Submitted by chlester0@gmail.com on Sun, 2014-08-03 21:48
After Hines threatens congregants with a pistol during a prayer meeting, "the law" came and jailed him (378). "Officials" is our way to translate "the law" into the terms of a Character database; presumably Faulkner is thinking of a few policemen or deputy sheriffs.
Submitted by chlester0@gmail.com on Sun, 2014-08-03 21:46
When Doc Hines disrupts a prayer meeting by "yelling" for "white folks to turn out and kill" all the blacks, the "folks in the church" make him come down from the pulpit (378). When he threatens them with a pistol, they call the law.
Submitted by chlester0@gmail.com on Sun, 2014-08-03 21:44
When Hines realizes his daughter Milly is pregnant, he "starts out to find a doctor that would fix it" (377). He does not succeed, but according to his wife, he does "beat up a doctor in another town" (378), possibly because he refuses to perform an abortion.
Submitted by chlester0@gmail.com on Sun, 2014-08-03 21:41
He owns the circus at which Milly Hines meets the father of her baby. He appears in the novel during Milly's father's murder trial, to testify that the man Hines murders "was a part nigger instead of Mexican" (377).