Chapter 7
Because he is
looking forward to spending the lunch hour with Becky, Tom cannot concentrate
on his book. He takes out a tick he has captured, and he and his friend Joe
Harper begin to drive and control the tick by prodding it with pins. To try to
introduce some order, Tom draws a line down the middle of his slate, puts the
tick on the slate, and tells Joe that as long as the tick is on Joe's side, Joe
can control the tick, whereas when it is on Tom's side, only Tom can control
it. At last, Tom, unable to restrain himself, interferes with the tick when it
is on Joe's side, and the two boys begin to argue. The teacher's attention is
caught and both boys get a whipping.
In the lunch
hour, Tom meets Becky in the empty schoolroom and teaches her to draw. Tom
persuades Becky to tell him that she loves him and to get "engaged" to him,
which means, he says, that she will never have anyone else but him. In his
excitement, Tom begins to talk about how wonderful being engaged is, and lets
slip that he was previously "engaged" to Amy Lawrence. Becky starts to cry,
saying that he must still love Amy, and pushes him away. Tom denies that he
cares for anyone except Becky. He offers her his best treasure, a brass knob
from a fire iron, but she strikes it to the floor. Tom marches out of the
school. Becky tries to call him back, but he is gone, and she has no one to
share her grief.
Chapter 8
Tom wanders off
into the woods, nursing his sadness and anger at Becky's treatment of him. He
fantasises about dying or running away to join the army, and thinks how sorry
she would be. Finally, he settles on running away to become a pirate.
He digs under a
log and retrieves a treasure box that he had buried there two weeks previously.
Tom had placed a marble in it and said various incantations over it, in the
superstitious belief that when he dug it up, all the marbles he had ever lost
would have gathered themselves around it. But the charm has not worked - there
is still only the solitary marble in the box - and Tom concludes that "some
witch had interfered and broken the charm." He uncovers a doodle-bug and asks
it whether his supposition is correct, but naturally, the doodle-bug does not
reply. This confirms Tom's suspicion that a witch is reponsible, and has
terrified the bug into silence.
Tom meets Joe
Harper, and they play at Robin Hood before going home. They agree that "they
would rather be outlaws a year in Sherwood Forest than President of the United
States for ever."
Chapter 9
That night, Tom
is in bed when he hears a noise like a wailing cat. It is Huck, who has brought
his dead cat and making the sign for Tom to come out and go with him to the
graveyard, where they plan to try out the wart charm. Tom escapes through the
window and the boys go to the graveyard, where they hide themselves and wait
for the devil to appear.
Soon, three
figures appear. The boys at first think they are devils, but then they realize
that they are Dr Robinson and two local outcasts, Muff Potter and Injun Joe.
Muff Potter is drunk. Dr Robinson leads the men to the grave of Hoss Williams
and tells them to dig up the corpse, presumably for medical experiments. They
do so, and load the corpse onto a barrow, but Potter refuses to let the doctor
take it unless he pays them extra money. Dr Robinson protests that he has paid
them already. Injun Joe joins Potter in threatening Dr Robinson. He says that
five years ago Dr Robinson had driven Injun Joe away when he had come begging
to his house, and then the doctor's father had jailed him as a vagrant. Now,
Injun Joe wants revenge.
Dr Robinson strikes
Injun Joe, who falls to the ground. Potter drops his knife and grapples with
the doctor. Injun Joe gets up and snatches up Potter's knife. Dr Robinson
seizes the headboard from Hoss's grave and fells Potter with it, at which Joe
stabs Dr Robinson in the chest. The doctor falls on top of Potter, covering him
with blood. Tom and Huck are terrified. They run away, unseen by the men.
The doctor dies.
Joe robs the body and puts the knife in Potter's hand. When Potter regains
consciousness, he realizes that he is holding a knife and drops it with a
shudder. He sees the doctor's body and asks Injun Joe if it is true that he,
Potter, killed him. Joe replies that the doctor hit Potter with the headboard,
and that Potter stabbed the doctor just as the doctor was hitting him again.
Both Both fell to the ground, Joe says. Potter is confused, as he has never
used weapons, but he concludes that he must have been carried away by the
whiskey and believes Joe's story. Joe agrees not to tell anyone what happened,
and Potter leaves. Joe, pleased to see that Potter has left his knife at the
scene of the crime, leaves separately.
Analysis of
Chapters 7-9
Tom's
interactions with Becky show that, while he is ahead of his classmates in being
interested in girls, he is still immature when it comes to dealing with
emotions. He has a strong romantic imagination and can place himself in
exciting narratives with ease, to the extent of recreating the dialog from
stories he has heard or read. His mistake is to bring his games of makebelieve
into his relationship with Becky, with unhappy results. Carried away by a
romantic fantasy, he persuades her to get "engaged" to him, but in his
excitement, blurts out that he was previously "engaged" to Amy Lawrence. When
Becky cries, he cannot deal with the situation. Instead, he escapes into the
woods and takes refuge in his fantasies of running away to become a pirate, and
pretending to be Robin Hood.
Tom's choice of
fantasy - that of becoming a pirate - is significant. To Tom, a pirate unites
freedom with fame, but is mercifully free of responsibility or any awareness of
consequences to actions. Tom's fascination with superstitions, such as his
faith that a buried marble will somehow attract all his other lost marbles, has
a similar basis in irresponsibility: unwilling to accept that the only solution
to lost marbles is to do the hard work of looking for them or to take care not
to lose them in the first place, Tom wants them magically to return in response
to his charm. It is no surprise that the charm fails, but in seeking to blame a
witch even for this, Tom still avoids facing the harsh truth - that he lost the
marbles, and that they remain lost. However, responsibility and an awareness of
consequences are exactly the lessons he is about to learn, the hard way.
The incident of
the murder in the graveyard shifts the narrative, and the moral tone, to a
different level. While Tom has always got into trouble, his activities have
been harmless and have had no consequences. Now, he and Huck are witnesses to
the murder and framing of an innocent man (Potter). Depending on what they do,
or fail to do, an innocent man could be hung and the real murderer escape
justice.
Injun Joe is
presented as such an unregenerate villain that it is hard to feel any sympathy
for him. The depth of his evil is shown by his eagerness to kill Dr Robinson in
revenge for a relatively small offense, the doctor having driven him away when
he came begging to their house and the doctor's father having him put in jail
for vagrancy. Not only is he a murderer, but he pins the crime on an innocent
man who trusts him. As a result, Potter risks being hanged.
Many readers
will see the character of Injun Joe as a racist portrayal of a half-Indian man,
called by Twain a "half-breed." This interpretation is supported by Twain's
attributing Injun Joe's vicious nature to his race. When Joe tells Dr Robinson,
"The Injun blood ain't in me for nothing," he is referring to his determination
to avenge the minor offenses committed five years previously; the implication
is that 'Indians' (Native Americans) do not forgive or forget and that they are
ruthless in revenge. However, insofar as Injun Joe's outcast status is
concerned, this cannot be taken as a sign of racism on Twain's part, as it is likely
to be an accurate reflection of how a half-Indian man would have been treated
in a small Southern town at that time.
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