In the novel "The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn", Huck matures and grows throughout the
novel. Huck evolves in every aspect of his life during the many events he goes through in the
book. This novel challenges huck and his past beliefs and morals and develops new ways of
thinking for himself
Huck matures by friendship. Huck starts feeling lonesome in the island that he is on. As he is on
the island he hears something near him and realizes that someone else is in the island with him.
He then find out that it was Jim miss Watsons slave. He then says, "Well, I warn 't long making
him understand I warn 't dead. I was ever so glad to see Jim. I warn 't lonesome now. I told him I
warn 't afraid …show more content…
He realizes that telling the truth makes him fell good inside of him. This shows the
level of his maturity where he can be honest and do the right thing. Knowing from right and
wrong he says that no matter what a person has done they should deserve respect. As he
watches the King and the Duke get tard and feathered, paraded shamefully through the town he
says, "I couldn 't ever feel any hardness against them anymore in the world. It was a dreadful
thing to see. Human beings can be awful cruel to one another." A child would not be able to
make a deep inference such as that quote. He sees how demeaning others is wrong, and his
ability to forgive, appreciate, and accept people, no matter what they may have done, shows
that he is in-fact very mature.
The process of growing up and maturing will not be fully completed. As adult many of them have
things to learn which in fact will make them wiser. Adult learn new thing as they experience