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Quiz about Captain Hastings
Quiz about Captain Hastings

Captain Hastings Trivia Quiz


I hope you enjoy my quiz on Hercule Poirot's faithful friend, Captain Hastings.

A multiple-choice quiz by LindaC007. Estimated time: 4 mins.
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Author
LindaC007
Time
4 mins
Type
Multiple Choice
Quiz #
127,761
Updated
Dec 03 21
# Qns
10
Difficulty
Average
Avg Score
6 / 10
Plays
1679
Awards
Top 35% Quiz
Last 3 plays: Guest 212 (9/10), Guest 114 (7/10), Guest 97 (4/10).
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Question 1 of 10
1. About how old was Captain Hastings when he helped Hercule Poirot solve "The Mysterious Affair At Styles"? Hint


Question 2 of 10
2. After being invalided out of the military in WWI, Hastings took rooms in London with Hercule Poirot. Poirot embarked on a very successful career as a private detective, but which of the following did Hastings do? Hint


Question 3 of 10
3. Hastings finally finds true love while helping Poirot sort out the tangled events of "The Murder On The Links". Which of the following statements does NOT describe the lady who becomes Mrs. Hastings? Hint


Question 4 of 10
4. What was the first name of Captain Hastings? Hint


Question 5 of 10
5. Does Captain Hastings ever meet another good friend of Hercule Poirot's, famous mystery writer Mrs. Ariadne Oliver?


Question 6 of 10
6. Captain Hastings makes an appearance without Poirot in one of the short stories found in "The Mysterious Mr. Quin" (1930).


Question 7 of 10
7. Which one of the following statements is NOT an observation (on the personality of Hastings) made by his old friend, Hercule Poirot? Hint


Question 8 of 10
8. After marrying the lady he meet in "The Murder On The Links", the Hastings moved to a ranch in the Argentine and raised a family. How many children did the Hastings have? Hint


Question 9 of 10
9. Hercule Poirot unravels a tangled web involving a stolen atomic formula and murder in the 1934 stage play "Black Coffee". Was Hasting also featured in the play?


Question 10 of 10
10. What was the name of Hastings's daughter who played a prominent role in "Curtain", the final Hercule Poirot mystery? Hint



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Most Recent Scores
Nov 15 2024 : Guest 212: 9/10
Nov 14 2024 : Guest 114: 7/10
Nov 10 2024 : Guest 97: 4/10
Nov 09 2024 : Guest 103: 7/10
Oct 06 2024 : rabbit1964: 9/10
Sep 30 2024 : Guest 2: 8/10

Score Distribution

quiz
Quiz Answer Key and Fun Facts
1. About how old was Captain Hastings when he helped Hercule Poirot solve "The Mysterious Affair At Styles"?

Answer: Thirty years old

Captain Hastings is the narrator of Agatha Christie's first published book, "The Mysterious Affair At Styles" (1920). Captain Hastings had been sent home to recoup from wounds suffered at the Front. After spending some months in a Convalescent Home, he was given a thirty-day leave. Hastings was invited to spend his leave at Styles Court by an old acquaintance, John Cavendish. Describing Cavendish, Hastings says, "He was a good fifteen years my senior, for one thing, though he hardly looked his forty-five years." This tells us that Hastings was around thirty years old when he helped Poirot investigate "The Mysterious Affair At Styles". We are told, in "Curtain" (1975), that the events depicted in "The Mysterious Affair At Styles" happened in 1916.
2. After being invalided out of the military in WWI, Hastings took rooms in London with Hercule Poirot. Poirot embarked on a very successful career as a private detective, but which of the following did Hastings do?

Answer: Hastings was a private secretary to a MP (Member of Parliament)

At the beginning of the second Poirot-Hastings novel, "The Murder On The Links" (1923), we are told that after leaving the military, Hastings moved into London rooms with Hercule Poirot and became a private secertary to a MP (Member of Parliament). The Young Adventurers, Ltd. was formed by Miss Prudence "Tuppence" Crowley and Thomas "Tommy" Beresford in "The Secret Adversary" (1922).

It was the first of five Tuppence and Tommy mysteries. The others were: "Partners In Crime" (1929), "N or M" (1941), "By The Pricking of My Thumbs" 1968), and "Postern of Fate" (1974).

In "The Mysterious Affair At Styles", Hastings told Mary Cavendish, in conversation over tea, that he had been with Lloyd's before the War.
3. Hastings finally finds true love while helping Poirot sort out the tangled events of "The Murder On The Links". Which of the following statements does NOT describe the lady who becomes Mrs. Hastings?

Answer: She was several years older than Hastings

Hastings meets Dulcie Duveen in "The Murder On The Links" (1923), on the Calais Express. She was around seventeen years old, and Hastings was in his early 30's. Hastings learns that she was born in America but has spent most of her life in England. Hastings finds himself strangely attracted to this sassy young lady, while at the same time thinking her not quite his sort.

She tells Hastings that, along with her sister, she is part of an acrobatic, song and dance variety act. When the train stops, she tells Hastings that her name is "Cinderella" and that is what Hastings calls her for the rest of the book. Finally, the complicated plot of the Duveen sisters, Bella and Dulcie, is sorted out, and Hastings ends up with Dulcie.

There has been some confusion over his wife's name, because in "The ABC Murders" (1934), while referring to his wife, Hastings says, "Bella always trusts my judgment", but this is just a tiny error on Christie's part.

In "Curtain" (1975), Hastings refers to his wife always as "Cinders", which is just a take on Cinderella.

