Back after a week, maybe it will go ahead in this rhythm.
Your observation about the Roma camp in the south-eastern direction is great! And even without that, it would have been a good idea to assume directions to communicate easier. So I follow your suggestion to assume the hall is perfectly facing to the south.
(Although it might be slightly different. We don't know for sure, but it seems that Tintin comes straigth from the right, when coming back from the Roma camp. Then the hall might face rather to the south-west. Furthermore, if the hall did face to the south, south-east would be around where Tintin escapes in
Unicorn. But we can't see anything of the path which leads to where the camp later will be. So I assume this path to be north of the district we see in
Unicorn. If this route leads straight to the camp, the hall is not perfectly showing to the south.)
Is it possible to deduce a direction from the data about the moon? Tintin came from the hall and the moon is behind the camp. So if the moon can proove the south-eastern direction, it would be perfect.
I can think of a couple of reasons. Firstly, I presume you believe the village to be north of the Hall? I’ve always assumed that the village is south-west from the Hall, so by rights if he was walking from the village he would pass a corner of the grounds with a road leading north (up to the western gate) or he could continue along the eastern road to the main gate. If that were the case perhaps the gates are equidistant and he often chooses the main gate out of etiquette (it’s a bit rude to come in from a side gate when you don’t live there).
Well, I wont insist in which direction the village is.
Calculus (2) allows to situate the second gate either in the south-west or north-east. And yes, a corner with a fork to each of the two gates makes the south-western theory possible. The way to the village had to „meet the fork“ behind the corner in
Castafiore (30).
If the „corner“ has several edges, it could even be possible also to place the gap (14) in the south-west. The wall would look there like the half of a hexagon then, including these two corners. Then the way to the village could lead from the middle part, allowing the escaping reporters not to drive to the main gate in the frames on p. 14.
As you say, the side gate must be a reasonable way to the village, it's not showing to nowhere. To assume the two gates are equidistant would help here.
It would make sense that Wagner and Tintin come back this way in Castafiore (p.50 & 51)
Right, but there's no evidence. I kindly disagree with these assumtions of yours, H'n'R:
I think these are exactly the same paths, by the way, even if the bushes and trees are slightly different, it’s from a slightly different aspect after all. Also, the path leads more directly to the Maritime Gallery, which is in the western wing of the Hall.
The bushes are totally different. I can't get these two frames into one scheme. Wagner is closer to the („his“) bend on (51) than Tintin on (50) to the one seen there, I think. The Wagner-bushes in front of him, directly right-behind the bend, had to be seen in front of Tintin at „his“ bend, hadn't they? Further the hall looks closer on the Wagner-frame. I don't think, this is one and the same path.
Tintin's path seems to be more to the right side of the hall. But I can't see one path (Tintin's?) lead into the other one, either.
We don't see which way they go from the(se) corner(s) to the hall. We just know, that Tintin comes from the left side (i.e. from south-west) to the front of the Maritime Gallery. I'm fine with assuming, two paths opposite to each other. Tintin may take the shortest way (the one you suggested), while Wagner has to hide and maybe take a longer route. (And in Wagner's case we don't even get the hint with the south-western direction like in Tintin's.)
When I'm right with that, there's not much space left for the ivy. (I just didn't read properly about the footprints. I'm sorry for that.) The last possibility would be to locate the ivy on the north-west of the hall. (We never see that wall properly.) Anyway, you're right that Tintin's position on (15) doesn't fit then. Well, the ivy remains as a problem for me.
Now, Unicorn is a problem. I can’t quite get it into my head that Max Bird would escape by driving to the back of the Hall/grounds (everything about the Hall looks different compared to later versions anyway; the pathways directly around the Hall (too narrow?) the brickwork (wrong colour/style?), the side hedge (not even visible in Red Rackham, page 59), the lower basement windows, not to mention the interior, etc…) I think it’s easier to ignore their walk around the Hall and work backwards. Logically, Max Bird would drive in the direction of the front gate.
Ok, I wouldn't ignore any things we can see. Why not assume a gate on the north side? There's no overview of/from the hall's back. Also if we assume that the whole estate is as symmetric as possible, a northern gate would be ok, when there's one both to the south and west.
You're welcome to proof that my reconstruction of their „walk“ was wrong, but I'm pretty sure, it's right.
Well, north... south... and the Picaros view... I'm not sure about that myself. I'm pretty sure, there's a wide pasture land in front of the hall => to it's south (see Castafiore 57 and 61, on 30 also to the south-west, and behind the gap (14), whereever it is situated). Yes, there are trees, but they seem to be single ones, or it's at least possible to interpret them as such, considering the evidence of wide pasture.
Look at the Picaros view again. If this were the back it would make the grounds behind the Hall very small.
Right. But that wouldn't be any problem. Until now, all cases where longer distances or wider areas have to be assumed within the grounds, both of us situated them (rather) to the east: the Roma camp, the reporters' chase and Tintin's escape in
Unicorn. No need for much space in the north. This would also be advantageous for my theory of a car route to a northern gate.
If we see a southern view in
Picaros, I'd see the bushes between Tintin and the hall just as a stripe of bushes from the south-eastern corner (close) to the hall to the farer south-west. Then there would be enough space for „my“ pasture land, also to the west (
Castafiore, 30).
I wont necessarily deny that Tintin arrives from the village in
Picaros (1). Although there's no evidence. Far from it. He's riding a moped, he could come elsewhere. Often a station is not the closest way to reach a certain place. Here, Tintin is able to chose his own way.
Anyways, the decision whether the view in
Picaros is the northern or the southern, might also decide about the direction the village is situated.
An argument against the northern-view theory is the our assumed western gate then definetly would be the closer way to the hall. (I doubt, politeness is a strong argument, if the gates aren't equidistant.)
An argument against the southern-view theory is the strange way Tintin had to take from his position in
Picaros (1) around the south-western corner in
Castafiore (30) to the front gate.
Personally I'm quite glad about the maps at the police station. Since they logically should show the whole principality and now place as Malinspike can be found in the part of the maps we see, the grounds might lie in the northern part of the area and the village probably south of it.
Then you're welcome to delete my assumption on Nestor's remark on the kitchen. I'd say the French edition should serve as the dominant source. Foreign editions/translations might serve as hints, but the French is always right.
And I follow your hint, that the steeple we see on
Castafiore (47) is certainly not the one of Marlinspike village.