Huckleberry Finn Values

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The greatness of a civilization lies between the teachings and values of the society. People will control or influence the ideas that became small parts of a soul and slowly form the image the civilian’s seek to see in within a future soul. Within a society, teachings are taught as well as values that are reflected in the novel, “ The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn ”, by Mark Twain, where the virtue of values are strongly enforced to the generations. The people of this society are much more trapped in the teaching and the importance of forcing to pass down every rule to the future generations. However, Huckleberry Finn rejects the acceptance to inherit these values that society has put down forth to be practiced and honored. He chooses to ignore …show more content…

Civilization is hypocrisy in the way Huck reveals it to be. Meaning that people can tell him what to do and say whether it is right and wrong without necessary being right and wrong in the eyes of Huck. If civilization means to attend school, dressed in appropriate clothing, and being active in the idea religion, Huck is rather better off his own with the practice of any of these values. He has come to the conclusion that he does not need these values nor these virtues to be part of his body and would rather leave than be conformed to a life that is not what defines him as a human. He desires a world with nothing but the simple rule of nothing, meaning that there are no boundaries that prohibit actions form being preformed but on the other hand let the actions be done. The actions what will show the spark within a soul that can define what civilization should mean in society. Through the contrasting over civilization and humanity, Huckleberry Finn suggest a new theme for civilization as he goes along on his voyage to from a two sided life in where he defines civilization in accordance to his ideas and …show more content…

Huck and Jim, Miss Watson’s slave, have untied as a union to continue on this voyage as they both seek to have a life of change that include no axioms without explaining the purpose of them. For the cause of this critical condition that Huck and Jim are involved in, both have the duty to oversea and accomplish to excel more than one identity in order to protect each other in the time of this crisis. The act of multiple personalities is significant in every aspect of the voyage. For instance, during the moment that Huck dresses up like a girl as he enters the town of Illinois and exclaims, “ Now this was lucky, because I was weakening; I was getting afraid I had come; people might know my voice and find me out” (Twain 55). As Huck enters into the presence of the town, all state of minds revolves over the central idea that the secret can be revealed. Huck is seen as a criminal in where every soul is looking for his heart beat in order to receive the granted outcome. The civilians urge in receiving the outcome for the runaway slave and Huck for a commission of two hundred dollars and this desire makes Huck be afraid. He is afraid over the idea that he holds in his hands the fate of Jim’s life and his own. This type of civilization is Huck’s and Jim’s biggest fear as to how they must ask and conform to the