaking into it as a proof that I had been in rapport with you.
But I was still far from satisfied.
In the example which you read to me, said I,
the reasoner drew his conclusions from the actions of the man whom he observed.
If I remember right, he stumbled over a heap of stones, looked up at the stars and so on,
but I have been seated quietly in my chair, and what clues can I have given you?
You do yourself and injustice.
The features are given to man as the means by which he shall express his emotions,
and yours are faithful servants.
Do you mean to say that you read my train of thought?
from my features.
Your features, and especially your eyes.
Perhaps you cannot yourself recall how your reverie commenced?
No, I cannot.
Then I will tell you.
After throwing down your paper, which was the action which drew my attention to you,
you sat for half a minute with a vacant expression.
Then your eyes fixed themselves upon your newly framed picture of General Gordon,
and I saw by the alteration in your face that a train of thought,
had been started.
But it did not lead very far.
Your eyes turned across to the unframed portrait
of Henry Ward Beecher,
which stands upon the top of your books.
You then glanced up at the wall,
and of course your meaning was obvious.
You were thinking that if the portrait were framed,
it would just cover that bare space
and correspond with Gordon's picture over there.
You have followed me wonderfully, I exclaimed.
So far, I could.
hardly have gone astray. But now your thoughts went back to Beecher, and you looked hard across
as if you were studying the character in his features. Then your eyes ceased to pucker, but you
continued to look across, and your face was thoughtful. You were recalling the incidents of Beech's
career. I was well aware that you could not do this without thinking of the mission which he undertook
on behalf of the North at the time of the Civil War, for I remember you expressing your
passionate indignation at the way in which he was received by the more turbulent of our people.
You felt so strongly about it that I knew you could not think of Beecher without thinking of that
also. When a moment later I saw your eyes wander away from the picture, I suspected that your mind
had now turned to the civil war, and when I observed that your lips set, your eyes sparkled,
and your hands clinched, I was positive that you were indeed thinking of the gallantry, which was shown
by both sides in that desperate struggle.
But then, again, your face grew sadder.
You shook your head.
You were dwelling upon the sadness and horror and useless waste of life.
Your hand strolled towards your own old wound,
and a smile quivered on your lips,
which showed me that the ridiculous side of this method
of settling international questions
had forced itself upon your mind.
At this point, I agreed with you that it was
preposterous, and was glad to find that all my deductions had been correct.
Absolutely, said I.
And now that you've explained it, I confess that I am as amazed as before.
It was very superficial, my dear Watson, I assure you.
I should not have intruded it upon your attention had you not shown me some incredulity the other day.
But the evening has brought a breeze with it.
What do you say to a ramble through London?
I was weary of our little sitting-room and gladly acquiesced.
For three hours we strolled about together,
watching the ever-changing kaleidoscope of life
as it ebbs and flows through Fleet Street and the Strand.
His characteristic talk, with its keen observance of detail
and subtle power of inference,
held me amused and enthralled.
It was ten o'clock before we reached Baker Street again.
A broom was waiting at our door.
Hmm, a doctor's, general practitioner, I perceive, said Holmes.
Not been long in practice, but has had a good deal to do.
Come to consult us, I fancy.
Lucky we came back.
I was sufficiently conversant with Holmes' methods to be able to follow his reasoning
and to see that the nature and state of the various medical instruments in the wicker basket
which hung in the lamplight inside the broom had given him the dutch.
for his swift deduction.
The light in our window above
showed that this late visit
was indeed intended for us.
With some curiosity
as to what could have sent
a brother Medico to us at such an hour,
I followed Holmes into our sanctum.
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A pale, taper-faced man with sandy whiskers rose up from a chair by the fire as we entered.
His age may not have been more than three or four and thirty,
but his haggard expression and unhealthy hue told of a life which has sapped his strength and robbed him of his youth.
His manner was nervous and shy, like that of a sensitive gentleman.
And the thin white hand which he laid on the mantelpiece as he rose was that of an artist,
rather than of a surgeon. His dress was quiet and sombre, a black frock-coat, dark trousers,
and a touch of colour about his necktie.
