Preview

As They Head For The Ohio River Chapter 12 Summary

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
264 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
As They Head For The Ohio River Chapter 12 Summary
Chapter 12: Huck and Jim float down the Mississippi for a few days. They spot a boat and Huck, looking for an adventure, decides he and Jim should hop aboard. They overhear two robbers threatening to kill a third. Jim and Huck's raft breaks loose and floats away.

Chapter 13: Jim and Huck steal the robbers' getaway boat. Huck feels bad and goes to shore for help. Jim and Huck abandon the robbers' getaway boat and go to sleep.

Chapter 14: Jim and Huck go through the items salvaged from the robbers' boat. Huck tells Jim stories about kings and queens. Jim expresses his dislike for adventures, pointing out that they could get him killed or captured.

Chapter 15: As they head for the Ohio River, Huck and Jim get separated by a thick fog.


You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Satisfactory Essays

    As the chapter gets underway, Huck has to force Jim to keep his energy about him to find the robbers’ boat, while the robbers’ steal more money from the steamboat. Eventually, Huck finds their raft and tells a man on shore a story about the Walter Scott wreck. He includes some arbitrary details that aren’t exactly factual, like his family was stuck on the wreck. In Chapter 14, Huck and Jim start and finish by lying in the woods and resting from the busy day. Waiting for the sun to vanish, they start relaying stories about adventures. Huck even tells Jim about King Sollermun; the only king he’s heard of. Later on, the conversation switches to King Louis XVI. Lastly, Jim and Huck get in a quarrel about the English speaking French. Unfortunately…

    • 142 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    -One day Huck went out and found a canoe and hid it in the woods. Another day, when his dad was gone, Huck finishes sawing open a whole in a wall in the back of the cabin that he has started sawing some days earlier. When he completed, he gathered supplies and food to the canoe. He also came up with a master plan to make it seem like he got murdered by killing a pig, and messing up the cabin with an ax. He then went to this canoe and slept, and the next day he rowed out to Jackson's Island.…

    • 546 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    When Pap leaves the cabin he locks Huck in and beats him when he returns drunk. Huck escapes Pap and the cabin by faking his own death. He hides on Jackson’s Island in the middle of the Mississippi River. Huck runs into Jim, Miss Watson’s slave in the woods and they stay together. Huck and Jim find a raft and house floating down the river. A dead body is in the house but Jim refuses to let Huck see the man’s face. They start downriver in the raft and run into con…

    • 2373 Words
    • 10 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    At the very start of this section Huck sets out for town disguised as a woman only to find out that Jim was blamed for Huck’s “murder.” Huck raced back to Jim and they set off down the river. These two eventually came upon the wreck of a steamboat where once aboard, they discovered two men attempting to plan a murder. Quietly, the two stole as much supplies as they could carry, along with the two planned murderer’s canoe, and set off down the river once again. Down river they warned a steamboat captain of the wreck and he went to investigate the wreck. After Jim and Huck were separated from a storm, Huck stumbled upon a Hatfield and McCoy feud brewing between the Grangerfords and Shepherdsons. A Grangerford slave named Jack led Huck back to…

    • 829 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In “The Adventures Of Huck Finn”, the Mississippi River plays several roles and holds a prominent theme throughout much of the story as a whole. Huckleberry Finn and Jim are without a doubt the happiest and most a peace when floating down the river on their raft. However, the river has a much deeper meaning than just a compilation of water. It almost goes to an extent of having its own personality and character traits. The river offers a place for the two characters, Huck and Jim, to escape from everybody and even everything in society and leaves them with a feeling of ease. In the middle section of Huckleberry Finn, the river takes on more of a concrete meaning and will be discussed more so in the paragraphs that follows.…

    • 792 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    To begin with, among the many characteristics of Jim, his compassionate nature shows throughout the book. When Huck and Jim come across the floating boathouse, Jim finds a dead man inside. He advises Huck not to look as he says, "It's a dead man... dead two er three days... come in Huck, but doan' look at his face." At the end of the book the reader finds out that the dead man turns out as Huck's father. Further on down the river, Huck and Jim engage in a deep conversation. Jim speaks of the family he feels he has left behind. Jim tries hard to save up all his money in hopes of buying back his wife and children when he becomes a free man. He expresses that he feels terrible for leaving behind his family and misses them very much. As a result, Huck feels responsible and guilty for ruining Jim's freedom. Huck decides that he wants to reveal the truth, that Jim really isn't a free man. His conscience tells him not to and instead he finds himself helping Jim rather than giving him up. Jim feels so thankful to Huck when he says ". . .it's all on account of Huck, I's a free man, ... you's the best friend Jim's ever had..." Even further along, Huck becomes separated from Jim and living at the Grangerford's. Huck doesn't know if he'll ever see Jim again. He also doesn't realize Jim has found a hiding spot not very far away. He asks one of the Grangferford's slaves…

    • 967 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The first time that the reader is exposed to Huck’s inner turmoil is when he and Jim leave Jake and Bill, the murderers, on the sinking steamship. In chapter thirteen, Huck starts to think about “how dreadful it was, even for…

