13. When Tom decides to make the deal with the Devil, besides his soul, what else does the…
Tom Walker was a greedy, terrible person that was never satisfied with what he had. For example, he sold his soul to the devil in exchange for riches. Tom Walker was so shallow that he sold his life for temporary wealth. Tom acquisitiveness drew him to darkness that he could no longer escape. Tom became so greedy and infatuated with money to the point that it killed…
Toms actions catch up with him when the Devil takes his soul in the end and all his possessions turn to dust/wood chips. This shows that he was hiding the real truth and it came up and got revenge on him. He tried hard to not let the truth out but the devil got him. The narrator says, "On searching his coffers all his bonds and mortgage were found reduced in cinders. In places of gold silver, his iron chest was filled with chips and shavings : two skeletons lay in his stable instead of his half starved horses, and the very next data his house took fire and burnt to the ground" (Poe 322). This quote shows how Tom wore the mask and it finally caught up to him by burning all his fortune an value. Tom carries bibles around to protect him from the Devil and his soul. Tom doesn't want the Devil to take his soul so he wears the mask of religion. Even though he is not trying to be…
While spending time with casy, Tom begins to see himself more like Casy. He noticed this realization towards the end of the book. For example, when Tom meets Casy once more, Casy tells Tom that he has been starting a strike and he is trying to bring justice to those who have been starving. When Casy dies and Tom has to go into hiding, Tom ends up thinking a lot about Casy and his thoughts. In this quote, “Lookie, Ma. I been all day an’ all night hidin’ alone. Guess who i been thinkin’ about? Casy! He talked a lot. Used ta bother me. But now I been thinkin’ what he said, an’ I can remember - all of it. Says one time he went out in the wilderness to find his own soul, an’ he foun’ he didn’ have no soul that was his’n. Says he foun’ he jus’ got a little piece of a great big soul. Says a wilderness ain’t no good, ‘cause his little piece of a soul wasn’t no good ‘less it was with the rest, an’ was whole. Funny how I remember. Didn’ think I was even listenin’. But i know a fella ain’t no good alone. (570, Steinbeck)”. In this quote, Tom is talking to his mother about how he is going to finish what Casy started. This also proves that Tom’s philosophy has changed. Before he believed that he should put one froot in front of the other, but now he believes that each of our souls is part of a big…
The first three chapters present this period in American history by showing us the life of a boy at the time, Tom Sawyer. From his adventures, Twain depicts that the education at the time was not as well enforced and as serious as it is today, which is shown by Tom not going to school, but instead, he went swimming. Furthermore, Twain depicts religion at the time to be a formal event, shown through the way Tom had to wash himself and dress for his Sunday school. In addition to this. Twain depicts that religious knowledge is something that the children should be rewarded for, to get the honor of a bible and a ceremony.…
He's very one-dimensional; he represents the greed that inherent to human nature, but he is totally consumed by it. The reader can assume that because Tom is so greedy, he will eventually sell his soul to the Devil in exchange for riches--and so he does. Also, because this type of story (man meets devil, man sells his soul to devil, man suffers dire consequences in the end) is quite typical, it is easy to predict the ending of the story (it seems that the Devil takes Tom to…
Tom starts a gang with the other boys around his age. In the beginning, Huck goes along with the game, but does not see the point of it. To the gang, Tom says, “Now we’ll start this band of robbers and call it Tom Sawyer’s Gang. Everybody who wants to join has got to take an oath and write his name in blood” (Twain 7). Tom wants everything to be about him. He proclaims himself the leader of the gang and names it after himself. He thinks the whole world revolves around him; essentially, he is a huge drama-queen. As the gang is being formed, Tom tells the boys the rules. Most of the gang’s rules are from books Tom has read. Tom says to the gang, “if anybody done anything to any boy in the band, whichever boy was ordered to kill that person… mustn’t eat and he mustn’t sleep till he had killed them and hacked a cross in their breast, which was the sign of the band” (Twain 7). As a result of all the reading he does, Tom wants immeasurable amounts of drama and action in his everyday life. He wants the rules to scare the boys into staying a part of his adventure. There is no other significance of cutting a cross into someone’s chest as a sign of the gang aside from the drama and fear it ignites. Mark Twain writes Tom Sawyer as significantly dramatic in his…
The onset of the book focuses heavily on religious aspects. Twain portrays humor to show Huck’s young perceptions of religion in the beginning. For instance, Miss Watson tells Huck all about the good place, otherwise known as heaven, and that she wants to end up there. Twain here uses humor with Huck’s silent response, Huck did not see any benefit in going to the same place as Miss Watson, “so [Huck] made up [his] mind [he] wouldn’t try for it” (Twain 2). The author uses the literary element of satire to poke at religious individuals and their beliefs that they need to end up going to heaven. Later on in the story, Twain ridicules church and members of the church. The author uses the Grangerford and Shepardson families to render his mockery of the church. The feuding families, the Grangerfords and the Shepherdsons, both came to church routinely and they set the guns under the pews, this particular sermon was “all about brotherly love” (Twain 83). This displays irony because the two families are feuding, but they listened to a sermon about having love for neighbors and family when they fight over issues they cannot even reckon. The Grangerfords also discussed how they thought “it was a good sermon” and what it means to do “good works, and free grace” (Twain 83). Twain shows the hypocrisy of church-goers and how it does not matter if…
