The Lunatic at Large
Book Excerpt
" 'Oh, it's all right,' said the man, rather as though he expected me to say that it wasn't. He looked a little doubtful what to do, and then I heard some one inside the cab call him. He stuck his head in the window and they confabbed for a minute, and then he turned to me and said, with the most magnificent air you ever saw, like a chap buying a set of diamond studs, 'My friend here is a great personal friend of Dr Congleton, and it's a damned---- I mean it's an uncommonly delicate matter. We must see him.'
" 'Well, if you insist, I'll see if I can get him,' I said; 'but you'd better come in and wait.'
"So the Johnnie opened the door of the cab, and there was a great hauling and pushing, my friend pulling an arm from the outside, and the doctor shoving from within, and at last they fetched out their patient. He was a tall man, in a very smart-looking, long, light top-coat, and a cap with a large peak shoved over his eyes,
Editor's choice
(view all)Popular books in Humor, Fiction and Literature
Readers reviews
R: * * * * *
Plot bullets
A man wakes up in a insane asylum.
He can\'t remember much, even his name.
He was brought in the middle of the night, and it looks like there is a conspiracy going on.
The man must break out, and aided by a pretty girl, he does so. Now what? He is free, but not really free.
He takes up with a visiting German nobleman.
He is at large and no one can fail to say that he acts like a lunatic.
A lunatic he may look, but he is clever and does all he can to find out who he is and why things have turned out as the have done.
I find this story to be in the tradition of J. K. Bangs or J. K. Jerome.
- Upvote (0)
- Downvote (0)