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…
During the course of Huck’s journey he creates a strong wilful bond with Jim, and learns a lot about doing right. Huck thought it would be funny to play a joke on Jim, and leave the dead snake in his bed as a prank forgetting that the mate of a snake would come and lay with it. Huck then later felt bad about leaving the snake in his bed, and getting him bit by one. Before Huck wouldn’t care much about playing a prank but he learned that what he did was wrong and knew that he was doing bad, and wanted to change his ways. Huck was beginning to gain a conscience and was becoming more aware of responsibility for his actions, Huck was feeling guilty about his part in a criminal scandal of the duke and king, who plotted to rob the Wilks girls of their father’s money. Huck reminds himself that what he was doing wasn’t right and he needed to make a change about his actions, “I says to myself, this is a girl that I'm letting that…
In The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, a young boy named Huckleberry Finn runs away from his life and travels down the Mississippi River with his friend Jim, a runaway slave. The story follows Huck 's moral growth and maturity throughout his many adventures and experiences. The major turning point of the book is when Huck realizes that Jim cares about him, and that he cares about Jim in return. As a child, Huck is taught that Jim isn 't a person because of his skin color and that he does not deserve respect, but Huck discovers that Jim is a person and deserves more respect than most people Huckleberry met on his journeys. He comes to this decision because Jim cares for him and treats Huck better than his own father. Huck says “All right, then, I 'll go to hell.” when he decides to go against the racist teachings of his childhood and help Jim get his freedom (Twain 216-217). The book was written to show what life was like in the 1840s and successfully revealed the way people viewed each other and people of other races. In the beginning of the story, Huck treats Jim poorly because he is taught that…
In chapter 8 on page 41, Huck and Jim seem to grow a bond, a bond that society wouldn’t accept, when Huck later finds out that Jim ran away and were wondering in the woods they seem to develop a close friendship. Huck could have told someone that Jim ran away but instead Huck accepted Jim and took part in an adventure along with Jim.…
Huckleberry Finn is a static character. Throughout the realistic, historical fiction novel, The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain, the main character Huck travels with a fugitive slave, Jim. Constantly, Huck’s internal conflict between helping a fugitive slave, and turning him in, divides him. Huck ultimately ends up helping Jim, but treating him as subhuman, and taking advantage of his companionship. Huckleberry Finn wavers in his moral ideas, but undergoes no development. He starts to challenge and change his views on his stance of racism, but the book ends with him reverting to his old racist views as he had in the beginning. Furthermore, he does not show development in the sense that he constantly does what society expects of him, as shown in his treatment of Jim.…
At first blush Huck Finn seems like an incorrigible youth of the period. In his first appearance in the novel, he is sneaking out of his window. (3) Huck is also caught in a mess of lies throughout the novel. For example Huck is caught pretending to be a girl. "Oh, yes'm, I did. Sarah Mary Williams. Sarah's my first name. Some calls me Sarah, some calls me Mary." (44) Huck feels ambivalent toward the idea of "civilization." Huck's view of civilization would be along the lines of floating on a raft down a river doing whatever comes his way, rather than behaving like he is expected to by his foster mother Miss Watson who is trying to civilize him. (1-2, 220)…
Once again this is an example Huck is always worried about things he should be and you can still tell he hasn't figured everything out with himself. Huck still doesn't know his morals and is worried about things he shouldn't be thinking about in the story. In the end of the story Jim was forced into this prison because he was a slave. Huck has to finally make up his mind if society has been wrong this whole time or is he going to do what is right for him.…
When Jim is sold by one of the con artists, Huck decides to go against societies orders, as he shouts, “Alright then, I’ll go to hell” as he goes out to find Jim and free him. Going against societies orders, proves that Huck’s compassion and care for Jim is genuine, and he is willing to risk his own life for a black person. Ironically though, when Huck and Tom manage to find Jim, Tom forgets to mention to Huck that Jim was free the entire time, and they were the ones keeping Jim enslaved. This comes to a shock for Huck because he actually believed Tom would risk his own life as well to help “free” Jim, but Huck still struggles with the idea that he thinks all “good people” obey to societal values, and that he himself thinks is bad because he does not obey to those…
No matter how Huck viewed Jim, everyone can enjoy the novel Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. The way Huck sees Jim changes many times throughout the novel as their relationship develops. Huck and Jim have a friendship that overcame all odds. Whether Jim is a slave, friend, or father to Huck, the book changed American…
