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Sad Cypress Quizzes, Trivia and Puzzles
Sad Cypress Quizzes, Trivia

Sad Cypress Trivia

Sad Cypress Trivia Quizzes

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Fun Trivia
Did Elinor Carlisle murder her wealthy aunt, or was she framed?
2 Sad Cypress quizzes and 25 Sad Cypress trivia questions.
1.
  Sad Cypress (1940)   great trivia quiz  
Match Quiz
 10 Qns
Match the major characters in this novel with their description. (NO SPOILERS)
Easier, 10 Qns, MotherGoose, Nov 04 21
Easier
MotherGoose editor
Nov 04 21
169 plays
2.
  Sad Cypress   best quiz  
Multiple Choice
 15 Qns
One of Christie's more unusual mysteries, this one features a tragic love triangle and a young woman on trial for her life. CAUTION: the solution is revealed in the quiz. Good Luck!
Average, 15 Qns, jouen58, Oct 05 05
Average
jouen58
937 plays

Sad Cypress Trivia Questions

1. The title of the novel is taken from a melancholy song from one of Shakespeare's plays (a comedy, oddly enough). Which play is it from?

From Quiz
Sad Cypress

Answer: Twelfth Night

The song in question is "Come Away, Death", sung by the clown Feste. The first verse of the song, which contains the novel's title, is as follows: "Come away, come away, death And in sad cypress let me be laid: Fly away, fly away, breath; I am slain by a fair cruel maid. My shroud of white, stuck all with yew, O prepare it! My part of death, no one so true Did share it." The song contains a bit of a clue to the mystery, since the murderer turns out to be a woman. Although Nurse Hopkins, who is described as "homely" in the novel, is not exactly a "fair maid", she is certainly cruel...and ruthless.

2. Christie had one major regret about this novel. What was it?

From Quiz Sad Cypress

Answer: She regretted using Poirot in the novel.

"Sad Cypress" was one of a handful of novels which Christie felt had been spoiled by the introduction of Poirot (others included "Five Little Pigs", a.k.a. "Murder in Retrospect", and "The Hollow"). In the case of "Sad Cypress", she felt that Poirot's presence spoiled what was essentially a tragic love story.

3. The novel begins with Elinor in the dock, listening to the prosecution's case against her. She thinks back to the incident that triggered the whole matter. What was the incident?

From Quiz Sad Cypress

Answer: An anonymous letter

Elinor had received an anonymous letter, ungrammatical and badly spelled, written on cheap pink paper. It warned her, in rather crude language, that someone- specifically a young woman- was "sucking up" to her aunt Laura Welman, and urging her and her cousin Roddy Welman to see to the matter, lest they be done out of their inheritance. The letter is signed "Well-Wisher". The letter was, in fact, written by Nurse Hopkins in order to create bad feelings between Elinor and Mary Gerrard. Nurse Hopkins' plan is to do away with Mary after getting her to make out a will leaving her money to her mother's sister (who, unbeknownst to Mary, is Nurse Hopkins herself). She also intends to frame Elinor for the crime, the motive being Elinor's supposed resentment of Mary and her fear of being done out of her inheritance. Although the letter fails in this purpose, it does prompt Elinor and Roddy to visit their aunt. During this visit, Roddy becomes hopelessly infatuated with Mary, creating an even greater motive for the scapegoat Elinor than Nurse Hopkins had originally anticipated.

4. Dr. Lord, Laura Welman's physician, suspected that her death was not due to natural causes. Why didn't he relate his suspicions to the police and order an autopsy?

From Quiz Sad Cypress

Answer: He thought that Laura had committed suicide.

Laura Welman hated being a helpless invalid and repeatedly told Dr. Lord that she wanted to end her life. She also suggested that he give her an injection to put her out of her misery. When she died after her second stroke, Dr. Lord suspected that she had somehow carried out her plan, and he did not want to darken her memory by suggesting that she had possibly taken her own life. In doing so, he unwittingly played into the killer's hands. A subsequent autopsy performed after Mrs. Welman was exhumed revealed that she had been given morphine, the same poison that was used on Mary. The killer had to ensure that Mrs. Welman would die intestate, in which case her money would go to Mary Gerrard, as her next of kin.

5. Nurse Hopkins shows Poirot a letter written by Mary's mother, Eliza Gerrard (nee Riley) revealing that Mary was really Mrs. Welman's daughter. To whom was this letter addressed?