In "An Autobiography", Agatha Christie says, "I think 'Murder on the Links' was a moderately good example of its kind. This time I provided a love affair for Hastings. Truth to tell, I think I was getting a little tired of him." After their marriage, the Hastings moved to the Argentine. Luckily for his fans, Christie does bring Hastings back in several Poirot mysteries.
4. What was the first name of Captain Hastings?

Answer: Arthur

Hastings never tells us his name while narrating his first adventure with Hercule Poirot, "The Mysterious Affair At Styles". In fact, it was not until the last page of their second mystery novel, "The Murder On The Links", published in 1923, that we find out that his first name is Arthur: "And what of Captain Arthur Hastings, humble chronicler of these pages?" In the beginning of the final Hercule Poirot mystery, "Curtain" (1975), a retrospective Hastings says, on his journey back to Styles Court, "It had seemed in 1916 to young Arthur Hastings that was already old and mature".
5. Does Captain Hastings ever meet another good friend of Hercule Poirot's, famous mystery writer Mrs. Ariadne Oliver?

Answer: No

Hastings is not featured in any of the mysteries of Hercule Poirot and Mrs. Oliver. We are never led to believe that Hastings ever meets Mrs. Oliver. Like Hastings, Mrs. Oliver was the perfect foil for Poirot's brillance. Together they solved many dicey mysteries.

The pair's long friendship begins in "Cards on the Table" (1936) when they meet at a bizarre dinner party of murderers and detectives. The last mystery that Poirot and Mrs. Oliver solved together was told in "Elephants Can Remember" (1972). One of my favorite Christie novels is the Hercule Poirot and Mrs. Oliver mystery, "Hallowe'en Party" (1969).
6. Captain Hastings makes an appearance without Poirot in one of the short stories found in "The Mysterious Mr. Quin" (1930).

Answer: False

Captain Hastings never appears in any short story or novel without Hercule Poirot, but Poirot appears in most of his mysteries without Hastings. These are the books I have read that feature Hastings: "The Mysterious Affair At Styles" (1920), "The Murder On The Links" (1923), "Poirot Investigates" (1924), "The Big Four", (1927), "The ABC Murders" (1935), "Poirot Loses A Client" (1937), and "The Under Dog and Other Stories" (1957).
7. Which one of the following statements is NOT an observation (on the personality of Hastings) made by his old friend, Hercule Poirot?

Answer: Hastings listened at keyholes and had few scruples

Hastings was a man of very high principles and scruples. He would never stoop to opening someone else's mail or putting his eye to a keyhole! Hastings was always a loyal and trustworthy friend to Poirot. Poirot even refers to Hastings, in their final adventure "Curtain", as "my faithful dog" and "My excellent and loyal Hastings". We know that everything that Hastings felt showed on his face, because in "The Mysterious Affair At Styles", Poirot says to Hastings, "You see, my friend, you have a nature so honest, and a contenance so transparent, that, enfin, to conceal your feelings are impossible." Hastings certainly was not a user of his little grey cells, but that Hastings had a good heart, there is no doubt. Poirot says to Hastings, in the short story "The Jewel Robbery at the Grand Metropolitan", "You have a good heart to think of an old man. And the good heart, it is in the end worth all the little gray cells."
8. After marrying the lady he meet in "The Murder On The Links", the Hastings moved to a ranch in the Argentine and raised a family. How many children did the Hastings have?

Answer: Four

In "Curtain" (1975), Hastings tells us that he has four children, two boys and two girls. One son was in the Navy, and the other son is married and running the cattle ranch in the Argentine. He never tells us their names. The names of his daughters are Grace and Judith. Grace is married to a soldier and lives in India. Judith is a secretary to specialist in in the study of tropical disease, Dr. Franklin.
9. Hercule Poirot unravels a tangled web involving a stolen atomic formula and murder in the 1934 stage play "Black Coffee". Was Hasting also featured in the play?

Answer: Yes

Hastings did appear with Poirot in the 1934 stage play "Black Coffee". In the 1990's, Charles Osbourne turned two of Agatha Christie's plays into novels. "Black Coffee" was one of them, and the other was "The Unexpected Guest". While no one can beat Dame Agatha, the Osbourne novelizations are fun reads.
10. What was the name of Hastings's daughter who played a prominent role in "Curtain", the final Hercule Poirot mystery?

Answer: Judith

All things must come to an end, and it is fitting that the Poirot-Hastings mysteries should end back at Styles Court where it all began, so long ago. In "Curtain" (1975) Hastings has been summoned to Styles by his old friend, Hercule Poirot. The ever faithful Hastings answers the summons, and the hunt for X begins. Hastings's youngest child, Judith, is at Styles Court, too.

She is the secretary for Dr. Franklin, a specialist in tropical diseases. Judith is the child that Hastings secretly loves best but knows the least.

She is extremely intelligent, beautiful, and has a mind of her own. In fact, Hastings admits that he is a little afraid of his brillant, difficult daughter. I hope you enjoyed my quiz on Hercule Poirot's good friend, Captain Arthur Hastings. All the information for my quiz can be found in the novels and short stories of Poirot and Hastings. I have tried to make it interesting without putting in any "spoilers". I wonder if perhaps Poirot shone so brightly because Hastings was a little "dim"? A huge thank you to my very smart younger brother, a real Christie fan, for his invaluable help. Thank you for taking my quiz.
Source: Author LindaC007

This quiz was reviewed by FunTrivia editor bullymom before going online.
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