Jim is the main secondary character in the story, eventually becoming Huck’s best friend. As an African American, Jim adds an otherwise lacking perspective to the story and serves a purpose in furthering Huck’s experiences with racism and oppression. He also functions as a progresser to Huck’s internal conflict. Jim can be argued to be one of the good role models for Huck in the novel, increasing his significance. Adjectives that describe Jim are: Loyal, compassionate, honest, intelligent.…
Mark Twain made Jim a likeable character. Jim was an honest, loyal, kind, caring, and admirable character. Even though the author also made him a little dumb and superstitious, he was still one of the most likable character in the book. Twain also made Huck’s father out to be a bad guy, he was mean and he was…
Jim was intelligent, caring, passive and most importantly, a father figure of Huck. Huck met Jim after he faked his death and ran away to an island. Jim ran away from Mrs. Watson because he overheard that she is going to sell him. Huck and Jim had similar goals throughout the story. Their goal was to be free. Jim and Huck however becomes closer and eventually builds a strong friendship throughout the journey on the Mississippi River. Jim starts off as just a runaway slave but later on, Jim strives for freedom at Cairo. The relationship between Huck and Jim wasn’t just a simple relationship but it came to the point where Jim was almost identified as Jim’s father. Jim has children himself but since they’re not with him, Jim felt the need to support Huck. After getting separated on the raft because of a mist on the river, Jim said, “I could a got down on my knees en kiss your foot I’s so thankful” (pg 65). This shows that Jim and Huck need each other considering that they are both separated from their families and has no one else that can support them. Also, this part represents a typical father and son relationship because a proper father would be worried if their son had been lost and later when found, they are overly happy. Unnecessarily, Huck lies to Jim that the whole mist thing was all a dream but later, Jim finds out that it wasn’t perhaps a dream. Jim felt betrayed and became angry. Since Huck felt so bad after…
Due to the loss of his mother and having to run from an abusive father, Huck longed for kindness and support. Jim was the only character in this novel to do just that. For instance, when Huck and Jim come upon a floating cabin, Jim tells Huck not to look at the dead man inside the house. Jim protectively tells Huck, "Come in, Huck, but doan' look at his face—it’s too gashly" (50). The dead man turned out to be Huck’s father. Jim, however, did not want Huck to see his dead father. This is just one example of how Jim was like a father to Huck, or in fact, an even better father than Huck’s birth father.…
In the beginning of the novel Huckleberry Finn, Huck was a very immature young boy who did not care about what would happen if he got caught doing something. With having Miss Watson as his caregiver, she tried helping him into the right direction but with Huck’s father Pap, it was a disaster. Once Pap kidnapped Huck, Huck realized he needed to get out quick and once he did he was all by himself. “ I got out amongst the driftwood, and then laid down in bottom of the canoe and let her float” (Twain 35). Huck’s maturity is shown here with confidence because he left his father and he was always afraid to get beaten by Pap. Huck being by himself was the main reason why he matured like he did. Another reason Huck matured through the novel was because of him having Jim as basically his only friend. When Huck says to Tom “Good land! I says, “Why, there ain’t NO necessity for it. And what would you want to saw his leg off for, anyway?” it shows that Huck truly cares about Jim and would care if something happen to him. Another quote that Huck said about Jim was “It hadn’t ever come to me before, what this thing was I was doing. But now it did; and it staid with me, and scorched me more and more. I tried to make out to myself that I warn’t to blame, because I didn’t run Jim off from his rightful owner; but it warn’s no use, conscience up and says, every time, “But you knowed he was running for his freedom, and you could a paddled ashore and told somebody” (Twain 92). What Huck was trying to say was that even though hiding Jim from people was the wrong thing to do he did not care, he cared more about their friendship which shows maturity. Another quote that relates to this is “all right then, I’ll go to hell- I’m not giving up” (Twain 191). Huck says this after he rights a letter to Miss Watson and rips it up.…
Anyone who carefully considers the novel can find that Jim is the best person in this novel. Bridgewater Review sates, “Jim is: honest, perceptive and fair-minded, a loving father and loyal friend. In contrast, the white characters include, among others, Huck’s father, a child-abusing drunkard; the Duke and King, who are frauds and swindlers, and the Grangerfords and Shepherdsons, two feuding clans whose main purpose in life is the murder of as many of their enemies as possible.” When Huck ran away from home he had no one to turn to. Jim was in a similar situation and both of set sail down the Mississippi River. Jim was like a father figure toward Huck. In chapter 9 Jim protects Huck from the death of his father, "It's a dead man. Yes indeedy; naked, too. He's ben shot in de back. I reck'n he's ben dead two er three days. Come in, Huck, but doan' look at his face—it's too…