In the adventure of Huckleberry Finn, Huck found himself in countless dilemmas. Whether it is his own life or another life endangered, Huck will make a decision based on his moral compass. His ethics has been shaped by his heavy life and the society he lives in. However, Huck sometimes deviates from the correct, wrong version of society. In such a case, he does not realize that society has a very narrow view of moral perspective, he thinks something is doing wrong.
Hack may have changed morally through novels, but it is not impossible for him to return under the influence of society. To increase the complexity of Huck's suffering, Twain included many elements of racial discrimination in his prewar plot to contrast sharply with the moral change in his traveling hook; however, Twain He was not racist himself. The reader of this novelty may have been worried that mischief hack is a role model for young readers, but it is meant to make him him.
In Mark Twain's Huckleberry Finn, Huck is facing the dilemma of accepting discriminatory ideology in the South, but at the same time he is attacking inner consciousness. In search of a better lifestyle, Huck, freedom to pursue youth, and Jim, a runaway slave, all departed. They encountered many obstacles in the process. Their first contact eventually began to become a solid friendship that avoided racist social practices and led Hack to support Jim's escape. Initially, Huck thought Jim was more than a slave. In the meantime, slavery in the south was very strong. In the eyes of white people in the south, blacks are the bottom. What they can accept in their lives is service, to meet the needs of the Anglo 's daily needs. It is this common belief that it influences hacks and helps shape the relationship with the gym. As a slave, Jim is like a toy for Tom Sawyer and Huck Fin.
The relationship between Hack and Jim began with events in the widow 's garden. Tom wants to detain the gym, but Hack is against it. Hack has dealt with a moral dilemma; even if Tom does this, he does not want to detain the gym. When Hack was in front of Tom, he was still a little boy and became sensitive to his companion, so it became extremely difficult to be true to his morals and ideals. Unlike the relationship with Jim, Hack does not feel my feeling in front of the gym.
The relationship between Huckleberry Finn and Jim in Mark Twain's The Adventure of The Huckleberry Finn