The Purloined Letter
'The Purloined Letter' - By Edgar Allan Poe
[Video:]
Transcription:
Our story today is called "The Purloined
Letter." It was written by Edgar Allan Poe. Poe is generally known for his
horror stories. This is the third of three stories he wrote about Auguste Dupin
and how he solves crimes. The story is about a stolen letter. It first appeared
in eighteen forty-four in a yearly magazine. It was reprinted in many
publications, newspapers and books. This is one of Poe's stories that
influenced the development of the modern detective story. Here is Shep O'Neal
with "The Purloined Letter."
STORYTELLER:
One evening in Paris, during the autumn of
eighteen forty-five, I went to visit a friend, Auguste Dupin. We were smoking
our pipes and talking when the door of his apartment opened. Mister Germont,
the head of the Paris police force, came into the room.
"I came to ask your advice," Germont
said to my friend Dupin. "I am trying to solve a very important case. It
is also a very simple case, so I really need your help. But I thought you would
like to hear about it, because it is so strange.
"My men and I have worked on this case for
three months," Germont said. "It is a very simple case of robbery.
But we still cannot solve it."
Dupin took the pipe out of his mouth.
"Perhaps the mystery is too simple," he said.
Germont began to laugh. "Too simple?"
he said. "Who ever heard of such a thing?"
I looked at Germont. "Why don't you tell
us the problem?" I said.
Germont stopped laughing and sat down.
"All right," he said. "But you
must never tell anyone I told you this."
"The wife of a very important person needs
help. I cannot tell you her name, because her husband is a powerful man in the
French government. Let us just call her Madame X. Three months ago, someone stole
a letter from Madame X. She is offering a large amount of money to anyone who
can return the letter to her.
"We know that her husband's political
enemy, Mister D'Arcy, stole the letter. We also know it is somewhere in his
apartment. D'Arcy plans to use the letter to embarrass Madame X's husband and
destroy his political power.
"As you know, I have keys which can open
any lock in Paris. For the last three months, my men and I have spent every
evening looking for the letter in his apartment. But we cannot find it."
Dupin stopped smoking. "Tell me how you
looked for it," he said. Germont moved forward in his chair.
"We took our time," he said.
"First, we examined the furniture in every room. We opened all the
drawers. We looked under the rugs. We searched behind all the paintings on the
walls.
"We opened every book. We removed the
boards of the floor. We even took the tops off the tables to see if he had
hidden the letter in the table legs. But we cannot find it. What do you advise
me to do?"
Dupin puffed on his pipe. "What does the
letter look like?" he asked.
"It is in a white envelope with a red
stamp," Germont said. "The address is written in large black
letters."
Dupin puffed on his pipe again. "I advise
you to go back and search the apartment again," he said.
About one month later, Germont came back to see
us.
"I followed your advice," he said.
"But I still have not found the letter."
Dupin smiled. "I knew you would not find
it," he said. Germont became very red in the face. "Then why did you
make me search the apartment again?" he shouted.
"My dear Germont," Dupin said.
"Let me tell you a little story. Do you remember the famous doctor, Louis
Abernathy?"
"No!" Germont shouted. "Get to
the point, Dupin!"
"Of course! Of course," Dupin said.
"Once, a rich old man met Abernathy at a party. The old man was not
feeling very well. He decided he would get a medical opinion from the doctor
without paying for it. So he described his problems to Abernathy. 'Now doctor,'
the old man said, 'suppose you had a patient like that. What would you tell him
to take?'"
"'Oh, that is quite simple,' said
Abernathy. 'I would tell him to take my advice.'"
Germont looked embarrassed. "Look here,
Dupin. I am perfectly willing to pay for advice."
Dupin smiled at Germont. "How much money
did you say the reward was?" he asked. Germont sighed. "I do not want
to tell you the exact amount. But I would give fifty thousand francs to the
person who helps me find that letter."
"In that case," Dupin said,
"take out your checkbook and write me a check for fifty thousand francs.
When you have signed the check, I will give you the letter."
Germont looked at Dupin with his mouth open.
His eyes seemed to jump out of his head. Then he took out his checkbook and
pen, and wrote a check for fifty thousand francs. He gave it to Dupin.
My friend examined the check carefully and put
it in his pocket. Then he unlocked a drawer of his desk, took out the letter,
and gave it to Germont.
The policeman's hands shook as he opened the
letter. He read it quickly. Then he put it in his pocket and ran out of the
room without saying a word.
"Dupin!" I said, as I turned to my
friend. "How did you solve the mystery?"
"It was simple, my friend," he said.
"Germont and his policemen could not find the letter, because they did not
try to understand the mind of the man who stole it. Instead, they looked for
the letter where they would have hidden it.
"Mister D'Arcy is not a policeman. He is,
however, very intelligent. He knew the police would search his apartment. He
also knew how police think. So, he did not hide the letter where he knew they
would look for it.
"Do you remember how Germont laughed when
I said the mystery was difficult for him to solve because it was so
simple?"
Dupin filled his pipe with tobacco and lit it.
"Well, the more I thought about it, the more I realized the police could
not find the letter because D'Arcy had not hidden it at all.
"So I went to visit D'Arcy in his
apartment. I took a pair of dark green eyeglasses with me. I explained to him
that I was having trouble with my eyes and needed to wear the dark glasses at
all times. He believed me. The glasses permitted me to look around the
apartment while I seemed only to be talking to him.
"I paid special attention to a large desk
where there were a lot of papers and books. However, I saw nothing suspicious
there. After a few minutes, however, I noticed a small shelf over the
fireplace. A few postcards and a letter were lying on the shelf. The letter
looked very old and dirty.
"As soon as I saw this letter, I decided
it must be the one I was looking for. It must be, even though it was completely
different from the one Germont had described.
"This letter had a large green stamp on
it. The address was written in small letters in blue ink. I memorized every
detail of the letter while I talked to D'Arcy. Then when he was not looking, I
dropped one of my gloves on the floor under my chair.
"The next morning, I stopped at his
apartment to look for my glove. While we were talking, we heard people shouting
in the street. D'Arcy went to the window and looked out. Quickly, I stepped to
the shelf and put the letter in my pocket. Then I replaced it with a letter
that looked exactly like it, which I had taken with me. I had made it the night
before.
"The trouble in the street was caused by a
man who had almost been run over by a horse and carriage. He was not hurt. And
soon the crowd of people went away. When it was over, D'Arcy came away from the
window. I said good-bye and left.
"The man who almost had an accident was
one of my servants. I had paid him to create the incident."
Dupin stopped talking to light his pipe. I did
not understand. "But, Dupin," I said, "why did you go to the
trouble of replacing the letter? Why not just take it and leave?"
Dupin smiled. "D'Arcy is a dangerous
man," he said. "And he has many loyal servants. If I had taken the
letter, I might never have left his apartment alive."
ANNOUNCER:
"The Purloined Letter" was written by
Edgar Allan Poe and adapted into Special English by Dona De Sanctis. The
storyteller was Shep O'Neal. The producer was Lawan Davis.
You can read and listen to other AMERICAN
STORIES at our Web site, voaspecialenglish.com. I'm Barbara Klein.