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It was nearing Christmas, in the year 1895, and snow had fallen softly for most of the
previous two days, followed by a sudden drop in temperature that
edged the panes of our windows in Baker Street with feathers of frost. My friend, Sherlock
Holmes, and I were both up early and had breakfasted and
were looking out upon the whitened city.
Poe, in one of his Dupin stories, called it "meditation and a meerschaum," but Holmes was
resting back upon a pile of cushions, puffing rings from the old
blackened and broken clay that he kept by the window seat. I had lighted my favorite pipe
as well and was looking out upon the vast city, finding it
difficult, for the moment, to believe that there was aught to break the peace of that
serene stillness. But, glancing over at my friend, the expression of
thought upon his aquiline features convinced me, along with his restlessness of late over
the relative dearth of cases "worthy" of his great talents, that our
"eyrie" was about to be vacated, and the "eagle" was about to set forth.
"More like a hawk than an eagle," he said with a smile, tapping the dottle from his pipe
into the palm of his hand.
"Holmes this is really too much!" I was forced to exclaim. "How could you possibly know
precisely my thought of the moment?"
"You know my methods, Watson," he replied. "Actually this was simplicity itself, very
elementary."
"I know you walked some trail you'll soon lead me down, but I'm flummoxed, I have to say."
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