Society thinks that slaves are "less" than whites, but Jim is very smart. When floating, Jim noticed all debris, dirt and branches collected in the raft. He made him look like a fool and he was very angry about him so he got angry at Hack. In the famous quotation of this book, "I work hard and become able to humble himself 15 minutes ago but I did it, and in the future I am sorry about that" Twain 131). This sentence shows the beginning of maturation of Hack.
Strain surrounds the religious struggle in Mark Twain's "The Adventure of The Huckleberry Finn". An abused boy hack has doubt but quite deep religious ethics. Hack lives in a society that forces religious beliefs, but pretends to be "knight, observance, and Christian" (Martin 110). The moral struggle with Hack with him arises from his influence and religious flaws and uselessness. Twain's view is ironically trying to promote Christianity in such a way as to reduce hypocrisy, evil, ignorance.
Mark Hwain's "The Adventure of The Huckleberry Finn" experienced a major psychological anomaly as a corruption opposing this novel. On his trip along the Mississippi River, Hack's ethics has been tested over and over again. It is the 31st chapter of the novel that threatens the final trial of Hack's morality. According to his orthodox childhood, Hack raised or chased his mind and struggled to do what he thinks is right. Through a dramatic journey, Huck reaches his moral comprehension in Chapter 31.
In order to understand Huck as a moral guide, it is first necessary to understand the wrath of the author against the world. The main reason he wrote this novel is to dissipate his frustration; it can be said that he inadvertently provided a timely moral compass for the American society. Tom Quaker is shaking hands with Huckleberry Finn. In books, boys, and men's articles, it is pointed out that in 1880 Twain began to feel the bitterness of sincerity to "crazy people". Despise (30) He further said that Twain consumes three old-fashioned products everyday in his study and is smoking on a regular basis. It is pointed out that he likes to "privately and privately" like Huck of Tom Sawyer (18). Again, we can find many similarities with Twain and Huck. For him, Huck seems to represent a boy he wants to visit at his age (45)
Twain (pen name of Samuel Clemens) first introduced Huck Finn as a best friend of Tom Sawyer. TomSawyer is his very successful novel "Tom Sawyer's Adventure" (1876). A hero in the middle. Twain saw Hack's story as a sequel to his early work, but this new novel is more serious, focusing on slavery and other aspects of life in the south before the war. In the center of the book are Hack along the raft of the Mississippi River and his friend Jim, a slave of runaway. Jim had run away as he was going to sell away from his wife and children and Hack went with him to help him freely with Ohio. Hack speaks stories in his own unique voice and provides rich explanation of places to meet people on the way. The most impressive part of the book is the satirical expression of racial discrimination, religion, and other social attitudes at the time.