Chapter 2: In Chapter two, the narrator describes Mr. Norton as a wealthy man who donated millions to the college. He accidentally drives him to the cabin where Jim Trueblood lives, when he is technically not supposed to.
Chapter 3: While trying to quiet things down, the nameless narrator brings Mr. Norton to a parlor called the Golden Day. There, Norton is offended for being white, as the narrator is accused by those in the parlor for worshipping Norton as a god.
Chapter 4: Dr. Bledsoe, president of the school, becomes angry when he discovers where Mr. Norton has been. Mr. Norton guarantees …show more content…
Emerson, and is educated by Mr. Emerson 's child that the letter states how the narrator ought not be procured and be kept as far from the school as could be allowed. Luckily, in any case, his child secures the narrator work at Liberty Paints.
Chapter 10: Preceding section ten, it is uncovered that Mr. Bledsoe had malignant aims in sending the narrator to New York. There, he meets with Mr. Kimbro and works close by with him to blend paints keeping in mind the end goal to get the mark immaculate white paint of the organization. In any case, he gathers the wrong substance from a wrong tank which totally ruins the paint arrangement.
Chapter 11: In the wake of being reprimanded by the maddened Mr. Kimbro, he is sent to the heater space to watch the tank weights under the direction of Lucius Brockway, a hued man who loathes any new workers in trepidation of them taking his occupation. The narrator and Brockway get into a verbal and physical battle, making Brockway deliberately fix one of the boilers to blast. Therefore, he is sent to the processing plant clinic where the specialists utilize the electric-stun technique keeping in mind the end goal to help him, and the narrator awakens with