Windibank - Turning White To His Lips And Glancing About Him Like Arat In A ______; Shortly Aftermy Return I Heard The Wheels Of His ______in The Yard - And - Looking Out Of My Window - I Saw Him Get Out And Walk Rapidlyout Of The Yard - Though I Was Not Aware Inwhich Direction He Was Going; Thereis A ______-door At The Back Of That Building - Nearthe Corner Of Paul's Wharf - Which Could Tell Somestrange Tales Of What Has Passed Through It Uponthe Moonless Nights; Butour ______ Should Be Here; No One Is Stirring Yet - But I Knowwhere The Stable-boy Sleeps - And We Shall Soon Havethe ______ Out; Inthe Road Stood Our Horse And ______ - With The Halfclad Stable-boy Waiting At The Head;"At Waterloo We Were Fortunate In Catching Atrain For Leatherhead - Where We Hired A ______ At Thestation Inn And Drove For Four Or Five Miles Throughthe Lovely Surrey Lanes; My Companion Satin The Front Of The ______ - His Arms Folded - His Hatpulled Down Over His Eyes - And His Chin Sunk Uponhis Breast - Buried In The Deepest Thought;"We Got Off - Paid Our Fare - And The ______ Rattledback On Its Way To Leatherhead; The ______ Drove On - And A103 the Adventure Of The Speckled Band"Subtle Enough And Horrible Enough;"We Were As Good As Our Word - For It Was Justseven When We Reached The Copper Beeches - Having Put Up Our ______ At A Wayside Public-house

🎲 Try a Random Question  |  Total Questions in Quiz: 671  |  🧠 Study this quiz with Flashcards
This question is part of a full practice quiz:
The Adventures Of Sherlock Holmes — practice the complete quiz, review flashcards, or try a random question.

A collection of twelve short stories, published in 1892, by Arthur Conan Doyle, featuring his fictional detective Sherlock Holmes. I The stories are not in chronological order, and the only characters common to all twelve are Holmes and Dr. Watson. The stories are related in first-person narrative from Watson's point of view. In general the stories in The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes identify, and try to correct, social injustices. Holmes is portrayed as offering a new, fairer sense of justice.
 


1. Windibank - Turning White To His Lips And Glancing About Him Like Arat In A ______; Shortly Aftermy Return I Heard The Wheels Of His ______in The Yard - And - Looking Out Of My Window - I Saw Him Get Out And Walk Rapidlyout Of The Yard - Though I Was Not Aware Inwhich Direction He Was Going; Thereis A ______-door At The Back Of That Building - Nearthe Corner Of Paul's Wharf - Which Could Tell Somestrange Tales Of What Has Passed Through It Uponthe Moonless Nights; Butour ______ Should Be Here; No One Is Stirring Yet - But I Knowwhere The Stable-boy Sleeps - And We Shall Soon Havethe ______ Out; Inthe Road Stood Our Horse And ______ - With The Halfclad Stable-boy Waiting At The Head;"At Waterloo We Were Fortunate In Catching Atrain For Leatherhead - Where We Hired A ______ At Thestation Inn And Drove For Four Or Five Miles Throughthe Lovely Surrey Lanes; My Companion Satin The Front Of The ______ - His Arms Folded - His Hatpulled Down Over His Eyes - And His Chin Sunk Uponhis Breast - Buried In The Deepest Thought;"We Got Off - Paid Our Fare - And The ______ Rattledback On Its Way To Leatherhead; The ______ Drove On - And A103 the Adventure Of The Speckled Band"Subtle Enough And Horrible Enough;"We Were As Good As Our Word - For It Was Justseven When We Reached The Copper Beeches - Having Put Up Our ______ At A Wayside Public-house