“The Purloined Letter” (1844)
By: E. A. Poe
Summary
In a small room in Paris, an
unnamed narrator, who also narrates “The Murders in the Rue Morgue,” sits
quietly with his friend, C. Auguste Dupin. He ponders the murders in the
Rue Morgue, which Dupin solved in that story. Monsieur G——, the prefect of the
Paris police, arrives, having decided to consult Dupin again. The prefect
presents a case that is almost too simple: a letter has been taken from the
royal apartments. The police know who has taken it: the Minister D, an
important government official. According to the prefect, a young lady possessed
the letter, which contains information that could harm a powerful individual.
When the young lady was first reading the letter, the man whom it concerned
came into the royal apartments. Not wanting to arouse his suspicion, she put it
down on a table next to her. The sinister Minister D then walked in and noted
the letter’s contents. Quickly grasping the seriousness of the situation, he
produced a letter of his own that resembled the important letter. He left his
own letter next to the original one as he began to talk of Parisian affairs.
Finally, as he prepared to leave the apartment, he purposely retrieved the
lady’s letter in place of his own. Now, the prefect explains, the Minister D
possesses a great deal of power over the lady.
Dupin asks whether the police
have searched the Minister’s residence, arguing that since the power of the
letter derives from its being readily available, it must be in his apartment.
The prefect responds that they have searched the Minister’s residence but have
not located the letter. He recounts the search procedure, during which the
police systematically searched every inch of the hotel. In addition, the letter
could not be hidden on the Minister’s body because the police have searched him
as well. The prefect mentions that he is willing to search long and hard
because the reward offered in the case is so generous. Upon Dupin’s request,
the prefect reads him a physical description of the letter. Dupin suggests that
the police search again.
One month later, Dupin and the
narrator are again sitting together when the prefect visits. The prefect admits
that he cannot find the letter, even though the reward has increased. The
prefect says that he will pay 50,000 francs to anyone who obtains the
letter for him. Dupin tells him to write a check for that amount on the spot.
Upon receipt of the check, Dupin hands over the letter. The prefect rushes off
to return it to its rightful owner, and Dupin explains how he obtained the
letter.
Dupin admits that the police are
skilled investigators according to their own principles. He explains this
remark by describing a young boy playing “even and odd.” In this game, each
player must guess whether the number of things (usually toys) held by another
player is even or odd. If the guesser is right, he gets one of the toys. If he
is wrong, he loses a toy of his own. The boy whom Dupin describes plays the
game well because he bases his guesses on the knowledge of his opponent. When
he faces difficulty, he imitates the facial expression of his opponent, as
though to understand what he thinks and feels. With this knowledge, he often
guesses correctly. Dupin argues that the Paris police do not use this strategy
and therefore could not find the letter: the police think only to look for a
letter in places where they themselves might hide it.
Dupin argues that the Minister
D—— is intelligent enough not to hide the letter in the nooks and crannies of
his apartment—exactly where the police first investigate. He describes to the
narrator a game of puzzles in which one player finds a name on a map and tells
the other player to find it as well. Amateurs, says Dupin, pick the names with
the smallest letters. According to Dupin’s logic, the hardest names to find are
actually those that stretch broadly across the map because they are so obvious.
With this game in mind, Dupin
recounts the visit he made to the Minister’s apartment. After surveying the
Minister’s residence, Dupin notices a group of visiting cards hanging from the
mantelpiece. A letter accompanies them. It has a different exterior than that
previously described by the prefect, but Dupin also observes that the letter
appears to have been folded back on itself. He becomes sure that it is the
stolen document. In order to create a reason for returning to the apartment, he
purposely leaves behind his snuffbox. When he goes back the next morning to
retrieve it, he also arranges for someone to make a commotion outside the
window while he is in the apartment. When the Minister rushes to the window to
investigate the noise, Dupin replaces the stolen letter with a fake. He
justifies his decision to leave behind another letter by predicting that the
Minister will embarrass himself when he acts in reliance upon the letter he
falsely believes he still possesses. Dupin remarks that the Minister once
wronged him in Vienna and that he has pledged not to forget the insult. Inside
the fake letter, then, Dupin inscribes, a French poem that translates into
English, “So baneful a scheme, if not worthy of Atreus, is worthy of Thyestes.”
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