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Mark Twain's Use Of Irony In Huckleberry Finn

Decent Essays

Cayse Elliott Response to Lit Anchor Paper

In the book Huckleberry Finn that Mark Twain that is about a boy named Huck who had run away from his home. Huck finds a place to camp out and keep low he comes across a runaway slave. Evidently Huck keeps this slave a secret from others which was quite frankly against the law. As the story continues Huck believes he is a bad person because he isn’t telling on Jim. There were multiple uses of irony used within the text that represent the author’s opinion on slavery. That leads to Mark Twain’s opinion on slavery, which is that Mark is against slavery. First, Mark Twain shows how he’s against slavery using irony in his writing. As many people who are reading this book may know. while Mark wrote this he uses many examples that prove how he feels. In the book, one of the things Mark said is when he put a ‘nigger’ in the book and says how he’s able to vote. However Pap gets angry and said he won’t vote because of how they let a nigger vote. As the book says, “But then they tell me there’s a state in this country where they’d let a nigger vote. I gave it up. I says, ‘I’ll never vote again.’” (42). This shows that Mark Twain is against slavery because he allowed a state in the book to …show more content…

Although while Huck was planning to leave him and Jim were talking to each other. Jim mentioned how Huck was the best friend that he’s ever had and how he was the only white gentleman that had ever kept a promise to him. That was where Huck had lost all the courage he had to go tell him Jim. As it comes time to the men Huck comes across they ask who the man he’s with is, or at least if he’s white or black. That comes to Huck’s answer “I saw I was weakening. So I just give up trying, and up and says, ‘He’s

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