"'Good evening, doctor,' said Holmes cheerily.
"'I am glad to see that you have only been waiting a very few minutes.'
"'You spoke to my coachman, then?'
"'No, it was the candle on the side table that told me,
"'Pray resume your seat and let me know how I can serve you.'
"'My name is Dr. Dr.
Percy Trevelyan, said our visitor, and I live at 403 Brook Street.
Are you not the author of a monograph upon obscure nervous lesions, I asked?
His pale cheeks flushed with pleasure at hearing that his work was known to me.
I so seldom hear of the work that I thought it was quite dead, said he.
My publishers gave me a most discouraging account of its sale.
You are yourself, I presume, a medical man.
A retired army surgeon.
My own hobby has always been a nervous disease.
I should wish to make it an absolute specialty,
but of course a man must take what he can get at first.
This, however, is beside the question, Mr Sherlock Holmes,
and I quite appreciate how valuable your time is.
The fact is that a very singular train of events
has occurred recently at my house in Brook Street,
and tonight they came to such a head.
that I felt it was quite impossible for me to wait another hour
before asking for your advice and assistance.
Sherlock Holmes sat down and lit his pipe.
You are very welcome to both, said he.
Pray, let me have a detailed account of what these circumstances are,
which have disturbed you.
One or two of them are so trivial, said Dr. Trevelyan,
that really I am almost ashamed to mention them.
But the matter is so,
inexplicable and the recent turn which it has taken so elaborate that I shall lay it all before you and you shall judge what is essential and what is not.
I am compelled to begin with to say something of my own college career.
I am a London university man, you know, and I am sure that you will not think that I am unduly singing my own praises
if I say that my student career was considered by my professors to be a very promising one.
After I had graduated, I continued to devote myself to research,
occupying a minor position in King's College Hospital,
and I was fortunate enough to excite considerable interest by my research
into the pathology of catalepsy,
and finally to win the Bruce Pinkerton Prize and medal
by the monograph on nervous lesions,
to which your friend has just alluded.
I should not go too far if I were to say
that there was a general impression at that time,
that a distinguished career lay before me,
but the one great stumbling block lay in my want of capital.
As you will readily understand,
a specialist who aims high is compelled to start
in one of a dozen streets in the Cavendish Square Quarter,
all of which entail enormous rents and furnishing expenses.
Besides this preliminary outlay,
he must be prepared to keep himself for some years
and to hire a presentable carriage and horse.
To do this was quite beyond my power,
and I could only hope that by economy I might in ten years' time
save enough to enable me to put up my plate.
Suddenly, however, an unexpected incident opened up quite a new prospect to me.
This was a visit from a gentleman of the name of Blessington,
who was a complete stranger to me.
He came up to my room one.
morning and plunged into business in an instant.
"'You are the same Percy Trevelyan who has had so distinguished a career and won a great prize lately,'
said he.
"'I bowed.
"'Answer me frankly,' he continued,
"'for you will find it to your interest to do so.
"'You have all the cleverness which makes a successful man.
"'Have you the tact?'
"'I could not help smiling at the abruptness.
of the question.
I trust that I have my share, I said.
Any bad habits, not drawn towards drink, eh?
Really, sir, I cried.
Quite right, that's all right, but I was bound to ask.
With all these qualities, why are you not in practice?
I shrugged my shoulders.
Come, come, said he in his bustling way.
It's the old story, more in your brains than in your pocket, eh?
"'What would you say if I were to start you in Brook Street?'
"'I stared at him in astonishment.
"'Oh, it's for my sake, not for yours,' he cried.
"'I'll be perfectly frank with you,
"'and if it suits you, it will suit me very well.
"'I have a few thousands to invest, you see,
"'and I think I'll sink them in you.'
"'But why?' I gasped.
"'Well, it's just like any other speculation,
and safer than most.
What am I to do, then?
I'll tell you.
I'll take the house, furnish it,
pay the mage, and run the whole place.
All you have to do is just to wear out your chair in the consulting room.
