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Huck Finn Essay On Each Chapter (стр. 2 из 4)

more and more, until Huck decides to work out an escape plan. He finds

a saw and cuts a hole in the cabin wall, then covers it up to wait for

a chance to get out, while his father is away.

Soon after this, Pap comes back from town in a terrible mood. He

starts drinking and complaining about the courts, the widow, and a

number of other things. After a few drinks, he goes into a long speech

about the government. This speech is important in at least one way- it

shows how Twain felt about racial bigotry.

Pap complains about not getting justice from his government, when he

has had all the anxiety and expense of raising a son. We know,

however, that this isn’t true, that Pap has been about as bad a father

as anyone can imagine. We know that he isn’t the good citizen he

claims to be. And we know that his threat to leave the country is

laughable, considering what an undesirable character he is.

As he does with Huck, Twain is talking over Pap’s head to the

reader, and we know how Twain wants us to feel. The same thing is true

in the second part of Pap’s harangue, in which he berates the

government for allowing a black college professor to vote right

along with a white man like himself. Twain makes Pap look ridiculous

for suggesting that he is superior to the professor, simply because

he’s white.

Huck listens to all this, waiting for Pap to fall asleep so he can

slip out of the cabin. Unfortunately, Pap has a restless night and

never completely falls asleep. He has a nightmare, in which he

fights off the angel of death. Then he confuses Huck with the angel

and starts attacking him. When he finally falls asleep, Huck takes the

rifle from the wall and loads it. He sits there quietly, hoping his

father won’t attack him again.

CHAPTER 7

-

When Pap wakes up, he doesn’t remember anything about attacking Huck

as the angel of death, and he wants to know why Huck is asleep in a

chair with the rifle in his lap. Huck is afraid he won’t believe the

truth, so he says that somebody tried to break in during the night.

You remember that Huck gave away more than $6000 to avoid having

to tell a lie to his father. How can he lie so easily in this

situation? Later in the book, Huck himself will give you an answer

to that question. In the meantime, think about whether you see any

difference between the lie he refused to tell and this one.

While he’s out getting some fish for breakfast, Huck sees an

abandoned canoe drifting by. He wades out and gets the canoe and hides

it in the woods. An escape plan is beginning to form in his head. He’s

glad he lied to Pap about somebody trying to break in, because that

lie will help him in his plan.

After dinner, Pap goes to town to sell some logs. Huck is sure he

won’t be back until morning, which will give him plenty of time to put

his escape plan into effect.

Read the description of Huck’s escape carefully. It’s a pretty

elaborate plan, worked out to the smallest detail, obviously the

work of a bright kid. In the middle of his description, Huck says he

wishes Tom Sawyer were with him to “throw in the fancy touches.”

When you read it, you’ll see that this plan doesn’t need the kind of

fancy touches Tom would add. It’s complete as it is, and unlike

Tom’s make-believe adventures, this escape is the real thing.

The plan is intended to make everyone think Huck was murdered.

This is important to him, since he isn’t running away only from his

father. He’s running from Judge Thatcher, too, and the Widow

Douglas, and all the other people he knows. He’s determined to set out

on his own and to leave behind his whole life up until this night.

As long as no one is looking for a living Huck, he figures he can

stop anywhere he wants to take time to make further plans. He

decides on nearby Jackson’s Island as his temporary hideout. Then,

satisfied with the ways things are working, he lies down in the

canoe and falls asleep.

When he wakes up, he hears someone rowing toward his island, and

he soon discovers it’s Pap, coming back earlier than Huck expected. He

unhitches the canoe and floats downstream as quietly as possible.

Something happens at this point in the narration that you should pay

special attention to. It will happen again and again throughout the

book, and you’ll want to recognize it when it does.

What happens is that Huck describes what it’s like on the river.

It begins with “The sky looks ever so deep….” Whenever Huck talks

about living on the river, his tone of voice changes. His language

becomes gentler and less harsh than usual. Sometimes he becomes almost

poetic.

Imagine a friend talking to you about a date, or about sports, or

cars, or any subject you both have in common. Then suppose the

friend suddenly shifted to talking about a much-loved baby brother.

Think of the probable contrast in your friend’s language and tone of

voice.

Huck loves the Mississippi River the way most of us love people.

If you want to know how much Mark Twain loved the river, read Life

on the Mississippi some time. For now, you can get some idea of

Twain’s feeling by paying close attention to Huck’s descriptions,

beginning with the short, affectionate one we get in this chapter.

