Tom Sawyer is about in fifth or sixth grade. He is about 12 years old.
12 years old
He is the main character. He is twelve years old and is very mischeivous.
Injun Joe is a fictional character created by Mark Twain in "The Adventures of Tom Sawyer." His age is not explicitly mentioned in the book.
Becky Thatcher is a fictional character from Mark Twain's novel "The Adventures of Tom Sawyer." In the novel, she is portrayed as around the same age as Tom Sawyer, who is around 12 years old.
Tom Sawyer was about in fifth grade or about eleven or twelve years old.
In Chapter 10 of The Adventures of Tom Sawyer, Tom convinces the boys to meet at the old tannery to make a blood pact. While they are there, Injun Joe sneaks into the tannery and hides in the shadows, witnessing the boys' conversation and their pledge to keep the secret of the murder they witnessed.
The devil. See also Mark Twain's reference to Ol' Scratch in the Adventures of Tom Sawyer.
Making Aunt Polly cry. His aunt wept over him and asked him how he could go and break her old heart so; and finally told him to go on, and ruin himself and bring her gray hairs with sorrow to the grave, for it was no use for her to try any more. This was worse than a thousand whippings, and Tom's heart was sorer now than his body. (The text is an excerpt from "The Adventures of Tom Sawyer," by Mark Twain. See link below)
Judge Thatcher is Becky's dad, and, as his name suggests, he's a judge. Judge Thatcher is the closest thing Tom has to a role model; he's a fine father and a good citizen. He searches tirelessly for Becky and Tom when they get lost in the cave and takes the utmost care in making sure that no one ever gets lost again by sealing the cave off with a big old metal door. His judgment is, perhaps, not entirely sound. At the end of the book, he comes to believe that Tom will end up being a great soldier or a lawyer.
Potential answers in increasing detaii:A boy grows upA boy grows up in AmericaA boy grows up in America before the Civil WarA boy grows up in America before the Civil War, finding the value of friends and making pithy comments on Southern society.The growth of a boy as a microcosm of the interactions of social change in the American south prior to thee Civil War
In Mark Twain's "The Adventures of Tom Sawyer," the old lady is referring to the sudden and mysterious disappearance of Tom Sawyer. By asking "what's gone with that boy," she is inquiring about Tom's whereabouts and expressing concern over his absence. This phrase is a colloquial way of asking where he has gone or what has happened to him.
You could try taking it to a book dealer, but I suspect the answer is "pretty close to zero." Just because something is old does not mean it's worth anything. People who collect books generally like first editions or signed copies, and at 71 years after first publication and 37 years after Clemens' death it's not going to be either of those things.