Theme Of Corruption In Huck Finn By Mark Twain

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Imagine a world where everyone happens to be perfect, everyone happens to be the same cookie cutter image, and everyone happens to be nice. Pretty boring huh. Now let's arrive in the real world where nobody happens to be perfect, everyone happens to be different, and only a few happen to be not corrupt. The story of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain contains countless amounts of corrupt aspects in people’s lives. Huckleberry Finn unveils the story of a boy, named Huck, and his journey down the Mississippi River. Huck lives through numerous unusual situations for a kid in his time, which help display the person Huck actually is. Through Huck’s encounters with Miss Watson to Pap to Tom to Jim to Grangerfords and so on, throughout his journey, Huck’s …show more content…
Then Buck responds with, "Well, I bet I did." By stating this Twain reveals Buck as this person who wants the self benefit of another's blood. Huck responds with, "Well, then, what did you want to kill him for?"Twain then reveals greedy people as a whole are selfish and they do not just stop at one kill, they keep killing until they kills meet their level of greed.Buck then says to Huck, "Why, nothing- only it's on account of the feud." Twain creates his point of greed by the way of presenting the two families the way he does. The two families just kill to kill for no good reason. “Does anybody know?” The people just kill to kill and genuinely have no purpose in doing so except for the greed for the other family’s blood. Buck then responds to Huck’s question with, "Oh, yes, pa knows, I reckon, and some of the other old folks; but they don't know, now, what the row was about in the first place.(107-108)"Twain declares these greedy people are greedy for the deaths of the other family even though the deaths are only for personal gain of self worth. Twain presents greed in some people even though those people do not even know greed remains present. Buck acts like one of these people since his obliviousness of …show more content…
Twain reveals another form of greed when writing, “These rapscallions wanted to try the Nonesuch again, as a result of the money in the act, but they judged it wouldn't be safe, as the news might a worked along down by this time.(158)” The way Twain utilizes the aspect of greed in this passage occurs when he says “these rapscallions”, which means mischief. Mischief exists within the Duke and King, since they wanted to try Nonesuch again because money was present in the activity and even though they almost suffered being caught the last time. Most people when faced with a near death experience tend to stay away from the experience and for a while. However, Twain states greedy people, in general, like the idea of money and will do whatever to obtain as much money as their greed seems fit. In the end, Nonesuch big mouth full ultimately choked

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