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1[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/hugh_glass.jpg]]
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3A great American FolkHero, Hugh Glass (ca. 1780-1833) was a man of many involuntary careers. During his life, he was a {{Pirate}}, a WhiteManGoneNative, a MountainMan, but above all, one of history's greatest badasses.
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5For most of his life, he was just a sailor like any other sailor, from age of 13 til he was 37. Then, a man named Jean Lafitte turned his life upside down. Jean Lafitte, a pirate of the Mexican Gulf, attacked Glass' ship, killed half of the crew, and forced the rest, including Glass, into servitude as pirates. Dissatisfied with the pirate life, he opted to flee from the ship with a companion, Clive Hastings, a year later, by swimming to shore. In Texas. They then began walking to Kansas, for the first time displaying how much of a {{Determinator}} he really was. While they were very successful at evading natives, eventually the Wolf Pawnees caught them in Kansas, and Hastings was [[HumanSacrifice sacrificed]]. However, Glass convinced the chief to spare him by way of a gift he had stolen from Lafitte, and he went on to live with the natives for four years. After having lived among them for such a long time, they made peace with the American fur traders arriving in the region, and he joined them, abandoned the Pawnees, and became a MountainMan.
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7Now is where the real fun starts. After surviving two Native American massacres, one committed by the Blackfeet and one by the Arikaras, Glass was with a small group of eight men in the woods, led by Major Andrew Henry. While hunting, Glass stumbled into a [[BearsAreBadNews pissed off grizzly bear]] [[MamaBear mother]] and her cubs, and was mauled, nearly to death, before killing it with his knife. As they were in dangerous territory, and Glass was too wounded to speak or do anything, Henry opted to leave two men, John Fitzgerald and Jim Bridger, to guard Glass and ensure he was buried upon his death, but as he still did not die, they abandoned him in the wilderness, and told everyone he was dead. This was the biggest mistake of their lives. For Glass was most certainly not dead, and he pulled his way back to civilisation, just to exact revenge upon them. He crawled through 100 miles of Dakotan wilderness, during a timespan of six weeks.
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9He never got to exact revenge upon them, forgiving them both, and after surviving another massacre, he continued his life as a MountainMan for ten years, before being killed in a Native American attack in 1833.
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11Glass has inspired several works of fiction, and many books have dramatized his life. In addition, the 1971 film ''Man In The Wilderness'' starring Richard Harris (which famously gave Creator/StephenColbert his fear of bears) was directly based on his life (albeit with the names changed). More recently, Creator/LeonardoDiCaprio played Glass in the 2015 film ''Film/TheRevenant''.
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13Glass stands as a great example of the American FolkHero.
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16!Tropes associated with Glass:
17* BadassBoast: One account has him tell Fitzgerald that he better stay in the Army the rest of his life. [[BestServedCold Because if not...]]
18* BearsAreBadNews: ''Very bad'', when you run into a literal MamaBear while alone in the wilderness.
19* BerserkButton: Fitzgerald stealing his rifle.
20* CannibalTribe: Glass and Hastings worked specifically to avoid the man-eating Karankawas, while wandering through Texas.
21* ChekhovsSkill: Many of the things he learned among the Pawnees helped him later on.
22* CompanionCube: His rifle.
23* DentedIron: He gets his much of his skin torn off by a bear and still keeps going.
24* {{Determinator}}: You better believe it! He dragged his way through 100 miles of wilderness, all for the sake of revenge.
25* EasilyForgiven: Bridger and Fitzgerald, once Glass found them. He simply let them go.
26* HumanSacrifice: Practiced by the Pawnees.
27%%* HunterTrapper
28* InjunCountry: The reason Henry, Bridger and Fitzgerald left him was because they were afraid of the hostile Indian territory.
29* ItsPersonal: With the Arikaras, for most of his life. Also, when Fitzgerald stole his beloved rifle, enticing his RoaringRampageOfRevenge.
30* KillItWithFire: The nature of the HumanSacrifice practiced by the Pawnees involved buring the victim alive.
31* LeftForDead: Courtesy of Bridger and Fitzgerald. They regretted it. Big time.
32* MagicalNativeAmerican: Inverted. The Pawnee considered Glass magical, and the gift he produced for them a sign from the spirits that he should be spared.
33* MamaBear: The bear, obviously.
34* MightyWhitey: Managed to convince the Pawnees into not sacrificing him by producing a gift.
35* MountainMan
36* NeverSmileAtACrocodile: Alligators ''en masse'' forced Hastings and Glass out of the swamps, where food was easily accessible, out to the more desolate plains.
37* NinjaPirateRobotZombie: Pirate, honorary Indian, and Mountain Man.
38* NotWorthKilling: When he finally caught up with the teenaged Bridger, the young man was a blubbering mess. Glass decided that Brider’s reputation was now in shambles and the more senior Fitzgerald was more culpable anyway.
39* {{Pirate}}: While under Lafitte.
40* RoaringRampageOfRevenge: What gave him the willpower to drag himself back to civilisation was his desire for revenge against Bridger and Fitzgerald.
41* TheQuietOne: He was reportedly peaceful, and solitary by nature, rarely speaking and keeping to himself.
42* TheSavageIndian: The only text preserved directly from Glass himself, a letter written to the father of young man killed in a Native American attack, has him calling the Arikara "savages" repeatedly, and he had a personal feud with them during his entire life as a MountainMan. The Pawnees averted this.
43* WhiteManGoneNative: While at the Pawnees.

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