One motif in HUCK FINN is that people are not always what they seem to be. Select one event/episode from chapters 16-25 and discuss how Twain uses this contrasting episode to teach a bit of morality. (The deadline to post a response to this blog is midnight, July 2, 2013. Please let your friends know there is a new blog and remember just put your first name and last initial under your answer.)
2 comments:
There are many times when Mark Twain uses different situations to teach a bit of morality. One example is when Huck Finn and Jim meet two strangers. These strangers lie and say that one is the Duke of Bridgewater and the other is the King of France. These strangers lie to take advantage of Jim and Huck Finn. When the King and the Duke had the idea to perform "The King's Camelopard", and, on the third night of the performance, they ripped off the audience. At first, Finn and Jim believed that the two men were actually from royalty, but, situations like this one made them change their minds. I believe Twain uses this situation to show his readers that the world is full of surprises. Not everyone tells the truth and everything is not always what they seem.
An example of when appearances are deceiving is when the king and Huck go to a camp meeting/revival in a small town and the king uses the opportunity as a scam. He's dressed in ragged clothes and uses that to go along with the story that he was a pirate and he was robbed and now he's a changed man. The king starts crying and shouting and convinces the church goers to give him money. He appeared to be a person in need and deceived all those people, but I believe Twain wanted the readers to see how some people are gullible/too trusting and how things aren't always what they seem to be.
Lealah W.
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