The Mountebank

The Mountebank

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The Mountebank by William J. Locke

Published:

1926

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The Mountebank

By

4
(1 Review)
An orphaned boy becomes a traveling juggler, and later joins the army... many years later, as a general, he is faced with the social cost of his past, and must make difficult choices.

Book Excerpt

mself. Perhaps more; for a child of eight has lost all recollection of parents who died before he was two. They were circus folk, English, trapeze artists, come, they said, from a long tour in Australia, where Andrew was born, and their first European engagement was in the Cirque Rocambeau. Their stay was brief; their end tragic. Lackaday Père took to drink, which is the last thing a trapeze artist should do. Brain and hand at rehearsal one day lost co-ordination by the thousandth part of a second and Lackaday Mère, swinging from her feet upwards, missed the anticipated grip, and fell with a thud on the ground, breaking her spine. Whereupon Lackaday Père went out and hanged himself from a cross-beam in an empty stable.

Thus, at two years old, Andrew Lackaday started life on his own account. From that day, he was alone in the world. Nothing in his parents' modest luggage gave clue to kith or kin. Ben Flint who, as a fellow-countryman, went through their ef

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To me, the story did not interesting till the middle section, but overall it is a good book and worth reading. If you haven’t read Jeffery Farnol prior, I’d suggest Peregrine's Progress which was a much better story, in my opinion, and come back to read The Mountebank after your hooked on this outstanding author.