From Quiz Sad Cypress

Answer: Mary Riley, Eliza's sister

The letter was addressed "To Mary, to be sent to her after my death". Nurse Hopkins tried to lead Poirot to believe that the letter had been intended for Mary Gerrard, but Poirot realized that, in fact, the import of the letter was that Mary Gerrard should not know of its contents. Also, the note directed that the letter be sent, not given; there would be no need to send the letter to Mary Gerrard since she lived at the lodge. The letter was addressed to Mary Riley, Eliza's sister, who is actually Nurse Hopkins herself; she wanted it to come to light that Mary, not Elinor, had been Mrs. Welman's next of kin, hence Mrs. Welman's money should have gone to her and, subsequently, to Mary Riley.

6. In an interview with Poirot, Elinor admits that, while she was cutting the sandwiches on the day of the murder, she was thinking of which historical personage?

From Quiz Sad Cypress

Answer: Eleanor of Aquitaine

Elinor was imagining that the food she was about to serve to Mary was poisoned and that, when Mary ate her sandwich, she would die. She told Poirot that she had been thinking of her own namesake, Eleanor of Aquitaine, who had been the consort of King Henry II. According to a popular, but unsubstantiated legend, Eleanor had done away with her husband's mistress, the beautiful Rosamund Clifford. She is said to have offered Rosamund the choice of a dagger or poison; Rosamund chose the poison. When Mary subsequently died, Elinor considered herself morally responsible for Mary's death, and very nearly ended up confessing to a crime she had not committed.

7. Ultimately, the ruthless Nurse Hopkins is undone by a trivial lie she told regarding a rosebush growing near the lodge. What was peculiar about this rosebush?

From Quiz Sad Cypress

Answer: It has no thorns

Elinor noticed a scratch on Nurse Hopkins' arm, which she explained away by claiming that she had pricked herself on a thorn from the rosebush by the lodge. Elinor relates this incident to Poirot; she explains that the mention of the rosebush reminded her of a disagreement she had had with Roddy when they were children. Roddy preferred white roses, whereas Elinor loved red roses, they jokingly referred to this as the "War of the Roses". To Poirot, however, the story has a quite different meaning; he had inspected the rosebush himself and had found no thorns on it. A horticultural expert eventually identifies the rose as being of the variety known as Zephyrine Droughin; its principal distinction is the complete absence of thorns. This seemingly insignificant detail causes Poirot to suspect Nurse Hopkins, who had previously struck him as being entirely trustworthy.

8. How was the morphine that killed Mary Gerrard administered?

From Quiz Sad Cypress

Answer: In the tea

Nurse Hopkins had made a pot of tea, which she served to both herself and Mary. The tea contained a lethal dose of morphine, however shortly afterward Nurse Hopkins gave herself an injection of apomorphine hydrochloride, a powerful emetic. This caused her to vomit up the morphine she had just consumed, so that she herself was not affected by it. The tell-tale mark on her arm, which she claimed had been caused by a thorn, was in fact left by the hypodermic syringe.

9. What was significant about the fragment of the label found at the scene of the crime, which had come from a tube of hypodermic tablets?

From Quiz Sad Cypress

Answer: The letter "m" was not capitalized

A chemist, Mr. James Littledale, testified that the label could not have come from a tube of morphine tablets, as had been previously supposed. If it had, the letter "m" would have been capitalized. Mr. Littledale positively identified the label as having come from a tube containing tablets of apomorphine hydrochloride.

10. The defense calls two witnesses who positively identify Nurse Hopkins as Mary Riley, whom they had formerly known in New Zealand. It develops that the New Zealand police had suspected Mary Riley of murdering two other people. Who were they?

From Quiz Sad Cypress

Answer: Her husband and a wealthy patient

Poirot relates to Peter Lord after the trial that, while she was in New Zealand, one of Mary Riley's elderly patients had died shortly after leaving her a sizable legacy. The police were suspicious, and the woman's doctor was baffled, but there was not sufficient evidence for an indictment. Her husband had also died suddenly and unaccountably after having insured his life in her favor; unfortunately for her, he had never posted the check to the insurance company. Poirot describes her as "...a remorseless and unscrupulous woman", and suspects that other deaths may lie at her door.

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