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The Complete Sherlock Holmes
The Complete Sherlock Holmes
The Complete Sherlock Holmes
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<strong>The</strong> Adventure of Black Peter
“What are promises to such people as these? You have no guarantee that he will not be spirited away again. To humour your guilty elder son you have exposed your innocent younger son to imminent and unnecessary danger. It was a most unjustifiable action.” <strong>The</strong> proud lord of Holdernesse was not accustomed to be so rated in his own ducal hall. <strong>The</strong> blood flushed into his high forehead, but his conscience held him dumb. “I will help you, but on one condition only. It is that you ring for the footman and let me give such orders as I like.” Without a word the Duke pressed the electric bell. A servant entered. “You will be glad to hear,” said <strong>Holmes</strong>, “that your young master is found. It is the Duke’s desire that the carriage shall go at once to the Fighting Cock Inn to bring Lord Saltire home. “Now,” said <strong>Holmes</strong>, when the rejoicing lackey had disappeared, “having secured the future, we can afford to be more lenient with the past. I am not in an official position, and there is no reason, so long as the ends of justice are served, why I should disclose all that I know. As to Hayes I say nothing. <strong>The</strong> gallows awaits him, and I would do nothing to save him from it. What he will divulge I cannot tell, but I have no doubt that your Grace could make him understand that it is to his interest to be silent. From the police point of view he will have kidnapped the boy for the purpose of ransom. If they do not themselves find it out I see no reason why I should prompt them to take a broader point of view. I would warn your Grace, however, that the continued presence of Mr. James Wilder in your household can only lead to misfortune.” “I understand that, Mr. <strong>Holmes</strong>, and it is already settled that he shall leave me for ever and go to seek his fortune in Australia.” “In that case, your Grace, since you have yourself stated that any unhappiness in your married life was caused by his presence, I would suggest that you make such amends as you can to the Duchess, and that you try to resume those relations which have been so unhappily interrupted.” “That also I have arranged, Mr. <strong>Holmes</strong>. I wrote to the Duchess this morning.” “In that case,” said <strong>Holmes</strong>, rising, “I think that my friend and I can congratulate ourselves upon several most happy results from our little visit to the North. <strong>The</strong>re is one other small point upon which I desire some light. This fellow Hayes had shod his horses with shoes which counterfeited the tracks of cows. Was it from Mr. Wilder that he learned so extraordinary a device?” <strong>The</strong> Duke stood in thought for a moment, with a look of intense surprise on his face. <strong>The</strong>n he opened a door and showed us into a large room furnished as a museum. He led the way to a glass case in a corner, and pointed to the inscription. “<strong>The</strong>se shoes,” it ran, “were dug up in the moat of Holdernesse Hall. <strong>The</strong>y are for the use of horses; but they are shaped below with a cloven foot of iron, so as to throw pursuers off the track. <strong>The</strong>y are supposed to have belonged to some of the marauding Barons of Holdernesse in the Middle Ages.“ <strong>Holmes</strong> opened the case, and moistening his finger he passed it along the shoe. A thin film of recent mud was left upon his skin. “Thank you,” said he, as he replaced the glass. “It is the second most interesting object that I have seen in the North.” “And the first?” <strong>Holmes</strong> folded up his cheque and placed it carefully in his note-book. “I am a poor man,” said he, as he patted it affectionately and thrust it into the depths of his inner pocket.
<strong>The</strong> Adventure of Black Peter
- Page 1 and 2:
The Complete Sherlock Holmes Arthur
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Table of contents A Study In Scarle
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The Case-Book of Sherlock Holmes Pr
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Part I A Study In Scarlet Table of
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n the year 1878 I took my degree of
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hardly have given him credit. “Yo
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stained with chemicals, yet he was
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possible perfection in it. Before t
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“Why, that he was a retired serge
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great strips had become detached an
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dust from the floor, and packed it
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the dingiest and dreariest of them
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I recognized that justice must be d
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slammed behind our visitor before H
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“There’s more work to be got ou
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with a stick in his hand. “I don
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the mews at the back of the hotel.
