The Pathfinder: or the Inland SeaState University of New York Press, 30. 6. 1980 - Počet stran: 569 With the publication of The Pathfinder in 1840, James Fenimore Cooper engaged in what he called the "hazardous experiment" of reviving one of his most popular characters who had been allowed to die in a previous novel. Natty Bumppo—who had appeared as Leatherstocking in The Pioneers, as Hawkeye in The Last of the Mohicans, and who had died as the Trapper in The Prairie—appears again as the hero of The Pathfinder. Encouraged by his British publisher to write another tale of the American frontier, Cooper revived his character to take him to the shores of Lake Ontario, the Inland Sea, for an adventurous story of sailors, Indians, and hunters. Inspired by his own experiences as a mid-shipman on Lake Ontario in 1808-09, Cooper writes in his most picturesque fashion of the wilderness of the Great Lakes, the Thousand Islands, and Niagara. "Never did the art of writing tread more closely upon the art of the painter," wrote Honoré de Balzac in his review of The Pathfinder. Cooper writes of places that were wilderness in his youth and that changed rapidly in his own lifetime as cities and commerce developed around the Great Lakes. Cooper's attitude toward this development was ambivalent, as he indicated in his Preface: "That great results are intended to be produced by means of these wonderful changes, we firmly believe...but that they will prove to be of the precise results now so generally anticipated, in consulting the experience of the past, and taking the nature of man into account, the reflecting and intelligent may be permitted to doubt." The Pathfinder remains a classic and entertaining account of the American wilderness and of aspects of human experience in the New World. |
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Strana 11
... understand that his present companion was only a subordinate . So impos- ing indeed , had been the quiet superiority of the Tuscarora's reserve , that Charles Cap , for so was the seaman named , in his most dogmatical or facetious ...
... understand that his present companion was only a subordinate . So impos- ing indeed , had been the quiet superiority of the Tuscarora's reserve , that Charles Cap , for so was the seaman named , in his most dogmatical or facetious ...
Strana 21
... understand the compass , I suppose . " " The reason is easily comprehended , " said the young man , involuntarily ... understanding . Though , on the whole , I fear you have seen more green than blue water ! " " It is not surprising that ...
... understand the compass , I suppose . " " The reason is easily comprehended , " said the young man , involuntarily ... understanding . Though , on the whole , I fear you have seen more green than blue water ! " " It is not surprising that ...
Strana 23
... understands the dif- ferences in usages . The paint of a Mingo , is not the paint of a Delaware ; and he who should expect to see a warrior in the dress of a squaw , might be disapp'inted . I'm not very old , but I have lived in the ...
... understands the dif- ferences in usages . The paint of a Mingo , is not the paint of a Delaware ; and he who should expect to see a warrior in the dress of a squaw , might be disapp'inted . I'm not very old , but I have lived in the ...
Strana 24
... understand his own character . Now , there is my brother - in - law , the Serjeant , he is as good a fellow as ever broke a biscuit , in his own way ; but what is he , after all ; why nothing but a soger . A serjeant , to be sure , but ...
... understand his own character . Now , there is my brother - in - law , the Serjeant , he is as good a fellow as ever broke a biscuit , in his own way ; but what is he , after all ; why nothing but a soger . A serjeant , to be sure , but ...
Strana 27
... understanding these things so well . I suppose it would be no great matter , for a man regularly brought up to the sea , to catch these trifles , if he could only bring his mind fairly to bear upon them . " " I don't know that - The ...
... understanding these things so well . I suppose it would be no great matter , for a man regularly brought up to the sea , to catch these trifles , if he could only bring his mind fairly to bear upon them . " " I don't know that - The ...
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ag'in appeared Arrowhead believe better Blanchard 1840 block-house boat Brother Cap bushes calash canoe Chingachgook command companion compositor Cooper Edition cutter Delaware distrust doubt Emended enemy eyes face fancy father fear feelings fire forest French garrison gifts girl hand head heard heart heroine honor Indian inimy instant Iroquois island James Fenimore Cooper Jasper Eau douce jeant June Killdeer lake Lake Ontario land laughing Lea and Blanchard leave look Lundie Mabel Dunham Major Duncan manner manuscript Master Cap Master Pathfinder means mind Mingo minutes Muir Natty Bumppo nature never night Ontario opinion Oswego paddle party passed Quarter Master returned rifle river sail sailor Sarjeant's daughter Sarpent savages scalp Scud Serjeant Dunham shore smile soldier soon speak spot staysail stream tell thing thought Thousand Islands tion true truth Tuscarora uncle venison wife wind wish woman woods word young