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Adventures Of Huckleberry Finn By Twain Essay

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In the Style of Twain The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, is said to be "


the source from which all great American literature has stemmed" (Smith


127). This is in part attributed to Mark Twain’s ability to use humor and


satire, as well as incorporating serious subject matter into his work.


Throughout the novel Twain takes on the serious issue of Huck’s moral dilemma.


One such issue which is particularly important in the novel is pointed out by


Smith: He swears and smokes, but he has a set of ethics all his own. He believes


that slaves belong to their rightful owners, yet in his honest gratitude toward


his friend Jim, he helps him to escape the bonds of slavery. (181) This is


something that tears at Huck throughout the novel and helps Twain show how


complex Huck’s character really is. "The recognition of complexity in


Huck’s character enabled Twain to do full justice to the conflict of vernacular


values and the dominant culture" (Smith 125). Throughout Huck and Jim’s


adventures Huck is constantly playing practical jokes on Jim who seems to take


them all in stride. But unknown to the reader Twain uses this aspect as another


notch in Huck’s moral 2 growth. Critic Frank McGill points this out: Huck’s


humble apology for the prank he plays on Jim in the fog is striking evidence of


growth in Huck’s moral insight. It leads naturally to the next chapter in which


Twain causes Huck to face up for the first time to the fact he is helping a


slave escape.(119) Another serious issue addressed by Twain is the abuse that


was given to Huck by his father. Huck was kidnaped from the Widow Douglas by his


father who had heard of his inheritance. Huck’s father then took him to a cabin


far away in the woods where he kept the boy a prisoner, beating him and half


starving him. Twain tells us how Huck felt about life with his father: Before


long Huck began to wonder why he had even liked living with the widow. With his


father he could smoke and swear all he wanted, and his life would have been


quiet pleasant if it had not been for all of the constant beatings. (156) Huck


would soon after grow tired of the beatings and fakes his death to escape the


cabin. The humorous side of Twain is probably what he is most well known for.


Humor is considered an art form by many writers. Ja

ne Bernadette states the


difference between humor and comical stories: The humorous story is strictly a


work of art high and delicate and only an Curran 3 artist can tell it; but no


art is necessary in telling the comic and the witty story; anybody can do it.


The art of telling a humorous story-understand, I mean by word of mouth, not


print-was created in America and has remained at home. (159) Twain satirizes the


south for its seriousness on certain matters. "I think one of the most


notably southern traits of Mark Twain’s humor is its power of seeing the fun of


southern seriousness"(Bernadette 175). Twain also satirizes the society of


the ?day’ by describing the colonel Grangerford as "the symbol of


southern aristocracy"(245). Twain also goes on to satirize the south’s


racism. One such instance is pointed out in the novel when Aunt Polly hears of a


steamboat explosion. " Good gracious is anyone hurt?" "No",


"it just killed a negro" (209). Religious satire is another aspect


that Twain uses. An easy illustration of this is the Widow’s attempt to teach


Huck religious principles while she persists on keeping slaves. "Huck’s


principles of morality make him more ?Christian’ than the Widow even though he


takes no interest in her lifeless principles"(Bernadette 288). Twain’s


humor has been mistaken by some to be racist or politically incorrect. "The


humor of Mark Twain contains a sense of the incongruous which frontiersmen felt


in a region where civilization and uncultivated nature come face to face"


(McGill 95). In conclusion I think that the style and structure of Mark Twain’s


work not only exemplifies him as a humorist but as a serious writer as well ; a


writer who cannot be Curran 4 categorized by any one aspect of his writing.


"To remember him only as a creator of boyhood adventure or as a relic of an


American frontier or the voice of idiosyncracy is to do him disservice"


(McGill 211).


Bernadette, Jane. American Realism . Toronto: Educational Resources


Corporation, 1972. McGill, Frank. American Writers. Montana: University of


Montana, 1974. Smith, Henry. Mark Twain: Development of a Writer. London: Oxford


Press, 1962 Twain, Mark. The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. New York: Penguin


Press, 1996

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