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clever as himself. As long as this
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In the central portion of the great
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“It don’t matter. It ain’t qu
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of the episode. Then he turned to t
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was to deal with cattle, she was no
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At first this vague and terrible po
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ger which threatened them, and how
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So unnerved was he at the sight tha
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All night their course lay through
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his way. On the sixth day, he reach
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A Study In Scarlet CHAPTER VI. A Co
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nothing more than his paid servant,
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was the only memento that I had of
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in criminal annals. The cases of Do
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The Sign of the Four
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herlock Holmes took his bottle from
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the neighborhood. So much is observ
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clear-cut, hawklike features. “St
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It was half-past five before Holmes
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We followed the Indian down a sordi
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to part with, although I had got it
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dreamily conscious that he was pour
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I went up and peeped through the ke
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ope which I see in the corner, secu
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“On which the dead man very consi
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only led us, however, to a deeper a
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“There’s the print of wooden-le
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“Ah! it’s all right. He’s off
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“My dear fellow, it would be a co
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It may be looked upon as the very l
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Norwood tragedy. They all appeared
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The old man made a little run towar
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for the final escape, and hurried t
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the deck. It straightened itself in
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a matter of duty, send an inspector
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you came up with us. However, there
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doubts as to whether they could arr
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done up in a shawl. He seemed to be
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enough all day; though in the eveni
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up by a convict-gang in the woods.
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The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes
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A Scandal in Bohemia Table of conte
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the firelight strikes it, the leath
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“You are right,” he cried; “I
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groom out of work. There is a wonde
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He disappeared into his bedroom and
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We had reached Baker Street and had
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The Red-Headed League
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you know, for example, that I did m
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mine. He said a few words to each c
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shall be happy to look into it. Fro
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“Very well. And, I say, Doctor, t
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highest pitch of tension, and my he
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A Case of Identity
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“I have seen those symptoms befor
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said she would make it all right wi
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“That will do,” said Holmes.
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e pushed as far as it would go if a
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e were seated at breakfast one morn
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“It appears that his arrest did n
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Lestrade looked startled. “I do n
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armaid, finding from the papers tha
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“Who was the criminal, then?”
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gold, became wealthy men, and made
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hen I glance over my notes and reco
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trembling hand, ‘K. K. K.!’ he
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“Tut! tut!” cried Sherlock Holm
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looks as if they always send their
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He took a large sheet of paper from
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sa Whitney, brother of the late Eli
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“I was certainly surprised to fin
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his lodger, and that he could not a
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“Frankly, then, madam, I do not.
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drove through the streets of the Su
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entreated him to prevent anyone fro
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had called upon my friend Sherlock
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has been hung up indoors most of th
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occurrences, perhaps I ought to ask
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“Well?” “That’s the list of
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as if on some commission, and I mad
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The Adventure of the Speckled Band
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stand this strain no longer; I shal
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I seemed to hear a low whistle, suc
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the other of us, while his deep-set
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chairs, made up all the furniture i
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“Did you observe anything very pe
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of using a form of poison which cou
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f all the problems which have been
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of money through my poor father’s
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into a carriage, the door of which
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my own curiosity. It was obvious at
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“They must have done so. I have a
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The Adventure of the Noble Bachelor
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St. Simon, second son of the Duke o
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“A most painful matter to me, as
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“Still, jealousy is a strange tra
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Simon has not already arrived. Ha!
