Faith is one of the different words that everyone may mean to ask. The Oxford English Dictionary defines belief as "confidence, faith, or confidence (for someone or something)" (151). We believe that many beliefs are practiced through the characters in this book, and today it has been practiced in connection with the old days - this is the period before science. In that era, in fact, much of today's things are called cultural knowledge based on patterns of perception in living and nature, including patterns not proved unseen.
Huckleberry Finn has several themes. There are racial discrimination, slavery, civil society, survival, water image, and the superstitions I discuss (SparkNotes Editors). Superstition is a belief or practice caused by ignorance, fear of unknown, trust to magic or opportunity, or misunderstanding about causality ("Merriam - Webster"). It is a very popular theme for Huckleberry Finn through a story that has seen superstitions. Hack is a little superstitious, but Jim talks about all superstitions and folktales.
The power of superstition of superstition is by belief or practice to ignorance, fear of unknown, trust to magic or opportunity, or false causal relation. Despite the opposite evidence (Merriam-Webster), superstition is also supernatural, natural, or unreasonable humble attitude towards God, or thinking. Superstitious is the most common relic inherited. When and where are superstitions coming from? - Mark Twain's "Adventures of The Huckleberry Finn" focuses on slavery in the south. Twain further irritates the various institutions in the book, including religion. Twain emphasized superstition more than religion after all. Mark Twain highlighted that superstition is aimed at providing lower class protection, hope and moral growth. The superstitions that appear in the novel are in the protection of the hack and the gym.