He felt they should have a slow death rather than a swift one.
He had whipped Magua for coming into his cabin drunk
for revenge
his rifle
He would let Alice go.
A shot sounded, and the savage fell dead.
Magua stopped the savages from killing Cora in "The Last of the Mohicans" because he had a personal obsession with her, driven by a desire for revenge against her father, Colonel Munro. He believed that capturing Cora alive would allow him to exert power over her and perhaps use her as a means to gain leverage against the British. Additionally, Magua saw value in Cora, as her beauty and lineage could serve his own ambitions. Thus, he intervened to save her from immediate death, despite his deep-seated animosity towards her family.
He had whipped Magua for coming into his cabin drunk
for revenge
a Huron Indian who was with Magua
his rifle
they chose to die with cora.
He would let Alice go.
He would let Alice go.
She should become his wife.
When Cora refused for the second time to become Magua's wife, he became enraged and threatened to kill her. Heyward intervened and attacked Magua to protect her. This confrontation led to a violent scuffle between Heyward and Magua, with Uncas eventually coming to their aid and saving them.
Magua was taken slave by the Mohawks. He became a blood brother to him in order to be free, but in his heart he would always be a Huron. Magua hated Colonel Munro, father of Cora and Elizabeth. He planned to kill them and once they were dead, Magua's heart would be whole again.
Magua, a character from James Fenimore Cooper's novel "The Last of the Mohicans," proposes to Cora Munro to marry him. He seeks to win her affection and loyalty, offering her a chance to escape the horrors of war and the constraints of her current life. However, his proposal is rooted in his desire for revenge against her father, Colonel Munro, and reflects the complex dynamics of love, power, and cultural conflict in the story. Cora ultimately rejects his advances, asserting her loyalty to her own heritage and values.