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“Then I trust that you at least w
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olmes,” said I as I stood one mor
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I should find myself! I determined,
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arms folded, asked me whether it wa
- Page 263 and 264:
“You heard nothing yourself last
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the world. Now I am left to a lonel
- Page 267:
“On entering the house, however,
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o the man who loves art for its own
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“ ‘Hampshire. Charming rural pl
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those all-night chemical researches
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drawing-room, which is a very large
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“There was a little passage in fr
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e very much surprised if this were
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The Memoirs of Sherlock Holmes
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am afraid, Watson, that I shall hav
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that the stranger was leaning throu
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“Undoubtedly. He has neither a kn
- Page 293 and 294:
Colonel Ross, who had shown some si
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“My friend and I return to town b
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“It was the first link in my chai
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The Yellow Face
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“This is Grosvenor mixture at eig
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set and rigid about it which was sh
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secret which was casting a shadow o
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We turned a corner in the lane as h
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The Stock-Broker’s Clerk
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“Ah! Then you got hold of the bes
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“ ‘Precisely what I don’t wan
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Following his lead, we ascended fiv
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family resemblance. But for the hap
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have some papers here,” said my f
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came out to say that there was a ma
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“My friend ascended with the doct
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“ ‘ “Well, where d’ye suppo
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him with a match-box in his hand se
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n anomaly which often struck me in
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was first taken up by my father, bu
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the body could we find. On the othe
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“From this starting-point I proce
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“ ‘What is it, then?’ he gasp
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t was some time before the health o
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course this Acton business has put
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house. You appear to take it for gr
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“And where was it?” “Where I
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“It is an art which is often usef
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ne summer night, a few months after
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her return. The blinds were not dow
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the curious fact that the intruder
- Page 365 and 366:
The man gave a violent start. “I
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The Resident Patient
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the portrait were framed it would j
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apidly to the front, and during the
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He relit the stair gas as he spoke,
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“Why should any one murder a man
- Page 379:
The Greek Interpreter
- Page 382 and 383:
of their fellows. Yet they are not
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Sometimes the rattle of the stones
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We all sat in silence for some litt
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which Mr. Melas had found himself.
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The Naval Treaty
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and finally brought a test-tube con
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the hall, where I found the commiss
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had not dared to think of what woul
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“Well, we have several, but we ca
- Page 402 and 403:
“I should,” said Lord Holdhurst
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“No, thank you, Joseph. I have a
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the centre of it was lying a little
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“Why did he try the window on the
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t is with a heavy heart that I take
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the door opened and Professor Moria
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turned the carriage, and dashed awa
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“I think that I may go so far as
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seething foam, will lie for all tim
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The Adventure of the Empty House
- Page 426 and 427:
to their cries and knocking. Help w
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“I stood up and examined the rock
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in his own creation. “It really i
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“I wonder that my very simple str
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Colonel Moran had done it? He had p
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om the point of view of the crimina
- Page 439 and 440: is that a most sensational crime ha
- Page 441 and 442: will which he did not intend ever t
- Page 443 and 444: een opened by the police. They were
- Page 445 and 446: “It is unquestionably the mark of
- Page 447: “Very simply. When those packets
- Page 451 and 452: olmes had been seated for some hour
- Page 453 and 454: “A promise is a promise, Mr. Holm
- Page 455 and 456: upon a cable form. “If my answer
- Page 457 and 458: of powder from the moment that they
- Page 459 and 460: new to me. The object of those who
- Page 461 and 462: the husband whom she loved and resp
- Page 463: The Adventure of the Solitary Cycli
- Page 466 and 467: seemed strange to us that Uncle Ral
- Page 468 and 469: 9.13. At Farnham Station I had no d
- Page 470 and 471: a glimpse of him again this morning
- Page 472 and 473: “You have heard of me, I see. I w
- Page 475: The Adventure of the Priory School
- Page 478 and 479: founder and principal. ‘Huxtable
- Page 480 and 481: “I will order a four-wheeler. In
- Page 482 and 483: Moor, extending for ten miles and s
- Page 484 and 485: “But I need your company and assi
- Page 486 and 487: “Why, Mr. Reuben Hayes,” said H
- Page 488 and 489: Never shall I forget the Duke’s a
- Page 493 and 494: have never known my friend to be in
- Page 495 and 496: door they saw a sight which sent th
- Page 497 and 498: “This is a most extraordinary thi
- Page 499 and 500: with the initials of our prisoner o
- Page 501 and 502: You say I murdered Peter Carey; I s
- Page 503: The Adventure of Charles Augustus M
- Page 506 and 507: hairless face, a perpetual frozen s
- Page 508 and 509: though technically criminal. To bur
- Page 510 and 511: murmur broke itself into the measur
- Page 512 and 513: “A murder—a most dramatic and r
- Page 515 and 516: t was no very unusual thing for Mr.
