In Hack's inevitable moral dilemma novel, Huck faces a gym, a dilemma that sends back a runaway slave to his master. When I was young I faced the decision that he bothered mankind for many years. Even if it is forbidden in society and popular culture, it is to choose a morally right path. He opposed the folding and told him according to his heart. Hack's dilemma is Twain's 'inevitable dilemma'. In an article titled "The Bill of Rights," by Roger Rosenblatt, Rosenblatt concluded his essay with a sentence "We are down the river and are running freely and underground as usual". There is an important point in the last line of the article.
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
There are several trial and error, some of them are funny and somewhat painful, but more important than the moral confrontation Huck faces as Jim as a slave. In some of the books, Huck confused Jim 's mediocrity and doubted the insight of an adult man due to his race. When he realized that he had emotions in Jim, this was a revelation to Hack, which was the turning point of the story. You can not read these paragraphs silently, but you need to remember that you are opposed to a child trying to become an adult. To achieve sound ethical standards. Huck was taught that it is a sin not permitted to help free slaves. Then, after over 250 lame observations and internal discussions, Huck says that Jim's freedom is more important than his own eternal soul, and trying to endanger his life for his friends I thought.
At the end of the book, Jim's capture and sale by Dauphin has brought about a final leap in entry into Huck's secondary ideology. Huck faces the challenging moral dilemma of returning Hack to Miss Watson or to save him. His final decision rescued Jim and he said, "I will go to hell!" Since he is sacrificing the ultimate possession he calls heaven, he has reached the transition from early, socially conscious to secondary ideology. Huck no longer thinks that Jim is a property, but in many cases you can rely on it as a real companion.