Answer:
Poor Huck was in the same state of wretchedness and terror, for Tom had told the whole story to the lawyer the night before the great day of the trial and Huck was sore afraid that his share in the business might leak out, yet, notwithstanding Indun Joe's flight had saved the suffering of testifying in court.
Explanation:
The above is the correct sentence from the excerpt that actually show that Tom and Huck are both afraid of Joe.
From the excerpt, we discover that Tom's night were nights of horror. This is because Indun Joe infested his dreams. Then we see that the same thing was happening to Huck. Tom and Huck were in the same state of wretchedness and terror.
The above answer shows that both Tom and Huck were both afraid of Joe.
Usher's madness begins to increase because he can hear the sound of Madeline below.
Even though his sister is buried in the basement, he can constantly hear her scratching her coffin. He was tortured by these sounds until the protagonist came to visit him so he could share his troubles with him. Usher is afraid of his 'undead' sister and of dying himself, which is why he grows crazier and crazier by the day, until he is finally killed by his own sister in the end.
In "A Worn Path", Old Phoenix Jackson was able to hit the dog her cane before falling into a ditch. She waits until a young white hunter shows up and helps her out of the ditch. He is demeaning at first about her age, then shows prejudice because he says “I know you old colored people…wouldn’t miss going to town to see Santa Claus!”
She sees a nickel has fallen out of the hunter's pocket, and before taking it, she distracts him by saying that his big black dog isn't afraid of anything. Not only does he chase it off to prove her wrong, but also points a gun at her at an attempt to assert power.
A how old is stonehenge and BTW i love that passage my favorite in fact when i was your age