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Mr. John Oakhurst, the "Duchess", "Mother Shipton", "Uncle Billy", Tom Simson, and Piney Woods
The problem in the Outcasts of Poker Flats is that residents of Poker Flat decided to kick out a group of undesirables who were: John Oakhurst, the Duchess, Mother Shipton, and Uncle Billy because they hoped to improve their town. The outcasts went on a journey to Sandy Bar, but the trail was very hard to pass and it was snowing and very cold. With very little food they starved and Oakhurst killed himself.
Bret Harte
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The Outcasts of Poker Flat was written by American author Bret Harte. It was first published in 1869.
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Despair
Mr. John Oakhurst, the "Duchess", "Mother Shipton", "Uncle Billy", Tom Simson, and Piney Woods
At first, the group in "The Outcasts of Poker Flat" react with resignation and a sense of helplessness to their situation of being expelled from Poker Flat. They are initially despondent and resigned to their fate, but as the story progresses, they begin to show resilience and camaraderie in the face of adversity.
The vigilante archetype in "The Outcasts of Poker Flat" is represented by the group of townspeople who decide to rid their community of undesirables by exiling them. Their actions reveal a sense of self-righteousness and a willingness to take justice into their own hands.
In the story of The Outcasts of Poker Flats, the townspeople are getting rid of the "undesirable elements". Oakhurst and the others are considered part of this group.
"Outcast" is not a verb and so it does not have a past tense.