Huck gets to Jackson’s Island just before daybreak. He hides his

canoe in some willow branches, then lies down to take a nap before

breakfast.

CHAPTER 8

-

Huck wakes after daybreak “feeling rested and ruther comfortable and

satisfied.” He seems to have forgotten last night’s harrowing

experience, and he lies in the grass enjoying the sun, the trees,

and a couple of friendly-looking squirrels. He feels completely at

home.

He’s torn from this pleasant state by the sound of cannon fire. He

gets up to see a ferry boat moving toward the island. He knows it’s

filled with people searching the water for his dead body.

From a hiding place at the shore, Huck watches as the ferry comes so

close to the island that he can almost reach out and touch the

people on it. He sees his father, Tom Sawyer, the widow, the judge-

almost everybody he knows is on that ferry searching for him. He looks

into those familiar faces, and he doesn’t make a sound.

—————————————————————–

NOTE: If you ever considered running away from home when you were

young, you might want to think about this scene for a minute. A lot of

kids fantasize about doing it, and the fantasy often involves

grief-stricken relatives and friends. Fortunately, most people never

do run away from home, because they decide they need those relatives

and friends more than they need freedom.

Huck is hiding on the island, having successfully fooled everyone he

knows into thinking he’s dead. Now he comes face to face with all

those people. Imagine yourself in that situation. Most of us would

probably abandon the idea of running, and yell out, “Here I am! I’m

not really dead!”

That would seem to be the natural response if you were suddenly

confronted by everyone who’s close to you. But it isn’t Huck’s

response. He just crouches there silently, letting everyone in his

life float by.

can look at this incident in a number of ways. Maybe it shows

that Huck is so much in control of his emotions that he doesn’t do the

“natural” thing. Maybe it shows that none of these people really means

anything to him, in spite of what he’s told us. Or it might show

that he doesn’t understand how sorrowful some of those people are.

Since he doesn’t think much of himself, he’d find it hard to believe

that someone else thinks much of him.

All these interpretations are possible, as well as some others

that may occur to you. Even if you aren’t ready to interpret the

incident in one particular way, keep it in mind as you read on. You’ll

learn other things about Huck, and you may be able to interpret this

better later on.

—————————————————————–

Once the ferry is gone, Huck is overcome by loneliness. He listens

to the river and watches the stars for a while, then decides to go

to sleep. “There ain’t no better way to put in time when you are

lonesome,” he says. He sounds as though he’s had this problem before.

After three days on the island, Huck makes a terrifying discovery.

The remains of a campfire tell him that he isn’t alone. As

frightened as he is, he decides that he has to find out who the

other person is. After a long search, he finds himself back at the

campfire. This time there’s a man sleeping near it.

He waits quietly until the man wakes up and throws the blanket off

his face. When Huck sees that it’s Miss Watson’s slave, Jim, he

skips from his hiding place to say hello.

It takes him a while to convince Jim that he isn’t seeing a ghost.

He explains how he created the illusion that he was dead, and Jim says

it was a hoax worthy of Tom Sawyer himself. Then Huck asks Jim why

he’s on the island.

Jim first makes him promise not to tell anyone. When Huck

promises, Jim confesses that he has run away from Miss Watson.

Notice Huck’s shocked reaction to this news. Remember that he grew

up with people who believed that stealing a slave was as serious as

committing murder. A modern equivalent of a runaway slave might be

someone who murders a police officer.

Huck’s shock is an expression of this belief. He’s never heard

anyone question the institution of slavery, and he has every reason to

believe that Jim has done something terrible.

All of this makes the next part of the conversation interesting. Jim

reminds Huck that he promised not to tell. Without hesitating, Huck

says he’ll keep his word. He realizes that “people would call me a

low-down Abolitionist and despise me for keeping mum.” And he really

believes those people would be right. But he’ll keep his word. “I

ain’t a-going back there, anyways,” he explains.

Not turning Jim in is a monumental decision for Huck to make, even

though he makes it on the spot. This is not just a boy running away

from home. It’s someone who has decided to turn his back on everything

“home” stands for, even one of its most cherished beliefs.

The rest of the chapter includes three things you may find

interesting. First, Jim explains why he’s running away and how he

got to the island. Then he does what might qualify as a comedy

monologue on things that foreshadow bad luck.

The last part of the chapter might remind you of comedy teams in

which one person provides all the straight lines and the other does

all the jokes. Jim tells a long story about a time when he had some

money. The routine ends with a punch line that might give you a clue

to how Twain felt about slavery when he wrote this book.

