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MARK TWAIN
THE ADVENTURES OF HUKLEBERRY FINN
(1884)
-summary of the novel : Huck escapes from
the lonely cabin in which his drunken, brutal father had imprisoned
him. On Jackson's
island he meets
Jim, a runaway slave. Together they float down the Mississippi
River on a raft, occasionally stopping at the banks. In
these
brief episodes, Huck participates in the lives of others, witnessing
corruption, moral decay, and intellectual impoverishment. He learns
from Jim of
the dignity and worth of a human being. Life on the river comes to an
end when
Jim is captured. Huck, reunited with Tom Sawyer, helps him to escape,
subordinating society's morality to his own sense of justice and
honour.
The youth experience of the novelist is
presented in the work THE ADVENTURES OF HUCKLEBERRY FINN, novel
about
life on the Mississippi.
The Southern traditions, the situation of the Negro slaves, the life
during the
XIXth century in the South of the United States, all is
presented in
a humorous but full of understanding manner. The following excerpt from
"Chapter 16" dwells on Huck's rather pragmatic behaviour in a very
dramatic situation. As the raft taking him and Jim downstream
approaches the
mouth of the Ohio River, Jim grows
more and
more excited because he believes that when he can head up the Ohio he will be
out of slave, and therefore
be free. Huck, in his turn, begins to realize for the first time that
he is
actually helping a slave to escape. His conscience, formed by the mid-19th century American Southern society,
goads him until he decides he will turn Jim in as a runaway slave. But
when he
is faced with the actual situation of having to inform on Jim to two
Negro
hunters, Huck finds himself unable to carry out his abominable plan and
improvises an elaborate story that makes them believe there is smallpox
on the
raft. By enlisting himself in Jim's cause, Huck becomes a
self-proclaimed
social outlaw. He goes through two moral crises in which he is
denounced by his
conscience, but he finally decides to "go to Hell" – that is to defy
the laws of God and of man and to stay loyal to Jim who has by now
become his
alter ego.
The
novel is written in the first person narrative, thus the feelings of
the main
character (Huck himself) are expressed more directly, offering the
whole story
authenticity and freshness. The scene presenting Huck's inner struggle
is very
impressive and of a peculiar dramatism. Huck leaves his raft "feeling
sick", disgusted with himself and with the idea of cheating his friend
so cruelly.
Still, he thinks it is his duty to inform the authorities. Very soon,
he meets
two men in a skiff. The men are white, they carry guns and
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they
are looking for "runaway niggers". When he is asked if there are any
men on his raft, Huck answers that there is only one. At this point he
still
doesn't know what to do. But when he is asked if his man is white or
black, he
hesitates for a while, trying to "brace up and out with it". The
clash between his feelings of friendship towards Jim on one hand, and
his
prejudices as a Southern boy, on the other, now reaches its climax.
Huck
regards his incapacity of telling the truth as a matter of courage
after all,
thinking he isn't man enough, but in fact his loyal heart can't accept
to
betray a true friend. Finally, he takes a decision, in spite of his
prejudices,
and he tells the two men that his man is white.
The attitude didn't seem very
convincing, as the two men expressed their wish to see for themselves
the man
on the raft. Huck immediately wish to see for themselves the man on the
raft.
Huck immediately invents a story: the man on the raft is his father, he
says, and his father is ill. He lets the
two men guess that the so-called father has got the smallpox, a very
unpleasant
and, at the same time, very dangerous disease. The two men leave in a
hurry,
feeling pity for Huck and giving him some money. As they don't want to
catch
the disease, they don't even have a look on the raft. Jim is saved but
Huck's
soul is tormented by various questions: had he done right or wrong?
Would he
have felt better if he had given Jim up?
He decides he had done wrong according
to the Southern rules concerning runaway slaves, but he realizes he
would have
felt miserable if he had betrayed his friend in need. Huck is in fact
the
victim of the social prejudices, but he is aware of the contradiction
between
his feelings of brotherhood towards and these prejudices. He can't help
regarding Jim as a human being, a faithful friend, and thus finally he
acts
like a man helping another man. Huck is guilty from the point of view
of the
Southern prejudices and laws, but from a human point of view he is
innocent,
because he saved Jim's life.
Huck is an objective narrator. He is
objective about himself, even when that objectivity is apt to reflect
discreditably
upon himself. He is objective about the society he encounters, even
when, as he
often fears, that society possesses virtues and sanctions to which he
must ever
remain a stranger. He is an outcast, he knows that he is an outcast.
Possessing neither a wide background of
economic fact and theory, nor a comprehensive knowledge of scientific
or
philosophical methods, he had a genuine contempt for all pretense and
hypocrisy, and exposed to humorous view the tyrannies of chivalry, of
slavery,
and of religion. Mark Twain is the greatest American voice of his day.
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