Through the various activities of Huckleberry Finnish Adventures, By Mark Twain introduces young and adventurous Huck's life. A runaway slave named Huck and Jim got into the Mississippi River. The Mississippi River is a symbol of protection, freedom, withdrawal from society, and Hack's real morality. In "The Adventure of The Huckleberry Finn", Mark Twain integrates life and life with water by taking advantage of Huck's experience. Living in river rafts gave Hack and Jim a sense of freedom, and they had no rules to follow the coast there without equal human rights or social standards.
Mark Twain's "Adventures of Huckleberry Finn" was mainly held around the year 1840 along the Mississippi River and the Mississippi River. Mark Twain has placed the hero's Huckleberry Fin in many situations. And he made it possible to contemplate himself and his personality to make his own decisions. Many of Huck's decisions may be directly related to Ralph Waldo Emerson's "independence" article. Emerson strongly believes in non-compliance and self-reliance, or the idea that you act as you think is right. Emerson himself is an unruly man, not a society, believes that people need to be correct according to their beliefs.
Mark Twain's "Huckleberry Finn Adventure" is a story of Huck Fin's adventure along the Mississippi River. This story took place in the town of St Petersburg before the American Civil War. Slavery was legal and the center of the south was the Mississippi River. Twain uses his personality and scene as an analogy of the whole Southern statue and its social norms, but Twain is trying to make this book a simple story of Huck. The widow Douglas adopted hack and tried to "reform" him, but he is still an outsider of society. Through Hack's ability to separate from society, Twain stated that the symbol of civilized society is "懦懦, lack of knowledge and profound selfishness."
Mark Twain chose the Mississippi River as the central symbol of Huckleberry Finnish Adventures. However, his depiction of the river is mainly due to his own experience of life. Mark Twain was born and became a "man in the river". He is a pilot of a steamship and his longtime river experience is reflected in his writings. Mark Twain's name became synonymous with the Mississippi River. He even chose his pseudonym (Mark Twain, his real name is Samuel Clemens) for living in the river. Mark Twain is a term used to describe the water depth of a river. In the latter part of his writing career, he wrote a book entitled "Living on the Mississippi River". And it discussed how much the Mississippi River affected him.