The Case of Lady Sannox

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LanguageEnglish
Published inThe Idler
"The Case of Lady Sannox"
Short story by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
Text available at Wikisource
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish
GenreShort story
Publication
Published inThe Idler
Media typePrint (magazine)
Publication dateNovember 1893

"The Case of Lady Sannox" (also published as "The Kiss of Blood") is a short story by the British author Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, first published in The Idler in November 1893.

The story features an arrogant surgeon, Douglas Stone, who is in love with the married Lady Sannox, one of the most beautiful women in London. On his way to a rendezvous with her, the surgeon is asked by a Turkish man to operate on the latter's wife, who has cut her lip with a poisoned scimitar. The doctor is informed the woman will die if the poison is not cut out.

Because of his desire to meet his lover, his need for money, his professional arrogance, and the opinion of the Turk that any delay would kill his wife, the surgeon goes ahead with the operation on the heavily drugged wife, whose face is obscured by a veil. After he has performed the operation, Dr. Stone realizes his patient is Lady Sannox, and the Turk her husband, who believes the disfigurement will be morally good for his wife. The surgeon suffers a breakdown.

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