I'll let you have pocket money and everything.
Then you hand over to me three quarters of what you earn,
and you keep the other quarter for yourself.
This was the strange proposal, Mr. Holmes,
with which the man, blessing you.
approached me.
I won't weary you with the account of how we bargained and negotiated.
It ended in my moving into the house next Lady Day,
and starting in practice on very much the same conditions as he had suggested.
He came himself to live with me in the character of a resident patient.
His heart was weak, it appears, and he needed constant medical supervision.
He turned the two best rooms of the first floor into a sitting-end,
room and bedroom for himself. He was a man of singular habits, shunning company and very seldom
going out. His life was irregular, but in one respect he was regularity itself. Every evening,
at the same hour, he walked into the consulting room, examined the books, put down five
and thruppence for every guinea that I had earned, and carried the rest off to the strong box
in his own room. I may say with confidence that he never had occasion.
to regret his speculation? From the first it was a success. A few good cases and the reputation
which I had won in the hospital brought me rapidly to the front, and during the last few years
I have made him a rich man. So much, Mr. Holmes for my past history and my relations with
Mr. Blessington. It only remains for me now to tell you what has occurred to bring me here tonight.
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Some weeks ago, Mr. Blessington came down to me in, as it seemed to me, a state of considerable agitation.
He spoke of some burglary, which, he said, had been committed in the West End,
and he appeared, I remember, to be quite unnecessarily excited about it,
declaring that a day should not pass before we should add stronger bolts to our windows and doors.
For a week he continued to be in a peculiar state of restlessness,
peering continually out of the windows and ceasing to take the short walk,
which had usually been the prelude to his dinner.
From his manner, it struck me that he was in mortal dread of something or somebody,
but when I questioned him upon the point he became so offensive that I was compelled to drop the subject.
Gradually, as time passed, his fears appeared to die away and he had renewed his former habits,
when a fresh event reduced him to the pitiable state of prostration in which he now lies.
What happened was this.
Two days ago, I received the letter which I now read to you.
Neither address nor date is attached to it.
A Russian nobleman who is now resident in England, it runs,
would be glad to avail himself of the professional assistance of Dr Percy Trevelyan.
He has been, for some years, a victim to cataleptic attacks on which, as it is,
is well known, Dr. Trevelyan is an authority.
He proposes to call at about a quarter past six tomorrow evening
if Dr. Trevelyan will make it convenient to be at home.
This letter interested me deeply
because the chief difficulty in the study of catalepsy
is the rareness of the disease.
You may believe, then, that I was in my consulting room
when at the appointed hour the page showed in the patient.
He was an elderly man, thin, demure and commonplace by no means the conception one forms of a Russian nobleman.
I was much more struck by the appearance of his companion.
This was a tall young man, surprisingly handsome with a dark, fierce face, and the limbs and chest of a Hercules.
He had his hand under the other's arm as they entered, and helped him to a chair with a tenderness, which one would hardly have expected from his appearance.
You will excuse my coming in, Doctor, said he to me speaking English with a slight lisp.
This is my father, and his health is a matter of the most overwhelming importance to me.
I was touched by this filial anxiety.
You would perhaps care to remain during the consultation, said I.
Not for the world, he cried with a gesture of horror.
It is more painful to me.
me than I can express. If I were to see my father in one of these dreadful seizures, I am convinced
that I should never survive it. My own nervous system is an exceptionally sensitive one. With
your permission, I will remain in the waiting room while you go into my father's case.
To this, of course, I assented, and the young man withdrew. The patient and I then plunged into a
discussion of his case, of which I took exhaustive notes.
He was not remarkable for intelligence, and his answers were frequently obscure, which I attributed
to his limited acquaintance with our language.
Suddenly, however, as I sat writing, he ceased to give any answer at all to my inquiries,
and on my turning towards him I was shocked to see that he was sitting bolt upright in his chair,
staring at me with a perfectly blank and rigid face.
He was again in the grip of his mysterious malady.
My first feeling, as I have just said, was one of pity and horror.
My second, I fear, was rather one of professional satisfaction.