CHAPTER 9

-

Neither Huck nor Jim has any intention of going back to the village;

so, without actually stating it, they’ve decided to be outcasts

together. This chapter shows them starting out on their new life.

Huck leads Jim to a cavern he found while he was exploring the

island. Jim convinces him that they should carry all their gear up

to this place because there are going to be heavy rains. Huck

doesn’t like having to do all that work, but he decides to go along.

Sure enough, the rain begins right after dinner. Huck gives

another of his “poetic” descriptions when he tells about the rain.

He seems to be perfectly satisfied with his new life.

It rains for so many days that the river floods. Huck and Jim take

the canoe out from time to time to see what they can find. On one of

their trips, they retrieve a 12 x 16-foot raft, well-built and sturdy.

They bring it back to the island for possible use later.

On another outing, they climb into the window of a two-story house

that’s floating by. In one room they find the body of a man who has

been shot in the back. Jim covers the man’s face to keep Huck from

seeing it. Jim’s behavior might be a little puzzling here, but it will

be explained later. He seems to be trying to keep Huck away from the

body. Huck, however, isn’t much interested in seeing it.

They ransack the house for equipment and supplies they may need.

Then they go back to the security of their island.

CHAPTER 10

-

The next morning Huck wonders aloud how the dead man was killed. Jim

says it would be bad luck to talk about it. He adds that unburied

corpses are more likely to haunt people than buried ones. That

sounds reasonable to Huck, so he drops the subject.

Most of this chapter is about bad luck and its causes. As you read

it, you should be able to detect Mark Twain in the background,

having a laugh over some of the superstitions he believed when he

was a boy.

Huck tells us that after he handled some snakeskin, Jim warned him

that bad luck was coming. Sure enough, three days later Jim is

bitten by a rattlesnake because of something Huck has done.

Even though Huck is directly responsible for what happens to Jim, he

counts this as the bad luck that Jim predicted. Twain is probably

making a small joke here about how superstitious people will go out of

their way to find things that make their superstitions seem true.

But he’s also setting us up for another joke on the same topic. Huck

tells us a story about Hank Bunker, who waited a full two years before

his bad luck finally showed up. The funniest part of the story is

the description of what happened to the man and how he was buried.

—————————————————————–

NOTE: The subject of good and bad luck comes up often in Huck’s

narration, and you might have suspected by now that it’s more than

simply a way for Twain to get some laughs. Jim’s attitude toward the

supernatural, for example, should tell you something about his

self-image and about his view of the world.

Maybe you remember a conversation the two had when they first met on

the island in Chapter 8. Huck asked Jim why he never talked about

signs of good luck, why he dwelt so much on bad omens. Jim’s

response was that, first, there are very few signs of good luck; and

second, that good luck wasn’t the sort of thing you had to know

about in advance.

To Jim, the world is an endlessly threatening place. Danger is

hiding behind every tree and under every rock. At any moment,

everything you have could be taken away from you by forces over

which you have no control.

If you can imagine growing up as a slave in 19th-century America,

you can understand how Jim could have developed such a view of life. A

slave had no status as a human being; he could be beaten or even

killed by a master; he was a piece of property who could be sold on

a whim, even if that meant permanent separation from his own family.

To someone who grew up under conditions like these, dark and

unexplained forces could become a part of everyday life. But how about

Huck? Does the same explanation hold true for him?

It’s true that Huck has had his share of hardship; you don’t have to

look any farther than Pap. To a kid, the unpredictable behavior of a

cruel, drunken father is no less frightening than the things a slave

had to worry about all the time.

That unwarranted and unpredictable cruelty could help to explain why

Huck has such a low opinion of himself. If his own father treats him

like a piece of dirt, he probably finds it easy to believe that he

is a piece of dirt. And if his own father could turn on him in an

instant and suddenly start beating him, Huck might find it easy to

believe that the world is filled with unexplained forces that could

ruin his life just as suddenly.

Still, there are at least two differences between Jim and Huck.

One is that Huck is white. No matter how badly he thinks of himself,

somewhere, deep inside, he knows that there’s at least a chance that

he could be a respectable person some day. For Jim, that would be

inconceivable.

A second difference is that Huck is a boy, on his way to becoming an

adult. He’s also inclined to examine ideas before accepting or

rejecting them. So he asks a lot of questions about the omens that Jim

believes with all his heart.

In most cases Huck ends up accepting what Jim tells him. But that

doesn’t mean he always will. He still has the potential of learning