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Loading... The pathfinder (original 1840; edition 1948)by James Fenimore CooperThe Pathfinder shows Natty at his old trick of guiding tender damsels through the dangerous woods, and the siege at the blockhouse and the storm on Lake Ontario are considerably like other of Cooper's sieges and storms. Natty, in this novel commonly called the Pathfinder, keeps in a hardy middle age his simple and honest nature, which is severely tested by his love for a nineteen-year-old young woman, Mabel Dunham. She is a conventional heroine of romance. A certain soft amiability about her turns for a time all the thoughts of the scout to the world of domestic affections. More talkative than ever before, he reveals new mental and moral traits. Here's what I wrote after reading in 1989: "Another of the Leather Stocking Tales. In this one, the noble and kind-hearted Pathfinder (Natty Bumppo) falls in love with the brave and virtuous Mable Durham. Tale is set on the Great Lakes and involves intrigue between the English Americans, French Canadians, and American Indians." I read The Deerslayer and The Last of the Mohicans many years ago, and was interested to discover this version of Natty Bumppo. In keeping with his era, Cooper is quite long-winded and didactic at times. I still enjoyed this story, although I probably won't read it again. The Pathfinder embodies what many would describe as the 'noble savage' except he's white. He is noble and virtuous, a solitary man of the woods except for his Indian friend Chingachgook, who plays a much smaller role in this story. He falls in love, but is doomed to disappointment, which isn't really a spoiler as it is clear from the beginning that in order for the Pathfinder to marry Mable he would have to become something other than he is. He would have to leave off being a nomadic woodsman, which he himself recognizes would change him utterly. His chivalric attitudes almost guarantee that he will be single and celibate for life. Although the Pathfinder plays a large role, the story is really about the adventures surrounding Mable, her father Sgt. Dunham, and Jasper Western, the captain of a boat on Lake Ontario. I liked dipping into this moment of pre-revolutionary history, when the French and their Indian allies still had designs on the American territory, and Americans were still subjects of the British. A nice edition, with few typos and excellent critical apparatus. You don't, strictly speaking, need the notes (unless you must know the meaning of every nautical term), but you'll come to appreciate them for providing welcome breaks in the text of what must surely be one of the worst novels ever written; and I say this as someone who has read the Lensman series. Much of the problem stems from Cooper's inability to shut up. Take this from chapter III (page 36 in this edition). The paragraph beginning “The Oswego...”. He expands on his subject for 159 words (it wouldn't be so bad but it's not even beautiful language) before summarising those words by saying “In short...” That sentence itself is 43 words long. Except he still cannot shut up and he then continues for a further 142 words. What a waste of my time. Or take this cracker from chapter XVII (page 250): “…the indefinable and controlling sense of womanly diffidence, made her suppress her womanly curiosity.” Now, if womanly diffidence is two things, and one of them is controlling, it must be possible to define the other thing. It's lazy writing and this is not the only time when I wondered if what we had here was a first draft. Particularly telling is Cooper's comment in his introduction that Mabel was first named Agnes, but that he changed it during the writing. Apparently the first edition called her by Agnes until the fifth or sixth chapter. Why was he submitting a half revised manuscript for publication and why did he not bother to proofread the text? I found myself asking not only why I was reading the book, but why it was written. What is it about? There seems to be a theme of trust and betrayal, and this is reflected in several sub-plots, or perhaps more accurately plot fragments, but I am forced to conclude, with astonishment, that this is the story of how Mabel got married. Why is this story about getting married been set against a background of nautical adventure and why is Natty Bumppo in it at all? Why is the heroine so boring? Why is Cooper's attitude to women so creepy? Why why why? 4617. The Pathfinder, by James Fenimore Cooper (read 9 Sep 2009) This is the third sequentially of the Cooper's Leatherstocking saga. I read the first two (The Deerslayer and The Last of the Mohicans) in November and December 1967 and decided now I better read the other three volumes or I wouldn't get them read in my lifetime. This is an exciting book, at times, and while it does not require a detective to know how it will turn out--and who will get the girl--it was fun to read and to see how Cooper works the story out. A bit sententious towards the end especially, but not offensively so. An excellent book! I quite enjoyed this story of the American frontier on the Great Lakes. Natty Bumppo (called Pathfinder in this book) falls in love. Can such a thing succeed when he is such a wild man? A great story, though sometimes the dialogue gets a bit wordy. Descriptions are lovely. I look forward to readin gmore of Cooper. One has to be in the proper mood to enjoy these books. A bit of romance, a bit of adventure, quite a bit of moralizing. I enjoyed them when I read them, but have no desire to read them again. I've since read enough history to realize just how fictional these are. If you read them for the adventure and the descriptions of the Northeastern woodlands, I don't think you will be disappointed. Sadly, the plot of each has sort of blended together and I can't remember the details of any. The Pathfinder (1840), Cooper's most picturesque novel and the fourth of the five Leatherstocking Tales, is a naval story set on the Great Lakes of the 1750s. Fashioned from Cooper's own experience as a midshipman on Lake Ontario in 1808-09, the novel revives Natty Bumpo (who had died in The Prairie), and illuminates Cooper's interest in American history with his concern for social development. |
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The Pathfinder embodies what many would describe as the 'noble savage' except he's white. He is noble and virtuous, a solitary man of the woods except for his Indian friend Chingachgook, who plays a much smaller role in this story. He falls in love, but is doomed to disappointment, which isn't really a spoiler as it is clear from the beginning that in order for the Pathfinder to marry Mable he would have to become something other than he is. He would have to leave off being a nomadic woodsman, which he himself recognizes would change him utterly. His chivalric attitudes almost guarantee that he will be single and celibate for life.
Although the Pathfinder plays a large role, the story is really about the adventures surrounding Mable, her father Sgt. Dunham, and Jasper Western, the captain of a boat on Lake Ontario. I liked dipping into this moment of pre-revolutionary history, when the French and their Indian allies still had designs on the American territory, and Americans were still subjects of the British. ( )