Syr Charles Baskerville, perhen tiryow in Pow Densher, yw ledhys yn
sodyn der own a gemeras ev, dell hevel, a gy uthyk ha brâs dres ehen.
Yma radn a bobel an pow ader dro ow cresy henwhedhel ow tùchya an keth
ky-na. Warlergh an whedhel coth nyns yw an ky best vëth a'n bës-ma saw
ky iffarnak gornatùral, usy tregys wàr hal peryllys ha dygoweth an
còstys-na hag usy ow trobla teylu Baskerville dres lies bledhen. Syr
Henry Baskerville, noy hag er Syr Charles, yw devedhys dhe Hel
Baskerville rag kemeres posessyon a'y erytans. Sherlock Holmes ha'n
Doctour Watson a's teves an devar a dhysqwedhes pëth yw an ky in
gwiryoneth hag in kettermyn gwetha Syr Charles dhyworth drog. Yma lies
crytycor ow consydra "Ky Teylu Basker-ville" dhe vos an whedhel gwella a
whedhlow Sherlock Holmes. Hèm yw an kensa prës dell hevel may feu onen
vëth a'n whedhlow-na dyllys in Kernowek. Sir Charles Baskerville, a
Devon landowner, has died suddenly, apparently from the fright given him
by an enormous fearsome dog. Some of the local people believe an old
legend according to which the dog is not an earthly animal, but rather a
supernatural hell-hound which inhabits the area's lonely dangerous moor
and has haunted the Baskervilles for generations. It's up to Sherlock
Holmes and Doctor Watson to show what the true nature of the hound is
while seeing to it that no harm comes to Sir Henry Baskerville, Sir
Charles' nephew and heir who has come to live in Baskerville Hall and
claim his inheritance. Many commentators consider that "The Hound of the
Baskervilles" is the best of the Sherlock Holmes stories and it is
certainly one of the best-known detective stories ever written.