Of the first twenty Newbery books, this is one of the most difficult reads. I found it difficult as an adult with a college degree; I can only imagine how crazy it all sounded to my son at 6y0m. The main character is a young boy named Philip Marsham, whose mother died when he was young and whose father is lost at sea within the first few pages. Philip had been staying with his father's unconfirmed fiancee but an accident with a gun leads Philip to flee. As if the rich English wasn't hard enough to understand, Hawes introduces a Scotsman so we can have seven pages interspersed with lines such as:
If you're not a Diana Gabaldon fan, like I am, or otherwise used to a Highland accent, it helps if you read it aloud. It's too hard to get lost in the attempt to write a lilt if you only process it with your eyes. An Scottish-lilt is of little concern though compared with an entire chapter spent with two drunk men. I was worried that the drunks were going to hook up with a woman - maybe they did and I just missed it due to the difficult language. I really can't tell you much more about the book because it seems we gave up after two or three chapters. And the way it is written it is difficult to just skim it. I provide a random passage for demonstration:
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