At the beginning of the book we are confronted with a young man who is just trying to find his way back into society. After a few years in prison for manslaughter he is out on parole and tries to make his way to the farm of his father where he wants to start anew. Tom does not have any big plans for the future but just sets one foot in front of another. This is the way he survived his years in prison. He thinks that people should no worry too much about the future, but just take things as they come and try to make the best of every situation.…
Characters in this novel seem to believe in Tom and Eva’s messages while they are alive but when both characters die it seems their lives leave a lasting impression about Christianity and the wrong doings of being a slave owner. I felt, as a reader,…
Tom Walker makes a deal with the devil, turning him from rags to riches. He quickly becomes rich after opening a bank with the fortune he gathered from the devil. Tom buys everything he wants and before long “began to feel anxious about those of the next. He thought with regret on the bargain he had made with his black friend, and set his wits to work to cheat him out of the conditions. He became, therefore, all of the sudden, a violent churchgoer”(Irving 13). Tom no longer was content with his deal of selling his soul to the devil. He began to see that his freedom and his life was more important than his big house and money. The fact that Irving included this shows how his quality of life really did not improve as he was trying to. The romantic value of freedom over goods shines through with Tom’s realization that he wanted his life back. This trend of regret continues after Stephen Benet’s Jabez Stone gets fed up with all of the things that happen to him. He feels he is the most unlucky person in the world and makes a deal with the devil so that he can have good luck for (ultimately) ten years before the devil takes him. The deal makes Jabez have good crop turnout, strong horses, and good luck, but also extreme apprehensiveness “For every day, when he gets up, he thinks, ‘There’s one more night gone,’ and every night he lies down he thinks of the black pocketbook and the soul of Miser Stevens, and it makes him sick at heart”(Benet 310). Stone cannot bear the fact the he can count down the days until his death. The benefits of the deal with the devil no longer help Jabez and he realizes that his freedom is more important than having nice. He cannot enjoy his life no matter what while he knows his fate, showing romanticism’s emphasis on freedom for self realization. Jabez’s good luck is quickly overshadowed when he realizes he doesn’t have his life anymore,…
Themes: Racism and Slavery- how it was still a problem in the south even after slavery was abolished; injustice of slavery…most whites thought it was morally right for African Americans to be slaves. Intellectual and Moral Education-Huck doesn’t trust the morals and views of society that treats him like an outcast; gets abused. Huck learns through experience about society, and his growing relationship with Jim, lead Huck to question many of the teachings that he has received, especially regarding race and slavery. More than once, we see Huck choose to “go to hell” rather than go along with the rules and follow what he has been taught... huck is especially free from society’s rules, able to make his own decisions without restriction. At the end he can tell somewhat right from wrong .Lies and Cons- huck lies and scams for the greater good; lies to slave hunters to save jim. He discovers lies can be good depending on their purpose. while the king and duke don’t care about anything.…
The foremost example of the contrast between the slaves and those portrayed as being evil rested in the character of Uncle Tom. A devout Christian, Tom never lost sight of his convictions, staying true to his Christian beliefs until his death. Even when under the harshest conditions, Tom never lost faith, while praying to God and finding ways to keep his faith. After succumbing to the wrath of Simon Legree, Tom was viewed as a martyr by withstanding his doubts and staying firm in his beliefs, ending his own life, while saving those of two others.…
William Shakespeare’s ‘Macbeth’, is the story of a usurping General, Lord Macbeth, and his wife Lady Macbeth who are driven to murder their king in pursuit of the throne and power. The tragedy has multiple reoccurring themes and motifs, of which Shakespeare uses many aesthetic features to effectively develop and enhance. One such theme is Masculinity vs. Femininity which resounds throughout the entirety of the play and is a central focus point during many events. Shakespeare uses imagery, symbolism and metaphor very effectively during the course of the play to augment and pinpoint important developments and changes to the characters and their states of masculinity and femininity. At the time that Shakespeare wrote his plays the values and attitudes were vastly different to those of modern society. Women were considered the fairer sex while men were considered the dominant sex. In Macbeth, this view is approached with the idea that masculinity carried with it the ability to kill and commit sin while femininity in its ideal was softer, gentler and comprised of virtue.…
The central theme of the essay is each one of us in not perfect and we hide in our own veil. An area where we hide the truth of our sins. This leads to the fact, people should be less concerned about other sin, attending a redemption for their own sins. The main point that is thrown across the essay, everyone has their own form of the black veil, which goes to say that they have sinned. A clear place this is shown is at the end of the story, “Tremble at each other! Have men avoided me, and women showed no pity, and the children screamed and fled, only for my black veil?” A clear evidence of no respect towards others, putting more importance on others problems. To conclude, the theme was each one of us humans have our own veil in which we hide…