I made notes of my patient's pulse and temperature,
tested the rigidity of his muscles, and examined his reflexes.
There was nothing markedly abnormal in any.
of these conditions, which harmonised with my former experiences. I had obtained good results in such
cases by the inhalation of nitrite of Amel, and the present seemed an admirable opportunity of
testing its virtues. The bottle was downstairs in my laboratory, so leaving my patient seated
in his chair, I ran down to get it. There was some little delay in finding it, five minutes,
let us say, and then I returned. Imagine my amazement.
to find the room empty, and the patient gone.
Of course, my first act was to run into the waiting room.
The sun had gone also.
The hall door had been closed, but not shut.
My page, who admits patience, is a new boy, and by no means quick.
He waits downstairs and runs up to show patients out when I ring the consulting-room bell.
He had heard nothing, and the affair remained a complete mystery.
Mr. Blessington came in from his walk, sure.
shortly afterwards, but I did not say anything to him upon the subject, for to tell the truth I have got in the way of late of holding as little communication with him as possible.
Well, I never thought that I should see anything more of the Russian and his son, so you can imagine my amazement when, at the very same hour this evening, they both came marching into my consulting room, just as they had done before.
I feel that I owe you a great many apologies for my abrupt departure yesterday, doctor, said my patient.
I confess that I was very much surprised at it, said I.
Well, the fact is, he remarked, that when I recover from these attacks, my mind is always very clouded as to all that has gone before.
I woke up in a strange room, as it seemed to me, and I was a strange room.
made my way out into the street in a sort of dazed way when you were absent.
And I, said the son, seeing my father, past the door of the waiting-room,
naturally thought that the consultation had come to an end. It was not until we had reached
home that I began to realize the true state of affairs. Well, said I, laughing,
there is no harm done except that you puzzled me terribly.
So if you, sir, would kindly step into the waiting-room,
I shall be happy to continue our consultation,
which was brought to so abrupt an ending.
For half an hour or so I discussed that old gentleman's symptoms with him,
and then, having prescribed for him,
I saw him go off upon the arm of his son.
I have told you that Mr. Blessington generally chose this hour
of the day for his exercise. He came in shortly afterwards and passed upstairs. An instant later,
I heard him running down, and he burst into my consulting room like a man who is mad with panic.
Who has been in my room? he cried. No one, said I. It's a lie. He yelled.
Come up and look. I passed over the grossness of his language, as he seemed half out of his mind with fear.
When I went upstairs with him, he pointed to several footprints upon the light carpet.
Do you mean to say those are mine? he cried.
They were certainly very much larger than any which he could have made and were evidently quite fresh.
It rained hard this afternoon, as you know, and my patients were the only people who called.
It must have been the case, then, that the man in the waiting room had, for some reason, while I was busy with the other,
ascended to the room of my resident patient.
Nothing had been touched or taken,
but there were the footprints to prove
that the intrusion was an undoubted fact.
Mr. Blessington seemed more excited over the matter
than I should have thought possible,
though, of course, it was enough to disturb anybody's peace of mind.
He actually sat crying in an armchair,
and I could hardly get him to speak coherently.
It was his suggestion that I should come
round to you, and of course I at once saw the propriety of it, for certainly the incident is a very
singular one, though he appears to completely overrate its importance. If you would only come
back with me in my brougham, you would at least be able to soothe him, though I can hardly
hope that you will be able to explain this remarkable occurrence. Sherlock Holmes had listened
to this long narrative with an intentness which showed me that his interest was keenly around.
His face was as impassive as ever,
but his lids had drooped more heavily over his eyes,
and his smoke had curled up more thickly from his pipe
to emphasise each curious episode in the doctor's tale.
As our visitor concluded, Holmes sprang up without a word,
handed me my hat, picked his own from the table,
and followed Dr. Trevelyan to the door.
Next time on Sherlock Holmes' short stories,
Holmes and Watson pay Blessington a visit
and almost require treatment themselves.
The Russians return, apparently now in rude health,
and Sherlock offers a conclusive diagnosis.
That's next time.
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