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Huckleberry Finn Literary Analysis

211 Words1 Pages
In The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, Twain uses nature to show how much it impacts Huck and Jim in this novel. The raft they use represents idyllic existence while the towns represents harsh reality. In class, most students agreed that the raft represented an escape route to freedom for Jim and Huck. The idyllic existence of the raft is illustrated when Huck says, “we said there wasn’t no home like the raft” (107). When looking back at the moments before Huck and Jim started sailing on the raft, they both faced many problems on shore that caused them to not experience the freedom they should’ve had. In Huck’s case it was his Pap, who often abused him, and for Jim, it was Miss Watson, his slave master.Being on shore isn’t the same as sailing
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