Page 16

The Return of Sherlock Holmes

The Six Napoleons

"Well, that's all we could reasonably expect from Morse Hudson," said Holmes, as we emerged from the shop. "We have this Beppo as a common factor, both in Kennington and in Kensington, so that is worth a ten-mile drive. Now, Watson, let us make for Gelder & Co., of Stepney, the source and origin of the busts. I shall be surprised if we don't get some help down there."

In rapid succession we passed through the fringe of fashionable London, hotel London, theatrical London, literary London, commercial London, and, finally, maritime London, till we came to a riverside city of a hundred thousand souls, where the tenement houses swelter and reek with the outcasts of Europe. Here, in a broad thoroughfare, once the home of wealthy City merchants, we found the sculpture works for which we searched. Outside was a considerable yard full of monumental masonry.

Inside was a large room in which fifty workers were carving or moulding. The manager, a big blond German, received us civilly and gave a clear answer to all Holmes' questions. A reference to his books showed that hundreds of casts had been taken from a marble copy of Devine's head of Napoleon, but that the three which had been sent to Morse Hudson a year or so before had been half of a batch of six, the other three being sent to Harding Brothers, of Kensington.

Vocabulary:

Fringe: Untidy edge
Tenement: Cheap rented accomodation
Swelter: Become hot and sweaty
Reek: Smell very strongly
Masonry: Things made of stone
Moulding: Squeezing into shape
Civilly: Politely
Batch: Group

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