[identity profile] mafief.livejournal.com
Canon Story: The Three Students
Title: Wouldn’t It Be Great
Author: Mafief
Rating: G
Warnings: none

Wouldn’t it be great
To stay within the comforts of home?
To have institutional integrity never compromised?
To be included?
To easily excel with the examination?
To maintain perfect marks?
To stay focused when studies are just too easy?
To never succumb to temptation?
To not cover for the misdeeds of the former master’s son?
Yes, wouldn’t it be great.
gardnerhill: (Default)
[personal profile] gardnerhill

Title: The Three Students: So Painful A Scandal
Author: gardnerhill                         
Word Count: 60
Rating:  G
Warning: None
Summary: The Victorian-school definition, that is.

 ***

My friend read the headmaster’s incident book. “Two lads setting a lower form on fire.”

Soames hand-waved. “Good wholesome character-building.”

“Four deaths due to hazing last year. An upper-form’s servant boy beaten nearly to death.” Holmes fixed Soames with a stare. “But a student looking at an exam paper –“

“Is a scandal from which St. Luke may never recover!”

alafaye: (Default)
[personal profile] alafaye
This week we are reading The Three Students. It carries the themes of dishonesty and loyalty. My apologies for not posting a reminder for it. (*hides*)

Three_Students )
alafaye: (Default)
[personal profile] alafaye
This week we are reading The Three Students. It carries the themes of dishonesty and loyalty. My apologies for not posting a reminder for it. (*hides*)

Three_Students )
[identity profile] gardnerhill.livejournal.com
Title: The Three Students: So Painful A Scandal
Author: gardnerhill                        
Word Count: 60
Rating: G
Warning: None
Summary: The Victorian-school definition, that is.

***

My friend read the headmaster’s incident book. “Two lads setting a lower form on fire.”

Soames hand-waved. “Good wholesome character-building.”

“Four deaths due to hazing last year. An upper-form’s servant boy beaten nearly to death.” Holmes fixed Soames with a stare. “But a student looking at an exam paper –“

“Is a scandal from which St. Luke may never recover!”
ext_1620665: knight on horseback (Default)
[identity profile] scfrankles.livejournal.com
Canon Story: The Three Students
Title: Playing the Three-Card Trick
Author: [livejournal.com profile] scfrankles
Rating: G
Author's Notes: In the year 1878 I took my degree of Doctor of Medicine… [STUD] I will endeavour in my statement to avoid such terms as would serve to limit the events to any particular place, or give a clue as to the people concerned.


Holmes was reading Watson’s draft. “...in the year '95… spend some weeks?” He snorted.

“52 weeks is ‘some’ weeks,” said Watson primly.

Holmes raised an eyebrow. “And ‘one of our great university towns’..?”

“I received just as excellent an education as you, Holmes.”

Watson grinned.

“And it uses my readers’ assumptions against them. They’ll never guess we never left London!”
ext_1620665: knight on horseback (Default)
[identity profile] scfrankles.livejournal.com
Welcome once again to my poetry page!

I hope each week you will read Dr. Watson’s delightful narrative and then go on to write a poem related to it in some way. All forms of poetry are permitted, and further down the page there is a selection you might like to consider using over the coming weeks.

And here, courtesy of my housemaid Rachel, are this week’s suggested poems to read—suggestions inspired by the themes and subjects in this week's story. Hopefully you will enjoy the poems, and perhaps they may give you some ideas for a poem of your own or allow you to look at Dr. Watson's story in a new way.



University

By Karl Shapiro


Note from Rachel: This poem highlights the prejudiced social structure underlying old-fashioned university life, more scandalous, corrupt, and harmful than the incident in this week's mystery. (Warning: the poem includes blunt description of racism and antisemitism).



Art & Craft

By Robin Coste Lewis


Note from Rachel: I cannot help but wonder whether students like Daulat Ras had to fight their way through a different kind of academic pressure - the temptation to conceal part of their talent in order to conform to the biases of the people around them. I imagine that even Sherlock Holmes might once have felt, as a young student, the urge to hide his light under a bushel in order to avoid the resentment of his peers.



Thank you so much to Rachel. And here is my suggested form to revisit this week: the abecedarian. (The link takes you back to a previous poetry page.)

