- The Four Feathers
Infobox Book
name = The Four Feathers
title_orig =
translator =
image_caption =
author =A.E.W. Mason
illustrator =
cover_artist =
country =
language = English
series =
subject =
genre =
publisher = Macmillan
release_date = 1902
english_release_date =
media_type = Print
pages =
isbn = NA
oclc = 848975
preceded_by =
followed_by ="The Four Feathers" is a 1902
adventure novel by British writerA.E.W. Mason that has inspired many films of the same title.Plot summary
The novel tells the story of British officer, Harry Feversham, who resigns his commission from his regiment just prior to Sir Garnet Wolseley's 1882 expedition to
Egypt to suppress the rising of Urabi Pasha. He does this for his own personal reasons, rather than cowardice. However, he is faced with censure from three of his comrades for cowardice, signified by the delivery of three white feathers to him, fromCaptain Trench andLieutenants Castleton and Willoughby, and the loss of the support of his fiancée, Ethne Eustace, who presents him with the fourth feather. His best friend in the regiment, Captain Durrance, becomes his rival for Ethne.Talking with Lieutenant Sutch, a friend of his father, an imposing retired general, Feversham questions his own true motives, and resolves to redeem himself by whatever means necessary, travelling on his own to Egypt and
Sudan , where in 1882Muhammad Ahmed proclaimed himself theMahdi (Guided One) and raised aHoly War . On January 26, 1885, his forces, at the time calledDervishes , capturedKhartoum and killed its British governor, GeneralCharles George Gordon . It is mainly in the eastern Sudan, where the British and Egyptians heldSuakin , that the action takes place over the next six years. Durrance is blinded by sunstroke and invalided home. Castleton is reported killed atTamai where a British square is briefly broken. Feversham's first success is with Willoughby, by recovering lost letters of Gordon. He is aided by a SudaneseArab , Abou Fatma. Later, disguised as a mad Greek musician, Feversham gets imprisoned inOmdurman , where he rescues nowColonel Trench, who had been captured on a reconnaissance mission, and they escape.Returned to England, Feversham has his honour restored and the feathers returned. Trench admits he instigated the feathers. Durrance yields Ethne, and travels to Germany to seek a cure for his blindness. Ethne and Feversham wed. The story is rich in characters and sub-plots,which the filmed versions perforce trim, along with making major changes in the story line, with the best known 1939 version centered on the 1898 campaign and
battle of Omdurman , only hinted as a future event in the novel.Film, TV, and theatrical adaptations
This novel's story has been filmed several times with all films retaining much of the same storyline (i.e. young Feversham disgracing himself by quitting the army followed by his redemption of manhood by various deeds in the Sudan).The enemy forces, Islamic rebels called Dervishes, of The Mahdi, are the same, as are the geographic settings,
England ,Egypt and theSudan ). The films also feature a British square broken, only mentioned in the novel in a battle in which the square recovered. The various film versions differ in the "precise" historical context. For example, the celebrated 1939 cinematic version, produced byAlexander Korda andRalph Richardson its chief star, takes place during the 1898 campaign, with its climax theBattle of Omdurman when British soldiers wore khaki uniforms. The more recent 2002 version withHeath Ledger takes place during the 1884-1885 campaign, when some British still wore red coats and when some of the novel's action occurs, and features theBattle of Abu Klea , January 17, 1885, fought by the Desert Column that included theCamel Corps dressed in gray jackets and khaki trousers, but not in red coats. While the square was briefly broken, unlike the movie version, the British won the battle, but their advance was delayed. The battle is more accurately treated in the movie "Khartoum" (1966). In the 1929 silent version of "Four Feathers", a square ofHighlanders is broken, but saved by Feversham and the Egyptian garrison of a besieged fort. Set in the 1880s, its great moment comes when wild hippos in a river attack the Dervishes pursuing Feversham. The many versions also differ in the racial ethnicity of the local Sudanese guide, Abou Fatma, who assists young Feversham in his desert adventure. For instance, this local guide is anArab man in the 1977 version while he is a Black man in the 2002 version.The various film versions are as follows:
External links
*gutenberg|no=18883|name=The Four Feathers
*imdb title|id=0005353|title=Four Feathers (1915)
*imdb title|id=0012189|title=The Four Feathers (1921)
*imdb title|id=0018908|title=The Four Feathers (1929)
*imdb title|id=0048662|title=Storm Over the Nile (1955)
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