Yes, I do, though.
Voice Reading
Why, it's Beppo.
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He was a kind of Italian piece-work man, who made himself useful in the shop.
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He could carve a bit and gild and frame, and do odd jobs.
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The fellow left me last week, and I've heard nothing of him since.
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No, I don't know where he came from nor where he went to.
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I have nothing against him while he was here.
Voice Reading
He was gone two days before the bust was smashed."
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"Well, that's all we could reasonably expect to get from Morse Hudson," said Holmes, as we emerged from the shop.
Voice Reading
"We have this Beppo as a common factor, both in Kennington and in Kensington, so that is worth a ten-mile drive.
Voice Reading
Now, Watson, let us make for Gelder and Co., of Stepney, the source and origin of busts.
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I shall be surprised if we don't get some help down there."
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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.
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Here, in a broad thoroughfare, once the abode of wealthy City merchants, we found the sculpture works for which we searched.
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Outside was a considerable yard full of monumental masonry.
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Inside was a large room in which fifty workers were carving or moulding.
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The manager, a big blond German, received us civilly, and gave a clear answer to all Holmes's questions.
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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.
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There was no reason why those six should be different to any of the other casts.
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He could suggest no possible cause why anyone should wish to destroy them - in fact, he laughed at the idea.
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Their wholesale price was six shillings, but the retailer would get twelve or more.
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The cast was taken in two moulds from each side of the face, and then these two profiles of plaster of Paris were joined together to make the complete bust.
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The work was usually done by Italians in the room we were in.
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When finished the busts were put on a table in the passage to dry, and afterwards stored.
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That was all he could tell us.
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