Lateral Thinking Puzzles - third time is best!

Does “definitely a keeper” mean that he had qualities desirable as a husband?
Does it mean that he had qualities desirable for some other purpose?
Does it mean that he kept something? Bees?

Did he die as the result of a disease?
Poison?
Old age?
Accident?
Homicide?
Attacked by an animal?

Did he have any relevant surviving family members?
Did he have any relevant family members who died along with him?

wordrequirement

Did he die because of what he kept?

Was what he kept in any way unusual?

wordymcwordface

What he kept: Was it living?
Was it inanimate?
Was it a secret?

Is this the sort of thing where some guy (a) gets accidentally injured, but (b) would’ve totally survived, if not for bloodletting or whatever being the medical wisdom of the day?

Was his accident related to transportation?
Mistaken identity?
A malfunction?

Was he keeping something of a non-material nature?
Was he keeping it real?

Was his death an industrial accident?
Sporting event?
Did his death involve another person who happened to be famous?
Was Henry a famous person in his own time prior to his death?

Was he a “keeper” of books, and a bookcase fell on him?

Did he actually have a job that contains or ends with -keeper?

Was he a:

  • groundskeeper
  • bookkeeper
  • innkeeper
  • barkeeper
  • zookeeper
  • goalkeeper
  • shopkeeper

NO

I believe there is a plaque for him, now, though.

NO

Yes, to having a job that ends with -keeper.

No to all of the “keepers” in your list.

Was the malfunction related to his keeping job?
If so, was what malfunction integral to his job (like if a zookeeper, a gate didn’t latch and he got eaten by a giraffe)?
If not, then can we assume it was a more general malfunction (like a steam pipe burst)?

Was the malfunction even related to working (like at work in a shop and the roof collapsed on him)?

Did he contribute to the malfunction? Or was he a victim of circumstance?

(they are herbivores)

They want you to think so. That’s how they lure you in.

Wait! Timekeeper?
Is this the guy that invented a clock to wake him up by moving his bed upright and he got tangled in the ropes and got strangled?

(I think @Saint_Cad might have it, but just in case:)

Was the malfunction a malfunction of something that might broadly be described as a tool?

Was it a tool typically used in his line of work?

Was the thing that malfunctioned something that he had made?

Is the thing that malfunctioned something common?

Does it commonly malfunction?

Good idea to focus on:

  • his job
  • the nature of the incident and what makes it obviously noteworthy compared to typical incidents

So he was not eaten by a giraffe?

Was a giraffe involved? Like shot him for more acacia leaves?

No animals were harmed in the creation or development of this lateral thinking puzzle.

(Means “no to both”)

:slight_smile:

So this accident happened in the 1700s…

Is this “keeping” job something that people still do today, in some form that would be recognizable as the same job?
Is/was it a fairly common job that everyone today would probably know about?
Or is it an obscure job that few people would be aware of?
Or somewhere between what you yourself would consider common and obscure?
Is it something he would have done every working day, all day, at his place of employment?
Or would he have gone various places to do the work?