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- This file is copyright of Jens Schriver (c)
- It originates from the Evil House of Cheat
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- --------------------------------------------------------------
- Essay Name : 999.txt
- Uploader : Brain Forst
- Email Address :
- Language : English
- Subject : Education
- Title : The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
- Grade : B+
- School System : High School
- Country : USA
- Author Comments : I like what i wrote
- Teacher Comments : She liked what i wrote
- Date : 11/14/96
- Site found at : Friend told me about it
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- Huck finn a story about a boy
- Brain Frost 17 years old
- got a 85% on it a B
-
- "The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn"
- EARLY INFLUENCES ON HUCKLEBERRY FINN
-
- Mark Twain's The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn is a novel
- about a young boy's coming of age in the Missouri of the mid-1800's. The
- main character, Huckleberry Finn, spends much time in the novel floating
- down the Mississippi River on a raft with a runaway slave named Jim.
- Before he does so, however, Huck spends some time in the fictional town of
- St. Petersburg where a number of people attempt to influence him.
- Before the novel begins, Huck Finn has led a life of absolute
- freedom. His drunken and often missing father has never paid much
- attention to him; his mother is dead and so, when the novel begins, Huck is
- not used to following any rules. The book's opening finds Huck living with
- the Widow Douglas and her sister, Miss Watson. Both women are fairly old
- and are really somewhat incapable of raising a rebellious boy like Huck
- Finn. Nevertheless, they attempt to make Huck into what they believe will
- be a better boy. Specifically, they attempt, as Huck says, to "sivilize"
- him. This process includes making Huck go to school, teaching him various
- religious facts, and making him act in a way that the women find socially
- acceptable. Huck, who has never had to follow many rules in his life,
- finds the demands the women place upon him constraining and the life with
- them lonely. As a result, soon after he first moves in with them, he runs
- away. He soon comes back, but, even though he becomes somewhat comfortable
- with his new life as the months go by, Huck never really enjoys the life of
- manners, religion, and education that the Widow and her sister impose upon
- him.
- Huck believes he will find some freedom with Tom Sawyer. Tom
- is a boy of Huck's age who promises Huck and other boys of the town a life
- of adventure. Huck is eager to join Tom Sawyer's Gang because he feels
- that doing so will allow him to escape the somewhat boring life he leads
- with the Widow Douglas. Unfortunately, such an escape does not occur. Tom
- Sawyer promises much--robbing stages, murdering and ransoming people,
- kidnaping beautiful women--but none of this comes to pass. Huck finds out
- too late that Tom's adventures are imaginary: that raiding a caravan of
- "A-rabs" really means terrorizing young children on a Sunday school picnic,
- that stolen "joolry" is nothing more than turnips or rocks. Huck is
- disappointed that the adventures Tom promises are not real and so, along
- with the other members, he resigns from the gang.
- Another person who tries to get Huckleberry Finn to change is
- Pap, Huck's father. Pap is one of the most astonishing figures in all of
- American literature as he is completely antisocial and wishes to undo all
- of the civilizing effects that the Widow and Miss Watson have attempted to
- instill in Huck. Pap is a mess: he is unshaven; his hair is uncut and
- hangs like vines in front of his face; his skin, Huck says, is white like a
- fish's belly or like a tree toad's. Pap's savage appearance reflects his
- feelings as he demands that Huck quit school, stop reading, and avoid
- church. Huck is able to stay away from Pap for a while, but Pap kidnaps
- Huck three or four months after Huck starts to live with the Widow and
- takes him to a lonely cabin deep in the Missouri woods. Here, Huck enjoys,
- once again, the freedom that he had prior to the beginning of the book. He
- can smoke, "laze around," swear, and, in general, do what he wants to do.
- However, as he did with the Widow and with Tom, Huck begins to become
- dissatisfied with this life. Pap is "too handy with the hickory" and Huck
- soon realizes that he will have to escape from the cabin if he wishes to
- remain alive. As a result of his concern, Huck makes it appear as if he is
- killed in the cabin while Pap is away, and leaves to go to a remote island
- in the Mississippi River, Jackson's Island.
- It is after he leaves his father's cabin that Huck joins yet
- another important influence in his life: Miss Watson's slave, Jim. Prior
- to Huck's leaving, Jim has been a minor character in the novel--he has been
- shown being fooled by Tom Sawyer and telling Huck's fortune. Huck finds
- Jim on Jackson's Island because the slave has run away--he has overheard a
- conversation that he will soon be sold to New Orleans. Soon after joining
- Jim on Jackson's Island, Huck begins to realize that Jim has more talents
- and intelligence than Huck has been aware of. Jim knows "all kinds of
- signs" about the future, people's personalities, and weather forecasting.
- Huck finds this kind of information necessary as he and Jim drift down the
- Mississippi on a raft. As important, Huck feels a comfort with Jim that he
- has not felt with the other major characters in the novel. With Jim, Huck
- can enjoy the best aspects of his earlier influences. As does the Widow,
- Jim allows Huck security, but Jim is not as confining as is the Widow.
- Like Tom Sawyer, Jim is intelligent but his intelligence is not as
- intimidating or as imaginary as is Tom's. As does Pap, Jim allows Huck
- freedom, but he does it in a loving, rather than an uncaring, fashion.
- Thus, early, in their relationship on Jackson's Island, Huck says to Jim,
- "This is nice. I wouldn't want to be nowhere else but here." This feeling
- is in marked contrast with Huck's feelings concerning other people in the
- early part of the novel where he always is uncomfortable and wishes to
- leave them.
- At the conclusion of chapter 11 in The Adventures of
- Huckleberry Finn, Huck and Jim are forced to leave Jackson's Island because
- Huck discovers that people are looking for the runaway slave. Prior to
- leaving, Huck tells Jim, "They're after us." Clearly, the people are after
- Jim, but Huck has already identified with Jim and has begun to care for
- him. This stated empathy shows that the two outcasts will have a
- successful and rewarding friendship as they drift down the river as the
- novel continues.
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