Entry 1: Passage: (Pgs. 10-11) “‘Now,’ says Ben Rogers, “what’s the line of business of this Gang?’ ‘Nothing only robbery and murder,’ Tom said. ‘But who are we going to rob?-house, or cattle, or-’ ‘Stuff! stealing cattle and such things ain’t robbery; it’s burglary,’ says Tom Sawyer.
They decide to pretend that their plan has been in the works for thirty-seven years. Huck tries to show Tom the reality in his plan, but Tom accuses him of never reading any books. So then Huck succumbs to Tom and agrees to his
1. The boys decide to keep their witness of Dr. Robinson’s murder a blood oath secret. They are under the assumption that if they tell anybody and injun Joe escapes his hanging that Tom and Huck will be on his kill list. “S’pose something happns and Injun Joe didn’t hang? Why he’d kill is both”.
Mark Twain wrote “Fenimore Cooper’s Literary Offences” as an attack on Cooper’s novels. Twain lists eighteen violations of literature Cooper had made in Deerslayer. Of the eighteen violations Twain listed, he is also guilty of the same offenses; in chapter twenty two and twenty three of Adventures of Huckleberry Finn: number eleven clearly define character; number nine on the list no miracles; and number eight crass stupidities. In Twain’s essay “Fenimore Cooper’s Literary Offences” he made the rules too specific; like number eleven state, “They require that the characters in a tale shall be so clearly defined that the reader can tell beforehand what each will do in a given emergency.
Huck finds himself in a number of situations where he needed to lie. Although lying is wrong according to society, Huck knows it is the right choice to make in the moment. One example is when he and Jim are travelling on a raft and run into some men who are looking for runaway slaves. Huck has to quickly fabricate a story about his “sick father” on the raft so they would not approach Jim (Twain 72). Huck knows he must not tell the truth, again to help his friend escape slavery.
With the true murderer in the courtroom, Tom "was badly scared" (Twain 214) and conflicted on whether or not to tell the whole story, knowing that Injun Joe would without a doubt, kill him. " Tom began-hesitatingly at first" (Twain 216) and decided to put the wellbeing and condition of the falsely accused man before his own safety and life. Understandably, Tom only hesitated because he was very nervous and traumatized by the whole situation, as any 11-year-old boy should
Tomś conversations with others reveals that he is caring. In the middle of the story, Huckleberry wanted to use a sharp pin to pierce his skin to write his initials, but Tom immediately stopped him and said, ¨Don't do that. It might have verdigrease on there¨, which is poison. In other words, he prevented his friend from dying using his knowledge. This conveys that even though Tom is guile sometimes, he is very helpful during important moments.
One night Tom and Huck went to the graveyard and witnessed a murder. They saw Injun Joe kill Doctor Robinson, but Injun Joe had framed Muff Potter. Tom doesn’t know to tell or not, but keeping the secret to himself makes him feel bad. Some people say that Tom should tell because he feels really bad and cannot sleep at night, but they should not tell because in the long run, everything will turn out good. The reasons that Tom and Huck should not tell is because the people in the town wouldn’t believe them, they would most likely die, and he will eventually start feeling better.
However, Tom was just a rowdy boy, nobody would believe him, right? Tom thought back to the promise he had Huck. They said that neither of them would say anything about this! Tom thought it was right at the time, but now, he wasn’t so sure. That night, Tom couldn’t sleep.
This demonstrates how Miss Watson is trying to stain religion on huck even though she does not fully understand it herself. Huck and Tom clearly demonstrate some of humanitys fault in The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. Twain uses diction, dialouge, and characterization to symbolize society through Tom and Huck in order to show the Hypocricy and Blind comformity in an everyday society.
The Star Spangled Banner in its entirety suggest that Americans are courageous and powerful. In the song Francis Scott Key alludes to the courage Americans had as they fought in the war. For example one of the lines of The Star Spangled Banner was “O'er the land of the free and the home of the brave?” (Key). He suggest that America is the home of the brave which is as clear as it can get.
Tom Sawyer should not tell the cops what he saw, what he saw was so horrific because there is no way of knowing what could have happened to Huck and Tom. He saw the murder of the doctor, Injun Joe killed him and then framed Muff Potter for the murder. We know, there was no technology back then that could be used to know one hundred percent that DNA was the person that was accused for murder. Today, we have technology to see what fingerprints that are on weapons that the victim was hurt with.
We all have heroes in our life whether they are fictional or real. Some are more epic than others,but still they are heros. An epic hero in literature is defined as a brave and noble character in an epic poem, admired for great achievements or affected by grand events. Epic heros are said to follow an literary archetype which is defined as a typical character, an action or a situation that seems to represent such universal patterns of human nature; also known as universal symbol, may be a character, a theme, a symbol or even a setting.
As a fiction writer, Mark Twain, whose original name is Samuel Langhorne Clemens, stands apart as a comic genius. In America, Mark Twain had popularized this new genre through two of his well- known novels. One is 'The Adventures of Tom Sawyer ' and the other 'The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn '. Mark Twain 's idea of a boy character is based on the picture of an average American boy. The American boy, by nature, is enterprising and mischievous, not a reserved character like his counterpart in England.
Twain provides a narrative hook by familiarizing the readers with how vivid Tom’s life is when he and Huck sneak through Widow