Conclusion
In early America, there was a division of labor between the sexes, both physically and
morally. Women like Elizabeth are the caretakers of the home just as they are the caretakers of
republican morality. While men may be able to resolve differences according to innate moral
codes, women are also there to insure that these codes are nurtured and put into practice. They
tame and educate the men - Kirby, Natty and Ben can sometimes resolve their differences
between themselves as men, based on simple fairness or loyalty, but at other times a woman’s
voice is needed to arbitrate, as in the case of the turkey shoot, or to counsel, as in when Elizabeth
forces her father to consider the rectitude of punishing Natty.
Wood wrote that this idea of separate spheres of influence between men and women
“became the dominant line of thinking on women’s issues in the early Republic.”
Women, it was said, possessed the crucially important talents of civilizing their sons
and husbands and of teaching the new republican virtues of affection and
benevolence. They had a special responsibility in the home as wives and mothers,
which the men could not undertake, for cultivating the moral feelings necessary to
hold this sprawling commercial American society together.
146
Cooper’s men were not completely lost without women’s help. He clearly endowed
Natty, Kirby and Ben with inherent moral values, recognizing that such innate morality was of
paramount importance to a republican society. Even though the notions of the new society were
predicated both on innate morality and adherence to laws, Cooper is unafraid to explore how
these two concepts can be at odds in a new land. The innate morality of the frontier individualist
146
Wood, Rising Glory 175-176
35
and the laws of “civilization” clearly were at odds in Cooper’s Templeton. Again, we see the
clash of a new and unfinished social order being imposed on existing norms of behavior. Natty
could not exist in the framework of the new laws.
While Cooper himself was Federalist-leaning and ultimately resigned to the imposition of
new laws and republicanism in America, it seems clear that he also subscribed to the Jeffersonian
belief that “morals were too essential to the happiness of man, to be risked on the uncertain
combinations of the head. [Nature] laid their foundation, therefore, in sentiment, not in
science."
147
147
Letter from Jefferson to Maria Cosway, 1786, quoted in Merrill D. Peterson, Ed.; The Portable Thomas Jefferson
(New York: Penguin Books, 1977) 400
36
CHAPTER 3: PRACTICAL KNOWLEDGE and EDUCATION
Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |