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Huck Finn Freedom Analysis

Decent Essays

A regular journey would have the common goal of reaching their destination safely, but for runaway slaves and those who were going on a mental journey, it was so much more mental toughness and reliability that was needed. Many walked this journey to freedom because they wanted to change their lives. These journeyers could not walk alone, as they needed people to be with them, so they could depend on them to get through the mental toughness. People cannot achieve freedom alone because hope is not lost when the people surrounding the journeyer and so the freedom-seeker can be brought to safety; although some may say that it is in fact perseverance that brings one through to freedom, in reality, the connection the journeyer has with others during times of distress allows him to attain liberty. People need someone to hold on to, so hope is not lost at any moment. With someone to lean on, the journey can accomplish his goal of freedom. In the novel The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, Jim, a runaway slave, acts as a helper to Huck who allows the 12-year-old boy to lean on him in times of distress. Jim knowingly does not tell about Huck’s father’s death, as he knew that Huck would not continue to live with Jim. At the end of the novel, Jim states: “‘He ain’t comin back no mo… ‘member de house… down de river, en dey wuz a man in dah, kivered up… dat wuz him’” (Twain 293). Many readers have speculated that Jim chose not to tell Huck about his dad’s death until the end of their

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