    • 532 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Once Huck and Jim reunite after losing each other in the fog, Jim reveals that Huck is his best and only friend, and the one person the world who treats him with genuine kindness. Unfortunately, at the same time Huck reflects on how criminal his actions are for helping a runaway slave and stealing Miss Watson’s property. Within Huck’s mind, a war wages between saving a friend and following the rules. As Huck is interrogated by some bounty hunters, he is forced to choose a side in his mind. Huck is unable to adhere to society’s questionable rules, and so he lies to the bounty hunters about Jim, saying, “‘He’s white’… ‘because it’s pap that’s…

    • 1492 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    He used to lay drunk with the hogs in the tanyard, but he hain’t been seen in these parts for a year or more.” But the widow still cared about him, “the widow she cried over me, and called me a poor lost lamb..” He faked his own death and took off, Huck could have just went back to the widow but he doesn’t like it there either because he didn’t like the rules like you can’t eat unless you said a prayer and you had to be on time. “The widow rung a bell, and you had to come to time. When you got to the table you couldn’t go right to eating, but you had to wait for the widow to tuck down her head and grumble” He wants to be free of rules and the so he ran away to the Jacksons Island and he was there on his own for a while until Jim showed up. Huck wants to be free from the civilized world and rules, he wants to be on his own. And honestly with Jim and him together they could make it, they made it this far by using their wits and lying a little. And in the end they formed a strong…

    • 632 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Huckleberry Finn is one of the most significant and remarkable novels published, representing pure American Culture, and the conflicts of civilization and living freely. Huck meets Jim when he was on the run looking for food. Jim was on the run away from Miss Watson because he was afraid that she was going to sell him to someone from New Orleans. At first, Huck thinks Jim is a ghost, although he is not.…

    • 1177 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Huck learns a variety lessons from the various figures in his childhood, some good and some bad. From his Pap, he learns how to fend for himself and to reject formal society, but he also learns about racism, alcoholism and has to suffer years of abuse. From the Widow and Miss Watson Huck learns about generosity and kindness but also about religious indoctrination and the boundaries of what deemed is acceptable in society. From Jim, Huck learns about love and compassion, trust and honesty as well as the difference between right and wrong. Floating down the Mississippi River Huck learns to challenge social norms and constructs when he decides to help Jim to freedom. The contrasting characters of Pap and The Widow mirror their contrasting beliefs systems. And yet with the help of Jim, one of the only constant characters in the novel huck learns the truth about the world. Huck’s new world image is tested when the King and the Duke, two “rapscallions”, sell Jim to Mr. and Mrs. Felps. Once again attempting to use his own judgment, but erring on the side of his upbringing Huck decides that Jim would be…

    • 714 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Most of the development of their relationship to each other comes in the beginning of the book. During the second half of the book, the character of Jim takes somewhat of a back seat to the rest of the story. Jim is either left behind on the raft, or confined to a cell for most of the chapters after Chapter 19. Despite his infrequent appearances, it is in the last half of the book that the bond of trust is solidified in Huck’s heart. When Huck decides that he will free Jim and declares, "All right, then, I’ll go to hell," (pg. 206) he bases that decision on events that have brought the two closer during the trip, such as the foggy night and the time Huck saved Jim by saying he had smallpox. These are probably two of the key events in the story as it relates to the relationship between Huck and Jim. It is the first event, the foggy night, which brings about a major change in Huck. He risks his life trying to navigate the river in the fog in order to be reunited with Jim. When the raft first drifts off, Huck could have stayed on the shore and been safe, but he does not even think of not following Jim because he knows Jim would be caught if Huck was not with him because they were in the south and slavery was still going on and people would take Jim and put him back into slavery and undo what Huck was trying to do. When he…

    • 4981 Words
    • 20 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    The primary objective of the main character, Huck, is to gain his friend, and also runaway slave, Jim's freedom. In order to do so they have to venture towards the free states. However, a runaway's crime can be punishable by hanging, posing an immense threat to the welfare of the characters. Huck and Jim miss their turn up the river and ironically end up “pretty well down in Arkansaw”(Twain 40) from the start of their journey “[up on] the Missouri shore” (66) putting them in a worse off situation. The minor mishap proved…

    • 556 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Tom, Huck and their friend Joe run away and the town thinks they are dead. Tom sneaks back home to watch the commotion and decides to return during his funeral. Back at school, Tom takes the blame for ripping a book that Becky had damaged and gets back on her good side. Tom testifies against Injun Joe in court but Joe escapes the courthouse. In the summer, the boys go hunting for treasure.…

    • 251 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Better Essays

    Mississippi's Journey

    • 1152 Words
    • 5 Pages

    Just like in life, nothing is perfect, and there is no real freedom without consequences. Very quickly, influences from the real world invade the raft, and, to relate to the metaphor, the water becomes murky. When the river floods, it led the duo into a gang of criminals, and brought a broken house with a dead man in it, which was later discovered to be Huck’s father. Already the evils of society had permeated their barrier, even bringing what Huck wished to avoid, his father, back to him. And, to taint the water even more, a fog rolls in, preventing them from reaching the mouth of the Ohio River, where it would have allowed them to be carried to the free…

    • 1152 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays