James Fenimore Cooper's The Last Of The Mohicans

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The Last of the Mohicans was a story full of danger, emotion, sacrifice, and courage. The novel was focused around four Englishmen, Major Duncan Heyward, Cora and Alice Munro, and Psalmodist David Gamut, along with some Indian friends, Uncas and Chingachgook. The story shows the struggles the group experienced while traveling through Indian country to Fort William Henry. The English began the journey with Magua, the initial guide, yet quickly realized he was not there to help, rather he was only attempting to kidnap. They came across Hawkeye and his two Indian friends who saved them from the Huron tribe led by Magau. The journey to Fort William Henry continues. The Englishmen and Indians had to fight off the Huron tribe, survive an attack, and …show more content…

James Fenimore Cooper was an author during this era and portrayed this through his stories. In The Last of the Mohicans, Cooper shows how free Hawkeye, Uncas, and Chingachgook live; they had no permanent home and were not confined by a governmental dictatorship. I believe the first settlers in America saw the way of the natives and desired to live without the parliamentary reigns, another reason for the spark of the Romanticism era. Uncas lived a free lifestyle which is exactly what the period focused on. After years of dictatorship from England, American wanted freedom; Indians were the epitome of free. They lived off what they found and did not have to worry about money; they just roamed like the buffalo. Cora lived a high-class lifestyle since her father was a general. She showed another aspect of the Romantic era; rather than living on the wind’s gales, she showed more of the emotional yet logical side of the era. She was taken captive by the Indians yet she remained calm and used her logical thinking to keep her alive and on the Indian’s good side. Yet, by the end of the book, still had no desire to uproot and live off the