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LITR 5535: American
Romanticism Christopher Lucas
In Romantic literature, fictional characters and in some cases real
people, portray an almost uncontrollable desire for undertaking journeys or a
quest. In these stories, protagonists and historical figures alike tend to
create the conditions necessary to live out a romantic story line.
Both Columbus and John Smith display a propensity for allowing their
desires for travel and discovery to cloud or color their visions and perceptions
of what is actually going on around them. In
fictional stories such as The Last of the Mohicans, Cooper uses the
action or inactions of characters like Hawkeye and the Mohicans to perpetuate
and ensure the quest storyline.
As Krisann Muskievicz points out in her American Romance essay, The
Gothic Style: America’s First “Extreme” Entertainment, Americans have
always sought excitement and the danger of the unknown.
This same desire can be seen in Columbus who made four voyages to the
Caribbean and coast of South America between 1492 to 1500.
During this time, Columbus “developed a plan to find a commercially
viable Atlantic route to Asia.” Ultimately, Columbus ends up descending from
being the hero of exploration to being the scapegoat for all that has gone wrong
in the New World.
On a physical level, the quests and voyages of Columbus are plain to see.
On a deeper level, his need for a quest and the self-fulfilling manner in which
he views his travels is also evident. In his writings, Columbus creates an
Edenic image of the New World which nourishes and sustains his physical
desire to travel. Columbus deceives himself into believing only the “good
parts” of his voyage. In doing so, Columbus reaffirms that what he is doing is
correct and justified and therefore, should be continued. Essentially, the
paradise described and envisioned by Columbus fuels his need to continue the
quest.
Columbus writes, “there are in it very many sierras and very lofty
mountains, beyond comparison[…]” (26-27). “[…] with trees of a thousand
kind and tall, and they seem to touch the sky.” “[…] there are very large
tracts of land cultivatable lands, and there is honey and there are birds of
many kinds and fruits in great diversity. In the interior are mines of metal,
and the population is without number. Espanola is a marvel.”
Through
Columbus’s eyes this new land is almost perfection, he seems unable or
unwilling to see anything derogatory about the lands he discovers. Columbus
appears to turn a blind eye to the changes and challenges presented by the
cultural differences, disease, temperature, humidity, and insects that must have
been evident even in the first voyage. For
Columbus to truly acknowledge these conditions would contradict his vision of
his quest and journey and pollute his Romantic dreams of his quest. With John Smith, we see a figure with an almost uncontrollable yearning for discovery and quest. Smith blurs the line between reality and romance in terms of his writing and desire for adventure. Smith was so influenced by “tales of exploration, piracy, and military adventure[…]” (43) in his childhood, that it becomes difficult for him to separate fact from fiction in his autobiographical and historical accounts of his travels.
Smith’s life is a testament to his attempt to live out the adventure
romance which stirred his imagination as a child.
Immediately following his fathers death, Smith volunteered to travel and
fight wars in The Netherlands and Austria. During this time, Smith rises to the
rank of Captain, is wounded in battle, taken as a slave escapes by murdering his
master and flees to Romania. On a grand scale, Smith lives out the
capture/escape story line through this ordeal.
While this is a great story, and no doubt based in fact, it is still
necessary to remember that “many of these details come to us only through
Smith’s own at times garbled narratives, most of them penned long after the
events” (43).
Smith’s war adventures in Europe apparently were not enough to satiate
his desire to live a romantic life. Following his escape from the Turks, Smith
undertakes the voyage to Virginia in 1607.
During this journey, Smith is arrested and threatened with death by the
people in charge of the voyage. Again,
Smith lives out the imprisonment /freedom motif, and again through a twist of
fate, he is set free.
Once in America, Smith is yet again imprisoned. The captors this time are
in the form of the Chesapeake Bay Indians. These Indians, like the Turks and his
fellow voyager before, plan to kill Smith.
Here we see the capture/escape storyline repeated again. This time the
storyline has the added twist of romance since Smith’s future wife,
Pocahontas, saves him.
Smith, like Columbus, internalizes the Romantic storyline and chooses
only to remember the parts of his travels that support this theme.
