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Today I’ve been stumbling upon one sentence in HOUNDS and I had the strong feeling of sensing a certain pattern there:
HENRY (to Dr. Frankland): Twenty years! Twenty years of my life making no sense! Why didn’t you just kill me?!
SHERLOCK: Because dead men get listened to. He needed to do more than kill you. He had to discredit every word you ever said about your father…
Dr. Frankland’s tactic seems very similar to Moriarty’s plan to destroy Sherlock, doesn’t it?
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"discredit every word you ever said" - it does sound rather familiar. I wonder if it means anything or just a coincidence?
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It sounds quite familiar yes... and adds an extra point of view on Sherlock's fake death.
Because dead men get listened to
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Add to that these:
- After Sherlock's 'outburst' of having no friends (so John could feel as if he has lost his friend), the next morning he finds John contemplating in a graveyard.
- At one stage, Sherlock interprets Liberty In as part of teh phrase " There is liberty in death..."
Just sayin'
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What about "Got to see a man about a dog"?
Of course this could just be the well known euphemism/yet another dog joke, but my instinct was to link it to the next scene, the man being Mycroft and the dog being Moriarty, and Sherlock initiating? Moriarty's release now he's got some other things sorted.
Actually I think it's usually "Going to see a man about a dog" but I guess there could be regional variations.
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Britigander wrote:
What about "Got to see a man about a dog"?
.
He was meaning that he was going to speak to the owner of the restaurant about the dog that they said was put down, because it wasn't & became such a menace in the end.
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You're right Britgander in that it is definitely a play on words going on here.
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The "Liberty in death, isn't that the expression? The only true freedom." that Sherlock mumbles really stopped me yesterday.
Funny, how different moments have different meanings depending on the mood and mind we are in..
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The Doctor wrote:
The "Liberty in death, isn't that the expression? The only true freedom." that Sherlock mumbles really stopped me yesterday.
Wow. Amazing line. Almost makes you think Sherlock is suicidal...
Last edited by Arya (July 31, 2012 11:56 pm)
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Liberty in death can have a few meanings...tho as it turned out, none terribly relevant to H.O.U.N.D.