Receiving no reply to this extraordinary appeal, which in truth, as it was delivered with the vigor of full and sonorous tones, merited some sort of notice, he who had thus sung forth the language of the holy book turned to the silent figure to whom he had unwittingly addressed himself, and found a new and more powerful subject of admiration in the object that encountered his gaze. His eyes fell on the still, upright, and rigid form of the “Indian runner,” who had borne to the camp the unwelcome tidings of the preceding evening. Although in a state of perfect repose, and apparently disregarding, with characteristic stoicism, the excitement and bustle around him, there was a sullen fierceness mingled with the quiet of the savage, that was likely to arrest the attention of much more experienced eyes than those which now scanned him, in unconcealed amazement.
The Last of the Mohicans
Table of Contents
- James Fenimore Cooper 7
- INTRODUCTION 9
- CHAPTER 1 20
- CHAPTER 2 48
- CHAPTER 3 73
- CHAPTER 4 102
- CHAPTER 5 131
- CHAPTER 6 158
- CHAPTER 7 193
- CHAPTER 8 228
- CHAPTER 9 258
- CHAPTER 10 283
- CHAPTER 11 319
- CHAPTER 12 357
- CHAPTER 13 401
- CHAPTER 14 433
- CHAPTER 15 477
- CHAPTER 16 510
- CHAPTER 17 547
- CHAPTER 18 591
- CHAPTER 19 627
- CHAPTER 20 664
- CHAPTER 21 701
- CHAPTER 22 733
- CHAPTER 23 767
- CHAPTER 24 806
- CHAPTER 25 840
- CHAPTER 26 881
- CHAPTER 27 914
- CHAPTER 28 943
- CHAPTER 29 973
- CHAPTER 30 1013
- CHAPTER 31 1051
- CHAPTER 32 1076
- CHAPTER 33 1120