Huck Finn Journey To Freedom

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Journey to Freedom

In every type of travel, the journey is just as important as the destination; who a person is at point 'A' is not necessarily who they will be when they arrive at point 'B'. In the classic novel The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, Mark Twain describes the physical, mental, and emotional tolls of one young boy, Huck, as he travels the country to find the grand prize of freedom. Huck lives in the Mississippi Valley during the 1840s where he is motherless and his father is an abusive drunk. Huck is a thief, a liar, and a trouble-maker; this equation adds up to a plan of disastrous proportions as Huck is fed up with the abuse of his father, so he fakes his death. On his way out of town, Huck runs into a runaway slave named Jim and they go on a journey down south on a raft in the Mississippi River to their own personal freedoms.

Huckleberry Finn is an emotionally independent boy. He has a hard time opening up to people, assumingly because of his father. In order to get away from the horror he thinks is his life, he fakes his death. Huck comes up with an elaborate plan to escape everyone and live on his own. His plan falls through when a kind-hearted slave named Jim finds …show more content…

Huck is constantly doing the right thing by basically tricking himself into thinking it's the wrong thing. For example, in the text when Huck finds out about Jim being a runaway slave, he doesn't know whether to report him or not. In addition, when Huck realizes that not telling the authority makes it a big secret, he decided not to report him. Subconsciously he does the right thing by saving Jim from extreme measures of consequence. He likes to be rebellious in every way possible. The thought of being bad gives him life. It makes him feel like he is doing everything he can to go against his abusive

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