For example, in Smith’s version of the Pocahontas story, there is only
a brief mention of the two soldiers killed while Smith was out being heroically
captured by the Chesapeake Bay Indians. The death of the soldiers, coupled with
loss of provision, was a very serious and noteworthy event. In fact, Smith, “would have been hanged had a fleet with
much-needed supplies not arrived from England” (43). A point Smith conveniently sidesteps in his “historical”
version of the events. Additionally, Smith rewrote this story several times with
the final version coming only after the death of Pocahontas. During the
rewriting process the actions of Pocahontas become more and more heroic.
Cooper, unlike Smith and Columbus, is truly given the opportunity to
create a Romantic storyline in The Last of the Mohicans.
It is here in Cooper’s fictional world that the characters are free to
live out a Romantic quest. Given an authors license, Cooper is able to push
realty into the shadows while placing the spotlight on the Romantic events of
his storyline.
The Last of the Mohicans contains almost all of the
elements normally associated with a Romantic story.
There are strong character types, women in distress, a Byronic hero, a
setting encompassing nature and spirit, male bonding and enough capture/ escape
scenarios to exhaust any would-be hero. Cooper also adds enough history to his
story to give it a place in time and space, but unlike Smith,
he does not attempt to portray his account of any event as historically
accurate.
Cooper is able to develop a Romantic quest in his novel quite easily.
In fact the entire story can be viewed as quest. The wanderlust and need
for adventure is evident from the first meeting of Hawkeye, Chingachgook, and
Uncas. Cooper shifts to the opening
scene of these characters by showing them “lingering on the banks of a small
but rapid stream” (28). Later in
the passage, Cooper refers to them as “loiterers.”
It appears that Cooper has these would be heroes waiting around, like
Knights of Old, simply waiting for some Romantic quest to befall them.
Cooper uses several plot twist to keeps the journey or quest moving
throughout the story. For example,
Magua is kept alive until the very end of the novel.
At several points in the tale either Hawkeye, Chingachgook, or Uncas
could have killed Magua, but this would have effectively ended the journey.
Instead, Cooper has his heroes choose to live by a code and a sense of
honor that prevents them from simply shooting Magua on sight.
This code also prevents the heroes from walking away from Cora, Alice and
Heyward and letting them fend for themselves at any of several points in the
novel. By instilling this code, Cooper is able to ensure that the
adventure will continue.
Like Columbus, Hawkeye shows a propensity to view the nature around him
as Edenic. “Here the Lord laid his hand, in the midst of the howling
wilderness, for their good, and raised a fountain of water from the bowels of he
‘arth[…]” (119). Hawkeye
doesn’t confuse his admiration for wilderness around him with an admiration
for all of the indigenous people he meets.
Hawkeye states “And I tell you that he who is born a Mingo will die a
Mingo.” and “Give me a Delaware or a Mohican for honesty” (37).
Columbus, Smith and Cooper all strike the same cord with reference to
Romantic literature and the desire for characters to be anywhere but “the here
and now.” Columbus and Smith allow their desires for travel and discovery to
obscure their vision of reality to the point where it becomes difficult to
distinguish between fact and fiction. Cooper on the other hand, develops
fictional storylines which create the conditions necessary to create a Romantic
story. Works
Cited Columbus,
Christopher. “Letter to Luis De Santangel” The Norton Anthology of
American Literature.
Shorter 6th ed. Ed. Nina Baym. New York: W.W. Norton &
Company, 2003. 25-29. Cooper,
James Fenimore. The Last of the Mohicans. New York: Penguin, 1986. Smith,
John. “John Smith 1580-1631” The Norton Anthology of
American Literature.
Shorter 6th ed. Ed. Nina Baym. New York: W.W. Norton &
Company, 2003. 42-56. Muskievicz,
Krisann. “The Gothic Style: America’s First “Extreme” Entertainment”
LITR
5535: American Romanticism. Ed. Craig White. Summer 2002. U of
Houston –
Clear Lake. Summer 2002
<http://coursesite.uhcl.edu/HSH/Whitec/LITR/5535/models/2002/midterms/defau
lt.htm>. |