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  1. The Pathfinder

    The Pathfinder

    PG-131996 · Historical drama · 1h 41m

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  1. The Pathfinder, or The Inland Sea is a historical novel by American author James Fenimore Cooper, first published in 1840. It is the fourth novel Cooper wrote featuring Natty Bumppo , his fictitious frontier hero, and the third chronological episode of the Leatherstocking Tales .

  2. The Pathfinder is a 1996 American television film based on the 1840 novel The Pathfinder, or The Inland Sea by James Fenimore Cooper. It stars Kevin Dillon as Pathfinder and Laurie Holden as Mabel Dunham. The film is known as La Légende de Pathfinder in Canada (French title) and Le Lac Ontario in France .

  3. James Fenimore Cooper, Thomas Berger (Afterword), John Stauffer (Introduction) 3.89. 4,771 ratings152 reviews. 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 ...

  4. The Pathfinder, novel by James Fenimore Cooper, published in two volumes in 1840, the fourth of five novels published as The Leatherstocking Tales. In terms of the chronological narrative, The Pathfinder is third in the series. Natty Bumppo is a 40-year-old wilderness scout living near Lake Ontario.

  5. With George Montgomery, Helena Carter, Jay Silverheels, Walter Kingsford. Pathfinder, a white man raised by the Mohican Indians, joins forces with the British army to avenge himself on the Mingo warriors and the French, who have brought death and pillage to his people.

  6. Written by Aleksei Marchyn. Nineteen year old Mabel Dunham, accompanied by her uncle - the old sailor Cap - and two Indians (Smashing Arrows the and his wife June Dew) are for many days making their way through the vast American jungle from New York City to a small English castle on the shores of Lake Ontario.

  7. Nov 3, 2008 · Pathfinder started, for sure enough an object was crossing the stream, above the rift, towards which, however, it was gradually setting by the force of the current. A second look satisfied both the observers that it was a man, and an Indian, though so concealed as at first to render it doubtful.

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