How Huckleberry Finn Changes

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When you are a kid you learn a lot of things about life, but as you grow up they way you see things change. In Twain’s book The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, the novel's protagonist Huck Finn is searching for adventure. When he is on his adventure he meets many new people that change his ways he looks at society and others. Huck is becoming more aware of his surroundings, he is also able to tell the right from wrong now. He can tell that the King and Duke are bad and Mary Jane is nice and caring. He realizes that the Duke and King are liars and frauds (Twain 147). When they are trying to rob the diseased Peter Wilks, Huck realizes that what they are doing is wrong. He tells Mary Jane about the whole thing, about the Duke and the King robbed Mary Jane and her sisters, about them robbing other places, Huck also tells her what she should …show more content…
Huck doesn't like being told what to do so when the state told him he had to live with his dad he was ecstatic. The problem with living with his dad is he is an alcoholic, he abuses Huck. He also makes Huck do everything around the house and he is never home. At the beginning of the book society has shown him how everyone else thinks about black people and because he is younger, he thinks that he needs to think the same way. As the story goes on he starts to realize that Jim is more than a slave and he is just like a brother that he has never had. Jim protected Huck from so many things when he found the body on the houseboat and keeping him away from it and so many other things. In the end, Huck had learned many new things. One of the biggest ones is that because society thinks something is right doesn't mean it is, you're you and you can have your own opinions. Huckleberry Finn is learning what his personal morals are based on the people and things that he has encountered on his

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