Who is hoss williams in tom sawyer
Injun Joe tells the drunk Potter that Potter murdered Dr. Robinson in a drunken fury, and Potter, still dazed, believes him. Injun Joe promises not to tell anyone about the crime, and they part ways. SparkTeach Teacher's Handbook. Themes Motifs Symbols. Summary Chapters 7— Page 1 Page 2. Summary—Chapter 8: A Pirate Bold to Be For the rest of the afternoon, Tom wanders about in a forest, first deciding that he will become a pirate, next trying a futile charm to locate his lost marbles, and finally encountering Joe Harper.
Previous section Chapters 4—6 Next page Chapters 7—10 page 2. Test your knowledge Take the Chapters Quick Quiz. Two men enter and find some loot hidden in a fireplace brick. The leader of the men is revealed to be Crazy Joe. Joe finds a shovel and starts digging up dirt to bury the loot, but comes across a metal box.
He uses an arrowhead to open the box and reveal treasures left behind by the Murrell Gang. Joe claims it as his own, but quickly wonders where the tools came from. He then wonders if the people who left the tools behind are still around, and begins climbing the staircase. The staircase breaks apart, sending Joe to the ground. Joe and his partner leave, and Tom plots to get the treasure back. Tom and Becky in McDougal Cave. After a while, they soon find themselves lost in the cave systems.
Tom later decides to go looking through the cave systems when Becky is too tired to move. He then sees a light shining off the cave walls, and walks further to investigate. It turns out that the light is coming from a lantern held by Crazy Joe, who somehow doesn't see Tom. Tom doesn't stop to wait and runs away screaming loudly.
Becky begins losing hope, but Tom lets Becky tie some cat-string to Tom so that they can stay connected by the line. Tom walks down a tunnel and notices light shining down a hole and onto his face. He shouts to Becky that he can get them out of there. The party at Tom Sawyer's House. They both return home, and Judge Thatcher arrives to Tom's house to tell him that Crazy Joe had died while in the cave systems. Tom realizes that Joe's hiding spot is in the caves and the treasure is in the caves.
He arrives at Huck's shack and informs him about the treasure's location. They go down to the cave to find the treasure and find a cross marked into a rock. They dig into the dirt and uncover the treasure box.
On returning it to town, they become the richest people in town, and as a celebration, a party is held at Tom's house, and Thatcher puts Huck under the care of Widow Douglas.
After a few weeks, Huck finds his new life unbearable, and runs back to his shack. Listening to Injun Joe's lies and machinations, the two boys begin to feel conscience-stricken about their silence. Tom's conscience bothers him so much that he eases it by "smuggling small comforts" to the prisoner, but he can't escape his conscience altogether. At night, he is troubled by wild dreams, and he often talks in his sleep about blood and murder and graves, but his mumblings make no sense.
Superstitions pervade these chapters and mark a new direction that the novel will take. First, superstition is seen in the many sounds that Tom hears and in the various signs that Tom and Huck encounter. At the graveyard, the boys discuss the powers of dead people; they believe that spirits of the dead can hear people talking and can see them in the dark. This discussion leads to the various superstitions connected with the entire Injun Joe episode.
Until this point in the novel, Twain has shown the childhood adventures of Tom and some of his friends to be all innocent fun. That is, Tom is the mischievous boy playing various types of pranks, creating great adventures using pirates and robbers, and fighting great wars. Furthermore, Tom has been seen in terms of his relationships at home, at school, at Sunday school, and at play with his friends. In this chapter, there begins a simple adventure in the graveyard concerning a dead cat.
This adventure, however, is vastly different from anything that Tom or Huck have previously confronted. In the person of Injun Joe, Tom and Huck have their first encounter with pure evil. They witness first a grave robbery, then an argument, and finally a fight that ends in a murder.
Two new characters are also introduced in this chapter: Muff Potter and Injun Joe. Muff Potter is the town's disgrace--a drunk and worthless person who is hired to help dig up the corpse of the recently buried Hoss Williams. Muff is not very bright and is easily persuaded by Injun Joe that he is the murderer. Muff's trust in Injun Joe indicates his simple-mindedness. After the murder, Potter is depicted as fearful, weak, hopeless, confused, and literally shaking, partly from alcohol and partly from fear.
The townspeople take advantage of his weakness and willingly believe Injun Joe; they condemn Muff Potter on the basis of rumor and hearsay even before any formal accusation is made against him. In contrast, Injun Joe is a vicious, wicked, and evil man. The murder of Dr.
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