Tales of Mystery
2. The Beetle-hunter 
A curious experience? said the Doctor.  Yes, my friends, I have
had one very curious experience.  I never expect to have another,
for it is against all doctrines of chances that two such events
would befall any one man in a single lifetime.  You may believe
me or not, but the thing happened exactly as I tell it. 
I had just become a medical man, but I had not started in
practice, and I lived in rooms in Gower Street.  The street has
been renumbered since then, but it was in the only house which has
a bow-window, upon the left-hand side as you go down from the
Metropolitan Station.  A widow named Murchison kept the house at
that time, and she had three medical students and one engineer as
lodgers.  I occupied the top room, which was the cheapest, but
cheap as it was it was more than I could afford.  My small
resources were dwindling away, and every week it became more
necessary that I should find something to do.  Yet I was very
unwilling to go into general practice, for my tastes were all in
the direction of science, and especially of zoology, towards which
I had always a strong leaning.  I had almost given the fight up and
resigned myself to being a medical drudge for life, when the
turning-point of my struggles came in a very extraordinary way. 
One morning I had picked up the Standard and was glancing
over its contents.  There was a complete absence of news, and I was
about to toss the paper down again, when my eyes were caught by an
advertisement at the head of the personal column.  It was worded in
this way: 
"Wanted for one or more days the services of a medical man.  It
is essential that he should be a man of strong physique, of steady
nerves, and of a resolute nature.  Must be an entomologist--
coleopterist preferred.  Apply, in person, at 77B, Brook Street. 
Application must be made before twelve o'clock today." 
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