Irene_Adler Irene_Adler

Irene Adler - Definition and Overview

Irene Adler is a fictional character featured in the Sherlock Holmes story "A Scandal in Bohemia" by Arthur Conan Doyle, published in July, 1891. Her surname derives from the German word for "eagle".

She was reportedly born in New Jersey during the year 1858. She followed a career in opera as a contralto. Notable points of her career included performances in La Scala, Milan, Italy and a term as Prima donna in the Imperial Opera of Warsaw, Poland. Sometime before her 30th year, Irene retired from the operatic stage and moved to London, United Kingdom. The reasons for her retirement are not stated in the story. But it must have been a profitable career, to allow her to retire in comfort. Dr. Watson mentions her as being deceased at the time of the story's publication and before reaching her 34th year. The reasons of her death were not stated. However it has been speculated that the reason of both her early retirement and her early demise was a hidden health problem.

On March 20, 1888, according to the story, Wilhelm Gottsreich Sigismond von Ormstein, Grand Duke of Cassel-Felstein and hereditary King of Bohemia (though historically the current King was Franz Joseph of Austria) incognito contacted Sherlock Holmes to secure a photograph from Miss Adler. The Monarch reigned from Prague but c. 1883 and as a Crown Prince, he reportedly paid "a lengthy visit to Warsaw" where he "made the acquaintance of the well-known adventuress, Irene Adler". The two became lovers and Irene had kept a photograph of the two of them. The thirty-year-old King explained to Holmes that he intended to marry Clotilde Lothman von Saxe-Meningen, an unseen character and second daughter of the King of Scandinavia. Irene could well threaten this marriage. It should be noted that Scandinavia was at the time actually divided between the domains of two different Kings:Oscar II of Sweden and Norway, and Christian IX of Denmark and Iceland.

Using his great skills at disguise, Holmes traced her movements and learned much of her private life; then he set up a faked incident to cause a diversion that would let him discover where the picture was hidden. When he came back to snatch it, he found Miss Adler gone, along with her new husband and the goods, which had been replaced with a letter to Holmes! This was the one person ever to outwit Holmes completely.

Irene Adler is a most interesting sort of character to appear in popular Victorian fiction. At a time when ladies were supposed to be ladies, she had "the face of the most beautiful of women, and the mind of the most resolute of men" according to the King. She had the wit to one-up Sherlock Holmes, and he admired her for it. (One might compare the sincere gratitude shown by Einstein toward anyone who caught and corrected an error of his.) Not only that; as she says in the letter to Holmes, "Male costume is nothing new to me. I often take advantage of the freedom which it gives." Holmes does not blink at the shocking revelation that she goes out into the town disguised as a man.

To be sure, Irene Adler was no lady. Watson starts out by describing her as "of dubious and questionable memory." But she earns Holmes's unbounded admiration, and even the King of Bohemia says, "Would she not have made an admirable queen? Is it not a pity that she was not on my level?"—a sentiment which Holmes treats with no attempt to conceal which of the two he thought to be on a higher level.

For all his eccentricity, Holmes frequently expressed Doyle's own views on life, the universe, and everything. With no hint that the author considers Holmes's reaction to be wrong-headed, Irene Adler exposes some contradictions in Victorian standards and is something of a subversive character.

Sherlock Holmes fans have often theorized that Holmes and Adler became romantically involved, though a statement to the contrary was made in the original story. Some fans have even theorized that Holmes and Adler were the parents of Nero Wolfe.

External links

  • "A Scandal in Bohemia" (http://sherlock-holmes.classic-literature.co.uk/a-scandal-in-bohemia/) - in easy to read HTML format.



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Sherlock Holmes topics
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Authors and illustrators: Arthur Conan Doyle | Adrian Conan Doyle | John Dickson Carr | Nicholas Meyer | Sidney Paget
Novels: A Study in Scarlet | The Sign of Four | The Hound of the Baskervilles | The Valley of Fear
Short Story Collections: The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes | The Memoirs of Sherlock Holmes | The Return of Sherlock Holmes | His Last Bow | The Case Book of Sherlock Holmes
Short Stories: A Scandal in Bohemia | The Red-Headed League | A Case of Identity | The Boscombe Valley Mystery | The Five Orange Pips | The Man with the Twisted Lip | The Blue Carbuncle | The Speckled Band | The Engineer's Thumb | The Noble Bachelor | The Beryl Coronet | The Copper Beeches | Silver Blaze | The Cardboard Box | The Yellow Face | The Stockbroker's Clerk | The Gloria Scott | The Musgrave Ritual | The Reigate Squire | The Crooked Man | The Resident Patient | The Greek Interpreter | The Naval Treaty | The Final Problem | The Empty House | The Norwood Builder | The Dancing Men | The Solitary Cyclist | The Priory School | Black Peter | Charles Augustus Milverton | The Six Napoleons | The Three Students | The Golden Pince-Nez | The Missing Three-Quarter | The Abbey Grange | The Second Stain | Wisteria Lodge | The Red Circle | The Bruce-Partington Plans | The Dying Detective | The Disappearance of Lady Francis Carfax | The Devil's Foot | His Last Bow | The Illustrious Client | The Blanched Soldier | The Mazarin Stone | The Three Gables | The Sussex Vampire | The Three Garridebs | Thor Bridge | The Creeping Man | The Lion's Mane | The Veiled Lodger | Shoscombe Old Place | The Retired Colourman
Characters: Irene Adler | The Baker Street Irregulars | Mycroft Holmes | Inspector Lestrade | Professor Moriarty | Dr. Watson | Inspector Hopkins | List of Sherlock Holmes Inspectors
Pastiches: The Canary Trainer | The Seven-Per-Cent Solution | Sherlock Holmes in the 22nd Century
Places: 221B Baker Street | The Diogenes Club | Reichenbach Falls


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