Huckleberry Finn of the Mississippi River Mark Twain has played a number of roles and occupies a distinguished theme in the story. There is no doubt that Huck and Jim are the happiest and quietest when they float on a raft. This river has a deeper meaning than water and mud, and almost reaches its own ideal personality. It provides a means for both characters to escape from all and everyone and relaxes. Mudu provides some freedom in behavior, speech and emotion, although there is a great limit to the ability to provide movement freedom.
Like a river, the relationship between Hack and Jim is constantly changing. For Jim the river represents an escape from a society enslaved with prisoners of war, for Hack the river is social freedom and casts doubt on his morality. However, the two immediately noticed the fact that they did not completely eliminate the problem they had eagerly escaped. The trials and suffering to tackle the white social problems bothered Hack and Jim from their trip to the end.
The relationship between Huckleberry Finn and Jim in Mark Twain's The Adventure of The Huckleberry Finn
The ultimate concept of the novelty of freedom is how the river provides it. This river provides freedom, home and attribution to Hack. Jim said how hacky you are to be enthusiastic, Huck should join the dee gaming (49). When Jim and Huck entered the river, they established freedom of decision. As Huck said, their biggest decision was to place watermelons, put watermelons, or decide what kind of paste (71). Huckleberry Finn's biggest theme is freedom. The main character of the book, Hack and Jim are looking for freedom. Jim wants to remove slavery, but Huck is seeking social freedom. What they have in common when seeking freedom is how they get there through the river.
For Huck and Jim, the Mississippi is a powerful symbol of freedom they imagine. Even this symbol has different behaviors for each character. Just with their rafts, Huck and Jim have full autonomy. In the evening of the river, I could not see the world while passing through it, and gave him a calm feeling: "You feel free, relaxed, and comfortable with a raft." Hack has freedom in the river. For the gym who wants to take Mississippi to a free state along the Ohio River, the river is the way to freedom. As long as he and Hack are traveling the Mississippi river, Jim is still a slave, his life is still in danger, his personal freedom is still damaged. That is why he and Huck traveled mostly at night, and when Huck, King and Duke landed during the day, he was hiding in the cabin. For Hack, the river itself is the destination, for Jim it is not virtual freedom but a means to express theoretical freedom.