“Human beings can be awful cruel to one another.”
Chapters
1-7: Huck's Escape
Mark
Twain begins The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn with a notice to the
reader. He identifies Huckleberry Finn as "Tom Sawyer's
Comrade," and reminds the reader that this novel resumes
where The Adventures of Tom Sawyer left off: in
Missouri, on the Mississippi River, forty to fifty years before the
novel was written (so between 1834 and
1844, before the American Civil War). He tells the reader that several
different “dialects are used,” which have been written painstakingly, based on
his own personal familiarity with these several forms of speech.
The eponymous character (novel’s title character), Huckleberry Finn, narrates
the story. He summarizes the end of The Adventures of Tom Sawyer, in which he
and Tom discovered a large amount of stolen gold. He lives now with the Widow
Douglas, who has taken him in as her son, and her sister Miss Watson. His father,
“Pap,” has left him:
“Pap
hadn’t been seen for more than a year, and that was comfortable for me; I
didn’t want to see him no more. He used to always whale me when he was sober and
could get his hands on me; though I used to take to the woods when he was
around.”
The widow attempts to “sivilize” Huck, and teach him religion. Huck finds her ways confining. Miss Watson nags him to learn, to read, to set up straight, and to behave. Huck remains superstitious, and he mostly resists the women’s influence; after bedtime, he escapes out his window to join Tom Sawyer for new adventures. The boys meet Jim, Miss Watson’s nigger, and they play a trick on him. Jim, like Huck, is superstitious, and when he wakes up he thinks that witches played the trick.
Tom, Huck, and other boys meet in a cave down the river, and form a Gang, a band of robbers. But Huck tires of the Gang’s adventures, because they are only imaginary. Pap wants Huck’s reward money from the end of The Adventures of Tom Sawyer. Signs of his son’s increased civilization irritate him: the proper clothing, and the ability to read and write. Huck secures his money by selling it to Judge Thatcher. Huck’s father brings a lawsuit against the judge, but law is a slow business. Eventually Pap kidnaps Huck, and takes him up the river to a shack on the Illinois (east part of Mississippi) side of the river. At first, Huck enjoys the return to freedom, but living with his father has its difficulties; by and by pap gets too handy with his hick’ry (used to beat him), and he either leaves Huck locked in the cabin alone, or beats him. Huck decides to escape, and cuts a hole in the cabin. After his father lays in some supplies, Huck execute his plans. He catches a canoe (small boat) as it floats down the river. Left alone, Huck stages his own murder: he kills a wild pig and leaves its blood around the shack and on his jacket, then leaves a fake trail showing a body being dragged to the river. He then loads up the supplies and takes off down the river. He stops to camp on Jackson’s Island.
Chapters 8-18: Down the River
On the island, Huck feels liberated. Seeing his friends search for his body troubles him only slightly. After a few days, he discovers that he is not alone on the island: Jim has run away from Miss Watson, who had threatened to sell him. Jim’s escape troubles Huck, but together they enjoy a good life: fishing, eating, smoking, and sleeping. They find a house floating down the river, with a dead man in it, from which they take some valuables. Huck appreciates the lore (stories) that Jim teaches him, but still likes to play tricks. He leaves a dead rattlesnake on Jim’s bed, and Jim gets bitten by the snake’s mate. He recovers, but interprets the bite as the result of Huck touching a snakes-skin, a sure harbinger of bad luck. Jim suspects that there is more to come.
One night, Huck dresses as a girl and goes across to town to “get a stirring-up.” He discovers that there is a reward offered for Jim and that the island is no longer a safe hiding place. He rushes back to the island, and he and Jim float down the Mississippi, sleeping by day and drifting by night. Living this way, they get to know each other, and Jim tells Huck about his children. They also have several adventures. They board a wrecked steam boat and steal some ill-gotten goods from three thieves on board, accidentally leaving them to drown.
Huck and Jim get separated in a fog. They call out, but for hours at a time, they seem lost to each other. Huck falls asleep, and when he awakens, he sees the raft. He sneaks aboard and convinces Jim it was all a dream.
Chapters 19-33: The King and Duke
Huck and Jim plan to drift down to Cairo, Illinois, and then steamboat North, but they realize that they passed Cairo in the fog. A steamboat crashes into their raft and separates them again. Huck swims ashore and is taken in by the Granger ford family, who are embroiled in a quarrel with another local family, the Shepherd sons. He lives with the Granger fords, while Jim hides in a nearby swamp and repairs the raft. When the quarrel erupts into new violence, and Huck’s new friend, Buck Granger ford, is killed, Huck and Jim set off once again down the river.Huck and Jim rescue two rapscallions (rogue or scoundrels), who identify themselves as a duke and a king. They employ different schemes to make money along the river. They attend a religious camp-meeting, and the king takes up a collection for himself. In Arkansaw (land of downriver people), they rent a theater and put on a Shakespearean farce called “The Royal Nonesuch.” Next, a boy they meet confides that an inheritance awaits one Mr.Wilks, an English gentleman, in his town. Seeing their opportunity, the king and duke assume the identity of Mr. Wilks and his servant, and go to claim the money. Huck feels increasingly uneasy about their unscrupulous behavior, and vows to protect their victims.
Next, the king and duke betray Jim as they knew he is a a run away slave, and sell their rights to a farmer, Silas Phelps. Huck realizes what has happened and determines to rescue Jim. He seeks the Phelps farm. By a stroke of luck, they are relatives of Tom Sawyer’s, and mistakenly identify Huck as Tom, come to pay a visit. When Tom arrives a few hours later, he understands the situation, helps Huck, pretending to be his brother Sid.
Chapters 34-43:
Tom agrees to help Huck rescue Jim. He insists that the escape follow
models from all of his favourite prison stories: Phelpses makes Jim sleep with spiders and rats, and write a
prison journal on a shirt. He also warns the Phelpses anonymously. In the
escape, Tom gets shot in the leg. Jim and Huck each return and are caught in
the act of seeking help for Tom.
Finally Tom reveals that Jim is in fact no longer a slave: Miss Watson died and
set him free in her will. Tom’s Aunt Polly arrives and clears up the case of
mistaken identity. Huck, upset by the trick played on him and Jim, accepts
Tom’s explanation that he wanted “the adventure” of the escape. Tom gives Jim
forty dollars for his trouble. Huck worries
about Pap, but Jim tells him not to bother: Pap was the dead man in the house
floating down the river. Huck ends the novel with a plan to “light out for the
Territory ahead of the rest” before the women try again to “sivilize” him.
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