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What Is Jim's Relationship In Huck Finn

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Jim is an astoundingly kind and brave soul, despite the tremendous hardships of being a slave in the South. In Mark Twain’s The Adventures Huckleberry Finn, a fictitious adventure story, a young boy and a runaway slave journey along the Mississippi River in hopes of gaining their freedom. Jim loves Huckleberry as his own son and would do anything for him. Jim misses his family dearly and Huck fills that void while on their journey. Twain purposely creates this relationship to reveal the idiocy behind slavery and discrimination in our world. The Mississippi river can be unforgiving and dangerous at times. Jim is very protective of Huck and does his best to ensure Huck’s safety on the voyage. The river rushes a large house that had been floating upon the flooded waters into Huck and Jim's cave. This shows how dangerous flooding can be along the Mississippi and how fragile life really is. “‘Come in, Huck, but doan’ look at his face--it’s too gashly’“ (Twain 50). Jim protects Huck from the horrific sight of the dead man found in the house, knowing that the man is Huck’s father. He didn’t …show more content…

as Huck grows, the audience will grow as well. In the story we see Jim as the superstitious runaway slave who cares for a boy claimed dead. We learn that Jim deeply cares for Huck and will do anything to protect him. The relationship between the two grows stronger with each challenge they face. It ultimately leads up to Jim selflessly risking his life to save Tom Sawyer’s life. Twain reaches out to the audience through his characters in order to have them grow in the same as Huck does. Through Huck’s epiphany, Twain hopes that the readers will have learned the same lesson; that slavery is wrong and man should not let another man own him. The relationship between Huck and Jim reveals how discrimination is wrong and how friendship is built in darkest of

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