Who is hines grapes of wrath




















This invitation will shorten the length of their own employment, but it echoes the communal attitude of the camp. This attitude is also supported by the small owner, Mr. Hines, who warns the men of a plan by the Farmers Association to spark a riot at the camp's dance. He represents the small owners described in the preceding intercalary chapter. Indeed, forced to lower his wages by pressure from the Farmers Association, Mr.

Hines will eventually be put out of business by the large farming corporations. Previous Chapter Next Chapter These are the various methods the migrants have for finding escape and salvation. Ezra Huston, the chairman of the camp committee, hires twenty men to look out for instigators and preempt the riot. Although Rose of Sharon goes to the event, she decides not to dance for fear of the effect it might have on her baby.

As the music begins, Tom and the other men quickly spot three dubious-looking men. They watch the men carefully. Before they leave, Huston asks the three why they would turn against their own brethren, and the men confess that they have been well paid to start a riot.

Later that night, a man tells a story about a group of mountain people who were hired as cheap labor by a rubber company in Akron.

When the mountain people joined a union, the townspeople united to run them out of town. In response, five thousand mountain men marched through the center of town with their rifles, allegedly to shoot turkeys on the far side of the settlement.

The march served as a powerful demonstration. The storyteller concludes that there has been no trouble between the townspeople and the workers since then. He died the minute you took 'im off the place [ I think he knowed it. An' Grampa didn' die tonight. He died the minute you took 'im off the place. Oh, he was breathin, but he was dead. He was that place, an' he knowed it.

The men were silent and they did not move often. As the day went forward the sun became less red. It flared down on the dust-blanketed land. The men sat in the doorways of their houses; their hands were busy with sticks and little rocks. The men sat still - thinking - figuring. And the heat changed. While the sun was up, it was a beating, flailing heat, but now the heat came from below, from the earth itself, and the heat was thick and muffling. Read an in-depth analysis of Tom Joad. Ma Joad The mother of the Joad family.

Read an in-depth analysis of Ma Joad. Read an in-depth analysis of Pa Joad. Jim Casy A former preacher who gave up his ministry out of a belief that all human experience is holy. Read an in-depth analysis of Jim Casy. Read an in-depth analysis of Rose of Sharon.

Ruthie Joad The second and younger Joad daughter. Winfield Joad At the age of ten, Winfield is the youngest of the Joad children. Floyd Knowles The migrant worker who first inspires Tom and Casy to work for labor organization. Next section Tom Joad. Popular pages: The Grapes of Wrath.



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