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Keep thy foot out of brothels, thy hand out of plackets, thy pen from lenders' books, and defy the foul fiend. ~Shakespeare
Willoughby Corbo, our hero, is born the illegitimate son of an irresponsible and irascible nobleman, Lord Ollebeare, who has a nose like a double strawberry as well as "six Norman names, a ruined house, a wild park, and one large and barren farm." With hardly a backward glance, Ollebeare dumps his unwanted wee newborn on the doorstep of his brother and hastily disappears. Willoughby is raised alone - neglected and unloved except for the attentions of a devoted (though somewhat unsavory) old servant; "Here was an equality, between the little bent old chap of seventy and the straight boy in his earliest teens, between the old centaur and the puppy hero."
At the proper age Willoughby must find a job and is thrown into a somewhat tilted modern world for which he is wholly unprepared. One employer queries:
"Eton?" asked Lord Stumber abruptly.
"Yes, thanks," said Willoughby. "I had lunch before I got the train."( Ch 4)
Willoughby sees himself as a worthless wretch and says about himself: "I am," he said," a waster for political, social, moral, artistic, philosophical, individual, creditable, and interesting reasons."
Ah, but after lost jobs, squalid boarding houses, unpaid debts, unsavory love affairs, and a reunion with his father, does he defy the foul fiend?
A postwar Penguin ( with the so called drunk Penguin emblem on the front cover, Penguin number 666, horizontal triband cover, light edgewear ( curl at corners) and usual tanning.