- content_type
- application/json
- description
- Job log for job_01KG16ZXNE279Q4T8BHJZJ3ZSF
- filename
- job_01KG16ZXNE279Q4T8BHJZJ3ZSF.json
- key
- job_01KG16ZXNE279Q4T8BHJZJ3ZSF.json
- log_data
- agent_id
- description-service
- agent_version
- 1.0.0
- completed_at
- 2026-01-28T02:31:49.054Z
- entries
- level
- info
- message
- Initializing agent job
- metadata
- job_id
- job_01KG16ZXNE279Q4T8BHJZJ3ZSF
- timestamp
- 2026-01-28T02:30:18.192Z
- level
- info
- message
- Agent job started
- timestamp
- 2026-01-28T02:30:18.192Z
- level
- info
- message
- Running task
- timestamp
- 2026-01-28T02:30:18.292Z
- level
- success
- message
- Task completed
- metadata
- result
- data
- cost_usd
- 0.001185173
- description
- # Peace Pipe Ceremony
## Overview
The "Peace Pipe Ceremony" is a narrative scene extracted from *The Adventures of Tom Sawyer* by Mark Twain. It appears in [CHAPTER XVI](arke:01KG16PT8VZSB6AT24CYCK69ZX) of the novel and is part of the larger text file [tom_sawyer.txt](arke:01KG0K71QZ8KK7RGEGSNTB5534). This scene spans lines 4709 to 4731 of the source document and was formally identified and extracted on January 28, 2026, as part of the [More Classics](arke:01KFXT0KM64XT6K8W52TDEE0YS) digital collection.
## Context
This scene follows the boys' imaginative transformation from pirates to Native American warriors, a shift introduced in the preceding scene, [Indians Adventure](arke:01KG16QKWDJAS7FRNTACY77XNW). After engaging in mock battles and ritual scalping, the characters—Tom Sawyer, Joe, and Huck—return to camp hungry and in need of reconciliation after their fictional tribal conflicts. The narrative reflects 19th-century American cultural perceptions of Indigenous peoples, filtered through the lens of childhood play and adventure fiction.
## Contents
The scene centers on the boys' enactment of a "peace pipe" ceremony, a ritual they believe is necessary to end hostilities between warring tribes. Though initially reluctant—two of them "almost wished they had remained pirates"—they proceed with the ceremony by passing and smoking a pipe in formal succession. The act marks a turning point in their development of smoking as a skill; unlike their earlier failed attempts, they now manage to smoke "without having to go and hunt for a lost knife," indicating growing tolerance. Encouraged by this progress, they practice after supper and spend a "jubilant evening" proud of their accomplishment—more so, the narrator notes ironically, than they would have been from "scalping and skinning the Six Nations." The passage ends with the narrator stepping away, leaving the boys to "smoke and chatter and brag," concluding this episode of their island adventure.
- related_entities_count
- 4
- title
- Peace Pipe Ceremony
- tokens_used
- 14059
- message
- Generated description for Peace Pipe Ceremony
- success
- true
- timestamp
- 2026-01-28T02:31:49.054Z
- job_id
- job_01KG16ZXNE279Q4T8BHJZJ3ZSF
- result
- data
- cost_usd
- 0.001185173
- description
- # Peace Pipe Ceremony
## Overview
The "Peace Pipe Ceremony" is a narrative scene extracted from *The Adventures of Tom Sawyer* by Mark Twain. It appears in [CHAPTER XVI](arke:01KG16PT8VZSB6AT24CYCK69ZX) of the novel and is part of the larger text file [tom_sawyer.txt](arke:01KG0K71QZ8KK7RGEGSNTB5534). This scene spans lines 4709 to 4731 of the source document and was formally identified and extracted on January 28, 2026, as part of the [More Classics](arke:01KFXT0KM64XT6K8W52TDEE0YS) digital collection.
## Context
This scene follows the boys' imaginative transformation from pirates to Native American warriors, a shift introduced in the preceding scene, [Indians Adventure](arke:01KG16QKWDJAS7FRNTACY77XNW). After engaging in mock battles and ritual scalping, the characters—Tom Sawyer, Joe, and Huck—return to camp hungry and in need of reconciliation after their fictional tribal conflicts. The narrative reflects 19th-century American cultural perceptions of Indigenous peoples, filtered through the lens of childhood play and adventure fiction.
## Contents
The scene centers on the boys' enactment of a "peace pipe" ceremony, a ritual they believe is necessary to end hostilities between warring tribes. Though initially reluctant—two of them "almost wished they had remained pirates"—they proceed with the ceremony by passing and smoking a pipe in formal succession. The act marks a turning point in their development of smoking as a skill; unlike their earlier failed attempts, they now manage to smoke "without having to go and hunt for a lost knife," indicating growing tolerance. Encouraged by this progress, they practice after supper and spend a "jubilant evening" proud of their accomplishment—more so, the narrator notes ironically, than they would have been from "scalping and skinning the Six Nations." The passage ends with the narrator stepping away, leaving the boys to "smoke and chatter and brag," concluding this episode of their island adventure.
- related_entities_count
- 4
- title
- Peace Pipe Ceremony
- tokens_used
- 14059
- message
- Generated description for Peace Pipe Ceremony
- success
- true
- started_at
- 2026-01-28T02:30:18.192Z
- status
- done
- size
- 0
- uploaded
- false