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C. Auguste Dupin | Novels | By Edgar Allan Poe

C. Auguste Dupin is a detective created by Edgar Allan Poe. He appears in three stories that are often considered the first modern detective stories. Here’s a brief synopsis of each: 1."The Murders in the Rue Morgue" (1841) Synopsis: The story follows C. Auguste Dupin and his unnamed friend (the narrator) in Paris as they investigate a brutal double murder in the Rue Morgue. The victims, Madame L'Espanaye and her daughter, are found dead in their home under mysterious circumstances, with no apparent motive and with evidence that seems impossible to decipher. The police are baffled, but Dupin uses his analytical skills to piece together the clues. He discovers that the murders were committed by an escaped orangutan, which climbed through an open window, revealing how observation and reasoning can solve even the most perplexing mysteries. 2. "The Mystery of Marie Rogêt" (1842) Synopsis:In this sequel to "The Murders in the Rue Morgue," Dupin is tasked with solving the real-life-inspired murder of Marie Rogêt, a young woman whose body is found in the Seine River. The story is based on the real-life murder of Mary Cecilia Rogers, a case that was widely publicized at the time. Dupin meticulously analyzes newspaper reports and pieces together a timeline of events and motivations to uncover the truth behind Marie's death. The story showcases Dupin's methodical approach to solving crimes using existing evidence. 3. "The Purloined Letter" (1844) Synopsis: In the final Dupin story, Dupin is asked to recover a stolen letter that is being used to blackmail a member of the royal family. Unlike the previous stories, this case involves a more intellectual and psychological challenge. The letter has been hidden in plain sight by the cunning thief, Minister D—. Dupin's insight into human nature allows him to outsmart the minister and retrieve the letter. This story highlights Dupin's skill in understanding the criminal mind and solving crimes without physical evidence.

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It was in Paris that I met August Dupin.

He was an unusually

interesting young man with a busy,

forceful mind. This mind could, it

seemed, look right through a man's

body into his deepest soul.

One hot summer morning we

read in the newspapers about a

terrible killing. The dead persons

were an old woman and her unmar￾ried daughter, who lived alone on

the fourth floor of an old house on

the street called the Rue Morgue.

Someone had taken the

daughter's neck in his

powerful fingers and

pressed with fearful strength until her life was gone. Her mother's

body was found outside, behind the house, with the head nearly cut

off. The knife with which she was killed was found, however, in the

room, on the floor.

Several neighbors ran to the house when they heard the women's

cries of fear. As they ran up to the fourth floor they heard two other

voices. But when they reached the room and broke down the door

they found no living person in the room. Like the door, the two windows were firmly closed, locked on the inside. There was no other

way that the killer could have got in or out of the room.

The Paris police did not know where to begin to look for the

answer. I told Dupin that it seemed to me that it was not possible to

learn the answer to the mystery of these killings. No, no, said Dupin.

"No; I think you are wrong. A mystery it is, yes. But there must

be an answer. We must not judge what is possible just by what we have

read in the newspapers. The Paris police work hard and often get good

results; but there is no real method in what they do. When something

more than simple hard work is needed, when a little real method is

needed, the police fail. Sometimes they stand too near the problem.

Often, if a person looks at something very closely he can see a few

things more clearly, but the shape of the whole thing escapes him.

"There must be an answer! There must! Let us go to the house

and see what we can see. I know the head of the police, and he will

allow us to do so. And this will be interesting and give us some plea￾sure."

I thought it strange that Dupin should believe we would get plea￾sure out of this. But I said nothing.

It was late in the afternoon when we reached the house on the

Rue Morgue. It was easily found for there were still many persons — in

fact, a crowd, standing there looking at it. Before going in we walked

all around it, and Dupin carefully looked at the neighboring houses as

well as this one. I could not understand the reason for such great care.

We came again to the front of the house and went in. We went

up the stairs into the room where the daughter's body had been

found. Both bodies were there. The police had left the room as they

had found it. I saw nothing beyond what the newspaper had told us.

Dupin looked with great care at everything, at the bodies, the walls,

the fireplace, the windows. Then we went home.

Dupin said nothing. I could see the cold look in his eyes which

told me that his mind was working, working busily, quickly. I asked no

questions.

Dupin said nothing until the next morning, when he came into

my room and asked me suddenly if I had not noticed something especially strange about what we saw at the house on the Rue Morgue. I replied: "Nothing more than we both read in the newspaper."

"Tell me, my friend. How shall we explain the horrible force, the

unusual strength used in these murders? And whose were the voices

that were heard? No one was found except the dead women; yet there

was no way for anyone to escape. And the wild condition of the room;

the body which was found head down above the fireplace; the terrible

broken appearance of the body of the old lady, with its head cut off;

these are all so far from what might be expected that the police are

standing still; they don't know where to begin.

"These things are unusual, indeed; but they are not deep

mysteries. We should not ask, 'What has happened?' but 'What has

happened that has never happened before?' In fact, the very things

that the police think cannot possibly be explained are the things

which will lead me to the answer. Indeed, I believe they have already

led me to the answer."

I was so surprised I could not say a word. Dupin looked quickly

at the door. "I am now waiting for a person who will know something

about these murders, these wild killings. I do not think he did them

himself. But I think he will know the killer. I hope I am right about

this. If I am, then I expect to find the whole answer, today. I expect

the man here — in this room — at any moment. It is true that he may

not come; but he probably will."

"But who is this person? How did you find him?"

"I'll tell you. While we wait for this man we do not know — for I

have never met him — while we wait, I will tell you how my thoughts

went." Dupin began to talk. But it did not seem that he was trying to

explain to me what he had thought. It seemed that he was talking to

himself. He looked not at me, but at the wall.

"It has been fully proved that the voices heard by the neighbors

were not the voices of the women who were killed. Someone else

was in the room. It is therefore certain that the old woman did not

first kill her daughter and then kill herself. She would not have been

strong enough to put her daughter's body where it was found; and the

manner of the old lady's death shows that she could not have caused

it herself. A person can kill himself with a knife, yes. But he surely

cannot cut his own head almost off, then drop the knife on the floor

and jump out the window. It was murder, then, done by some third

person — or persons. And the voices heard were the voices of these persons. Let us now think carefully about the things people said about

those voices. Did you notice anything especially strange in what was

told about them?"

"Well, yes. Everybody agreed that the low voice was the voice of

a Frenchman; but they could not agree about the high voice."

"Ah! That was what they said, yes; but that was not what was

so strange about what they said. You say you have noticed nothing

that makes their stories very different from what might have been

expected. Yet there was something. All these persons, as you say,

agreed about the low voice; but not about the high hard voice. The

strange thing here is that when an Italian, an Englishman, a Spaniard,

and a Frenchman tried to tell what the voice was like, each one said

it sounded like the voice of a foreigner. How strangely unusual that

voice really must have been! Here are four men from four big coun￾tries, and not one of them could understand what the voice said; each

one gave it a different name.

"Now, I know that there are other countries in the world. You will

say that perhaps it was the voice of someone from one of those other

lands — Russia, perhaps. But remember, not one of these people heard

anything that sounded like a separate word."

Here Dupin turned and looked into my eyes.

"This is what we have learned from the newspaper. I don't know

what I have led you to think. But I believe that in this much of the

story there are enough facts to lead us in the one and only direction

to the right answer. What this answer is, I will not say…not yet. But I

want you to keep in mind that this much was enough to tell me what

I must look for when we were in that house on the Rue Morgue. And I found it!"