**In Chapter 2, Dr. Mortimer presents to Holmes and Watson the story of the Baskerville curse. In this chapter, he gives no mention as to whether he believes in it or not, but he still feels it is important. Interestingly, he is a man of science, as was Sir Charles. The following questions will deal with reality versus fantasy.
1) What are the supernatural elements contained in the Baskerville legend? How does it have any bearing on Sir Charles's death? How does it have any bearing on the supposed violent deaths of other Baskerville men? Does it appear that Dr. Mortimer is trying to prove the legend to be true or false? How can you tell? Do you think less of Dr. Mortimer's apparent unease with the story? How is this at odds with his scientific training? Some supernatural elements of the legend are the "a great black beast" and a hound shaped animal that is bigger than the eye has ever seen. It is said that the Baskerville legend haunts his family to the current date in the story, so they believe he died due to the fact that he does not have an imagination and does not believe in it. The three friends of Hugo who died while going down in the dip of the valley to find the lady has to do with the legend because the big black beast ate them. Dr. Mortimer is trying to prove the Baskerville legend to be true and make Watson and Holmes have some pity on them. Dr. Mortimer's unease with the tale is bad but if it has affected his family for this long then he should be worried.
2) The Baskerville legend is made up of superstitions and myth, though it is told as fact. Do you believe that Hugo came to his violent end the way the legend describes? Is there any practical explanation for how he and the young lady died? Is there any practical explanation for how Sir Charles may have died? Why? I do not think Hugo died the exact way that the legend describes; but the young lady and he died from the same thing-the black beast of Baskerville. Sir Charles may have died the same way as Hugo and the young girl, but there is no way to know for sure this early into the book.
3) The facts of Sir Charles's death have been presented by both the newspaper and Dr. Mortimer, along with the story of the curse. Do you believe in the curse so far? Why or why not? Could there be a logical explanation for the hound? (Note that this is a very famous story and, even if you already know the ending, please do not use your knowledge of the rest of the plot on this question). I do not believe everything in the curse so far. I do not believe that the hound of baskerville is all the way true, maybe it is not a hound but a wild animal and no one has seen it up close or in the dark to know for sure. There is no logical explanation for the curse other than the hound was made and his DNA messed up and now it is a bigger version of the average hound.
4) The Baskerville curse is presented as a legend that people fear and take seriously, despite Holmes's skepticism. Are there any legends you know of that you take seriously? Are there any that you can explain away logically? Why do you believe in it or why do you not believe in it? There is a legend of bigfoot that many people believe is not real. I believe in bigfoot because there is so much unexplored land in the world that we may not know every single species there is.
*** Arthur Conan Doyle builds the suspense in Chapter 2 from the very beginning. Dr. Mortimer presents to Holmes and Watson an old legend crossed with a modern tragedy and a problem that must be addressed within a day. Even more, the chapter ends with a chilling and shocking revelation. The following questions will deal with the use of suspense.
5) What is suspense? What are ways that it can be built? Is urgency part of what makes this chapter so suspenseful? Suspense is a state or feeling of excited or anxious uncertainty about what may happen. For suspense to be built, you have to get the reader to care about what happens, build tension by causing small losses and small wins and you have to foreshadow what is going to happen. Urgency has somethings to do with the suspense in the chapter.
6) What are some of the terms that build the dramatic aspects of this chapter? Specifically note the story of the wicked Hugo. How does Doyle use language to ratchet up the tension in this chapter? Some terms that builds dramatic aspects in Chapter two are style, characterization, themes, symbolism, allusions and mood. The story of the "wicked" Hugo is a perverted man from Baskerville who kidnapped his neighbor's daughter and locked her in his attic. Hugo and his drunk friends chased after the girl. After coming up on the dip in Baskerville, the group of guys discover the girls dead body in the middle of a field and saw a huge dog gnawing Hugo's throat out.
7) Cliffhanger: "The Hound of the Baskervilles" was published in monthly serial form in "The Strand." How does ending the chapter with the line about the hound's footprints amp the suspense? Given that when it was first published, a person would have had to wait a whole month to find out what happened next, how does this affect your reading of this chapter? Stating that the hounds footprints were gigantic, the reader now wants to know exactly how big and scary the hound really is. The reader would be dying the read the next chapter if they had to wait a month to see what happens. This made people continue to read the series.
8) Write a brief essay on the use of suspense in this chapter. How did it make you feel? Did you sense the tension rising in this chapter? Why or why not? What works for you and what does not? Does the suspense make you eager to start the next chapter? The use of suspense in Chapter two made me want to read more of the novel because it left out many details. Tension rose throughout the chapter and eggs you on to read more of the book because it is hard to not be curious.