Понятно
Понятно
Для того чтобы воспользоваться закладками, необходимо
Войти или зарегистрироваться
Отмена
Для того чтобы воспользоваться озвучкой предложений, необходимо
Войти или зарегистрироваться
Отмена
Озвучка предложений доступна при наличии PRO-доступа
Купить PRO-доступ
Отмена
261
"
Running
from
what
?
"
262
"
There
lies
our
problem
.
There
are
indications
that
the
man
was
crazed
with
fear
before
ever
he
began
to
run
.
"
263
"
How
can
you
say
that
?
"
Отключить рекламу
264
"
I
am
presuming
that
the
cause
of
his
fears
came
to
him
across
the
moor
.
If
that
were
so
,
and
it
seems
most
probable
,
only
a
man
who
had
lost
his
wits
would
have
run
from
the
house
instead
of
towards
it
.
If
the
gipsy
's
evidence
may
be
taken
as
true
,
he
ran
with
cries
for
help
in
the
direction
where
help
was
least
likely
to
be
.
Then
,
again
,
whom
was
he
waiting
for
that
night
,
and
why
was
he
waiting
for
him
in
the
Yew
Alley
rather
than
in
his
own
house
?
"
265
"
You
think
that
he
was
waiting
for
someone
?
"
266
"
The
man
was
elderly
and
infirm
.
We
can
understand
his
taking
an
evening
stroll
,
but
the
ground
was
damp
and
the
night
inclement
.
Is
it
natural
that
he
should
stand
for
five
or
ten
minutes
,
as
Dr.
Mortimer
,
with
more
practical
sense
than
I
should
have
given
him
credit
for
,
deduced
from
the
cigar
ash
?
"
267
"
But
he
went
out
every
evening
.
"
Отключить рекламу
268
"
I
think
it
unlikely
that
he
waited
at
the
moor-gate
every
evening
.
On
the
contrary
,
the
evidence
is
that
he
avoided
the
moor
.
That
night
he
waited
there
.
It
was
the
night
before
he
made
his
departure
for
London
.
269
The
thing
takes
shape
,
Watson
.
It
becomes
coherent
.
Might
I
ask
you
to
hand
me
my
violin
,
and
we
will
postpone
all
further
thought
upon
this
business
until
we
have
had
the
advantage
of
meeting
Dr.
Mortimer
and
Sir
Henry
Baskerville
in
the
morning
.
"
270
Our
breakfast-table
was
cleared
early
,
and
Holmes
waited
in
his
dressing-gown
for
the
promised
interview
.
Our
clients
were
punctual
to
their
appointment
,
for
the
clock
had
just
struck
ten
when
Dr.
Mortimer
was
shown
up
,
followed
by
the
young
baronet
.
The
latter
was
a
small
,
alert
,
dark-eyed
man
about
thirty
years
of
age
,
very
sturdily
built
,
with
thick
black
eyebrows
and
a
strong
,
pugnacious
face
.
He
wore
a
ruddy-tinted
tweed
suit
and
had
the
weather-beaten
appearance
of
one
who
has
spent
most
of
his
time
in
the
open
air
,
and
yet
there
was
something
in
his
steady
eye
and
the
quiet
assurance
of
his
bearing
which
indicated
the
gentleman
.