- Page 517 and 518: As it is I am giving away valuable
- Page 519 and 520: though. Why, it’s Beppo. He was a
- Page 521 and 522: letter to send, and it is important
- Page 523 and 524: and struck Napoleon a sharp blow on
- Page 525: The Adventure of the Three Students
- Page 528 and 529: “For an instant I imagined that B
- Page 530 and 531: in this room we had the man prisone
- Page 532 and 533: “He looked at us in a queer way.
- Page 534 and 535: “Well, when he saw that they were
- Page 537 and 538: hen I look at the three massive man
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“If it is not asking too much, Mr
- Page 543 and 544:
know nothing about it. I would only
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Again the Professor burst into high
- Page 547:
of my remarks, that Professor Coram
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e were fairly accustomed to receive
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to this hotel, and see if the porte
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“It’s worth trying, Watson,”
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These few inquiries proved, however
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not be fast, but I expect you will
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The Adventure of the Abbey Grange
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Sydenham a fortnight ago, and were
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aquiline features were convulsed in
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“Their cumulative effect is certa
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take him into my confidence yet. I
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“Well, I never thought to see her
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The Adventure of the Second Stain
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have known that there was anything
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you, and you will no doubt let us k
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“Now, Watson, the fair sex is you
- Page 584 and 585:
knocked at the door—surprise visi
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ask you, madam, to be kind enough t
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“Purely negative as yet,” my fr
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The Hound of the Baskervilles Table
- Page 594 and 595:
fresh basis from which to start our
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“I have in my pocket a manuscript
- Page 598 and 599:
ken men for the rest of their days.
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go out upon the moor at night. Incr
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hard-headed countryman, one a farri
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“Yes, the setting is a worthy one
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“If any possible doubt remained i
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“Whichever it is, my answer is fi
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Sherlock Holmes had, in a very rema
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settlement from Sir Charles, though
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driving Mr. Sherlock Holmes.’ Tha
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glanced keenly at us as we passed.
- Page 618 and 619:
edrooms opened. My own was in the s
- Page 620 and 621:
hat. A tin box for botanical specim
- Page 622 and 623:
“Yes, it’s rather an uncanny pl
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e frank with me, Miss Stapleton, fo
- Page 626 and 627:
ipen into love, and I have several
- Page 628 and 629:
some ways they have become more com
- Page 630 and 631:
What’s the matter with me, anyhow
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“And you go in disgrace. By thund
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Baskerville Hall. A boulder of gran
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strangely shaken by that sound upon
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people living within driving distan
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the second was criticism. There was
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I should explore every hut upon the
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A vague pathway among the boulders
- Page 646 and 647:
“But why keep me in the dark?”
- Page 648 and 649:
ody hunched together as if in the a
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“I would suggest carrying this po
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with the wig ought to be a Reynolds
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has informed me of what you have co
- Page 656 and 657:
the position of the rooms? What are
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“To leave you here. You are not f
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London, Watson, and I say it again
- Page 662 and 663:
alarmed the country-side, and final
- Page 664 and 665:
timacy he made it certain that Sir
- Page 667:
Part I The Valley Of Fear Table of
- Page 671 and 672:
am inclined to think—” said I.
- Page 673 and 674:
large book which is surely somethin
- Page 675 and 676:
Yet, if his emotions were dulled, h
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“Six thousand a year. That’s pa
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drawbridge, the chains and windlass
- Page 681 and 682:
“You mean that someone waded acro
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expression of surprised and reveren
- Page 685 and 686:
“Anything fresh, Sergeant Wilson?
