The Corpse on the Grating

The Corpse on the Grating by Hugh B. Cave is a literary work published by CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform on November 16, 2015. This edition spans 32 pages and is presented in English. The narrative begins with a meeting between the narrator and M. S., a psycho-analysis enthusiast, as they visit Professor Daimler to discuss his recent experiments. The story unfolds in a setting that hints at intrigue and exploration of human psychology.
Readers will find a focus on the dynamics between the three characters, particularly as they delve into the implications of Daimler’s work. The text explores themes related to psycho-analysis and the human brain, reflecting on the characters’ differing perspectives. This edition invites readers into a world where scientific inquiry meets personal relationships, providing a glimpse into the complexities of human thought and behavior.
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IT was ten o’clock on the morning of December 5 when M. S. and I left the study of Professor Daimler. You are perhaps acquainted with M. S. His name appears constantly in the pages of the Illustrated News, in conjunction with some very technical article on psycho-analysis or with some extensive study of the human brain and its functions. He is a psycho-fanatic, more or less, and has spent an entire lifetime of some seventy-odd years in pulling apart human skulls for the purpose of investigation. Lovely pursuit!For some twenty years I have mocked him, in a friendly, half-hearted fashion. I am a medical man, and my own profession is one that does not sympathize with radicals.As for Professor Daimler, the third member of our triangle-perhaps, if I take a moment to outline the events of that evening, the Professor’s part in what follows will be less obscure. We had called on him, M. S. and I, at his urgent request. His rooms were in a narrow, unlighted street just off the square, and Daimler himself opened the door to us. A tall, loosely built chap he was, standing in the doorway like a motionless ape, arms half extended.”I’ve summoned you, gentlemen,” he said quietly, “because you two, of all London, are the only persons who know the nature of my recent experiments. I should like to acquaint you with the results!”
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