But you do not have to use that form. Any form of poetry is welcome this week—and every week! Here are a few suggestions for you:

221B verselet, abecedarian poetry, acrostic poetry, alexandrine, ballad, beeswing, blackout poetry, blitz poem, blues stanza, bref double, Burns stanza, call and response, chastushka, cinquain, circular poetry, clerihew, colour poems, compound word verse, concrete poetry, Cornish verse, curtal sonnet, diamante, doggerel, double dactyl, ekphrasis, elegiac couplet, elegiac stanza, elfje, englyn, epigram, epistle, epitaph, epulaeryu, Etheree, fable, Fib, florette, found poetry, free verse, ghazal, haiku, In Memoriam stanza, Italian sonnet, jueju, kennings poem, lanturne, limerick, line messaging, lyric poetry, mathnawī, micropoetry, mini-monoverse, musette, palindrome poetry, pantoum, Parallelismus Membrorum, poem cycle, quintilla, renga, rhyming alliterisen, riddle, rime couée, Schüttelreim, sedoka, septet, sestina, sonnet, tanka, tercet, terza rima, tongue twister poetry, triangular triplet, triolet, Tyburn, villanelle


Please leave all your poems inspired by The Three Students in the comments on this post. I look forward to seeing them!


Warm regards,

Mrs. Hudson
ext_1620665: knight on horseback (Default)
[identity profile] scfrankles.livejournal.com
This week, the canon story we’re looking at is The Three Students and the chosen topic is University Education.

Discussion continues... )
[identity profile] gardnerhill.livejournal.com
Title: The Three Students: Deja Vu
Author: gardnerhill                         
Word Count: 60
Rating: G
Warning: None
Summary: Gilchrist wasn’t even the cleverest cheat.

***

Alas, all three students were guilty.

Gilchrist admitted to studying the Thucydides paper, and Daulat Ras to paying Bannister to copy the exam.

But Miles McLaren’s secret weapon lay under his bed – a disheveled and startlingly familiar person.

“Mr. Melas!” Holmes exclaimed.

The Greek interpreter shrugged. “This pays better, Mr. Holmes – and is far less dangerous than my last assignment!”
ext_1620665: knight on horseback (Default)
[identity profile] scfrankles.livejournal.com
This Sunday, 5th March, we'll be posting our 60 word ficlets for The Three Students.

For reasons they are resolutely keeping to themselves, Holmes and Watson are currently staying in ‘one of our great University towns’. Holmes is not coping well with being away from Baker Street but perks up on being presented with a case. Examination papers for an important scholarship have apparently been copied. Can Holmes work out which student is the guilty party and avert a scandal..?

If you haven't tried 60 for 60 before, full information - including our schedule - can be found on our profile. But in essence: you read ACD's story and then you write a 60 word story inspired by it! You don't have to post a story every week - just join in whenever you feel like it.

Each Sunday we will also have our weekly discussion post, where we discuss a topic inspired by the canon story. And there’s Mrs. Hudson's Poetry Page too - any poems written about this week’s story can be left as a comment on her post. Mrs. Hudson informs me that the poetry form being revisited this week is the abecedarian. (If you’re giving this one a try, going through the entire alphabet isn’t necessary - unless you want to!) And as usual, her housemaid Rachel will be suggesting a poem for us to read, to give us added inspiration.

You can choose one activity, or have a go at everything. Or just come along and read the 60s! (And have a chat in the comments.) All options are absolutely fine.

Hope to see you on Sunday. But don’t worry if you can’t join us then - we stay open for posting and commenting all week!
[identity profile] thesmallhobbit.livejournal.com
Canon Story: The Three Students
Title: University Choice (as featured in the Marylebone Illustrated)
Author:thesmallhobbit
Rating: G

Whilst many students choose to attend either Oxford or Cambridge, those in the north may prefer to attend Durham University and we have excellent facilities in our own city.  We are proud that our university was the first to accept female students on equal terms with their male counterparts and equally proud we were the first to award science degrees.

 
ext_1620665: knight on horseback (Default)
[identity profile] scfrankles.livejournal.com
Canon Story: The Three Students
Title: Fun and Games
Author: [livejournal.com profile] scfrankles
Rating: G
Author's Notes: “...the landlady babbled of green peas at seven-thirty.” “Quite a little parlour game…”


"Hot boiled beans and butter; walk in and find your supper!" chanted everyone.

Holmes re-entered the room and began a determined search.

“Cold!” called Hopkins.

“Cold!” called Mrs. Hudson.

“Even colder!” laughed Watson.

Lestrade furrowed his brow. “When do we tell him we didn’t hide the thimble?” he whispered.

“Oh, he’s the genius,” grinned Watson. “Let him work it out.”
ext_1620665: knight on horseback (Default)
[identity profile] scfrankles.livejournal.com
Welcome once again to my poetry page!

I hope each week you will read Dr. Watson’s delightful narrative and then be inspired to write a poem related to it in some way. All forms of poetry are permitted, and further down the page there is a selection you might like to consider using over the coming weeks.

