Adversity In Huckleberry Finn

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At the beginning of Twain’s novel that profiles the adventures of Huckleberry Finn, the protagonist, a boy growing up in the south, reflects that “I was ever so glad to see Jim”(HF 82). Huck who is meeting Jim, Miss Watson’s slave, for the first time on Jackson’s Island as a boy on the run from his broken family is excited because he will not be on his journey alone. This unplanned meeting between the soon to be unlikely friends with Twain’s portrayal of Huck, a boy who is not susceptible to his society's prejudiced views of African Americans, is curious and questions Jim wanting to know more about him. Twain effectively personifies the imminent friendship which leads to perilous adventures in the events to come after the two’s first meeting. …show more content…

Explaining his motive to leave, Jim tells of how he overheard Miss Watson talking about selling him. Selling Jim, her slave, would in turn separate him for his wife and children. This situation gives rise to Jim escaping and running away to Jackson’s island. Jim remarks that Miss Watson told him earlier in the novel “She awluz said she wouldn' sell me down to Orleans”( HF 85). Miss Watson directly violates what she told Jim, and this situation demonstrates how little her word means to an African American. After Jim and Huck meet the fraudulent King and Duke, the two treat Jim as if he was inferior to them although they see how much Huck cares for him. They make Jim sleep in the rain, and they trick him into believing they are actually royalty. The King and Duke sell him into slavery when Huck is not around to protect him. Their actions depict the southern view of slaves, and how slaves should be treated based off their terms. In contrast to white society’s view of Jim, in the African American community, Jim is admired and respected for his ability to tell stories. Jim vividly explains,” Dey’s mighty good to me, dese niggers is, en whatever I want ‘m to do fur me I don’t have to ast ‘m twice” ( HF 146). The slaves he met from the Grangerfords’ respected him because they heard of him and his abilities. Although in many …show more content…

Huck defies the expected social boundaries when Jim gets mad at Huck for letting the debris pile up on the raft. Huck says,“It was fifteen minutes before I could work myself up to go and humble myself to a nigger”(HF 161). Although Huck felt peculiar about apologizing to Jim about raft situation, this event demonstrates how Huck not only treats Jim fairly, but considers that Jim is his equal by apologizing to him. As Huck and Jim come across the Duke and King on their adventures, Huck is forced to lie about how Huck knows Jim. Huck tells the two men that he was orphaned as a boy, and Jim is his slave. Telling this lie to the men, Huck asserts that he cares and yearns for Jim to be free. After the Duke and King sold Jim to Silas Phelps, Huck is intent on finding Jim and helping him escape from slavery. Questioning himself, Huck writes a letter to Ms.Watson telling her where Jim is. Huck has a change of heart, and proclaims,”All right, then, I’ll go to hell” (390). Huck tears up the letter, exhibiting that his society has manipulated his views of right and wrong yet Huck still thinking his decision is wrong destroys the letter because Jim is more important. Ultimately, Jim is freed because Jim protects Tom from a gunshot therefore earning his freedom. The bond that Jim and Huck have built has transcended the political

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