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How Does Huck Finn Change Throughout The Novel

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Throughout The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain, Huck’s morality changes and shifts, growing into thoughts that are separate from those of society. At the start of the novel, he shares similar ideas with the others of the society he lives in, but as the book goes on, Huck comes to realize that what society thinks is right isn’t always right. He learns that sometimes, what society thinks is the opposite of what’s morally right in his eyes. One of the most important moments in which Huck’s views change is when he is writing to Miss Watson, the woman he lives with in the beginning of the novel. He knows that it is right in the eyes of society to write to her of where Jim is, and he does just that. But while doing so, he comes across the realization that he sees Jim as something more than a simple runaway slave. Jim considers Huck a friend, and Huck is more than aware of this fact. So, Huck decides, “All right, then, I’ll go to hell” (Twain 214). Huck decides in this moment that there is no turning back and that he …show more content…

To protect Jim, Huck lies to men who are searching for runaway slaves, saying that a white man is on the raft, ill with smallpox. He recognizes that lying about such matters is entirely wrong, as he is raised to believe, and he feels guilty about saying such words, but at the same time, he wonders, “...what’s the use you learning to do right when it’s troublesome to do right and ain’t no trouble to do wrong” (Twain 91). In this moment of thinking, Huck notices that doing what’s right in regards to the teachings of society is troublesome, making him feel guilty. He is uncertain of what the “right” way of dealing with such situations is due to the change Jim is creating in his morality, and because of this change, he feels guilty about not giving Jim up and recognizes that he would feel just as bad if he’d just let the men search for

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