1. What things give away the king and duke? They caught him in a lie about where he came from. One man recognized Huck from coming down the river on the raft and canoe.…
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.…
Whenever Huck and Jim encounter a problem they are able to simply return to their raft and escape their troubles. The river is also a place where the pair is able to be themselves without fear of being criticized by members of society. This is a particularly important element because it allows them to be free to make decisions and create a relationship without public influence. This is a luxury that they are not permitted on land. The river allows the two to be comfortable with each other, because they are separated from land and society. “We said there warn’t no home like a raft, after all. Other places do seem so cramped up and smothery, but a raft don’t. You feel mighty free and easy and comfortable on a raft” (136). This quote explains that the two boys are able to find a place where they can both relax and be at…
In the novel The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, the author, Mark Twain, compares life on land to life on the river using Huck’s forbidden friendship with Jim, the risks Huck makes, and when Huck joins Tom sawyer’s gang, proving that friendship has no limits. Life on land was emotional for Huck because of the obstacles and hardships he faced. Life on the river on the other hand was a challenge because of the troubles Huck had being safe.…
The most obvious symbol of the river is the freedom that it gives both Huck and Jim. One of the freedoms is that nothing matters while on the river; they are free to do whatever they please. They don't need to be civilized, schooled, made to wear certain outfits at certain times, or anything else that they don't want to do. They can sit naked and nobody can say a thing about it. To Huck, the river represents just that very thing: no civilization or rules. But to Jim, it represents much more: the freedom that he will soon have. The river will lead him to that freedom.…
Huck Finn is a very clever at thinking up ideas, even sometimes when he has no time to think. This theme is shown throughout the novel The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. He always seems to have a clever solution for squeezing his way out of a tight situation that either he or Jim gets into.…
Throughout the incident on pages 66-69 in Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, Huck fights with two distinct voices. One is siding with society, saying Huck should turn Jim in, and the other is seeing the wrong in turning his friend in, not viewing Jim as a slave. Twain wants the reader to see the moral dilemmas Huck is going through, and what slavery ideology can do to an innocent like Huck.…
The colorful diction in this passage portrays the continuous, elegant motion of the raft while Huck and Jim travel down the river. "Two or three days and nights went by; I reckon I might say they swum by; they slid along so quiet and smooth and lovely." The metaphoric diction in this sentence combines the movement of the river with the element of time to create the feeling of a peaceful, undisturbed journey. Since Huck and Jim only travel at night for their protection, the river becomes all the more serene with no commotion from the activity of the people. Huck enjoys this tranquility. Twain's artistic diction clearly establishes this, as such in the following sentence from the passage. "Not a sound, anywheres-perfectly still-just like the whole world was asleep..." The words "not a sound," "perfectly still," and "asleep" make the journey seem very private, with Huck and Jim having minimal interaction with others, allowing the days and nights to simply blend together. Twain's vivid diction in this passage allows the reader to understand the simultaneous movement of the raft and the passing time while interconnecting the two, comparing the passing time to the steady movement of the raft.…
Now I’m going to compare myself with the character Huck, the main one, and in my opinion the most interesting of the story. I am sixteen years old, studying at school, having a relative normal life. Huck is about thirteen years old, at the beginning of the story is studying at home (these are our first differences, the age and the fact that he studies at home and I study at a school). I’m living in the state of Arizona. He lives in Missouri.…
The person I am going to compare from Huck Finn is my dad and Huck’s dad. First off Huck’s dad doesn't want Huck to be well educated because he himself is not educated. Also Huck’s dad does not want him to become civilized or sophisticated. Because he does not want him to be any better than he is. Also he beats him left and right. He is hardly ever at home always out and about doing whatever.…
(Thoreau)” This quote by Henry David Thoreau was one that fit the mindset Huck had as he adventures down the Mississippi, increasing his appreciation for nature. In the beginning of his journey, Huck joyfully states, “The sun was up so high when I waked, that I judged it was after eight o’clock. I laid there in the grass and the cool shade, thinking about things and feeling rested and ruther comfortable and satisfied” (Twain 44). Huck has a strong appreciation for nature and all it has to offer and finds great peace in the outdoors. Furthermore, Huck has encounters with society on his adventure down the Mississippi where he has to opportunity to become civilized, yet insists on living in nature. He explains, “Other places do seem so cramped up and smothery, but a raft don't, you feel might free and easy and comfortable on a raft” (Twain 137). Huck thinks he experiences the perfect family and living situation, but soon realizes that simply existing in nature is his version of perfect. It is also important to add that Huck is a transcendentalist through his appreciation for the Mississippi River. It is on the Mississippi River where Huck announces,”...it did seem so good to be free again and all by ourselves on the big river, and nobody to bother us.” (Twain 29). Huck and Jim are able to use the Mississippi as an escape route which equates to much appreciated freedom…
This episode occurs in a small, run down town on the banks of the Mississippi river and provides yet another contrast to the idealised life that Huck and Jim experience on the raft. Twain shows the reader rather than explicitly declares an appropriate reaction to the cruelty inflicted by that part of society on a fellow human being, through Huck. Huck is constructed in this way to show the audience the immorality of their actions. Therefore, in order for this to be achieved, Huck must observe and learn from the episode. Huck further develops his sense of what is right and wrong as he watches the arbitrary power of the “mob” that have by definition lost all sense of moral autonomy or individual responsibility and the ruthless effects of extreme…
When you picture a river in your mind, you imagine it flowing peacefully without any worries. Well this is exactly how Huck Finn and Jim, a runaway slave, felt when they were traveling on the Mississippi River. The river was an escape from harsh life, they both felt free on the raft. Huck and Jim also state that the Mississippi River gives peace between the hectic adventures they experience. Huck would not really have any fun if it was not for the smooth river. In the novel The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain, the Mississippi River symbolizes freedom, peace, and adventure for Jim and Huck.…
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…
were slaves, and town folk could make money off of them by selling them, if they got their hands on them. Huck always made sure that Jim was hidden whenever Huck had to leave the raft, because he felt it was his responsibility to make sure Jim was never…