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How Is Huck Finn A Picaresque

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Ever met someone so adventurous and outgoing that they don’t like to conform to rules and regulations? In the book The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain his character Huck portrays those exact qualities of being a picaresque character. Huck goes down the Mississippi River having adventure after adventure, hating the idea of a civilized life. He is a picaresque character because he is from the low class of society, lives by his wits, and has episodic adventures that make him so enjoyable.
The first quality that makes Huckleberry Finn a picaresque character is his place in society. Huck is from the lower class of society and that is mostly because of Pap’s (his dad) reputation around the town. Pap is basically just a racist who loves his whiskey and that gets in the way of him raising Huck and being a worthy parent, “I borrowed 3 dollars… and pap took it and got drunk, and went a-blowing around and cussing… and he kept it up all over town… then they jailed him, and the next day they had him before court, and jailed him again for a week. But he said he was satisfied; said …show more content…

At the beginning of the book Huck was involved with a gang that was led by Tom Sawyer. Tom was Huck’s best friend and that’s why he went along with all of Tom’s crazy ideas that led into exaggerated adventures, “ I didn’t believe we could lick a crowd of Spainiards and A-rabs but I wanted to see the camels and elephants… when we got word we rushed out the woods and down the hill, but it warn’t anything but a Sunday school picnic” (Twain 13). Tom pretended that a caravan of Spaniards and Arabs were going to camp nearby with camels and elephants. This group of Spaniards and Arabs turned out to be just a Sunday school picnic but the boys of the gang still managed to cause ruckus among the attenders. This is just one of the few adventures that Huck is involved with before his big journey down the

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