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"Not in reason, sir. Voice Reading
But this is out of all reason. Voice Reading
He has been there for ten days, and neither Mr. Warren, nor I, nor the girl has once set eyes upon him. Voice Reading
We can hear that quick step of his pacing up and down, up and down, night, morning, and noon; but except on that first night he has never once gone out of the house." Voice Reading
"Oh, he went out the first night, did he?" Voice Reading
"Yes, sir, and returned very late - after we were all in bed. He told me after he had taken the rooms that he would do so and asked me not to bar the door. I heard him come up the stair after midnight." Voice Reading
"But his meals?" Voice Reading
"It was his particular direction that we should always, when he rang, leave his meal upon a chair, outside his door. Then he rings again when he has finished, and we take it down from the same chair. If he wants anything else he prints it on a slip of paper and leaves it." Voice Reading
"Prints it?" Voice Reading
"Yes, sir; prints it in pencil. Just the word, nothing more. Here's one I brought to show you - SOAP. Here's another - MATCH. This is one he left the first morning - DAILY GAZETTE. I leave that paper with his breakfast every morning." Voice Reading
"Dear me, Watson," said Holmes, staring with great curiosity at the slips of foolscap which the landlady had handed to him, "this is certainly a little unusual. Seclusion I can understand; but why print? Printing is a clumsy process. Why not write? What would it suggest, Watson?" Voice Reading
"That he desired to conceal his handwriting." Voice Reading
"But why? What can it matter to him that his landlady should have a word of his writing? Still, it may be as you say. Then, again, why such laconic messages?" Voice Reading
"I cannot imagine." Voice Reading
"It opens a pleasing field for intelligent speculation. Voice Reading
The words are written with a broad-pointed, violet-tinted pencil of a not unusual pattern. Voice Reading
You will observe that the paper is torn away at the side here after the printing was done, so that the s of 'SOAP' is partly gone. Voice Reading
Suggestive, Watson, is it not?" Voice Reading
"Of caution?" Voice Reading
"Exactly. There was evidently some mark, some thumbprint, something which might give a clue to the person's identity. Now, Mrs. Warren, you say that the man was of middle size, dark, and bearded. What age would he be?" Voice Reading
"Youngish, sir - not over thirty." Voice Reading
"Well, can you give me no further indications?" Voice Reading
"He spoke good English, sir, and yet I thought he was a foreigner by his accent." Voice Reading
"And he was well dressed?" Voice Reading
"Very smartly dressed, sir - quite the gentleman. Dark clothes -nothing you would note." Voice Reading

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