This week my featured form is the blues stanza. It is a kind of tercet.

Definition and Example )



As always, this is simply something to consider for the future. Any form of poetry is welcome this week—and every week! Here are a few suggestions for you:

221B verselet, abecedarian poetry, acrostic poetry, alexandrine, blackout poetry, blues stanza, call and response, cinquain, circular poetry, clerihew, colour poems, concrete poetry, diamante, doggerel, double dactyl, ekphrasis, elegiac couplet, englyn, epigram, epulaeryu, fable, found poetry, ghazal, haiku, kennings poem, lanturne, limerick, lyric poetry, palindrome poetry, pantoum, poem cycle, renga, riddle, rime couée, Schüttelreim, sedoka, septet, sestina, sonnet, tanka, tercet, terza rima, tongue twister poetry, triolet, tyburn, villanelle


Please leave all your poems inspired by The Three Students in the comments on this post. I look forward to seeing them!


Warm regards,

Mrs. Hudson
ext_1620665: knight on horseback (Default)
[identity profile] scfrankles.livejournal.com
This week we’re having a look at The Three Students. I’ve typed up a few thoughts and questions to get the discussion going—please leave your own ideas in the comments!

Discussion continues... )
ext_1789368: okapi (Default)
[identity profile] okapi1895.livejournal.com

Author: [livejournal.com profile] okapi1895
Story: The Three Students

Rating: G

“...early English charters, Greek proof-pilfering…”

“They weren’t pilfered!”

“And still….”

Holmes curled on the sofa until all that was visible of him was dressing-gown. “Since you deny me my syringe…” he mumbled into the cushion.

“Goodness, this Case of the Unsettled Detective is one of my cases!”

He looked over his shoulder as I reached for him.

“Physical, not mental.”

[identity profile] gardnerhill.livejournal.com
Title: The Three Students: Into Which I Need Not Enter
Author: gardnerhill
Word Count: 60
Rating: G
Warning: Implies a pairing between Holmes and Watson.
Summary: I’m sure the timing was merely a coincidence.

***

In early April 1895 Holmes shook me awake on a cold dark morning. “Watson, we are leaving town for some time. Immediately.”

I blinked. “A case?”

“Among other reasons. Lestrade has let slip something. Come, into your clothes at once!”

Not till we were well ensconced in a university town, far from London, did I hear of Oscar Wilde’s arrest.
ext_1620665: knight on horseback (Default)
[identity profile] scfrankles.livejournal.com
This Sunday, 4th October, we'll be posting our 60 word ficlets for The Three Students.

Holmes and Watson are presently away from Baker Street and staying in "one of our great University towns". A lecturer comes to them for help: examination papers have apparently been copied and the examinations themselves begin the very next day. To avoid scandal, can Holmes discover which of three students is the guilty man..?

If you haven't tried 60 for 60 before, full information - including our schedule - can be found on our profile. But in essence: you read ACD's story and then you write a 60 word story inspired by it! You don't have to post a story every week - just join in whenever you feel like it.

Each Sunday we will also have our weekly discussion post, and Mrs. Hudson's Poetry Page. Any poems inspired by this week’s story can be left as a comment on her post.

You can choose one activity, or have a go at everything. Or just come along and read the 60s! (And have a chat in the comments ^^) All options are absolutely fine.

Hope to see you on Sunday ^^
[identity profile] thesmallhobbit.livejournal.com
Canon Story: The Three Students
Author: thesmallhobbit
Rating: G




Bannister
On finding his young mister
Spoke to him man to man
And thought Rhodesia a good plan
 
[identity profile] thesmallhobbit.livejournal.com
Canon Story: The Three Students
Title: Poor Planning
Author: thesmallhobbit
Rating: G

Had Holmes not advertised the fact that he had stolen some of the dubious explosives by blowing up part of our ceiling, we could at least have remained in London whilst repairs were made.  In the circumstances, it was considered safer for us to leave the capital, a fact which also took us out of reach of Mrs Hudson’s wrath.
vaysh: (Default)
[personal profile] vaysh
Canon Story: The Three Students
Title: How Miles McLaren Got a Lucky Streak
Author: [livejournal.com profile] vaysh
Rating: G
Words: 60


Plato. Miles McLaren was sure of it; the Greek translation had to be Plato.

He ran into Gilchrist on the stairs. The chap was white as a sheet.

"Studying too much Plato, have you?"

"Thucydides," Gilchrist muttered absent-mindedly.

"What?"

But Gilchrist had already disappeared into his room.

Thucydides... Well, he'd better spend the night reading up on the Peleponnesian War.

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Sherlock Holmes: 60 for 60

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