- Page 687 and 688:
“Sorry to interrupt your consulta
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thought that someone was after him.
- Page 691 and 692:
Mrs. Douglas thought earnestly befo
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produced upon my mind. “We though
- Page 695 and 696:
“We will suppose that this couple
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with bicycle and valise. In the lat
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“I don’t doubt it, Mr. Holmes;
- Page 701 and 702:
Holmes took a swift glance round, a
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to California, then they chased me
- Page 705:
PART II. The Scowrers
- Page 708 and 709:
“Hullo, mate!” said he. “You
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“How could I have heard of him wh
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“What, does he hate the police to
- Page 714 and 715:
“Aren’t you?” The man’s sav
- Page 716 and 717:
“I have had that name among those
- Page 718 and 719:
On the day following the evening wh
- Page 720 and 721:
the assembly within. Once or twice
- Page 722 and 723:
“Jim was shot last month when the
- Page 724 and 725:
Ted Baldwin looked at McMurdo with
- Page 726 and 727:
life in your hands by what I say; b
- Page 728 and 729:
“I guess you’ll pay for this, C
- Page 730 and 731:
“What’s come over you, Jack?”
- Page 732 and 733:
Day was breaking now, and a line of
- Page 734 and 735:
quarries. It was two in the morning
- Page 736 and 737:
McMurdo sat in silence for some tim
- Page 738 and 739:
The usual revelry of the lodge was
- Page 740 and 741:
McMurdo shrugged his shoulders. “
- Page 742 and 743:
more besides yourselves that will s
- Page 744 and 745:
“I can only say that the first wo
- Page 747:
Preface The friends of Mr. Sherlock
- Page 751:
The Adventure of Wisteria Lodge Tab
- Page 754 and 755:
ad habit of telling his stories wro
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ow. With a slow smile he drew a fol
- Page 758 and 759:
yourself insensibly twisting them r
- Page 760 and 761:
Then from the table he took a platt
- Page 762 and 763:
a dangerous one, and if Garcia did
- Page 764 and 765:
Baynes flushed with pleasure. “I
- Page 766 and 767:
emarkable only for the fact that am
- Page 769 and 770:
n choosing a few typical cases whic
- Page 771 and 772:
e the most feasible, but if you sho
- Page 773 and 774:
“Yes, you are quite right. Those
- Page 775 and 776:
noted their anatomical peculiaritie
- Page 777 and 778:
compliment to me that you can’t b
- Page 779:
The Adventure of the Red Circle
- Page 783 and 784:
ell, Mrs. Warren, I cannot see that
- Page 785 and 786:
are good reasons to suspect that th
- Page 787 and 788:
“Education never ends, Watson. It
- Page 789 and 790:
projected the white haft of a knife
- Page 791:
“A few days later came the meetin
- Page 795 and 796:
n the third week of November, in th
- Page 797 and 798:
here he comes, if I am not mistaken
- Page 799 and 800:
the Bruce-Partington submarine are
- Page 801 and 802:
A small but well-kept house in the
- Page 803 and 804:
And yet we have surely made some ap
- Page 805 and 806:
“Here we are, Watson—this must
- Page 807 and 808:
keys which your brother held; and t
- Page 809:
The Adventure of the Dying Detectiv
- Page 812 and 813:
“If you will stand there I will t
- Page 814 and 815:
front of him. Make any excuse so as
- Page 816 and 817:
“The same,” said Holmes. “Ah!
