TRAIN in Classic Quotes
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Quotes from The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes by Arthur Conan Doyle
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Current Search - Train in The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes
1 You have come in by train this morning, I see.
2 I suppose there would be no chance of a train back.
3 We shall want you to come to-night by the last train.
4 But, you know, I have been trained as an actress myself.
5 Perhaps I have trained myself to see what others overlook.
6 I shall be busy this afternoon, and shall probably return to London by the evening train.
7 He had trained it, probably by the use of the milk which we saw, to return to him when summoned.
8 Some three hours or so afterwards we were all in the train together, bound from Reading to the little Berkshire village.
9 I came in by train this morning, and on inquiring at Paddington as to where I might find a doctor, a worthy fellow very kindly escorted me here.
10 At Waterloo we were fortunate in catching a train for Leatherhead, where we hired a trap at the station inn and drove for four or five miles through the lovely Surrey lanes.
11 All these I may sketch out at some future date, but none of them present such singular features as the strange train of circumstances which I have now taken up my pen to describe.
12 The idea of using a form of poison which could not possibly be discovered by any chemical test was just such a one as would occur to a clever and ruthless man who had had an Eastern training.
13 But for the trained reasoner to admit such intrusions into his own delicate and finely adjusted temperament was to introduce a distracting factor which might throw a doubt upon all his mental results.
14 It is conjectured that he may have been hurrying down to catch the last train from Waterloo Station, and that in his haste and the extreme darkness he missed his path and walked over the edge of one of the small landing-places for river steamboats.
15 This dust, you will observe, is not the gritty, grey dust of the street but the fluffy brown dust of the house, showing that it has been hung up indoors most of the time, while the marks of moisture upon the inside are proof positive that the wearer perspired very freely, and could therefore, hardly be in the best of training.