Saturday, October 26, 2019
Coopers Chingachgook :: essays papers
Coopers Chingachgook    The Death of Chingachgook as the Apogee of  the tragedy of the Indian  Nation in Cooper^s The Pioneers    The Pioneers, written by James Fenimore Cooper in 1823 opens the  popular series of books about the adventures of an inhabitant of the  New England forests Natty Bampo ^ a white man, a scout, and a hunter.    However, the novelist does not merely narrate the life of Natty,  his  main aim is to present the whole situation on the Eastern Coast of  America in the seventeenth century. In The Pioneers, in particular,  Cooper writes about the new settlers in America, about their conquest  of the lands, and about the tragic extinction of the Indian people,  who had been proud owners of the lands of America. One of the most  important moments in this book, and even in the whole cycle, is the  scene of the death of Natty Bampo^s best friend Chingachgook, the last  representative of the Indian tribe of Mohicans. In this scene the  author presents his most important ideas about the vices of the new  settlers, hypocrisy of Christianity, and the tragedy of the native  inhabitants of the American lands. C!  ooper actually makes the death  of the Mohican sound as a  final chord in the calamitous history of the  Indian people, who under the onslaught of European civilization are  doomed to disappear. He makes the dying Indian chief a symbol for his  perishing nation, presenting him at the last minutes of his life in his  national costume and believing in the Indian morals and gods. Moreover,  by misspelling his name on the gravestone, Cooper redoubles the tragic  implication that after the death of Chingachgook his culture is  forgotten and lost, and  a meaningful Indian name loses its importance  for the white people who come to live in the formally Indian forests.    Towards the end of The Pioneers the tragic story about the  Indians who were expelled from their lands by the white  Europeans, reaches its apogee. The scene of the Chingachgook^s  dying is full of sadness, pain, and hopelessness. In a very  meaningful way Cooper presents his Indian hero on the threshold  of death, sitting "on a trunk of a fallen oak" (p.381). Thus he  hints at the identity between the old chief and the tree,  implying that once young and strong they both are now old and  lifeless. Moreover, as the fallen tree is now disconnected from  the company of the strong young forest mates, thus also  Chingachgook with his "tawny visage" (p.381) is lonely among  the liveliness of the newly established colonies. So Cooper  writes that in place of the once virgin forests where the    					    
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