- Page 818 and 819:
was clear to me, however, that by p
- Page 821 and 822:
ut why Turkish?” asked Mr. Sherlo
- Page 823 and 824:
Frances had started thither in thei
- Page 825 and 826:
most unscrupulous rascals that Aust
- Page 827 and 828:
He had rung loudly at the door of a
- Page 829:
men, appeared on the threshold. Hol
- Page 833 and 834:
n recording from time to time some
- Page 835 and 836:
“Then we shall walk over together
- Page 837 and 838:
“It won’t do, Watson!” said h
- Page 839 and 840:
above, his bedroom. They looked out
- Page 841 and 842:
so already before we embarked upon
- Page 843 and 844:
Dr. Sterndale drew from his pocket
- Page 845:
His Last Bow An Epilogue of Sherloc
- Page 848 and 849:
then closed the door behind the bul
- Page 850 and 851:
“Same as I said in my cable. Ever
- Page 852 and 853:
“No, indeed, Martha. So long as y
- Page 854 and 855:
far. No, Mr. Von Bork, you will go
- Page 857:
Preface I fear that Mr. Sherlock Ho
- Page 861 and 862:
t can’t hurt now,” was Mr. Sher
- Page 863 and 864:
I shall be prepared to look into it
- Page 865 and 866:
“I’m easy to find,” said the
- Page 867 and 868:
out of hate for him and to spite hi
- Page 869 and 870:
outside the imperial palace of Peki
- Page 871 and 872:
a few minutes before were now like
- Page 873:
The Blanched Soldier
- Page 876 and 877:
near Diamond Hill outside Pretoria.
- Page 878 and 879:
ut it was his face which held my ga
- Page 880 and 881:
of the next week, as my diary recor
- Page 882 and 883:
“It seemed that none of them coul
- Page 885:
The Adventure Of The Mazarin Stone
- Page 888 and 889:
“Expecting what?” “To be murd
- Page 890 and 891:
“It was you—you yourself?” Ho
- Page 892 and 893:
“He knows a damned sight too much
- Page 894 and 895:
a believer in your powers, and that
- Page 897 and 898:
don’t think that any of my advent
- Page 899 and 900:
struggle like some huge awkward chi
- Page 901 and 902:
Please come out at once. Client’s
- Page 903 and 904:
He scribbled three or four words up
- Page 905:
The Adventure of the Sussex Vampire
- Page 908 and 909:
“With me!” “You had better re
- Page 910 and 911:
“I had only known her a few weeks
- Page 912 and 913:
The woman must have some strange de
- Page 914 and 915:
“Jacky!” “I watched him as yo
- Page 917 and 918:
t may have been a comedy, or it may
- Page 919 and 920:
policy—but I judged it better to
- Page 921 and 922:
with solid references, and he is bo
- Page 923 and 924:
central table with the brisk manner
- Page 925:
The Problem of Thor Bridge
- Page 928 and 929:
“Ah, I forgot I had not told you.
- Page 930 and 931:
Our visitor had risen also, and his
- Page 932 and 933:
to what she said, and she believed
- Page 934 and 935:
his employer had accumulated in the
- Page 936 and 937:
“Did he seem to you much perturbe
- Page 938 and 939:
“Then she took one of her husband
- Page 941 and 942:
. Sherlock Holmes was always of opi
- Page 943 and 944:
that certain letters might come to
- Page 945 and 946:
certainly see us in Camford. There
- Page 947 and 948:
Holmes smiled and rubbed his hands.
- Page 949:
were we able to look at each other
- Page 953 and 954:
t is a most singular thing that a p
- Page 955 and 956:
I advised him to send for his immed
- Page 957 and 958:
if he had married against his wish.
- Page 959 and 960:
“A most ingenious comparison. Or
- Page 961:
McPherson saw it, and that this phr
- Page 965 and 966:
hen one considers that Mr. Sherlock
- Page 967 and 968:
“What alternative could be concei
- Page 969:
past him before he could strike, bu
- Page 973 and 974:
herlock Holmes had been bending for
- Page 975 and 976:
when Sir Robert was gone and preten
- Page 977 and 978:
a quarrel, began. The lady keeps he
- Page 979 and 980:
swathed in a sheet from head to foo
- Page 981:
The Adventure of the Retired Colour
- Page 984 and 985:
to my inquiry and gave me a curious
- Page 986 and 987:
“Dispatched at 2.10 from Little P
- Page 988 and 989:
which one associates with the media
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