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Examples Of Childhood In Huckleberry Finn

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Childhood, experts say, affects people more than many realize. The experiences that people have as children, oftentimes, have many physical and psychological effects that become apparent in their later lives. Oftentimes, literature becomes the easiest place to analyze the effect of childhood experiences on later life. As an example, in the nineteenth century southern novel, The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn the experiences of the author, Mark Twain, as a child present themselves when analyzing the connections between his childhood and his characters, his experiences with the novel, items in his childhood and the novel, and the time period in which Twain grows up in and aspects of his novel, which becomes important when attempting to understand the deeper meanings of the novel. Many people possess idols, religious figures, personages, and many other figures that they look up to, or wish to exemplify. Later in life, people may even begin to see aspects of themselves within the figures they wish to exemplify. The same concept holds true for Twain’s writing. Oftentimes, especially in connection with the character Huckleberry Finn, aspects of both Twain and others that he looks up to present themselves. Huck Finn explains his new life: "It was kind of lazy and jolly, laying off comfortable all day, smoking and fishing, and no books nor study” (Twain 36). While Huck does not possess a new life in the sense that he has never experienced such a life before, he does have a life

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