Brother Dusty-Feet

Brother Dusty-Feet

First edition
Author Rosemary Sutcliff
Illustrator C. Walter Hodges
Cover artist William Stobbs
Country United Kingdom
Language English
Genre Historical novel
Publisher OUP
Publication date
1952
Media type Print (Hardcover)
Pages 248 pp
ISBN 0-19-271444-9

Brother Dusty-Feet is a children's historical novel written by Rosemary Sutcliff and first published in 1952.[1]

It is set in England during the reign of Queen Elizabeth I. It is Sutcliff's fourth book.

Plot summary

Hugh Copplestone is an orphaned eleven-year-old boy living with his paternal Aunt Alison, who resents the duty of looking after her brother's child. When he answers her back after she speaks disrespectfully of his dead father, Aunt Alison vindictively vows to have his pet dog Argos killed on the excuse that she has no duty of care to the animal and no intention of incurring the expense any longer.

There is an overnight stay of execution since all the farmhands who could have undertaken the task are away at a fair, which gives Hugh time to plan an escape. He resolves to run away and hopes to make his way to Oxford and become a scholar, as his father always wanted to do. However, he is not long on his way when he falls in with a troupe of strolling players, whose leader Tobias Pennifeather soon wheedles the story out of him. Tobias offers to allow Hugh to travel with them so that he will have their protection on the road and the means of earning a living, and he is first assisting with the troupe's properties and then participating in the plays themselves, since female parts were generally played by boys and their boy Nicky Bodkin is starting to grow up.

Hugh is especially befriended by Jonathan Whyteleafe, the troupe's playwright and tumbler, who is visibly more intelligent than the rest although too poor to have afforded much education. Jonathan is aware that his plays are only rhyming jingle, which he can compose easily, and once appears to bemoan his inability to write grander literature; Hugh notes that his demeanour when the subject is mentioned is that of someone who is in pain but too proud to mention it.

The troupe has many adventures as they meander across Elizabethan England. Once they are arrested as vagabonds for trying to perform without a licence, then released from the stocks on the word of Sir Walter Raleigh who pretends to the local constable that they are secret agents working for Sir Francis Walsingham. At one point they have the ill luck to blunder into Hugh's aunt and uncle, and escape by having Hugh switch clothes with Nicky while another company member, Jasper Nye, pretends to be ill with the sweating-sickness. At a fair, Hugh is able to warn a friendly Quack doctor of the arrival of the law, and is later ceremoniously granted "Seisin of the Road" by a Tom O'Bedlam around the fair-folks' camp fire.

Eventually the Players reach Oxford and Hugh has the good luck to meet an old acquaintance of his father's, a gentleman with a daughter of a similar age to Hugh and who is willing to foster him and sponsor him as an Oxford scholar. At first Hugh is reluctant to leave the Players, but Jonathan has a quiet talk with him to convince him of the uncertainty of a strolling player's mildly illegal life and the advantages of a good education. Jonathan's strong affection for his adopted brother is very evident when Hugh accuses him of wanting to "get rid of me", but Hugh sees sense and, as the story closes, is happily settling in with his new family.

Radio 4 adaptation

A three-episode dramatisation of Brother Dusty-Feet was broadcast on BBC Radio 4 in February and March 2012. The cast included:[2][3]

References

  1. Rosemary Sutcliff (1952). Brother Dusty-Feet. Oxford University Press.
  2. Caroline Meyer. "Brother Dusty Feet". Radio Times.
  3. "Rosemary Sutcliff - Brother Dusty Feet". BBC.

External links

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